JD Vance underwent surgery before being sworn in as VP
JD Vance’s journey to the White House is quite an astounding one. The 40-year-old, from Middletown, Ohio, shot to relative stardom when he released his memoir Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis in 2016.
Following a career in the military and a short stint as a venture capitalist, he is now the Vice President of the United States. However, though Vance has had a successful political career thus far, his year began with some health issues. In January, he had to undergo surgery.
JD Vance’s childhood was not what many might have expected. Born in Middleton, Ohio, he grew up with his half-sister, Lindsay Vance. Their mother was a drug addict. When he was only a child, Vance’s mother and father divorced, and as the years went by, his mom showed violent tendencies.
Vance experienced many tragic days as a child, and in an interview with NPR, he touched on some incidents which he also wrote about in his 2016 memoir, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis. It later became a film by Ron Howard named Hillbilly Elegy, starring Amy Adams and Glenn Close.
n the NPR interview, Vance recalled the terrifying moment his mother threatened to crash their car, killing both her son and daughter.
“[I] hopped in the back seat to hide from her. And this got her really angry. And she stopped the car and pulled over and, I think, was going to start hitting me. And so I ran,” Vance said.
It ended with a lawsuit against his mother, before Vance and Lindsay were free. They were adopted by their grandparents, and while things weren’t necessarily easy, the half-siblings had each other.
JD Vance childhood
When his half-sister moved out and settled down with a husband and children, Vance tried to find his own way. He didn’t quite know what he wanted to do, and his sister felt bad for having left her half-brother behind. In his memoir, Vance touched upon Lindsay leaving home, and when she read it, she cried.
“I just laid in bed at night pulling apart and reading it and I would just cry,” she told NBC News. “I just felt so sorry for those kids and why I didn’t see more of him. … I should have been able to do more.”
Vance has made it clear that he never blamed Lindsay for leaving. “I just don’t think that Lindsay should feel guilty at all about it,” he told Kelly. “She had found her way and I was looking for my way out.”
As mentioned, Vance didn’t know what he wanted to do in life. He began hanging out with the wrong crowd and experimenting with drugs, but his grandmother soon rooted that out. When she found out, she decided to talk some sense into him – a moment he never will forget.
“She actually told me in a very menacing voice, ‘Look, JD, I’ll give you a choice. You can either stop hanging out with these kids, or I’ll run them over with my car. And trust me, no one will ever find out,’” Vance told NPR.
Vance graduated from Middletown High School in 2003, after which he signed up for the military. He enlisted and spent four years in the Marine Corps, serving as a combat correspondent in Iraq in 2005. His job was to write articles and take photos for the public affairs office, going by the name James Hamel. His last name was after his stepfather, Robert Hamel, and his mother renamed him James David Hamel.
“We all knew one day he would run for office”
Although he probably never thought of becoming a politician at the time, his military colleagues saw something of a politician in him: his fellow Marine friend, retired Maj. Shawn Haney, JD Vance’s officer in charge at Cherry Point, North Carolina, stated that he knew Vance once would walk through the doors of the White House.
“We all knew one day he would run for office,” he told CNN. “He always did a great job where he was, but always looked forward to the next thing.”
Vance wrote plenty about his military days and deployment in his 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis. He explained how lucky he was to have escaped any fighting, but even so, being in Iraq gave him a lot of insight into life.
In his book, Vance recalled a moment when he was sent out with a civil affairs unit to do community outreach in an Iraqi community, which he said was an important reminder of how lucky he was.
“When I joined the Marine Corps, I did so in part because I wasn’t ready for adulthood,” Vance wrote in his memoir. “I didn’t know how to balance a checkbook, much less how to complete the financial aid forms for college.”
“It was the Marine Corps that first gave me an opportunity to truly fail, made me take that opportunity, and then, when I did fail, gave me another chance anyway.”
JD Vance got the “holy grail” of positions within the Marine Corps public affairs
JD Vance returned to the Marine Corps Airfield in Cherry Point, North Carolina, after his deployment in Iraq. To his surprise, he became a media relations officer on home soil, a position usually reserved only for the most senior Marines. In that role, Vance perfected his skills with the media, as the job involved dealing with journalists. As per Stripes, the job has been considered the “holy grail” of Marine Corps public affairs with the “biggest audience and the highest stakes.”
“The experience taught me a valuable lesson: That I could do it. I could work 20-hour days when I had to. I could speak clearly and confidently with TV cameras shoved in my face. I could stand in a room with majors, colonels, and generals and hold my own. I could do a captain’s job even when I feared I couldn’t,” Vance wrote in his book.
Haney, who oversaw Vance as the officer in charge of public affairs at Cherry Point, said that when he returned, she put him on a job handling media relations, which was usually handled by an officer.
“I needed someone else to be that media relations officer. And my lieutenants were deploying, so next man up was JD Vance,” Haney said. “That was normally an officer’s job, and he was a corporal at the time.”
It became increasingly clear that Vance was built for the political world. Curt Keester, a Marine Corps veteran who served with Vance at Cherry Point, recalled when he and JD Vance traveled to New York City for Fleet Week. As they waited for the wreath-laying ceremony, media outlets approached them.
“As we’re standing there waiting, a broadcaster, a radio journalist, came up and started asking us questions, asked, ‘What are your thoughts?’ I gave what I considered to be a terrible answer,” Keester recalled, speaking to CNN. “He asked JD the same question, and right off the top of his head, he gives this eloquent Winston Churchill-like quote, and at that moment it dawned on me how cut out for public affairs he was. He was a natural.”
JD Vance – venture capitalist career
Vance used the GI Bill to attend Ohio State University, where he graduated in 2009 with a bachelor’s degree in political science and philosophy. He was a talented, hard-working student, which ultimately led him to Yale Law School, where he graduated with a law degree in 2013.
Vance wanted to tell his story, and did so through the 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis. The book became a huge success before being adapted into a Netflix movie in 2020. It’s safe to say Vance made quite a bit of money through book, and he would earn even more after becoming Donald Trump’s pick for vice president pick. According to the New York Times. Vance’s memoir sold over 750,000 copies in all formats in the weeks after Trump revealed his pick for VP.
The success of his book brought JD Vance a lot of attention. As a result, he decided to connect with investors, among them AOL co-founder Steve Chase, who gave him a job offer at his firm, Revolution, with a focus on investing in Midwestern startups. Two years later, Vance left the firm and founded Cincinnati-based Narya Ventures, but not long after, Vance turned his sights to Washington.
In 2018, Vance was considered a US Senate candidate. He declined to enter the race due to family reasons, but it was a different story three years later. As Republican Rob Portman, the junior US Senator from Ohio, decided not to seek reelection, Vance entered the discussion—and the race.
Vance placed first in the Republican primary in May 2022. In the November general election, he defeated Tim Ryan and was sworn in as Senator of Ohio on January 3, 2023. Donald Trump endorsed JD Vance at the time, but their relationship has not always been that good.
JD Vance once called Donald Trump a “moral disaster”
In 2017, Vance sent messages to a former friend from law school on X, formerly Twitter, which were verified by CNN. He spoke about how he opposed the American Health Care Act—the Republican plan to replace Obamacare—and called Trump a “moral disaster.” In 2016, in a conversation with Kentucky radio host Matt Jones, Vance also criticized Trump and his politics.
“I cannot stand Trump because I think he’s a fraud. Well, I think he’s a total fraud that is exploiting these people,” Jones said to Vance.
“I do too,” Vance replied. “I agree with you on Trump, because I don’t think that he’s the person. I don’t think he actually cares about folks. I think he just recognizes that there was a hole in the conversation and that hole is that people from these regions of the country, they feel ignored. They feel left out and they feel very frustrated. And I think of course in a lot of ways they feel that way for totally justifiable reasons. So it’s a problem that Trump has been the vessel of a lot of that frustration.”
JD Vance and Trump came together to find common ground later on, and today he is the Vice President of the United States of America. In August last year, shortly after announcing Vance as his VP pick, Trump said: “My interpretation is he’s strongly family-oriented. But that doesn’t mean that if you don’t have a family, there’s something wrong with that.”
Vance has now been the Vice President for some months. He came under heavy fire from many leaders worldwide after he lashed out against Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the White House some weeks ago, and what the next four years will bring, only time will tell.
JD Vance underwent surgery before inauguration
However, the start of his term at the White House didn’t start well, as Vance suffered from some health issues. On January 3, a little more than two weeks before the inauguration in Washington, it was announced that the then-Vice President-elect had undergone a “long-planned” minor surgery. The surgery was believed to take place at George Washington University Hospital in Washington, DC.
“The Vice President-elect is having long-planned, minor sinus surgery and will be back at work tomorrow,” his spokesperson William Martin told Fox at the time.
It didn’t take long before JD Vance was back to work, which indicates that the surgery was, luckily, successful. As he was sworn in as Vice President, the old man became the youngest vice president since Richard Nixon.
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