
On this episode of “Interesting Times,” Ross Douthat interviews Vice President JD Vance about the Trump administration’s deportations, the tariff backlash and how Vance’s faith influences his politics.
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Ross Douthat
Mr. Vice President, welcome to Interesting Times.
J.D. Vance
Thank you, Ross.
Ross Douthat
Try and contain your last word.
J.D. Vance
Wait, is that actually the name of your podcast?
Ross Douthat
That is the name of our show.
J.D. Vance
Okay.
Ross Douthat
Yes. Do we not live in interesting times?
J.D. Vance
We do live in interesting times.
Ross Douthat
So we're here in Rome. This is the day after the papal inauguration, but now it's the next day.
J.D. Vance
It is.
Ross Douthat
And you just met with Pope Leo xiv.
J.D. Vance
I did.
Ross Douthat
The first American Pope, yeah. So what did you talk about?
J.D. Vance
Well, I want to be respectful, of course, of the private conversation we had. I mean, generally, we talked about issues the Vadan cares a lot about, obviously. They care about the migration issue. They care a lot about world peace. They care a lot about what's happening in Russia, Ukraine. They care a lot about what's happening with Gaza and Israel. And so very productive conversation. I mean, amazing to me. As you know, I was one of the last world leaders to meet with Pope Francis on Easter Sunday before he passed away. I'm actually wearing the tie that he gave me, which is very cool.
Ross Douthat
Let's see.
J.D. Vance
Yes. Yeah. Very excited about it.
Ross Douthat
So that's the Vatican seal on polka dots.
J.D. Vance
Yes. Yeah. On. On dark blue polka dots. But, you know, it's. It's. So it's been in the life of one person's faith who happens to be an American political leader. It's been really an amazing three, four weeks, and I'm sure I'll. I'll have some time to think about it and reflect on what it all means. But you're really just honored to be here and thrilled to be a part of it.
Ross Douthat
How does being either a Catholic or just a Christian shape your politics in the sense of just to be specific, what are things that you feel like you believe or care about in politics that are specific to Christianity rather than conservatism, the Republican Party, and so on? How would your worldview be different if you weren't a Catholic Christian?
J.D. Vance
Well, I think one of the criticisms that I get from the right is that I am insufficiently committed to the capital M market. And I am a capitalist. I believe the market economy is the best way of provisioning goods and services and coordinating people across a very complex society. But I'm not one of these people who says every intervention in the market, for example, trade, which I'm sure that we'll get into if you apply a tariff on an import. Good. There are a lot of people who say, well, that is a violation of some market rule. I think one of the things that I take from my Christian principles and Catholic social teaching, specifically, whether you agree with the specific policies of our administration, is, look, the market is a tool, but it is not the end state, is not the purpose of American politics. The purpose of American politics should be to encourage our citizens to live a good life. And part of that is good, dignified work. Part of that is having a high enough wage that you can support a family. That very much flows through my Catholicism. To be clear, I'm not saying it has to flow and that people who don't share my faith can't worry about those things. But that is something very much that I take from Catholic social teaching, and it certainly influences my views on economics. I mean, obviously, I'm pro life. I care about the rights of the unborn. That very much flows from my Christian perspective. And there's a lot of stuff right when I talk about family policy. We talked about this a little bit with the Holy Father today. But look, American society, I think, has become way too hostile to family formation. I think it's probably true across the west. In some ways, maybe the Europeans are even worse off than we are. But Europe and America have been quite bad at supporting families over the last generation. And I think you see that in the fact that fewer people are choosing to start families. That's something else that I think a lot about because of my faith. So it would be easier to say, what does your faith not cause you to think about? Because when you really believe something, and I do believe it, not saying I don't have doubts. I think everybody does. But when you really believe something, it ought to influence how you think about the way that you do your job, the way that you spend time with your wife and your children, it just necessarily informs how I live my life.
Ross Douthat
And then how should a Catholic politician like yourself think about issues where the. Either the hierarchy of the Church or the Pope himself seems to be critical of the stances you're taking? And I just want to Preface this. Right. This is going to lead us into a conversation about immigration. But, you know, you mentioned migration as one of the political issues that the Holy Father. Yeah, I knew the hard questions wanted to talk about and. Well, I think it's useful to have context. Historically, American presidents have tended to almost always have some set of issues where they're not in tune with the Vatican. And for Ronald Reagan, it could be the nuclear issue. There was conflict, at least between the Reagan administration and elements of the church on nuclear non proliferation. There was also conflict over Reagan era policy in Central America. Obviously liberal and Democratic administration. It tends to be around abortion and issues related to that. But then even George W. Bush, as much as some conservative Catholics, wanted to downplay the fact that Pope John Paul II was against the Iraq War, the Vatican was against the Iraq War. Right. And so that was a point of tension.
J.D. Vance
And they were right.
Ross Douthat
And they were right. You and I agree. So when you have. And clearly there is some tension between Trump administration policy and things that the Pope thinks or the Vatican thinks, how do you, as a Catholic think about that tension?
J.D. Vance
Yeah, yeah. This is. I mean, we probably talk all morning about this, but we'll try not to. It's interesting. So let me give you a very specific instance of the tension. So yesterday after the Mass, okay. So I am a Catholic. I believe that he, meaning Pope Leo, is actually the shepherd of 1.4 billion Catholics. And so there are things like bowing before him, kissing the ring that are signs of respect for a spiritual father. Okay. But on the world stage, I'm not there as J.D. vance, a Catholic parishioner, I'm there as the Vice President, United States, and the leader of the President's delegation to the Pope's inaugural Mass. And so, you know, it was interesting. Some of the protocols about how I respond to the Holy Father were much different than how I might respond to the Holy Father. How might you might respond to the Holy Father? Purely in your capacity as a citizen. And so that's just like one very concrete observation.
Ross Douthat
So is there actually, is there actually a rule that says you as Vice president should not kiss the papal ring?
J.D. Vance
The protocol is that American presidents and vice presidents do not bow before foreign leaders do not kiss any rings. And obviously given our history, you can appreciate that. So no sign of disrespect, but, you know, important to observe the protocols of the country that I love and that I'm representing and that I serve as Vice President, United States. But sort of that's an easy thing, right? This is more difficult. This Question. And I think there are sort of three ways of thinking about it, and I tend to fall in the middle. Okay, so way number one, and you see some Catholics or some Christians say this is. They'll say, well, politics is politics, policy is policy, religion is religion, and we wish the Pope all his best, or we wish the Church all its best in its moral teachings, but we got to focus on policy. And these are two totally separate matters. But I think that's wrong because it understates the way in which all of us are informed by our moral and religious values. So that's not the right way to do it. I think another way to do it would be to say, I'm just going to do everything the Holy Father tells me to do. I think that would be.
Ross Douthat
Some people were worried about that with John F. Kennedy, of course, as I.
J.D. Vance
Recall, and I think that would be a violation of the US Constitution. But certainly I think just my obligation more broadly as a vice president to serve the American people. You've got to think about this stuff. But I think the way that I take it is on the migration question in particular, you have to think about what they've said. And when the Church says, yes, we respect the right of a country to enforce its borders, you also have to respect the rights of migrants, the dignity of migrants, when you think about questions like deportation and so forth. And so you have to be able to hold two ideas in your head at the same time. And I'm not saying I'm always perfect at it, but I at least try to think about, okay, there are obligations that we have to people who in some ways are fleeing violence or at least fleeing poverty. I also have a very sacred obligation, I think, to enforce the laws and to promote the common good of my own country, defined as the people with the legal right to be here. One issue in particular, I talked to a lot of cardinals this weekend, just because there are a lot of cardinals here in Rome. And one of the arguments that I've made, very respectfully, I've had a lot of good, respectful conversations, including with cardinals who very strongly disagree with my views on migration, is that it's easy to get locked in a left versus right. The left respects the dignity of migrants. The right is motivated by hatred. I think far too many people. Obviously, that's not my view, but I think some liberal immigration advocates get locked in that view, that the only reason why JD Vance wants to enforce the borders more stridently is because he's motivated by some kind of hatred or some kind of Grievance. And the point that I've tried to make is I think a lot about this question of social cohesion in the United States. I think about how do we form the kind of society again where people can raise families, where people join in institutions together, where what I think Burke would have called the mediating layers of society are actually healthy and vibrant. And I do think that those who care about what might be called the common good, they sometimes underweight how destructive to the common good. Immigration at the levels and at the pace that we've seen over the last few years. I really do think that social solidarity is destroyed when you have too much migration too quickly. And so that's not because I hate the migrants or I'm motivated by grievance. That's because I'm trying to preserve something in my own country where we are a unified nation. And I don't think that can happen if you have too much immigration too quickly.
Ross Douthat
Let me propose a theory of sort of papal interventions in politics.
J.D. Vance
Okay.
Ross Douthat
Which is that it might be useful to think of issues where presidents end up in some kind of tension with the papacy as zones of temptation for people like yourself. Meaning that it's not that when the Pope says, you know, I think you're wrong about this, that that automatically means that you say, oh, you know, absolutely, your holiness, we're going to change our policy tomorrow. But it might mean that you're operating in an area where you're going to be exposed to certain kinds of temptations and get into zones of danger. So, for instance, to take the Iraq war example, right. Like. Like while George W. Bush was getting ready to go to war, people who defended the decision to go to war in Iraq would say, look, even if the Pope is against it, this is a prudential judgment. It's a judgment that a statesman has to make sure it's not the judgment the Pope has to make. And I think they were right. Nonetheless, it would have been useful perhaps, for more people in the Bush administration to say, okay, as we're thinking about this war, the fact that the Pope is against it should, you know, make us think, let's say, 10% more carefully, take 10% more moral care around, you know, what's going to happen to Christian minorities in the Middle east, for instance, if we invade Iraq, something like that. Right. Or to take a case like Joe Biden, the former President of the United States. I look at his career and his relationship to the church on issues like abortion.
J.D. Vance
Sure.
Ross Douthat
And I see a kind of tragic story where Biden starts out as a pro life Catholic, pro life politician. Biden, by the end of his career, because of the nature of partisan politics, has just ended up with a position on abortion, indistinguishable from the secular left. And sort of step by step, piece by piece, he ended up alienated from his faith. So when I, I feel like for someone in your position, whatever the Pope says about immigration, yes, it doesn't imply that you need to change, you know, your general policy overn, but it means that you need to be aware that this is a zone where you're exposed to a certain kind of partisan temptation. What do you think about that kind of analysis?
J.D. Vance
I think that's fair. It's more linear and more structured than what I just said, but I think it's pretty consistent with what I just said, that it's not you follow commandments. It's also not that you just disregard these things or sort of say, oh, well, I know what this guy thinks, but I have to make a prudential judgment differently. I think it's that you make a prudential judgment informed very much by the church's teachings as reflected by these leaders. And by the way, you mentioned Joe Biden, two things on this. First of all, we just found out, actually right before I was walking in here, that apparently he's got some very serious health issues. So we wish the former president the best in his health. I also, to be candid, and this is going to sound like I'm beating up on him, I really don't know how much Joe Biden's late evolution on abortion was that thought out. I mean, far be it for me to defend Joe Biden, but I really think the more that we learn, the more that we see the policy of the Biden administration was driven much more by staff than it was by the elected president.
Ross Douthat
I think that's probably fair to say. And, yeah, I would join you in expressing sympathy and solidarity with the former president and his cancer diagnosis. All right. But I'm going to come back to that zone of temptation idea as we get a little bit deeper into the actual policy debate. So we're going to talk about immigration and trade with a similar sort of big picture question in both cases. Right. So start with immigration. The Trump administration, when you were running for president, basically made two promises. We're going to secure the border and we're going to deport a substantial number of the people who entered illegally under the previous administration. I would say that you have been honestly more successful than I expected at Swiftly securing the border on deportations. It seems like the actual process is not moving that quickly. And there's a lot of debates in the courts and elsewhere about relatively small numbers of potential deportees.
J.D. Vance
Sure.
Ross Douthat
So looking ahead four years from now, what would constitute success in immigration policy at the end of this term?
J.D. Vance
Well, I mean, one, not to pat ourselves on the back too much, but I do think the most important success is stopping the flow of illegal migration to begin with. And I think that the president has succeeded wildly on that. I agree. Greater than my expectations and I had high expectations, but we've done a very good job there. And I think the president deserves a great deal of credit on the deportation question. So first is just a minor wonky point that kind of bothers me in the way this reported in the media is sometimes you will hear people say that deportations in the Trump administration down relative to the Biden administration, that is in fact an artifact of the fact that the Biden border was effectively wide open. In other words, if somebody comes across the border illegally and you immediately turn them around or you schedule a deportation hearing and say, hey, come back for your hearing, a lot of both of those would get counted as deportation. So you can have a lot of deportations when you have quite literally millions of people per year walking across the border. That's low hanging fruit in terms of deportation. So just a point clarification, that's completely fair.
Ross Douthat
But at the current pace of deportations, you would be deporting numbers commensurate with prior presidents and not commensurate with the numbers that entered.
J.D. Vance
Yeah, that's right. I mean, look, it's, and I'm sure that New York Times listeners are going to be scandalized by this line of argumentation, but I think it's really important that in some ways the deportation infrastructure that is developed in the United States is not adequate to the task, given what Joe Biden left us. Now, there are different estimates here of how many illegal immigrants came in under the Biden administration. Was it 12 million? Was it 20 million? You know, it's hard to count this stuff because you have known gotaways, you have unknown gotaways, you have the people that we never even saw across the border. So there's a little bit of guesswork in all this. I actually think the number is much closer to 20 than to 12 million.
Ross Douthat
I mean, just to pause there, one of the most, I would say hardcore critical of illegal immigration think tanks, when I looked into this, had its estimate, I think in the 10 to 12 million. That's range, right?
J.D. Vance
So they did. And I think they're undercounting it because I think they're counting the people that we were aware of. I don't think they were counting that estimate unknown gotaways. They weren't counting certain classes of asylum seekers, of TPS seekers. So they were answering a question as honestly as they could. But I think if you look at the grand scheme of it, it's higher. But. But look, whether it's 12 million or whether it's 20 million, it's a lot. And that is a lot of work ahead of us. Now, there are two things that we can do. I think one thing is a little bit easier, and one thing is a little bit harder. And the first thing is you just have to have the actual law enforcement infrastructure to make this possible. And again, I think that we should treat people humanely. I think we have an obligation to treat people humanely. But I do think that a lot of these illegal immigrants have to go back to where they came from. And that requires more law enforcement officers. It requires more beds at deportation facilities. It just requires more of the basic nuts and bolts of how you run a law enforcement regime in the context of deportation. That's one of the main things. And the big beautiful bill that is moving through Congress right now is more money for immigration enforcement. That's what that money is for, to facilitate that deportation infrastructure. There's a much more difficult question, and I think you see the President's frustration. I've obviously expressed public frustration on this, which is, yes, illegal immigrants, by virtue of being in the United States, are entitled to some due process. Okay, but the due process under a.
Ross Douthat
Legislative standard, to be clear, yes, this is based on legislation. Like, the judges who are making these decisions are not inventing this standard. It is a legislative standard.
J.D. Vance
But the amount of process that is due and how you enforce those legislative standards and how you actually bring them to bear is, I think, very much an open question. And I think that what you've seen. And I remember when I was in law school, there were all of these people who were wanting to become immigration lawyers. And there was almost a certain buzz around immigration law at the time because there was so much gray area, there was so much open space where the courts would interpret how to apply these rules. Now, in the context of the United States, in 2011, 2012, 13, when I was in law school, we had significant illegal immigration, but not that much. There was this idea that you could use the asylum claim process and you could use the refugee process. And you could use all of these other tools of the immigration enforcement regime to actually make it harder to deport illegal aliens. And then what happened is a lot of very well funded NGOs went about the process of making it much harder to deport illegal aliens. And that's what we inherited in the year of our Lord 2025 is a whole host of legal rules, and in some cases, not even legal rules as much as arguments that had made by left wing NGOs that hadn't actually been ruled on by the courts yet. And what we're finding, of course, is that a small but substantial number of courts are just making it very, very hard for us to deport illegal aliens. And Stephen Miller, who of course is sort our immigrations are in the White House, a good friend of mine, you know, he's thinking of all of these different and new statutory authorities. Right. Because there are a lot of different statutory authorities. The President has to enforce the nation's immigration laws. And there is candidly frustration on the White House side that we think that the law is very clear. We think the President has extraordinary plenary power. Yes, you have to. You need some process to confirm that these illegal aliens are in fact illegal aliens, not American citizens.
Ross Douthat
Right, but.
J.D. Vance
But it's not like we're just throwing that process out. We're trying to comply with it as much as possible and actually do the job that we were left. Okay, but let me just make one final sort of philosophical point here. I worry that unless the Supreme Court steps in here or unless the district courts exercise a little bit more discretion, we are running into a real conflict between two important principles in the United States. Principle one, of course, is that courts interpret the law. I think principle two is that the American people decide how they're governed. That's the fundamental small d democratic principle that's at the heart of the American project. I think that you are seeing, and I know this is inflammatory, but I think you are seeing an effort by the courts to quite literally overturn the will of the American people. And to be clear, it's not most courts, but I think what the Supreme Court has to do, and I saw an interview with Chief Justice Roberts recently where he said the role of the Court is to check the excesses of the executive. I thought that was a profoundly wrong sentiment. That's one half of his job. The other half of his job is to check the excesses of his own branch. And you cannot have a country where the American people keep on electing immigration enforcement and the courts tell the American people they're not allowed to have what they voted for, and that's where we are right now. We're gonna keep working it through the immigration court process, through the Supreme Court as much as possible. And look, my hope is that when you ask what success is, success to me is not so much a number, though, obviously, I'd love to see the gross majority of the illegal immigrants who came in under Biden deported. That actually is a secondary metric of success. Success to me is that we have established a set of rules and principles that the courts are comfortable with, and that we have the infrastructure to do that allows us to deport large numbers of illegal aliens. When large numbers of illegal aliens come into the country, that, to me, is real success. But I think whether we're able to get there is a function, of course, of our efforts, but also of the courts themselves.
Ross Douthat
Right. But it seems like the stable way to get there, where you are creating a settlement that would outlast your own administration, would involve a combination of Supreme Court rulings. And I think it's fair to say that there is a majority on the Supreme Court that is likely to be sympathetic to something other than a left NGO reading of immigration law.
J.D. Vance
I hope that's right.
Ross Douthat
Okay.
J.D. Vance
I hope that's right.
Ross Douthat
I think that's likely combined with perhaps a recognition that maybe the legislative setup around this issue is out of date. You know, that the asylum system assumed by legislation written in the 1950s doesn't make sense and so on. Right. So there you have two tracks. You have trying to get Supreme Court rulings that vindicate your interpretation of the law. And then you have potentially legislative efforts where the existing law needs to be revised, but your administration just to push.
J.D. Vance
But there's a third track, too, which is using existing legal authorities that haven't been used in the past, but we think are there.
Ross Douthat
And this is what I'm asking about. The legal authorities that you guys have tried to use have been. The particular one is the Alien Enemies Act. Right. Which is an extremely aggressive claim about wartime powers that, as far as I can tell, even under the most aggressive interpretation, is likely to apply only to an incredibly small number of migrants. Right. You're not. The claim is not actually that 5 million migrants here illegally are in a state of war against the United States. Or is that the claim?
J.D. Vance
No, it's not that 5 million are engaged in, like, military conflict, but that the. I take issue that it's an aggressive interpretation. So let me back up and take some issue with the Premise. I don't think that the supposition, if you look at the history and the context of those laws, is that for something to be an invasion, you have to have like 5 million uniformed combatants. Yes, we don't have 5 million uniformed combatants. But, Ross, I mean, this is where I think I have to be careful here, because some of this information, of course, is classified. But think how to put this point. I think that the courts need to be somewhat deferential. In fact, I think the design is that they should be extremely deferential to these questions of political judgment made by the people's elected president, United States. Because when you say, well, there aren't 5 million people who are waging war, okay, but are there thousands, maybe tens of thousands of people, and then when you take their extended family, their networks, is it much larger than that, who are quite dangerous people who I think very intentionally came to the United States to cause violence or to at least profit from violence, and they're fine if violence is an incidental effect of it. Yeah, I do, man. And I think the people underappreciate the level of public safety stress that we're under when the President talks about how bad crime is. The one thing I'd love for the American media to do a little bit more is really go to a migrant community where you have, say, 60% legal immigrants and 40% illegal immigrants. The level of chaos, the level of violence, the level of, I think, truly pre modern brutality that some of these communities have gotten used to. Whatever law was written, I think it vests us with the power to take very serious action against this. It's bad. It's bad. It's worse than people appreciate. And it's not, you know, Donald Trump, I know most of your listeners probably hate the President I serve under and probably hate me. Maybe not your listeners, but a lot of New York Times readers. But we'll talk about that.
Ross Douthat
We'll talk about that question in a minute.
J.D. Vance
I would just ask them, like. Like, do not filter this through the. I see President Trump and Vice President Vance up there, and I sort of immediately assume that they're lying to me, that they're motivated by some bad value. This is not sustainable. And it's not just sustainable, like, oh, this is more immigrants than we used to have. This is a level of invasion. Invasion that I think our laws, we already have laws to help us deal with. And I wish the courts were more deferential. And we're gonna see again. This is. We're very early innings in the court process. And you know, some of the worst capital W, worst Supreme Court decisions that have been made on, you know, the media says, oh, this is a big blow to the administration. I mean, a lot of these things are very narrow procedural rulings. I think that we're very early innings here on what the court is going to interpret the law to mean.
Ross Douthat
Right. Shouldn't this sort of barbaric medieval landscape that you're describing show up in violent crime statistics?
J.D. Vance
Oh, sometimes no. Because the people who are most victimized by this, Ross, they're not running to the FBI, they're not running to the local police. But certainly, I mean, if you look at, I mean, hell, look at the number of people dying of fentanyl overdoses. Again, just go substantively, qualitatively, you go to these communities and you see what they're dealing with. I really think that we underappreciate just how violent these cartels are and how much they've made life, I think, pretty unbearable for frankly a lot of native born American citizens, but also a lot of legal American migrants, especially those along the southern border.
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Ross Douthat
So to get quickly to my idea of a zone of temptation here for you. Well, so what you're describing is again, you and I both live through the Bush presidency.
J.D. Vance
Right.
Ross Douthat
And there are elements of what you might call a kind of of war on terror mentality.
J.D. Vance
Yeah.
Ross Douthat
That you're taking vis a vis the cartels or people associated with the cartels or people allegedly associated with gangs and cartels. That seems to me similar to the approach taken to anyone associated with Islamic terrorism and so on in the aftermath of September 11th. And again, you remember and I remember that in more than a few cases, right, this ended up with situations where the US Was taking people into custody and remanding them to black sites and so on, who turned out, unsurprisingly, not to be, number one, Al Qaeda terrorists. Right? And to the extent that it is possible, and it is somewhat difficult for the media to do this, but to the extent that it's possible for the media to examine the kind of figures and individuals that you guys have been trying to essentially remand to prison in El Salvador, right, Without, you know, extensive legal process, it just seems like this system is ripe for war on terror style abuses where you are going to be sending people to a prison in El Salvador that advertises itself as a terrible place. And one, some of those people are probably going to be innocent. Two, some of them are going to be people who have committed a crime, who have some kind of gang affiliation, but who, under your normal American law, non wartime law, would end up going to jail for six months or a year or something. And again, they're going to disappear potentially into a system for a decade or more or something like that. And that just seems like you are creating a context where injustice is inevitable, even if your intentions are just to bring peace and order to communities along the border or anything else.
J.D. Vance
Well, look, first of all, I understand your point. And making these judgments, if you take the teachings of our faith seriously, they are hard. Right. I'm not gonna pretend that I haven't struggled with some of this, that I haven't thought about whether we're doing the precisely right thing. So it's a fair point. And I know that you think you've got me trapped here.
Ross Douthat
I don't think I have you. No. No, I'm not. All right, let me be perfectly honest, I'm not interested in having you trapped here. We're having a conversation in Rome as a journalist and a vice president, but also as two Catholics.
J.D. Vance
Ross, trust me, I think it's. To be clear, I think it's a totally fair question.
Ross Douthat
I'm interested in what politics does to.
J.D. Vance
People, to your soul. Yes, of course. So, number one, the concern that you raise is fair. Okay? The concern that you raise is fair. There has to be some way in which you're asking yourself, as you go about enforcing the law, even to your point, against Some very dangerous people that you're enforcing the law consistent with. With the Catholic Church's moral dictates and so forth. And also, to be clear, I'm the vice.
Ross Douthat
And also, I mean, after that pitch to your soul and American law and.
J.D. Vance
Basic principles, most importantly American law. But we're talking about, you know, we're in Rome, and so that's why I brought up the Catholic flag. The American flag is positioned behind you, for sure. So here's the thing. So with a caveat that I'm the Vice President of the United States, and I am hardly an expert in every single edge case or every single case that has become a viral sensation or that people have criticized us over, but I am pretty well read on some of the cases. Typically what I find when I look at the worst cases, I mean, the ones that the media seem so preoccupied with. I would make a couple of observations about it. Number one, it is hard to take seriously. Now, this doesn't absolve me from doing my duty as an American leader and hopefully as a Christian leader, too. But it is hard to take seriously the extraordinarily emotive condemnations of people who don't care about the problem that I'm trying to solve and that the President is trying to solve. That's not you. It's why I actually take your concerns seriously. I listen to most of your podcasts. I read most of your columns. So when I see people who for legitimately four years told me that I was a xenophobe for thinking that what Joe Biden was doing at the border was a serious problem, I am less willing. There's a witness element to this, and I'm less willing to believe the witness of people who are now saying that this MS.13 gang member. And we'll talk about that case in a second. This guy, this guy is somehow a very sympathetic person and you violated his civil rights, et cetera, et cetera. Okay, so that. That's number one. Number two, I still have an obligation to think about these cases. And I'll tell you, you know, a lot of times I'll read about these cases and I'll reach out to the people who are enforc immigration law, and I'll try to find out what exactly is going on. I haven't asked every question about every case, but the ones where I have asked questions and I try to get to the bottom of what's going on. I feel quite comfortable what's happened. And the one that I spent the most time understanding is the one of the Maryland father. And what I found so bizarre about that case is that, that the American media took one line, and I forget what line it was, but it acknowledged some error had happened in a department of justice filing without actually asking the two most important questions. What is the nature of the error? And much more importantly than that, what is the remedy for an error, both as a matter of law, most importantly as the vice president, but also, again, as a matter of Christian principles? I think this guy was not just a gang member, but a reasonably high level gang member. In Ms. 13, I think he had engaged in some, some pretty ugly conduct legally. He had had multiple hearings before an immigration judge. He had a valid deportation order. What he also had was a sort of exception, what's called a withholding order, that basically said, yes, you can deport this guy. No one doubts that we could have deported this guy, but you can't deport this guy to El Salvador because of particular conditions that obtained In, I believe, 2019, when his case was adjudicated. So you Fast forward to 2025, we deport this guy, the courts hold that we've made a mistake, and then eventually it gets to the Supreme Court. And I believe, and we're getting in the weeds a little bit of the legal technicalities, but I believe the court term is you must facilitate his return. And I sat in lunch with Bukele, the leader of El Salvador, with the president of the United States and with others and talked about this case. And Bukele basically said, I don't want to send this guy back. I think he's a bad guy. I want him in, he's my citizen. He's in a prison in El Salvador and I think that's where he belongs. And our attitude was, okay, what are we really going to do? Are we going to exert extraordinary diplomatic pressure to bring a guy back to the United States who is a citizen of a foreign country, who we had a valid deportation order with? I understand there may be disagreements about the judgments that we made here, but there's just something that it's hard to take serious when so many of the people who are saying we made a terrible error here are the same people who made no protests about how this guy got into the country in the first place, or what Joe Biden did for four years to the American southern.
Ross Douthat
Border in that meeting. The other thing that the president of the United States said was that he hoped or aspired to a situation where he could potentially send American citizens prisons to El Salvador's prisons.
J.D. Vance
The worst of the worst said explicitly he would follow the law and follow American courts on this. So I don't think it's unreasonable for the president to say, here's this thing I'd like to do, so long as it's consistent with the law.
Ross Douthat
I think that you should be able to see, though, why, in the context of sending illegal immigrants to an El Salvador in prison and and claiming to be unable for diplomatic reasons to bring them back, the prospect of then saying, and we'd like to send US Citizens to that prison would raise some concerns about how the administration uses the immigration powers that you think it should have under arguable wartime conditions. Again, Right. Like, regardless of the particulars of a case case, it just seems like you are setting up a machinery that people of good faith who are not hostile to your policies would reasonably regard as dangerous to particular people who are caught up in the system. That's not so.
J.D. Vance
Look, I understand the point, especially as it's what the president says or what I say is refracted through the lens of an American press that I have my complaints with. But just what did the president. Again, I'm gonna defend my boss here. What did he say? I'm gonna think about doing this only in cases of the very, very worst people, number one, and number two, only if it's consistent with American law. I think that if that was the headline that was reproduced, the president is considering sending the very worst violent gang members in America to a foreign prison. So long as that is a legal thing to do, I don't think that would inspire so much passionate resistance. That's my understanding of the American people.
Ross Douthat
In a context where the administration is saying, notwithstanding the Supreme Court's desire that we facilitate the return of someone who was sent there in error, we can't do it.
J.D. Vance
It's said that we understand facilitation to mean something. Of course, the Supreme Court or any other court can further eliminate that. Yes. But this point is interesting to me. So there are two things about my boss, and I never reveal private conversations. There are two things about the President of the United States that I am extremely fascinated by. One is he has better instincts about human beings than anybody that I've ever met. We can talk about that, but I'll set that to the side. Just sort of almost a bizarre level of intuition about people. The second, which I think is very underappreciated, and it motivates the foreign policy. And in Ukraine and Russia, it motivates the things that he said about the Middle East. Motivates really, a lot of them is he has this sort of humanitarian impulse. Okay. And I've heard the President say, well, maybe if we sent the very worst people to different places, then American prisons would be a little less violent. Because, as you know, American prisons are not a good place. They're not very good at rehabilitation. Sometimes people go in there for. For not. You know, I think we overstate how much people go to prison for truly petty crime. But they go in there for something that should at least give them an opportunity for a second chance. They end up getting stabbed while they're in prison. So the idea that there is just something fundamentally inhumane about sending a very violent person to another. Another prison outside of the country, I just, I don't buy that. I don't think that's what motivates the president. And again, that's a separate question from whether it's legal, which the President's been very clear he would follow the law.
Ross Douthat
All right, let's pull back to another issue, trade. And I'm going to ask the same question about what does success look like? So we've ended up in a place where we had Liberation Day. We had a period of, let's say, market difficulty and chaos.
J.D. Vance
Sure.
Ross Douthat
It seems like we're in a zone of partial stability where we're setting tariffs around 10%, we're negotiating new trade deals. So you have a policy set in motion that is trying to produce some kind of results. What results do you want at the end of four and specifically at the end of four years, are you looking at as indexes of success? Is it the number of manufacturing jobs? Is it the number of new factories open? Is it particular, particular industries that are currently overseas that have national security implications that you want back home? Is it tariff revenue to help with the deficit? What do you want from this policy that we can actually measure and say in three years it succeeded or it failed?
J.D. Vance
Okay, so I want to answer your question, but I want to give some context here and back up a little bit because I do think that there has been a little overconfidence from the economic class and from other are watchers of this policy that they know what Donald Trump doesn't, that we're sort of motivated by chaos or stupidity or something else? And you don't have to agree with the policy, but there are a couple of very important points that I think illustrate this. Number one, yes, we are at a global minimum tariff of effectively 10%, but that understates it in a lot of ways because we also have Substantial tariffs on automobiles, we have substantial tariffs on steel, we have substantial tariffs on a whole host of other product categories. Okay. One of the very classic, very straightforward predictions of the economics profession is that if you do this, the currency, meaning the US Dollar, the currency of the importing nation that's applying the tariff is going to appreciate. Okay, what happened? The currency actually depreciated. I think it's worth just stepping back and saying the consensus forecast of our economics profession is, like, profoundly wrong on this particular question. Similarly. Similarly, if you look at the inflation numbers, if you look at the jobs numbers, if you look at nearly every metric, we keep on beating expectations. The one exception was the GDP number, which even our critics have acknowledged. The GDP number which went down, I think, by 0.3% last quarter. That is very much an artifact of how this stuff's met, measured. That's not real gdp, actually decline. That's how it's measured. So just step back here. I think that we're trying a new economic paradigm, but people who think that they know everything should have a little bit more humility. We have a lot of humility. Trust me. Me and the President and the entire team. We are constantly testing this stuff. Do you want to say something?
Ross Douthat
No. I mean, I answer your question. I'm trying to avoid having a long argument about the wisdom of the specific tariffs that were announced on Liberation Day, which. Which I found it. As someone who hosts a podcast and tries to talk to people, I found it very difficult to get anyone inside the administration or sympathetic voices outside to sort of straightforwardly say, this is why this set of policies are good and defensible. The nation by nation tariffs, however, the place we're in now with a global minimum tariff, I can find people who will defend that policy. So rather than litigating it, I want to start where we are, and I want you to tell me. Let's say the economics profession is wrong in some way and the US Economy can absorb these tariffs without dramatic impacts on prices and jobs and so on. Let's say that's the case. Still, you're doing these tariffs not to just have them absorbed by the economy, but to achieve something.
J.D. Vance
Yes.
Ross Douthat
So tell me what you want to achieve.
J.D. Vance
That's right. So again, again, I don't want to litigate this either. The one. Let me. A bit of litigation here is. I gave you 20 more minutes. Give me 30 seconds. I have 30 more questions. I'll be brief. I'll be brief. Look, the point of Liberation Day, as the President himself has said, was to One, announce that the old global trading system was over, and two, that America was now open for business, open for negotiation, open to talk, and open to a whole host of other policies, which.
Ross Douthat
Is why the numbers were randomly selected by a Magic 8 ball and it didn't really matter what the numbers were.
J.D. Vance
I totally disagree with that. I think they're based in large part on the trade deficit, which is a very reasonable place to start, especially large economies versus large economies. But anyway, we don't have to have anything.
Ross Douthat
Tell me about success.
J.D. Vance
The goal here, Ross, is there are a few things that we want out of this. So first of all, I think the President's been very clear. The 10% minimum is going to apply nearly universally, if not universally. So, yes, there is one way in which we are trying to raise revenue. Meanwhile, we're trying to lower taxes on domestic producers and consumers. And if you sort of combine those two policies, he's trying to make it more expensive to import into the United States. He's trying to make it a little bit cheaper to produce or to work in the United States. Right. So those two policies go hand in hand. Second of all, and this is related, you ask, so what does success look like? Look, does it mean that we have more manufacturing jobs than we do right now? Yes, I think that's one of the things that we want now. It's going to take a little while to get there. Does it mean One very important metric of success, which I think you already saw in the Q1 numbers, which are way more important than this sort of weird artifact of measurement on gdp, was how much private capital investment is coming into the country. You saw a very significant increase. A lot of people poo, poo, the Middle Eastern driven, they say, oh, well, these investment numbers that he's getting from foreign countries are from American companies. Those aren't real numbers. But if you look at the actual measured amount of capital investment in the country that is on the rise, and we think that capital investment will produce factories and other companies will produce good jobs and so forth. I think the best way of measuring where we're headed here is whether we still have a 1.2, $1.3 trillion trade deficit. And that to me, not next year, because this takes a while. You've got to build factories, you've got to change the trading regime with other countries. We're trying to make our exports cheaper, which, by the way, give the President credit. If you look at the UK trade deal, it is very, very good for us. Our manufacturers got better access to the sixth largest economy in the world. Our agricultural producers got major access in a way they've never been able to get to the sixth largest economy in the world. But all of this is, I think, in service of America making more of its own stuff, relying less on foreign countries. And the way the best way to measure that, not the perfect way, but the best way to measure that is, are we still losing, as the president would say, 1.2, $1.3 trillion on trade?
Ross Douthat
Okay, so if that's the case, isn't there then a big missing piece of this agenda, which is China has major industrial policy. Right. And, and again, if you talk to a lot of the people who are most supportive of some kind of economic change along the lines you're describing, they will say, look, tariffs and trade barriers are part of it, but you also need to increase manufacturing and domestic industry, and the government has a big role to play in that. So, one, is that true? Two, to the extent that it is true, when I look at things that that Doge has done in terms of cuts it's made, when I look at the big, beautiful bill working its way through the House and Senate, I see very conventional sort of small government republican policymaking, certainly not a kind of new industrial policy for the 21st century. So is that out there as a possibility for the administration?
J.D. Vance
So, yes, but I think you're underweighting how much. There's both a carrot and stick element to this. And the Trump administration, again, again, you see traditional Republican small government, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Okay, but we're talking about no tax on overtime, no tax on tips. These are things that give domestic consumers more money. And if you combine giving domestic consumers more money with making it easier and cheaper to produce in America and more expensive to produce overseas, then that is, in our view, at least, a form of industrial policy. There are other things that we're doing. Number two, two massive, massive changes to the regulatory regime. Our biggest belief, or at least mine, I don't want to speak for the President because I haven't talked to him on this issue, but I think his policy is consistent with his perspective, is we actually have an industrial policy in this country. The biggest industrial policy that we have is a regulatory regime that is incredibly rewarding to software, to the world of bits, as Peter Thiel and Tyler Cowen might say, and is incredibly punitive in the world of atoms. We would like to reverse that or at least equalize it. If you look at what we're trying to do on the regulatory regime we were trying to make it so much easier to produce things in the real world, not just to write code, as important as that can be. That is a form of industrial policy. To that point, I think our energy policy is a form of industrial policy because that's the most important cost input, especially for high value added manufacturing. And then the final point here, give us some credit here because you know what our secretary of the army did two weeks ago didn't get a whole lot of headlines, but he's completely rejiggering the Army's procurement process because we see industrial policy. We have a trillion dollar industrial policy at the Department of Defense that's rewarded slow incumbents instead of innovation in technology. And so we've empowered our service leads in a way that no administration has in a generation to actually spend that money on tech and innovation and developing the next generation of tools. So I agree with you that industrial policy is part of this, but it's gotta be smart industrial policy. And I think that's what we're doing.
Ross Douthat
Is there a legislative vision after the tax bill passes?
J.D. Vance
You know, you have to bite off so much at a time, Ross. And I think that, you know, it's not just a tax bill, of course it's an immigration bill. There are a lot of other parts of the policy agenda that matter. There's a lot of regulatory relief in this bill. This bill is what we're focused on. Once we get this bill passed, we're going to think about other legislative priorities. But I would be lying to you if I told you I had some detailed legislation I idea for what comes next. The president probably does, but we're focused on, you know, we have to take take one step at a.
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Ross Douthat
Okay, speaking of the economy, industrial policy and everything else. And the Pope. Bring it all together, right? No. One of one. You know, we've come full circle. Pope. Pope Leo took the name Leo xiv, the reference to Leo xiii, of course, who, you know, was sort of engaged in figuring out the Catholic response to the industrial era. And the new Pope has said explicitly that he's thinking about the Catholic response to the age of information technology and AI. You have been a point person for the administration on AI issues, and I'm both curious. One, there are people who think that we are essentially getting a profound economic revolution driven by AI while you guys are in office in the Trump Vance administration. So I'm first curious how likely you think that is, and then second, because the last guest on this podcast was making prophecies of imminent AI driven doom. How much do you worry about the potential downsides of AI? Not even on the apocalyptic scale, but on the cultural scale, the way human beings respond to a sense of their own obsolescence, these kind of things.
J.D. Vance
So one on the obsolescence point, I think the history of tech and innovation is that while it does cause job disruptions, it more often facilitates human productivity as opposed to replacing human workers. And the example I always give is of the bank teller. In the 1970s, there were very stark predictions of thousands, hundreds of thousands of bank tellers going out of a job. Poverty and immiseration. What actually happened is we have more bank tellers today than we did when the ATM was created, but they're doing slightly different work, more productive. They have pretty good wages relative to other folks in the economy. I tend to think that is how this innovation happens. AI.
Ross Douthat
But that is then, just to be clear, that is a prediction of. By the standards of the predictions, people are making a relatively slow pace of change, I think, right?
J.D. Vance
Well, I think it's a relatively slow pace of change. But I think on the economic side, the main concern that I have with AI, it's not. Not sort of the obsolescence. It's not people losing jobs in mass. You hear about truck drivers, for example. I think what might actually happen is that truck drivers are able to work more efficient hours, they're able to get a little bit more sleep, but they're doing much more on the last mile of delivery than staring at a highway for 13 hours a day. So they're both safer, they're able to get higher wages. So anyway, I'm more optimistic, I should say, about the economic side of this, recognizing that, yes, there are concerns, I don't mean to understate them. Where I really worry about this is in pretty much everything non economic. I think the way that people engage with one another, I mean, the trend that I am most worried about, there are a lot of them. And actually, well, I don't want to give too many details, but I talked to the Holy Father about this today. If you look at basic dating behavior among young people, and I think a lot of this is the dating apps are probably more destructive than we fully appreciate. I think part of it is technology has just for some reason made it harder for young men and young women to sort of communicate with each other in the same way. Our young men and women just aren't dating. And if they're not dating, they're not getting married, they're not starting families. There's a level of isolation, I think, mediated through technology. That technology can kind of be a bit of a salve. It can be a bit of a band aid, maybe make you feel less lonely, even when you are lonely. But this is where I think AI could be profoundly dark and negative. I don't think it'll mean 3 million truck drivers are out of a job job. I certainly hope it doesn't mean that. But what I do really worry is, does it mean that there are millions of American teenagers who are talking to chatbots who don't have their best interests at heart? Or even if they do have their best interests at heart, they start to develop a relationship. They start to expect that a chatbot that's trying to sort of give you a dopamine rush that compared to a chatbot, a normal human interaction is not going to be as satisfying, because human beings have wants and needs, right? And I think that's one of the. Of course, like the great things about marriage in particular is you have this other person and you just have to kind of figure it out together, right? But if the other person is a chatbot who's just trying to hook you to spend as much time on it, that's the sort of stuff that I really worry about with AI. And then there's also a whole host of defense and technology applications. I mean, we could wake up very soon in a world where there is no cybersecurity, where the idea of your bank account being safe and secure is just a relic of the past where there's weird shit happening in space mediated through AI that makes our communications infrastructure either actively hostile or at least largely inept and inert. So, yeah, I'm worried about this stuff. I actually read the paper of the guy that you had on. I didn't listen to that podcast, but.
Ross Douthat
If you read the paper, you got the gist. Last question on this. Do you think that the US government is capable in a scenario, again, not like the ultimate Skynet scenario, but just a scenario where AI seems to be getting out of control in some way of taking a pause because for the reasons you've described, the arms race component.
J.D. Vance
Yeah. The honest question of that is, I don't know, because part of this arms race component is if we take a pause, does the PRC not take a pause? And then we find ourselves, we're all sort of enslaved to PRC mediated AI. You know, one thing I'll say, just I know we're here at the embassy in Rome, is I think that this is one of the most profound and positive things that Pope Leo could do, not just for the church, but for the world is like the American government is not equipped to provide moral leadership, at least full scale moral leadership. In the wake of all the changes that are going to come along with AI, I think the church is. This is the sort of thing the church is very good at. This is. It's what the institution was built for in many ways. And I hope that they really do play a very positive role. I suspect that they will. But it's one of my prayers for his papacy is that he recognizes there is such great challenge in the world, but I think such great opportunity for him and for the institution he leads.
Ross Douthat
So a couple times in this interview, you've said something to me to the effect of I know New York Times readers hate me, or I know New York Times readers don't like me, and so on. But here's the reality of the last couple years as I experienced it as a New York Times consumer conservative, the Trump Vance ticket won a constituency that you didn't have before, that Trump didn't have before in 2016. Sure, that included some of the kind of people who read the New York Times. Yes, people who were exhausted by wokeness.
J.D. Vance
By the way, if they don't like me, I still love them.
Ross Douthat
You still love them.
J.D. Vance
But I'm trying to acknowledge the points that I make. May not land particularly well, but go ahead.
Ross Douthat
I'm interested in this constituency because I talk to these kind of people all the time. So I may have an outsized sense of their importance. Right.
J.D. Vance
So I do. They all live in Washington.
Ross Douthat
They all live there. They live around the country. Right. But there's a group of people who. It's not millions and millions of people, but it's a real and substantial constituency that voted for you guys, maybe to their own surprise, or even if they didn't vote for you, woke up the day after the election, I heard a lot of people say this and said, you know, in the end, I was glad they won. And then a lot of those people have experienced the first few months of the administration as a series of unpleasant shocks where it's not one, one big issue, but it'll be something that they care about in particular, that Doge has cut. Or it's the issue we were arguing about before with renditions to El Salvador, where they're like, well, I voted for this administration, but I didn't expect them to go this far or push this hard. And so I want to know what you say to them in general. But I have two examples of that that I think are close to your own interests that I hear a lot about from people. One is, is how we handle addiction in the U.S. the Trump administration has cut staff to the health administration that handles addiction and mental health. It's being reorganized inside RFK Jr. S HHS department. But people I know in addiction medicine, around people who are working with people addicted to fentanyl and other drugs, are incredibly anxious and distressed about some of these changes. Another case with where it's people who, you know, who are evangelical and Catholic, who are concerned about is foreign aid. The Trump administration came in and said, look, we're reorganizing foreign aid. We're not getting rid of it entirely, but we're looking at it anew. But right now, foreign aid has been dramatically cut. So on those two issues, is your expectation at the end of four years that in the end the Trump administration is just, we're just gonna spend less on drug addiction treatment in foreign aid? Or do you think at the end of four years people who have those kind of anxieties will feel like, no, in the end, the administration took our concerns seriously and took our concerns about life saving treatments in Africa seriously, took our concerns about fentanyl addiction treatment seriously here?
J.D. Vance
So let me give you a couple. Let me answer the specific question first, because I think they're basically the same answer, though different questions. One is, while there have been some disruptions, what really has happened here is not an end to supporting people with fentanyl problems or an end to supporting humanitarian causes and people who are suffering from famine or HIV help, HIV drugs in Africa or other places. What has really happened is a reorganization of a very complex bureaucracy. And I'm not saying there haven't been disruptions, because there have been. But I've talked to Secretary Rubio about this, actually a number of times just in the past two days. Days. The goal here is to one, make the spending a little bit more efficient, is two, to eliminate the graft that is built into the system. Marco's told me stories as he dug into this as one of his many jobs. Our Secretary of State was the archivist. He's the archivist, he's the USAID director, that some of the model in USAID was to subcontract completely separate the crazy stuff like doing lesbian puppet shows in very conservative Christian societies. That's insane. But a more fundamental problem is a given NGO contracts to another ngo, which contracts to another ngo. And this isn't true across the board, but some of these grants, they felt like they were getting 11 to 12 cents on the dollar that was actually making it to people. So if we eliminate most of that graft, we could actually save a little money while simultaneously ensuring better services for people. And that, I think, would be a win for the American taxpayer, and of course we care a lot about them, but would also be a win for a lot of poor populations, the world. And that's the same thing with Bobby Kennedy and hnhs. A lot of what we've done is, yes, about saving money, making government more efficient, but it's more fundamentally about bringing some of these bureaucracies within the control of the Secretary of State, as opposed to this random entity that's out there or within the control of Bobby Kennedy, the Secretary of hnhs, as opposed to this vast bureaucracy that's out there. Do I promise that everything is going to be perfect? No. But is our goal to radically cut the provision of mental health services for people who are dealing with fentanyl abuse? No, not at all. That's not what the President has said. Our goal is to make things more efficient and importantly, to make it more subject to Democratic control. And the general point? Just about.
Ross Douthat
Let me frame this. This is really the last question, but frame it as a question. So then generally, you're going to face the voters by proxy in the midterm. Sure, you may face the voters personally in some future. Right. But to this constituency that was pro Trump, again, maybe it's to its own surprise, but has found Itself sort of shocked at various points in the first few months. What is your pitch to them right now?
J.D. Vance
I guess my pitch to them would be we came into the administration with what we believe was a mandate from the American people to make government more responsive to the elected will of the people people and less responsive to bureaucratic intransigence. And changing that is not perfect. And I won't even say that we've gotten every decision right. I think that, you know, sometimes, you know, even Elon has admitted we made a mistake, we corrected the mistake. So the point is not that this is perfect. The point is that it was a necessary part of making the people's government more responsive to the people. And I think that if you look. Look over the next. In two years, you look at the past two years or in four years, you look at the past four years. What I hope to be able to say and what I think is true today and will still be true then, is that we actually have done, with some bumps, we've done a good job at making the government more responsive at more efficient to the cabinet secretaries or the deputy secretaries in those departments. And that this sort of feeling of shock, I don't dismiss it or diminish it, but I think that the system actually needed some pretty significant reform. And I'd ask people for patience because we're on the inside of this. You elected us to do a job, and you get to make the judgment with the benefit of hindsight, whether we were just breaking stuff or whether we were actually doing something in the service of fixing things. I promise you that I believe that we're fixing things, but ultimately, the American people will be the judge of that.
Ross Douthat
All right, well, hopefully we can talk again around when they make that judgment. Perhaps in Jerusalem.
J.D. Vance
Okay.
Ross Douthat
Next time Athens, probably not Moscow, but. Mr. Vice President, thank you so much.
J.D. Vance
Good to see you, Ross, thank you.
Ross Douthat
As always. Thank you so much for listening. And as a reminder, you can watch this as a video podcast on YouTube. You can find the channel under Interesting Times with Ross Douthat. Interesting Times is produced by Sophie Alvarez Boyd, Andrea Batanzos, Elisa Gutierrez and Kathryn Sullivan. It's edited by Jordana Hochman. Our fact check team is Kate Sinclair, Mary, Marge Locker and Michelle Harris. Original music by Isaac Jones, Sonia Herrero, Amin Sahota and Pat McCusker. Mixing by Pat McCusker. Audience strategy by Shannon Busta and Christina Samulewski. And our director of Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.
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Podcast Summary: JD Vance on His Faith and Trump’s Most Controversial Policies
Podcast Information:
Introduction
Ross Douthat welcomes Vice President J.D. Vance to the episode, setting the stage for a deep dive into the intersection of Vance's Catholic faith and his administration's contentious policies under President Trump. The conversation begins in Rome, shortly after the papal inauguration of Pope Leo XIV, marking the first American Pope.
Faith and Politics
The discussion opens with Vance reflecting on his recent meeting with Pope Leo XIV.
J.D. Vance [01:19]: "We talked about issues the Vatican cares a lot about... migration, world peace, Russia, Ukraine, Gaza, and Israel. It was a very productive conversation."
Vance emphasizes how his Catholic principles influence his political views, distinguishing his faith-driven motivations from broader conservative ideologies.
J.D. Vance [02:47]: "The market is a tool, but it is not the end state. The purpose of American politics should be to encourage our citizens to live a good life... that flows through my Catholicism."
He discusses key areas where his faith shapes his policies, including pro-life stances, family support, and economic justice, underscoring that his beliefs inform his approach to governance.
Tension Between Vatican and Administration Policies
Ross probes into the potential conflicts between Vance’s administration and the Vatican’s teachings, particularly on immigration.
Ross Douthat [05:02]: "How should a Catholic politician like yourself think about issues where the hierarchy of the Church or the Pope himself seems to be critical of the stances you're taking?"
Vance acknowledges the historical tensions between American presidents and the Vatican on various issues, asserting a balanced approach informed by both his faith and his duties as Vice President.
J.D. Vance [07:25]: "There are obligations to respect the rights of migrants and enforce the laws for the common good. It's about holding two ideas in your head at the same time."
He differentiates his stance from mere political partisanship, advocating for policies that align with both religious values and national interests.
Immigration Policies
A substantial portion of the conversation delves into the administration's immigration policies, focusing on deportations and border security.
J.D. Vance [15:29]: "The most important success is stopping the flow of illegal migration. The president has succeeded wildly on that."
Vance addresses the challenges faced in deporting millions of illegal immigrants inherited from the Biden administration, highlighting infrastructural inadequacies and legal obstacles.
J.D. Vance [19:00]: "We are running into a conflict between courts interpreting the law and the will of the American people. Success for me is establishing rules the courts are comfortable with and having the infrastructure to deport large numbers of illegal aliens."
He emphasizes the need for Supreme Court support and potential legislative reforms to solidify the administration's immigration stance.
Deportation Infrastructure and Legal Challenges
Vance discusses specific cases and the frustration with judicial resistance to deportations.
J.D. Vance [28:05]: "If we take a pause, does the PRC not take a pause? We could become enslaved to PRC-mediated AI."
He defends the administration's deportation efforts as legal and necessary for national cohesion, while acknowledging the anti-immigration sentiments fueling resistance.
Trade and Industrial Policy
The conversation shifts to trade policies enacted under the administration, particularly tariffs and efforts to bolster domestic manufacturing.
J.D. Vance [46:08]: "The goal is to have more domestic production, rely less on foreign countries, and reduce the trade deficit."
Vance outlines the administration's objectives, including reducing the $1.3 trillion trade deficit by making imports more expensive and domestic production more competitive. He highlights successes such as increased private capital investment and improved trade deals, like the UK agreement benefiting U.S. manufacturers and agricultural producers.
J.D. Vance [52:16]: "We have a trillion-dollar industrial policy at the Department of Defense, rewarding innovation in technology."
He counters critiques of the administration's approach by framing their policies as smart industrial strategies aimed at enhancing U.S. economic resilience.
Artificial Intelligence and Cultural Impacts
Addressing the future, Douthat inquires about the administration's perspective on AI and its societal implications.
J.D. Vance [56:12]: "I worry about how AI affects human interactions, like dating behavior among young people and isolation mediated through technology."
Vance expresses concerns over AI’s potential to disrupt cultural and social norms, emphasizing the risks of diminished human interactions and increased isolation, despite being optimistic about AI’s economic benefits.
J.D. Vance [60:32]: "The church is well-equipped to provide moral leadership in the wake of AI advancements."
He advocates for the church’s role in guiding society through technological transformations, highlighting a need for moral and ethical frameworks.
Addressing Voters' Concerns
In the final segment, Douthat raises concerns from Trump's constituency about the administration's handling of addiction services and foreign aid.
Ross Douthat [61:16]: "How do you respond to constituents shocked by cuts to addiction treatment and foreign aid?"
Vance reassures that the administration is not eliminating support but reorganizing programs for efficiency and effectiveness.
J.D. Vance [65:46]: "We've worked to make spending more efficient and eliminate graft, ensuring better services for people while saving taxpayer money."
He urges patience and trust, emphasizing that reforms aim to enhance government responsiveness and efficiency, despite initial disruptions.
Conclusion
The episode concludes with mutual appreciation, as Douthat and Vance acknowledge the complexities of integrating faith with policy-making. Vance reiterates his commitment to balancing religious values with national interests, while addressing voter anxieties about the administration’s reforms.
Notable Quotes:
Final Thoughts
In this comprehensive dialogue, Vice President J.D. Vance articulates how his Catholic faith shapes his approach to contentious policies, particularly immigration and trade. Balancing religious convictions with political responsibilities, Vance navigates the challenges of implementing administration goals amidst legal and societal pressures. The conversation underscores the intricate interplay between personal beliefs and public policy in shaping America's future.