Vice President Vance, wife Usha, met with boos at Milan Winter Olympics opening ceremony

 February 7, 2026

Vice President JD Vance and his wife, Usha, were jeered by spectators on Friday when their faces appeared on the Jumbotron during the Winter Olympic Games' opening ceremony at Milan's San Siro stadium. The New York Post reported that the crowd, which had cheered U.S. athletes moments earlier during the Parade of Athletes, turned hostile when the vice president — holding small American flags beside his wife — was displayed on screen.

The boos landed exactly where they were cultivated.

For weeks leading up to the Games, local officials and international commentators worked to set a tone — not of sportsmanship, but of political theater.

That the jeering materialized on cue tells you everything about what the Milan Olympics have already become: less a celebration of athletic excellence and more a stage for European left-wing posturing against the United States.

Milan's Mayor Set the Table

The hostility didn't come from nowhere. Earlier this month, Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala — a member of a left-wing political party — publicly declared he did not want members of Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security in his city to provide security for the Games. His language was not subtle:

"It's a militia that signs its own permits to enter people's house, like we signed our own permission slips at school, except it's much more serious."

A "militia." That's how an Italian mayor describes American federal law enforcement officers tasked with protecting American officials and athletes abroad. Sala didn't stop there:

"They're not welcome in Milan. Can't we just say 'no' to Trump for once?"

There it is. Not a policy disagreement. Not a jurisdictional concern. A political dare — wrapped in the language of resistance, delivered from the safety of a mayoral office in a country that depends on American security guarantees through NATO.

Sala framed the entire question of U.S. participation in the Games as a referendum on whether European politicians are brave enough to defy an American president. And he did it while his city was hosting American athletes who trained their entire lives for this moment.

When you spend weeks telling your citizens that American officials are unwelcome occupiers, don't feign surprise when the crowd boos the Vice President of the United States.

The IOC Saw It Coming — and Did Nothing Meaningful

IOC President Kirsty Coventry acknowledged the risk earlier in the week when asked about the possibility of jeering. Her response:

"I hope that the opening ceremony is seen by everyone as an opportunity to be respectful of each other."

"I hope." Not "we expect." Not "we will enforce decorum." Not "we have spoken with local officials about the inflammatory rhetoric coming from the mayor's office." Just a hope — the thinnest possible gesture toward the Olympic ideals the IOC claims to steward.

The Olympics are supposed to represent a truce. A space where geopolitics yields, however briefly, to shared human achievement. That ideal has always been aspirational, sometimes naive. But it has never before been so openly sabotaged by a host city's own elected leader. Coventry's mild plea for respect amounted to bringing a napkin to a food fight someone else organized.

One detail deserves emphasis: the spectators cheered U.S. athletes during the Parade of Athletes. The boos were reserved specifically for Vance and his wife. This wasn't anti-American sentiment in the broad sense — it was targeted political contempt, directed at the representatives of an administration that European progressives have decided to treat as illegitimate.

That distinction matters. It reveals the nature of the hostility. These spectators don't hate America. They hate that America elected leaders who enforce borders, challenge European free-riding on defense, and refuse to treat progressive consensus as settled international law.

The athletes get cheers because they're sympathetic. The vice president gets jeered because he represents democratic outcomes that Milan's political class finds intolerable.

Vance's Friday was not defined by the boos — even if that's the story international media wanted to tell. Before the ceremony, the vice president met with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni at the Prefettura di Milano, a historic Milan palace now used as a government building. After the opening ceremony, he watched the opening session of the three-day team figure skating competition alongside his family and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

No dramatic walkout. No retaliatory tweet storm. The vice president attended the ceremony, represented the United States, met with an allied head of state, and watched Americans compete. That's what showing up looks like.

The contrast with Sala's theatrics couldn't be sharper. One man used the Olympics to grandstand against a foreign government. The other used it to conduct diplomacy and support his country's athletes. The crowd may have booed, but the schedule spoke louder.

A Larger Pattern in Plain Sight

What happened in Milan fits a pattern that has played out across European capitals — progressive politicians using international events as venues for anti-American performance art. It's cheap, it's easy, and it plays well with domestic audiences that have been marinated in years of media coverage portraying American conservatism as an existential threat to the liberal world order.

But it is worth asking what, exactly, Sala and those booing spectators are protesting. An American administration that:

  • Enforces its own immigration laws
  • Asks NATO allies to meet their defense spending commitments
  • Sends its vice president and secretary of state to an international sporting event as a show of good faith

These are the offenses that warrant a public humiliation of a vice president's wife at a sporting event. The proportionality tells you everything about the seriousness of the people involved.

Sala's rhetoric — calling American law enforcement a "militia," daring his countrymen to "say no to Trump" — isn't aimed at Washington. It's aimed at Italian voters who have watched Meloni govern as a pragmatic conservative and allied partner of the United States. Sala's performance is domestic opposition politics dressed in the language of international resistance. The Olympics just gave him a bigger microphone.

That a sitting mayor would actively undermine the diplomatic atmosphere of an event his own city is hosting reveals how thoroughly Trump Derangement Syndrome has migrated across the Atlantic. It is no longer an American media affliction. It is a Western progressive reflex — and it now overrides even the pretense of Olympic hospitality.

What the Boos Don't Change

American athletes will compete. American diplomats will conduct meetings. The vice president attended the Games, met with the Italian prime minister, and watched figure skating with his family on a Friday evening in Milan. None of that required the crowd's approval.

The spectators who booed JD Vance on a Jumbotron will go home and forget about it by Monday. The diplomatic relationship between the United States and Italy — built on decades of shared security interests and economic ties — will not be renegotiated because a soccer stadium full of people followed the cues their mayor spent weeks laying down.

Giuseppe Sala told his city that Americans weren't welcome. A crowd of strangers booed a man and his wife holding small flags. And somewhere in that stadium, U.S. athletes prepared to compete for gold — unbothered, unbroken, and carrying a country that doesn't need permission to show up.

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