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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

Ivanka billboards stir skirmish

First daughter to sue New York group over ad

Dana Rubinstein New York Published 27.10.20, 12:09 AM
Billboards featuring Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner placed by the Lincoln Project in Times Square in New York

Billboards featuring Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner placed by the Lincoln Project in Times Square in New York NYTNS

In July, Ivanka Trump released a photo of herself cradling a can of Goya beans in an effort to support a Trump-friendly company facing a boycott.

The photo raised concerns among ethics watchdogs that Ivanka Trump had used her government position to market a consumer product. Now, Ivanka Trump’s act of guerrilla marketing is causing concern of another sort.

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On Thursday morning, the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump group made up mostly of Republicans, posted that image of Trump on a billboard in Times Square, with statistics about Covid deaths substituting for the beans.

Ivanka Trump’s husband, Jared Kushner, a senior White House adviser, beams from the adjacent billboard alongside body bags and a quote, attributed to him in a Vanity Fair article, stating that New Yorkers will suffer during the pandemic, and “that’s their problem”.

The billboards sparked a prompt reaction from the couple’s lawyer, Marc E. Kasowitz, who called them “false, malicious and defamatory” and threatened to sue.

“Of course, Kushner never made any such statement, Trump never made any such gesture, and the Lincoln Project’s representations that they did are an outrageous and shameful libel,” Kasowitz wrote. “If these billboard ads are not immediately removed, we will sue you for what will doubtless be enormous compensatory and punitive damages.”

The Trump family has a history of suing critics, and Kasowitz’s letter was not surprising. But the billboards were also a reminder of another point: Should Trump lose the election, and should his daughter and son-in-law return to New York City, there is no guarantee they will receive a warm reception.

“The reality is if you kill thousands and thousands and thousands of New Yorkers, you’re not going to re-enter polite society and go to the Met Ball,” said the writer Molly Jong-Fast, a senior adviser to the Lincoln Project.

The couple might be greeted warmly in some parts of the city, said Joe Borelli, a councilman from Staten Island — which voted for the president in 2016. Borelli said he has no insight into “polite society” but noted that Ivanka Trump and Kushner “are always welcome on Staten Island”.

Borelli, the New York state co-chairman for the Trump campaign, called the ads “tacky”.

“It’s a reminder why no one will ever hire the consultants from the Lincoln Project ever again,” Borelli said. “This is what a bunch of GOP rejects do.”

New York City alone has lost nearly 24,000 residents to Covid-19. The pandemic has devastated the city’s economy and its finances. More than half a million city residents remain unemployed.

The city is also Ivanka Trump’s and Kushner’s home base. Ivanka Trump grew up on the Upper East Side. Her husband grew up in New Jersey, but made a name for himself with the purchase of a Manhattan newspaper, The New York Observer, and a Manhattan office building. After they married, they lived downtown and on Park Avenue in Manhattan.

New York is President Donald Trump’s hometown, too. But his presidency has been marked by a souring of relations with the city. He has rejected New York City residency in favour of Florida and sought to defund New York City for its immigration policies. Most recently, Trump’s administration named the city one of several “anarchist jurisdictions” to which the federal government should deny funding.

New York Times News Service

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