Vice President JD Vance is looking to lease a $9 million estate in Virginia’s horse country to give his family some outdoors space. The only catch is that the land is reportedly from a person with business ties to a policy push by the second Trump administration in regards to AI data centers. The property is Wolver Hill, a long-time horse farm roughly 45 miles from Washington, according to The Daily Beast. The estate’s owner, Charles “Chuck” Kuhn, is one of northern Virginia’s largest landowners, and among its more active data center developers. Vance, for his part, has been among the loudest voices in the administration behind the expansion of data centers. He pushed for the debut of The White House’s AI Action Plan, which is a blueprint calling for more data-center capacity and the electricity to sustain it. And that was just the first stepping stone. The president later signed an executive order to speed federal permitting for projects such as this. What some might consider an ethics problem when it comes to this particular endeavor is JD Vance’s personal finances. The VP’s salary is $235,100 a year, and that number hasn’t moved since 2019 because Congress keeps a tight hold on the scale. A Middleburg lease would sit alongside homes the family already has use of — among them the official vice-presidential residence at Number One Observatory Circle. A source familiar with the plans told NBC News the family wants rural space for their children to enjoy the outdoors. Usha Vance is due to have the couple’s fourth child this month. Federal ethics guidelines generally prohibit officials from accepting gifts from parties with business pending before the government. A lease priced below market value can qualify as one. So the questions that matter are what the Vances would actually pay and whether the deal turns up in the vice president’s financial disclosures. We bring up financial disclosures because of the fact that the family holds a $2.3 million house in Cincinnati from his Senate years, and the entity that owns it was missing from his disclosure filings. Early this year, the White House leaned on the regional grid operator PJM to hold an emergency auction meant to unlock more than $15 billion for faster grid hookups. Kuhn, the owner of Wolver Hill, builds inside that same corridor. On the AI data center front, the numbers, per MarketScale, suggest they accounted for half of all new U.S. electricity demand growth in 2025, and over 700 data centers are currently in the works across 38 states as of mid-2026 (via Electric Choice).