Vice President JD Vance on Thursday branded MSNBC host Jen Psaki’s podcast remarks about his wife Usha as “disgraceful,” the latest flare-up in a long-running debate over how Democrats wield identity politics—proclaiming feminism and racial allyship while, critics say, demeaning conservative women and Black Americans who reject progressive orthodoxy.
Speaking to reporters on an official visit to Israel, Vance called himself “very lucky to have a wonderful wife” and said Usha, who joined him on the trip, “can speak for herself.” The couple’s three children—Ewan, 8; Vivek, 5; and Mirabel, 3—remained stateside.
Psaki, who served as Biden White House press secretary from 2021 to 2022 before joining MSNBC, made the comments Tuesday on the “I’ve Had It” podcast. She labeled Vance a “little Manchurian candidate” more ambitious than President Trump, then turned to Usha Vance, 39, a Yale Law graduate and former clerk to Chief Justice John Roberts and then-Judge Brett Kavanaugh.
“I always wonder what’s going on in the mind of his wife,” Psaki said. “Like, are you OK? Please blink four times. We’ll come over here. We’ll save you.”
She called Vance “scarier” than Trump—young, agile, a “chameleon” willing to say anything for power.
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The clip exploded online.
Trump communications director Steven Cheung accused Psaki of projecting personal issues; Fox contributor Joe Concha called her “not a good person.” Neither Psaki nor MSNBC has responded.
Republicans see a pattern.
During Trump’s first term, Melania Trump endured media speculation that she was trapped or coerced—claims never mirrored against Democratic spouses like Doug Emhoff. Hillary Clinton’s decision to stay with Bill Clinton after the Lewinsky scandal is either ignored or framed as strength.
The contradiction extends to race. Democrats position themselves as sole defenders of Black Americans, yet often react with condescension when Black conservatives succeed. Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, the first Black woman elected statewide in the commonwealth and a Marine veteran, has been a frequent target.
On October 22, Earle-Sears mocked MSNBC’s Morning Joe after the panel blamed Democratic gubernatorial candidate Abigail Spanberger’s polling struggles on American sexism. “Other countries have no problem electing women,” host Mika Brzezinski lamented. Earle-Sears, running against Spanberger, posted on X: “Who wants to tell them?”
Earle-Sears won her 2021 race decisively. After Joy Reid in 2022 questioned her authenticity as a Black leader, she fired back: “They don’t know what to do with Black people who think for themselves.”
A Jamaican immigrant and business owner, she has built a coalition across racial lines on education and public safety.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has faced decades of caricature as intellectually dependent despite a rigorous judicial record. Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) endured 2024 media skepticism about his personal life even as polls showed growing Black support for GOP economic messaging.
Usha Vance, daughter of Indian immigrants, graduated first in her Yale Law class section and litigated complex appeals before stepping back to raise her family.
JD Vance credited her in Hillbilly Elegy as his “Yale spirit guide.” Psaki’s rescue fantasy reduces a distinguished professional to a stereotype of subjugation.
Democrats have leaned hard on identity in recent cycles. Kamala Harris’s 2024 campaign highlighted her barrier-breaking status—first woman, first Black woman, first Indian-American vice president—while policy details often took a backseat. Yet when Republican women or minorities advance, their agency is questioned.
Psaki’s remarks come months after she declared “prayer is not freaking enough” after a Minnesota school shooting, drawing Vance’s earlier rebuke.