Former White House advisor and current son-in-law of the presumptive Republican nominee for President Jared Kushner has not been called to testify before any House committees investigating allegedly corrupt relatives of presidential candidates despite getting a $2 billion parting gift from the Saudi crown prince (presumably for not seeking justice for the murder of a US-based journalist). And one could say he’s become emboldened by Republican indifference to Republican corruptions, as is laid out in a New York Times (gift-link) article describing Kushner’s proposed foreign business dealings.
Leveraging connections he made while working in the Trump White House, Kushner is on the verge of closing three deals to develop luxury real estate developments in Albania and Serbia, and he’s relying on another former Trump lackey, Richard Grenell, to use his connections from the time he was an ambassador in the region.
Because they would require the sale of government-owned land, two of the projects would require the permission of the current foreign administrations to complete, and should those Albanian and Serbian administrations might be wary of pissing off an unbalanced Republican nominee before an election. But yeah, no hint of trading on a relative’s political influence here, eh?