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US3 min(s) read
Published 12:38 06 Mar 2025 GMT
Social media users have made the same observation about Vice President JD Vance after President Trump's speech to Congress.
On Tuesday (March 4), President Donald Trump delivered his first congressional address of his second term.
The 78-year-old's speech was packed with bold statements, from promising to take Greenland “one way or another” to reading a letter from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy about potential peace talks in the ongoing Ukraine- Russia war.
But while Trump was making headlines for his vision for America and the world, social media had its attention locked on something else entirely - Vice President JD Vance’s trousers.
us3 min(s) read
Published 15:01 26 Nov 2025 GMT
The 40-year-old VP has found himself at the center of controversy in recent weeks.
His remarks about the UK’s role in supporting Ukraine - claiming the US could offer a “way better security guarantee than 20,000 troops from some random country that hasn’t fought a war in 30 or 40 years” - managed to unite British politicians across party lines in outrage.
He also faced backlash for what many called an “embarrassing” comment during a meeting with Zelenskyy alongside Trump.
But now, the internet has shifted its focus from his foreign policy stances to his fashion choices, specifically, his oddly short trousers.
One user on X (formerly Twitter) posted a photo of the politician at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), where his pants sat noticeably high above his ankles, captioning it: “Say hello to tiny pants Vance.”
The hashtag #TinyPantsVance quickly took off, with social media users roasting the Vice President for his ill-fitting suits.
A third wondered who was responsible for dressing the VP: "Our local Goodwill has a better tailor on staff than whoever is throwing clothes on you!"
Some compared his look to outdated fashion trends, with one person remarking: "In my youth, what Vance is wearing was called Capri shorts."
Another took it a step further, suggesting Vance needed an upgrade: "People might (might) listen if you got a pair of big-boy-Vance pants. A pair that at least break on the foot arch and go mid-heel, not mid-calf. Just… who the hell dresses you?"
A quick search reveals that Vance stands at 6 feet 2 inches (188 cm), several inches taller than the average American man. That might explain why some off-the-rack trousers don’t fit quite right.
The scrutiny over Vance’s wardrobe comes just days after the Ukrainian President was criticized by pro-Trump journalist Brian Glenn for not wearing a suit during wartime.
Glenn directly asked the Ukrainian leader, “Why don’t you wear a suit?” to which Zelenskyy responded: “I will wear costume [a Ukrainian translation for suit is ‘kostyum’] after this war will finish.”
Now, in an ironic twist, it’s Vance’s clothing choices that are under the spotlight.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has detained a relative of White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt as part of the Trump administration’s intensifying immigration enforcement efforts.
Bruna Caroline Ferreira, the mother of Leavitt’s nephew, was taken into custody in Revere, Massachusetts, according to multiple reports.
A spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security told NBC News that Ferreira is a “criminal illegal alien from Brazil” accused of overstaying a tourist visa that expired in 1999.
A White House spokesperson also added: “Karoline had no involvement whatsoever in this matter.”
She was arrested on suspicion of battery and is now being held at a South Louisiana ICE Processing Center nearly 1,700 miles from home.
Ferreira’s sibling, Graziela Dos Santos Rodrigues, has created a GoFundMe campaign seeking funds for legal expenses. The family hopes the support will give Ferreira a “chance to return home to her family.”
On the fundraising page, Rodrigues wrote that Ferreira arrived in the U.S. as a child and had “maintained her legal status through DACA.”
She described her sister as “hardworking, kind, and always the first to offer help when someone needs it.”
Rodrigues added that Ferreira’s 11-year-old son, Michael Leavitt Jr., is struggling without his mother: “Bruna’s absence has been especially painful for her 11-year-old son… who hopes every single day that she’ll be home in time for the holidays.”
NBC reported, however, that Leavitt’s nephew has lived full-time in New Hampshire since birth and has never resided with his mother.
Past reporting from The Cullman Times revealed that Michael Leavitt, Karoline’s brother, had been engaged to Ferreira as recently as 2014.
That same year, he won $1,008,001 in the DraftKings Millionaire Maker contest. “I’m speechless… I can’t believe it,” he said at the time.
Ferreira, quoted in that 2014 article, said she planned to use a portion of the winnings to buy “a lamp for my son’s room,” adding, “We really are blessed.”
The pair reportedly split not long after, and a source told WBUR that Leavitt and Ferreira have been separated for around a decade.
Karoline and Michael Leavitt grew up in New Hampshire with their siblings, where their parents owned a local ice cream shop and a used truck dealership.
Karoline later rose to national prominence as a spokesperson for MAGA Inc. before becoming the face of the Trump administration.
Leavitt has been a vocal supporter of the administration’s strict immigration agenda. Earlier this year, she reiterated Trump’s warnings to those living in the country illegally:
“If you invade our nation’s borders… you are going to be deported… and you may be held at Guantanamo Bay,” she said, via The Independent.
“These are criminals we are talking about – don’t forget that.”
In October, she declined to comment on whether emergency rooms should check a patient’s immigration status, saying the question was better left to “healthcare professionals and legal experts.”
New polling shows growing public discomfort with the administration’s enforcement efforts.
Only 34 percent of Americans now approve of ICE’s activities – down four points from last month.
A year ago, 56 percent supported mass deportations, but a turbulent year of raids across major cities has sharply divided public opinion.