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Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr. are in a 'cold war' for their father's favor, and suspect each other of planting damaging stories in the media, according to a major new report

Sinéad Baker,Sinéad Baker,Sinéad Baker   

Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr. are in a 'cold war' for their father's favor, and suspect each other of planting damaging stories in the media, according to a major new report
Politics3 min read

Donald Trump Junior Ivanka Trump

AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Donald Trump Jr., Donald Trump, and Ivanka Trump in 2016.

  • Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr, the oldest children of US President Donald Trump, suspect each other of planting damaging stories in the press to harm each other's success, according to a new report.
  • Citing aides, officials, and former Trump organization employees, a report from The Atlantic painted a picture of siblings who are constantly vying for their father's attention and approval.
  • "Tell your people to stop trashing me to the media," Donald Trump Jr reportedly told his sister after a negative story appeared about him in the press.
  • Spokespeople for both Ivanka and Trump Jr. denied the incident, and said there is no rift between the siblings, The Atlantic reported.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

US President Donald Trump's two oldest children, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr, are locked in a "cold war" as they compete for their father's favour and suspect each other of planting damaging stories in the media, according to a lengthy report from The Atlantic.

The Atlantic's report, which cites interviews with Trump campaign aides and former employees, White House officials, and friends of the family, portrays a Machiavellian family dynamic, with the Trump children constantly vying for their father's attention and approval.

The rivalry, which had intensified when their father became president, has become even stronger since Trump began using Donald Trump Jr. at rallies after he proved to be a strong campaigner popular with rural Republicans.

Before this, President Trump had spent decades viewing him as a less useful child, the report said.

Donald Trump Jr.

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Donald Trump Jr. speaks at a Trump rally.

As the two siblings gained their own teams of allies and advisors, they grew "paranoid that the other's henchmen were planting damaging stories about them in the press," the report said.

Read more: Ivanka Trump and her brother Don Jr. are staking opposite sides in the gun control debate - and the president calls Don Jr. his 'gun expert'

After a November 2018 report in Washington DC outlet McClatchy claimed that "Don Jr. wows, Ivanka disappoints" on the campaign trail," Ivanka's team was reportedly "enraged." She suspected Trump Jr's team of "planting damaging stories about them in the press," The Atlantic reported.

Rumors reportedly also swirled that Ivanka's team was "undermining him in off-the-record conversations with reporters, leading Trump Jr. to challenge her.

Someone familiar with the incident said he told her: "Tell your people to stop trashing me to the media."

Ivanka Trump Oval Office meeting Donald Trump White House

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Ivanka Trump attends an event in the Oval Office where President Donald Trump signed Anti-Human Trafficking Legislation on January 9, 2019.

Spokespeople for the two siblings both denied to The Atlantic that this incident occurred, and said there was no disagreement between the pair.

Read more: Here's how the Trump family spends their billions, from a $15 million beachfront estate in St. Martin to a $32 million fleet of private helicopters and airplanes

Both siblings often try to influence their father's policies, raising issues with him, bringing up issues with the media, and arranging meetings between him and influential people that then help to inform his policies and talking points, The Atlantic said.

Ivanka and Donald Trump Jr. have often found themselves on opposite sides of policy issues, including most prominently the debate around gun control.

Both have represented their father, with Ivanka, who is an official advisor to the president, often playing roles in meetings with world leaders. Trump Jr. has played an increasingly visible role as a campaigner for his father, including opening for him at numerous rallies.

Read The Atlantic's full article here.

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