logo
Opinion: JD Vance and Usha's Strange Hard-Right, Same-Sex Political Bedfellows

Opinion: JD Vance and Usha's Strange Hard-Right, Same-Sex Political Bedfellows

Yahoo28-02-2025

Germany took an expected turn to the Right electing a conservative businessman to lead the country while an upstart far-right party, the Alternative for Deutschland (AfD), claimed second place thanks in part to its unconventional leader, Alice Weidel, a hardliner on immigration who wants to close Germany's borders, and favors what she calls 'remigration,' a euphemism for mass deportation.
An attractive blonde who has made turtleneck sweaters her trademark, Weidel and her party advocate for the traditional role of marriage as between a man and a woman. At the same time, the former investment analyst with a Ph.D. in economics is open about her wife, Sarah Bossard, a Sri-Lankan born filmmaker, and the two sons they are raising together.
Weidel is heralded for giving her party a new more modern and cosmopolitan look. Her unconventional lifestyle is seen as an attribute, attracting young people to a party that most Germans recoil from, fearing an incarnation of the bad old days. A New York Times profile describes Weidel, 46, as someone who can be alternately charming and biting, and who speaks clearly and fluently 'even if it is without much empathy,' German political scientist Werner Patzelt told the Times.
She is the future of the extreme right movement in her country, and once you know more about her, it makes perfect sense that Vice President JD Vance, while in Munich earlier this month, chose to meet with Weidel rather than the then German chancellor who was on his way out. They are kindred spirits. Two right-wing white leaders whose personal brand of wokeness welcomes diversity when it comes to picking a soul mate. They just don't want it mandated anywhere.
When Vance was in Munich making his first foreign trip, he had his wife, Usha, and their three young children, accompanying him and attracting lots of oohs and ahs at the lovely family portrait. Reporters noted the children were already in their pajamas for the overnight flight to Europe, no doubt thanks to Usha.
The daughter of immigrants from India, Usha Chilukuri was born in San Diego, California, grew up in an upper middle class suburb, attended Yale University and then Yale Law School, where she met Vance. Together they organized a discussion group on 'social decline in white America,' a topic that Vance, having come from a dysfunctional family in rural poverty, knew firsthand.
Usha's presence in the public eye, though rare aside from the Munich trip, showcases a marriage that helps make the case that Donald Trump's party isn't against all diversity, just the kind that undercuts white America. In other words, it's good for business if you're in the business of politics.
'For whatever reason in this day and age, people attracted to this conservative movement don't really care if the leader is in on the deal or not,' says Elaine Kamarck, a senior fellow and the director of the Center for Effective Public Management at Brookings. She credits Trump with forging the trail, noting his unwavering support from evangelicals in three straight elections despite his marital history and lack of churchgoing.
'In no way does he live up to the evangelical ideal. He's the one who started all this,' Kamarck told the Daily Beast, referring to the disjunction between a leader's lifestyle and what their supporters think they're supposed to have.
As for Weidel, her grandfather was a Nazi party member and military judge in occupied Warsaw, but he died when she was 6. She claims to not know much about him. Her party, the AfD, more than doubled its support from the last elections, but remains something of a pariah. Weidel lives in Switzerland most of the time to keep herself and family safe from death threats.
Even so, she has not backed off on the issues that drew support from Vance and from Elon Musk, who endorsed her for chancellor. They are on the same page in denying climate change and wanting to dismiss professors who teach gender studies and closing Germany's borders to immigration.
Asked before the election how many nights she had spent at her German address, Weidel ended the interview rather than answer. Clearly, it's a sensitive subject for her while we here in America barely blinked a collective eye when we learned that Melania Trump will be spending the majority of her time as first lady between New York and Florida, returning to the White House only for big events. (Including the famous annual White House Easter Egg Roll, which, she announced in a rare statement on Thursday, will be held on April 21.)
No word on whether she will pick up her 'Be Best' anti-bullying agenda—and who cares? This isn't what we're accustomed to, but it is modern. 'She has no intention of being a first lady,' says Kamarck. 'Who knows if that's a reflection on her husband or the job—maybe both.'
Other things Trump is doing that evade categorization and potentially attract new voters, he is bringing Alice Marie Johnson to the White House as a 'pardon czar.' At the suggestion of Kim Kardashian, Trump pardoned the now 69-year-old Black woman in 2020 for a first-time nonviolent drug offense, and now he wants her to find others like her to pardon. Who can say no to that?
Adding to the colorful cast of characters in the Trump White House is Rev. Paula White, who preaches the prosperity gospel, as head of a newly resurrected faith based office at the White House. The future of the extreme right in America shares more than ideology with what's happening in Germany and elsewhere. Everybody loves a good show.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Germany's CDU: Foreign medical students must work in Germany or pay
Germany's CDU: Foreign medical students must work in Germany or pay

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Germany's CDU: Foreign medical students must work in Germany or pay

The German conservative party of Chancellor Friedrich Merz wants to charge foreign medical students for their studies if they return to their home countries immediately after graduation instead of working in Germany. "Anyone who studies here should practise in rural areas for at least five years. Those who do not wish to do so must repay the costs of this first-class education," Sepp Müller, deputy chair of the parliamentary group of the conservative CDU/CSU bloc, told the Bild newspaper in remarks published on Wednesday. Higher education, including medical school, is mainly free in Germany - to both foreign and domestic students. By contrast, in the United States both domestic and foreign students can pay some $60,000 per year - and more when housing and books are included. In the United Kingdom, annual international fees range between £43,700 ($59,232) at the Cardiff Medical School in Wales, to £67,194 at the Cambridge Medical School, according to UK testing site UKCAT The secretary of state in the German Health Ministry, Tino Sorge, also called for measures to prevent foreign medical students from returning to their home countries after completing their studies. "Our goal must be to retain such highly qualified professionals. We need to attract young doctors to work in Germany instead of watching them leave," the CDU politician told the newspaper. He added that each medical school place comes with significant costs. Florian Müller, the research policy spokesman for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, told Bild that the federal states should independently regulate the repayment of study costs. "We need to focus much more on ensuring that international talents work in Germany after university," he said.

German Foreign Minister Wadephul heads to Rome for talks on Ukraine
German Foreign Minister Wadephul heads to Rome for talks on Ukraine

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

German Foreign Minister Wadephul heads to Rome for talks on Ukraine

German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul is expected in Rome on Thursday for an international conference focused on EU security and the war in Ukraine. Hosted by Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, the meeting is taking place within the framework of the so-called Weimar Plus format. The group is an extension of the Weimar Triangle, which is made up of Germany, France and Poland. According to the German Foreign Office, both NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha will attend the conference. They are to be joined by representatives from Poland, Spain, the United Kingdom, France and the European Union. The meeting is taking place less than a month before the fourth Ukraine Recovery Conference, scheduled for July 10-11, at which some 2,000 representatives from politics, business and international organizations plan to discuss Ukraine's long-term prospects. After a bilateral meeting with Tajani, Wadephul's schedule sees him leave Rome for the Middle East on Thursday evening. Through Sunday, he plans to visit a host of countries, including Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel. The Foreign Office said the focus of the trip to the region is the catastrophic humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip and plans for a peaceful order in the territory after the end of the ongoing conflict with Israel.

Vance echoes Trump's call for Fed's Powell to cut interest rates: 'Monetary malpractice'
Vance echoes Trump's call for Fed's Powell to cut interest rates: 'Monetary malpractice'

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Vance echoes Trump's call for Fed's Powell to cut interest rates: 'Monetary malpractice'

Vice President JD Vance on Wednesday echoed President Donald Trump's calls for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. "The president has been saying this for a while, but it's even more clear: the refusal by the Fed to cut rates is monetary malpractice," Vance wrote in a post on X. Trump on Wednesday repeated his prior call for the U.S. central bank cut interest rates by a full point. "CPI JUST OUT. GREAT NUMBERS! FED SHOULD LOWER ONE FULL POINT. WOULD PAY MUCH LESS INTEREST ON DEBT COMING DUE. SO IMPORTANT!!!" Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. Inflation Increased Slightly On An Annual Basis In May The two posts came after the Bureau of Labor Statistics released the latest consumer price index data Wednesday morning that showed inflation in May was cooler than analysts expected. Read On The Fox Business App The CPI rose 0.1% in May compared to the prior month, while it was up 2.4% on an annual basis. Those figures were slightly cooler than the estimates of economists polled by LSEG, while the annual CPI ticked up from 2.3% a month ago. Fed Saw Inflation, Jobless, Stability Risks At May Meeting, Minutes Show So-called core prices, which exclude more volatile measurements of gasoline and food to better assess price growth trends, were up 0.1% from the prior month and 2.8% on an annual basis, both below economists' estimates of 0.3% and 2.9%, respectively. Trump most recently called on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell to lower interest rates last week. "'Too Late' at the Fed is a disaster!" Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. "Europe has had 10 rate cuts, we have had none. Despite him, our Country is doing great. Go for a full point, Rocket Fuel!" Trump posted those comments after the release of the Labor Department's May employment report, which showed the U.S. economy added 139,000 jobs in the month. The figure was stronger than the estimate of economists polled by LSEG, which projected a gain of 130,000 jobs, but cooler than the revised increase of 147,000 jobs added in April. FOX Business' Eric Revell contributed to this reportOriginal article source: Vance echoes Trump's call for Fed's Powell to cut interest rates: 'Monetary malpractice' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store