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Jared Kushner said to lose top secret security clearance

Attorney says downgrade allowing Trump’s son-in-law and aide to only access ‘secret’ material will not affect work, after months of operating under temporary arrangement

Jared Kushner at a White House meeting with US President Donald Trump, January 11, 2018. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
Jared Kushner at a White House meeting with US President Donald Trump, January 11, 2018. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner has had his security clearance downgraded and can no longer view top secret materials,news website Politico reported Tuesday.

Kushner is one of dozens of White House aides who have been working without permanent security clearances for the better part of a year.

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly, in a memo released last week, had set a February 23 deadline for halting access to top secret information for those whose applications have been pending since June 1 or before that date. Some officials are expected to leave their posts as a result, while others will continue working with reduced — or no — access to classified information.

Kushner now has access only up to the level of “secret.”

White House officials had not ruled out the idea of Trump potentially using his executive authority to grant Kushner a permanent security clearance, which would circumvent the traditional process. But Trump made clear Friday he would not be intervening.

“I will let General Kelly make that decision and he’s going to do what’s right for the country and I have no doubt he’ll make the right decision,” Trump said during a joint press conference with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, where he addressed the security clearance issue.

At the press conference, the president heaped praise on Kushner — who has been tasked with solving the Mideast conflict — calling him a master dealmaker and saying he’d “done an outstanding job.” He noted Kushner does not take a salary and complained he’d been treated “very unfairly” by the press.

US President Donald Trump alongside his son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner during a meeting at the White House, February 23, 2017. (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb)

Trump also complained he’d inherited a “broken” background check system in which it can take “months and months and months” for full security clearance to be granted, even for people without complicated financial holdings.

The White House’s handling of security clearances has come under intense scrutiny in the wake of revelations that former White House staff secretary Rob Porter had worked for more than a year with only interim clearance.

Porter, whose job gave him constant access to the most sensitive of documents, had been accused of domestic abuse by his two ex-wives. The White House has repeatedly changed its timeline about who knew what and when about the allegations, and the scandal has weakened Kelly’s standing, both among staffers and the president.

The debate over security clearance has also heightened existing tensions between Kushner and Kelly.

Both the White House and Kushner’s lawyer have insisted that, regardless of any action taken by Kelly, Kushner’s work will be unaffected by the change.

“Nothing that has taken place will affect the valuable work that Jared is doing,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters earlier this week. “He continues and will continue to be a valued member of the team. He’ll continue to do the important work that he’s been focused on for the last year.”

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly, left, talks with White House senior adviser Jared Kushner as they walk to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Thursday, August 3, 2017, in Washington, DC. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Kushner’s attorney, Abbe Lowell, said the new policy would “not affect Mr. Kushner’s ability to continue to do the very important work he has been assigned by the president.”

And Kelly said he had “full confidence” in Kushner’s “ability to continue performing his duties in his foreign policy portfolio,” which includes working on the Middle East peace process and US-Mexico relations.

Kushner’s portfolio once included the US relationships with China and Japan and a host of domestic priorities, including infrastructure, trade and economic development. But his free-wheeling reach in the foreign policy space — which was viewed as undermining Secretary of State Rex Tillerson — had already been curtailed somewhat under Kelly.

Still, Kushner is reportedly said to review the highly secret presidential daily brief and has been in the room for some of Trump’s most consequential domestic and foreign policy decisions.

Kelly’s change only applies to clearances for access to the apex of the classification pyramid — top secret and sensitive compartmented information — not to lower-level clearances required to handle secret or confidential information. Much, but not all, of Kushner’s work on the two issues singled out by Kelly are handled at those lower levels, the official said.

Kushner has been forced to repeatedly correct omissions in his “SF-86,” the government-wide form used to apply for clearances, as well as his financial disclosure forms, which experts said could delay or even nix his chances of earning a clearance through the normal process. Kushner has also come under scrutiny in special counsel Robert Mueller’s ongoing investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

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