How Jared Kushner Washed His Hands of Donald
Trump Before Jan. 6
Mr. Kushner’s role in the final months of the Trump
White House could come into sharp relief once the committee investigating the
attack on the Capitol opens hearings.
Jared Kushner’s decision to withdraw from the most
consequential moment of the Trump presidency left few effective counterweights
to plotters looking to subvert the 2020 election.
Peter Baker
By Peter
Baker
June 8,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/08/us/politics/jared-kushner-trump-jan-6.html?searchResultPosition=2
WASHINGTON
— On Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020, barely 24 hours after President Donald J. Trump
claimed in the middle of the night that “frankly, we did win this election,”
Jared Kushner woke up in his Kalorama mansion and announced to his wife that it
was time to leave Washington. “We’re moving to Miami,” he said.
The
election had not even been called for Joseph R. Biden Jr., but as Mr. 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. They saw which way the
votes were going and understood that, barring some unforeseen surprise, the
president had lost his bid for a second term. Even if he refused to accept it
himself.
No matter
how vociferously Mr. Trump claimed otherwise, neither Mr. Kushner nor Ivanka
Trump believed then or later that the election had been stolen, according to
people close to them. While the president spent the hours and days after the
polls closed complaining about imagined fraud in battleground states and
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 like Rudolph W. Giuliani and Sidney Powell, who relayed to
Mr. Trump farcically false stories of dead voters, stuffed ballot boxes,
corrupted voting machines and foreign plots. Concluding that the president
would not listen even to family members urging him to accept the results, Mr.
Kushner told Mr. Trump that he would not be involved if Mr. Giuliani were in
charge, according to people he confided in, effectively ceding the field to
those who would try to overturn the election.
Mr.
Kushner’s decision to withdraw from the most consequential moment of the Trump
presidency left few effective counterweights to the plotters seeking to subvert
the will of the voters to hang on to power. While the president’s son-in-law
had arguably been the most influential adviser to the president through four
years, weighing in at times and carefully cultivating his reputation, he chose
at that pivotal moment to focus instead 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. It was the
final act in the myth that Mr. Kushner would be the moderating force on a
president who resisted moderation.
The role Mr.
Kushner played could come into sharp relief once the congressional committee
investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol opens public hearings
this week. The committee interviewed Mr. Kushner, who otherwise has not spoken
at length publicly about the events after the 2020 election, and plans to show
video excerpts from his testimony along with Ivanka Trump’s.
Mr.
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. Mr. Kushner has
said he abided by all legal and ethical guidelines while in public service.
This
account of Mr. Kushner’s postelection activities is based on interviews with a
wide array of figures close to him and the former president for a forthcoming
book by this reporter and Susan Glasser of The New Yorker magazine 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 to discuss private
conversations and meetings.
One of the
most striking realizations that emerged from the book research was how many
people around Mr. Trump did not believe the election had been stolen but kept
quiet or checked out, including White House officials and campaign aides. Hope
Hicks, long one of his closest advisers, told him it was time to move on.
“Well, Hope doesn’t believe in me,” Mr. Trump responded bitterly. “No, I
don’t,” she replied. “Nobody’s convinced me otherwise.” She disappeared in the
final weeks of the administration.
Kellyanne
Conway, the former White House counselor and fierce Trump loyalist, reported in
her new book that she told Mr. Trump to accept his loss, something she did not
say publicly at the time; even this much-delayed acknowledgment of reality drew
a rebuke from Mr. Trump, who said she should “go back to her crazy husband.”
The
Two-to-One Formula
During his
four years in the White House, Mr. Kushner positioned himself as the measured
alter ego to a volatile president, the one who others turned to for help in calming
down or reasoning with Mr. Trump when he headed down one erratic path or
another. But in fact, Mr. Kushner became strategic in his interventions, having
been burned by early efforts that blew up in his face. He focused on personal
priorities like criminal justice reform, and he jousted with rivals in a
factionalized West Wing while absenting himself at key moments, to the
frustration of colleagues.
Mr. Kushner
developed his own techniques for handling Mr. Trump. One key, he told others,
was feeding the president good news, even if it was in short supply. In fact,
Mr. Kushner came up with a specific mathematical formula for his peculiar brand
of Trump management: two to one. Any phone call, any meeting should include
this good-news-to-bad-news ratio. He would give twice as much upbeat
information as grim updates. He similarly made a habit of telling Mr. Trump to
add five points to any bad poll, rationalizing that traditional surveys missed
many Trump voters anyway, part of a common White House practice of telling the
president what he wanted to hear regardless of the facts.
Even for
his son-in-law, though, the president was a demanding boss, not given to
showing appreciation. Mr. Kushner understood that Mr. Trump was never going to
call him and say, “You’re doing a great job. I just want to thank you for
this.” Instead, Mr. Kushner once explained to an associate, his dealings with
Trump invariably began with the president saying, “What the hell is going on
with this?” albeit with an earthier expletive, often in a phone call at 1 or 2
in the morning.
Having
watched dozens of senior officials come and go, Mr. Kushner realized the
essential element of survival: never forgetting it was Mr. Trump’s show, Mr.
Trump’s party, Mr. Trump’s way. “You have to realize you don’t make the waves,”
Mr. Kushner regularly advised other officials. “He makes the waves. And then
you have to do your best to kind of stay on the surfboard.”
Mr. Kushner
the surfer 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. Mr. Trump would lash out and make outlandish
claims but eventually accept reality and move out of the White House — an
assumption many Republicans in Washington made, only to discover how far the
president was really willing to go.
To Mr.
Kushner, his father-in-law’s decision to turn once again to Mr. Giuliani was a
red flag. As far as Mr. Kushner was concerned, Mr. Giuliani was an erratic
schemer who had already gotten Mr. Trump impeached once because of his
political intriguing in Ukraine, and nothing good would come of the former
mayor’s involvement in fighting the election results. But instead of fighting
Mr. Giuliani for Mr. Trump’s attention, Mr. Kushner opted out entirely,
deciding it was time to focus on his own future, one that would no longer
involve the White House.
He and Ms.
Trump began making plans. They quickly ruled out returning to New York. Like
Mr. Trump, who had officially become a Florida resident in 2019, they had
soured on their former home just as it had soured on them. Miami, on the other
hand, seemed exciting and new.
While Mr.
Trump huddled with Mr. Giuliani and others telling him that he could still win,
Mr. Kushner and his wife began thinking about where they would live, what
schools they could send their three children to and what business ventures they
would pursue. They had to be discreet about it. The last thing they wanted to
do was make it look as if they were moving on because that would produce
headlines embarrassing to Mr. Trump. Indeed, Ivanka Trump would text her
father’s top advisers that same day just after the election and prod them to
“Keep the faith and the fight!”
But she and
Mr. Kushner were soon scouting properties in Florida, and within weeks they
were buying a $32 million lot formerly owned by the Spanish singer Julio
Iglesias on the private island of Indian Creek near Miami, an exclusive haven
for a couple dozen wealthy families that tabloids called the “Billionaire’s
Bunker.”
In what
remaining time he had in the White House, Mr. Kushner wanted to focus on
expanding the Abraham Accords, the agreement establishing diplomatic relations
between Israel and several Arab states, an achievement that he felt validated
his whole time in Washington. Two other countries, Morocco and Sudan, signed on
to the accords during the period between the election and Mr. Biden’s
inauguration.
As his
father-in-law refused to authorize transition cooperation with Mr. Biden’s
incoming team, Mr. Kushner quietly began working with aides to the
president-elect like Jake Sullivan and Jeffrey Zients to prepare for their
takeover. And although Mr. Trump might not have been thinking about his legacy
yet, Mr. Kushner was.
While still
in the White House, he began writing a memoir focused on Middle East
peacemaking. In the weeks to come, as Mr. Trump would continue to insist that
he would remain for a second term, Mr. Kushner set about chronicling the first.
He even took an online MasterClass on how to write a book, taught by the
prolific best-selling novelist James Patterson. In the course of a two-week
stretch after the election, he secretly batted out 40,000 words of a first
draft. The final version is set to be published in August.
A Coming
Collision
The
postelection fraud claims quickly exposed a rift within the Trump family. On
the same day Mr. Kushner woke up to declare it was time to move to Miami, his
brother-in-law Donald Trump Jr. was already 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 Mr. Biden invalidate the results and
send Electoral College votes for Mr. Trump when Congress counted them on Jan.
6.
How much
Mr. 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 Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican majority leader,
that Mr. Trump would eventually accept the reality that he lost.
“We’ll get
through it, bear with us,” Mr. Kushner told Josh Holmes, a former chief of
staff and campaign manager for Mr. 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 on Dec. 14, he suggested, that would be the end of it. Mr. Trump
just needed time to come to terms with his defeat.
While Mr.
Kushner was often called the president’s shadow chief of staff, the man who
held the actual title, Mr. Meadows, was actively encouraging the conspiracy
theorists seeking to overturn the election, acting less as a gatekeeper than a
door opener, letting practically anybody who wanted to come into the Oval
Office.
Among them
were lawyers and others arguing that Vice President Mike Pence could
unilaterally stop Mr. Biden from being formally recognized as the winner in his
role overseeing the counting of the Electoral College votes in Congress. Mr.
Pence concluded he had no such power and it would be unconstitutional for him
to do so, but that did not stop Mr. Trump from keeping up the pressure.
Finally,
seeing the collision that was coming, Marc Short, the vice president’s chief of
staff, tried to enlist help from Mr. Kushner, calling him over the holidays to
ask him to get his father-in-law to stand down. “Look, can you help us with
this?” Mr. Short asked.
But Mr.
Kushner brushed him off. “Look, when Rudy got involved, I stopped being
involved,” he told Mr. Short. The vice president “is a big boy,” and if he
disagreed with the president on a legal issue, he should bring in his lawyers.
“I’m too busy working on Middle East peace right now, Marc.”
Indeed, in
the days leading up to Jan. 6, Mr. 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 Mr. Trump’s mob
stormed the Capitol.
After
arriving home in the afternoon, Mr. Kushner was in the bathroom with the shower
already running and about to jump in when his phone rang. Representative Kevin
McCarthy of California, the House Republican minority leader, was on the line
asking Mr. Kushner to persuade the president to do something. “We need help!”
Mr. McCarthy insisted. Mr. Kushner turned off the shower and 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 Mr. Pence that she decided to
accompany him there in hopes of avoiding a worse clash. Over the following
hours, as rioters rampaged through the Capitol, she ran up and down the stairs
in the West Wing from her office to the Oval Office hoping to persuade her
father to issue stronger statements calling off the attackers.
By the time
Mr. Kushner finally 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.” Mr. Kushner quickly
concluded there was little more he could do at that point.
In the days
that followed, Mr. Kushner tried to broker peace between the president and vice
president. On Jan. 11, he asked Mr. Short to come to his office. Would the vice
president be willing to get together with the president?
“He’s
always willing,” Mr. Short replied. “But that’s not his responsibility to
reconcile this relationship. That invitation should come from the other end of
the hall.”
“That’s
what I’m doing, Marc,” Mr. Kushner said.
At
Kushner’s arrangement, Mr. Trump and Mr. Pence sat down that afternoon with no
staff for an hour and a half. Mr. Pence reported back to aides that it was
somewhat warm. But it was only a bandage over a gaping wound.
On Jan. 20,
Mr. Kushner and Ms. Trump attended the farewell ceremony for the outgoing
president at Joint Base Andrews and accompanied him on Air Force One to
Florida. Mr. Trump was heading into exile, prepared to keep waging war on Mr.
Biden and the system, insisting he really won.
Mr. Kushner
and Ms. Trump would have nothing to do with that. The next day, two moving
trucks showed up at their Kalorama house to load up the furniture and a Peloton
bike for the journey south to a luxury multilevel condo they had rented to live
in while waiting for their new mansion to be built.
They were
moving on to their new life.
Peter Baker
is the chief White House correspondent and has covered the last five presidents
for The Times and The Washington Post. He also is the author of six books, most
recently "The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker
III." @peterbakernyt •
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