Trump says ‘too early’ to name Vance as successor

Vice President-elect Vance
Greg Nash
Vice President-elect Vance is seen following a joint session of Congress to count the electoral college votes for President at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Monday, January 6, 2025.

President Trump said that it’s too early to name Vice President Vance as his successor in 2028, saying that while his No. 2 is skilled, so are a number of other people who could be future leaders of the GOP.

In an interview with Fox News’s Bret Baier, Trump was asked if he viewed Vance as his successor and the Republican nominee in 2028, and he replied, “No, but he’s very capable.”

“I think you have a lot of very capable people. So far, I think he’s doing a very fantastic job. It’s too early, we’re just starting,” Trump added.

When Baier noted that by the time the 2026 midterm cycle rolls around, Vance could be looking for an endorsement, Trump shifted to praise Vance’s work so far in the White House.

“A lot of people have said that this has been the greatest opening, almost three weeks, in the history of the presidency,” he said.


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Vance is seen as the potential future of the MAGA movement in the Republican Party and has quickly become Trump’s liaison to the Senate in the first weeks of the administration.

The vice president has been credited with getting swing-vote Republicans to support some of the president’s more controversial nominees, including director of national intelligence nominee Tulsi Gabbard and Health and Human Services nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Vance this week is in Europe to attend an artificial intelligence summit in Paris and the Munich Security Conference. He has also been tasked with overseeing a TikTok deal, and hurricane recovery efforts in the U.S.

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