The vice president touched on a number of issues, including prices, immigration, Jan. 6, and more.
Vice President JD Vance on Sunday gave his first media interview days after being sworn into office and defended the Trump administrationâs recent activity.
Lowering Prices
At one point in the interview, Vance was pressed on how President Donald Trumpâs administration will lower prices of groceries, which was a 2024 campaign promise. The vice president, in response, said that getting prices down would take time, noting that Trump only took office less than a week ago.
âThere have been a number of executive orders that have caused, already, jobs to start coming back into our country, which is a core part of lowering prices,â the vice president said. âMore capital investment, more job creation in our economy, is one of the things thatâs going to drive down prices for all consumers, but also raise wages so that people can afford to buy the things that they need.â
After Brennan pushed back, Vance said that Trump cannot âundo all of the damage of Joe Bidenâs presidency in four daysâ and that âRome wasnât built in a day.â
âDonald Trump has already taken multiple executive actions that are going to lower energy prices, and I do believe that means consumers are going to see lower prices at the pump and at the grocery store, but itâs going to take a little bit of time,â he said.
Trumpâs decisions to address energy prices and increase drilling will also impact everyday costs, Vance said.
Birthright Citizenship
Vance defended Trumpâs executive order ending automatic birthright citizenship, which has been temporarily blocked by a federal judge on Jan. 23.
âAmerica should actually look out for the interests of our citizens first,â Vance said. âIf youâre here permanently and lawfully, your kid becomes an American citizen.â
The order, signed hours after Trump took office, directed federal agencies to not issue citizenship documents to children who were born on American soil to parents in the United States illegally or under temporary visas. A judge last week blocked the order from going into effect.
Vance said that âif you come here on vacation and you have a baby in an American hospital, that baby doesnât become an American citizen,â and âif youâre an illegal alien and you come here temporarily, hopefully, your child does not become an American citizen by virtue of just having been born on American soil.â
Big Tech
When asked about the founders or CEOs of Big Tech companies appearing at Trumpâs inauguration at the Capitol on Jan. 20, Vance said that the administration believes âfundamentally that big tech does have too much power.â
âThey can either respect Americaâs constitutional rights, they can stop engaging in censorship, and if they donât, you can be absolutely sure that Donald Trumpâs leadership is not going to look too kindly on them,â he said.
Metaâs Mark Zuckerberg, Amazonâs Jeff Bezos, Oracleâs Larry Ellison, Xâs Elon Musk, Appleâs Tim Cook, and Googleâs Sundar Pichai, among others, attended the inauguration ceremony last week.
Response to Catholic Groupâs Criticism
Last week, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and other Catholic groups issued a statement critical of the Trump administrationâs immigration policies to allow for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to enter churches and schools.
âCatholic health care, Catholic Charities agencies, and the Churchâs other social service ministries work daily to feed, house, heal, educate, and meet peopleâs needs in communities across our nation … through our parishes, shelters, hospitals, schools, and other Church institutions, we recognize that this dignity is not dependent on a personâs citizenship or immigration status,â the religious groupâs statement said.
He said that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops âhas, frankly, not been a good partner in common sense immigration enforcement that the American people voted for.â
âI think that the US Conference of Catholic Bishops needs to actually look in the mirror a little bit and recognize that when they receive over $100 million to help resettle illegal immigrants, are they worried about humanitarian concerns?â Vance asked. âOr are they actually worried about their bottom line?â
When asked by Brennan about whether he thinks the order ending Biden administration policies on ICE officials detaining people near churches and schools will have a âchilling effect,â Vance said he hopes it does.
âI desperately hope it has a chilling effect … on illegal immigrants coming into our country,â the vice president said.
Trumpâs Jan. 6 Pardons
Hours after Trump took office last week, he pardoned about 1,500 people who were charged in connection to the Jan. 6, 2021, breach at the U.S. Capitol, a move that drew pushback from Democrats and some Republicans in Congress.
Responding to a question about why pardons were given to Jan. 6 defendants who were convicted for violent acts, Vance said that the Department of Justice had âdenied constitutional protections in the prosecutionsâ and said he believes there were âdouble standards in how sentences were applied to the J6 protesters versus other groups.â
âWe looked at 1,600 cases,â he said. âAnd the thing that came out of it, Margaret, is that there was a massive denial of due process of liberty, and a lot of people were denied their constitutional rights. The president believes that, I believe that, and I think he made the right decision.â
Later, Vance said that while he thinks that violence against police officers was not appropriate, the DOJ was weaponized under the previous administration.
âThe pardon power is not just for people who are angels or people who are perfect. And, of course, we love our law enforcement and want people to be peaceful, with everybody, but especially with our good cops,â he said.
âWe rectified a wrong, and I stand by it.â
Reuters contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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