
JD Vance appears to have been booed for a second time during the Winter Olympics in Italy. Video posted on social media on Saturday shows the US Vice President and his wife, Second Lady Usha Vance, take their seat at a concert hall.
Members of the audience can then be heard booing, jeering and shouting in the direction of the couple. The 36 second clip, which has yet to be independently verified, shows Mr Vance apparently unphased by the hecklers as he waves down from the balcony.
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An X-user who shared the clip commented: "JD Vance just got again demolished with boos at the Milan Olympics. Maybe he should pack [up] and leave?"
The footage comes after the US Vice President was booed at the Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Italy on Friday (February 6).
Cheers for the US team turned to boos when footage relayed on big screens around the San Siro host venue switched to Mr and Mrs Vance.
Mark Adams, spokesperson for the International Olympic Committee (IOC), was asked about Friday night's booing on Saturday.
He told reporters: "What I would say from the IOC point of view is with the next Games coming up in Los Angeles we are super happy that the US administration is so engaged with the Games here and going forward. That’s a great thing for the Olympic movement.

"We are largely a sports organisation and seeing the US team cheered as they were by the audience - fair play - that was fantastic, so very happy.
"In general, at sporting events we like to see fair play, but in terms of having a good relationship with the administration, that’s good news for us."
Milano-Cortina 2026 Chief Executive Andrea Varnier also attempted to downplay the Vice President's reception.
He said: "I was there. I heard an incredible cheering when the US team entered the stadium, that’s what I heard. I didn’t hear anything else."
Mr Vance and his family arrived in Milan on Thursday, meeting US athletes, IOC President Kirsty Coventry and spectating at the US Women's ice hockey team's opening match against Czechia.
On Saturday, the Vances went to see Leonardo da Vinci's famous painting, "The Last Supper", in a part of Milan some distance from a large protest in the city, which turned violent later in the day.
Italian police said about 10,000 people joined the demonstration against the environmental impact of the Games and the presence of US agents on Italian soil for the event. Demonstrators said they opposed the presence of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Italy.
This was despite official statements that a small number of agents from US Homeland Security Investigations would be present in US diplomatic territory and not operational on the streets.
The ICE arm at the forefront of the immigration crackdown in the US is known as Enforcement and Removal Operations. There is no indication its officers are in Italy.