Ivanka Trump, juggling dual roles of White House adviser and daughter of the president, said in an interview aired Wednesday that the United States might need to admit more refugees from Syria, a pointed public departure from one of her father’s bedrock populist positions.

Ivanka Trump’s comments, which seemed to question the basis for President Donald Trump’s two executive orders that tried to bar migrants from Syria and other predominantly Muslim nations, set off a minor scramble in the West Wing. Advisers grappled with a political problem unique to Donald Trump’s family-business White House: how to manage an officially empowered daughter who is prone to challenging elements of the president’s conservative agenda.

“I think there is a global humanitarian crisis that’s happening, and we have to come together and we have to solve it,” Ivanka Trump told NBC when asked about the refugee crisis in Syria, which has created a nativist backlash in European countries.

Asked whether that would include admitting Syrian refugees to the United States, she replied: “That has to be part of the discussion. But that’s not going to be enough in and of itself.”

The remarks, in an interview that was recorded Tuesday, came at the end of Ivanka Trump’s rocky 24-hour trip this week to Germany, her first official foray since taking a West Wing office last month.

A spokeswoman for Ivanka Trump did not respond to questions about her position on immigration — or about whether her remarks were intended to pressure her father.

But two advisers to Donald Trump, who declined to be identified talking about an internal White House dispute, described the statement as a political misstep. Her comments, they said, revealed a simmering private policy debate in the White House that pits Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, against hard-core nationalists like the president’s chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, and the policy adviser Stephen Miller, who see the crackdown on immigration from Muslim nations as fulfilment of a core campaign promise to Donald Trump’s white working-class base.

Breitbart News, the conservative website formerly run by Bannon, posted an article about her remarks that sat atop its list of most-read stories on Wednesday. It was followed by thousands of comments questioning Ivanka Trump’s commitment to the populist causes that propelled her rougher-hewn father to the White House.

The United States admitted more than 13,000 refugees from Syria in 2016, before Donald Trump proposed restrictions. Despite his hard line, support has been rising for admitting more migrants from the Middle East country, now in its seventh year of civil war; 58 percent of registered voters in a recent Quinnipiac Poll favoured an increase in immigration from Syria, 14 percent more than in a survey conducted in late 2015.

In the days after Donald Trump’s election, Democrats and some moderate Republicans expressed hope that Ivanka Trump and Kushner would act as a moderating and stabilizing force in a West Wing dominated by the mercurial Bannon, who viewed himself as a disrupter intent on dismantling major components of the federal government.

That liberal crown has never fit perfectly: The husband-and-wife team, while powerful and socially progressive, have mostly been reluctant to challenge the president publicly and have lost significant battles, most recently an attempt to preserve federal funding for Planned Parenthood.

Questions about Ivanka Trump’s ambiguous West Wing arrangement took centre stage during the Berlin trip to attend the G-20 women’s conference, where German political and media figures questioned whether her ascent was a product of merit or dynastic privilege.

At one point, Ivanka Trump was booed and hissed as she sought to defend her father’s record on empowering women, and at times she struggled to define precisely what her responsibilities in the West Wing entailed.

“I am listening and I am learning and I am defining ways in which I think I will be able to have an impact,” she said.

A person close to Ivanka Trump said she took the mixed reception in stride, and said she was not surprised that her father’s critics would vent their ire on her.

Ivanka Trump was deeply moved by televised images of children dying from a sarin gas attack this month in Idlib province in northern Syria. But she denied a claim by her brother, Eric, that her reaction influenced the president’s decision to launch a retaliatory missile strike on a government air base in Syria. In Berlin, Ivanka Trump told reporters that this was a “flawed interpretation.”

But even the unveiling of her first major initiative — to support female entrepreneurs — hit another bump in Berlin.

White House officials were taken by surprise when Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany announced at the Berlin summit meeting Ivanka Trump’s project, a World Bank fund to provide female entrepreneurs with financial and logistical services. The money would be part of a donor trust fund and go to women in developing countries, according to a World Bank official who briefed reporters on Wednesday.

Ivanka Trump — who will promote the initiative through public and media appearances — will not solicit funds or have authority over how the money is spent, according to a senior administration official, who declined to be identified by name when briefing reporters because the program was still being developed. Funding decisions will be made by corporate donors and the participating countries, including Canada, Germany and several Middle Eastern nations.

The fund was Ivanka Trump’s idea, and was passed to the World Bank’s president, Jim Yong Kim, before he mentioned it to Merkel, the administration official said.

Ivanka Trump’s position on Syrian refugees reflects a minority view within the White House, where she has taken on the role of trying quietly to affect her father’s policies on the margins instead of applying the public pressure it often takes to sway the cable TV-focused president.

But it also represented a view that her father himself once held.

In a September 2015 interview with Bill O’Reilly, then a host at Fox News, Donald Trump said he believed the United States needed to accept some refugees from Syria. “I hate the concept of it, but on a humanitarian basis, with what’s happening, you have to,” Donald Trump said.

At another point he called it an “unbelievable humanitarian problem.”

In pictures: US missile strike against Syria Show all 7 1 /7 In pictures: US missile strike against Syria In pictures: US missile strike against Syria The guided-missile destroyer USS Porter (DDG 78) launches a tomahawk land attack missile in the Mediterranean Sea AP In pictures: US missile strike against Syria The United States military launched at least 50 tomahawk cruise missiles at al-Shayrat military airfield near Homs, Syria, in response to the Syrian military's alleged use of chemical weapons in an airstrike in a rebel held area in Idlib province EPA In pictures: US missile strike against Syria Shayrat airfield in Syria Getty Images In pictures: US missile strike against Syria US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Ross (DDG 71) fires a tomahawk land attack missile in Mediterranean Sea Reuters In pictures: US missile strike against Syria US Navy guided-missile destroyer USS Ross (DDG 71) fires a tomahawk land attack missile in Mediterranean Sea Reuters In pictures: US missile strike against Syria President Donald Trump speaks at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Fla., after the US fired a barrage of cruise missiles into Syria in retaliation for this week's gruesome chemical weapons attack against civilians AP In pictures: US missile strike against Syria Syria's President Bashar al-Assad Reuters

But soon after, Donald Trump backtracked, and said he did not want to see new refugees coming in.

His daughter’s comments not only roiled a White House that has been fighting a court battle to enact his executive order, the blocking of which Donald Trump has viewed as an unacceptable defeat, but were also another reminder to her West Wing rivals that Ivanka Trump is going to be treated as a policy adviser in her official government capacity.