J.D. Vance said he cried backstage when his wife introduced him as Trump's VP before acceptance speech at Republican convention
- J.D. Vance reacts to his wife's speech at the Republican National Convention
- READ MORE: Who is Senator Vance's Ivy-League educated wife Usha?
- READ MORE: What J.D. Vance has said about the biggest 2024 issues
Ohio Senator J.D. Vance praised his wife Usha's speech introducing him at the Republican National Convention, saying he cried backstage as she spoke Wednesday night in Milwaukee.
'She really is just an amazing person and she gave a really really great speech,' Vance gushed Thursday morning while speaking at the Faith & Freedom Coalition breakfast after accepting the GOP vice presidential nomination.
'It was such a tough act to follow in part because I was crying backstage, and in part because she's beautiful and has this incredible relatability to her,' he continued.
'I'm like who in their right mind thought it was a good idea for me to follow this person and give the biggest speech of my life? And I realized, it was my idea,' Vance recalled.
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Usha made her primetime debut Wednesday when she spoke ahead of her husband who was picked this week as Donald Trump's running mate.
The experienced litigator and mother of his three children recounted the story of how they fell in love and how their relationship is a 'testament to this great country' to cheers at the Fiserv Arena.
The 38-year-old Ivy League graduate then kissed her husband before he formally accepted the nomination to be Trump's vice presidential pick in the 2024 election.
'It's safe to say that neither J.D. nor I expected to find ourselves in this position, but it's hard to imagine a more powerful example of the American dream,' she said.
'I'm grateful to all of you for the trust you have placed in him and in our family,' Vance added before welcoming him to the stage.
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Speaking at the Thursday morning breakfast, Vance credited his wife with helping him find faith.
He recounted being raised by his grandmother and her reading the bible every day and said by the time he was in law school he even referred to himself as an atheist.
'To me what really brought me back to Christ was finding a wife and falling in love... and thinking about what was required of me as a husband and as a father,' Vance said Thursday.
'The more I thought about those deeper questions, the more that I thought that there was wisdom in the Christian faith that I had completely discarded and completely ignored,' he added.
Usha was with the senator on the convention floor when he was officially nominated as vice presidential pick for the Republican 2024 ticket on Monday.
But Wednesday night viewers from around the world watched as she gave her first public remarks at the since he was announced as the former president's pick.
'When I was asked to introduce my husband J.D. Vance to all of you, I was at a loss. What could I say that hasn't already been said before? After all, the man was already the subject of a Ron Howard movie,' she joked to start, referencing the movie version of his memoir 'Hillbilly Elegy.'
She described Vance Wednesday night as the most interesting person she knew who overcame childhood traumas and whose idea of a good time is to 'play with puppies.'
She fondly recalled how Vance adapted to her vegetarian diet and learned to cook for her mother.
'Before I knew it, he had become an integral part of my family,' she recalled.
Vance first met her husband J.D. when they were both students at Yale Law School in 2013. They married on year out of law school in 2014.
In 2017, the couple welcomed the first of three children, Ewan Blaine. They also have a second son Vivek and welcomed a daughter Mirabel in December 2021.
The daughter of Indian immigrants, born Usha Chilukuri, Vance was raised in the suburbs of San Diego. She has said she was raised in a religious Hindu family.
After graduating, she went to Yale University where she majored in history. She then continued her studies at University of Cambridge.
Until recently, Vance was an attorney at the San Francisco and Washington, DC law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson where she focused on complex civil litigation and appeals.
She left the firm after her husband was picked as Trump's running mate.
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