VP Vance Delivers Family Bombshell

Vice President JD Vance reveals in his upcoming memoir that the death of Charlie Kirk influenced his wife Usha’s decision to become pregnant with the couple’s fourth child, a boy who will be their first since Vance took office in January 2025.

The disclosure appears in “Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith,” a spiritual memoir that frames Kirk’s September 10, 2025, assassination at Utah Valley University as a turning point in Vance’s personal and religious life.

“Something changed for Usha, and not long after we buried my friend, she became pregnant with our fourth child, a boy,” Vance writes in the book.

Kirk, the 31-year-old founder of Turning Point USA, was shot in the neck during a speaking and debate series called the American Comeback Tour at the Orem, Utah campus. Police identified 22-year-old Tyler Robinson as the suspect and said he acted alone. Kirk, a devout Christian whose views on gender, race and abortion drew fierce backlash from liberals, became the subject of one of the most polarizing political tragedies of the Trump era.

A Friendship Forged in Politics

The vice president has said Kirk was among the first people he called when weighing a Senate run in 2021, and Kirk publicly and privately championed Vance’s selection as President Donald Trump’s running mate in 2024. Vance’s bond with Kirk extended well beyond political alliance. After Kirk was killed, Vance scrapped a planned trip to New York commemorating the 24th anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks and flew instead to Utah to retrieve the body, which was transported on Air Force Two to Kirk’s home state of Arizona.

Five days after the shooting, on September 15, 2025, Vance guest-hosted “The Charlie Kirk Show” from his office in the White House complex. Andrew Kolvet, the show’s executive producer, said Vance asked to do it. “Charlie and JD were friends. They were actual friends,” Kolvet said.

During the broadcast, Vance called Kirk “the smartest political operative I ever met” and credited him with helping to build the second Trump administration. “The success we’ve had in this administration traces directly to Charlie’s ability to organize and convene,” he said, adding that Kirk “didn’t just help us win in 2024, he helped us staff the entire government.” President Donald Trump announced he would award Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom posthumously.

Grief, Faith and a Memoir

The book, framed as a spiritual reckoning, suggests Kirk’s death pushed Vance and his wife toward decisions they had not anticipated. Usha Vance, who has largely kept a low public profile, had three children with the vice president before the assassination. The memoir explicitly ties the family’s expansion to mourning and personal renewal in the wake of Kirk’s death.

Vance has called Kirk a “true friend” and said, “I owe so much to Charlie.” Those tributes have intermingled with sharper political rhetoric. On the September 15 broadcast, Vance argued that “left-wing extremism” was “part of the reason why Charlie was killed by an assassin’s bullet,” and joined White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller in vowing to dismantle what Miller described as “terrorist networks.” Law enforcement officials said Robinson had an “obsession” with Kirk and “had become more political” before the shooting, though investigators have not established a motive.

The Wider Backlash

Republican officials launched a campaign to punish those celebrating Kirk’s death following the killing. Vance urged listeners to “call them out, and hell, call their employer.” Florida Rep. Randy Fine demanded the “firing, defunding, and license revocation” of those mocking Kirk. South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace called on the Department of Education to cut funding to schools that did not retaliate against employees making insensitive posts.

Anthony Pough, a U.S. Secret Service employee, had his security clearance revoked after Facebook posts about Kirk. Secret Service Director Sean Curran wrote in an internal memo that politically motivated attacks were on the rise. Office Depot fired employees at a Michigan branch after a viral video showed staff refusing to print posters for a Kirk vigil. Washington Post columnist Karen Attiah was dismissed over social media posts.

Democrats have rejected the framing that the political left bears unique responsibility. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said “finger pointing” would not cool tensions. A YouGov poll found liberal Americans more likely than conservatives to defend feeling joy about the deaths of political opponents. But a 2023 Public Religion Research Institute survey found that one-third of Republicans agreed true patriots “may have to resort to violence” to save the country, compared with 13 percent of Democrats.

Gov. Spencer Cox of Utah said that information about Robinson’s ideology had so far come “from his acquaintance and his family members.” Robinson is registered to vote but is unaffiliated with any party and listed as an inactive voter.

For Vance, the political and personal remain inseparable. “Communion” is, by his own telling, the story of a man finding his way back to faith. That return, the book makes clear, began with a funeral — and continued with the news that his family would grow by one.

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