About eight days after his father-in-law was elected President of the US in November last year, Kushner had met with Wu Xiaohui, the chairman Anbang Insurance Group, a Chinese financial behemoth with estimated assets of USD 285 billion and an "ownership structure shrouded in mystery," according to an extensive report in the New York Times.
The meeting at the Waldorf Astoria hotel in Midtown Manhattan "was a mutually auspicious moment" and Wu and Kushner, husband of Trump's daughter Ivanka, were nearing agreement on a joint venture for redevelopment of prime New York real-estate property, 41-floor building at 666 Fifth Avenue, a "crown jewel" of the Kushner family real-estate empire.
After Anbang acquired Waldorf, such were the security concerns that Barack Obama broke with presidential protocol and did not stay at the Waldorf when he visited New York for the opening of a session of the UN General Assembly in September 2015.
American officials cited security, counterintelligence and cyber-surveillance concerns for the same.
Following the meeting, Wu toasted Trump and declared his desire to meet the President-elect, whose ascension, he was sure, would be good for global business.
"But with Kushner laying the groundwork for his own White House role, the meeting at the Waldorf shines a light on his family's multibillion-dollar business, Kushner Companies, and on the ethical thicket he would have to navigate while advising his father-in-law on policy that could affect his bottom line," the NYT report added.
The Anbang talks began roughly six months ago "well before
the President-elect's victory," Kushner's spokeswoman Risa Heller said but just at the time Trump clinched the Republican nomination.
"As for conflicts of interest, Kushner would be required to make limited financial disclosures, which could give the public a clearer picture of his holdings.
"And, unlike Trump, who as President will be exempt from conflict-of-interest laws, he would have to recuse himself from decisions with a direct and predictable effect on his financial interests," the NYT report said.
A WilmerHale partner Jamie Gorelick said that while plans were not final, Kushner was taking significant steps to extricate himself from the family business.
Kushner will resign as chief executive of Kushner Companies, and though the law does not require it, he would divest "substantial assets", she added.
