Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Politics

Usha Vance and the Illusion of the American Dream

As Usha Chilukuri Vance steps further into the national spotlight as the Second Lady of the United States, her presence has sparked conversations about identity, ambition, and the myth of meritocracy in America. For many Indian Americans, her story—one of elite education, career success, and political prominence—feels familiar. Yet, for progressives, her embrace of conservatism and her husband’s hard-right politics presents an unsettling paradox.

Parallel Lives, Diverging Paths

The daughter of Indian immigrants, Vance’s trajectory mirrors that of many high-achieving Indian Americans. Like so many in the diaspora, she comes from a family that valued education and hard work. Her father, like many before him, was part of the wave of Indian professionals who arrived in the U.S. after the 1965 Immigration Act, benefiting from a system that prioritized highly skilled workers. She attended Yale Law School and clerked for Supreme Court justices before marrying J.D. Vance, now vice president.

Yet her rise into the highest circles of American power has been framed as something different—a triumph of assimilation and conservative values. Articles celebrating her as proof of the “Indian-American dream” have appeared in outlets like The Wall Street Journal and The Times of India, reinforcing a selective narrative: If you work hard, America rewards you, regardless of background.

The Model Minority and Its Limits

This framing, however, ignores the structural advantages many Indian Americans have benefited from—advantages shaped by caste, class, and immigration policy. Journalist Arun Venugopal has described the Indian American success story as a product of “social engineering,” rather than pure merit. Vance, like many in her community, inherited both privilege and the expectation of achievement.

Her public statements reflect this worldview. In a 2024 interview with Fox and Friends, she described her parents as coming to America “legally” and “with the intention of belonging.” The omission of the word “India” and the emphasis on legality mirror the rhetoric of conservative politicians who distinguish “good” immigrants from “bad” ones—an implicit rejection of asylum seekers and undocumented migrants.

From Career Woman to Political Partner

Beyond immigration, Vance also embodies another American ideal: the ambitious woman who succeeds on her own terms. When she became a mother, she didn’t slow down—she started clerking for Chief Justice John Roberts just seven weeks after giving birth. Even after leaving her law firm in 2024 to support her husband’s political career, she maintained an air of intellectualism, seen reading The Iliad on the campaign trail and keeping a public Goodreads page.

But this brand of feminism—the kind championed by figures like Sheryl Sandberg in the “Lean In” era—has limits. It prioritizes individual success over systemic change, enabling women to climb the ladder while leaving others behind. Now, as she stands by her husband, who has dismissed universal childcare as “class war against normal people,” Vance legitimizes policies that make it harder for working parents to achieve the balance she once had.

A Reflection of America’s Divisions

For liberals, especially Indian Americans, Usha Vance is both fascinating and discomfiting. She is a reminder that assimilation into American society does not guarantee progressive values. The same meritocracy that lifted her also created a generation of immigrants eager to distance themselves from others seeking opportunity.

Her rise is not an anomaly—it is a reflection of an America that rewards ambition but demands ideological alignment. And for those who see their own story in hers, she serves as a stark reminder that the myths we tell about success and belonging are not as neutral as they seem.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Politics

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon announced on Sunday that the United States will send a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) battery to Israel, alongside...

Politics

WASHINGTON — As the countdown to the November 5 presidential election continues, former President Donald Trump is urging his supporters to aim for a...

Health

As concerns about age-related cognitive decline grow, experts emphasize the importance of proactive measures to protect brain health. A recent survey revealed that 87%...

Health

NEW YORK — Teen smoking in the United States has reached an all-time low in 2024, with significant declines in overall youth tobacco use,...