Friday, December 5, 2025
ADVT 
Global Indians

Usha becomes first Indian-American Second Lady as JD Vance takes oath as US Vice President

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Jan, 2025 12:36 PM
  • Usha becomes first Indian-American Second Lady as JD Vance takes oath as US Vice President

Washington, Jan 21 (IANS) Usha Vance became the first Indian-American and Hindu Second Lady after her husband J.D. Vance was sworn in as the 50th Vice President of the US on Monday.

She held the Bible in one hand, and their daughter Mirabel Rose in the other, as Vance placed his left hand on the religious text, and raising his right hand took the oath of office.

President Donald Trump said later that Usha Vance is smarter than her husband and that he might have picked her as the Vice President.

Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a mentor to Usha Vance, administered the oath to her husband.

J.D. Vance was sworn in before President Donald Trump took the oath of office.

Before the Vances came to the podium, military personnel in ceremonial uniforms brought their children, Ewan Blaine, 7, Vivek, 4, and Mirabel Rose, 3, to the podium.

The boys wore formal suits, and Usha Vance was dressed in pink.

She beamed and looked admiringly at J.D. Vance as he repeated the oath after Kavanaugh.

J.D. Vance's mother, Beverly Aikins who has given up drugs, stood with the family during the ceremony.

Usha Vance is the daughter of Telugu immigrants from India, Radhakrishna "Krish" Chilukuri, an aerospace engineer, and Lakshmi Chilukuri, the provost at the University of California, San Diego.

J.D. Vance and Usha met while they were studying law at Yale University.

J.D. Vance, who came from a broken family with his mother a drug addict, and suffered poverty, credited Usha in his memoir with being his "spirit guide" who helped him navigate the Ivy League university and professional life.

Raised by his grandmother, Vance joined the military to escape the dysfunction of life in Middleton, Ohio, and got his break with admission to Yale, where he said he felt out of place.

He wrote: "In a place that always seemed a little foreign, Usha's presence made me feel at home."

They married in 2014.

After briefly practicing law, J.D. Vance turned to business as a venture capitalist.

Entering politics, he was elected to the Senate in 2022.

Usha Vance is a corporate litigator who left a prestigious law firm after he was named the Vice President candidate.

She worked previously as a clerk for Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Kavanaugh while he was an appeals court judge.

J.D. Vance also influenced her.

She switched her membership from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party.

MORE Global Indians ARTICLES

Vikram Patel named chair of Harvard's global health dept

Vikram Patel named chair of Harvard's global health dept
Patel, who succeeds Paul Farmer, is the Pershing Square Professor of Global Health in the Blavatnik Institute at Harvard Medical School and a well-known expert in global mental health.

Vikram Patel named chair of Harvard's global health dept

Indian-American teen wins $50,000 Young Scientist award

Indian-American teen wins $50,000 Young Scientist award
Saathvik Kannan of David H. Hickman High School in Columbia was awarded for using biocomputational methods to understand the causes of heightened infectivity in the disease mpox after it re-emerged in 2022.

Indian-American teen wins $50,000 Young Scientist award

Birmingham elects first ever British-Indian Lord Mayor

Birmingham elects first ever British-Indian Lord Mayor
Born in Pakhowal village of Punjab's Hoshiarpur district, Lal came to England in 1964 with his mother to join his father Sardar Harnam Singh, a British-Indian army officer who in the Second World War served in the Italian campaign. Lal joined the Labour Party in 1989 and has taken part in many social justice campaigns to challenge inequality and all forms of discrimination. 

Birmingham elects first ever British-Indian Lord Mayor

NYC Mayor honours India-born woman for promoting cultural literacy

NYC Mayor honours India-born woman for promoting cultural literacy
Sehgal, founder and president of The Culture Tree, was honoured on Tuesday at the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Reception 2023 in New York, which was attended by 800 prominent members of the diaspora and Asian communities.

NYC Mayor honours India-born woman for promoting cultural literacy

California Governor names India-born attorney as superior court judge

California Governor names India-born attorney as superior court judge
Sweena Pannu, a Democrat, who will serve as a Judge in the Stanislaus County Superior Court, fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Thomas D. Zeff. She was an attorney at ML SARIN from 1996 to 2004, and earned a Master of Laws degree from the University of Aberdeen School of Law. 

California Governor names India-born attorney as superior court judge

Indian-American high schooler wins top computer science award

Indian-American high schooler wins top computer science award
Sirihaasa Nallamothu of University High School in Normal, Illinois, will receive a $10,000 cash prize for her project that was selected by a panel of judges based on ingenuity, complexity, relevancy and originality.

Indian-American high schooler wins top computer science award