Usha Vance gets candid: Second Lady talks Motherhood, books, and her summer challenge

Second Lady Usha Vance doesn’t do a lot of media. But when she does, she brings something rare: authenticity.

During a recent sit-down with Fox & Friends host Ainsley Earhardt, Usha gave viewers a rare glimpse into her home life with Vice President JD Vance and their children while launching her brand-new Summer Reading Challenge for kids across America.

And while some viewers found the interview “awkward,” others found it refreshingly real. One user on X put it best:

“Usha Vance is lovely, gracious, and intelligent… and genuinely uncomfortable in interviews. I appreciate that. It’s refreshing.”

Books on the Coffee Table and Bugs in the Backyard
Usha, who grew up in a low-key household with books scattered across every surface, shared how reading shaped her childhood, and now plays a central role in how she and JD raise their own kids.

“My parents were hands-off, but they always encouraged us to learn,” she said. “They had books by the bedside, on the tables — they led by example.”

These days, her boys are fascinated with insects (after a dinosaur phase), and their home is filled with books about creepy crawlies, even if some titles, she joked, aren’t ones she’d personally pick up.

“There are a lot of books in our house I’d never read,” she laughed.

A Challenge Worth Reading Into
Launched on June 1, the Second Lady’s 2025 Summer Reading Challenge invites kids in grades K–8 to read 12 books by September 5, tracking their titles, drawing or writing reflections, and submitting their forms for a chance to win prizes, including a trip to Washington, D.C.

“Adventure, imagination, and discovery await — right between the pages of a book,” the challenge’s welcome letter reads.

Children who complete the challenge will receive a certificate and small prize, and their entries will be placed into a national drawing. One winner, along with a parent or guardian, will be invited to visit the capital (pending security vetting, of course).

“My goal is to come up with small ways I can use my platform to counteract big problems,” Usha explained. “This isn’t the end-all, be-all — but it’s a start.”

Familiar, but National
Usha says the program was partly inspired by her own upbringing and by the nostalgia many parents feel for the summer reading challenges of their youth.

“I think a lot of us grew up doing these,” she said. “But I’m not aware of one that’s equally accessible to children across the country.”

The program is free, simple, and open to all. A PDF packet on the White House site explains the rules, includes a log sheet, and wraps up with, yes, a very legal-sounding waiver that reminded some online readers of a science fair meets Capitol Hill.

But Usha’s tone throughout the interview remained measured and sincere. And she’s focused not on PR buzz, but on impact.

“We hope you’ll join us this summer,” the letter concludes. “Let the reading adventures begin!”

Bottom line? Usha Vance may not crave the spotlight, but she’s using her platform to shine one on something that matters.

And if that makes for an awkward TV clip? Honestly…

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