I was aware that Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner had performed useful work behind the scenes in Saudi Arabia, so decided to see what Google, AI had to say about family.
“AI Overview
Donald Trump has two sons-in-law: Jared Kushner, who is married to Ivanka Trump, and Michael Boulos, who is married to Tiffany Trump.
* Jared Kushner
Spouse: Ivanka Trump
Background: Kushner is a businessman and investor who comes from a prominent real estate development family.
* Role in First Trump Administration: He served as a powerful senior advisor to President Trump from 2017 to 2021, with a wide-ranging portfolio that included criminal justice reform (the FIRST STEP Act) and Middle East diplomacy, which led to the Abraham Accords.
* Current Activities: Since leaving the White House, he founded the private equity firm Affinity Partners, which has raised significant funds, largely from the Saudi government’s sovereign wealth fund, and is currently involved in international real estate projects, including a controversial one in Serbia.
* Michael Boulos
Spouse: Tiffany Trump
Background: Boulos is a business executive of Lebanese descent who grew up in Nigeria. He is the son of Massad Boulos, a business executive who Trump recently nominated as ambassador to France.
* Personal Life: He and Tiffany Trump were married in 2022 and welcomed their first child in May 2025.”
We can see that Trump has made good use of new family members and the backgrounds they bring to this family. Biden was not successful in doing something similar. I have wondered how his life and career would have turned out if his two boys had not been scarred by being in the auto accident that killed their mother and his new baby when they were children?
Jared Kushner is currently involved in international real estate projects, including a controversial $500 million luxury development in Belgrade, Serbia, which has faced significant opposition. The project involves redeveloping the site of the former Yugoslav army headquarters, a building damaged during NATO’s 1999 bombing campaign and regarded by many as a cultural landmark and unofficial memorial.
Kushner’s investment firm, Affinity Partners [ with large funds from Saudi ], secured a 99-year lease for the site, initially agreed upon in 2022, to build a high-rise complex featuring a hotel, apartments, offices, and shops.
The Serbian government, led by President Aleksandar Vučić, has pushed the project forward despite public backlash and legal challenges, including an investigation into forged documents related to the site’s declassification.
In November 2025, Serbia’s parliament passed a special law declaring the development a project of national importance, thereby removing the site’s protected cultural status and fast-tracking construction approvals. The vote passed 130-40 in the 250-member parliament.
Critics, including opposition lawmakers and urban planners, argue the deal sacrifices national history and architectural heritage to appease former U.S. President Donald Trump, with MP Marinika Tepić stating, “In a place where bombs once fell, you now plan to pour champagne”.
Environmental and anti-corruption activists have also protested, viewing the move as emblematic of government impunity and undue foreign influence. Additionally, leaked documents reveal a joint venture between Kushner’s firm Atlantic Incubation Partners LLC (holding a 77.5% stake) and the Serbian government (22.5%), with the government required to demolish existing structures by May 2026.
Kushner has pledged to include a “memorial dedicated to all the victims of NATO aggression” in the development, a move criticized by retired U.S. General Wesley [Weasely ] Clark [ aka, the Butcher of Belgrade ] as a “betrayal of the United States” and aligned with Russian interests in weakening NATO.
Despite controversy, supporters argue the project will boost tourism and economic growth in Belgrade.