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e hope it doesn't come as a surprise to hear this, but something people should know at long last is that when she was working in the White House, Ivanka Trump did not end hunger or empower women or create 14 million jobs. Instead, most of her time was spent cultivating the image of someone who might do all those things, when in reality her nine-to-fives revolved around cosplaying as a person who had any business advising the president, offering uniquely bad advice, and somehow always being on vacation when s--t hit the fan.
Not surprisingly, Princess Purses believed that the White House press team existed to serve her and her ambitions, and apparently quite often expected it to "siphon off some of its resources to defend and support her," according to former press secretary Stephanie Grisham's new book, I'll Take Your Questions Now. "She obviously had a Google alert set for her name and would go to Sean Spicer whenever a story about her popped up that she didn't like, which was most of them, expecting us to push back," Grisham writes. "That happened even if 90 percent of a story was positive. She would focus on obscure small facts that she didn't like or claimed weren't true.… Image was everything in the Trump family, and Ivanka worked very hard to convey an image of perfection."
According to Grisham, one story the former first daughter really didn't like involved her flashing a hot dog vendor, which she presumably believed didn't fit in with the trajectory she had laid out with Jared wherein she would one day be the first female president. Initially reported by Vanity Fair's Emily Jane Fox in her 2018 book, Born Trump, the story was recounted in detail by Trump's childhood best friend Lysandra Ohrstrom shortly after the 2020 election. As Ohrstrom writes:
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