
Second Lady Usha Vance opens up about interfaith parenting with Vice President JD Vance
Usha Vance spoke to Meghan McCain on her podcast, "Citizen McCain," about raising her three children, Ewan, Vivek and Mirabel, at the Naval Observatory, as well as the transition into becoming the second couple.
"At the time when I met JD, he wasn't Catholic, and he converted later and when he converted, we had a lot of conversations about that because it was actually after we had our first child, maybe it was after Vivek was born too," she said. "When you convert to Catholicism it comes with several important obligations, like to raise your child in the faith and all that."
"We had to have a lot of real conversations about how do you do that, when I'm not Catholic, and I'm not intending to convert or anything like that," Usha continued.
The second lady said it was helpful because she felt she had a say over the directions of their lives.
"So what we've ended up doing is we send our kids to Catholic school, and we have given them each the choice, right? They can choose whether they want to be baptized Catholic and then go through the whole step-by-step process with their classes in school," she said.
Vance said their oldest child has done that, and added that they make going to church a "family experience."
"The kids know that I'm not Catholic, and they have plenty of access to the Hindu tradition from books that we give them, to things that we show them, to the recent trip to India, and some of the religious elements of that visit," Vance continued.
Usha Vance was also the subject of a New York Times profile published Wednesday, which described some friends as "bewildered" by her going from once being a Democrat to the spouse of a Republican vice president.
Others said, however, that she naturally soured on the left over time, and she was reportedly outraged at Democratic attacks on future Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh during his wrenching confirmation process in 2018; she clerked for Kavanaugh when he sat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
"People close to the vice president, who went from being a vocal critic of now-President Trump to his running mate, argue that Ms. Vance went on a similar but less public journey that soured her on the left," the Times reported.
Usha Vance spoke to Fox News in August while her husband was on the campaign trail and told host Ainsley Earhardt how she deals with negative press coverage of her husband.
"Sometimes I don't see it all, and sometimes I do see it and I look at and think, well, this is not the JD I know, this is not accurate," she said at the time. "And other times it might span discussions or thoughts about what we should do next or how we should live. But I think we've been doing this now for a little while, and I've gotten kind of accustomed to it and grown a bit of a thick skin to it."
Usha Vance met JD Vance at Yale University, and the couple married in 2014. Vice President Vance, 40, is the third-youngest vice president in history and first millennial to hold the office, and Usha Vance is the first Indian-American second lady.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
22 minutes ago
- New York Times
Pence Welcomes Trump's D.C. Deployment of National Guard
Former Vice President Mike Pence, who pushed for earlier deployment of National Guard troops to the Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021, riots, said on Sunday that he welcomed President Trump's recent decision to send federal troops to Washington to combat crime. In an interview on CNN's 'State of the Union,' Mr. Pence was asked about Mr. Trump's aggressive push of federal troops compared with his lack of urgency on Jan. 6, when it took hours for the Guard to arrive. In response, Mr. Pence inhaled and shrugged his shoulders. 'Well, Jan. 6 was a tragic day, but I know we did our duty that day, I wish the president would have done more,' he said. 'But I welcome his decision to deploy the National Guard and essentially federalize the D.C. Police Department.' 'I think is important what the president is doing and I fully support it,' he added. 'I think the American people welcome the president taking decisive action to ensure the streets of our nation's capital are safe.' Back on Jan. 6, an angry mob chanting 'hang Mike Pence' at one point came within 40 feet of the vice president. Mr. Pence was critical in trying to move National Guard forces to the Capitol, but Mr. Trump initially refused, even as police officers were overrun. Last week, Mr. Trump said he needed to send federal troops to protect Washington because the nation's capital had been overrun with 'violent gangs and blood thirsty criminals,' misstating crime data to justify the action. Already, 800 National Guard troops have been deployed from the D.C. National Guard. At Mr. Trump's request, an additional 700 troops are being deployed by the governors of West Virginia, South Carolina and Ohio, all of whom are Republicans.


Fox News
22 minutes ago
- Fox News
Red states join Trump's DC crime crackdown
Former Acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf comments on President Donald Trump's federal crackdown on crime in Washington, D.C., and his reaction to some red states sending National Guard troops to the area for assistance.


Fox News
22 minutes ago
- Fox News
Zohran Mamdani responds to the fatal shooting in Brooklyn early Sunday morning
Speaking with reporters at a canvass launch event in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, NYC Democratic mayoral candidate, Zohran Mamdani, called the shooting "another example of the scourge of gun violence" in New York City.