Usha Vance Addresses Possibility Of Becoming First Lady In 2028
Second Lady Usha Vance is taking it day by day.
During a recent interview, the second lady responded to speculation her husband, JD Vance, is angling to be the next Republican presidential nominee.
“People do ask about it,” Usha Vance told Meghan McCain on her podcast “Citizen McCain.”
While she acknowledged the possibility of her husband, Vice President JD Vance, running for president, Usha Vance emphasized that she moved into the Washington area with “no intention whatsoever” of considering his political future. However, she pointed out that she also had no intention of being involved in politics four years ago.
For now, Usha Vance said she is focused on the present, though she did not completely dismiss the idea.
“My attitude is that this is a four-year period where I have a set of responsibilities to my family, to myself, to obviously the country and that’s really what I’m focused on,” Usha Vance said. “I’m not plotting out next steps or really trying for anything after this.”
She continued, “In a dream world, eventually Iโll be able to live in my home and kind of continue my career and all those sorts of things. And if that happens in four years, I understand. If that happens in some other point in the future, I understand. Just sort of along for the ride and enjoying it while I can.”
As vice president, Vance is considered the political frontrunner to be the Republican nominee for president in 2028.
“I really am just not focused on politics. I’m not focused on the midterm elections in 2026, much less the presidential election in 2028. When we get to that point, I’ll talk to the president. We’ll figure out what we want to do,” Vance told Lawrence Jones in a “Fox & Friends” exclusive interview in April.
In March, Tucker Carlson, co-founder of the Daily Caller News Foundation, forecasted that Vice President JD Vance will emerge as the Republican Partyโs presidential nominee in 2028. Carlsonโs statement, made on the โVINCEโ podcast, sheds light on the increasing influence of Vance within the party and the likelihood of him becoming the successor to Donald Trumpโs political legacy.
Despite Donald Trump declining to endorse Vance during a February Fox News interview, where he stated there were โa lot of very capable peopleโ in the Republican Party, Carlson is optimistic that the former president will ultimately support the vice president in 2028. Trumpโs comment, which may have seemed like a rejection to some, was interpreted by Carlson as a temporary stance, not a definitive end to any future support.
โI think people want to leave a legacy, all of us do, and great men especially do. And the only person in the entire Republican Party from my position whoโs capable of carrying on the Trump legacy and expanding it, making it what it should fully be, is JD Vance,โ Carlson explained. He also praised Vanceโs loyalty to Trump and his profound service, indicating that Trumpโs current withholding of endorsement may have been a strategic decision.














