The Mercury

Ivanka takes dad’s seat at G20 table

- Abby Phillip

HAMBURG: Ivanka Trump deputised for her father at a table of world leaders at the Group of 20 summit on Saturday, reigniting questions about the unorthodox mixing of family and government in President Donald Trump’s White House.

The moment, captured in a pixelated photo by a member of Russia’s delegation, caught the scope of the first daughter’s expansive influence in Trump’s administra­tion.

But it drew sharp criticism by some who say the move demonstrat­es Trump’s flouting of democratic norms against such familial arrangemen­ts as well-establishe­d diplomatic protocols.

Former Nato ambassador Nicholas Burns, who served under presidents Bill Clinton and George W Bush, said the incident was a breach of protocols for such summits. Those traditions are intended to send a clear message to world leaders about who has power in the government.

Burns said that in his experience at summits, the secretary of state would take the president’s place at the table.

“This is a group of the 20 most powerful leaders in the world in the 20 most powerful countries,” Burns said. “Authority is not conferred upon family members because of the president’s position.”

Trump and other world leaders of the G-20 sat around a massive table for a working session on “Partnershi­p With Africa, Migration and Health” when Ivanka relieved her father, who had to leave the room for additional meetings. The move placed her squarely between British Prime Minister Theresa May and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

“Yes, it stuck out,” said a senior European official who took part in the G-20 talks, and spoke on condition of anonymity. “The very fact that his daughter is senior adviser smacks of the kind of nepotism not seen since John F Kennedy named Robert F Kennedy as attorney-general.”

Some critics online compared Ivanka Trump’s presence at the table to a “banana republic”, arguing that she is “unelected” and “unqualifie­d” for a role usually filled by officials with policy expertise.

A White House official said the conversati­on at that point in the meeting had shifted into one area of focus for Ivanka Trump: supporting female entreprene­urs in Africa.

“Ivanka was sitting in the back and then briefly joined the main table when the president had to step out,” the official said. “When other leaders stepped out, their seats were also briefly filled by others.”

Her presence was unusual given that government ministers or senior officials are typically called to stand in for heads of state.

She is both the president’s daughter and a White House aide with the title of “assistant to the president”.

She has focused on issues of women’s empowermen­t and workplace developmen­t but maintains broad influence in the administra­tion.

Earlier on Saturday, Trump and her father announced the US’s $50 million (R670m) commitment to a new World Bank fund dedicated to supporting female entreprene­urs in developing countries.

This was not the first summit meeting she has participat­ed in. On Thursday, she and her husband, Jared Kushner, another Trump adviser, joined the president at a bilateral meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, a White House official confirmed.

Kushner also participat­ed in Trump’s bilateral meeting with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto on Friday.

Asked at a news conference about Ivanka’s presence at the table on Saturday, Merkel did not weigh in on whether it was appropriat­e.

“The delegation­s themselves decide, should the president not be present for a meeting, who will take the chair, and Ivanka Trump was part of the American delegation,” she said. – Washington Post

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