‘He’s On Saudi Payroll For $2Bn’: Ossoff’s Huge Revelation On Trump Family, Exposes Ivanka’s Husband

The Saudi Payroll Scandal: Senator Ossoff Exposes the $2 Billion Kushner Connection and the ‘Mar-a-Lago Mafia’s’ Global Web of Corruption

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In a political landscape often defined by carefully managed narratives and poll-tested rhetoric, Senator Jon Ossoff has delivered a scorching indictment of the current administration, peeling back the layers of what he describes as the most “spectacular” heights of corruption in American history. Speaking to a crowd in Augusta, Georgia, Ossoff did not mince words, revealing a series of bombshell allegations concerning the Trump family’s international financial dealings, specifically focusing on Jared Kushner’s reported $2 billion connection to the Saudi Arabian government. The Senator’s speech, which moved seamlessly from global geopolitical failures to the intimate healthcare struggles of Georgians, paints a picture of a nation whose priorities have been fundamentally hijacked by a “coin-operated” political system that rewards billionaire donors while leaving ordinary citizens to suffer the consequences of a hollowed-out social safety net.

At the heart of Ossoff’s revelation is the figure of Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump’s husband, who served as a senior advisor in the White House and was a primary architect of Middle East policy. According to Ossoff, Kushner is currently on a Saudi payroll to the tune of $2 billion . This staggering sum of money, allegedly secured shortly after his departure from government service, raises profound questions about the nature of the diplomatic work he performed while in office. Ossoff pointed out the sheer audacity of a “princling” like Kushner leading American diplomacy while simultaneously soliciting billions of dollars from the very shakes and princes he was supposed to be negotiating with on behalf of the American people . “The rules are for us, not for them,” Ossoff declared, highlighting a growing sentiment that the political elite operate within a separate reality of unchecked financial gain and zero accountability.

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The corruption, however, is not limited to Kushner. Ossoff expanded his critique to the broader “Mar-a-Lago mafia,” noting that a company owned in part by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. has been actively pitching drone interceptors to Gulf Kingdoms during the ongoing conflict . These revelations suggest a blurring of the lines between national defense policy and private family profit that is unprecedented in modern American history. While the administration demands $200 billion to fund a war that Ossoff claims “no one voted for and no one can explain,” the President’s own family members appear to be positioning themselves to profit from the military-industrial complex that the war fuels . This $200 billion figure is particularly galling when put into perspective: it could fund a full decade of nationwide universal pre-kindergarten, a program that would fundamentally transform the lives of millions of American children . Instead, that wealth is being funneled into a conflict characterized by “daily, hourly lying to the American public” regarding the status of the war and the nature of the agreements reached .

Ossoff provided a grim review of the administration’s record on this conflict, noting the series of contradictory and premature declarations of victory. From Day 10, when the President claimed the war was “very complete,” to Day 40, when he declared “total and complete victory,” the reality on the ground has told a different story . As of Day 49, the Strait of Hormuz remained closed despite Trump’s claims to the contrary, and Iranian-backed forces had reportedly hit a cargo ship . The human and material cost of this engagement is staggering: thirteen brave Americans killed, hundreds wounded, thousands of civilians dead, and military equipment destroyed that will take years to replace . Furthermore, the strategic goals of the conflict appear to have been utterly missed. The Iranian regime remains intact, its ability to throttle global energy supplies is undiminished, and its stockpile of highly enriched uranium—which it only began assembling after Trump shredded the Obama-era Iran deal—continues to grow .

The Senator’s critique then turned inward, addressing the systemic rot that allowed such a “depraved” leadership to take hold. He cited the Citizens United Supreme Court decision as the “worst court decision in modern American history,” arguing that it turned American politics into a money-in, favors-out machine . This systemic corruption, Ossoff argued, is the reason why insurance companies are allowed to deny life-saving procedures, why big tech firms can spy on citizens and sell their private data, and why the ultra-rich receive tax cuts while the cost of living for everyone else continues to skyrocket . In this “lazy, cynical expedience,” both political parties often find themselves serving donors rather than the people, resulting in a politics “unmoored from fixed moral principles” .

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Nowhere is the cost of this moral failure more evident than in Georgia’s healthcare crisis. Ossoff described the situation as an “emergency” that state leaders have tried to dress up as normal . Georgia currently has the second highest uninsured rate in the nation and the third fewest mental health providers . Perhaps most shocking is the statistic that a child born in Georgia today has a shorter life expectancy than a child born in Lebanon, a country that has been in a state of intermittent war for decades, despite Georgia’s economy being 40 times larger than Lebanon’s national economy . This “needless death and suffering” is not an accident; it is a choice made by leaders who have blocked Medicaid expansion while overseeing the closure of 21 hospitals in 20 years .

The human stories behind these statistics are heart-wrenching. Ossoff shared the story of a Monroe County mother of three with cancer who was denied a liver transplant and forced to fight her insurance company while being told she had only six months to live . He spoke of a retired teacher who paid $100,000 into a cancer policy only to have her claims denied upon diagnosis . These are not isolated incidents but represent the “tip of the iceberg” in a system where the “profound values and priorities problem” mentioned by civil rights leader Marian Wright Edelman has become a life-and-death reality . While women hemorrhage in Georgia labor wards due to a lack of prenatal care, their leaders are in Atlanta “having a steak at the Palm,” handing out tax dollars to the very donors who fund their campaigns .

'He's On Saudi Payroll For $2Bn': Ossoff's Huge Revelation On Trump Family,  Exposes Ivanka's Husband

Ultimately, Ossoff’s message is one of urgent, desperate change. He spoke of the young couples unable to afford a first home, the students needing food stamps despite working through college, and the South Georgia farmers waiting years for federal hurricane aid . These people, regardless of their political party, are looking for leaders who will solve problems rather than recite poll-tested talking points. The “Mar-a-Lago mafia” may have taken corruption to new heights, but Ossoff believes that by addressing the root causes of this rot—from campaign finance to healthcare access—America can reclaim its moral compass and achieve great national successes once again. The choice, he argues, belongs to the people of Georgia and the nation at large to stop pretending that those responsible for this misery are “competent, serious people” and instead demand a government that serves the many rather than the few.