海角大神

By tapping JD Vance, Trump charts MAGA鈥檚 future

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Carolyn Kaster/AP
Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio and his wife, Usha Chilukuri Vance, arrive on the floor during the first day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum, Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee.

By naming Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance as his running mate,聽former President Donald Trump has picked an articulate young firebrand whose politics align closely with his own. It鈥檚 a ticket that reinforces Mr. Trump鈥檚 root-and-branch makeover of the Republican Party in his own image, one that Senator Vance, a self-described 鈥淣ever Trump guy鈥-turned-archloyalist, has come to embrace and embody: pugnacious, populist, and nationalist.聽

Mr. Vance, a first-term senator just shy of his 40th birthday,聽is one of the youngest vice presidential candidates in U.S. history. Should he be elected in November, he would become a next-generation leader of Mr. Trump鈥檚 鈥淢ake America Great Again鈥 movement and his presumed successor, given Mr. Trump鈥檚 advanced age and presidential term limits.聽聽

As the author of 鈥淗illbilly Elegy,鈥 his popular memoir about growing up in Ohio in a working-class family struggling with poverty and addiction,聽Mr. Vance could also help the GOP ticket in key Midwestern states that Mr. Trump lost in 2020. On his social media platform, Mr. Trump wrote Monday that his vice presidential pick would 鈥渂e strongly focused on the people he fought so brilliantly for, the American Workers and Farmers in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio, Minnesota, and far beyond.鈥 Of these, only Senator Vance鈥檚 home state of Ohio was carried by Mr. Trump in 2020.聽

Why We Wrote This

While many presidential candidates choose a running mate who will balance out some aspect of the ticket, Donald Trump picked a partner who above all will reinforce and perhaps extend his brand.

Whether vice presidential candidates in the modern era can deliver home states or regions or have much of an electoral impact overall is debatable, says Matt Grossmann, a political science professor at Michigan State University.聽What is clear, however, is that candidates who have little or no experience in government have become increasingly attractive to voters, who distrust the compromises involved in governing and prefer neophytes who haven鈥檛 blemished their records with hard choices.

鈥淎cross all elections, but especially in Republican primaries, there鈥檚 less of a premium, or almost a negative premium, for having political experience,鈥 says Professor Grossmann, who directs the Institute for Public Policy and Social Research.聽

From the Rust Belt to venture capitalism聽

James David Vance came to prominence with the success of his 2016 bestseller,聽鈥淗illbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis,鈥 about growing up in聽the Rust Belt town of聽Middletown, Ohio. Reviewers praised the book聽as a window into the distress experienced by deindustrialized regions in an era of bipartisan support in Washington for free-trade deals. Mr. Trump鈥檚 surprise election win and his evocation of communities that had been 鈥渓eft behind鈥 boosted the well-timed book, which was later turned into a film by director Ron Howard.聽

HarperCollins Publishers/AP/File
This book cover image released by HarperCollins Publishers shows "Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis" by J.D. Vance. Mr. Vance's book provides a vivid tour of the stark world he grew up in, set mainly in the Ohio city of Middletown that was hit hard by its dominant steelmaking company's decline, but also set in his family's home in the eastern Kentucky hills region.

Senator Vance served in the Marine Corps and then attended Ohio State University and Yale聽Law School, where a professor encouraged him to write a memoir.聽He worked for a venture capital firm in San Francisco, investing in tech companies, before moving back聽to Ohio, where he started a nonprofit working to tackle addiction and other issues. The nonprofit shut down after two years. Mr.聽Vance pivoted to politics after Ohio Sen. Rob Portman聽announced his retirement, creating an open seat in 2022.

In a crowded 2022 GOP Senate聽primary, Mr. Vance had the backing of Mr. Trump鈥檚 son, Donald Trump Jr., as well as Peter Thiel, a Silicon Valley billionaire known for his libertarian politics. Mr. Vance won the primary after Mr. Trump endorsed him toward the end over more experienced Ohio politicians, and the first-time candidate went on to a solid general election victory over his Democratic rival, Rep. Tim Ryan.

The endorsement came after Mr. Vance apologized for his past criticisms of Mr. Trump, including comparing him in 2016 to Adolf Hitler. He said Mr. Trump turned out to be a 鈥済reat president鈥 who had proved him and other doubters wrong. He has indicated that he would have made a different decision on Jan. 6, 2021, than then-Vice President Mike Pence, whose refusal to bend to Mr. Trump鈥檚 pressure to challenge the certification of the election was part of what fueled the riot at the U.S. Capitol.

鈥淚f I had been vice president, I would have told the states like Pennsylvania, Georgia, and so many others that we needed to have multiple slates of electors, and I think the U.S. Congress should have fought over it from there,鈥 Senator Vance聽聽ABC鈥檚 George Stephanopoulos earlier this year.

What Vance brings to the ticket

To Mr. Trump, who never held public office before he became president, Senator Vance鈥檚 relative lack of experience in government was not disqualifying. Unlike in 2016, when Mr. Trump chose former Indiana Governor Pence as his running mate to bolster his standing with evangelical conservatives,聽Mr. Trump isn鈥檛 trying to win over skeptical GOP constituencies.聽

In fact, the聽choice of Senator Vance indicates the opposite. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not about outreach,鈥澛爏ays Joel Goldstein, professor emeritus of law at St. Louis University and an expert on the vice presidency. 鈥淚t鈥檚 totally reinforcing.鈥澛

This reflects Mr. Trump鈥檚 current strength 鈥 both within his party and in the race against President Joe Biden. Other candidates vetted for vice president included Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, another Trump-critic-turned-ally, and Gov. Doug Burgum of North Dakota, who ran in the GOP presidential primary.聽

鈥淔or a candidate that鈥檚 winning this race and seems to have already unified the party, that鈥檚 a smart strategy,鈥澛爏ays GOP pollster Robert Blizzard in a text message, calling it a 鈥渟afe鈥 choice. 鈥淰ance will not help Trump win over new voters, but he also will not alienate any part of his winning coalition.鈥澛

Charles Rex Arbogast/AP
A sign adds in handwriting the name of the Republican vice presidential candidate, Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio, during the Republican National Convention, Monday, July 15, 2024, in Milwaukee.

Presidential nominees often pick running mates who help balance out the ticket in some way. But as a former president, Mr. Trump had more leeway to name a vice president based on loyalty and personal chemistry. Senator Vance appears to have won him over, in part, by being a deft political communicator, as well as a channel to wealthy tech donors, a constituency that often leans Democratic.聽

But his main calling card may have been his willingness to play attack dog against Mr. Trump鈥檚 enemies. After Saturday鈥檚 assassination attempt against Mr. Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, and before any information about the shooter was known, Mr. Vance聽:聽鈥淭he central premise of the Biden campaign is that President Donald Trump is an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs. That rhetoric led directly to President Trump鈥檚 attempted assassination.鈥

That reaction to the shooting put him at the outer edge of responses by Republican politicians, who mostly called for calm and refuted political violence, says Professor Goldstein. Mr. Trump鈥檚 decision to pick Mr. Vance as his running mate 鈥渞uns strongly counter to any talk of unity or dialing down the rhetoric. Vance is the one who most clearly mirrors Trump鈥檚 MAGA approach.鈥澛

Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters
Republican presidential nominee and former President Donald Trump and Republican vice presidential nominee J.D. Vance point to the stage during Day 1 of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, July 15, 2024.

Foreign policy contrasts with old-guard GOP

Perhaps the starkest contrast with other potential vice presidents is in foreign policy: Senator Vance is broadly skeptical about U.S. military interventions abroad, unlike the older guard of internationalists in his caucus, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.聽

During his brief spell in Congress, Mr. Vance has not passed any significant legislation, but has focused on foreign policy and the Trump agenda of economic protectionism and restrictions on immigration. He聽has opposed U.S. aid to Ukraine and聽has said Ukraine should cede territory seized by Russian troops in 2022 in order to end the war. He argues that an open-ended U.S. commitment to Ukraine, a smaller military power than Russia, is a recipe for prolonged war, not peace.聽

Opposition to military commitments with foreign allies is a political stance with a long history in the Republican Party, says Edward Miller, a political historian at Northeastern University. Its standard-bearer in the 1940s was another Ohio senator, Robert Taft, who opposed U.S. involvement in NATO.聽

鈥淰ance is a throwback to that Robert Taft, 鈥楢merica First鈥 anti-internationalism,鈥 says Professor Miller, who studies far-right political movements. In 1952, Taft sought the GOP presidential nomination, but lost out to Dwight Eisenhower.

In interviews, Senator Vance has praised Mr. Trump for rejecting the economic orthodoxy on free trade and immigration that has mostly benefited elites at the expense of working families. He told The New York Times鈥 Ross Douthat that 鈥渃enter-left liberals who are doing very well, and center-right conservatives who are doing very well,聽 about how much their success is built on a system that is not serving people who they should be serving.鈥

As聽was made abundantly clear at the opening of the Republican National Convention on Monday night,聽as vice president Mr. Vance would play second fiddle to the main act, a politician who has perhaps the world鈥檚 greatest brand recognition, for better or worse. The success of presidential tickets rarely turns on the running mate, says Professor Goldstein 鈥 but it could matter in a close contest. 鈥淭he impact tends to be marginal, but many of our elections are decided at the margins.鈥

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