Primary Topic
This episode explores JD Vance's military service and political statements, particularly his controversial "childless cat lady" comment.
Episode Summary
Main Takeaways
- JD Vance's military service was as a civil affairs marine in Iraq, not a frontline combat role.
- Vance has shifted his stance from criticizing to supporting Donald Trump, reflecting broader shifts within the Republican party.
- Vance's comments about Kamala Harris and "childless cat ladies" have sparked controversy and may impact his favorability among voters.
- Military service has historically been an important aspect of presidential campaigns, though recent decades show a trend away from electing veterans to the presidency.
- The episode discusses the strategic implications of Vance's candidacy for the Republican party in the upcoming election.
Episode Chapters
1: Introduction and Background
The hosts introduce the episode's focus on JD Vance, discussing his recent selection as Trump's running mate and his military service. They provide context for his political career and his book, Hillbilly Elegy.
- Sarah McCammon: "Senator JD Vance has had a week on the campaign trail as former President Trump's new running mate."
2: Military Service Discussion
This chapter examines Vance's military service in detail, highlighting his role in Iraq and how it is perceived in the context of his political career.
- Quill Lawrence: "He was a civil affairs marine. So basically, he was a military journalist and escorting journalists around Iraq."
3: Political Controversies
The hosts explore Vance's controversial comments, particularly his "childless cat lady" remark, and discuss its reception and impact on his public image.
- Stephen Fowler: "So the implication there, which some have pointed out as being a racist dog whistle, is trying to say that his service in the Marine Corps and his business ethic is better."
Actionable Advice
- Verify the context of political statements before forming opinions.
- Explore the background and roles of political candidates to better understand their qualifications.
- Consider the impact of military service on leadership qualities.
- Analyze the evolution of political parties and their platforms over time.
- Reflect on how personal and political transformations can impact public perception and electability.
About This Episode
JD Vance has been careful not to claim he served in a combat role while deployed to Iraq as a Marine. But after a Harris campaign ad claimed Vance would be "loyal to Trump, not to our country," Vance responded to the vice president directly in an attack evoking racist trope about Black women.
"I served in the United States Marine Corps and I built a business," Vance said. "What the hell have you done other than to collect the government check for the past 20 years?"
This episode: national political correspondent Sarah McCammon, political reporter Stephen Fowler and veterans correspondent Quil Lawrence.
The podcast is produced by Casey Morell and Kelli Wessinger. Our intern is Bria Suggs. Our editor is Eric McDaniel. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.
People
JD Vance, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris
Books
Hillbilly Elegy
Content Warnings:
None
Transcript
Andrea
Bonjour. This is Andrea.
Benjamin
And this is Benjamin.
Andrea
And we're traveling on a train at 300 km an hour through the french countryside on our way to Marseille. And the first event of the Olympics, USA versus France in men's football.
Benjamin
You mean soccer.
Andrea
This podcast was recorded at 12:40 p.m.
Sarah McCammon
Eastern time on Monday, July 29, 2024.
Andrea
Things may have changed since it was recorded, but we'll be enjoying our first Olympics experience.
Benjamin
Au revoir.
Sarah McCammon
I was just in France, but I can't pronounce anything french.
Quill Lawrence
That was super cute.
Benjamin
It was so cute.
Sarah McCammon
Hey, there. It's the NPR politics podcast. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover the presidential campaign.
Stephen Fowler
I'm Stephen Fowler. I also cover the campaign.
Quill Lawrence
And I'm Quill Lawrence. I cover veterans in the VA.
Sarah McCammon
Senator JD Vance has had a week on the campaign trail as former President Trump's new running mate. And today we want to take a look at his message so far and how it's been landing with voters. Steven, you've been following Vance. What sorts of things is he talking about on the campaign trail?
Stephen Fowler
So, Sarah, there's a little bit of an introduction period going on. Even though JD Vance is a United States senator, he's relatively new to the gig. And so a lot of his speeches has been a little bit of a reintroduction of who he is, his backstory, and what he brings to this republican ticket. Now, just for the brief recap, he was born in Ohio. He rocketed to notoriety through this memoir, hillbilly Elegy, that painted a picture of a broken middle America and Appalachia ravaged by opioids and addiction and people losing their jobs. And he turned that into a bit of notoriety and is now a United States senator from Ohio. And he's been one of Trump's biggest defenders in Congress. And now on the campaign campaign trail, his message, in addition to, hi, I'm JD Vance is. And I'm here to be the torch bearer for Donald Trump's policies moving forward.
Sarah McCammon
Which, of course, is quite a reversal from several years ago when hillbilly Elegy came out and Vance was quite a critic of Trump.
Stephen Fowler
Absolutely. It's a 180 that some people might say is a little bit hypocritical but really shows the way the Republican Party is now under Donald Trump. It's not what you say in the past. I mean, Vance has also been telling people he's changed. He said all of these things about Trump before, before he was elected. But in the four years Donald Trump was in office and then the three plus years Joe Biden's been president, he's seen the light and had a change of heart. And so, you know, some people might say that's a weakness, but Vance is really using it to his strength of saying, look, even I was wrong about what Donald Trump means.
Sarah McCammon
Now, quill, another important part of that bio that Stephen just fleshed out for Senator Vance is his military service. It's part of his resume, something he's campaigned on and written about, a Marine we know. But what exactly was his role?
Quill Lawrence
Yeah, Vance went to Iraq during the year 2005.
He was a civil affairs marine. So basically, he was a military journalist and escorting journalists around Iraq. And so some people are making a point of this, that he was not a grunt. Hes what military people call a pogue, a person other than grunt, and that maybe Donald Trump thought he was picking a combat veteran who would have that sort of a credential. But theres a civilian military divide in this country, and very few people have first hand experience or even family experience of military service. And I think most veterans, they dont really care what role you had with the proviso that as long as youre not bragging about doing something you didnt do and Vance hasnt done that. He was in Iraq in a very tough year in Iraq. I can tell you personally that it was a very violent year. And a lot of the combat in Iraq and Afghanistan wasnt really any sort of a frontline combat gunfight. It was convoys getting blown up and mortars dropping anywhere on anyone. So I think veterans give Vance credit for going, and as he says, serving honorably.
And he has not been saying that he did anything other than what he did, which is go over and serve honorably.
Sarah McCammon
Now, Stephen, what are you hearing from Vance on the trail when he talks about his time in the military?
Stephen Fowler
To Gwill's point, there's not any embellishment of his service or trying to imply his role was something different than it was. But it has been something that has come up in his role as an attack dog against Vice President Kamala Harris, who is very soon going to be the democratic presidential nominee, replacing Joe Biden. And he said this a couple, couple times on the trail, where he implies that his service in the military kind of gave him more experience than Kamala Harris. Here's what he said on the trail.
JD Vance
Now, I want to say something about our likely opponent, Kamala Harris, because, you know, she said a couple of days ago that I showed no loyalty to the United States, that I have no loyalty to the United States?
Well, you know, I don't know, Kamala. I served in the United States Marine Corps and I built a business. What the hell have you done other than to collect a government check for the past 20 years?
Stephen Fowler
So the implication there, which some have pointed out as being a racist dog whistle of a black woman, you know, being on welfare, is trying to say that his service in the Marine Corps and his business ethic is better and that, you know, Kamala Harris has been just somebody who hasn't really worked that hard. But she was a prosecutor. She was a United States senator. She is the vice president of the United States. But it also gets at the kind of flat footedness of Vance's rollout coming at a time when it was kind of supposed to be running up the score against President Joe Biden and his selection was just further dominance of the Republican Party. But now with him out and Harris as the likely nominee, it's a completely different strategy.
Sarah McCammon
All right, we'll take a quick break, and we'll have more in just a moment.
And we're back, quill, part of the reason we're parsing out Vance's military service record is just because of how prominent military service has been in both democratic and republican presidential politics in the past, it used to be very common for presidents to have had a record of military service and often combat experience. But it's been a long time since we've had a president who's been in combat. Can you just quickly remind us of the history there?
Quill Lawrence
Sure. I mean, I can list some presidential candidates who had combat experience in the last 30 odd years, and they will all be losers. So we have to go back to George Hw Bush, who served in World War two.
We did elect him president, but only once. And then he lost to Bill Clinton, someone who avoided serving in Vietnam. And then Bob Dole, another world war two, a combat wounded veteran, lost to Bill Clinton, who avoided serving in Vietnam, and then Al Gore, who did serve in Vietnam, but also in a journalistic role. He was in the military, but as a military journalist, just like JD Vance. And he then lost to George W. Bush, someone who avoided serving in Vietnam. And then John Kerry, who had several purple hearts from serving in Vietnam, lost to George W. Bush, who avoided serving Vietnam. And then John McCain, who was a war hero from Vietnam, lost to. Well, Barack Obama was too young to have served in Vietnam. And then Hillary Clinton versus Trump. Well, Trump had avoided service, but it's not really a fair comparison because Hillary wasn't subject to the draft but then we get biden, Trump, and both of them avoided service in Vietnam. So essentially, Americans say that they like veterans and they value that, and maybe they do, but they don't really vote veterans into office, into the presidency.
Sarah McCammon
Hmm.
Now, Stephen, we cannot finish this conversation about Vance without talking about something else that's gotten very big online and also in the headlines. And that is, of course, the now famous, or maybe infamous comments Vance made several years ago about the vice president referring to her as a childless cat lady. So many memes about this. What did Vance say and how is it being received?
Stephen Fowler
So there has been a lot of past comments that JD Vance has made that's been resurfaced now that he's the vice presidential nominee for the Republican Party. One of those is rhetoric around, like, democratic policies around families and kind of republican policies around families. And there was this comment made about childless cat ladies as a derogatory term for women who vote for democratic politicians and have more progressive views but don't, in this view, contribute as much to society because they don't have children. And it has not been received well, to say the least.
It's part of this rollout of Vance that has just seen negative headline after negative headline after negative headline. It's been attacked by many democrats, from Harris to people like Minnesota governor Tim Walls, who's on the VP shortlist, as just an example of republicans being weird about policies and people and trying to cater to women and other people who vote whether they have children or not. And it's a thing that's led to JD Vance's favorability ratings among voters starting out very, very negative. I mean, there have been many polls and surveys done from variety of pollsters who find that more people have negative views about JD Vance and positive views. And even though it's still early on in his time as the VP nominee, it's probably going to be something hard to come back from.
Sarah McCammon
Yeah. And that's even true on his home turf right, in the Midwest and Appalachia, which is kind of why he was probably brought on the ticket. Right, to try to woo some of those swing voters in key states like Wisconsin and maybe even Pennsylvania.
Stephen Fowler
Well, and that's actually some of this mismatch we're seeing. JD Vance arguably was not brought onto the ticket to woo those swing voters, to appeal to the suburbanites and to be a more moderating message on the ticket. He's there to double, if not triple down on Trump's messaging. And, you know, if Donald Trump said something about childless cat ladies, it probably wouldn't be dominating the headlines the same way because of how long he's been around and the sort of reputation of rhetoric he's done. But JD Vance is not Donald Trump, and this is a case of that difference.
Sarah McCammon
Now, Trump was asked on a call that I was on last week with reporters whether he essentially regrets his pic of JD Vance, and he said that he didn't, that he was catching on. But as we've been discussing, Vance did have a wobbly first week. It seems like for both of you, what will you be watching from here?
Quill Lawrence
Yeah, I mean, in terms of his veteran status, we've been interviewing people about this, and one thing someone said is he's done a very good job so far about mentioning his military status but not overdoing it, not saying he did anything. He didn't doing a fine job. But one of the vets I talked to was saying you're up there in the spotlight and, and you're in front of a microphone and all these people, and there might be a temptation to start talking like you represent all veterans, and that would be something to resist because that's where you could really get yourself into trouble. But that said, vance hasn't done that.
Stephen Fowler
Yes, Sarah, something I'm looking at as this race begins to solidify and as we know who Kamala Harris will pick as her vice presidential nominee, that'll be a contrast with Vance is how this race will shape up. I mean, the democratic national convention is in just a couple of weeks, so there's going to be a lot of focus on Democrats contrast there. So what is Vance going to be doing in the meantime? I know this week he's traveling to some of the swing states that previously looked like they might have been buttoned up for Republicans like Arizona and Nevada. So it's going to be interesting to watch him respond to this time in the spotlight and to see if he can avoid having more childless cat lady news cycles.
Sarah McCammon
All right. Well, much to watch in the weeks to come, but we'll leave it there for right now. Please follow the show if you haven't, wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Sarah McCammon. I cover the campaign.
Stephen Fowler
I'm Stephen Fowler. I also cover the campaign.
Quill Lawrence
And I'm Quill Lawrence. I cover veterans in the VA. And.
Sarah McCammon
Thank you for listening to the NPR Politics podcast.