Bonnie Blanton Vance and J.D. Vance.Photo:JD Vance/Facebook, BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty
JD Vance/Facebook, BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty
J.D. Vance’s Mamaw had a big impact on his life.
Through the years, Vice President Vance, who was elected alongsideDonald Trumpin November 2024, has spoken highly of his late grandmother, who died in 2005.
During an interview withMegyn Kelly in 2017, he noted that she was the greatest influence on his life, saying she “just got me.”
Ahead, here’s everything to know about J.D. Vance’s Mamaw and what he has said about her through the years.
Vance’s maternal grandparents originally hailed from Jackson, Ky., located in the “heart of southeastern Kentucky’s coal region,”perPolitico.
In the late 1940s, the couple moved to Middletown, Ohio. At the time, Jim was 16 and Bonnie was 13 — and pregnant with their first child.
Throughout his early childhood, Vance’s mother Beverly struggled with substance abuse and addiction, which he alleged would make her act aggressively.
J.D. Vance.Andrew Harnik/Getty
Andrew Harnik/Getty
Vance’s birth name is James Donald Bowman, though he later changed it to James David Hamel after his mother remarried.
After his grandparents took him in, he began using their last name, becoming J.D. Vance, perThe New York Times.
While Vance is serving as a Republican vice president, his grandparents were union Democrats. In his memoir, the politician explained how his grandparents and others like them thought about political parties,perPolitico:“All politicians might be crooks, but if there were any exceptions, they were undoubtedly members of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal coalition."
In his memoir, Vance noted that his grandmother had an “affinity for Bill Clinton” while his grandfather only voted Republican once, for Ronald Reagan. In a previous interview, he noted that his grandparents were “classic blue-dog Democrats, union Democrats,” adding that “they loved their country” and “were socially conservative,” perThe New York Times.
After he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2022, he gave a shout-out to his Mamaw in his victory speech, saying, “You’re not always going to agree with every vote that I take, and you’re not going to agree with every single amendment that I offer in the United States Senate, but I will never forget the woman who raised me.”
During an interview withNPR, Vance discussed his own faith as well as his grandmother’s approach to Christianity.
“Mamaw taught a very personal faith,” he said, “She really loved the Christian faith. She loved God, and that was an important part of her life. But she was disconnected from a traditional religious institution” and therefore didn’t go to church.
“Mamaw just mistrusted a lot of the parts of institutional Christianity as she saw it,” he explained. “She saw that people were primarily asking for money and weren’t actually that interested in the faith. And the other side of it — and I think that this is related — is that Mamaw saw church as increasingly an upper-crust institution. There were a lot of churches in Middletown, Ohio, but there weren’t a lot of churches in the very poor, white communities.”
He concluded, “In some ways, I think Mamaw’s approach to church was a leading indicator of what we’re seeing a lot these days, which is that lower-income folks don’t feel as comfortable in church and don’t have as much exposure to church."
Speaking with Kelly, Vance recalled one of the first things his grandmother told him when he went to live with her. “She said, ‘Look you’re gonna come and stay with me and if anybody has a problem with it, they can talk to my gun,’ ” he recalled.
Vance added that she was “very good with a gun” and when she died, they found 19 loaded handguns throughout her home.
Glenn Close as Mamaw in Hillbilly Elegy.Netflix
Netflix
Though Mamaw died before the film’s release, Close metwith Vanceand his family, including his mother Beverly, while filming the movie.
“Everyone in my family has had this ‘Oh, s—’ moment every time they see Glenn Close’s Mamaw because she looks so much like her, she acts so much like her,”Vance told Netflix.
Vance has noted that his Mamaw had a huge impact on his life, especially his adolescent years.
Speaking with Kelly in 2017, he talked about their close bond: “She really just got me. She understood when I needed someone to ride me. She knew when I needed love and comfort. She knew when she just needed to be sympathetic. She was really smart.”
source: people.com