Usha Vance
American attorney

Usha Vance

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
American attorney
A.K.A.
Usha C. Vance, Usha Chilukuri, Usha Chilukuri Vance
Gender:
Female
Work field:
Birth:
6 January 1986(San Diego, San Diego County, California, USA)
Star sign:
Religions:
Education:
Yale University
New Haven, South Central Connecticut Planning Region, USA
Clare College
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
Employers:
Munger, Tolles & Olson
Family:
Spouse(s):
The details
Biography

Usha Chilukuri Vance (née Chilukuri; born January 6, 1986) is an American lawyer.

After graduating from Yale Law School, Vance was a law clerk for multiple federal judges, including Chief Justice John Roberts, Judge Brett Kavanaugh, and Judge Amul Thapar. She is the wife of J. D. Vance, Ohio's junior United States Senator and Donald Trump's running mate in the 2024 presidential election. If J. D. Vance is elected Vice President, Usha Vance would become the first woman of Indian descent to serve as Second Lady of the United States.

Early life and education

Usha Chilukuri was born in San Diego to Telugu-speaking Indian immigrants. She graduated from Mt. Carmel High School in 2003, where she performed in the marching band. Her parents hail from a village near Pamarru in the Krishna district of Andhra Pradesh, India, and migrated to the U.S. in the 1980s. Her father, Radhakrishna "Krish", is a lecturer at San Diego State University's Department of Aerospace Engineering, while her mother, Lakshmi, is a marine molecular biologist and biochemist, and Provost of Sixth College at the University of California, San Diego. She has one sister.

Vance was raised in San Diego's upper-middle-class Rancho Peñasquitos suburb. Childhood friends described her as a "leader" and a "bookworm." She attended Yale University, graduating summa cum laude with a bachelor's degree in history, with membership in Phi Beta Kappa. She then attended Clare College, Cambridge, in England, as a Gates Cambridge Scholar, receiving a Master of Philosophy in early modern history in 2010. In 2013, she graduated Juris Doctor at Yale Law School, where she was the Executive Development Editor of the Yale Law Journal and Managing Editor of the Yale Journal of Law & Technology. During her time at Yale, she also taught American history as a Yale-China Teaching Fellow at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou, China.

Career

In 2014–15 Vance served as a law clerk for then–District of Columbia Circuit Judge Brett Kavanaugh and in 2017–18 for Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts. She was admitted to the District of Columbia Bar in May 2019 and worked for the law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP, handling civil litigation and appeals in cases involving higher education, local government, entertainment and technology, until July 2024. Among her clients were the Regents of the University of California and a division of The Walt Disney Company.

She has served on the board of the Gates Cambridge Alumni Association and as secretary of the board of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.

Personal life

While at Yale Law School, Chilukuri met her future husband, J. D. Vance, a relationship encouraged by their professor Amy Chua. Vance described Chilukuri as his "Yale spirit guide" because she was a critical source of support and encouragement in his academic and professional life. Chua has called their relationship "extremely unlikely, almost opposites of personality". In 2013, Chilukuri and Vance collaborated to organize a discussion group at Yale focused on "social decline in white America".

Chilukuri and Vance married in 2014 in Kentucky, in an interfaith marriage ceremony, which included Bible reading by her husband's friend Jamil Jivani, while the couple was also blessed by a Hindu pundit. They have three children. She is a practicing Hindu, and her husband is a Christian who was raised Evangelical but converted to Catholicism in 2019.

According to public records, in 2014 Chilukuri voted in Democratic primaries, but in 2022, she voted in the Republican primary, in which her husband was a candidate. She clerked for conservative judges, such as Roberts and Kavanaugh, but has also practiced at a California law firm with a progressive work culture. According to The New York Times, her political views seem to have evolved over the years, as in 2021, she made a political contribution to a national conservative, Blake Masters for Arizona Senate elections.

Described as a "bookworm" in high school, reading has been a key passion for her, wherein the “read” books on her Goodreads account include novels by Zadie Smith, Jonathan Safran Foer, and Vladimir Nabokov, as well as nonfiction by Nina Burleigh and Nicholas Kristof, and in 2016, she shared her enthusiasm for her husband's book, Hillbilly Elegy, to which she gave a 5-star rating.

Portrayal in media

In Hillbilly Elegy (2020), a film about the life of her husband, she was portrayed by actress Freida Pinto.

References