Welcome to Balance of Power, bringing you the latest in global politics. If you haven’t yet, sign up here. There’s a synchronicity to the Trump family’s separate European trips this weekend. President Donald Trump will join world leaders attending the funeral of Pope Francis in Rome tomorrow, a somber occasion that will also resonate with the religious element of his support base. Meanwhile, his eldest son Donald Trump Jr. kicks off his own mini-tour of southeast Europe today, building up the business side of the family empire. Lara Trump, Eric Trump, Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr. at the US Capitol in Washington on Jan. 20. Photographer: Shawn Thew/EPA Power and money have always gone together, like garlic and slivovitz — the plum brandy that is eastern Europe’s native spirit. But their mutual interaction in the Trump world is unusually open. Trump Jr. has no official position in the US administration. His visit is a private matter, with events aimed at identifying business opportunities in the region, sources say. But it’s hard not to see a political thread running through his chosen destinations. They include Hungary, where Prime Minister Viktor Orban is a MAGA ally; and Romania, which drew the attention of US Vice President JD Vance over alleged discrimination against far-right candidates in its presidential election. Then there’s Serbia, where Trump Jr. met with Russia-friendly President Aleksandar Vučić just two months ago. Belgrade is also where the US president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner — who is married to Donald Jr.’s sister, Ivanka — plans a luxury hotel project. The source of the Trump family’s fascination with eastern Europe and especially the perennially volatile Balkan region is unclear. True, the president’s first wife, Ivana, was born in then Czechoslovakia, and First Lady Melania Trump originally hails from Slovenia. Perhaps it’s simply seen as territory ripe for business — and political — development. Either way, all eyes will be on the president’s European visit. But Donald Jr.’s trip may be the more consequential, both for the Trump family and the region at large. — Alan Crawford Donald Trump and Viktor Orban in Washington in May 2019. Photographer: Bloomberg |