Politics
JD Vance
Finally Loses It Over Attacks on His Wife: ‘Eat S**t’
The vice
president nevertheless tried to draw some kind of equivalence between the
critics, an MS NOW host and a vile antisemite.
Cameron
Adams
Reporter
Updated
Dec. 22 2025 6:58AM EST
Published
Dec. 22 2025 3:57AM EST
https://www.thedailybeast.com/jd-vance-loses-it-over-racist-attacks-on-wife-eat-st/
Vice
President JD Vance finally lashed out at critics of his wife in a furious
tirade, saying they can “eat s--t.”
Vance’s
response comes months after the attacks on Usha Vance, who is the first Indian
American second lady. The vice president also lumped his wife’s critics
together by name, though one is an MS NOW host and former White House press
secretary and another is a white nationalist and antisemite.
Far-right
white nationalist Nick Fuentes has made several racist slurs against the
Vances, who married in 2014, and have three children together. He has called
the vice president a “fat race-mixer” and a “race traitor” before using an
offensive new slang word his followers, known as groypers, are using to
describe Indian people.
Speaking
to UnHerd, Vance stood up for his wife. “Let me be clear,” he said, “Anyone who
attacks my wife, whether their name is Jen Psaki or Nick Fuentes, can eat s--t.
That’s my official policy as vice president of the United States.”
Psaki,
who hosts The Briefing on MS NOW and served as President Joe Biden’s White
House press secretary, spoke out about Vance and his wife on the popular
podcast I’ve Had It in October.
“I always
wonder what’s going on in the mind of his wife,” Psaki said, before suggesting
Usha may need help to escape her marriage.
“Like,
are you OK? Please blink four times. Come over here, we’ll save you.”
During
the UnHerd interview, Vance was pressed on the hate speech he has encountered
since entering politics.
“Antisemitism,
and all forms of ethnic hatred have no place in the conservative movement,”
Vance said. “Whether you’re attacking somebody because they’re white or because
they’re Black or because they’re Jewish, I think it’s disgusting.”
Referencing
Fuentes, who once had a private dinner with Trump at his resort, Vance
attempted to distance Fuentes’ wildly offensive beliefs from the MAGA movement.
“I think
that Nick Fuentes, his influence within Donald Trump’s administration, and
within a whole host of institutions on the right, is vastly overstated, and
frankly, it’s overstated by people who want to avoid having a foreign-policy
conversation about America’s relationship with Israel.”
When
pressed about Fuentes’ frequent use of racial slurs, he said he believed that
racism was bad, and that people should be judged according to their deeds and
not their ethnicity.
“Is Nick
Fuentes really the problem in this country?” Vance said. “He’s a podcaster. He
has a dedicated group of young fans, and some of them have been s--tty to my
friends and family. Does that annoy me? Of course. But let’s keep some
perspective. For the past five to 10 years, I’ve watched one-half of our
political leadership go all in on the idea that discriminating against whites
in college admissions and jobs is not just OK, but affirmatively good.”
Vance
added, “If you believe racism is bad, Fuentes should occupy one second of your
focus, and the people with actual political power who worked so hard to
discriminate against white men should occupy many hours of it.”
US Vice
President JD Vance speaks at the Turning Point's annual AmericaFest conference,
in remembrance of late right-wing political activist Charlie Kirk, in
He also
steered away from fully condemning the rise of racism and antisemitism in the
Republican Party while speaking at Turning Point USA’s annual convention on
Sunday in Phoenix.
The VP
said conservatives should welcome everyone as long as they “love America.” He
also said he was against using “purity tests” to work out who might be excluded
from the religious movement over their beliefs, after questions arising over
divisive figures such as Fuentes and Candace Owens.
“I didn’t
bring a list of conservatives to denounce or to de-platform,” Vance said during
his closing speech at the convention.
“We don’t
care if you’re white or Black, rich or poor, young or old, rural or urban,
controversial or a little bit boring, or somewhere in between,” he said of
Turning Point’s entry policy.
“We have
far more important work to do than canceling each other,” he said.
Vance was
more vocal about the Trump administration’s policies to end diversity and
inclusion, telling the audience, “In the United States of America, you don’t
have to apologize for being white anymore.”
Cameron
Adams
Reporter

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário