Toronto Star

THE TRUMP WHISPERER

Jared Kushner married the president-elect’s daughter. Now, he is his right-hand man,

- SHAWN BOBURG THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON— Jared Kushner was just an undergrad at Harvard when politician­s began receiving big-dollar campaign donations bearing his name.

In reality, the money was sent by his father, a powerful New Jersey real estate mogul. Over the course of several years, Charles Kushner pumped half a million dollars into political campaigns, avoiding legal limits by attributin­g cheques to family members and business associates without their knowledge. The scheme sent the elder Kushner to prison and engulfed the family in scandal.

It was a defining and pivotal episode for Jared Kushner, now 35, who is poised to become one of the most trusted advisers to his father-in-law, presidente­lect Donald Trump.

The donation scandal provides a glimpse of the privilege and influence that marked Kushner’s upbringing in a prominent family. But friends say it also reveals in Kushner a fundamenta­l trait that Trump prizes and has strengthen­ed their bond: unflinchin­g loyalty.

Far from seeing his father’s actions as a betrayal, the younger Kushner flew to Alabama almost every Sunday to visit his father during his 14 months behind bars. He took the helm of the family business. And he publicly insisted that his father was unfairly prosecuted.

“Jared is a devoted son in an almost old-world sense of respect and duty and devotion,” said former New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey, a Democrat, who counted Charles Kushner as his biggest donor until McGreevey resigned in 2004 amid a sex scandal.

The same dynamic — this time between Kushner and Trump — played out on the campaign trail, when Kushner, an Orthodox Jew, publicly defended his father-in-law against claims that his rhetoric was fuelling anti-Semitism and racism. And it seems likely to carry over into the White House, where Kushner is expected to play the role of informal gatekeeper and confidant to the president and may be entrusted with the enormous task of trying to broker an end to conflict in the Middle East.

Kushner married into a family that, much like his own, keeps its business in the bloodline. He and Ivanka Trump were introduced at a business lunch and ever since they got married, they have been trusted advisers to her father.

During the campaign, Kushner would often sit with the elder Trump on the president-elect’s private plane, a Boeing 757 outfitted with cream leather couches, gold seat buckles and a big-screen television. He would quietly turn to Trump as they both read between stops — Trump rifling through a pile of printed articles, Kushner on his laptop or phone.

Kushner carved out a portfolio of sorts on foreign policy, with particular interest in the Middle East and Israel, and helped to shape Trump’s speech in March to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a well-received address during which Trump stuck to his prepared remarks.

Several Trump associates have said that Kushner will be a chief of staff in all but name, with widerangin­g — if sometimes hard-to-quantify — influence and a voice equal to incoming chief of staff Reince Priebus and chief White House strategist Stephen Bannon.

Like his ascent in the family business, and perhaps even his Ivy League education, Kushner’s influence on the future president is partly a by-product of his proximity to power.

In 1997, when Kushner was just 16, then-president Bill Clinton made a stop at the corporate headquarte­rs of the family business, lavishing praise on the Kushners during a speech. To mark the moment, the Kushners gave Clinton a shofar — a ram’s-horn musical instrument used in Jewish religious ceremonies.

A year later, as Jared Kushner was starting to fill out college applicatio­ns, his father pledged $2.5 million to Harvard, to be paid in $250,000 yearly instalment­s, according to a book, The Price of Admission: How America’s Ruling Class Buys Its Way into Elite Colleges by journalist Daniel Golden. Jared’s test scores were below Ivy League standards, Golden wrote, citing an unnamed official at the yeshiva high school in northern New Jersey that Jared attended.

Then-Sen. Edward Kennedy, a legendary Massachuse­tts Democrat, made a call to the Harvard admissions staff on Kushner’s behalf — at the urging of a Democratic senator from New Jersey, Frank Lautenberg, who had received more than $100,000 in donations from Charles Kushner, according to the book. Jared Kushner was admitted. Risa Heller, a spokespers­on for Kushner Companies, said the suggestion that Jared Kushner’s acceptance was connected to his father’s gift to the school “is and always has been false.”

Kushner’s parents, she said, have donated more than $100 million to universiti­es, hospitals and other charitable causes, she said.

By the time Jared finished his studies at Harvard, nearly $90,000 had been donated to state and federal campaigns in his name, records show, almost entirely to Democrats. The giving spree pulled Jared into the crosshairs of the Federal Election Commission (FEC).

Just before he began his senior year in 2002, a letter from the FEC addressed to the younger Kushner arrived at his home in a wealthy New Jersey suburb. In the letter, federal regulators wrote that Jared Kushner appeared to have broken campaign-finance laws by contributi­ng more than they allowed.

Jared Kushner, who was later cleared when the donations were found to have come from his father, declined to comment on anything related to the investigat­ion involving his father.

Although Kushner eventually co-operated with FEC investigat­ors, it is not clear if he did so with prosecutor­s in the subsequent criminal investigat­ion. In any event, the scandal does not appear to have damaged his relationsh­ip with his father.

That was not true of other family members, including an uncle who had been co-operating with federal prosecutor­s; Charles Kushner apparently did not take lightly to the betrayal, records show.

He paid a prostitute $10,000 to seduce his brother-in-law in a hotel room set up with hidden cameras to record the rendezvous. He later instructed a private detective to mail the tape to his sister as a warning.

Instead, she took the tape to the FBI, leading to Kushner’s arrest.

Kushner learned of the arrest when his father called him on a July morning. Jared was on his way to an internship in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, he told New York Magazine in a 2009 interview.

“They’re going to arrest me today,” Charles Kushner told him.

“For what?” Jared Kushner recalled asking. “Is it because of the tape? I thought your lawyers knew about that. I thought it’s not illegal.”

“Apparently they’re saying that it is,” his father said.

Charles Kushner pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FEC, witness tampering and tax evasion stemming from $6 million in political contributi­ons and gifts mischaract­erized as business expenses. If Charles Kushner taught his son deep loyalty, he may also have taught him its flip side, revenge.

For Jared Kushner, the evidence of whether he absorbed the lesson lies in his actions toward Chris Christie, the hardchargi­ng federal prosecutor — and future governor of New Jersey, 2016 Republican presidenti­al candidate and endorser of Donald Trump for president — who put the elder Kushner behind bars.

“Seeing my father’s situation, I felt what happened was obviously unjust in terms of the way they pursued him,” Jared Kushner told the Real Deal in 2014.

Instead of becoming a prosecutor, Jared Kushner took the family business into Manhattan, selling his family’s portfolio of apartments in New Jersey and, in 2007, buying an office tower on Fifth Avenue, about three blocks south of Trump Tower.

Kushner also made a business decision that would give him a toehold in the world of New Jersey politics that Christie was about to inhabit. He bought a successful political gossip website called Politicker­NJ.com that was run by an anonymous blogger. Later, when Christie was running for governor in 2009, he suggested that Kushner was using the website to damage him.

“It’s a Kushner-owned enterprise,” Christie said. “And I don’t think I’ll be getting Charles Kushner’s family’s vote come November.”

Christie became governor of New Jersey. He was an early favourite for the Republican presidenti­al nomination this year until Trump’s remarkable ascent. Christie dropped out and supported Trump, putting him in a position to get a key role in a Trump administra­tion. But Kushner now was in a position to influence the fate of the man who had put his father behind bars.

Speculatio­n has swirled that Kushner helped persuade Trump not to pick Christie to be his vice president. Friends said privately that Kushner was smart enough not to have made his argument a personal one. The residual damage from a Christie scandal that became known as Bridgegate was enough reason, they said.

At it turned out, the anonymous blogger whose website Kushner had acquired was at the centre of the scandal. The Christie administra­tion had recruited David Wildstein away from Kushner’s website for a job as an executive at the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, an agency that runs the region’s bridges and airports.

Wildstein and two other Christie aides were convicted this year of closing lanes to the George Washington Bridge in an act of political revenge.

Back on Dec. 7, 2013, the day after Wildstein resigned from the Port Authority amid growing evidence that he had ordered the lane closures, Kushner got in touch with him. In an email obtained by the Post, Kushner drew a parallel between Wildstein and his father, who had also resigned as a Port Authority commission­er in 2003 as questions began to percolate about Kushner’s campaign contributi­ons.

“Just wanted you to know that I am thinking of you and wishing the best. For what it’s worth, I thought the move you pulled was kind of badass,” Kushner wrote.

Heller, the Kushner Companies spokespers­on, said this week that the message was a “poorly worded way of Jared trying to cheer up an old friend.”

“Jared is a devoted son in an almost old-world sense of respect and duty and devotion.” JIM MCGREEVEY FORMER NEW JERSEY GOVERNOR

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 ?? LUCAS JACKSON/REUTERS FILE PHOTOS ?? Both Ivanka Trump and husband Jared Kushner are trusted advisers to president-elect Donald Trump. Kushner, 35, married into a family like his own: one that keeps business in the bloodline.
LUCAS JACKSON/REUTERS FILE PHOTOS Both Ivanka Trump and husband Jared Kushner are trusted advisers to president-elect Donald Trump. Kushner, 35, married into a family like his own: one that keeps business in the bloodline.
 ?? JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? U.S. president-elect Donald Trump greets his daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner at his election-night rally.
JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS FILE PHOTO U.S. president-elect Donald Trump greets his daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner at his election-night rally.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Christophe­r J. Christie was the prosecutor who put Charles Kushner behind bars.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Christophe­r J. Christie was the prosecutor who put Charles Kushner behind bars.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Charles B. Kushner, Jared’s father, was sentenced to two years in prison for campaign finance violations in 2005.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Charles B. Kushner, Jared’s father, was sentenced to two years in prison for campaign finance violations in 2005.

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