The Twilight of Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner

Published in El País
(Spain) on 19 May 2018
by Joan Faus (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Marta Quirós Alarcón. Edited by Elizabeth Cosgriff.
The couple have lost their luster and influence during the past year, stalked by legal issues and weakened by the president’s disruptive decisions.

They were the couple of the hour. Rich businesspeople in their 30s who had constant access to the president of the United States. Ubiquitous and powerful. It was said that they pulled a lot of strings in the back room of the White House and that they were a moderating influence. One year later, the halo surrounding Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner is fading. Donald Trump’s daughter and his son-in-law, both advisers to the White House and with no previous political experience, have lost some of their pull during the second year of the presidency, stalked by legal issues and weakened by the leader’s turn toward disruptive positions.

This twilight was symbolically displayed last Monday. Ivanka and Jared traveled to Jerusalem to take part in the inauguration ceremony of the new American Embassy. An uncomfortable duality took place: Almost at the same time as the American delegation was celebrating the relocation of the Tel Aviv diplomatic office, Israeli forces killed dozens of demonstrators who were protesting against the decisions in Gaza. Ivanka’s wide smile during the inauguration has been strongly criticized in the U.S. The tension also highlighted Kushner’s failure, as he had been in charge of Israeli and Palestinian relations. His main task is to promote a peace plan that has never been revealed and which now seems impossible, given the Palestinian indignation toward the embassy move.

A year ago, Ivanka and Jared, who are practicing Jews, had already visited Jerusalem. They joined Trump on his first tour abroad as president. One analysis in the Israeli paper Haaretz this week recalled the way in which some described the Republican president’s daughter back then as the “most powerful Jewish woman” in the U.S. That visit, which included a trip to the West Bank, was thoroughly organized by Kushner, whom Trump showered with praise. The day before taking office in January 2017, he was confident that his son-in-law would do a “great job” in accomplishing what nobody has ever achieved: a sustained peace agreement in the world’s most volatile region.

Today, those words generate derision. “The president has realized he can only do so much. Kushner is not the panacea and is not going to bring about a solution,” says George C. Edwards III, a distinguished political science professor at Texas A&M University, by telephone. He considers it a “ridiculous notion” to believe that Kushner, who lacks international experience, could solve one of the world’s greatest hieroglyphs because of his family friendship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.*

At the start of Trump’s presidency, Kushner’s portfolio was infinite. Aside from handling the Middle East, he launched a technological innovation initiative and another which concerned the prison system, and oversaw the relationship with Mexico. One year later, Kushner remains officially involved in those assignments, but his power, which appeared to be vast, has been narrowed down.

This is primarily due to the June 2917 appointment of John Kelly as Trump’s chief of staff, an appointment which raised barriers around the president. Secondly, Kushner's reduced influence is due to the withdrawal of Kushner’s maximum security clearance last February as a result of numerous mistakes in the information supplied to the FBI about his financial and international contacts. According to expert Edwards, it is telling that Trump has done nothing to try to recover that protection for his son-in-law, which could prove that he has distanced himself from him.**

Up until that moment, Kushner’s undisclosed meetings with Russian characters during the election campaign had earned him an investigation by Robert Mueller, the special counsel analyzing Moscow’s interference in the presidential election. However, with the loss of his security clearance, he has been sidelined. He no longer has access to the daily briefing in which the president is informed of the world’s major security risks. Concurrently, information has surfaced about efforts by foreign countries to try to manipulate Kushner through his family’s real estate network.

Ivanka Trump does not have as many problems as her husband, but she is not trouble free. The FBI’s investigation of Michael Cohen, her father’s shady personal lawyer, threatens to rub off on her, because the attorney helped the family seal trade agreements overseas. As Trump’s adviser, Ivanka has mainly focused on issues related to the empowerment of women. She has achieved milestones, such as the creation of an international fund sponsored by the World Bank.

But that feminist struggle has also been eclipsed by her father’s controversies. Trump has openly endorsed people accused of sexual harassment or abusing women, and his lawyer Cohen paid $130,000 in 2016 to porn actress Stormy Daniels so that she would refrain from talking publicly about an alleged sexual affair with the president in 2006.

Moreover, Ivanka and Jared are increasingly alone in the White House. Their influence as moderating voices started to fall apart when they failed to persuade Trump to remain in the Paris climate agreement, from which he withdrew the U.S. in June 2016. They did manage to dispose of Steve Bannon, the leader’s chief strategist, and an emblem of the radical right. However, little by little, almost all of their allies in the West Wing are gone, such as Gary Cohn, economic adviser, giving way to additional disruptive voices more in line with Trump’s instincts.

During his first weeks in office, Edwards says, the president was “very naive” about how the government worked and “didn’t know who to trust,” which is why he chose his daughter and son-in-law as his advisers, in turn, newcomers to politics. But harsh reality has gradually prevailed. Presidential experts “wouldn’t be surprised” if, after the November general election, Ivanka and Jared stopped working at the White House and settled for an amicable departure.* For the time being, however, there are reports that say the couple is searching for a new house to move to in Washington.

*Editor’s note: This quote, accurately translated from the original, could not be verified.

** Editor’s note: Jared Kushner’s permanent security clearance was restored on May 23, 2018.



El ocaso de Ivanka Trump y Jared Kushner

La pareja ha perdido brillo e influencia en el último año acechada por problemas legales y debilitada por las decisiones rupturistas del presidente

Eran la pareja del momento. Empresarios treintañeros y ricos con acceso constante al presidente de Estados Unidos. Omnipresentes y poderosos. Se decía que movían muchos hilos en la trastienda de la Casa Blanca y que eran una influencia de moderación. Un año después, el aura alrededor de Ivanka Trump y Jared Kushner se ha difuminado. La hija de Donald Trump y su yerno, ambos asesores de la Casa Blanca y sin ninguna experiencia política previa, han perdido impronta en el segundo año de presidencia acechados por problemas legales y debilitados por el giro hacia posiciones rupturistas del mandatario.

El ocaso se visualizó simbólicamente el pasado lunes. Ivanka y Jared viajaron a Jerusalén para participar en la ceremonia de inauguración de la nueva Embajada estadounidense. Hubo una incómoda dualidad: casi al mismo tiempo en que la delegación norteamericana celebraba el traslado de la sede diplomática desde Tel Aviv, fuerzas israelíes mataban a decenas de manifestantes en Gaza que protestaban contra la decisión. La amplia sonrisa de Ivanka durante la inauguración ha sido muy criticada en EE UU. La tensión también evidenció el fracaso de Kushner, encargado de la relación entre israelíes y palestinos. Su principal tarea es promover un plan de paz que nunca se ha revelado y que ahora parece imposible dada la indignación palestina por el cambio de la Embajada.

Un año antes, Ivanka y Jared -practicantes del judaísmo- ya habían visitado Jerusalén. Acompañaron a Donald Trump en su primera gira en el extranjero como presidente. Un análisis de esta semana del diario israelí Haaretz recordaba cómo algunos describieron entonces a la hija del republicano como la “mujer judía más poderosa” de EE UU. Esa visita, que incluyó un viaje a Cisjordania, fue preparada al detalle por Kushner, del que Trump se deshacía en elogios. El día antes de asumir la presidencia, en enero de 2017, confió en que su yerno haría un “gran trabajo” en lograr lo que nadie ha conseguido: un acuerdo de paz sostenido en la región más volátil del mundo.

Esas palabras ahora suscitan sorna. “El presidente se ha dado cuenta de que solo puede hacer un poco. Kushner no es la panacea y no va a impulsar una solución”, dice por teléfono George C. Edwards III, profesor distinguido de Ciencias Políticas en la Universidad Texas A&M. Considera una “noción ridícula” el creer que Kushner, que carecía de experiencia internacional, podía resolver uno de los mayores jeroglíficos del mundo gracias a su amistad familiar con el primer ministro israelí, Benjamín Netanyahu.

Al inicio de la presidencia de Trump, la cartera de Kushner era infinita. Al margen de ocuparse de Oriente Próximo, lanzó una iniciativa de innovación tecnológica, otra sobre el sistema penitenciario, supervisaba la relación con México… Un año después, Kushner sigue oficialmente involucrado en esas tareas pero su poder, que parecía inabarcable, ha sido acotado.

Primero, por la designación en junio de 2017 de John Kelly como jefe de gabinete de Trump y que levantó nuevas barreras alrededor del presidente. Y segundo, por la retirada el pasado febrero de la credencial de máxima seguridad a Kushner por los numerosos fallos en la información proporcionada al FBI sobre sus contactos económicos e internacionales. Según el experto Edwards, es revelador que Trump no haya hecho nada para tratar de recuperar esa protección para su yerno, lo que podría reflejar que se ha distanciado de él.

Hasta ese momento, las reuniones no reveladas de Kushner con personalidades rusas durante la campaña electoral le habían valido ser investigado por Robert Mueller, el fiscal especial que analiza la injerencia de Moscú en los comicios presidenciales. Pero, con la pérdida de la credencial de seguridad, ha quedado relegado: ya no tiene acceso a la reunión diaria en que se informa al presidente de los mayores riesgos de seguridad en el mundo. En paralelo, han aflorado informaciones sobre los intentos de países extranjeros de tratar de manipular a Kushner a través del entramado inmobiliario de su familia.

Ivanka Trump tiene menos problemas que su marido pero no está exenta de ellos. La investigación del FBI a Michael Cohen, el oscuro abogado personal de su padre, corre el riesgo de salpicarla porque el letrado ayudó a la familia a sellar acuerdos comerciales en el extranjero. Como asesora de Trump, Ivanka se ha centrado sobre todo en asuntos relacionados con el empoderamiento de mujeres. Ha logrado hitos, como la creación de un fondo internacional apadrinado por el Banco Mundial.

Pero esa lucha feminista también se ha visto eclipsada por polémicas de su padre. Trump ha apoyado abiertamente a personas acusadas de acoso sexual o maltrato a mujeres, y su abogado Cohen pagó en 2016 130.000 dólares a la actriz porno Stormy Daniels para que no contara una presunta aventura sexual con el presidente en 2006.

Ivanka y Jared están, además, cada vez más solos en la Casa Blanca. Su influencia, como voces moderadas, empezó a resquebrajarse cuando no consiguieron convencer a Trump de seguir en el Acuerdo de París contra el cambio climático, del que retiró a EE UU en junio de 2016. Lograron sacarse de encima a Steve Bannon, el estratega jefe del mandatario y emblema de la derecha radical. Pero poco a poco, casi todos sus aliados en el Ala Oeste se han marchado, como Gary Cohn, el consejero económico, lo que ha dado entrada a voces más rupturistas al gusto de los instintos de Trump.

En sus primeras semanas, el presidente, dice Edwards, era “muy ingenuo” sobre el funcionamiento del Gobierno y “no sabía en quién confiar” y por eso optó por tener como asesores a su hija y yerno, que a su vez eran muy novatos en política. Pero la fría realidad se ha ido imponiendo. Al experto presidencial, “no le sorprendería” si, después de las elecciones legislativas de noviembre, Ivanka y Jared dejan de trabajar en la Casa Blanca y pactan una salida amistosa. De momento, sin embargo, hay informaciones de que la pareja está buscando una nueva casa a la que mudarse en Washington.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Topics

Poland: Meloni in the White House. Has Trump Forgotten Poland?*

Germany: US Companies in Tariff Crisis: Planning Impossible, Price Increases Necessary

Japan: US Administration Losing Credibility 3 Months into Policy of Threats

Mauritius: Could Trump Be Leading the World into Recession?

India: World in Flux: India Must See Bigger Trade Picture

Palestine: US vs. Ansarallah: Will Trump Launch a Ground War in Yemen for Israel?

Ukraine: Trump Faces Uneasy Choices on Russia’s War as His ‘Compromise Strategy’ Is Failing

Related Articles

Poland: Meloni in the White House. Has Trump Forgotten Poland?*

Japan: US Administration Losing Credibility 3 Months into Policy of Threats

Mauritius: Could Trump Be Leading the World into Recession?

India: World in Flux: India Must See Bigger Trade Picture

Palestine: US vs. Ansarallah: Will Trump Launch a Ground War in Yemen for Israel?