The “New Right” JD Vance Edition: Vance and the so‑called “New Right” are basically the GOP’s younger, more ideological startup bros… except instead of pitching an app, they’re pitching a whole new flavor of conservatism that really took off in the later Trump years.
Reporting describes this crew as a cocktail of:
- Economic nationalism (because globalization is so 1999)
- Hardline immigration restriction
- Deep suspicion of U.S. military adventures abroad
- Culture‑war politics turned up to “aggressively online”
- And a firm “no thanks” to old‑school small‑government conservatism, in favor of a government that’s extremely ready to enforce cultural priorities
POLITICO groups this under “national conservatism,” with influences ranging from Catholic post‑liberalism to conservative populism to some fringe online neo‑reactionary corners of the internet.
WBUR adds that the coalition includes everything from techno‑libertarians to white nationalists to various reactionary online communities… a sort of ideological potluck where everyone brought something spicy.
---
How JD Vance Fits Into This Circus:
According to POLITICO, JD Vance is basically the poster child of the New Right in Washington. Reporting highlights traits like:
- Young, Catholic, and very into intellectual frameworks
- Fluent in anti‑elite rhetoric despite the Yale Law degree
- Aligned with Trump’s agenda but with more theory behind it
- A champion of “national conservatism”
His transformation from Trump critic to Trump loyalist has been widely covered, and reporting frames his rise as a sign that this once‑fringe faction has successfully moved into the GOP’s main house and started rearranging the furniture.
---
How This Differs From the Old GOP:
Compared to the Reagan‑Bush era, the New Right is basically the “we’re not doing that anymore” caucus. Reporting notes shifts like:
- Less pro‑business, more “pro‑worker” rhetoric
- More enthusiasm for using government power to shape culture and economics
- More isolationist or “America First” foreign policy
- More online, more meme‑driven, more counter‑cultural
- More confrontational toward universities, media, and federal agencies
---
Why It Matters:
Analysts say the New Right is gaining influence because:
- Trump elevated many of its champions
- Younger conservative thinkers gravitate toward it
- It gives Trump‑era populism a more coherent ideological framework
- Figures like Vance represent where the party could be heading
If JD Vance runs for president in 2028, reporting indicates he wouldn’t start a new party… he’d aim to lead the existing GOP as the heir to the MAGA coalition. Right now, he’s widely described as a leading favorite for the nomination.
Some people argue that if Trump was the chaotic showrunner of this political era, Vance could be the reboot with a darker, more ideological script. Less improv, more doctrine, and absolutely no laugh track.