WHERE ARE THEY NOW: First kids of the United States
Talia Lakritz  Â
- Children of US presidents are in the public eye almost as much as their parents.
- Some first kids follow their parents into politics, while others steer clear of the limelight.
Melissa Stanger, Melia Robinson, and James Pasley contributed to previous versions of this article.
Caroline Kennedy, daughter of President John F. Kennedy and first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, was just 3 years old when she moved into the White House in 1961.
After President Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, Jacqueline moved the family to Manhattan.
Kennedy went on to attend Radcliffe College and Columbia Law School.
Kennedy served as the US ambassador to Japan for three years.
Kennedy was the first woman to serve as ambassador to Japan. During her tenure, former President Barack Obama strengthened his relationship with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. She resigned from the job shortly after President Donald Trump was sworn in in 2017.
The former attorney also serves as president of the JFK Presidential Library and has written best-selling books on constitutional law, American history, and poetry.
In 2019, she presented House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award.
Caroline is married to American designer Edwin Schlossberg and they have three children.
President Lyndon B. Johnson's daughter Lynda held her wedding at the White House in 1967.
Lynda Bird Johnson married Chuck Robb, who went on to serve as the governor of Virginia from 1982 to 1986 and the state's senator from 1989 to 2001.
The bride wore a gown designed by Geoffrey Beene, embellished with buttons at the high neck and down the princess-line seams.
Today, Lynda Bird Johnson Robb advocates for equal rights for women and minorities.
The former Virginia first lady is the oldest living child of a US president. In the '70s, she chaired the President's Advisory Committee for Women to help carry out former President Jimmy Carter's mandate to promote gender equality.
Johnson Robb, whose father signed the 1964 Civil Rights Act and 1965 Voting Rights Act, spoke at the 50th anniversary ceremony of the March on Washington and attended the remembrance banquet for the 50th anniversary of the "Bloody Sunday" assault in Selma, Alabama.
She has openly supported same-sex marriage, and she and her sister, Luci. told Katie Couric in an interview in 2014 that she believes her father would have, too.
In 2019, the Johnson sisters christened a warship bearing their father's name by smashing champagne bottles against the ship.
The younger Johnson daughter, Luci Baines Johnson, also had a White House wedding.
Baines Johnson married Patrick Nugent in 1966 in a gown designed by Priscilla Kidder.
The couple held their ceremony at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception and their reception in the East Room of the White House. They had four children and divorced in 1979.
Baines Johnson then married investor Ian J. Turpin in 1984.
Baines Johnson now chairs the private holding company her mother founded 70 years ago.
Baines Johnson and Turpin took the helm of LBJ Asset Management Partners in the late '80s and completely turned the business around during the economic crisis.
In 2020, she took part in a Facebook live event supporting Texas Democrats.
President Richard Nixon's daughter Tricia held her wedding in the White House Rose Garden in 1971.
Tricia Nixon and Edward Finch Cox met at a high school dance in 1963 and dated throughout college.
Their wedding was the first to be held outdoors in the White House Rose Garden.
Today, Nixon Cox lives a quiet life with her family in Manhattan.
Nixon Cox accompanied her father on many campaign stops and state trips during his presidency but has steered clear of the spotlight since starting a family more than 40 years ago.
Trisha serves on the board of the Richard Nixon Foundation and has one child, Christopher Nixon Cox.
She and Cox celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 2021 with an event at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower, who married President Eisenhower's grandson in 1968, volunteered as a White House tour guide during her father's presidency.
In the summer of 1969, Nixon Eisenhower led tours of the White House for people with impaired vision.
"Children and adults felt the scaled serpent legs of the wooden Empire sofa in the Red Room, enjoyed the smoothness of the silk tassels on the draperies in the Green Room, and touched the cool silver of the two-hundred-year-old coffee urn that had belonged to John and Abigail Adams," she wrote in a biography of her mother titled "Pat Nixon: The Untold Story."
Nixon Eisenhower has written several biographies and serves on the board of her father's presidential library.
A staunch supporter of her father after the Watergate scandal, Nixon Eisenhower lives on a Pennsylvania farm away from the public eye.
In addition to writing a biography about her mother, she and husband David Eisenhower authored a memoir about her grandfather-in-law, "Going Home to Glory: A Memoir of Life with Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1961-1969." The couple has three children.
Michael Ford (first from the right) had recently married Gayle Ann Brumbaugh when his father, President Gerald Ford, took office.
Michael was also a student at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary, an evangelical seminary in Massachusetts.
Michael spent 36 years overseeing campus life at Wake Forest University.
John "Jack" Gardner Ford was known as the president's "free-spirited, shaggy-haired son."
During Ford's presidency, Jack studied at Utah State University and worked as a park ranger at Yellowstone National Park during the summers.
Jack became a founding staff member of the magazine Outside.
Jack grew into a successful entrepreneur. He founded a startup, California Infotech, which supplied electronic information kiosks to malls. He also helped launch Outside magazine.
After appearing at half a dozen Republican National Conventions, Jack served as executive director of the San Diego host committee for the RNC in 1996.
In 1989, he married Juliann Ford. They have two sons.
Steven Ford was 18 years old when his father became president.
Known as the "charmer of the family," Steven worked as a ranch hand in Utah, Montana, and Idaho instead of going straight to college.
Steven became an actor, appearing in "The Young and The Restless" and several Hollywood blockbusters.
Steven joined the cast of television soap opera "The Young and The Restless" in 1981, playing P.I. Andy Richards. After six seasons and a role reprisal in 2002, he has since appeared in a number of films, including "Armageddon," "Black Hawk Down," "When Harry Met Sally," and "Transformers."
Ford ended his tenure as chairman of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation in 2014, though he remains on the board of trustees. He continues to honor the legacy of his father's administration, speaking at town-hall events and lectures around the country. His most requested talks are: "Inside the White House and Hollywood" and "Getting to the top with character."
In 1975, 17-year-old Susan Ford held her senior prom in the East Room of the White House.
The youngest of the Ford children, Susan lived in the White House full-time. Her senior class raised all the funds for the prom, including the fee for bands Sandcastle and the Outerspace Band, and elected her prom queen, according to Vanity Fair. It remains the only prom to have ever been held in the White House.
Susan also took up photography under the mentorship of White House photographer David Kennerly.
Susan Ford Bales has since worked as a photojournalist, breast cancer advocate, and trustee of the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation.
Ford Bales worked as a photojournalist for the Associated Press, Newsweek, Money Magazine, Ladies Home Journal, the Topeka Capital-Journal, and the Omaha Sun. She has also written two novels set in the White House, "Double Exposure: A First Daughter Mystery" and "Sharp Focus."
Ford Bales launched National Breast Cancer Awareness Month in conjunction with her mother, and she succeeded her mother as chairwoman of the Betty Ford Center. She has also called for better efforts to identify causes and cures to heart disease, after suffering a sudden cardiac arrest herself in 2013.
She married Charles Vance, one of her father's former secret service agents, and they had two children before divorcing in 1988. She later married attorney Vaden Bales.
John William "Jack" Carter is President Jimmy Carter and first lady Rosalynn Carter's oldest son.
Jack and his then-wife Judy had a young son of their own, Jason James, when Jimmy Carter took office.
Jack ran for a Nevada seat in the US Senate.
Jack ran for the first major office the Carter family has sought since 1980. He sealed the Democratic nomination for a US Senate seat in Nevada, but was unsuccessful against an incumbent Republican senator in the 2006 election.
Jack spent most of his career in the investment and finance industry. He has been married twice and has two children.
James Earl "Chip" Carter worked for his family's peanut farming business.
He attended his father's inaugural ball with his then-wife Caron Griffith in 1977, where they were interviewed by American gossip columnist Rona Barrett.
Chip has since participated in the Democratic National Committee and served as a member of Plains City Council.
Chip worked as vice president, then president and CEO, at Friendship Force, a not-for-profit that organized international exchanges for adult home stays.
He has been married three times and has a son and a daughter.
His son James Carter IV — the grandson of President Carter — made headlines during the 2012 presidential election, after he helped unearth the infamous "47%" video that ostracized nominee Mitt Romney. James Carter IV later received a thank-you note from former President Barack Obama.
Donnel Jeffrey "Jeff" Carter and his wife, Annette, were newlyweds when they moved into the White House with his parents.
Jeff and Annette met at Georgia Southwestern University and married in 1975 during Jimmy Carter's presidential campaign. They spent the first years of their married life in the White House.
"While living in the White House, Jeff and Annette helped host everybody from Bob Dylan to Pope John Paul II," their son Josh wrote in Annette's obituary in September 2021. "In some of Annette's favorite White House memories, she greeted the cast of Star Wars after the release of 'A New Hope' and John Travolta after he starred in 'Saturday Night Fever' and 'Grease.' These experiences were quite extraordinary for Jeff and Annette's first few years of marriage."
Jeff launched a computer-electronics company.
Jeff co-founded Computer Mapping Consultants, a firm that became a consultancy for the World Bank in 1978 and held foreign government contracts.
He and Annette had three children together. In 2018, their 28-year-old son Jeremy died from a suspected heart attack.
President Jimmy Carter's youngest child, Amy Carter, was 9 years old when her father's presidency began.
Amy had a pet Siamese cat named Misty who accompanied her to Camp David and took up residence in her doll house.
Amy illustrated a children's book that her father wrote.
Amy became a political activist in the '80s and '90s, and she was even arrested at a CIA recruitment protest. She later received a master's degree from Tulane in art history and started a family in the Atlanta area with computer consultant James Wentzel. At her wedding ceremony she was not given away, saying she did not belong to anyone. She had one child with Wentzel, before later remarrying and having a second son.
Amy worked with her dad on "The Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer," which President Carter wrote and she illustrated. The children's book is about a boy who befriends a monster.
Michael Reagan was adopted by Ronald Reagan and his first wife, Jane Wyman, three years before the couple divorced.
He is the last living child of Reagan's first marriage.
Michael became a successful radio talk-show host.
After a stint working in aerospace, the powerboat-racing enthusiast found his niche as a political radio talk-show host. He hosted the show for over 26 years. In his retirement, Michael writes op-ed articles, contributes to Newsmax Media, and serves as president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation.
Michael, 76, has been married twice and has two children.
Reagan's daughter Patti followed in her father's footsteps as an actress.
During the 1980s, she appeared in TV movies such as "Curse of the Pink Panther" and "For Ladies Only," as well as shows like "Romance Theatre" and "The Love Boat."
She didn't always have the easiest relationship with her parents — she wrote a tell-all memoir detailing "her father's emotional abandonment of her, her mother's cruelty, and the family's bitter rivalries, uncontrollable rage, and dark secrets."
Patti married Paul Grilley in 1984. They divorced in 1990.
Davis is the author of multiple fiction and nonfiction novels.
Davis struggled with a number of personal obstacles, including drug addiction, self-harm, and an eating disorder, and discovered her voice through her writing. She has published more than half a dozen works.
She blogs regularly on her website and in 2017, wrote an editorial on her father's shooter called " Don't Let My Dad's Shooter Go Free." In 2019, she said her father would be "horrified" about democracy during the era of President Donald Trump.
She released her latest memoir, "Floating in the Deep End: How Caregivers Can See Beyond Alzheimer's," in September.
Ron Reagan Jr. dropped out of Yale to become a professional ballet dancer.
As a member of the Joffrey Ballet, Reagan Jr. danced in John Cranko's ''The Taming of the Shrew'' at City Center, Frederick Ashton's ''Illuminations,'' Mr. Cranko's ''Pineapple Poll,'' and Antony Tudor's ''Offenbach in the Underworld.'' He left the ballet company in 1983.
Reagan Jr. now provides political analysis as an MSNBC contributor.
Reagan Jr. tried his hand at a number of careers before arriving in journalism and joining MSNBC as a political analysis contributor. He has expressed strong opposition to Trump.
Unlike his father, Reagan Jr. has very liberal political views. The "unabashed atheist" recorded a comical PSA for the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which ran during Comedy Central's "The Daily Show" and "The Colbert Report" in 2014.
He married Doria Palmieri, a clinical psychologist, in 1980. She died in 2014, and he married Federica Basagni in 2018.
George W. Bush, the oldest of President George H.W. Bush and Barbara Bush's children, went to Yale and worked in the oil business before venturing into politics himself.
George W. Bush campaigned for his father in 1988 and purchased the Texas Rangers baseball team a year later. He served as governor of Texas from 1995 to 2000.
He served as president from 2001 to 2009, and he has since taken up painting.
George W. Bush served as the 43rd president at the start of the war in Iraq. He was criticized for his handling of the "War on Terror," Hurricane Katrina, and other challenges.
He has mostly steered clear of politics since leaving office, but he called for the end of the partial government shutdown on Instagram in 2019 with a photo featuring him and his wife, Laura Bush, handing pizza over to their Secret Service detail, who were working without pay.
In April, he revealed that he wrote in Condoleezza Rice's name on his 2020 election ballot.
"She knows it," he told People magazine. "But she told me she would refuse to accept the office."
He also gave the maximum allowed political contributions to Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, two Republicans who supported impeaching former President Donald Trump over the January 6 Capitol riot.
Today, he is enjoying retirement as a grandfather and an artist. In April, he released a book of paintings titled, "Out of Many, One: Portraits of America's Immigrants." His friendship with former first lady Michelle Obama has also made headlines.
John Ellis "Jeb" Bush stayed in close contact with his father's administration as he pursued his own political ambitions.
Jeb transitioned from corporate life to public office in the '80s — first as the chairman of the Dade County Republican Party and eventually as governor of Florida.
Jeb frequently wrote letters to his father during his presidency with various requests, ranging from suggestions for appointees for United States attorney to meetings with Motorola. The New York Times reported in 2015 that Jeb's requests often served to reward supporters and build out his own political connections.
After serving as governor of Florida and running for president in 2015, Jeb became a college professor.
During his presidential campaign, he released 33 years of tax returns — the most ever made public by a presidential candidate — as a sign to voters that he values transparency.
Since his presidential run, Jeb has been spending time teaching, first as a visiting fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School, then teaching a class at Texas A&M before being named presidential professor of practice at the University of Pennsylvania.
He published an op-ed in the Miami Herald in 2020 calling for a "student and parents 'bill of rights' that secures their right to access, quality and transparency."
He married Columba Garnica Gallo in 1974 and they have three children.
Neil Bush's experience with dyslexia inspired Barbara Bush's focus on childhood literacy programs as first lady.
He earned a bachelor's degree and an MBA from Tulane University and then founded educational software company Ignite! Learning in 1999 after struggling with dyslexia as a child.
An international businessman, Neil currently chairs the board of directors at Points of Light, the philanthropic group his father founded.
In addition to Points of Light, Neil chairs the Barbara Bush Houston Literacy Foundation, the Bush China US Relations Foundation, and several property development companies and consulting firms.
Neil married Sharon Bush and they had three children. In 2003, they divorced and he married Maria Andrews in 2004.
Marvin Bush attended the University of Virginia and worked in insurance.
His family gave him the nickname "Marvelous," according to The New York Times.
Today, Marvin Bush is a managing partner at an investment firm in Washington, DC.
Marvin is president of the Washington, DC-based investment firm Winston Capital Management.
Marvin made headlines during the 2016 presidential election when he endorsed Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson over Trump after his brother Jeb's exit from the race.
He married Margaret Conway in 1981 and they adopted two children.
Dorothy Bush married former Democratic aide Robert "Bobby" Koch in a private ceremony at Camp David in 1992.
The private Camp David nuptials were Dorothy's second wedding. Koch previously worked as an aide to Rep. Richard Gephardt, a Democratic congressman from Missouri.
"I think every once in a while, even a president's family is entitled to something private," President Bush said, according to The Washington Post. "And certainly when it comes to the marriage of a daughter, that's the way we looked at it."
Dorothy Bush Koch authored a book about her experience as a first kid.
Dorothy is involved in a number of charities and philanthropies, and she serves as the honorary co-chair of The Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy.
She published "My Father, My President: A Personal Account of the Life of George H. W. Bush," a memoir of her life as the 41st president's daughter. She also helped found a wellness company that educates people about mindfulness and holistic living.
She and Koch live in Maryland. She has four children, two of whom are from her first marriage.
Chelsea Clinton was 12 years old when Bill Clinton entered the White House.
The Clintons asked the media to give Chelsea privacy outside of public appearances, but she still faced intense scrutiny and ridicule from the likes of Rush Limbaugh and "Saturday Night Live."
She began studying at Stanford University in 1997.
Chelsea Clinton serves as vice chair of the Clinton Foundation.
Chelsea is currently vice chair of the Clinton Foundation, where she champions the group's advocacy work in global health and childhood obesity. She previously worked as a special correspondent for NBC News and earned two master's degrees, one from Oxford in international relations and one in public health from Columbia University.
Chelsea has written several children's books, and she's active on Twitter discussing issues facing families, public health, and dealing with bullies.
While her mother, Hillary, lost the presidency to Trump, Chelsea said a future for her in politics was a "definite maybe."
She and her husband, Marc Mezvinsky, have three children.
President George W. Bush's older twin daughter, Barbara Pierce Bush, graduated from Yale during his presidency and moved to New York City.
Barbara and her twin sister, Jenna, campaigned for their father and gave a speech at the 2004 Republican National Convention.
"Jenna and I are really not very political, but we love our dad too much to stand back and watch from the sidelines," Barbara said in the RNC speech. "We realized that this would be his last campaign, and we wanted to be a part of it. Besides, since we've graduated from college, we are looking around for something to do for the next few years. Kind of like Dad."
Barbara went on to cofound Global Health Corps and support Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign.
Within five years of graduating from Yale, Barbara cofounded Global Health Corps, a nonprofit that recruits young professionals to fight for better access to healthcare around the world. Before that, she worked at a children's hospital in South Africa and interned for UNICEF in Botswana.
Barbara's political views differ from her family's. She spoke out in support of same-sex marriage in 2011 and was a noted Hillary Clinton supporter during the 2016 election.
In 2017, she and her sister, Jenna Hager Bush, released a memoir called "Sisters First" about growing up in a political dynasty.
That same year, Barbara married screenwriter Craig Coyne at the Bush family's Walker Point compound in Maine. They welcomed a daughter in 2021.
She currently works as executive-in-residence with Eric Schmidt's Schmidt Futures, a venture facility "focused on technology & society, shared prosperity, and scientific benefit."
The younger Bush twin, Jenna, graduated from the University of Texas at Austin in 2004 and began working in a DC charter school.
The younger of the Bushes' twin daughters, Jenna earned a degree in English and worked as a teacher's aide at a charter school in Washington, DC. She took a leave of absence in 2006 to work for UNICEF in Latin America before returning to the school.
Jenna Bush Hager is now a host for NBC's "Today" show.
In 2008, Jenna released a book inspired by her work with UNICEF called "Ana's Story: A Journey of Hope."
She began working as a correspondent for NBC News in 2009 and was announced as the new host for the 10 o'clock hour of the "Today" show in 2019.
Since taking over at "Today," she has begun a monthly book club that's been so successful it prompted Entertainment Weekly to dub her the new "book club queen." She also serves as a board member on the Greenwich International Film Festival.
She and her husband, Henry Hager, have three children.
Malia Obama was 10 years old when President Barack Obama took office.
Malia attended Sidwell Friends School in Washington, DC.
In a 2015 appearance on "The Rachael Ray Show," former first lady Michelle Obama said that Malia's Secret Service detail taught her how to drive "because they wouldn't let me in the car with her."
Malia graduated from Harvard in 2021 and is reportedly working with Donald Glover on a new Amazon Prime show, "Hive."
Malia's interest in the entertainment industry began in high school. She interned on the canceled CBS series "Extant" in 2014, and she spent the summer of 2015 interning on Lena Dunham's HBO series "Girls."
After graduating high school in 2016, she took a gap year where she interned at the now-defunct film studio The Weinstein Company.
In 2021, Glover reportedly asked Malia to join the writing staff of his new Amazon show, "Hive," about a "Beyoncé-like" figure, sources told The Hollywood Reporter.
She is dating Rory Farquharson — son of British investment banker Charles Farquharson — whom she met at Harvard. Obama revealed on an episode of The Bill Simmons Podcast that Malia's boyfriend spent time living with them during the pandemic.
"He's British. Wonderful young man, and he was sort of stuck because there was a whole visa thing and he had a job set up," he said. "So we took him in, and I didn't want to like him, but he's a good kid. The only thing you discover ... young men eat! It's weird to watch them consume food. My grocery bill went up about 30 percent."
At 7 years old, Sasha Obama was the youngest child to live in the White House since John F. Kennedy Jr.
Sasha also attended Sidwell Friends School, where she became close friends with President Joe Biden's granddaughter Maisy Biden. Sasha and Maisy played together on the school's Vipers basketball team, which Obama briefly coached before a rival team complained.
Sasha is currently a junior at the University of Michigan.
In 2016, Sasha worked in the takeout window at Nancy's, a seafood restaurant on Martha's Vineyard, with six Secret Service agents in tow. Her and her sister's reaction to meeting "Deadpool" star Ryan Reynolds also went viral that same year.
She moved back home at the beginning of the pandemic and continued taking her college classes online, but Michelle Obama told Stephen Colbert on "The Late Show" that both Sasha and Malia eventually had enough quality time with their parents and moved out west.
"By the summer, we were like, 'OK, that's enough of you. I have nothing else to say,'" she said. "Our youngest, Sasha, who's not as talkative as our older one, is just like, 'I really have nothing to say to you. I just don't. I'm not even trying anymore.'"
Donald Trump Jr. served as executive vice president for the Trump organization and was instrumental in his father's presidential campaign.
As executive vice president, Trump Jr. focused on expanding the commercial and real estate side of the business, and he appeared on "The Apprentice."
He played a key role in his father's election campaign, making $50,000 speeches on his behalf and famously meeting with a Russian lawyer at Trump Tower in June 2016 to get "dirt" on Clinton.
He and his ex-wife, Vanessa, with whom he shares five children, finalized their divorce in February 2018, and he began dating former Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle that May.
Trump Jr. continues to speak at Trump rallies, bought a house in Florida, and is reportedly engaged to Guilfoyle.
In March 2021, Trump Jr. and Guilfoyle sold their house in the Hamptons for $8 million and purchased a $9.7 million home in the gated Admirals Cove neighborhood of Jupiter, Florida, about 20 minutes from Mar-a-Lago.
In January, Guilfoyle posted a photo with Trump Jr. where she appeared to be wearing a diamond ring on her left ring finger. An unnamed source told The Daily Mail in January 2022 that the pair quietly got engaged on New Year's Eve in 2020 and have been keeping it under wraps since then, but neither Trump Jr. nor Guilfoyle have confirmed their engagement publicly.
In his latest speaking engagement — a Trump rally in Conroe, Texas, on Saturday — Trump Jr. told the crowd he took his 12-year-old son, Donald Trump III, to a gun manufacturer to make his own AR-15.
Trump's daughter Ivanka served as an official advisor to her father in the White House.
Ivanka Trump served as a White House advisor to her father beginning in early 2017. In 2018, she was criticized for using a personal account to send hundreds of government-related emails.
Before that, she worked at the Trump Organization with her brothers, but she resigned to avoid any conflicts of interest. She also had her own Ivanka Trump fashion brand, which she shut down in July 2018.
In her early life, she modeled for brands like Tommy Hilfiger and Versace. She later appeared on "The Apprentice" as well as appearing on an episode of "Gossip Girl".
She is married to real estate developer Jared Kushner, who also worked with her at the White House. They have three young children.
Since Trump's presidency, Ivanka and Kushner have bought multiple properties in Florida and continued work on Kushner's Abraham Accords Caucus.
Ivanka and Kushner reportedly bought a $32 million empty lot in Indian Creek Village, Florida, known as Miami's "Billionaire Bunker," in December 2020. They then signed a lease for a "large, unfurnished unit" in the amenities-packed Arte Surfside condominium building in Surfside, Florida, for at least a year, Katherine Clarke reported for The Wall Street Journal. They reportedly also added a $24 million mansion in Indian Creek Village to their Florida real estate profile.
The Abraham Accords, which Kushner helped broker in August 2020, normalized relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco.
During a visit to Israel in October 2021, Ivanka and Kushner met with former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and attended an event at the Museum of Tolerance Jerusalem with former US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Like his older brother, Eric Trump worked as an executive vice president at the family business and appeared on "The Apprentice" before Trump's presidency.
In 2007, Eric created a charitable foundation to raise money for St. Jude Children's Research hospital in Tennessee, but he later stopped fundraising to avoid confusion around donations in the wake of his father's run to be president. In 2017, the foundation came under fire when a Forbes report alleged that thousands in donations were funneled to the Trump Organization. A spokesperson responded, "Contrary to recent reports, at no time did the Trump Organization profit in any way from the foundation or any of its activities."
In 2014, he married Lara Lea Yunaska. They have two children.
He is still a vice president at the Trump Organization, which is currently being investigated for fraud, and is a regular on Fox News.
The New York attorney general is investigating the Trump Organization's financial dealings, and new court filings detail the AG office's accusations against the company, including improperly inflated property values. Donald Trump has denied all wrongdoing and accused the probes of being politically motivated.
Eric was subpoenaed in the investigation in late 2020, but he invoked the Fifth Amendment right more than 500 times when they were deposed in 2020, New York State Attorney General Letitia James' office said, according to court documents.
Eric has also made regular appearances on Fox News, criticizing President Joe Biden's leadership and weekend trips to Delaware.
Tiffany Trump was in law school when her father took office.
Tiffany is the only daughter from the president's second marriage to television personality Marla Maples.
When she was 14, she released a single called "Like A Bird," and she said she was considering becoming a professional singer on "The Oprah Winfrey Show." She was later profiled as one of the "Rich Kids of Instagram" and has 1 million followers on the social network.
Tiffany is currently living in Miami and planning her wedding to Michael Boulos.
Tiffany graduated from Georgetown University's law school in 2020.
The couple vacationed in Mykonos this summer — reportedly to scout out destination wedding locations, according to People magazine.
Barron Trump moved into the White House in June 2017 after finishing out the school year at Trump Tower in Manhattan.
Barron was the first boy to live in the White House since John F. Kennedy Jr.
While living in the White House, he attended St. Andrew's Episcopal School in Maryland, where tuition costs about $40,000 a year.
In May 2017, he took his classmates to meet his dad at the White House.
Barron is finishing high school at Oxbridge Academy in Palm Beach, Florida.
Barron, who Donald Trump says is now 6 feet 7 inches tall, will graduate high school with the class of 2024. He visited New York City with his mother, former first lady Melania Trump, in July.
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