We hope it doesn’t come as a surprise to hear this, but something people should know at long last is that when she was working in the White House, Ivanka Trump did not end hunger or empower women or create 14 million jobs. Instead, most of her time was spent cultivating the image of someone who might do all those things, when in reality her nine-to-fives revolved around cosplaying as a person who had any business advising the president, offering uniquely bad advice, and somehow always being on vacation when s--t hit the fan.
Not surprisingly, Princess Purses believed that the White House press team existed to serve her and her ambitions, and apparently quite often expected it to “siphon off some of its resources to defend and support her,” according to former press secretary Stephanie Grisham’s new book, I’ll Take Your Questions Now. “She obviously had a Google alert set for her name and would go to Sean Spicer whenever a story about her popped up that she didn’t like, which was most of them, expecting us to push back,” Grisham writes. “That happened even if 90 percent of a story was positive. She would focus on obscure small facts that she didn’t like or claimed weren’t true.… Image was everything in the Trump family, and Ivanka worked very hard to convey an image of perfection.”
According to Grisham, one story the former first daughter really didn’t like involved her flashing a hot dog vendor, which she presumably believed didn’t fit in with the trajectory she had laid out with Jared wherein she would one day be the first female president. Initially reported by Vanity Fair’s Emily Jane Fox in her 2018 book, Born Trump, the story was recounted in detail by Trump’s childhood best friend Lysandra Ohrstrom shortly after the 2020 election. As Ohrstrom writes:
According to Fox, Trump was ultimately not asked to return to Chapin, not because of the hot dog incident, but because the school was annoyed with how many classes she missed while trying to become a model. “She traveled to Mar-a-Lago to put together her modeling portfolio and lied to administrators about why she was missing school,” Fox recounts in her book.
Anyway, Ivanka would prefer if these stories were no longer discussed and for the press to focus on other matters, but, like, not about how she and her husband made up to $640 million while working in the West Wing or how they reportedly made their Secret Service details go to extreme lengths to “find a bathroom.” Acceptable topics would be about how she’s just a few short years away from returning to the White House in her own right and how Jared is just putting the finishing touches on his plan for world peace. Anything else, run by her office for approval. Sound good? Great.
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Somewhere in Mar-a-Lago, a busboy just got a 47-minute earful about how rich Trump is
Apologies to everyone else who will have to hear this for all eternity. Per the Washington Post:
As the Post notes, Trump has long been so obsessed with making the Forbes list that he was known to call editors claiming to be “John Barron,” a fake PR man he said was representing him, and demand to be moved up several places higher, in case you were worried there was ever a time this man could be considered relatively sane. “[W]hile many of the super-rich wanted to keep their names off the ranking, Trump was desperate to scale it,” Jonathan Greenberg, who compiled the early lists, wrote in 2018.
As for falling off it this year, Forbes tough but fairly points out that he has only himself to blame:
Trump does not appear to have publicly commented on the news yet but when he does he’ll undoubtedly claim the whole thing is rigged and that he’s as rich as ever, based on imaginary metrics. In 2009, for example, he claimed his name alone was worth $5 billion, and that it can go up or down depending on the mood he’s in. No, really.
“My net worth fluctuates, and it goes up and down with markets and with attitudes and with my feelings, even my own feelings,” Trump said in a deposition in a libel suit he filed against Tim O’Brien, who wrote TrumpNation: The Art of Being the Donald. “. . . My own feelings affects my value to myself.”
Did you know that if you’re the governor of Idaho, and you leave the state, all your power automatically goes to the lieutenant governor?
And if said lieutenant governor is an unhinged far-right Republican, she can just start issuing anti-vaccine executive orders, among other things? Seems like something that should perhaps be reconsidered! Per the Guardian:
Anti-vaccine measures weren’t the only stunt a drunk-with-power McGeachin tried to pull on Tuesday. Idaho’s number two, who, per the Guardian, “has associations with far-right militia members,” also attempted to activate the Idaho national guard and deploy troops to the southern border to crack down on migrants trying to cross into the U.S.— 2,000 miles from her state. “As of Wednesday, my constitutional authority as governor affords me the power of activating the Idaho national guard,” McGeachin wrote to major general Michael Garshak in a letter. In response, Garshak shot down the request, writing: “I am unaware of any request for Idaho national guard assistance under the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) from Texas or Arizona … As you are aware, the Idaho National Guard is not a law enforcement agency.”
Bill DeBlasio thinks he could be the next governor of New York
No one else seems to, but god love him, the guy believes in himself! Per the New York Times:
During the NYC Democratic primary this year, candidates were asked to raise their hand if they’d accept an endorsement from DeBlasio, and just one person did. And if that’s not clear enough, ask Rich Schaffer, the chairman of the county’s Democratic committee, what he thinks of BdB’s chances. “Osama bin Laden is probably more popular in Suffolk County than Bill de Blasio,” Schaffer said Monday. “De Blasio, I would say, would have zero support if not negative out here.”
Elsewhere!
Finance executives say the risk of a default is already damaging the economy (NYT)
House committee investigating January 6 can't find Trump aide to serve subpoena (CNN)
Why whistleblower Frances Haugen is Facebook's worst nightmare (CNN)
FDA Is Reviewing Data on Mixing and Matching Boosters, Fauci Says (Bloomberg)
CDC director warns the U.S. is at risk of a severe flu season this year (CNBC)
Florida woman got $3.4M COVID grant she never applied for (AP)
Texas man sentenced to 15 months in prison for posting Covid-19 hoax on social media (CNN)
Real Phone Number Featured in ‘Squid Game’ Leads to Prank-Call Apocalypse (WSJ)
This Instagram account is nothing but pictures of people’s half-finished Dunkin’ orders abandoned around the city. It’s oddly artistic. (Boston Globe)
You’re snacking more when working from home too, right? (Fortune)
Fat Bear Week has a winner: 480 Otis is the chunkiest champ for the fourth time (Washington Post)
— An Exeter Teacher Was Punished for Sexual Misconduct. The Student Says It Never Happened
— Surprise: Ivanka, Eric, and Donald Trump Jr. Are Still Mooching Off U.S. Taxpayers
— Florida Governor Celebrates Ban on School Mask Mandates as More Kids Die From COVID
— Billionaire Leon Black Allegedly Raped a Woman in Epstein’s New York Mansion
— Trump Is Reportedly “Laying the Groundwork” for a 2024 Run
— A Photographer Reckons With Her Family’s Trump Adoration
— Biden’s COVID Vaccination Strategy Triggers Full-Scale Republican Meltdown
— The Right’s War on COVID Vaccine Mandates Is About to Get Scary
— From the Archive: Martin Shkreli’s Poison Pill
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Memories: Ivanka Trump Demanded the White House Squash a (True) Story About Her Flashing a Hot Dog Vendor - Vanity Fair
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