8
Takeaways From Usha Vance’s Interview With Meghan McCain
The
Second Lady didn't dodge any questions, though she wasn't asked any tough ones.
Written
by Sylvie McNamara | Published on June
26, 2025
https://www.washingtonian.com/2025/06/26/usha-vance-meghan-mccain-interview-takeaways/
On
Wednesday, Meghan McCain interviewed Second Lady Usha Vance on her podcast,
Citizen McCain. It was “journalism” in the way a lot of these shows are:
McCain, daughter of John McCain and a former co-host of The View, relentlessly
lobbed softballs about Vance’s cooking, childrearing, fashion, and home décor.
There was very little acknowledgement that Vance is a former litigator with two
Yale degrees who has—by various accounts—been quite influential on her husband,
one of the most powerful men in the world.
Vance
presumably has her own political opinions, which are perhaps complex and
interesting. She’s clerked for Chief Justice John Roberts and for Brett
Kavanaugh before he ascended to the US Supreme Court. But she was also once
registered as a Democrat and was reportedly “appalled” by Donald Trump.
Fifty-five minutes into their hour-long interview, when McCain apologetically
teed up a question about the “elephant in the room,” it seemed like this
dissonance might finally be addressed. But actually, McCain was inquiring about
the possibility of Vance becoming First Lady someday. (Vance was tepid but
polite: “In a dream world, eventually I’ll be able to live in my home and
continue my career and all those sorts of things,” she said.)
The
interview is an odd artifact from MAGA-world. Vance, 39, is poised and
understated, thoughtful and serious. She doesn’t dodge questions, though she’s
never asked any tough ones. The aura is quite different from her husband’s:
it’s not Mountain Dew and four-wheelers and Catholic doctrine and the 4-H
livestock show. It’s more Khan Academy and piano lessons and balanced meals.
Vance comes off as fairly effete. Here are some takeaways—many frivolous, some
not.
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Vance
dreads the limelight but braves it to go to Pilates
“One of
the things that’s kind of difficult about this life is that you’re constantly
set apart,” Vance lamented of being Second Lady. She doesn’t like “the security
element, where you enter through weird back doors to get into a restaurant,” or
the “public element, where people are socially distant from you in various
ways.” She seems to find it weird to be called “ma’am” (“nobody ever called me
ma’am before this”), and she admits that she and her husband sometimes walk the
streets in disguise. (Apparently, donning hats substantially reduces the number
of people who recognize them.)
Vance
spoke of her aspiration to “just be a millennial person living in the world, as
opposed to some sort of figure on television.” It’s a bit odd, since the Vances
are rarely spotted off the grounds of the US Naval Observatory where they live.
(By contrast, Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff seemed to be everywhere.) But Vance
claims that she tries each day to live a normal life—to “forget that people are
watching,” despite “maybe being photographed by someone”—particularly by going
to the gym. As someone who’s “not a natural exerciser,” she apparently takes a
lot of workout classes: Pilates, hot yoga, high-intensity interval stuff. No
word on where she works out.
McCain’s
strange pregnancy reveal
The thing
about McCain’s style of journalism is that almost every question was about her
own life: She asked whether Vance had pregnancy or postpartum complications,
because she herself had them. She asked how Vance keeps her children normal,
because she herself comes from a political family. But 20 minutes into this
interview, McCain outdid herself. “I hope you don’t mind, but I wanted to let
you in on something that’s private that I haven’t talked about publicly yet,”
she said, before revealing to Vance that she’s currently pregnant with her
third child—virtually guaranteeing that all coverage of this rare conversation
with a notoriously reticent public figure would also encompass the
interviewer’s personal life. “I know it’s a weird way to announce it,” McCain
acknowledged. Vance graciously called her news “wonderful.”
Vance is
not a tradwife
The
pregnancy reveal segued into a question, of sorts: McCain said she “keeps
reading all this horrible data” about how three is the worst number of children
to have, and then asked Vance to “tell women in America” why that particular
family size is great. It was an opportunity for the Second Lady to lean into
the pronatalism of the MAGA and MAHA right: to tell women why bigger families
are better, and why mothers (as her husband has notoriously said) are more
fulfilled than the childless cat ladies clawing their way up corporate ladders
and trying to run this country into the ground.
Vance did
not take that bait. “I love having three kids; I’m a huge proponent of it,” she
said, adding that, “obviously people want to have different family sizes for
different reasons.” Mentioning that JD sometimes wants a fourth child, Vance
seemed to dismiss the possibility; she laughed and said, “We’ll see where that
leads.”
For a
while, JD seems to have followed his wife’s career
In one of
the interview’s more intriguing moments, Vance described a conversation between
JD and one of his law school professors (Amy Chua, of course) that set the tone
for their early careers. JD was apparently having “a little bit of a crisis
about why he was in law school at all”—chasing professional success without
really understanding why, and Chua urged him to think about it differently.
“Your heart is not in doing that,” Chua apparently said. “You really love Usha.
Make decisions that maximize your happiness in that way.” JD, in Vance’s
telling, was “really amazing about this,” which meant that “we were able to
follow some of my legal career’s twists and turns geographically.” It sure
sounds like she’s saying that JD—who seems to desire a return to traditional
gender roles—followed her career in the early years of their relationship, not
the other way around.
Vance
chooses outfits via group text
Prior to
her life as Second Lady, Vance said, she “always tried to have a pretty small
wardrobe” and was not “the most fashionable person out there.” Asked if she now
works with a stylist, she replied that she has a group text of assorted
friends, one of whom works in the fashion industry. Apparently, the Second Lady
has photographed everything in her closet and put it into an app so that her
faraway text friends can mix and match various pieces to suggest ensembles. For
this interview, Vance wore beige trousers, an off-white sleeveless top, and
glossy white slingback heels. “I’m just doing the best that I can to feel like
myself and not this Second-Lady figure,” she said.
JD bakes
cakes
Apparently,
when the Vances first met, “JD didn’t know how to cook a thing. There was some
chicken dish he could make and really nothing else.” But after realizing that
his new girlfriend was a vegetarian—and that he “had no idea what a vegetarian
diet would look like”—JD apparently went to Usha’s mom for some cooking
lessons. Now, according to Vance, her husband has “mostly transitioned to
baking.” Apparently he makes good biscuits. Recently, he’s been “taking up
cakes.”
Vance
takes German lessons and keeps her kids off screens
So what
does an Ivy League graduate and former Supreme Court clerk do with her
chill-ish Second-Lady life? Vance described various “self-improvement
projects”: taking German lessons, reading a backlog of books, and making toys
for her kids. “I do try to have these personal projects that are just
fundamentally unrelated to anything in politics,” she explained.
Of
course, Vance also has a public role—and so far, she’s taken up the cause of
literacy. “Literacy scores have been dropping,” she told McCain; kids are
“reading less, and are able to read less to begin with.” To address this, Vance
recently announced a summer reading challenge, to try to get American children
off screens and reading books. Elsewhere, she told McCain that she and JD do
not let their young children use tablets on planes, despite doing a fair amount
of international travel. (“Honestly, we just sort of accepted that sometimes it
was going to be sort of a disaster,” she said.)
Overall,
Vance seems on board
As
expected, Vance did not give the impression that there was any daylight between
herself and her husband. This was not Melania slapping the President’s hand
away or writing a book about how she supports abortion rights. Vance appeared
to be very much the devoted wife. That seems completely plausible; plenty of
reporting has suggested that Vance’s liberal views have drifted rightward in
recent years. But on the other hand, as the vice president joked to a crowd
back in March, whenever “the cameras are all on, anything that I say—no matter
how crazy—Usha has to smile and laugh and celebrate it.”
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