Jack Schlossberg has never shied away from his famous surname â but now, the grandson of John F. Kennedy is leaning fully into controversy as he defends a series of âaggressiveâ and highly polarising social media posts targeting the family of U.S. Vice President JD Vance.
In a fiery interview on CBS News Sunday Morning, the 33-year-old Democratic congressional hopeful made it clear: he has no regrets â and no intention of backing down.

đ„ âThis Is a New Era â And Iâm Not Holding Backâ
Schlossberg, who is running to replace retiring Democratic heavyweight Jerry Nadler in New Yorkâs 12th Congressional District, was pressed on posts critics have branded âcreepy,â âprovocative,â and deeply inappropriate.
The backlash centered on a now-infamous image in which Schlossberg superimposed his own face onto one of the children of JD Vance and his wife, Usha Vance.
Asked directly whether involving the vice presidentâs wife â and children â crossed a line, Schlossberg shot back.
âI think whatâs crossing a line is the propaganda that we see issued every single day by the White House and Vance,â he said.
âSo what are we going to do â hold back? Hold back our sense of humour? Not tease them, not make fun of them back?â
đ âNo One Thought I Meant We Had a Love Childâ

Attempting to defuse one of the most explosive elements of the controversy, Schlossberg insisted the posts were never meant to be taken literally.
âFirst of all, I donât think anyone seriously thought I meant we actually had a love child,â he said.
He then escalated his defence â pointing the finger directly at President Donald Trump.
âYou can point at anything I posted,â Schlossberg added,
âand Iâll point you back to a president who shares pictures of himself bombing U.S. citizens with fecal matter. This is the era weâre living in.â
The remark instantly reignited debate online, with supporters praising his bluntness â and critics accusing him of dragging political discourse into new territory.
đ§Ź âMy Family Was Fair Game â So Iâm Throwing It Backâ

Schlossberg framed his approach as deeply personal.
Referencing decades of scrutiny endured by the Kennedy family, he argued that his surname has always made him â and his relatives â a target.
âMy grandmother wasnât elected. My uncle John wasnât elected,â he said, referencing the Kennedy legacy.
âAnd yet people feel free to say whatever they want about them.â
His conclusion was unambiguous:
âSo Iâm going to throw it right back at you.
The time is not now to play it safe.
Absolutely not. Weâre going to get these people out of here.â
đłïž A Campaign Turning Sharper by the Day
Schlossbergâs comments come as he emerges as one of a new wave of Democrats adopting a far more combative online style, arguing that traditional restraint no longer cuts through a crowded, hostile digital landscape.
âYou need to be aggressive right now to get your message through,â he said plainly.
His campaign believes his viral social media presence â which has already drawn millions of views â gives him a crucial edge in a district long dominated by establishment figures.
Still, the risks are obvious.
Political analysts warn that attacking a rivalâs family could alienate moderate voters â even as it energises a younger, angrier base hungry for confrontation.
â ïž Silence From the Vance Camp
Fox News Digital confirmed it reached out to the vice presidentâs office for comment on Schlossbergâs remarks. As of publication, no response has been issued.
That silence has only fueled speculation over whether the controversy will escalate further â or quietly fade as the campaign marches on.
đ§š Kennedy Name, New Rules

For decades, the Kennedy name has been associated with idealism, restraint, and soaring rhetoric.
Jack Schlossberg appears determined to rewrite that script.
This isnât Camelot politics.
This is a bare-knuckle digital brawl â and heâs making it clear he intends to fight it his way.
Whether voters reward that aggression â or punish it â may decide not just this race, but the future shape of Democratic campaigning in a brutally online age.


