In a press conference held at the U.S. southern border, Senator JD Vance, a Republican vice presidential contender, hit back assertively at a CNN reporter’s query concerning former President Trump’s remarks regarding Vice President Kamala Harris’ racial identity. The comments had drawn attention as Trump raised questions about Harris’ race, saying that she “became a Black person” after numerous years of identifying as Indian.
Steve Contorno, a CNN correspondent, put forward the topic to Senator Vance who is a father of three biracial children. Contorno asked, “He [Trump] said that Vice President Harris is ‘all the sudden Black.’ As a father of three biracial children, do those comments give you pause at all?” Vance did not hesitate in his response.
This event unfolded during Vance’s visit to Cochise County, Arizona, where he criticized the border policies under Harris’ supervision. Vance, who has three biracial children with his wife Usha Vance, a daughter of Indian immigrants, did not shy away from addressing Contorno’s question.
“They don’t give me pause at all,” Vance asserted with conviction. “Look, all he said is that Kamala Harris is a chameleon. She goes to Georgia two days ago, she was raised in Canada, she puts on a fake southern accent. She is everything to everybody and she pretends to be somebody different depending on which audience she is in front of.”
Vance argued that it’s entirely rational for the former president to criticize such inconsistency. He went on to attack Harris on transformation in her campaigning strategy.
“She’s running as a tough on crime prosecutor even though she implemented open border policies. She’s saying that she wants to support the police, yet she wanted to defund the police just three years ago. It’s totally reasonable to call out the fact that she pretends to be somebody different depending on the audience she is talking to,” he continued.
Trump’s comment on Harris’ race came after ABC News’ Rachel Scott questioned him about whether he agreed with some Republican lawmakers labeling Harris as a “DEI,” diversity, equity and inclusion, hire. “I’ve known her for a long time, indirectly, not directly… and she was always of Indian heritage, and she was only promoting Indian heritage,” Trump expressed, adding, “I didn’t know she was Black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn Black.”
Vance’s comments added fuel to the recent scrutiny faced by Harris following criticism over her use of a Southern accent during an Atlanta rally. “You all helped us win in 2020 and we gonna do it again in 2024,” she told attendants, debuting a seemingly new accent that was quickly picked by online critics who accused Harris of pandering to her audience.
Racial identity and racial politics in the United States continue to generate heated debates, especially in the political sphere. The recent comments by former President Trump and the reaction of JD Vance exemplify the complexities and sensitivities that surround these discussions.
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