JD Vance, Trump’s VP pick, once called him a ‘moral disaster,’ and possibly ‘America’s Hitler’ | CNN Politics (2024)

JD Vance, Trump’s VP pick,once called him a ‘moral disaster,’and possibly ‘America’s Hitler’ | CNN Politics (1)

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'I've never liked him': See how JD Vance changed his tune on Trump

02:00 - Source: CNN

CNN

Donald Trump’s vice presidential pick Ohio Sen. JD Vance was once a fervent critic of the former president. In private messages, he wondered ahead of Trump’s election whether he was “America’s Hitler” and in 2017 said the then-presidentwas a“moral disaster.” In public, he agreed Trump was a “total fraud” who didn’t care about regular people and called him “reprehensible.”

“I go back and forth between thinking Trump is a cynical asshole like Nixon who wouldn’t be that bad (and might even prove useful) or that he’s America’s Hitler,” Vance wrote in a message to a friendin 2016. “How’s that for discouraging?”

In 2016 and 2017, Vance, then best-known for penning the best-selling book “Hillbilly Elegy” said Trump was “cultural heroin” and “just another opioid”for Middle America. He told CNN ahead of the 2016 election that he was “definitely not” voting for Trump and he also contemplated voting for Hillary Clinton (he ultimately said he planned to vote for independent candidate Evan McMullin.)

“Fellow Christians, everyone is watching us when we apologize for this man. Lord help us,”he tweetedafter theAccess Hollywoodtape was published in 2016.

Sen. JD Vance speaks in National Harbor, Maryland in February. Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP Related article Trump selects Ohio Sen. JD Vance as his running mate

Vance alsoliked tweetsthat said Trump committed “serial sexual assault,” called him “one of USA’s most hated, villainous, douchey celebs,” and harshly criticized Trump’s response to the deadly 2017 White nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

“There is no moral equivalence between the anti-racist protestors in Charlottesville and the killer (and his ilk),” Vancewrote ina deleted-tweet.

Trump’s vice president announcement on Monday caps a dramatic reversal on Vance’s part. He made his most critical remarks when he was promoting his memoir“Hillbilly Elegy,”which was published in 2016. The book had catapulted him to fame as a “Trump whisperer,” capable of explaining Trump’s appeal to the White working class.

“I’m definitely not gonna vote for Trumpbecause I think that he’s projecting very complex problems onto simple villains,” Vance told CNN’s Jake Tapper ahead of the 2016 election.

But by 2020, Vance fully embraced Trump, telling podcaster Megyn Kelly after the election he voted for him. A yearlater,Vance announced he was running for Senate in Ohio and vied for Trump’s endorsem*nt, which he ultimately received.

But at the beginning of that campaign, Vance wasforced to apologizeafter CNN resurfaced old tweets from the 2016 campaign and early in 2017 in Trump’s administration that he had deleted.

“I did say those critical things and I regret them, and I regret being wrong about the guy,” Vance told Fox Newsin 2021.

In astatement to CNN last month, Vance cited Trump’s “many successes in office” for changing his mind onthe former president.

“I’m proud to be one of his strongest supporters in the Senate today and I’m going to do everything in my power to ensure President Trump wins in November - the survival of America depends on it.”

Vance won his Senate race in 2022 by6 percentage points– less than the8.1 percentage points Trumpwon the statebyin 2020.

JD Vance, Trump’s VP pick,once called him a ‘moral disaster,’and possibly ‘America’s Hitler’ | CNN Politics (3)

Book: Hillbilly Elegy by author JD Vance on October 8, 2013 in New York City.

Vance’s remarkable political evolution underscores the broader trend of realignment in the country and the GOP as the party becomes one ofworking-classWhitevoters.

‘Idon’t think he actually cares about folks’

In comments promoting his book, Vance often said Trump playedtoor exploitedWhiteworking-classvoters’ fears and prejudices.

“And I cannot stand Trump because I think he’s a fraud,”one radio host saidto Vance when promoting his book in 2016. “I think he’s a total fraud that is exploiting these people.”

“I do too. And it’s like you, like you said, I, I agree with you on Trump because I don’t think that he’s the person. I don’t think he actually cares about folks,” Vance said. “I think he just recognizes that there was a hole in the conversation and that hole is that people from these regions of the country, they feel ignored.”

InSeptember 2016, Vance argued Trump’s immigration policies like the “great Mexican Wall,” were overly simplistic and aimed to give folks something to latch on to.

“At the heart of Trump’s immigration message is that if we had less immigration, we would have much better jobs,” he said. “I think it’s a lot more complicated than that. My own sense is that Trump definitely simplifies these problems. I don’t think if you build a great Mexican wall, all of a sudden, all of these steel mill jobs are going to come back to southern Ohio, but it at least gives people something to latch onto.”

Vance also argued in 2016 that if White working-class people attended church, they would not be as attracted to Trump.

“I think Trump provides that sense of community that many in the White working class would have, if they actually went to church,” VancetoldNew York public radio. “I think if folks went to church a little bit more, they may not be as excited or as attracted to the sort of social experience that Trump provides.”

Vance once said racism played a role in Trump support

Vance also said that racism and xenophobia played a role in Trump’s rise.

“There is definitely an element of Donald Trump’s support that has its basis in racism, xenophobia, but a lot of these folks are just really hardworking people who are struggling in really important ways,” Vancesaidin a September 2016“PBS NewsHour”Interview.

“Definitely some people who voted for Trump were racist and they voted for him for racist reasons,” Vancesaidin an interview at the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics.

Speaking with CNN in October 2016, Vance criticized Trump foractively antagonizingBlack voters, claiming this tactic was a long-standing Republican strategy.

“It’s not just that Donald Trump doesn’t speak to issues of special concern of minority voters or Black voters, it’s that he seems to like actively antagonizing a lot of the Black voters,” Vancesaid during a panel discussion.

In a July 2016 interview with American Conservative, a right-leaning publication, he added Trump was making the problem of racial resentment “worse” by talking about “rapist immigrants and banning all Muslims” as part of his message.

To that end – Vance once tweeted he found Trump reprehensible.

“Trump makes people I care about afraid. Immigrants, Muslims, etc. Because of this I find him reprehensible. God wants better of us,”he wrote in October 2016.

JD Vance, Trump’s VP pick, once called him a ‘moral disaster,’ and possibly ‘America’s Hitler’ | CNN Politics (2024)

FAQs

Where is JD Vance from? ›

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio, July 26 (Reuters) - In his bestselling 2016 memoir, Republican vice presidential hopeful JD Vance questioned whether rural, white Americans, like those in his native Middletown, Ohio, had the drive to reverse their economic decline.

Was Vance a Democrat? ›

James David Vance (born August 2, 1984) is an American politician, lawyer, author, and Marine veteran who has served since 2023 as the junior United States senator from Ohio. A member of the Republican Party, he is its nominee for vice president in the 2024 United States presidential election.

What business does JD Vance have? ›

In Vance's five years as a venture capitalist, he worked for two firms before co-founding his own venture vehicle, Ohio-based Narya Capital Management.

What is Vance's real name? ›

The only birth certificate for Vance on file at Ohio's vital statistics office reads James David Hamel, according to information provided by the state. Beverly kept the boy's initials the same, since he went universally by J.D., Vance explains in the book.

What religion is JD Vance? ›

His conversion to Catholicism seems at once sincere and opportune. In an interview with Rod Dreher of The American Conservative, posted the weekend he was baptized, in August, 2019, Vance said, of Catholicism, “I've been reading and studying about it for three years, or even longer.”

How much is JD Vance worth? ›

(His most recent financial disclosure pegs his net worth at $7 million, most of it, presumably, the fruit of his bestselling book-cum-movie, Hillbilly Elegy, and Usha's lucrative years at Munger Tolles.)

Is JD Vance's mother? ›

What part of Kentucky is JD Vance's family from? ›

Vance wrote that while his childhood address was in Ohio, he considered “my home” to be the ancestral homestead “in the holler, in Jackson, Kentucky.”

Did JD Vance go to the military? ›

Vance enlisted in the Marine Corps after high school only months after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, his military records show. He was intent on “heading to the Middle East to kill terrorists,” he wrote in “Hillbilly Elegy,” his bestselling memoir of his upbringing and early life.

How did JD Vance go to Yale? ›

When J.D. Vance applied to law school, he viewed it as a pathway out of his chaotic upbringing in working-class Middletown, Ohio. Then he won a spot at his dream school. Yale Law not only accepted him for the fall of 2010, but also offered a nearly full ride the first year.

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