Itâs been a turbulent few daysâto say the leastâfor former president and 2024 Republican nominee Donald Trump, who survived an attempt on his life at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on Saturday. Seemingly undaunted, Trump took to Truth Social shortly after the incident to confirm that he was âshot with a bullet that pierced the upper part of my right ear,â and by Mondayâthe first day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukeeâhe was well enough to name Ohio senator J.D. Vance as his vice presidential pick (also on Truth Social, of course).
Below, catch up on everything you need to know about Vance ahead of his confirmation at the RNC this week.
Heâs the author of the 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy
Vanceâs memoir about adhering to his familyâs so-called Appalachian values while growing up in Kentucky and Ohio was a New York Times number one bestseller in August 2016 and January 2017. (The book was later made into an Oscar-nominated film.) While members of the conservative and liberal media alike lauded the book at the time of its release, Vance was also criticized for generalizing the Appalachian experience and favoring a bootstrap theory of self-improvement that puts the onus on the individual (rather than the society in which they live) to rise out of poverty.
He went to Yale
Despite his efforts to paint himself as a conservative voice for the American working class, Vance in 2013 earned his Juris Doctor from Yale Law Schoolâthe same institution that counts right-leaning Supreme Court justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Brett Kavanaugh (in addition to Justice Sonia Sotomayor) among its esteemed alumni. It was there that he met his wife, attorney Usha Vance, with whom he shares three children.
His views on abortion are (shocker) extremely anti-choice
Vance argued against the need for exceptions to abortion laws that would affect pregnant victims of rape and incest in 2021, saying: âTwo wrongs donât make a right. Itâs not whether a woman should be forced to bring a child to term, itâs whether a child should be allowed to live, even though the circumstances of that childâs birth are somehow inconvenient or a problem to the society.â
Heâs accused President Joe Biden of âopening up the floodgates to the borderâ in order to target his political opponents with fentanyl
âIf you wanted to kill a bunch of MAGA voters in the middle of the heartland, how better than to target them and their kids with this deadly fentanyl?â asked Vance in 2022, adding: âIt does look intentional. Itâs like Joe Biden wants to punish the people who didnât vote for him, and opening up the floodgates to the border is one way to do it.â Shortly after Vance made these comments, the Washington Post noted that deaths from opioids like fentanyl rose 60% under Trump and 15% in the first 12 months of Bidenâs term, concluding: âVance is putting the blame on Biden for a problem that got significantly worse under Trumpâ (and scapegoating migrants to boot!).
Jennifer Lawrence isnât a fan
Lawrence memorably christened Vance a ârich twat,â in her October 2022 Vogue cover interview, going on to qualify: âI mean, Iâm a rich twat, but Iâm not running for office pretending that Iâm not.â