The Atlantic

Where Is Ivanka?

Her silence on the border crisis and on her father’s racist tweets shows she has abandoned even the pretense of being a voice of reason inside the White House.
Source: Patrick Semansky / AP

Ivanka Trump wants it both ways.

Since joining her father’s White House as a senior adviser in early 2017, the has reserved the right to toggle between a strict and loose construction of her portfolio. When flashy opportunities arise—such as the chance to play diplomat with Kim Jong Un—the edges of her purview, which she often defines as “women’s economic empowerment,” become conveniently blurry. But when the issue du jour is particularly messy, she is quick to clarify its limits, thus absolving herself of accountability for problems that exist outside it. When ’s Abby Huntsman, for example, asked Trump in February why she didn’t speak up about family

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