The man suspected of plotting to assassinate former president Donald Trump was active on X, but claims Republican vice presidential candidate J.D. Vance was among his followers are false. An image shared on social media as proof includes a parody account of the Ohio senator,
Ohio U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance’s staff was told by Springfield officials that a racially charged rumor Vance had been amplifying was false, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. Despite a wave of death and bomb threats directed at the community,
Even though J.D. Vance hasn't always been on the same page as Donald Trump when he talks about policy plans, the campaign is happy to let him loose.
Reporting from Raleigh in the swing state of North Carolina, Eric Garcia notes that Trump’s running mate has a fascinating new tactic
Hillary Clinton has criticized Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance for suggesting that families could ease the financial burden of child care by tapping grandparents for more help, saying that the Ohio senator is “just not in touch with what goes on in the lives and the working careers of the vast majority of Americans.
The Democratic presidential nominee has participated in only three TV and print interviews since announcing her bid for the presidency.
Vance has a law degree, and he likes to present things in terms of principles and philosophies. But the fancy talk is just a way of weaponizing his feelings, which are actually the ultimate arbiter of fact vs. falsehood and right vs. wrong.
A sudden ascension to a national political platform? A rapid transformation to attack dog? It’s nothing new to presidential campaign politics.
Democrats are seizing on JD Vance’s pitch to do away with a bedrock part of the Affordable Care Act, saying it would cause costs for chronically ill people to spike.