
This article was last updated on April 16, 2022
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"'Daddy, daddy we have to do this!'" Trump said, impersonating 34-year-old Ivanka, herself a mother of three and an executive at the Trump Organization. Later he added, "She’s the one who’s been pushing so hard for it."
Indeed she has been. Ivanka has spent the bulk of her father’s campaign fashioning herself as something of a voice for professional working moms. She's got a lifestyle website that shares stories of working women while also hocking Ivanka Trump collection merchandise. In June, she announced that she’s writing a new book, Women Who Work: Rewriting the Rules for Success, that will be out next spring. And in July, she stood up at the Republican National Convention and declared that "gender is no longer the factor creating the greatest wage discrepancy in this country; motherhood is." (The day after, by the way, she published a tweet that encouraged fans to shop her RNC look.)
See, Ivanka knows how to talk to women. She’s poised, charming, and well-spoken. She doesn’t have the brashness that her father has, and also, unlike her father, she speaks with self-awareness.
"I have three young children myself and I’m grateful daily for the means to pursue two of my dreams — being a mother and investing in a career that fulfills me," she said at yesterday’s rally. "I recognize that far too few women can say the same for themselves and that I am more fortunate than most."

This makes her an effective surrogate as Trump tries to narrow the gap with female voters. Trump knows he won’t win without women, but it’s also clear that he has no idea how to talk to them. Enter Ivanka. It’s no coincidence that when Trump took the stage at his rally last night she stood to his left, in full view of the TV cameras, even though he rarely shares the limelight. As NBC News correspondent Ali Vitali noted on Twitter: "It's rare for Trump to have anyone else on stage with him while he speaks. But Ivanka's right there. Why? That's a great TV optic.”
Yesterday, during the Trump campaign’s rollout of the plan, a campaign manager, Kellyanne Conway, told MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell: "We’ve got Hillary Clinton talking about how she’s always been fighting for children…We can’t find a lot about her child-care policy on her website."
This was something that Donald Trump repeated in his rally last night: "My opponent has no child-care plan. She never will." Both of these statements are patently false (look here and here, for example). Hillary Clinton has been talking about the cost of child care since May, when she was still running in the primary against Bernie Sanders.
Either Trump is lying to his constituents who don’t know any better, or he’s only just started to pay attention. But once Ivanka inevitably moves off stage (you don’t think she’ll accompany him everywhere, do you?), there is no telling what will come out of that mouth.
Yael Kohen is a writer and editor who is the author of We Killed: The Rise of Women in American Comedy. The views expressed here are her own.
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