Donald John Trump Jr. (born December 31, 1977) is an American businessman, former television presenter, political activist, and author. He is the eldest child of former U.S. President
Donald Trump and his first wife
Ivana Trump.
Trump serves as a
trustee and executive vice president of
The Trump Organization, running the company alongside his younger brother
Eric.[2] During their
father's presidency, the brothers continued to do deals and investments in foreign countries, as well as collect payments in their U.S. properties from foreign governments, despite a pledge that they would not do so.[3] He served as a boardroom judge on the
reality TV show featuring his father, The Apprentice. He authored Triggered in 2019 and Liberal Privilege in 2020.
Trump was born on December 31, 1977, in
Manhattan, New York City, to
Ivana and
Donald Trump.[17] He has two younger siblings,
Ivanka and
Eric. He also has two half siblings,
Tiffany, from his father's marriage to
Marla Maples, and
Barron, from his father's current marriage to
Melania Trump. Through his father, Trump is a grandson of
Fred Trump and great-grandson of
Elizabeth Christ Trump, who founded what became the Trump Organization. As a boy, Trump found a role model in his maternal grandfather, Miloš Zelníček, who had a home near
Prague, where he spent summers camping, fishing, hunting and learning the
Czech language.[18]
His parents divorced when he was 12 years old due to his father having an
extramarital affair.[19] Trump Jr. was estranged from his father for one year after the divorce, furious at his actions which broke up the family.[20]
On January 11, 2017, Trump's father announced that he and his brother Eric would oversee a trust that included the Trump Organization's assets while his father was president, to avert a
conflict of interest.[26]
Amid the
Trump–Ukraine scandal – where Trump asked the Ukrainian president to investigate
Joe Biden and his son
Hunter Biden – Trump Jr. strongly criticized Hunter Biden, accusing him of nepotism and leveraging his father as a means to get financial benefits. Trump Jr. said, "When you're the father and your son's entire career is dependent on that, they own you." Trump Jr. was widely ridiculed for these remarks by
Trevor Noah and others. Trump Jr. is a high-level executive in his father's business and continued to operate and promote the family's businesses across the world during Trump's presidency.[27][28][29][30] The
Associated Press wrote of Trump Jr.'s, remarks that he was "showing no self-awareness that he, too, has at least in part been successful because of a famous father".[31] According to The Washington Post fact-checker, Trump Jr.'s assertion that he and his family members had gotten out of foreign business deals after Trump became president is false.[3]The Washington Post reported that after Trump became president, "Trump's sons have been busy selling assets to foreign individuals, expanding or adding onto their existing deals and investments in foreign countries, and collecting payments in U.S. properties from foreign governments."[3]
In February 2018, advertisements in Indian newspapers promoted a deal whereby anyone who purchased
Trump Organization apartments in
Gurgaon before February 20 would be invited to have a "conversation and dinner" with Trump Jr. The ads were criticized by corruption watchdogs as unethical.[32][33]
A ruling which was handed down on February 16, 2024 barred Trump from serving as an officer or director of any New York corporation or other legal entity in New York, including the Trump Organization, for two years.[34]
Podcast
In 2023, Trump launched a podcast, Triggered with Don Jr, on the platform
Rumble.[35]
Trump Jr. influenced his father's choice of
Secretary of the InteriorRyan Zinke during the presidential transition.[38][39] Since his father's victory in the 2016 election, Trump Jr. has developed what The Washington Post calls a "public persona as a right-wing provocateur and ardent defender of Trumpism".[40]The Atlantic reported in 2019 that Trump had described Trump Jr. in 2017 as "not the sharpest knife in the drawer".[41] Trump Jr. earned the nickname "Fredo" among some Trump campaign staffers, a reference to
a character in The Godfather.[42][43]
Approximately a year later, Trump Jr. initially told the media that
adoption of Russian children was the main subject of the meeting.[45] On July 8, 2017, Trump Jr. tweeted his email exchange with Goldstone. It revealed that Trump Jr. had agreed to attend the meeting with the understanding he would receive information damaging to
Hillary Clinton.[46] Goldstone also wrote in one of Trump Jr.'s publicly disclosed emails that the Russian government was involved.[46]Robert Mueller, the
special counsel of the
Department of Justice in charge of Russia-related investigations, investigated the emails and the meeting.[47] Although the White House lauded Trump Jr. for his transparency, he released the e-mails only after The New York Times had informed him that they had them and were going to publish a story about them.[48]
In June 2019, Republicans and Democrats on the Senate Intelligence Committee made a criminal referral of Trump Jr. to federal prosecutors on suspicions that he misled the committee with his testimony.[49]
In November 2017, news broke that
Julian Assange had used the
WikiLeaks Twitter account to correspond with Donald Trump Jr. during the 2016 presidential election. Trump Jr. had already provided this correspondence to congressional investigators who were looking into
Russian interference in the 2016 election.[52][53][54]
The correspondence showed that WikiLeaks actively solicited the cooperation of Trump Jr., who was a campaign surrogate and advisor in the campaign of his father. WikiLeaks urged the Trump campaign to reject the results of the 2016 presidential election at a time when it appeared the Trump campaign would lose. WikiLeaks asked Trump Jr. to share a made-up[55] claim by
True Pundit that Hillary Clinton had wanted to attack Assange with drones. WikiLeaks also shared a link to a website that would help people search through the
hacked e-mails of Clinton campaign manager
John Podesta, which WikiLeaks had recently made public. Trump Jr. shared both.[52][53]
In 2007, Trump Jr. gave $4,000 to then-Senator
Hillary Clinton's campaign to be the
Democratic presidential nominee.[57]
In 2011, Trump Jr. responded to criticism of the
Tea Party movement by Florida representative
Frederica Wilson by confusing Wilson with California representative
Maxine Waters and saying her colorful hats made her look like a
stripper.[58]
In September 2017, Trump Jr. asked to have his
Secret Service detail removed, telling friends he wanted more privacy, the second presidential child to do so.[a] The request was criticized by former Secret Service agents.[61] Trump Jr.'s protection was restored later that month.[62]
In October 2020, it was reported that Pennsylvania Republicans were suggesting Trump Jr. run for the vacant Senate seat in Pennsylvania in
2022 after two-term incumbent
Pat Toomey announced he would not be seeking re-election.[63] In the same month, Trump Jr. held a crowded indoor rally where attendees did not wear masks, contradicting public health guidelines.[64]
In an October 29 interview with
Fox News's
Laura Ingraham, Trump Jr. asserted that the coronavirus death rate has dropped to "almost nothing", adding "(b)ecause we've gotten control of this thing. We understand how it works – they have the therapeutics to be able to deal with this. If you look at that, look at my Instagram, it's gone down to almost nothing."[65] On that day, the number of coronavirus deaths in the U.S. was 1,063.[66]
Trump has been the subject of speculation for a
2024 run for president.[67][68] In October 2020, he posted a photo to his Instagram account of a "Don Jr. 2024" flag.[69][70]
Views and controversies
Race and immigration
During his father's presidential campaign, Trump Jr. caused controversy in 2016 when he posted an image that compared Syrian refugees to
Skittles, saying "If I had a bowl of Skittles and I told you just three would kill you, would you take a handful? That's our Syrian refugee problem."[37][71][72] The makers of Skittles condemned the tweet, saying "Skittles are candy. Refugees are people. We don't feel it's an appropriate analogy."[72][37] The
Cato Institute claimed that year that the chances "an American would be killed in a terrorist attack committed by a refugee was one in 3.64 billion" per year.[73]
On March 1, 2016, an interview with
white supremacistJames Edwards and Trump Jr. was aired. The campaign initially denied the interview had taken place; later Trump Jr. claimed it was unintentional.[74] As a consequence of the interview, mainstream media outlets have accused Trump Jr. of being either a believer in the
white genocide conspiracy theory,[75] or pretending to be an advocate for political gain.[76]
In September 2016, Trump Jr. cited
Holocaust imagery to criticize what he perceived as the mainstream media's uncritical coverage of Hillary Clinton during her campaign, by "letting her slide on every discrepancy", while also accusing Democrats involved in the 2016 campaign of lying. Trump Jr. said if the Republicans were committing the same offences mainstream outlets would be "warming up the gas chamber right now".[77][78] Also that month, Trump Jr. shared an image on
Instagram depicting a cross between his father and
Pepe the Frog. When asked on Good Morning America about Pepe the Frog and its associations with
white supremacy, Trump Jr. said he had never heard of Pepe the Frog and thought it was just a "frog with a wig".[79]
In April 2017, Trump Jr. lauded conspiracy theorist
Mike Cernovich, who has promoted the debunked
white genocide and
Pizzagate conspiracy theories,[80] saying, "In a long gone time of unbiased journalism he'd win the
Pulitzer".[81][82]
In March 2017, Trump Jr. criticized the mayor of London,
Sadiq Khan, after the
2017 Westminster attack, which in turn led British lawmakers to criticize Trump Jr.[88][89][90] British journalists said Trump Jr. had quoted Khan out of context when he criticized him.[89][90] Khan did not respond to the criticism, saying he had "far more important things" to do.[88]
In May 2018, Trump Jr. retweeted a false and
antisemitic conspiracy theory that
George Soros, the Jewish Hungarian-American businessman and philanthropist, was a "nazi [sic] who turned in his fellow Jews to be murdered in German concentration camps & stole their wealth".[95][17][96] The tweets originated from
Roseanne Barr, whose TV show Roseanne was canceled the same day after she had posted a series of racist and antisemitic tweets.[95] A spokesperson for Soros responded to the tweets, "George Soros survived the Nazi occupation of Hungary as a 13-year-old child by going into hiding and assuming a false identity with the help of his father, who managed to save his own family and help many other Jews survive the Holocaust".[96]
In August 2018, Trump Jr. shared on Instagram a doctored image which had been crudely edited to falsely state that CNN had reported President Trump's approval rating as 50%. The actual CNN report had Trump at 40%, below
Barack Obama's 45% at the same point of his presidency. Trump Jr. deleted the image two days later.[98][99]
In September 2018, when
Hurricane Florence was affecting the United States, Trump Jr. tweeted a picture of CNN journalist
Anderson Cooper waist-deep in floodwaters when another man in the same picture was standing knee-deep a distance away. In the same tweet, Trump Jr. included a link to a Breitbart News article claiming that CNN's ratings had dropped by 41%, and proposed a conspiracy theory that CNN was "lying to try to make [his father, President Trump] look bad". In actuality, the picture of Cooper was about 10 years old, taken during 2008's
Hurricane Ike before Trump became president, and Cooper was videoed talking about how the floodwaters were receding.[100][101]
In August 2020, Trump Jr. shared a Breitbart News article about more than 800 dead people voting in Michigan which was framed to suggest that the ballots were not legitimately cast and thus showed evidence of extensive voter fraud; however, the voters in question died after submitting the ballots, and the ballots were rejected by Michigan authorities who knew the voters had died before the election date.[104] In September 2020, he again pushed false claims about voter fraud by asserting, "The radical left are laying the groundwork to steal this election from my father". He added: "Their plan is to add millions of fraudulent ballots that can cancel your vote and overturn the election" and asked "able-bodied" people to join an election security "army" for his father. Facebook and Twitter affixed labels to the video which pointed to accurate information about voting.[105]
In November 2020, after
Pfizer announced that it had developed a
COVID-19 vaccine with 90% effectiveness, Trump Jr. suggested that the vaccine had been held back in order to hurt his father's chances of winning the election.[106] Pfizer CEO
Albert Bourla dismissed the suggestion, saying that the company had always planned to rely on the "speed of science".[107]
Trump Jr. was given a 12-hour restriction by Twitter in July 2020 after he promoted misinformation about
COVID-19 by retweeting a video showing
Houston doctor
Stella Immanuel promoting
hydroxychloroquine as a cure despite conflicting studies and claiming that masks are unnecessary. Twitter later said that it restricted his ability to tweet or retweet for 12 hours for violating its
COVID-19 misinformation policy.[109][110][111][112]
On October 29, 2020, Trump Jr. criticized the media's focus on new infections rather than on deaths, saying on Fox News, "why aren't they talking about deaths? Oh, oh, because the number is almost nothing. Because we've gotten control of this, and we understand how it works." On the day Trump Jr. made that comment,
the United States registered roughly 1,000 COVID-19 deaths.[113]
On October 31, 2017, Trump Jr. tweeted that he would take away half his three-year-old daughter's
Halloween candy because, he wrote, "it's never too early to teach her about socialism."[115]
In November 2019, Trump Jr. tweeted the name of the alleged whistleblower who brought to light the
Trump-Ukraine scandal. Whistleblower conventions are intended to protect the identity of individuals who expose wrongdoing in government.
Agence France-Presse attempted to independently verify the identity that Trump Jr. tweeted but was unable to do so.[117]
In June 2020, during the
COVID-19 pandemic, Trump Jr. accused liberals of hypocrisy, for imposing restrictive measures and social distancing guidelines on businesses while holding the "Action for Black Trans Lives" protest for the rights of African American
transgender people.[118]
Trump Jr. has accused
big tech companies of being biased against conservatives and has claimed that a
deep state sought to undermine Trump during his presidency.[7]
CNN reported in April 2022 that two days after the election, Trump Jr. sent a text message to
White House Chief of StaffMark Meadows outlining paths to subvert the Electoral College process and ensure his father a second term. He wrote, "It's very simple. We have multiple paths. We control them all. We have operational control. Total leverage. Moral high ground. POTUS must start second term now." He continued, "Republicans control 28 states Democrats 22 states. Once again Trump wins," adding, "We either have a vote WE control and WE win OR it gets kicked to Congress 6 January 2021." Biden had not yet been declared the winner at the time of the text.[16][120]
Together with his father and other speakers, on January 6, 2021, Trump Jr. spoke to an audience and, speaking about reluctant GOP lawmakers saying, "If you're gonna be the zero and not the hero, we're coming for you".[121] President Trump further
incited the crowd which then marched to the
US Capitol building, where they
forced entry, broke windows and
vandalized the building. One woman was killed, and a police officer and three other people died during or shortly after the incursion.[122]
Television host and former congressman
Joe Scarborough called for the arrest of Trump Jr., along with his father and Rudolph Giuliani, for
insurrection against the United States.[123] Following his father's permanent ban from
Twitter on January 8, 2021, Donald Trump Jr. claimed that
free speech "no longer exists in America".[124]
On March 5, 2021, Representative
Eric Swalwell filed a civil lawsuit against Trump Jr. and three others (his father, Representative
Mo Brooks, and
Rudy Giuliani), seeking damages for their alleged role in inciting the riot.[125]
In December 2021, text messages released by Meadows revealed that Trump Jr. begged Meadows to persuade his father to stop the attack.[126][127]
Criminal investigation
On January 11, 2021, D.C.
attorney generalKarl Racine said that Donald Trump Jr. is a
person of interest in the criminal investigation of the attack on the U.S. Capitol and that he is looking at whether to charge him, along with
Rudy Giuliani and
Mo Brooks, with inciting the violent attack.[15]
Fraud investigation
On January 14, 2021, it became known that Trump Jr. is a person of interest in the
criminal investigation into
misuse of his father's inaugural funds in Washington D.C., and that
prosecutors intend to interview him over his role in "grossly overpaying" for use of event space at the
Trump Hotel in Washington for the 2017 inauguration.[128]
Books
Triggered: How the Left Thrives on Hate and Wants to Silence Us
In 2019, Trump Jr. released the book, Triggered: How the Left Thrives on Hate and Wants to Silence Us. The book is critical of
political correctness, and argues that the American left has a
victimhood complex.[129]The Washington Post commented: "yet, in his telling, the real victim is often him, his father or another Trump family member".[129] In the book, Trump Jr. pushes conspiracy theories about how the
intelligence community has attempted to harm President Trump, comparing President Trump's experiences with the
FBI harassment campaign against civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr.[130] Trump Jr. wrote of a visit to
Arlington National Cemetery (a military cemetery), commenting that he got emotional looking at the graves and that it reminded him of "all the sacrifices" the Trump family had made, including "voluntarily giving up a huge chunk of our business and all international deals to avoid the appearance that we were 'profiting off of the office'."[129][130] Fact-checkers have reported that Trump still owns the family business, and that the Trump family have continued to engage in international business deals since Trump became president.[129] In a review for The Washington Post,
Carlos Lozada said that it "fails as memoir and as polemic: its analysis is facile, its hypocrisy relentless, its self-awareness marginal (the writing is wretched, even by the standards of political vanity projects)".[131]
The book was a
New York Times best-seller. The book was purchased in bulk by at least nine Republican organizations, candidates or advocacy groups, including N.R.C.C. and the
RNC which bought $75,000 and $100,000 worth of the books, respectively.
Turning Point USA and the National Republican Senatorial Committee purchased approximately 2,000 and 2,500 books, respectively.[132]
Liberal Privilege: Joe Biden and the Democrats' Defense of the Indefensible
In 2020, Trump Jr. self-published the book Liberal Privilege: Joe Biden and the Democrats' Defense of the Indefensible. Trump Jr. reportedly hired three researchers to collect information about
Joe Biden and spent three months writing the book.[133] Trump Jr. explained to The New York Times his reasons: "While I had no plans for a book this year, I was stuck indoors like the rest of the nation during the pandemic", he said, adding that he "decided to highlight Biden's half century of being a swamp monster, since the media wouldn't do it". The same article stated that he decided to self-publish because he could count on the publicity of "his own platform – and the promise of bulk purchases from the RNC".[133]
The book was indeed bought in bulk by the RNC.[134] On October 28, 2020, the RNC paid over $300,000 of donor money to Pursuit Venture LLC, a company owned by Trump Jr., for "donor mementos". It was the most money the RNC had ever paid for this purpose.[135] The hardcover retails for $29.99, which suggests roughly how many copies might have been purchased, and the RNC's intent was to give a copy to people who donated $50–$100.[136]
Personal life
Family
In 2003, Trump Jr. began dating model
Vanessa Kay Haydon at his father's suggestion.[17] The couple married on November 12, 2005, at his father's
Mar-a-Lago estate in
Palm Beach, Florida; the service was officiated by Trump Jr.'s aunt, Judge
Maryanne Trump Barry.[137] Haydon's grandfather was Danish jazz musician
Kai Ewans.[138][139][140][141] They have five children: daughter Kai Madison (b. May 2007), son Donald John III (b. February 2009), son Tristan Milos (b. October 2011), son Spencer Frederick (b. October 2012), and daughter Chloe Sophia (b. June 2014).[142][143][144] The oldest daughter, Kai, is named after Kai's great-grandfather,
Kai Ewans.[145][138]
On March 15, 2018, it was announced that the couple had separated and she had filed for
uncontested divorce in
Manhattan Supreme Court.[146][147][148] However, later it was revealed that the divorce was contested.[149] The complaint was secret except for the title of the case.[150] On February 22, 2019, they announced that they settled their divorce at the end of 2018.[151]
Since 2018, Trump Jr. has been dating
Kimberly Guilfoyle.[41][152] Guilfoyle had been friends with the Trump family for years.[153] The two reportedly became engaged on December 31, 2020, though news of the engagement was not made public until January 2022.[154] In December 2021, Trump Jr. switched his official residency from New York to Florida.[155]
Hunting
Trump Jr. is an enthusiastic
hunter. Controversy erupted in 2012 when the pictures he had taken of his hunting trophies in 2010 were published, including by
Mia Farrow, who reposted them in 2015 and 2019. Trump Jr. responded by saying "I'm not going to run and hide because the
peta[sic] crazies don't like me". In one photo, Trump Jr. has his arms around a dead leopard; in another, he is holding a knife in one hand and a bloody elephant tail in the other.[156] Although the hunt was legal, anti-hunting activists criticized him. At least one sponsor dropped his father's TV show The Celebrity Apprentice.[157] On
Earth Day in 2017, Trump Jr. legally hunted
prairie dogs in Montana with GOP Congressional candidate
Greg Gianforte.[158]
^Dagnes, Alison (2019). "Negative Objectives: The Right-Wing Media Circle and Everyone else". In Dagnes, Alison (ed.). Super Mad at Everything All the Time. Berlin, Germany: Springer International Publishing. p. 172.
doi:
10.1007/978-3-030-06131-9_5.
ISBN9783030061319.
S2CID156032120.
^Lima, Christiano (April 4, 2018).
"Trump Jr.: Dad's ambassador to the fringe". Politico. Arlington, Virginia:
Capitol News Company.
Archived from the original on April 8, 2018. Retrieved April 9, 2018. It was far from the first time President Donald Trump's eldest son dabbled in online conspiracy theories, using his 2.7 million Twitter followers to promote questionable or outright false information that, in many cases, even his father had refrained from spreading.
^Safi, Michael (February 18, 2018).
"Indian investors offered dinner with Donald Trump Jr". The Guardian.
Archived from the original on February 18, 2018. Retrieved February 19, 2018. Prospective investors in a Trump Tower project near Delhi are being offered a conversation and dinner with Donald Trump Jras part of a marketing campaign that has drawn criticism from corruption watchdogs.
^"Trump India 'dinner and chat' property offer criticised". BBC News. February 19, 2018.
Archived from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 22, 2018. The Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (Crew) – a watchdog group – added the Indian promotion to a list of instances it believes show the Trump name being used for commercial gain.
^
abWedenborg, Freja (March 30, 2016).
"Vidtse du det? Her er Trumps danske forbindelse" [Did you know that? Here is Trump's Danish connection]. Avisen.dk (in Danish).
Archived from the original on December 30, 2016. Retrieved March 30, 2017.