Los Angeles Times

Trump son-in-law

Jared Kushner’s appointmen­t could face a challenge under an anti-nepotism law.

- Associated press

Jared Kushner is named a senior advisor to president-elect.

President-elect Donald Trump appointed his influentia­l son-in-law Jared Kushner as a White House senior advisor Monday, putting the young real estate executive in position to exert broad sway over both domestic and foreign policy, particular­ly Middle East issues and trade negotiatio­ns.

Trump has come to rely heavily on Kushner, who is married to the presidente­lect’s daughter Ivanka.

Since the election, the political novice has been one of the transition team’s main liaisons to foreign government­s, communicat­ing with Israeli officials and meeting with Britain’s foreign minister.

He’s also huddled with congressio­nal leaders and helped interview Cabinet candidates.

Ivanka Trump, who also played a significan­t role advising her father during the presidenti­al campaign, will not be taking a formal White House position. Transition officials said the mother of three young children wanted to focus on moving her family from New York to Washington.

Kushner’s own eligibilit­y for the White House could be challenged, given a 1967 law meant to bar government officials from hiring relatives.

Kushner lawyer Jamie Gorelick argued Monday that the law did not apply to the West Wing. She cited a later congressio­nal measure to allow the president “unfettered” and “sweeping ” authority in hiring staff.

In a statement, Trump said Kushner would be an “invaluable member of my team as I set and execute an ambitious agenda.”

Kushner will resign as chief executive of his family’s real estate company and as publisher of the New York Observer. He will also divest “substantia­l assets,” Gorelick said. The lawyer said Kushner would not be taking a salary.

Ivanka Trump will also be leaving her executive roles at the Trump Organizati­on — her father’s real estate company — and her own fashion brands.

Kushner, who turns 36 on Tuesday, emerged as one of Trump’s most powerful campaign advisors during his father-in-law’s unorthodox presidenti­al bid — a calming presence in an otherwise chaotic campaign. Soft-spoken and press-shy, he was deeply involved in the campaign’s digital efforts and was usually at Trump’s side during the election’s closing weeks.

He has continued to be a commanding presence during the transition, working alongside incoming White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and senior advisor Stephen K. Bannon.

He’s played a key role in coordinati­ng Trump’s contacts with foreign leaders and has been talking with foreign government officials, according to a person with knowledge of the conversati­ons.

Last week, Kushner and Bannon — the controvers­ial conservati­ve media executive — met with British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson.

Kushner and Bannon have also worked closely on issues related to Israel, including discussion­s over moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, which could inflame tensions in the Middle East, and on the Trump administra­tion’s response to a United Nations Security Council measure condemning Israeli settlement­s.

Kushner is also weighing in on domestic policy. He joined other Trump advisors Monday night for a meeting with House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) on tax reform.

He championed the selection of his friend Gary Cohn, president of Goldman Sachs, for a top White House economic post, and Cohn’s influence within Trump’s team is said to be growing. He’s been a conduit between Trump’s team and the private sector, a role transition officials said would continue in the White House.

Those with knowledge of Kushner’s role spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal matters.

The anti-nepotism law appears to be the main obstacle to Kushner joining the White House. In arguing that the measure did not apply to the West Wing, Gorelick cited an opinion from two federal court judges in a 1993 case involving Hillary Clinton’s work on her husband’s healthcare law. She said Trump planned to seek an advisory opinion on the nepotism law from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.

Gorelick worked in the Clinton administra­tion at both the Pentagon and Justice Department.

Norman Eisen, who served as President Obama’s government ethics lawyer, said there was a “murky legal landscape” regarding the anti-nepotism law. But he said Kushner appeared to be taking the proper steps regarding the ethics and disclosure requiremen­ts for federal employees.

Like his father-in-law, Kushner pushed a mid-sized real estate company into the high-stakes battlefiel­d of Manhattan. Though he is often viewed as more moderate than Trump, people close to him say he fully bought into the Trump campaign’s fiery populist message that resonated with white, working-class voters. He never publicly distanced himself from Trump’s more provocativ­e stances, including the candidate’s call for a Muslim immigratio­n ban and his doubts about President Obama’s birthplace.

Kushner’s place in Trump’s orbit — vital but often discreet — was vividly on display last month, when the president-elect toured the Carrier Corp. plant in Indiana to tout the jobs he says he saved.

Trump marched around the plant with Vice President-elect Mike Pence, shaking hands with workers, posing for photos and flashing a thumbs-up to the traveling news media.

Kushner stayed away from the cameras, lingering a deferentia­l 10 or 20 feet from Trump while marveling at the scene.

“Look at these people,” Kushner was overheard saying as he watched dozens of workers cheer. “This is why he won.”

 ?? Carolyn Kaster Associated Press ?? JARED KUSHNER will resign as head of his family’s real estate company and divest “substantia­l assets.”
Carolyn Kaster Associated Press JARED KUSHNER will resign as head of his family’s real estate company and divest “substantia­l assets.”

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