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Vice President JD Vance Hit back at critics who bashed his wife, Usha VanceTelling them they can “eat s***.”
“Let me be clear,” Vance said in an interview. open the stove Published on Monday. “Whoever attacks my wife, no matter what his name is only sake Or Nick FuentesCan eat***. This is my official policy as Vice President of the United States.”
Psaki, who was White House press secretary during President Joe Biden’s administration, raised questions on a podcast in October about whether Usha Vance might need to be protected from her husband.
“I always wonder what’s going through his wife’s mind,” said Saki, who presents a show on MS Now. “Like, are you okay? Please blink four times. Come here, we’ll save you.”
Fuentes, meanwhile, has called the other woman – the daughter of Indian immigrants – a “victory.” The far-right streamer, who openly identifies as a racist and expresses admiration for Adolf Hitler, has also labeled Vance a “race-traitor” for marrying her.
Nevertheless, Vance downplayed Fuentes’ importance in Republican politics.
“I think Nick Fuentes, his influence within Donald Trump’s administration and within a whole bunch of right-wing institutions, is greatly overestimated, and frankly, it’s exaggerated by people who want to avoid having a foreign-policy conversation about America’s relationship with Israel.” the Vice President told interviewer Sohrab Ahmari.
His comments echo comments he made earlier this month, when he told NBC News that he disagrees with Republicans who claim anti-Semitism.Exploding“On the right side.
The Vice President further said that anti-Semitism has no place in the GOP.
“Anti-Semitism and racial hatred of all forms have no place in the Conservative movement,” he said. “Whether you’re attacking someone because they’re white or because they’re black or because they’re Jewish, I think it’s disgusting.”
Debate over Israel and anti-Semitism takes center stage at Turning Point USA annual conference last week, which included Vance, Ben Shapiro and Tucker Carlson as speakers.
Shapiro accused some MAGA influencers of giving a platform to extremist voices who have promoted conspiracy theories about Charlie Kirk’s death. He took aim at Carlson, who has cast doubt on the government’s investigation.
Shapiro said, “The conservative movement … is under threat from fraudsters who claim to speak in the name of principle but in reality practice conspiracy and dishonesty.”
Carlson, who took the stage shortly after Shapiro, said GOP leaders should oppose the move to “deplatform and condemn,” adding that the rush to sideline those accused of bigotry is “the number one reason I voted for Donald Trump.”
The former Fox News personality, who said he supports Vance, said he is engaged in a “proxy war” for the future of the conservative movement.
Vance, meanwhile, sought to reduce division, saying he rejected the “purity test” on the right.
“I know some of you are discouraged by the infighting on various issues,” the Vice President said. “Don’t be discouraged. Wouldn’t you rather lead a movement of independent thinkers who occasionally disagree with George Soros than a bunch of drones who obey him?”