J.D. Vance refuses to admit Trump lost the 2020 election and suggests that he and Trump will separate their families through mass deportations
After going through the past few months put your foot in your mouth, smearing Haitian immigrantsand given the most uncomfortable feeling when trying to interact with my fellow Americans, J.D. Vance made an almost successful impression of a human being on Tuesday night vice presidential debate vs Tim Walz. Of course, that’s because the threshold was essentially set as low as possible and the Ohio Senator didn’t use phrases like “postmenopausal women” or screaming “they are eating dog meat” to moderator. But that doesn’t mean Vance doesn’t have some extremely disturbing things to say about how he and Donald Trump plans to run the country, and also made it clear that if they do not win in November, the duo will not leave quietly.
For one thing, the VP of hope refused to answer the question about family breakdown due to deportation when the moderator asked Margaret Brennan “Would you deport parents who entered the United States illegally and separate them from any of their children born in the United States?”
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Asked a second time, Vance again declined to take the opportunity to confirm that he and Trump have no intention of separating families, including those with citizen children:
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When the topic turned to abortion, the Republican Senator blatantly lied about his previous comments: declare he “never supported a national ban.” But in fact, Vance did it, speak in 2022: “I definitely want abortion to be illegal nationwide.” At the same time, he stated on his campaign website that he is “100% pro-life” and that he supports “eliminating abortion”; as CNN notes, “the words remained on his website until Trump selected him as his running mate in July.”
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Perhaps some of Vance’s most offensive comments on the debate came when the subject of January 6 and Donald Trump is a threat to democracy has emerged. That’s when the future Vice President—who only received approval for the job in the first place because the last person in his position was almost died doing it—claimed that Trump “said that on January 6, protesters must demonstrate peacefully. And on January 20, what happened? Joe Biden became president, Donald Trump left the White House,” conveniently not mentioning everything that happened in between.