Kushner, a key behind-the-scenes dealmaker for Trump, will disclose never-reported-details from the 2016 campaign, the Russia investigation, impeachment, and the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the publisher, Broadside Books.
The book will be published on August 9. Kushner takes readers “inside debates in the Oval Office, battles at the United Nations, meetings in Arab palaces, and intense negotiations in North Korea, China, Mexico,” the publisher says.
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The senior adviser recalls “negotiating the largest trade deal in American history, passing bipartisan criminal justice reform, and achieving several of the most significant breakthroughs in diplomacy in the last fifty years: the peace deals known as the Abraham Accords.”
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Kushner, who never served in government or policy roles before the Trump White House, led a sweeping portfolio that included peace deals in the Middle East, policing and criminal justice, the border wall, and opioids.
Trump talked to friends on the golf course and referred to Kushner as the “smartest guy I’ve ever seen in my entire life,” according to New York Times reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns in their book, “This Will Not Pass.”
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“Can't throw a football ten yards, and Ivanka could have married Tom Brady,” Trump said on the golf course, referring to his eldest daughter. “But he's a great kid, he’s got my back.”
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However, CNN reported last year that a source close to Trump said that the former President was jealous of his son-in-law’s book deal and whined that Kushner might use the deal to take credit for some of his achievements. The payout on the deal is not public, but another source described it as a “seven-figure deal.”
According to a New York Times report, six months after Kushner left the White House, his newly formed private equity firm Affinity Partners secured a $2 billion investment from Saudi Arabia’s state-owned sovereign wealth fund.
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Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law, and former White House senior adviser secured the massive deal despite being flagged for its “inexperience" and “public relations risks” by a panel of economics experts who screen the Saudi wealth fund’s investments. The panel even called the firm “unsatisfactory in all aspects.”
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During his time in the White House, Kushner was known for his close personal relationship with Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader Mohammed bin-Salman and for helping him secure a $110 billion arms deal. He was among the Saudi royal family’s strongest supporters within the Administration amid international outrage over its murder of US-based journalist and MBS critic Jamal Khashoggi.