The Morning Call

Kushner’s push to distance himself from Trump

Sources: Son-in-law’s plan in place before election was official

- By Peter Baker

WASHINGTON — On Nov. 5, 2020, barely 24 hours after President Donald Trump claimed that “frankly, we did win this election,” Jared Kushner woke up and announced to his wife that they were moving to Miami.

The election had not even been called for Joe Biden, but as Kushner later told the story to aides and associates, the White House’s young power couple felt no need to wait for the official results.

No matter how vociferous­ly Trump claimed otherwise, neither Kushner nor Ivanka Trump believed then or later that the election had been stolen, according to people close to them. While the president spent days after the polls closed plotting a strategy to hold on to power, his daughter and son-in-law were already washing their hands of the Trump presidency.

Their decision to move on opened a vacuum around the president that was filled by conspiracy theorists including Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, who relayed to Trump false stories of dead voters, stuffed ballot boxes, corrupted voting machines and foreign plots. Kushner told Trump he would not be involved if Giuliani were in charge, according to people he confided in.

While the president’s son-in-law had arguably been the most influentia­l adviser to the president through four years, he chose to focus on his personal project of Middle East diplomacy. He returned to the region to meet with figures who would also be helpful to him later in making money after leaving the White House.

The role Kushner played

could come into sharp relief now that the congressio­nal committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol opened public hearings.

Kushner’s activities in his final months in the White House are now also coming under the scrutiny of another Democratic-run House committee investigat­ing whether he used his position to secure a $2 billion investment in his new private equity firm from a prominent Saudi Arabian wealth fund. Kushner has said he abided by all legal and ethical guidelines while in public service.

This account of Kushner’s post-election activities is based on interviews of figures close to him and the former president for a forthcomin­g book by this reporter and Susan Glasser of The New Yorker called “The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021,” to be published by Doubleday on Sept. 20. Nearly all of

those who spoke requested anonymity.

During his four years in the White House, Kushner positioned himself as the measured alter ego to a volatile president. But Kushner became strategic in his interventi­ons, having been burned by early efforts that blew up in his face.

Kushner developed his own techniques for handling Trump. One key, he told others, was feeding the president good news, even if it was in short supply. Kushner came up with a mathematic­al formula for his brand of Trump management: 2-to-1. Any phone call, any meeting should include this goodnews-to-bad-news ratio.

Having watched dozens of senior officials come and go, Kushner realized the essential element of survival: never forgetting it was Trump’s show. “You have to realize you don’t make the waves,” Kushner advised other officials. “He makes the waves.”

Kushner had come to recognize when the waves were too rough — as they were after Election Day 2020. He understood that his father-in-law would not concede right away and would ask for recounts and file lawsuits, but he believed that even if there were some irregulari­ties, it was mainly a way of soothing a wounded ego and explaining defeat.

To Kushner, his fatherin-law’s decision to turn once again to Giuliani was a red flag. As far as Kushner was concerned, Giuliani was an erratic schemer who had already gotten Trump impeached once because of his political intriguing in Ukraine. But instead of fighting Giuliani for Trump’s attention, Kushner opted out entirely.

The post-election fraud claims quickly exposed a rift within the Trump family. On the same day Kushner declared it was time to move, his brother-in-law Donald Trump Jr. was pushing the

president’s team to fight to stay in power. He sent a text to Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, outlining a plan to override the verdict of the voters by having Republican legislatur­es in states won by Biden invalidate the results and send Electoral College votes for Trump when Congress counted them Jan. 6.

How much Kushner knew about that at the time remains unclear, but he did not express serious concern about how far the effort to hang on to power would go. He sent word to Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican majority leader, that Trump would eventually accept the reality that he lost.

“We’ll get through it. Bear with us,” Kushner told Josh Holmes, a former chief of staff and campaign manager for McConnell who would pass along the message. “We’ve got a couple of challenges that have some merit. We’ll see how they go, but there’s a pretty good chance we come up short.” And once the Electoral College voted Dec. 14, he suggested, that would be the end of it.

Indeed, in the days leading up to Jan. 6, Kushner was in the Middle East brokering a rapprochem­ent between Saudi Arabia and Qatar to end a three-year blockade of the small Gulf state. He was on a plane back to Washington when Trump’s mob stormed the Capitol.

After arriving home, Kushner’s phone rang. Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the House Republican minority leader, was on the line asking Kushner to persuade the president to do something. “We need help!” McCarthy insisted. Kushner rushed to the White House.

Ivanka Trump had spent much of the day trying to keep her father from going too far. She had refused to address the rally on the Ellipse but at the last minute was so concerned by her father’s anger toward Pence that she decided to accompany him there in hopes of avoiding a worse clash. As rioters rampaged through the Capitol, she hoped to persuade her father to issue stronger statements calling off the attackers.

By the time Kushner arrived at the White House, his wife had gotten her father to release a video telling supporters to go home. But even then, he repeated his lies about the “fraudulent election” and expressed solidarity with the rioters, telling them, “We love you, you’re very special.” Kushner quickly concluded there was little more he could do at that point.

On Jan. 20, Kushner and Ivanka Trump attended the farewell ceremony for the departing president and accompanie­d him on Air Force One to Florida. Trump was heading into exile, prepared to keep waging war on Biden and the system.

Kushner and his wife, meanwhile, were moving on to their new life.

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2020 ?? Jared Kushner, right, and Vice President Mike Pence applaud President Donald Trump. During his four years in the White House, Kushner positioned himself as the measured alter ego to a volatile president.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2020 Jared Kushner, right, and Vice President Mike Pence applaud President Donald Trump. During his four years in the White House, Kushner positioned himself as the measured alter ego to a volatile president.

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