Jared Kushner

Jared Kushner is a Jew, liar and the son of a #Charles Kushner, a major thief. That is merely what the Wikipedia chooses to tell us. He looks like a smarmy rogue & utterly untrustworthy. The fact that he was a lifelong Democrat until it became expedient to pretend that he was a Republican is significant. His application for a Top Secret security clearance was refused even though he was Donald Trump's son in law; this is very telling.

 

Jared Kushner ex Wiki
Jared Corey Kushner (born January 10, 1981) is an American investor, real estate developer, and newspaper publisher. He served as a senior advisor to his father-in-law, Donald Trump, the 45th president of the United States.[4]

Kushner is the son of the former real-estate developer Charles Kushner and is married to Ivanka Trump, President Trump's daughter and fellow advisor. As a result of his father's conviction and incarceration for fraud, he took over management of his father's real estate company Kushner Companies, which launched his business career. He later also bought Observer Media, publisher of the New York Observer. He is the co-founder and part owner of Cadre, an online real-estate investment platform.

During the 2016 Trump presidential campaign, Kushner helped develop and run Trump's digital media strategy. In 2017, he was named as a senior White House advisor, raising concerns about nepotism. He also stirred controversy for his conflicts of interest, as he continued to engage in business, even profiting on policy proposals that he himself pushed for within the administration. Kushner was unable to obtain Top Secret Security clearance until May 2018, when Trump reportedly intervened on his son-in-law's behalf.

As senior advisor to President Trump, Kushner pushed strongly for the First Step Act, a criminal justice reform bill which Trump signed into law in 2018. Kushner authored the Trump peace plan in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which was announced in January 2020 and widely viewed as highly favorable for Israel.[6] Kushner was the primary Trump administration participant in talks regarding the Middle East Peace Process, leading to the signing of the Abraham Accords in 2020.[7][8] Kushner has played an influential role in the Trump administration's COVID-19 response.

Political background
Jared Kushner had been a lifelong Democrat prior to his father-in-law Donald Trump entering politics.[55] He had donated over $10,000 to Democratic campaigns[56] starting at the age of 11. In 2008, he donated to the campaign for Hillary Clinton and his newspaper the New York Observer endorsed Barack Obama over John McCain in the 2008 United States presidential election.[57] After expressing disappointment with Obama, however, he endorsed Republican U.S. presidential nominee Mitt Romney in 2012 via the New York Observer.[58] In 2014 he continued to donate to Democratic groups,[57] but he then continued his "ideological conversion" by joining his father-in-law Donald Trump's nascent US presidential campaign in the field of the Republican candidates in 2015.[63] Kushner had no prior involvement in campaign politics or in government before Trump's campaign.[64]

His security clearance
On January 18, 2017, immediately after his appointment as senior advisor to President Trump, Kushner requested Top Secret security clearance,[157] using "Standard Form 86 (SF86): Questionnaire for National Security Positions".[158][159] The request omitted dozens of pertinent contacts with foreign officials, including the meetings with Kislyak and Gorkov.[157] Failure to disclose pertinent contacts can cause security clearances to be declined or revoked, and an intentional failure to disclose can result in imprisonment.[160] Kushner's lawyers said that the omissions were "an oversight",[161] and that "a member of [Kushner's] staff had prematurely hit the 'send' button" before the form was completed.

By July 2017, Kushner had resubmitted his SF86, this time disclosing contacts with foreign nationals.[160]/a> This was the first time that government officials were made aware of the June 2016 Trump campaign–Russian meeting and Kushner's role in it.[160]

On September 15, 2017, Carl Kline, the director of the personnel security office within the Executive Office of President Trump, recorded Kushner as having an interim Top Secret/SCI security clearance.[162] Kushner and his wife were among at least 48 officials granted interim clearance giving them access to sensitive compartmented information (SCI): detailed accounts of intelligence sources and methods.

On February 27, 2018, White House chief of staff John Kelly downgraded Kushner's interim security clearance to "secret" status, along with other White House staffers working with interim security clearances.[165][166] White House sources said that part of the reason Kushner had not yet been granted permanent security clearance was that he was under investigation by Robert Mueller.[167]

Kushner finally received permanent Top Secret security clearance on May 23, 2018.[168][169] In January 2019, Trump told The New York Times that he had not intervened to grant Kushner's security clearances.[162] On February 8, 2019, Kushner's wife Ivanka also denied that Trump had intervened to grant her or Kushner's security clearances. However, on February 28, 2019, CNN (citing three anonymous sources) and The New York Times (citing four anonymous sources) reported that in May 2018 Trump ordered Kelly to grant Kushner a top-secret clearance, which Kelly contemporaneously documented in an internal memo. Reportedly, this is the first time a U.S. president has intervened in such a way.

 

Charles Kushner is a lawyer and a thief who got two years.

 

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-01-13/kushner-halts-trump-move-to-new-social-media-after-twitter-ban [ 13 January 2021 ] 
Kushner Halts Trump Move to New Social Media After Twitter Ban - Bloomberg.html