JD Vance’s Look On ‘The View’ Drew Program’s Highest Scores In A Yr
Vice President JD Vance’s appearance on ABC’s “The View,” during which he discussed his newly-released memoir and Trump Administration priorities, was the program’s most-viewed episode in a little over a year.
Nielsen Live+Same Day data showed the episode drew 3.331 million total viewers. This total made it the program’s most-watched telecast since the November 6, 2024, post-presidential election episode.
It was also the second-most watched episode in nearly five and a half years, since January 11, 2021.
For the week of June 15, 2026, “The View” averaged 2.942 million total viewers. This represented a 22 percent increase from the prior week. The week also showed gains in key demographics, including women ages 25-54 and women ages 18-49.
Recent episodes of the program have typically drawn between roughly 2.3 million and 2.5 million viewers. The Vance episode therefore exceeded those recent averages by a clear margin and produced the strongest single-day performance in more than 18 months.
The appearance marked Vance’s first time on the program and made him the third sitting vice president to appear on the long-running daytime talk show.
Vance — who has garnered a reputation for handling adversarial interviews well — defended the administration’s record on wage growth, immigration and a massive reduction in crime across the nation’s largest cities. All in all, the conversation remained largely civil, even when the show’s left-wing hosts asked questions about U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) policies and other contentious issues.
Observers noted Vance’s composed and affable approach throughout the extended segment, which featured pointed questions from the co-hosts. Co-host Joy Behar offered specific comments on his participation. During a commercial break, Behar told Vance he should run for president in 2028 because he has a good vibe, adding the qualifier “for a Republican.”
In remarks after the episode, Vance referred to Behar’s questioning style in a lighthearted way, stating that she is “way tougher than the Iranians” and jokingly calling her a best friend. Other co-hosts observed that Vance presented himself as prepared and willing to engage in extended conversation.