A budget-friendly maternity dress unexpectedly found itself at the center of a political conversation after Usha Vance appeared in a Father’s Day video with Vice President JD Vance.
During a Father’s Day edition of Storytime with the Second Lady, released on June 21, Usha Vance joined Vice President JD Vance to celebrate family life as they prepare to welcome their fourth child.
Reflecting on their growing family, Usha, 40, told her 41-year-old husband, “Luckily, there’s going to be a new baby for you to read to. So, you’re going to have many more years ahead of you.”
Smiling, the vice president replied: “That’s right. That’s why I so desperately wanted to have a fourth baby is because I was sick of my kids growing up and I was not yet ready to be out of the baby phase.”
The couple’s conversation wasn’t the only thing viewers talked about.
Usha’s fitted coral maternity dress, complete with a cowl neckline that accentuated her baby bump, seemed like a remarkable wardrobe choice – until The New York Times suggested it carried a much bigger message.
‘Pronatalist movement’
In an article titled “The Politics and Power of the Pregnancy Image,” New York Times chief fashion critic Vanessa Friedman argued that the pregnancies of three “prominent women in the MAGA movement” – including the SLOTUS, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and Katie Miller, wife of White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller – “shows how much is said by an expectant silhouette, without anyone saying a word.”
“Ever since Vance, Leavitt and Miller revealed their pregnancies, their public appearances have showcased their growing stomachs,” Friedman wrote in the June 24 article, adding that they “offer an image of idealized womanhood that gives literal shape to the pronatalist movement.”
“Together, the women have created a notably consistent, and somewhat paradigm-shifting, picture of the White House’s family and fertility platform.”
‘I want more babies’ in the U.S.
The observation came after Usha previously acknowledged that becoming second lady had changed the way she dresses.
“I have to dress up a lot more,” she told NBC News in March. “I enjoyed my last pregnancy – there were a lot of sweatpants. I was working from home and sometimes put a blazer on over what was under.”
Friedman also connected Usha’s public appearances to her husband’s long-standing emphasis on family.
At the 2025 March for Life rally, JD Vance declared, “I want more babies in the United States of America,” a message that Friedman argued was reinforced every time the second lady appeared publicly embracing her pregnancy.
According to the critic, Usha’s role “is also to represent and humanize the vice president,” adding that “By spotlighting her pregnancy, she is doing exactly that.”
“She is wearing a stretchy coral dress that hugs her stomach, making what she is talking about very clear,” Friedman added about Usha’s wardrobe choice in the Father’s Day clip.
Styled by Old Navy
Rather than letting the conversation rev around political symbolism, Usha revealed there was nothing calculated about her fashion choice – a budget-friendly dress from Old Navy.
“Now that we know the political significance of my $8.75 coral maternity dress from Old Navy, can’t wait to hear what the New York Times has to say about my elastic-waistband pants and compression socks!” she wrote in a June 24 post on X, alongside an image of her wearing the dress during “Storytime with the Second Lady.”
She followed that post by sharing the receipt for the dress.
The coral maternity dress originally retailed for $44.99 before being discounted to $12.49. After an additional coupon was applied, the final price came to just $8.75.
The attention appears to have had one unexpected consequence.
The dress is no longer available on Old Navy’s website and has since sold out.
What do you think about the New York Times critics’ suggestions and the down-to-earth Usha Vance’s budget-friendly dress? Please let us know your thought and then share this story so we can hear from others!
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