Vice PresidentJD Vanceon Friday took a swipe at Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla, whom he incorrectly called “José Padilla,” and defended the Trump administration’s controversialuse of the California National Guardin Los Angeles.
“I was hoping José Padilla would be here to ask a question, but unfortunately, guess he decided not to show up because there wasn’t the theater, and that’s all it is,” Vance told reporters, speaking from an FBI mobile command center that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is currently using in Los Angeles.
Vance dismissedPadilla’s appearance last weekat Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s press conference as “pure political theater.” Padilla was forcefully removed, ordered to the ground by law enforcement and placed in handcuffs after attempting to ask Noem a question.
Padilla, California’sfirst Latino electedto the US Senate, had interrupted Noem as she was giving remarks in the Los Angeles FBI headquarters on the Trump administration’s response to protests in that city against Noem’s department and its immigration-enforcement efforts.
When asked about the vice president calling the senator by the wrong first name, Vance’s spokesperson Taylor Van Kirk brushed it off, telling CNN, “He must have mixed up two people who have broken the law.”
Padilla’s communications director Tess Oswald wrote on X, “As a former colleague of Senator Padilla, the Vice President knows better. He should be more focused on demilitarizing our city than taking cheap shots. Another unserious comment from an unserious administration.”
California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom also called Vance out on X, saying it was “not an accident.”
On Friday, Vance also reacted toa federal appeals court allowingPresident Donald Trump to maintain control over thousands of California National Guardsmen.
“That determination was legitimate, and the president’s going to do it again if he has to, but hopefully it won’t be necessary,” Vance said.
The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals late Thursday granted a request from Trump to lift, for now, a lower-court ruling that had required the president to relinquish control of roughly 4,000 guardsmen from the Golden State that he had federalized tobeef up security in Los Angeles amid unrestover immigration enforcement.
“And I think what the Ninth Circuit said very clearly is when the president makes a determination, you’ve got to send in certain federal officials to protect people,” Vance said, while lashing out at California’s Democratic leadership for their handling of the unrest.
The vice president also defended the administration’s immigration policy, saying Trump wants to prioritize deportations of violent offenders or “really bad guys,” but that no one who’s undocumented should feel immune from enforcement.
When asked whether the administration’s deportation tactics had gone too far, Vance argued that he didn’t think “we’ve been too aggressive.”
“Anytime we make a mistake we correct that very quickly,” Vance said.
CNN’s Kaanita Iyer contributed to this report.