In a previously unreported interview, JD Vance ranted in 2021 that the country has become a “dangerous place to live” because of childless elites. Vance’s remarks were met with skepticism from a seemingly unlikely source: Jenn Pellegrino, a conservative Newsmax host who was interviewing him.
Vance, who was previously a conservative commentator, has frequently criticized people for being childless. Media Matters has documented numerous instances of such remarks made in right-wing media, and senior fellow Matt Gertz has noted that the right-wing media bubble has incentivized politicians like Vance to make toxic remarks.
In one instance, Vance attacked people “who can't have kids” because they “passed the biological period when it was possible” as “miserable” people who pursue “racial or gender equity” to give “their life meaning.” Those comments, which were first reported by Media Matters, resurfaced over the weekend and increased scrutiny on Trump’s running mate.
While right-wing media outlets have largely been a safe space, some conservative hosts haven’t bought into his rhetoric. In July, Fox News’ Trey Gowdy said before interviewing him that “some of the finest people I know don’t have children.”
Another instance occurred on July 30, 2021, when Vance, then a Senate candidate, appeared on the now-defunct show Cortes & Pellegrino on the pro-Trump Newsmax TV. Former Trump adviser Steve Cortes and conservative reporter Jenn Pellegrino hosted the show.
Cortes started off by praising Vance “for being bold enough to say things that I think a lot of people on the right believe but are too scared to say because they’re scared of the blowback, and you clearly are not.”
Cortes then shifted to discussing “credentialed elites,” whom he described as “childless” people who “don't encounter families very much, and yet they have an incredible outsize influence on families all over the United States that they're totally separated from.”
Vance agreed, falsely claiming that Vice President Kamala Harris doesn’t have children (she’s a stepmother) and arguing that “we're being ruled by a childless elite.”
He went on: “And it's not just they don't have kids — of course a lot of people don't have kids for different reasons — it's that they're proud of the fact they don't have kids. … They look down on people who invest their time and their future in their children.” He concluded: “That is a dangerous place to live as a country.”