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 August 26, 2025

JD Vance tackles global and domestic policy on 'Meet the Press'

Vice President JD Vance didn’t mince words on "Meet the Press," delivering a sharp defense of the Trump administration’s agenda. His Saturday sit-down with Kristen Welker showcased a conservative vision unafraid to challenge progressive orthodoxy. Yet, his tone remained measured, aiming to persuade rather than provoke.

The Daily Wire reported that Vance addressed President Trump’s foreign and domestic policies, from brokering peace in the Russia-Ukraine conflict to reshaping congressional maps in Texas.

Russia has yielded ground to Trump’s negotiations, a breakthrough after three and a half years of stalemate. “The Russians have made significant concessions to President Trump,” Vance declared, signaling a shift in Moscow’s posture. This progress exposes the Biden administration’s softer approach as woefully inadequate.

Trump’s focus is on halting the bloodshed, not rehashing the war’s origins. Vance emphasized, “We’re trying to negotiate as much as we can with both the Russians and Ukrainians.” Progressive critics might scoff, but pragmatism drives results over endless moralizing.

China, a key player as Russia’s top oil buyer, faces a hefty 54% U.S. tariff. “We’ve had several conversations at all levels over the government to try to encourage the Chinese to be better partners,” Vance noted. Leveraging economic muscle to push Beijing is a bold, if risky, gambit.

Pressuring Russia, Avoiding Boots

Welker pressed Vance on Russia’s incentives to negotiate, asking, “Where exactly is the pressure on Russia to do anything?”

Vance countered, “The President has applied more economic pressure to the Russians to stop this war than Biden did in three years.” Facts over feelings—this administration plays hardball.

Trump’s stance is clear: no American troops in Ukraine. “The President has been very clear. There are not going to be [American] boots on the ground,” Vance affirmed. This commitment undercuts hawkish calls for escalation while prioritizing American lives.

Negotiations, not ultimatums, will end the war, Vance argued. “This is how wars ultimately get settled,” he said, emphasizing Trump’s role in opening doors for dialogue. Critics may call it appeasement; supporters see it as realism grounded in strength.

Turning to domestic policy, Vance tackled Texas’ new congressional map, poised to add up to five Republican seats in 2026.

“All we’re doing, frankly, is trying to make the situation a little bit more fair,” he claimed. Democrats’ cries of foul ring hollow given their own aggressive gerrymandering.

The census counting unauthorized migrants for congressional apportionment drew Vance’s ire. “They end up getting congressional representation that ought, by right, to go to American citizens,” he said. This policy dilutes the voice of legal residents—a point progressives conveniently ignore.

Vance’s defense of the Texas map was unapologetic yet restrained. “Democrats have gerrymandered their states really aggressively,” he noted, framing the move as a corrective. It’s a strategic play, not a tantrum, despite what left-leaning pundits claim.

Cracking Down on Crime

In the nation’s capital, the Trump administration has unleashed the National Guard to curb crime. “Allowing vagrants and armed robberies to take over your city—that’s a policy choice,” Vance quipped. Progressive leniency, he implied, has coddled criminals at the expense of safety.

Trump’s approach empowers local law enforcement to act decisively. “What President Trump is showing is that if you just empower local law enforcement to arrest and prosecute the bad guys, we can take back American streets,” Vance said. It’s a no-nonsense stance that resonates with fed-up citizens.

Vance’s broader point was clear: safety isn’t negotiable. By prioritizing arrests and prosecutions, the administration rejects the soft-on-crime policies of its predecessors. Urban voters, weary of chaos, may find this approach refreshingly direct.

Vance’s "Meet the Press" appearance was a calculated push against progressive narratives. From foreign policy to domestic reforms, he articulated a conservative agenda rooted in pragmatism. The left may bristle, but results, not rhetoric, will define this administration’s legacy.

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