Dozens of Trump administration officials — including the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner — still don’t have permanent security clearances more than a year after Inauguration Day.

The officials have been given temporary clearances that allow them to deal with sensitive information while the FBI continues to conduct background checks on them, The Washington Post reported.

Kushner, 37, is one of the president’s top advisers and has a broad portfolio of responsibilities, including bringing peace to the Mideast, reforming the criminal justice system and solving the opioid crisis — despite lacking any policy or political experience.

The clearance issue attracted new scrutiny after it was disclosed that top aide and accused wife-beater Rob Porter had been working in the administration since January 2017 with only a temporary clearance.

His permanent clearance was held up after the feds heard domestic violence allegations from his two ex-wives during a routine background check.

Chief of Staff John Kelly was aware of the allegations for months but staunchly defended Porter after they were made public earlier this week, as did communications director Hope Hicks, Porter’s latest squeeze.

Kelly and the White House only changed their tune after a photo was published of Porter’s first wife with a shiner — the result, she said, of being assaulted by her then-husband.

White House spokesman Raj Shah on Thursday defended the administration’s handling of security clearances, saying the FBI’s investigations take time.

“We should not short-circuit an investigation just because allegations are made. The truth must be determined, and that is what was going on with Rob Porter,” Shah said.

Porter, a rising star in the administration who helped draft Trump’s State of the Union speech, resigned after the allegations surfaced and was bounced from the White House on Thursday.