Ivanka Trump Now Admits: ‘I Am a Proud Republic of Trump’
Once seen as a balanced voice in the White House, the eldest daughter of the president was outraged by her deviation and plans to play a prominent role as fundraiser for her re-election campaign.
He told Fox News boss Sean Hannity that refusing to celebrate President Trump's America was "unforgivable" and he wrote angrily about the Senate's "miscarriage" case.
He recently took the stage for the first time at the Conservative Political Action conference, a rally of activists.
And now he is officially Republican.
Ivanka Trump's transformation from a New York social worker who donated to democratic politicians and openly supported gay rights to the member who held his father's "Make America Great Again" unity card is now complete.
Ms Trump on Monday said she had decided to officially change her voter registration from a Democrat to a Republican because she wanted to vote for her father in a New York primary, which she did not do in 2016 when she missed the registration deadline as a Republican.
According to the New York City Board of Elections, Mrs. Trump made the change on October 22, 2018, ahead of the mid-year elections.
"This process of flu and incontinence, the process of miscarriage is over and the President has been properly discharged," said Trump after the end of the Senate diversion trial. “POTUS has achieved a lot and is just getting started. The best is yet to come!"
On the day of her father's death, the woman who once used her popular Instagram account to identify herself as an unloving working mother raising a small family posted a picture of herself giving a Trumpian signature two thumbs in front of the American flag, wearing a USA hat. In the caption, he wrote that the image captured him "#Mood."
In an interview with Mr. Hannity that day, Mrs. Trump continued to entertain her father's critics.
Showing a list of executives' actions, Ms. Trump stressed that "so that we do not unite as a nation and celebrate American success is unforgivable."
Jared Kushner, Mrs. Trump's husband and senior adviser to Mr. Trump, who also recently claimed to be a Republican.
"I was not a Republican," he told reporters at a recent campaign rally. “I am now a Republican. I think the Republican Party is growing now as people like me feel free to be a part of it. ”
Ms Trump declined to say which Democrat would like to see her face against Mr Trump in the national election. "I will not tell you that," he said, calling all participants in the field "very different."
But, Ms. Trump said, she felt "good about our chances of beating them all."
"I'm a proud Trump Republican," Trump said in an interview Monday, referring to his political appearance and the role his father played in it. "I believe it has increased the reach of the Republican Party, which is very important to me."
That a daughter who has never strayed far from her father's side will officially register as a Republican may seem obvious. But it was a turning point in his West Wing role, where he was regarded by some Democrats as a bridge to moderation due to his progressive positions on issues such as climate change, pay equity and parental leave.
Most Democrats were skeptical of Mrs. Trump from the beginning. But the fact that he persuaded his father to keep the United States on climate deals in Paris and helped kill the proposed order that would remove the LG.B. protection in the early days of the administration gave him a slightly different image than the rest of the Trump family.
Since then, she has been Mr. Trump's top adviser, focusing on women's issues at work. But as her father is heavily involved in her re-election campaign, Mrs. Trump has made it clear where she stands in politics.
"I can't guess what other people have done to me," Ms. Trump said Monday. "In parts outside of my position, I tend to strongly agree with the idea of saving more often than the Democrats do today," he said, acknowledging that it had been a goal since the beginning of his father's presidency. He also added, "No man or group has dominion over good ideas."
Mrs Trump, who made a few remarks to her father during her 2016 campaign, is expected to start a four-city fundraising meeting at the end of March, at stops in Oklahoma; Austin, Texas; Naples, eFla .; and New York City, with a view to raising millions of dollars in re-election campaigns from early donors.
Ms Trump said she was proud to be able to raise more money during the one-hour morning rally than those who contested the top election for the Democratic President.
"Maybe it's more," said Mrs. Trump, comparing her fundraising skills with those of Joseph R. Biden Jr., who may have been her father's opponent. As an example, he pointed to a rare donor event that was a major hit in Houston last November, when he said he had raised $ 2 million in 45 minutes.
"It was disturbing history," he said.
During her time as White House adviser, Mrs. Trump never commented on the controversy surrounding her father. When pressured by journalists to talk about topics that he considers offline, he is frustrated, sometimes calling the questions “inappropriate” and sometimes insisting that his role was not to expose his differences in public.
But over the past few months, he has begun using his Twitter feed to blow the noses at Democrats and has appeared at campaign rallies that are apparently organized to recruit Mr Trump's party. Before the New Hampshire elementary team in February, for example, Mrs. Trump went to Portsmouth to participate in the "Cops for Trump" event
On the Internet, his personality has also become aggressive and rude, indicating his anger, say his assistants, about his father's misconduct.