Carrie Underwood Performing at Donald Trump's 2025 Presidential Inauguration
If you knew anything about JD Vance before Donald Trump picked him to be his running mate in the 2024 presidential election, it's that he was raised by his tough-as-nails Mamaw.
Which, as the incoming vice president of the United States first detailed in his 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy, was what he called his impressively foul-mouthed maternal grandmother, Bonnie Eloise Blanton Vance. She took him and his older half-sister Lindsay in when their mom Beverly couldn't provide a stable home.
“Mamaw was in so many ways a woman of contradictions," the 40-year-old said at the Republican National Convention in July while formally accepting his party's nomination for VP. "She loved the Lord, ladies and gentleman. She was a woman of very deep Christian faith. But she also loved the F-word. I’m not kidding. She could make a sailor blush."
Hillbilly Elegy—which in addition to telling his family's story is a treatise on why rural, working-class communities like the one his Mamaw hailed from have been feeling left behind—put Vance on the map as an in-demand commentator on socioeconomic issues and political grievances during the 2016 presidential election.
And the book itself sprang from a discussion group on "social decline in white America" that he and his then-girlfriend (now wife) Usha Chilukuri organized in 2013 when they were students at Yale Law School.
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"I'm one of those guys who really benefits from having sort of a powerful female voice over his left shoulder saying, "Don’t do that, do that,'" Vance said on Megyn Kelly's podcast in 2020. Growing up, that was Mamaw's voice, but now, he added, "it's Usha."
In his book he also credited his wife for encouraging him "to seek opportunities that I didn't know existed."
And now, after only a few years in politics—having just been elected to the U.S. Senate in November 2022—the father of three will be one rung away from the presidency when he and Trump are sworn in on Jan. 20.
Here's a guide to the Vance family:
(Originally published Oct. 20, 2024, at 6 a.m. PT)