Considered nominating Ivanka for WB because she's 'good with numbers’: Trump
He also discussed various roles she would have been well-suited for in the Trump administration
President Trump said he considered nominating his daughter Ivanka Trump to be president of the World Bank because “she’s very good with numbers,” according to a new interview.
In an interview with The Atlantic published on Friday, the president discussed his eldest daughter, and the various roles she would have been well-suited for in the Trump administration.
According to the president, who acknowledged that all his children have “been very, very good,” Ivanka, whom he reportedly refers to as 'Baby' in meetings, is 'unique'.
“I even thought of Ivanka for the World Bank… She would’ve been great at that because she’s very good with numbers,” Trump said.
Trump says could send migrants to 'sanctuary cities'
Referencing her admirable qualities, which include her 'great calmness' and 'tremendous presence,' the president also noted that his 37-year-old daughter would have been “great at the United Nations” - but that he did not nominate her to replace Nikki Haley as US ambassador to the UN because people would claim it was nepotism.
“If I did, they’d say ‘nepotism,’ when it would’ve had nothing to do with nepotism,” the president said. “But she would’ve been incredible.”
The president instead nominated undersecretary of the Treasury for International Affairs David Malpass for the position of president of the World Bank, who was confirmed last month.
Trump, in talks with South Korea's Moon, says sanctions on North Korea to stay in place
Ivanka, who currently plays an active role in the White House as senior advisor to her father, is unpaid for her work and, despite her father’s opinions, has previously said she tries to “stay out of politics”.
“I try to stay out of politics. [The president’s] political instincts are phenomenal,” she told Fox & Friends in June 2017. If she were to run for president herself, however, her father thinks she would likely win.
“I think she’d be very, very hard to beat,” Mr Trump told The Atlantic.
In an interview with The Atlantic published on Friday, the president discussed his eldest daughter, and the various roles she would have been well-suited for in the Trump administration.
According to the president, who acknowledged that all his children have “been very, very good,” Ivanka, whom he reportedly refers to as 'Baby' in meetings, is 'unique'.
“I even thought of Ivanka for the World Bank… She would’ve been great at that because she’s very good with numbers,” Trump said.
Trump says could send migrants to 'sanctuary cities'
Referencing her admirable qualities, which include her 'great calmness' and 'tremendous presence,' the president also noted that his 37-year-old daughter would have been “great at the United Nations” - but that he did not nominate her to replace Nikki Haley as US ambassador to the UN because people would claim it was nepotism.
“If I did, they’d say ‘nepotism,’ when it would’ve had nothing to do with nepotism,” the president said. “But she would’ve been incredible.”
The president instead nominated undersecretary of the Treasury for International Affairs David Malpass for the position of president of the World Bank, who was confirmed last month.
Trump, in talks with South Korea's Moon, says sanctions on North Korea to stay in place
Ivanka, who currently plays an active role in the White House as senior advisor to her father, is unpaid for her work and, despite her father’s opinions, has previously said she tries to “stay out of politics”.
“I try to stay out of politics. [The president’s] political instincts are phenomenal,” she told Fox & Friends in June 2017. If she were to run for president herself, however, her father thinks she would likely win.
“I think she’d be very, very hard to beat,” Mr Trump told The Atlantic.