Ivanka Trump said she had no intention to be a part of her father's government if he is president. | AP Photo Ivanka Trump says no plans to work in her dad's administration

Ivanka Trump is not planning to join her father’s administration, should Donald Trump deliver a come-from-behind victory on Nov. 8.

"No, I don't intend to be part of the government," Ivanka Trump told Fast Company as part of an interview published late Monday.


Donald Trump’s eldest daughter has been a frequent surrogate on the campaign trail, as well as a critical part of his sprawling real estate business.

The Republican nominee has floated the idea of putting his daughter in his cabinet, telling “First Coast News” in August that she would be a great addition to his administration.

"Well there are so many different ones to choose, I can tell you everybody would say -- 'Put Ivanka in! Put Ivanka in!' You know that, right?" Trump told reporter Angelia Savage.

"She's very popular, she's done very well. And you know Ivanka very well. But there really are so many that are talented people, like you," he said.

During the interview with Fast Company, Ivanka Trump also talked about the amount of negative press her family has received, saying she’s likely grown “tougher” because of the coverage.

"I mean, it's been a year and a half of enormous scrutiny, of my family, every business, every movement, action," Ivanka Trump said. "But I think that, you know, that sort of comes with the territory. And I think I've probably learned a lot through it and I've probably grown a bit tougher in terms of my resilience toward what is our thrown our way because, you know, I've read some very negative stuff.”

The interview occurred before the revelation earlier this month of a 2005 “Access Hollywood” tape in which the billionaire talks about being able to get away with sexual assault because he’s “a star.”

The tape and the subsequent emergence of a number of female accusers have sent Trump’s campaign into a tailspin in the final stretch of the presidential race.

Trump’s wife Melania has said she has accepted her husband’s apology for the past remarks, and Ivanka Trump offered a statement to Fast Company after the tape emerged.

"My father's comments were clearly inappropriate and offensive and I'm glad that he acknowledged this fact with an immediate apology to my family and the American people," she said.

