JD Vance on racist Puerto Rico joke: "We have to stop getting so offended"
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Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance during a campaign event in Racine, Wisconsin, on Monday. Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images
Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio) said Monday he doesn't believe Trump rally comedian Tony Hinchcliffe's racist joke about Puerto Rico will stop people voting for the Republican presidential ticket.
Why it matters: Hinchcliffe's likening of Puerto Rico to a "floating island of garbage" at former President Trump's N.Y. rally Sunday drew widespread criticism, including from Republican lawmakers, and the GOP presidential nominee's representatives said it "does not reflect" his views nor those of the campaign.
- Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton compared the Madison Square Garden rally to an infamous 1939 pro-Nazi gathering at the same venue.
- But Republican vice presidential nominee Vance said in Racine, Wisconsin, that he's "not worried about a joke that a comedian who has no affiliation" with the Trump campaign has told.
Driving the news: Vance was twice asked about the fallout from Hinchcliffe's remarks during campaign stops in Wisconsin.
- At a Wausau, Wisc., rally Vance said the Madison Square Garden event had been a "celebration of America" and "a lot of fun" as he accused Vice President Kamala Harris and her team of "comparing us to literal Nazis."
- A reporter asked Vance at the rally whether speakers telling racist jokes at Madison Square Garden and calling Harris "the anti-Christ" was the right tone as the 2024 race nears an end.
- "I've heard about the joke, I haven't actually seen the joke that you mentioned, but I think that it's telling that Kamala Harris' closing message is essentially that all of Donald Trump's voters are Nazis, and you should get really pissed off about a comedian telling a joke," Vance said.
- "Maybe it's a stupid, racist joke as you said, maybe it's not. I haven't seen it. I'm not going to comment on the specifics of the joke," he added. "But I think that we have to stop getting so offended at every little thing in the United States of America. I'm just — I'm so over it."
Zoom in: Vance said he's "not worried" that the joke would persuade people to say, "'We're not going to vote for Donald Trump now; we're going to look past the fact that we can't afford groceries because somebody made a joke that we don't like.'"
- He added: "I just don't buy that."
In Racine, Wisc, Vance said he didn't think that a comedian telling a joke was news worth making.
- "You know what I do when I think a joke is dumb or not funny? I don't laugh," he added.
Go deeper: JD Vance touts Trump as "candidate of peace"
