Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Old JD Vance Ad Resurfaces After Brutally Blunt X Community Note About His Mother Goes Viral

Screenshot of J.D. Vance
JD Vance for Senate Inc.

In a campaign ad from 2022, JD Vance tried to connect his mother's drug addiction to the border crisis and was fact-checked by a blunt X community note.

Former President Donald Trump's running mate J.D. Vance was mocked online after his 2022 "Are You a Racist?" Senate campaign ad resurfaced and an X Community Note offered a concrete example of how he's twisted facts about his own upbringing for political gain.

Vance rose to national prominence with the publication of his 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy, which shot to the top of the bestseller lists and made him for a time the de-facto spokesperson for rural America.


The book has been highly praised by the right wing for Vance's insights on Trump's ascent within the GOP, as well as his reflections on the Appalachian values of his Kentucky family and the social and economic challenges of his hometown, Middletown, Ohio, where his maternal grandparents moved when they were young.

But he nonetheless omitted the facts behind his mother's drug addiction by linking it to the ongoing humanitarian crisis at the southern border that has galvanized so-called "law and order" Republicans who've asserted that migrants and cartels are funneling drugs into the country and contributing to a record number of overdose deaths.

In the ad, he states:

"Are you a racist? Do you hate Mexicans? The media calls us racists for wanting to build Trump's wall. They censor us but it doesn't change the truth: Joe Biden's open border is killing Ohioans with more illegal drugs and more Democratic voters pouring into this country."
"This issue is personal. I nearly lost my mother to the poison coming across our border. No child should grow up an orphan."
"I'm J.D. Vance and I approve this message because whatever they call us, we will put America first."

However, a Community Note below the ad presented a crucial fact Vance omitted:

"JD Vance’s mother utilized her position as a nurse to steal prescribed medication from her patients, not because of undocumented immigrants."

You can see the ad and the Community Note below.

During Vance's childhood, as recounted in Hillbilly Elegy, his mother, Beverly, struggled with substance abuse and addiction, sometimes allegedly becoming abusive towards him. Eventually, Vance was placed in the care of his grandparents, James and Bonnie Vance.

Beverly worked as a nurse, which gave her easy access to prescription medications that she eventually began to abuse. Her substance abuse created a dysfunctional environment and Vance said he was frequently the target of her aggression. When J.D. was 12 years old, Beverly was arrested, an event that left him terrified but also somewhat "relieved."

In fact, he once told conservative pundit Megyn Kelly that at the time he "was just really sad and felt very lonely because I’m sitting in the back of this police cruiser, they just arrested my mom, the relief of having survived another day was gone and then I just wanted someone to come and take me away.”

When it comes to the way he tried to twist the tale to advance his desired political narrative, Vance was swiftly called out.




Vance's lie should come as no surprise given his previous identity as a "Never Trumper" who once described Trump as "America's Hitler" and "cultural heroin" unable to regard the needs of the working class.

Additionally, he referred to Trump as an “idiot” in tweets that have since been deleted. During an August 2016 NPR interview, he mentioned that he might consider voting for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton if he believed Trump had a chance of winning.

Prior to his Senate campaign, Vance apologized for previously calling Trump “reprehensible," telling CNN in 2021 that "I regret being wrong about the guy" while declaring that Trump was a good president.

Vance was named Donald Trump's running mate on Monday and gave the keynote address accepting the VP nomination at the Republican National Convention last night.

More from News/2024-election

Melania Trump
Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

Melania Just Held A Bizarre Press Conference To Debunk 'False Smears' Related To Jeffrey Epstein—And Everyone Had The Same Response

First Lady Melania Trump had everyone thinking the same thing after she held a bizarre press conference on Thursday to deny that she had anything but casual ties to Jeffrey Epstein, the late disgraced financier, pedophile, sexual abuser, and sex trafficker.

Mrs. Trump publicly denied any ties to convicted sex offenders Epstein and his procurer Ghislaine Maxwell, saying claims linking her to Epstein are “lies” meant to damage her reputation. She said she met her husband, President Donald Trump at a New York City party in 1998 and did not meet Epstein until 2000, contradicting a witness statement in the Epstein files that alleges Epstein introduced the couple.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sarah McBride; Nancy Mace
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images; Heather Diehl/Getty Images

Dem Rep. Sarah McBride Perfectly Shames Nancy Mace For Her Transphobic Response To McBride's Condemnation Of Trump

Delaware Democratic Representative Sarah McBride pushed back at South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace after Mace responded with transphobia to McBride's criticism of President Donald Trump's genocidal threat to kill the "whole civilization" of Iran.

Trump has insisted that God supports his war on Iran and declared—before a provisional ceasefire was announced—that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again" ahead of a deadline to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges that legal scholars and world leaders have said would constitute war crimes.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of JD Vance
News Nation

JD Vance Dragged After Making Bizarre 'Skydiving' Analogy About His Wife To Explain Iran Ceasefire Deal

Vice President JD Vance had critics raising their eyebrows after he used a bizarre analogy about his wife–Second Lady Usha Vance—going skydiving while attempting to explain the United States' position on Iran's right to enrich uranium.

Vance addressed reporters on the tarmac at Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport as he left Hungary, where he had voiced the Trump administration’s support for Prime Minister Viktor Orbán only days before the country’s elections.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @mikemancusi's Instagram video
@mikemancusi/Instagram

Comedian Explains How Millennials' Midlife Crises Are Different From Past Generations—And He's Spot On

Don't make promises you cannot keep, unless your goal is to hurt someone.

Millennials know that practically better than anyone. They were fed a long and impassioned series of advice, hyper-focused on the importance of getting a college degree in order to find a good job. They were also force-fed traditionalist ideals of getting married, having kids, and buying a nice house with the money they'd be making from that great job, of course.

Keep ReadingShow less