“The View” exposes the big flaw in JD Vance’s act
来源:Salon · 作者:Sophia Tesfaye · · 分类:US NewsFor years, the MAGA universe has treated ABC’s “The View” as the ultimate cultural bogeyman — a daytime coven of out-of-touch liberal media elites, political hacks, and, in the infamous framing of Vice President JD Vance, the epicenter of the “childless cat lady” ethos. President Donald Trump has routinely denigrated its hosts as “degenerates” and “dumb women,” while his regulatory henchmen, including FCC Chair Brendan Carr, have weaponized state pressure, threatening the show’s equal-time exemptions in an overt attack on the free press. Yet, there was Vance on Tuesday, pulling up a chair at the iconic hexagonal table to hawk his book, burnish his credentials as the heir apparent to the MAGA throne and attempt a high-stakes political rebrand.
Ostensibly, Vance’s appearance was part of a promotional tour for his new memoir, “Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith,” which, as Amanda Marcotte explains for Salon, is already a flop. But instead of a triumphant crossover breakthrough, his time on “The View” exposed the massive, fatal flaw at the center of his political identity.
Among conservative commentators, Vance is frequently praised as a devastating weapon against the press, a politician uniquely capable of shutting down hostile reporters, reframing uncomfortable topics and shaming anyone who steps out of line.
They mistake his slick evasion for effectiveness. In a combative setting, Vance can dismantle an argument, redirect a question and put his interlocutor on the defensive. But in a setting that demands connection, he can appear condescending or insincere. On “The View,” he was calm, self-deprecating at times and careful not to alienate outright. He even offered a mild mea culpa, calling his infamous “childless cat ladies” comment “boneheaded.” It was a tactical concession clearly designed to soften his image with women.
JD Vance’s sad book tour shows why his 2028 hopes are fadingThe hosts of “The View” did not allow him to coast on his carefully rehearsed charm. Throughout the interview, the hosts repeatedly forced him into a position he cannot easily escape: defending Trump while simultaneously trying to present himself as something more palatable. He was forced to awkwardly shield Trump from outrage over lavish expenditures — including millions of taxpayer and party dollars spent on a White House ballroom, a gargantuan new monument arch in Washington, D.C., and an extravagant Ultimate Fighting Championship birthday bash — all while everyday Americans continue to struggle with the crunch of rising prices. Take the exchange over Trump’s remark about loving inflation. Vance attempted to reinterpret the comment and soften its edges. Joy Behar cut through it with a simple question: are you his interpreter or his vice president? It was a devastatingly concise critique of Vance’s entire project.
Instead of a triumphant crossover breakthrough, his time on “The View” exposed the massive, fatal flaw at the center of his political identity.
The same pattern repeated across topics. On immigration, when confronted with reports of deaths in ICE custody and inhumane conditions for detained children, Vance defaulted to the need for “balance” and chalked up complaints to the unpleasantness of law enforcement. Ana Navarro’s response cut deeper than any partisan jab. “I would urge you as a Christian and as a father to visit those detention centers,” Navarro said, staring directly at him. It was the kind of moral challenge Vance struggles to meet, because it requires him to move beyond rhetoric into accountability. To witness a man who just wrote a book about Christian grace describe the systemic mistreatment of migrant children as an inherently “unpretty process” was a stark reminder of the moral compromises required to stay in Trump’s good graces.
When she says she doesn't Trust in Trump pic.twitter.com/sC5IYrtqzl
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 16, 2026
As the interview progressed, Vance’s vaunted media savvy quickly morphed into something far more grating: a combination of condescension and profound insincerity. Sara Haines pressed him on this profound philosophical inversion, noting that Vance’s initial horror about Trump’s 2016 presidential run wasn’t merely a disagreement over policy, but a deep concern regarding “what Christians were willing to excuse” in pursuit of political power. “That’s the part I can’t get past,” Haines told him. “What are you willing to excuse in the name of power?”
Spring savings are here!
Support Salon’s bold journalism. Annual members save 58%Perhaps the most telling moment came when Whoopi Goldberg raised the issue of race, asking what Black Americans had done to deserve being stigmatized by the administration. Vance’s response — “What exactly are you talking about?” — was met with boos from the audience. Sunny Hostin followed with specifics about dismantled voting districts and sidelined leaders, grounding the critique in reality that Vance could not easily wave away. Here again, the problem was not that Vance lacked an answer. It was that his answer did not engage with the premise of the question. He treated it as a debate point to be managed, deflecting to the right-wing canard of Black-on-Black crime, rather than a concern to be addressed.
What “The View” revealed is that Vance’s much-discussed “pivot” is less a transformation than a performance. He can toggle between modes — attack dog in conservative media, measured moderate in mixed company — but the transitions are visible. Nothing landed as spontaneous. Nothing felt unguarded.
Start your day with essential news from Salon.
Sign up for our free morning newsletter, Crash Course.
The idea that you can spend years dismissing a platform and then step onto it, smile, soften your tone and win people over underestimates the public. It assumes voters are responding only to style, not substance. But not even a well-executed pivot can erase a record. And the vice president’s attempted reinvention keeps colliding with his current job description.
Vance explained in other interviews with Fox News and Glenn Beck that he agreed to go on “The View” to reach even one in ten viewers who are persuadable. That’s a reasonable theory of outreach. But outreach only pays off if what you’re saying actually survives contact with pushback. “The View” is not just a television show; it is a microcosm of the electorate Vance needs and does not yet have. It is disproportionately female, politically diverse within a broadly liberal frame and deeply attuned to questions of character and intent. His net favorability among women is underwater by 20 points. A single appearance was never going to fix that. But it did clarify why the problem exists.
Read more
about JD Vance
- JD Vance goes all in on immigrant fraud hoax
- JD Vance can’t escape the Iran war
- MAGA and Putin bet big on Hungary’s election — it backfired
The post “The View” exposes the big flaw in JD Vance’s act appeared first on Salon.com.
原文链接:https://www.salon.com/2026/06/17/the-view-exposes-big-flaw-jd-vance-pivot/-
Lee Andrews faces return to prison in 14 days after 'talking himself out'West Asia LIVE: Trump, Iran’s President sign deal to end West Asia warAlbanese winds back tax hikes for small businesses and trustsEngland fans delighted by win over Croatia in opening World Cup matchModernizing Meeting Spaces: How Agentic Control and Intelligent Framing Redefine Hybrid WorkThe coming storm against MAGANot Just Netflix, Indians Are Now Subscribing To Furniture, Home AppliancesUS, Iran sign peace deal, pact takes ‘immediate effect’The Politics of the Big GamePremier pleads with teens to stop ‘malicious and evil’ shootings amid Sydney arrests
Next:Trump calls Brazil 'politically difficult'; Lula says he should learn about 'civilized elections'
- ·JetBlue Pushes Deeper Into Fort Lauderdale, Shrinks in Newark and LaGuardia
- ·The devastatingly affective tragedy of Main Vaapas Aaunga’s climax
- ·Bank set to hold interest rates after steady inflation and Iran peace deal
- ·USA legend Charlie Davies reacts to Mike Grella sledging the Socceroos
- ·Trump suggests Israel in no place to criticize Iran deal for not joining 2020 strike on Soleimani
- ·Canada’s soccer players call for action from companies, government over online abuse
- ·Trump says he ‘could understand’ Canada’s cap on Chinese electric vehicle imports
- ·Teenager dies after being thrown from horse-drawn carriage in NYC’s Central Park
- ·California says AT&T lied to FCC in attempt to shut off old phone network
- ·Shubman Gill-Ishan Kishan stand offers a glimpse into India's 2027 ODI WC blueprint
- ·Not Just Netflix, Indians Are Now Subscribing To Furniture, Home Appliances
- ·Trump blows through his red lines to justify interim peace deal with Iran
- ·Waze is sending drivers World Cup scores behind the wheel – here’s how to turn it off
- ·FIFA World Cup 2026 | Uzbekistan vs Colombia LIVE updates: Group K match gets underway
- ·Climate-driven heat in India’s textile factories stifles workers but coolers and ventilation help
- ·How Max Plath became Queensland's newest Origin cult hero
- ·Illegal miners adapt their strategies in Yanomami Amazon territory
- ·‘We’ve all just got to thank Australia’: Socceroos seeking next win
- ·Security Operations In Manipur Intensified Amid Protests Over Recent Deaths
- ·'Extremely dangerous' cancer care delays due to lack of staff
- ·Crypto Clipper Campaign Abuses Fake Reviews, AI Narrators, and VirusTotal Comments
- ·Inquiry into abuse at Muckamore to publish its findings
- ·Ronaldo left in Messi’s shadow as insipid Portugal held by DR Congo
- ·‘We’ve all just got to thank Australia’: Socceroos seeking next win
- ·Baltimore Mayor voices support for Apple Towson workers amid store closure controversy
- ·Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump claims Moscow losing more troops than Kyiv as he admits Putin on ‘the offensive’
- ·Fewer in new poll say they're proud of being American
- ·Europe explores energy security alternatives after Iran war's turmoil
- ·Iconic Chinatown restaurant to open in a new space
- ·'Extremely dangerous' cancer care delays due to lack of staff
- ·AI Isn’t Ignoring Airlines. It Just Can’t Read Their Fares.
- ·Protesters wearing keffiyehs link arms to try to block people from attending Tommy Robinson's visit to Oxford Union - as pubs board windows and close early amid warnings of 'unrest'
- ·The ‘great man’ era is passing away
- ·Inquiry into abuse at Muckamore to publish its findings
- ·The best math lesson for children might be happening at your kitchen table, shows study
- ·Shubman Gill-Ishan Kishan stand offers a glimpse into India's 2027 ODI WC blueprint
