The clash couldn’t have been scripted any better. The occasion was Vice President J.D. Vance’s first interview since taking office, a sit-down with Margaret Brennan of CBS News. The
Vice President J.D. Vance took the oath of office at the Capitol Rotunda, putting him in line to carry the torch of the MAGA movement.
In a harsh attack on Catholic bishops for criticizing mass deportation, the veep is intensifying his administration’s feud with Christian clergy.
The Catholic vice president managed to insult not only the hierarchy and Pope Francis, but agencies such as Catholic Relief Services and Catholic Charities; diocesan and parish organizations; and ordinary Catholics.
As he prepares to become the nation’s first millennial vice president, JD Vance is already a budding kingmaker in Republican politics and the presumptive heir to the “Make America Great Again” movement.
(RNS) — Thanks to the vice president, the national press may finally realize the Catholic bishops care about something other than abortion. (RNS) — Vice President J.D. Vance has done what the ...
Vice President JD Vance's political team, including two top advisors, is joining Vivek Ramaswamy's soon-to-be announced 2026 Ohio gubernatorial run, a source with knowledge confirmed to Fox News.
Second lady Usha looked straight ahead without engaging with her husband, as online MAGA allies offered their own reactions to the video. It was plain to many of Vance's allies that he had a ...
JD Vance’s first sit-down interview as vice president has been granted to Margaret Brennan, the moderator of CBS’s “Face the Nation.” The exchange will air Sunday. But conservatives on social media expressed their unhappiness at the move.
Elon Musk's mother Maye Musk reacted to a social media post that questioned why Vice President JD Vance's wife, Second Lady Usha Vance was not being c
J.D. Vance’s present persona is a far cry from the man who once compared Trump to “America’s Hitler.” How did we get here?
Unless Democrats want to see eight years of J.D. Vance in the White House, they'll need to "pick a lane and stay in it like grandma white-knuckling her way" down the highway, writes MSNBC politics reporter Alexander Nazaryan in a new opinion piece.