Summarize this content to 2000 words in 6 paragraphs Usha Vance said she and her husband Ohio Senator JD Vance at times disagree on politics during an interview on Fox & Friends on Monday.Former President Donald Trump announced Vance, first elected to the U.S. Senate in 2022, as his running mate in the presidential election last month.JD Vance is viewed as a staunch conservative and close ally to Trump who can help shore up the conservative base. However in the weeks since his announcement, the senator has faced criticisms for his past comments about “childless” women, as well as skepticism from some on the right over previous anti-Trump remarks he made.Usha Vance sat down for an interview with Fox & Friends that aired Monday morning in which she was asked by co-host Ainsley Earhardt about whether she and her husband always see eye-to-eye on political issues.”No, we’re two different people. We have lots of different backgrounds and interests and things like that, so we come to different conclusions all the time. But that’s part of the fun of being married. What I never doubt about Vance, even when I disagree about this or that, is his intention. What it is that he really wants to do and I really trust that,” she said.She added that she believes JD treats her opinions “with a lot of seriousness and respect,” and that “becomes a part of the way he thinks about things.”Newsweek has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment via email.Usha Vance also weighed in on her thoughts about Trump when asked by Earhardt about Senator Vance previously saying he did not think he would be a good president, but was later wrong.

Usha Vance speaks at the Republican National Convention on July 17 in Milwaukee. Usha Vance on Monday said she and JD Vance, an Ohio Republican senator who is former President Donald Trump’s running mate, have…
Usha Vance speaks at the Republican National Convention on July 17 in Milwaukee. Usha Vance on Monday said she and JD Vance, an Ohio Republican senator who is former President Donald Trump’s running mate, have different opinions about politics sometimes.
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“I’ve had several years since then to kind of understand what he is out to do, and honestly what JD is out to do and we’ve had a lot of really good conversations about that. If I didn’t feel that the ticket, the Trump-Vance ticket, was able to do some real good for the country, then I wouldn’t be here supporting him. And JD wouldn’t have done this,” she said.Usha Vance is an attorney who previously clerked for Supreme Court Justices John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh. She was born to Indian immigrant parents and grew up near San Diego, California. She met JD Vance while attending Yale Law School and later got married in 2014. She was a registered Democrat as of 2014, but registered as a Republican in 2018.In a clip of her interview released Sunday, Usha Vance said the media created a “caricature” of her husband.”You look at the news sometimes and you just see this caricature of a human. And he’s a really good person,” she said. “I wish people would pause and actually listen to the words he says and try to understand their meaning and purpose.”JD Vance drew criticism after a 2021 interview resurfaced in which he told the former Fox News host Tucker Carlson that the country was run by “a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they’ve made, and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable too.” He has defended the remarks, saying they were sarcasm.

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