Senate hopeful who went after Vance’s wife and ‘brown kids’ gets ‘personal, cruel, and straight-up disgusting’

Controversy continues for a swing state’s Senate hopeful as the Democrat twists the vice president’s family into a political weapon with suggestions relating to his “brown kids.”

“This is personal, cruel, and straight-up **disgusting**.”

Rather than promote any of the unpalatable policies they aim to ram through, Democrats have made their platform focus on demonizing President Donald Trump and — as heir apparent — Vice President J.D. Vance. So it was that Michigan Senate candidate Dr. Abdul El-Sayed used a podcast appearance to allege the vice president’s “career of hating people who are different” extended into his own household.

Joining host Brian Allen on “The Allen Analysis Show,” the former Wayne County Health Director used the platform to jest about the relationship between Vance and Second Lady Usha Vance, “What do you think is going through Usha’s head when he talks? She’s like, ‘Damn, I have to sleep with him.’ I mean, like, I mean, I guess she’s pregnant, so I guess something’s happening. But like, yeah, like you gotta imagine, like, truly, zero charisma. Like none, right? And like, can you imagine — like, he’s got brown kids. At some point, he’s gonna have to have a really awkward conversation with his kids. It’ll be like, you know, like, you made your career hating people who are different.”

Among those reacting to the viral clip, Christians Against Antisemitism Institute founder Reverend Jordan Wells said, “This isn’t politics. This is personal, cruel, and straight-up **disgusting**. Attacking a man’s wife and mocking his kids’ American identity? That’s the kind of gutter tactic that shows exactly who Democrats are willing to elevate. No wonder they’re losing the American people.”

The exchange continued with Allen adding. “Yeah, that looks like his kids. There’s a video of him saying that it’s completely okay for you to not want your neighbor to not speak English. So I’m thinking — I saw a photo of him at Thanksgiving. They’re speaking Hindi.”

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“His kids’ grandparents — like, how do you have that conversation with them?” wondered El-Sayed. “I’m just, I’m like, part of me is just like, bro, your whole political philosophy is incoherent. Like, and you’re smart enough to know it.”

Speaking to Vance’s education at Yale Law School, the candidate vying to fill the seat of retiring Michigan Sen. Gary Peters (D) expressed, “He’s a smart guy. The thing about it is, he’s like, soul corrupt.”

“So like, you got Donald Trump, who’s just an ego with no brain. Then you’ve got a brain with this like soul corruption for power. And I don’t know what’s worse. Part of me is like, it must suck to live inside your head, to know that your entire politics is incoherent with the way you live your life,” he said before he went on to add, “J.D. Vance has brown kids who he thinks — he thinks are less American than everyone else. Like, that’s wild, to look at your own kids and be like, you don’t actually belong as much in this country that I brought you into.”

While El-Sayed suggested the Vance children would grow up and “do everything they can to undo his politics,” the leftist who has already come under fire for aligning himself with Hamas sympathizers, equating “evil” Israel with the terrorist organization and refusing to speak about the death of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameini because “a lot of people in Dearborn are sad,” is hardly the first person to use the vice president’s family as a line of attack.

Late last year, former MSNBC host Joy Reid floated a conspiracy that Vance would leave his “brown Hindu wife” for “White Queen” Erika Kirk before the couple had announced they were expecting their fourth child.

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Meanwhile, the vice president made clear what his views were on race during a speech at Turning Point USA’s AmFest 2025: “Unlike the left, we stand against treating anybody … We don’t treat anybody differently because of their race or their sex. So we have relegated DEI to the dustbin of history, which is exactly where it belongs.”

“In the United States of America, you don’t have to apologize for being white anymore,” continued Vance. “And if you’re an Asian, you don’t have to talk around your skin color when you’re applying for college. Because we judge people based on who they are, not on ethnicity and things they can’t control.”

As for El-Sayed, his statements found many arguing that he had some explaining to do about his own possible inherent biases, while others called out his like-filled commentary to suggest education was not the field on which he ought to fight.

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Kevin Haggerty

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