Since going to work for his father-in-law in 2017, Jared Kushner has failed to accomplish virtually all of the tasks he’s been assigned, from solving the opioid crisis to re-inventing the entire government. Sure, he played a role in passing a criminal-reform bill, but that legislation had wide bipartisan support, even in these deeply partisan times. Elsewhere, Kushner’s dearth of achievements can be directly attributed to his complete and utter lack of experience, a circumstance that led U.S. officials to warn last year that the Boy Prince of New Jersey was being targeted by countries that saw him as an easy mark, and which was one reason the White House’s personnel security office tried and failed to stop him from obtaining a top-secret clearance. A top Palestinian negotiator sees him as a glorified “real-estate agent.” His texting habit with a murderous leader who reportedly boasted about having the First Son-in-Law in his pocket has become a point of contention in the administration. He actually believed he could convince Democrats to agree to build Donald Trump’s wall, and dragged out a government shutdown only to have it blow up in his face. “He’s a total nonentity,” as one senior Democratic aide put it. Yet according to young Jared, not only is he about to tackle two major issues that have eluded more competent people for nearly 50 years, but his total lack of experience is a good thing, something someone who doesn’t have the faintest clue what he’s doing would say. Per Politico:

With a headlong plunge into immigration reform and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Kushner is presenting his political inexperience as an asset, telling lawmakers he is free of preconceived notions that stymied previous attempts. His air of breezy self-assurance in the private meetings he is conducting to tease his plans at times astounds the battle-scarred veterans of past such efforts. Critics complain, too, that his briefings are often woefully short on detail.

But hey, what Ivanka’s husband lacks in relevant knowledge or a plan he makes up for in . . . PowerPoint slides: