Vice President JD Vance and Second Lady Usha Vance sat down with CBS News Sunday Morning this weekend to talk about their decision to have a fourth child — a decision born in part from the gut-wrenching loss of conservative icon Charlie Kirk back in September 2025. And naturally, because it involves a Republican family choosing to have more children, the internet is already losing its collective mind.
Imagine being so broken as a political movement that a married couple having a baby makes you angry. Welcome to the modern left.
The interview was timed to promote Vance's upcoming book, "Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith," which drops June 16, 2026. In it, the Vice President describes a conversation that happened on the very day of Kirk's assassination — one that clearly left a mark. Erika Kirk, Charlie's widow, told Usha that she "regretted having only two kids with Charlie." Let that sink in. A young widow, burying her husband, and the thing she wishes she had more of isn't money, isn't fame — it's children.
Usha Vance explained in the interview how that conversation hit home. "It really did crystallize for him, that sense that if you could have that other child, then you would have nothing to regret," she said, referring to JD's thinking after Kirk's death.
But Usha was also quick to point out this wasn't some impulsive grief decision. "I think it really heightened JD's sense that he'd been talking about this for a while," she said. The couple had already been discussing expanding their family. Kirk's death didn't start the conversation — it ended the debate.
The Vances announced in January 2026 that they were expecting their fourth child — a son, due in July. He'll join siblings Ewan, Vivek, and Mirabel in what is apparently the most triggering family unit in American politics.
Four kids. A married couple. Faith. The horror.
You'd think this would be one of those rare stories everyone could nod along to. A family choosing life. A tribute to a fallen friend. A man writing a book about rediscovering his faith. But we don't live in that country anymore — at least not according to the people who screech about "overpopulation" from their $4,000-a-month studio apartments with their emotional support cats.
Remember, this is the same crowd that mocked Vance relentlessly for his "childless cat ladies" comment. They acted like he'd committed a war crime for suggesting that maybe — just maybe — having a stake in the future through your children gives you a different perspective on policy. The Vances didn't just talk about it. They walked the walk. Again.
And the Charlie Kirk connection makes this story hit even harder. Kirk was 31 years old when he was killed. Thirty-one. He built Turning Point USA into one of the most effective conservative youth organizations in the country, and he was taken from his wife Erika and their two children in an instant. The fact that his death inspired the Vances to embrace life more fully is exactly the kind of legacy Kirk would have wanted.
That's what real people do when tragedy strikes. They don't retreat into nihilism. They don't write op-eds about how the world is too broken to bring children into. They hold their families tighter and they build.
The book, "Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith," reportedly details Vance's journey into Catholicism and how his faith shaped his worldview. According to LifeZette, which covered the CBS interview, the Kirk tragedy plays a significant role in that narrative — not as a political prop, but as a genuine turning point.
Contrast that with the other side. The Democrats' vision of family in 2026 involves government daycare, taxpayer-funded everything, and lectures from people who think gender is a spectrum but biology is settled science when it comes to climate. Meanwhile, the Vice President of the United States is on national television talking about how losing a friend made him want to be a better father and have more children.
And they wonder why they keep losing elections.
The Vance family is expecting their son in July. Charlie Kirk's legacy lives on — not just in the organization he built, but in the lives he inspired even after he was gone. That's what matters. That's what lasts.
The left can seethe. The rest of us will be busy building families.