Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) addressed questions from a cross-section of voters during a NewsNation town hall moderated by Chris Cuomo in the key swing state of Michigan on Thursday. Vance spoke on a range of topics, including abortion, the economy, and illegal immigration.
The session also included a call-in from former President Donald Trump, the Republican presidential nominee. He defended criticism of tariffs, disputing claims by experts that they would be passed onto consumers. “I know that’s a criticism that’s been out there.
Here’s why I don’t buy it,” Vance said, going on to say that the experts offering those criticisms are the same ones who said outsourcing manufacturing to China and Mexico would lead to greater prosperity. “They were wrong. It was a mistake to do that .
.. a lot of Americans can’t afford a good life—can’t earn a middle-class wage—because we listen to some of those very same people,” he said.
“But the more immediate reason why I don’t buy that argument is because, look, Donald Trump was already president. These aren’t just plans or proposals. He was already president .
.. and he did use tariffs,” Vance said.
He suggested the U.S. military could be directed towards organized crime cartels operating at the southern border, placing them on par with the U.
S. response to terrorism. “If we’re going to use the U.
S. military against criminal organizations in the Middle East, why wouldn’t we use it against a criminal organization that’s one our southern border that’s killing almost 100,000 of our citizens every single year,” Vance said. Vance also clarified his position on illegal immigration, saying that not all illegal immigrants are criminals but that they all need to go through the proper channels to enter the United States.
“But we have let in far too many illegal immigrant criminals, too many criminal gangs, because of what we’ve been doing with our border policy for the last three-and-a-half years,” he added. On the criticism he received for discussing claims that made headlines in September about Venezuelan nationals allegedly eating pets in Springfield, Ohio, Vance said that it is important for him to listen to voters who come to him with their problems. “Now, do I think that the media certainly got distracted on the housing crisis and the health crisis and the crisis in the public schools by focusing on the eating the dogs and the cats things? Yeah, I do.
Do I wish that I had been better in that moment? Maybe,” he said. “Just look at the campaign schedule Trump has kept compared to his Democratic opponents. He’s doing like three public events for every event Kamala Harris has done,” he said.
In response to a viewer question about whom he would consult for advice if he were president, Vance said he would first turn to his wife, Usha, but added that Trump would “be a good president for all four years.” He also noted, “That’s one of the reasons why you have a vice president, is for those unforeseen circumstances.” He suggested that there is a division between those who feel the American dream is attainable and those who feel it’s becoming unattainable.
“Maybe the way to heal that divide is, you know, lower prices and make the American dream more affordable again. Give people good job opportunities because if people are doing well, and we’re all doing well together, then we’ll have much less division in our country,” he said. Vance described the criticism of Trump as someone promoting division as a media concoction, adding that while he initially believed it in 2015, he later came to see things differently.
Pointing to Trump’s rallies, Vance said they were attended by people “from all walks of life” who want American prosperity. “I really do think that Donald Trump wakes up every day, and whether you’re living in inner-city Detroit or rural Michigan, he thinks ‘how can I make your life better and more prosperous?’ And I really do think that’s the way to heal the divisions,” Vance said. The vice presidential candidate urged Americans not to lose friends and family over political disagreements, saying that it’s not worth it.
He pledged to set an example by holding events while in office in which he'll take questions from people who do and don’t disagree with him politically. “If you’re discarding a lifelong friendship because somebody else votes for the other team, then you’ve made a terrible, terrible mistake and you should do something different,” he said. Vance said that some people he knows may not want to vote for him and that “doesn’t make them bad people.
” This involves making it less expensive to have and raise children and lower the costs of childcare. He said he’s pro-family and that the outcome of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade meant that states make their own laws on the matter, which he said is a “reasonable compromise.
” Elaborating on his personal views on abortion, he reflected on the lower socioeconomic neighborhoods where he grew up. He said he saw young women experience unexpected pregnancies and they chose to terminate them because they felt they had no other option. “I think that very often what we miss on my side, what we miss as Republicans, is that this is not people who are enthusiastic about having [an] abortion,” Vance said.
““Sometimes they feel like that’s the only option available to them.” “And so what we ought to do, is to make it easier to choose life to begin with. If we stop the crazy medical bills that young women come home with when they have a baby, if we make it easier to access childcare, I actually think one will earn the trust of the American people and we will be pro-family in the fullest sense of the word.
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Politics
JD Vance’s Michigan Town Hall: 5 Key Moments
Sen. JD Vance promoted former President Donald Trump’s policies on tariffs and border security in the key swing state.