When Jared Kushner first joined the White House as a senior adviser to his father-in-law, he was tasked with bringing peace to to the Middle East, solving the opioid crisis, overhauling the government’s I.T. infrastructure, and, in his spare time, “re-inventing the entire government.” Twenty months later, how’s that all working out for him? Not so great! To be fair, Kushner’s lack of progress can probably be attributed to a number of factors, including the period in which he had his security clearance downgraded, distractions at the family business, and his utter lack of experience with any of the tasks at hand. But that’s O.K.! Because the Boy Prince of New Jersey has been given a shiny new assignment: convincing millionaires and billionaires that Donald Trump’s administration isn’t the royally incompetent, absolute clusterf--k it would appear to be.

Politico reports that young Jared has been crisscrossing the country to appear at various events attended by elite donors and make the case that while his father-in-law’s administration looks like a hot mess of incompetence with a dash of narcissistic personality disorder and a sprig of complete and utter chaos (plus, a heaping dose of unbridled corruption on the side), nothing could be further from the truth. Some of these people are actually buying it:

His tour began last month, when he appeared at a donor retreat hosted by Ryan in Jackson Hole, Wyo. At a mountaintop restaurant, Kushner—who saw the event as an opportunity to address a group of establishment-aligned donors who weren’t fully on board with Trump’s 2016 campaign—spoke on a range of policy issues. His wife, Ivanka Trump, attended with him.

Karen Kemmerer, a Wyoming-based contributor who was in the audience that evening, acknowledged she initially felt some skepticism toward Kushner, a newcomer to government. But she said she came away impressed.

“I think certainly for my husband and I, before meeting either of them, we had on our minds like, ‘What backgrounds and capabilities do they really have to be working in the White House? What kind of experiences do they have? What are they doing? I don’t want to say we had a negative impression, but we were kind of neutral,” she said. “So it was really very eye-opening to hear from both of them that night. And I think the majority of the other donors felt the same way.”

Other events have included a dinner at New York City’s Pierre Hotel—attended by New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, billionaire investor Ira Renner, Democratic mega-donor Haim Saban, Chicago Cubs owner Todd Ricketts, and billionaire hedge-fund manager Paul Singer—where the First Son-in-Law detailed his work on trade, prison reform, and “the administration’s unorthodox approach to foreign policy.“ (According to longtime Kushner pal Ken Kurson, donors “walked in doubting that the president has serious, thoughtful people around him,” but “left feeling reassured”). Last week, he headlined a fund-raiser in Ohio for Representative Jim Jordan, who‘s been accused by wrestlers he coached at Ohio State of ignoring sexual abuse (Jordan has denied knowing anything about the abuse). While Kushner—whose event at the Pierre came on the same day Donald Trump claimed that Democrats invented the 3,000 deaths in Puerto Rico to make him look bad—may have finally found his niche, Boy Wonder has reportedly told people “he doesn’t expect to have a formal position on the 2020 campaign and will remain in the White House.”