Showing posts with label Jared Kushner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jared Kushner. Show all posts

Monday, April 17, 2017

Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump: Pillars of Family-Driven West Wing


SNL: Jimmy Fallon plays Jared Kushner opposite Alec Baldwin’s Trump

If you think of it as a classic business model, Trump likes to invest in winners because they make more money, and Jared has been pretty consistently winning, said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, an ally of Mr. Trumps. Youre always on a whats-your-quarterly-report kind of relationship with Trump.

Neither Mr. Kushner nor Ms. Trump have government experience. Mr. Kushner, 36, managed the real estate empire he inherited from his family and bought The New York Observer as a side project. Ms. Trump, 35, was groomed with her brothers to run the family company before starting a fashion brand that appealed to young, urban female consumers likely to align themselves with her fathers opponents.

But the quarterly report on Mr. Kushner shows that he has been in merger-and-acquisition mode. He has expanded his portfolio into a far-ranging set of issues, including Middle East peace, the opioid epidemic, relations with China and Mexico and reorganizing the federal government from top to bottom. Everything runs through me, he told corporate executives during the transition.

Lately, he has pushed to overhaul the criminal justice system, a goal that Mr. Trump embraced as a candidate near the end of the campaign when he tried to siphon black voters away from Hillary Clinton. But Mr. Kushner is running into opposition from Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who favors toughening, not relaxing, mandatory minimum sentences.

Some colleagues, including Mr. Bannon and Reince Priebus, the White House chief of staff, regard Mr. Kushners breathtaking list of assignments with comic contempt, according to a dozen Trump associates who insisted on anonymity to discuss Mr. Kushner and Ms. Trump. After Mr. Kushners trip to Iraq, White House aides referred to him as the secretary of state.

But they are warier of Ms. Trump, who only recently arrived in the West Wing and until now has been a more sporadic player than her ambitious husband. Initially resistant to a formal role in the administration, Ms. Trump took an office and a government position albeit, like her husband, without accepting a salary out of concern over the troubles of her fathers first couple of months in office.

According to associates, she views her role partly as guardian of the family reputation and has fretted during and since the campaign about the long-term damage to the family businesss image that her fathers political career could cause.

When Ms. Trump does intervene, her father listens although he does not always take her advice. One person close to the family described her influence as a delayed-action fuse: At times the president will mention a point Ms. Trump made, uncredited, days later.

Her brother Eric Trump said she was upset by pictures of victims from the chemical attack in Syria and that may have encouraged their father to retaliate. He defended family members being in the White House, saying relatives are more candid. The beautiful thing about family is you play on a little bit of a different dynamic and once in a while you can pull them aside and say, No disrespect but you might want to think about this or maybe you crossed the line here, he told The Daily Telegraph.

The White House had no comment on Friday. But the supposed backstage liberal counterrevolution that critics fear has yielded modest results. Last week, the president signed legislation allowing states to deny federal funding to womens health care providers offering abortion services, like Planned Parenthood. Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner were skiing in Canada, just as they were on the slopes in Aspen during the collapse of the health care effort.

I think there are multiple ways to have your voice heard, Ms. Trump recently told CBS News. In some cases, its through protest and its through going on the nightly news and talking about or denouncing every issue on which you disagree with. Other times it is quietly and directly and candidly.

So where I disagree with my father, he knows it, she added. And I express myself with total candor. Where I agree, I fully lean in and support the agenda and and hope that I can be an asset to him and and make a positive impact. But I respect the fact that he always listens. Its how he was in business. Its how he is as president.

Other presidents have relied on family. John Adams appointed John Quincy Adams minister to Prussia. Edith Wilson effectively ran the White House when Woodrow Wilson was stricken. Eleanor Roosevelt wrote reports to Franklin D. Roosevelt from around the country and their daughter Anna Roosevelt was a gatekeeper in his later days.

Graphic

The prospect of Stephen K. Bannons dismissal has brought renewed attention to the inner workings of President Trumps White House, a fractious ecosystem of competing centers of power.

Dwight D. Eisenhower made his son John Eisenhower a White House aide. Robert F. Kennedy served as his brothers attorney general and Nancy Reagan as her husbands quasi-personnel director. George Bush asked George W. Bush to ease out his chief of staff. Hillary Clinton famously ran a health care task force.

The history is that it is very common for the whole family to become involved in the White House, said Doug Wead, who researched presidential children for the first President Bush and later wrote a book. The Trumps are not as good at hiding the family involvement as others, but it is there for almost all of the presidents with adult children.

Carl Sferrazza Anthony, a historian at the National First Ladies Library, said Ms. Trump can play a vital role for her father and praised her for being transparent about taking the assignment rather than operating behind the scenes, predicting that her participation will prove the single greatest success of the first 100 days of her fathers presidency.

But Chris Whipple, author of The Gatekeepers, a history of White House chiefs of staff, said relatives in the West Wing can confuse the chain of command. It can be disastrous if they exert their influence at the expense of the chief of staff, he said.

At the center of the Trump presidency is a paradox: Even allies acknowledge Mr. Trump is impulsive, indifferent to preparation and prone to embracing the last advice offered. He needs a strong hand to guide him, but insists on appearing in firm command, so any aide perceived as pulling strings can face his wrath sooner or later. It was Mr. Trump, not his children, who pushed Mr. Bannon to the margins, motivated less by ideology than by dissatisfaction with recent failures and his perception that his chief strategist was running an off-the-books operation to aggrandize himself at Mr. Trumps expense.

Mr. Trump remains annoyed by a February cover of Time magazine labeling Mr. Bannon The Great Manipulator, telling one visitor this month, That doesnt just happen a favored Trump expression for anger at subordinates who tend to their interests ahead of his.

At the same time, the president and his family have closely monitored Mr. Bannons former website, Breitbart, which they regarded as a weapon in his war against White House rivals. Confronted about the site, Mr. Bannon told the president that it was operating beyond his control and against his wishes.

Ms. Trump has never been close to Mr. Bannon, although she appreciated the ferocity of his work, people close to her said. She puts him in the category of colorful, rough-hewed characters her father collects, with the likes of Roger Stone, a longtime Trump operative.

In recent weeks, she has spoken bluntly about Mr. Bannons shortcomings to the president. She was especially incensed by articles she believed were planted by Mr. Bannons allies suggesting he, not her father, honed the populist economic message that helped sweep the Midwest. She made that point in the strongest terms to her father, who agreed, according to a family friend.

Mr. Trump would prefer the situation with Mr. Bannon to stabilize, according to people familiar with his thinking, and to keep Mr. Bannon on board, albeit in a more circumscribed role, than see him become a populist critic outside the gates. Mr. Bannon intuitively understands the presidents connection to white working-class voters and his instinct to demolish political norms. And neither Ms. Trump nor her husband have so far plunged into day-to-day government operations or logged the 18-hour days the indefatigable Mr. Bannon routinely works.

They have important allies, though, including two Goldman Sachs veterans, Gary Cohn, the national economics adviser, and Dina Powell, a deputy national security adviser. Mr. Cohn, a Democrat, has been projected as a future chief of staff, and Ms. Powell, a Republican veteran of the second Bush administration, has served as all-around West Wing fixer.

While Mr. Cohn has been attacked by the right, Ms. Powell is praised by conservatives like Senator Tom Cotton, Republican of Arkansas, and she and Ms. Trump have been working with Kellyanne Conway, the White House counselor who remains a favorite of grass-roots Republicans. Perhaps tellingly, Stephen Miller, Mr. Trumps policy adviser, has shifted away from Mr. Bannon, his onetime ally. He has worked with Ms. Trump since the campaign on child care and other issues, and colleagues said he endeared himself to her and mr. kushner in order to get more freedom to pursue anti-immigration policies that animate him.

The larger shift has generated consternation among Mr. Trumps supporters. Scott McConnell, a founding editor of The American Conservative magazine, mocked the presidents daughter and son-in-law as bright, conventionally wisdomed yuppie New Yorkers who have never had to formulate or defend a complicated foreign policy position in their lives.

Writing on the website Vox, he said, I certainly didnt vote for the foreign policy preferences of Jared and Ivanka, or a policy driven by whatever images on TV happened to move the president.

The expectation that Ms. Trump will push her father to the left on social issues has been unhelpful, people close to her said. She shares his economically conservative view and did not enter the White House to be a social issues warrior, they said.

For his part, Mr. Kushner has succeeded in part because he has never tried to explain what Jared wants, Mr. Gingrich said. He is very attuned to listening to Trump and trying to figure out what Trump needs, and what Trump is trying to get done.

Mr. Kushner has served as the presidents eyes and ears. Jared is constantly reaching outside the Trump inner circle to get feedback, said Kathy Wylde, president of the Partnership for New York City, on whose board he served. That is really making an impression on people that theres an opportunity to have input into whats happening in the White House.

Mr. Kushner stays calm when others are frayed by Mr. Trumps explosive temper. During the campaign, when the candidate was incensed by the performance of his aides, he reminded his father-in-law that four people could not be fired himself and the three Trump siblings.

Still, if Mr. Trump lives by any management dictum, it may be this: The only indispensable employee looks back from his mirror.

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Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Who Is Jared Kushner? 18 Things You Need to Know About Donald Trump"s Son-in-Law.


Jared Kushner to face questions in Trump-Russia investigation

Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump"s 36-year-old son-in-law, is now serving as a senior adviser in the Trump administration. Though Jared did not have an official role during Trump"s campaign, he was nevertheless seen as a "de facto campaign manager," and he later served as a member of Trump"s transition team.

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The New York Times reported in November that Jared was exploring ways to join the Trump administration without breaking the federal anti-nepotism law and he was cleared by the Justice Department to serve in the administration in January. CNBC reported that Kushner would be resigning from his role as CEO at Kushner Companies and divesting his "substantial assets," including his stakes in the Observer, where he served as publisher.

Jared is one of the most influential people in Trump"s circle. He has been called someone who "enjoys a Rasputin-like power" with Trump.

Here"s what you need to know about Jared Kushner:

1. His White House transition has reportedly been difficult.

Jared is considered to be part of the "power center" in the White House, reports the Washington Post, along with Steven Bannon, Kellyanne Conway, and Reince Priebus. But in the early days of the administration, Kushner appears to have gotten caught up in some workplace politics. Sources told the Washington Post that observers "have been alarmed by Kushner"s efforts to elbow aside anyone he perceives as a possible threat to his role as Trump"s chief consigliere."

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According to Vanity Fair, Jared"s adjustment to Washington has been tough. "Kushner appears unable to control both his father-in-law and those around him," writes Emily Jane Fox. A source told Fox that Jared"s influence on Trump "may be flagging." After Jared successfully negotiated a meeting with Mexico"s president, Trump canceled it, leaving Jared "f*****g furious." Not only that, Jared isn"t looking so great these days, according to Fox"s source. "His body language and his demeanor toward Trump had changed, and he had lost a noticeable amount of weight from his already slight frame in just a week."

2. He has no prior experience in government or politics.

Apart from a semester as a member of the Institute of Politics during his freshman year at Harvard, Jared has not been engaged politically. While visiting the White House after the election, Jared reportedly asked, "How many of these people stay?" (Answer: Pretty much none.) Though comparatively inexperienced in politics, Jared has proved to be a quick study. "Honestly, Jared is a very successful real estate person, but I actually think he likes politics more than he likes real estate," Donald Trump said at a rally. "But he"s very good at politics."

Jared Kushner and Steve Bannon.

Getty

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Jared"s personal political leanings are harder to identify. He fully backs his Republican father-in-law and publishes a newspaper that has become more conservative in its leanings since he purchased it. But he has stated in the past that he admires Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat, and has a framed photo of John F. Kennedy, another Democrat, by his desk. Trump has said Kushner will help broker a peace deal between Israelis and Palestinans, telling him at a pre-inauguration, "If you can"t produce peace in the Middle East, nobody can."

3. He was born into wealth.

Jared"s father, Charles "Charlie" Kushner, founded the real estate development organization Kushner Companies in 1985 and built it into a billion-dollar enterprise. Jared had a correspondingly privileged upbringing in New Jersey. According to the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Daniel Golden, Jared benefited from the incredible advantage of being his father"s son. Though he did not perform especially well academically, Jared was accepted to Harvard, reportedly after his father gave $2.5 million to the university. While at Harvard, Jared reportedly drove a Range Rover (though he has said that he "didn"t have a car" in college). About driving that Range Rover though: "He didn"t do it with a sense of humor," a classmate told the New Yorker. "He did it, like, "I"m f*****g rich.""

4. He is an Orthodox Jew.

Jared"s wife, Ivanka Trump, converted to Judaism from Presbyterianism before the couple"s 2009 wedding. Religion specifically, the Kushner family"s objection to the fact that Ivanka wasn"t Jewish was reportedly one of the reasons for their brief breakup in 2008. Now, the couple are shomrei Shabbos. They observe the Sabbath, turning off cell phones and walking instead of driving between sundown Friday and sundown Saturday. Jared did make an exception in early October, when he joined a team of Trump advisers on a Saturday to deal with the fallout of the Access Hollywood tape. He and Ivanka also received an exemption during Inauguration weekend so that they could participate in the evening celebrations.

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5. He professes that Donald Trump is not an anti-Semite or a racist.

In July, when Trump tweeted (then deleted) an image from a white supremacist web forum of Hillary Clinton that featured the Star of David and the phrase "most corrupt candidate ever," Jared defended his father-in-law in his newspaper, the Observer.

"Its that simple, really," he wrote. "Donald Trump is not anti-Semitic and hes not a racist." In the piece, Jared revealed the story of his grandparents, Holocaust survivors from Poland who emigrated to the United States in 1949. His family members called him out on Facebook for it. "That my grandparents have been dragged into this is a shame," wrote Jared"s estranged cousin Jacob Schulder, according to Politico. "Thank you Jared for using something sacred and special to the descendants of Joe and Rae Kushner to validate the sloppy manner in which you"ve handled this campaign."

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Jared"s justification of his father-in-law"s racist statements has become even more questionable since Trump"s appointment of Ku Klux Klan-endorsed Steve Bannon to the role of chief strategist in the administration. Ultimately, Jared seems to have chosen loyalty to his family above all else.

6. He had to shoulder his family business from a young age.

Jared was studying to get a dual MBA and law degree at New York University (Charles"s alma mater and the recipient of another notable donation of $3 million) when his father was sent to prison for tax fraud, witness tampering, and illegal campaign donations. jared took over kushner companies as CEO in 2008 when he was 27 years old, abandoning his legal aspirations. "My dads arrest made me realize I didnt want to be a prosecutor anymore," Jared told The Real Deal in 2014. "Seeing my fathers situation, I felt what happened was obviously unjust in terms of the way they pursued him. I just never wanted to be on the other side of that and cause pain to the families I was doing that to, whether right or wrong. The moral weight of that was probably a bit more than I could carry."

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Taking over for his father might have happened sooner than he would have liked, but Jared was fully prepared. Charles had been bringing along Jared and his younger brother Joshua (now a tech entrepreneur and boyfriend of Karlie Kloss; they were both #WithHer) when he was doing business since they were very young children. While at Harvard, Jared had a successful side gig of acquiring buildings in Somerville, Massachusetts, and turning them over for a profit.

7. He remains incredibly close with his father.

Some suspect that Jared is a figurehead and that Charles actually runs Kushner Companies. Regardless, they work on the same floor of 666 Fifth Ave., a building Jared purchased in 2007 for $1.8 billion. At the time, it was the most anyone had paid for a building in New York City.

While his father was serving time in Alabama, Jared visited him on weekends. "He was the best son to his father in jail, the best son to his mother, who suffered terribly, and he was a father to his siblings," Charles told New York magazine in 2009. As a testament to his father, Jared said in the same New York profile, "I speak with my father about everything in my life." Before she married Jared, Ivanka described the father-son relationship as "really beyond beautiful."

8. He has many tangled social and political connections.

This is the part where the story gets even more biblical, so buckle up. Charles had, for many years, been a top political donor, giving large sums to mostly Democratic candidates, including Bill and Hillary Clinton (and Rudolph Giuliani too).

Charles also gave money to former New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey (the guy who resigned after admitting that his "truth" was that he was a "gay American"). After winning the 2002 gubernatorial race, McGreevey appointed Charles to the board of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.

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Donald Trump with Jim McGreevey (right).

Getty

Charles"s older brother Murray and a former Kushner Companies accountant brought separate lawsuits against Charles relating to his political contributions. Enter Chris Christie, then the U.S. Attorney General of New Jersey, who launched a criminal investigation.

Charles believed that his younger sister Esther Schulder was working with authorities, and he tried to blackmail her by setting her husband up with a prostitute and videotaping the sexual encounter that followed. The trap didn"t work, and Charles eventually pleaded guilty to the felony charges against him. Christie later became the governor of the state, then a presidential candidate, and finally, a top Trump adviser.

Getty | Katie Buckleitner

It"s worth noting too that Jared, through his rise as a member of the Manhattan elite, has made many friends with the city"s most powerful people, including Fox News chairman Rupert Murdoch and his ex-wife Wendi Deng, Chelsea Clinton and her husband Mark Mezvinsky, NBA commissioner Adam Silver, and Joel Klein, former New York City schools chancellor.

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9. He played a considerable role in the Trump campaign.

Jared has been credited with masterminding the campaign"s social media operation. Along with Ivanka, Eric, and Donald Jr., he persuaded Trump to fire former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and to pick Reince Preibus as chief of staff. He has been instrumental in smoothing Trump"s relationships with Fox News, the Republican establishment, and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

According to a report in Fortune, "One aide recalled having a private phone conversation with Trump when he heard Kushners voice unexpectedly. Trump was talking on speaker phone, the aide realized, while Kushner was in the room."

On Tuesday, as part of the transition process, Trump began receiving the Presidential Daily Brief, a daily document that only the president, vice president, and select Cabinet-level officials have access to. According to Andrea Mitchell, Trump"s team requested that Jared receive access to the PDB.

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For further proof of Jared"s importance to Trump, notice Jared"s place at the table:

10. He seems to have an appetite for revenge.

Recall Gov. Christie"s role in Jared"s father"s downfall in 2004. Now, 12 years later, Jared has avenged his father with a breathtaking forcefulness. It was widely reported that Christie was being considered for the role of running mate; Jared pushed for the selection of Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana instead. Christie was later put in charge of Trump"s transition team; Jared again was the agent behind Christie"s eventual ouster from that role. On Monday, Christie loyalist former Congressman Mike Rogers suddenly resigned from the transition team. It was reported by NBC News to be part of a "Stalinesque purge" of anyone close to Christie.

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In another example of Jared"s reported ability to hold a grudge, staffers at the Observer have spoken about how Jared ordered a hit piece on fellow real estate scion Richard Mack after their business relationship soured. For two years, Jared pushed for the story, but nothing legitimate emerged in the reporting and the piece eventually got killed. Jared denies these claims.

11. He has shown unvarnished disdain for the press.

A former Observer editor told the New Yorker that Jared "hates reporters and the press. Viscerally." He blames the New Jersey media for damaging his family"s reputation. He even said that he didn"t like reading the Observer before he purchased it. "I found the paper unbearable to read, it was like homework," he told New York. Jared also doesn"t think the mainstream media had any bearing on the Trump campaign. One source told Bloomberg Businessweek that, "One thing Jared always tells Donald is that if the New York Times and cable news mattered, he would be at 1 percent in the polls." Still, he was rumored to want to start a Trump television network after the election.

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12. He is intensely private.

Jared rarely gives interviews and has no social media presence of his own other than a Twitter account that has zero tweets. When he appears on social media, it"s through Ivanka"s Instagram, and he is usually pictured holding one of their three children: Arabella, 5; Joseph, 3; and Theodore, 7 months.

13. He is genteel.

Hardly a story has been written about him that doesn"t reference his politeness, or the fact that he is soft-spoken and well-behaved. "Ive never seen any kind of erratic behavior from him," real estate lawyer Robert Ivanhoe told The Real Deal. The publicist Peggy Siegel gushed to Vanity Fair: "Besides being devastatingly handsome, he is well mannered, well bred, and so well turned out."

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14. He and Ivanka like to talk business.

The meet-cute story Ivanka most often tells is that she and Jared met for the first time because a mutual acquaintance thought it would be good for them to know each other professionally. They fell for each other, and now they refer to it as "the best deal we ever made!" When asked in 2015 by the New York Times if his wife was involved in his business, Jared said, "Shes a great sounding board." They support each other"s work lives: "I"m happy for him when he is in the office working late," Ivanka told New York. "I know how good that feels when you sit down and return e-mails." In a Vogue profile, Ivanka shared a story about one of her date nights with Jared. "So, my husband"s idea of a date night somehow always involves me looking at one of his development sites."

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In that same Vogue story, Jared said, "I would say she is definitely the CEO of our household, whereas I"m more on the board of directors. We both pick up slack for each other where it"s needed, but she doesn"t want to outsource mothering, so she"s very involved."

15. He expresses pride in his growing family.

Jared appears to be a hands-on father from the occasional images of him with his children on social media. "You see in life that things can be taken from you, whether it"s money, status or freedom," Jared told the Guardian in 2008. "But the things that can"t be taken are the things that are most important to work to achieve, such as love and family and friendships."

Jared has also expressed his support for his wife. "She always has it in her to accomplish whatever she puts her mind to," he said in a promotional video for Ivanka"s #WomenWhoWork campaign.

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The feeling is mutual. "He"s a bit of a hero of mine," Ivanka told New York. "His ability to remain focused he lacks an anxiety thats natural for someone his age handed so much responsibility. Sometimes I catch myself looking at him and being thankful that I have grown to a level of personal maturity that I would value so much the qualities he has."

16. His family is negotiating a $400 million real estate deal with a Chinese firm.

Jared"s family"s New York real estate company is in negotiations to sell a stake in its Fifth Avenue flagship skyscraper to a Chinese insurance company, according to the New York Times. The insurance company, called Anbang Insurance Group, has ties to families of the Communist Party, and the results of the deal could potentially present a conflict of interest. While Jared, senior adviser to Trump, would be helping to oversee American foreign policy, his family would be receiving financial gains from a Chinese company.

When asked about the deal, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said, "Jared went through extraordinary lengths to comply with conflict-of-interest rules. White House spokeswoman Hope Hicks also said Jared had sold his interest in the building to a trust in which no one in his immediate family is a beneficiary.

The New York Times also reported that a spokesman for Anbang said in a statement there was no agreement and there is no investment from Anbang for this deal.

17. He will run a new White House Office of American Innovation.

Trump tapped his son-in-law to head up a new office focused on fixing U.S. bureaucracy through business-world ideas. Viewed internally as a SWAT team of strategic consultants, the office will be staffed by former business executives and is designed to infuse fresh thinking into Washington, float above the daily political grind and create a lasting legacy for a president still searching for signature achievements, the Washington Post reported. The government should be run like a great American company. Our hope is that we can achieve successes and efficiencies for our customers, who are the citizens, Kushner said. Apple chief executive Tim Cook, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Salesforce chief executive Marc Benioff, and Tesla founder and chief executive Elon Musk are among the business leaders who will work with this new office.

18. He will face questions over his contact with Russians.

In March 2017, the Senate Intelligence Committee informed the White House that, as part of its investigation into possible links between Trump associates and Russian officials or other people linked to Russian president Vladmir Putin, it wanted Kushner to answer questions about meetings involving Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak, according to the New York Times. Kushner met with Kislyak in December at Trump Tower and later that month met with Sergey N. Gorkov, head of the Russian state development bank Vnesheconombank. White House spokeswoman Hope Hicks told the Times Kushner would talk to investigators because he isnt trying to hide anything and wants to be transparent.

This post has been updated.

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Source: http://www.cosmopolitan.com/politics/a8293534/who-is-jared-kushner-trump-administration/

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Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Reports: Trump Son-In-Law Jared Kushner To Be Named Senior Adviser


Donald Trump: meet his "golden boy" Jared Kushner

Donald Trump"s son-in-law Jared kushner is expected to be named a senior adviser to the president, multiple news outlets report.

AUDIE CORNISH, HOST:

President-elect Donald Trump announced today plans to name his son-in-law Jared Kushner as a senior adviser in the White House. Kushner and his wife, Ivanka Trump, were key players during the presidential campaign, and he"s one of the president-elect"s most trusted confidants. He"s also CEO of his own family"s multibillion-dollar real estate business. And by formally joining the Trump administration, Kushner brings yet another set of potential conflicts of interest to the White House.

NPR"s Scott Horsley joins us now. And Scott, we know Trump was already planning to hold a news conference later this week to discuss plans to distance himself from his own family"s Trump Organization. So what sort of wrinkle could this Kushner appointment add?

SCOTT HORSLEY, BYLINE: Audie, this could be a very big wrinkle. We"ve talked about how the Trump Organization"s sprawling business interests, including in foreign countries, could complicate the incoming president"s decision-making. Now, the Kushner companies which Jared Kushner took over after his father went to prison for tax evasion, has its own spider web of financial threats.

Just to give you one example, The New York Times ran a lengthy story over the weekend about how Kushner has been negotiating with China"s Anbang company to help bankroll the renovation of his firm"s signature Manhattan skyscraper. Now, Anbang has close ties to the Chinese government. Its chairman is married to the granddaughter of Deng Xiaoping, and it carries some red flags for the U.S. government. Just to cite one - after Anbang bought the Waldorf Astoria hotel in New York, President Obama stopped staying there during his official visits.

Now, Jared Kushner thinks he can navigate these potential conflicts. He"s hired Jamie Gorelick, the former deputy attorney general from the Clinton administration, to help him. And Gorelick tells NPR that Kushner plans to play no active role in his company"s operations. He"s going to sell off some of his ownership in that company, and he"s planning to steer clear of White House decisions that involve those assets he doesn"t sell.

JAMIE GORELICK: He is being treated and will be treated as any other individual who goes into public service. We, on his behalf, have consulted with the Office of Government Ethics, and we believe we have a very good path for bringing him into compliance with those rules.

CORNISH: There"s also a rule against government officials hiring family members, and he"s the president-elect"s son-in-law. Can you talk about how those rules would or would not apply here?

HORSLEY: Yeah, the anti-nepotism statute says you can"t put family members to work in a government agency, but there appears to be a loophole for the West Wing because the White House is not considered a government agency. At least that"s the argument that Kushner and his team will be making.

Now, it"s not a slam dunk, but that argument was tested a little bit back in the 1990s when former President Clinton tapped his wife, Hillary, to lead the health care task force. That was challenged in court at the time, and at least one federal judge agreed the West Wing is exempt from the anti-nepotism statute. Now, I might add, the choice of Jared Kushner to be a senior adviser is not subject to Senate confirmation.

CORNISH: Before I let you go, help us understand why Trump wants Kushner in the White House with him.

HORSLEY: Well, he is, as you said in the intro, a very trusted confidant to the president-elect. It"s kind of funny because on the surface, these two could hardly be more different. Kushner, who turns 36 tomorrow, generally avoids the limelight, although his face has been on a lot of magazine covers since the election. He comes from a family of Democrats. He"s an Orthodox Jew. In fact, at one point, Donald Trump suggested Kushner might play a role in Middle East peace negotiations.

For all their differences, though, Kushner is intensely loyal to his father-in-law. He stood by Trump during some of the very darkest moments on the campaign trail, and both of these men are fiercely devoted to their families.

CORNISH: That"s NPR"s Scott Horsley. Scott, thanks so much.

HORSLEY: My pleasure, Audie.

Copyright 2017 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2017/01/09/509001356/reports-trump-son-in-law-jared-kushner-to-be-named-senior-adviser

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Thursday, November 17, 2016

It"s Time to Pay More Attention to Jared Kushner


What We Know About Jared Kushner And His Infleunce With Donald Trump | MSNBC

Jared Kushner, son-in-law of of President-elect Donald Trump, walks from Trump Tower on November 14, 2016, in New York. As Trump and President Barack Obama met privately at the White House, Kushner strolled the mansion"s South Lawn, deep in conversation with Obama"s chief of staff. AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

Chris Christie was fired as the head of Donald Trump"s transition team last week. This week, two members of Trump"s transition team for national security have also been fired. What"s going on? The Washington Post says this:

A former U.S. official with ties to the Trump team described the ousters of Rogers and others as a "bloodletting of anybody that associated in any way on the transition with Christie," and said that the departures were engineered by two Trump loyalists who have taken control of who will get national security posts in the administration: retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn and Trumps son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

Rogers had no prior significant ties to Christie but had been recruited to join the Trump team as an adviser by the former New Jersey governor. At least three other Christie associates were also pushed aside, former officials said, apparently in retaliation for Christies role as a U.S. prosecutor in sending Kushners father to prison.

Smoldering vengeance is about what we"d expect from Trump and his extended family, so I"m provisionally ready to believe this is what"s going on. Remember this?

Aboard his gold-plated jumbo jet, the Republican nominee does not like to rest or be alone with his thoughts, insisting that aides stay up and keep talking to him. He prefers the soothing, whispery voice of his son-in-law.

Kushner is Trump"s very own Grima Wormtongue! And he really, really, doesn"t like Christie. This is from July:

Sources close to Jared Kushner, who is Ivanka Trumps husband, say that Kushner has been telling them that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie will be Vice-President over his dead body. Kushner, who is playing an increasingly active role in the campaign, has a bitter history with Christie. Christie, when he was the US attorney of New Jersey, prosecuted his father, Charles Kushner, in a case that grabbed national headlines. The elder Kushner, pled guilty to 18 counts of illegal campaign contributions, tax evasion, and witness tampering in 2005. He received a 2 year prison sentence.

Wait. Kushner"s father engaged in witness tampering? Oh yes:

The federal witnesses he had attempted to retaliate against were his sister and brother-in-law, who were cooperating with that same investigation. Kushner paid a prostitute $10,000 to lure his brother-in-law to a motel room at the Red Bull Inn in Bridgewater to have s*x with him. A hidden camera recorded the activity, and Kushner sent the lurid tape to his sister, making sure the tape arrived on the day of a family party.

Maybe we should be less worried about Steve Bannon and more worried about Jared Kushner. No, scratch that. We should be worried about both. But Bannon is already getting plenty of attention. I have a feeling maybe Kushner should too.

Source: http://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2016/11/time-pay-attention-jared-kushner

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Friday, July 22, 2016

Ivanka Trump & Husband Jared Kushner: Top 10 Best Photos Together


Donald Trump’s Daughter Ivanka And Her Husband Are Key Players | TODAY
Donald Trump"s daughter Ivanka Trump has been married to husband Jared Kushner since 2009 and he is cut from the same cloth. Kushner is a businessman and investor in addition to having his hand in real estate properties as well. On an even more interesting note, he is actually the de facto campaign manager of Donald Trump"s presidential campaign. Kushner is 35 years old and is a great success, even setting records in his field. He is a Harvard and NYU graduate with an upbringing from within an Orthodox Jewish family. With his wife, Kushner has three children and the couple was actually married in a Jewish ceremony. Ivanka Trump actually converted to Modern Orthodox Judaism prior to marrying her husband. For more information on their marriage, Kushner"s business dealings and their children, click through our gallery of their best photos together. (Instagram/IvankaTrump) Next Image: Ivanka Trump Husband 1

Source: http://heavy.com/news/2016/07/ivanka-trump-husband-jared-kushner-family-instagram-family-donald-daughter/

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Is Jared Kushner the "Court Jew" of Donald Trump"s Realm?


Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner return after son Theodore"s bris

The Leader has everything: money, land, power. Theres just one thing missing, the support of the Godly. The Leader has never been big on religion. In fact, hes a little concerned that many of his Christian supporters are openly anti-Semitic. Thats a problem, since the Leader owes the Jews big time. Many of his fathers biggest land deals and the Leader wouldnt be the Leader without his father were made with the Jews.

So the Leader comes up with a brilliant plan. h**l marry his beautiful daughter to Hebrew nobility, a real Prince of the Jews. That way, no matter how egregiously anti-Semitic he and his followers might appear, he can always say but look at my son-in-law, you dont get more Jewish than him!

If this story sounds familiar, then youre pretty well up on the story of Charlemagne. It was in the late 8th century that Charles the Great, more commonly known as Charlemagne, made good on his fathers promise to give the Jews of southern France the kingdom of Septimania, to thank the Jews for betraying their Muslim neighbors and opening the gates to the Franks. Charlemagne insisted, however, that the Jews of Septimania send for a Prince from the House of King David to travel to the south of France and rule over the Kingdom. Legend had it that Jesus was descended from King David, and Charlemagne was keen to marry his daughter to a Jew who would not only cement the support of the Jewish people, but make his grandchildren the legitimate sons of the Son of G*d.

There may be many reasons why Donald the Great married his daughter Ivanka to a modern prince of the Jews, Jared Kushner. Some of them may have nothing to do with Charles the Greats instincts for political protection, dynasty building, anti-Muslim sentiment and prime shoreside property. In the course of his father-in-laws campaign for President, Kushner has done what Court Jews have done over the centuries rationalized insults for the sake of survival. He has played his heritage as a grandchild of a Holocaust survivor as, well, a Trump card against those who have attacked Donald the Great for his unwillingness to distance himself from anti-Semitic supporters and their attacks on his opponent (the mother-in-law herself of a nice Jewish boy) that make use of historically anti-Jewish images.

Between The Charles and The Donald, there have been scores of famous anti-Semites who kept a Court Jew close at hand. Because of the Catholic injunction against money-lending, Isabella and Ferdinand of Spain turned to Isaac Abravanel to finance their 15th-century wars against the Muslims. When the wars were over and Ferdinand and Isabella decided to clear Spain not only of the Muslims but also of Abravanels Jewish brethren, Abravanel sent his patrons more silver in the hope that they might change their minds. They didnt.

The German Jewish banker Joseph Sss Oppenheimer was one of the more famous Court Jews of the 18th century, serving as banker for Duke Karl Alexander of Wrtemmberg until the death of his protector. At that point the Jew Sss, as he was later immortalized on page, stage, and screen, was hanged and left in an open cage in the public square of Stuttgart for six years.

As the Republicans slouch towards Cleveland, it is worth remembering another coronation in Rome. On Christmas Day 800 CE, with his daughter and her Jewish husband, the new King of Septimania, at his side, Charlemagne entered St. Peters Basilica, knelt on the stone floor, and had himself crowned Holy Roman Emperor. By the end of the century, Charlemagne and his Empire were dead, destroyed by infighting and a bad case of Vikings. And Charlemagnes son-in-law the Jewish King of Septimania had long since been forgotten.

Jonathan Levi is the author of the novels A Guide for the Perplexed and the recent Septimania.

Source: http://forward.com/opinion/345183/is-jared-kushner-the-court-jew-of-donald-trumps-realm/

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