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Jared Kushner

13 Things to Know About Jared Kushner

Trump's son-in-law used a private email account for official White House business, his lawyer confirmed.

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When Jared Kushner married Ivanka Trump in 2009, it was seen by many as a dynastic joining of two real estate empires. It has since become a political alliance. Once a behind-the-scenes confidant, Jared Kushner rose to prominence as a close advisor to his father-in-law's upstart campaign. Now that Trump is in office, here's what else we know about who Kushner is and the role he's playing in the Trump White House.

1

Kushner Used a Private Email Account to Correspond with Other Trump Administration Officials

Jared Kushner
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The president's son-in-law set up a personal email account following the election and used it for official White House business, Politico first reported September 24. "Fewer than 100 emails from January through August were either sent to or returned by Mr. Kushner to colleagues in the White House from his personal email account," his attorney Abbe Lowell said. "These usually forwarded news articles or political commentary and most often occurred when someone initiated the exchange by sending an email to his personal rather than his White House address."

During the election, then-candidate Donald Trump had been critical of his opponent Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server when she was secretary of state, a choice that resulted in an FBI investigation.

2

The President's Son-in-Law Has Broad White House Responsibilities

Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner at President Trump and Angela Merkel's joint press conference
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Kushner, who was was sworn in as senior advisor to the president just days after the inauguration, heads up a new office called the "White House Office of American Innovation." He leads a team with a broad mandate to overhaul the federal bureaucracy, reportedly using private sector methods and models to fulfill the Trump administration's campaign promises, which include everything from fighting opioid addiction to improving care for veterans. “We should have excellence in government,” Kushner told the Washington Post in an interview last March in his West Wing office. “The government should be run like a great American company. Our hope is that we can achieve successes and efficiencies for our customers, who are the citizens.”

3

Kushner Appeared Before the Senate Intelligence Committee in July

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In May, while accompanying Trump on the first foreign trip of his presidency, news broke that the FBI is looking into Kushner as part of their Russia investigation. Per NBC, who published the news in tandem with The Washington Post, "Investigators believe Kushner has significant information relevant to their inquiry, officials said. That does not mean they suspect him of a crime or intend to charge him."

Shortly after the FBI investigation intel broke, the Washington Post reported that Kushner wanted to set up a "secret communications channel" with the Kremlin during Trump's transition period, without the knowledge of the U.S. government. Now, it is being reported that his business dealings are also being looked into by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.

On July 24, Kushner testified in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee in a closed-door meeting regarding Russian interference in the 2016 election and Kushner's communication with Russian contacts during the campaign. In a statement following the meeting, Kushner said, "All of my actions were proper and occurred in the normal course of events of a very unique campaign."

In his prepared remarks, Kushner denied any accusation of collusion, "I did not collude with Russians, nor do I know of anyone in the campaign who did." Kushner also said, "I had no improper contacts. I did not collude, nor know of anyone else in the campaign who colluded, with any foreign government."

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4

Kushner's Mandate Includes Foreign Relations

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In addition to focusing on economic initiatives, he is also working with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Defense Secretary James Mattis on issues of foreign policy and national security. "[Mattis and Tillerson] seek [Kushner] out. If they're about to go talk to the president, they ask him if they can stop by his office to talk about things," a source told Vanity Fair. "They know Donald is going to ask him about what they come to him with anyway."

The Washington Post went so far as to call Kushner, who has no government or foreign policy experience, a "shadow diplomat."

Back in November, in an interview with the New York Times, the Trump said that his son-in-law could help bring peace to the Middle East, despite the fact that Kushner has no foreign policy experience. "I would love to be the one who made peace with Israel and the Palestinians, that would be such a great achievement," Trump said Tuesday, according to a tweet from Mike Grynbaum.

But even the potential to solve issues between Israel and Palestine doesn't make you immune to the President's criticism. "Trump yells at him in front of people all the time," a source close to the family told Vanity Fair. "He's in line, too."

5

Kushner Rose to Prominence Over the Course of the Campaign

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Jared Kushner has long been a favorite of his father-in-law's, in no small part because he is married to Ivanka, the president's beloved older daughter. Despite having no experience in government or politics, Trump came to rely increasingly on Kushner's advice during the campaign. "Honestly, Jared is a very successful real estate person, but I actually think he likes politics more than he likes real estate," Donald Trump said at a rally. "But he's very good at politics." Kushner was credited with masterminding the campaign's social media operation. Along with Trump's older children Ivanka, Eric, and Donald Jr., he persuaded Trump to fire former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski and to pick Reince Preibus as chief of staff. He has reportedly been instrumental in smoothing Trump's relationships with Fox News (Kushner is friendly with Rupert Murdoch, who owns Fox), the GOP establishment, and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

6

Like his father-in-law, Kushner is a real estate developer.

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And like Trump, Kushner works for the family business. His father, Charles Kushner, was head of a real-estate empire worth billions and one of the most powerful men in New Jersey. He groomed Jared early, sending him company financial documents to review while he was at Harvard.

Jared first made business headlines of his own in 2007 when he paid $1.8 billion for 666 Fifth Avenue, at the time a record price for a Manhattan office building; the Kushner Companies own properties in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and New Jersey. The younger Kushner also previously owned the New York Observer, a newspaper he obtained in 2006. Many wondered why the soft-spoken and guarded Kushner would want to invest in newspaper at a notoriously difficult time for the industry. Perhaps the roots of his political ambitions can be found in his desire to become a media mogul. "Jared understands being a newspaper owner moves you into a different league," says Mitchell Moss, a professor of urban policy and planning at New York University and an acquaintance of Kushner's told Bloomberg Businessweek. "Politicians have to cultivate you. The elite come to you for attention, as opposed to you going to them. It reverses the relationship."

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7

He grew up in an Orthodox Jewish home and went to Harvard.

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Jared was raised in northern New Jersey, where he attended the Frisch School, a co-ed, modern orthodox yeshiva in Paramus. From an early age, he was involved in his father's real estate company, learning the ropes before he was even out of high school.

He went on to graduate from Harvard, where he was famously accepted after a $2.5 million donation from his father. He then went on to NYU for grad school, where he earned both his JD and MBA degrees.

8

Kushner took over the family business when his father went to jail.

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In 2005, when Jared was 24 and in law school, Charles Kushner pled guilty to tax evasion, witness tampering, and offering illegal campaign donations. The charges stemmed from an investigation into donations made to then-New Jersey governor Jim McGreevy's campaign; Charles was a prominent Democratic fundraiser in the state. In a lurid twist, Charles had apparently hired a woman to seduce his brother-in-law and videotape the interaction because Kushner believed the man was cooperating with federal authorities. The federal prosecutor in charge of the case was none other than Chris Christie.

Charles Kushner was sentenced to two years in prison, and paroled after one. Jared remained close to his father after the conviction, flying to Alabama on weekends to visit him in prison. The New York Times reports that for years, Jared carried a wallet that his father had made for him in prison. "He was the best son to his father in jail, the best son to his mother, who suffered terribly, and he was a father to his siblings," Charles told New York magazine. "I speak with my father about everything in my life," Jared said.

When his father was convicted, Jared stepped in to run the Kushner Companies, and has been CEO since 2008; his father continues to be involved in the business. "He knows a ton about real estate," says Jared.

9

Kushner Is Repeatedly Described as "Well-Mannered"

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Hardly a story has been written about Kushner that doesn't reference his politeness, or the fact that he is soft-spoken and well-behaved—perhaps in contrast to his father-in-law's more combative style. "I’ve never seen any kind of erratic behavior from him," real estate lawyer Robert Ivanhoe told The Real Deal. The publicist Peggy Siegel gushed to Vanity Fair: "Besides being devastatingly handsome, he is well-mannered, well-bred, and so well turned out."

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10

Kushner Had a Controversial Response to Accusations that Donald Trump's Campaign was Anti-Semitic

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Kushner and Ivanka keep a Kosher home and observe Shabbat. Ivanka converted to Orthodox Judaism before they were married, and while she declined to comment on their religiosity to T&C, she did say, "I will tell you that our Friday evenings are for just our family."

Many critics of the Trump campaign sited the anti-Semitism of some of its most extreme supporters as a reason to be fearful of the policies of a Trump presidency. They also questioned why Kushner did not openly denounce that aspect of Trump's campaign. After candidate Trump tweeted an image that contained a star of David over a pile of money, accusing Hillary Clinton as corrupt, Dana Schwartz, a then-writer for Kushner's own newspaper (she has since been laid off), The Observer, wrote: "I'm asking you, not as a "gotcha" journalist or as a liberal but as a human being: how do you allow this?

Kushner responded with an open letter of his own. "My father-in-law is not an anti-Semite," Kushner wrote, after he told the story of how his grandparents had survived the Holocaust. "The difference between me and the journalists and Twitter throngs who find it so convenient to dismiss my father-in-law is simple. I know him and they don't."

Kushner seemed to struggle with whether or not his father-in-law was truly responsible for the controversial tweet. "If my father in law's fast-moving team was careless in choosing an image to retweet, well part of the reason it's so shocking is that it's the actual candidate communicating with the American public rather than the armies of handlers who poll-test ordinary candidates' every move," he wrote.

11

Some of his family members were less-than-pleased with his involvement in the Trump campaign.

Josh Kushner and Jared Kushner in 2008
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More specifically, his relatives are upset with his invoking their grandparents' Holocaust survival story. "I have a different take­away from my Grandparents' experience in the war," wrote Marc Kushner, Jared's first cousin, in a Facebook post Thursday. "It is our responsibility as the next generation to speak up against hate. [Sic] Anti­semitism or otherwise."

Politico called attention to this message, also citing another cousin, Jacob Schulder, who wrote a comment on Marc's original post: "... For the sake of the family name, which may have no meaning to you but still has meaning to others, please don't invoke our grandparents in vain just so you can sleep better at night. It is self serving and disgusting."

Jared's brother Josh Kushner (above left) and his girlfriend, model Karlie Kloss, supported Hillary Clinton for President

12

He met his wife, Ivanka, over a business lunch.

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The meeting was set up by mutual friends who thought there was potential for a professional relationship. In fact, the relationship that burgeoned was a lasting romantic one. "They very innocently set us up thinking that our only interest in one another would be transactional," Ivanka told Vogue. "Whenever we see them we're like, The best deal we ever made!" The couple then dated for two years before getting married in 2009 in a lavish ceremony at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, N.J. On the star-studded guest list? Russell Crowe, Natalie Portman, and Chelsea Clinton.

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13

He and Ivanka have three children: Arabella Rose, Joseph Frederick, and Theodore James.

The couple's youngest son was born in March, 2016.

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Caroline Hallemann
Digital Director

As the digital director for Town & Country, Caroline Hallemann covers culture, entertainment, and a range of other subjects 

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