Much has been said about the political role Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner might play once Donald Trump takes office in January. Ivanka, a Trump Organization executive who also has her own lifestyle brand centered around working women, and Kushner, a real-estate heir who became one of his father-in-law’s most trusted advisers during his presidential campaign, have been taking on more and more responsibility as the president-elect inches closer to the White House.

Though Donald has said that Ivanka, along with her two brothers, Donald Jr. and Eric, will take the reins at the Trump Organization when he takes office, Ivanka has made it clear that she intends to take a greater role in pushing through policies aligned with the same maxims at the heart of her personal brand—paid maternity leave, helping working families afford child care, equal pay. In an interview with 60 Minutes just days after the election, Ivanka said that while she will officially serve merely as First Daughter, she’s said throughout the campaign that there are several issues she’s passionate about. “Wage equality, child care. These are issues that are important to me, really promoting opportunities for women,” she said, though she said her advocacy would not be in a “formal capacity.” Last week, Politico first reported that her slate of issues is growing to include climate change, as well. On Monday, Ivanka will sit down with former Vice President Al Gore to discuss the issue, according to a Trump press call. A source close to the First Daughter-to-be told me that her main focus will remain on issues related to women, but she is interested in learning about a host of other things now that she is in a unique position of power.

Her husband, Jared Kushner, has also emerged as a singular power broker within Donald Trump’s orbit, first rising through the ranks as the calm center of the otherwise tumultuous Trump campaign, and now, as a top adviser within his White House transition team. He was credited with the successful digital operation that helped propel his father-in-law to victory; reported to have influenced key hiring and firing decisions throughout; and has recently been reported to be mulling an official role within the White House. (An anti-nepotism law dating back to 1967 prohibits family members from serving in an official capacity. But the president has broad and far-reaching powers within the executive branch, and Kushner could act as an unpaid adviser, technically skirting the law while still exerting his influence.)

Now, Ivanka and Jared appear to be taking concrete steps to shore up their future on Capitol Hill, with a source confirming to the Hive on Monday that the couple is seriously considering a move to Washington D.C., although a representative for Ivanka denied that it is confirmed. CNN also reported the move, saying that the family plans to settle down in the nation’s capital with their three children.

Melania Trump, the incoming First Lady, has opted to stay in New York City with their 10-year-old son, Barron, until at least end of the school year in June, which has caused a great deal of hand-wringing over security at the Upper West Side school he attends. Last month, a Trump spokesperson said there “was obviously a sensitivity to pulling out a 10-year-old in the middle of the school year.”

Ivanka’s eldest daughter, 5, is in school in New York, but her two younger brothers are just 3 years old and 8 months old. According to CNN, the couple is already house hunting.