Vance debuts solo as VP candidate with rallies in Virginia and Ohio
MIDDLETOWN: Republican JD Vance made his first solo appearances on the campaign trail on Monday, a day after the 2024 presidential race was thrown into upheaval as President Joe Biden dropped out of the race, making the Democratic candidate an open question.
Vance, an Ohio senator, is scheduled to hold a rally in his hometown of Middletown on Monday afternoon, followed by a second rally on Monday evening in Radford, Virginia, fresh off his rally debut with Donald Trump over the weekend.
Vance was expected to eventually face Vice President Kamala Harris in a debate. But with Biden dropping out and the Democratic ticket unsettled, the senator is following Trump’s lead and focusing on attacking Biden and Harris jointly.
“President Trump and I are ready to save America, whoever’s at the top of the Democrat ticket,” Vance said on Sunday in a post on X.
“Bring it on.” Trump’s campaign plans to use Vance, who became the Republican vice presidential nominee last week, in Rust Belt states that are seen as pivotal for Democrats’ path to the White House, including Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, and places where the senator’s blue collar roots and populist views are expected to resonate.
His hometown of Middletown, which sits between Cincinnati and Dayton, is considered to be part of the Rust Belt.
Using it as the location for his first solo event as the vice presidential nominee not only allows Vance to lean into his biography, which he laid out in his bestselling memoir “Hillbilly Elegy,” but it gives the campaign a chance to establish a fresh groundswell in a former swing state that has been trending Republican.