Not out of love! JD Vance reveals why he and Usha decided to have a fourth child
Vice President JD Vance has openly suggested that the decision to have another child was not rooted in emotion or family longing, but in politics and policy. Addressing supporters at the 2026 March for Life rally in Washington, DC, on Friday, January 23, Vance revealed that government incentives played a direct role in his family planning discussions with second lady Usha Vance, who is currently pregnant with their fourth child.
“He told the crowd that when he and his wife debated having a fourth child, he said, ‘Honey, we’ve got an expanded child tax credit, and we’ve got the Trump accounts. We got to take advantage of this stuff.’”
The moment drew applause and made clear that for the vice president, the personal and political are not just aligned, but deliberately intertwined.
Vance framed the pregnancy as proof that he lives by the message he has been delivering from the stage for years. At last year’s March for Life rally, he told the crowd, “Let me say very simply: I want more babies in the United States of America.”
“I want more happy children in our country,” he added at the time, “and I want beautiful young men and women who are eager to welcome them into the world and eager to raise them.” Returning to the same event this year with another child on the way, Vance underscored that consistency.
“So let the record show, you have a vice president who practices what he preaches,” he said.
JD and Usha Vance already share three children, Ewan, 8; Vivek, 5; and Mirabel, 4, and are now expecting a baby boy this summer.
During his remarks, Vance argued that fulfilment comes from raising children, not from professional achievement.
“To our fellow Americans, we say, you're never gonna find great meaning in a cubicle or in front of a computer screen,” he said. “But you will find great meaning if you dedicate yourself to the creation and sustenance of human life.”
The message reinforced a worldview in which family growth is not only encouraged but framed as a moral obligation, one that the administration says it is prepared to financially support.
Another said, "So your main determining factor on whether or not to have a child is based on tax breaks and financial reasons? Man, it’s almost like financial instability is one of the exact reasons people don’t want children."
A third wrote, "So having a child is now a tax strategy ? interesting way to redefine family planning ?"
Vance told the crowd that the administration is pursuing a “historic expansion of the Mexico City Policy,” which bars foreign organisations receiving US global health funding from providing or promoting abortion.
“The administration is expanding this policy to protect life,” he said.
President Donald Trump also addressed the anti-choice rally through a recorded video message.
Vance placed these efforts alongside domestic policies meant to incentivize childbirth, including the expanded child tax credit and Trump accounts, which provide a $1,000 federal investment for every newborn American child.
“No family should be penalized for choosing to have kids,” he said. “In fact, we ought to be rewarding for families for choosing to have kids.”
It was those rewards, Vance acknowledged, that became part of the calculus in his own household.
Earlier this week, the couple announced the pregnancy in a joint statement shared on social media. “We’re very excited to share the news that Usha is pregnant with our fourth child, a boy. Usha and the baby are doing well, and we are all looking forward to welcoming him in late July,” they said.
The pregnancy marks the first time a sitting second lady has been expecting a child while in office, though there is historical precedent among first ladies. Frances Cleveland, wife of President Grover Cleveland, gave birth to her daughter, Esther, inside the White House in 1893, and later welcomed another child, Marion, in Massachusetts. Jacqueline Kennedy gave birth to Patrick Bouvier Kennedy in 1963; he was born prematurely on Cape Cod and died two days later from Hyaline membrane disease.
The moment drew applause and made clear that for the vice president, the personal and political are not just aligned, but deliberately intertwined.
“I want more babies in the United States of America”
Vance framed the pregnancy as proof that he lives by the message he has been delivering from the stage for years. At last year’s March for Life rally, he told the crowd, “Let me say very simply: I want more babies in the United States of America.”
“I want more happy children in our country,” he added at the time, “and I want beautiful young men and women who are eager to welcome them into the world and eager to raise them.” Returning to the same event this year with another child on the way, Vance underscored that consistency.
JD and Usha Vance already share three children, Ewan, 8; Vivek, 5; and Mirabel, 4, and are now expecting a baby boy this summer.
Parenthood as purpose, not profession
During his remarks, Vance argued that fulfilment comes from raising children, not from professional achievement.
“To our fellow Americans, we say, you're never gonna find great meaning in a cubicle or in front of a computer screen,” he said. “But you will find great meaning if you dedicate yourself to the creation and sustenance of human life.”
The message reinforced a worldview in which family growth is not only encouraged but framed as a moral obligation, one that the administration says it is prepared to financially support.
Social media roasts VP JD Vance
One user wrote on social media, "Bro is literally bragging about having kids for the tax perks like it’s a coupon deal. Also funny how the GOP kills the child tax credit, then shows up pretending they’re “pro-family” while forcing women into pregnancies. Pure hypocrisy."Another said, "So your main determining factor on whether or not to have a child is based on tax breaks and financial reasons? Man, it’s almost like financial instability is one of the exact reasons people don’t want children."
A third wrote, "So having a child is now a tax strategy ? interesting way to redefine family planning ?"
Policies designed to reward having children
Vance told the crowd that the administration is pursuing a “historic expansion of the Mexico City Policy,” which bars foreign organisations receiving US global health funding from providing or promoting abortion.
“The administration is expanding this policy to protect life,” he said.
President Donald Trump also addressed the anti-choice rally through a recorded video message.
Vance placed these efforts alongside domestic policies meant to incentivize childbirth, including the expanded child tax credit and Trump accounts, which provide a $1,000 federal investment for every newborn American child.
“No family should be penalized for choosing to have kids,” he said. “In fact, we ought to be rewarding for families for choosing to have kids.”
It was those rewards, Vance acknowledged, that became part of the calculus in his own household.
Earlier this week, the couple announced the pregnancy in a joint statement shared on social media. “We’re very excited to share the news that Usha is pregnant with our fourth child, a boy. Usha and the baby are doing well, and we are all looking forward to welcoming him in late July,” they said.
The pregnancy marks the first time a sitting second lady has been expecting a child while in office, though there is historical precedent among first ladies. Frances Cleveland, wife of President Grover Cleveland, gave birth to her daughter, Esther, inside the White House in 1893, and later welcomed another child, Marion, in Massachusetts. Jacqueline Kennedy gave birth to Patrick Bouvier Kennedy in 1963; he was born prematurely on Cape Cod and died two days later from Hyaline membrane disease.
end of article
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