Vance forbids Air Force cadets from heckling him at graduation: 'You can't boo me'
U.S. Vice President JD Vance delivers the commencement address for the graduating class of the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S., May 28, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt

Vice President JD Vance delivered the commencement address Thursday at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs — and made sure the graduating class knew the rules upfront: no booing allowed.

Addressing more than 900 cadets commissioning into the Air Force and Space Force, Vance acknowledged he'd been watching other graduation speeches this season get derailed by heckling — specifically, corporate executives who praised artificial intelligence and got booed for it.

"This is the only commencement speech that I'm giving this year, and so I've watched a few highlights of graduation speeches where this or that corporate leader will discuss artificial intelligence — AI — and be met with literal boos," Vance told the cadets.

"Now, you can't boo me. I'm the Vice President of the United States."

It was a notable preemptive strike from a politician who has become something of a lightning rod for public heckling. Vance was booed at the Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Milan in February, and again in Michigan in March after goading a crowd with a claim about the state's educational rankings.

Active-duty military personnel are bound by regulations prohibiting political demonstrations while in uniform.

"AI will inevitably change warfare," Vance said. "But one of the things that makes Americans unique — that makes you as warfighters unique — is that we wage war justly."

The ceremony marked the Academy's 68th commencement, with the Air Force Thunderbirds performing a flyover at the conclusion.