Ivanka Trump has spent the majority of her time in Washington cosplaying as a person who cares deeply about women’s empowerment. So even though she only cares about the advancement of one woman in particular, and uses her influence to mug for the camera and post the subsequent photos to Instagram like an influencer shilling Crest Whitestrips, you might think, in light of the events of the past two days, that she would at least release some milquetoast statement about how America belongs to all people, and her father has spent two years making the country great for everyone. You know, because women are her thing, and her racist dad just told four democratically elected congresswomen they don’t have the right to weigh in on how the U.S. government should be run, and also that they should go back to the third world hellholes from whence they came. But apparently, she can’t be bothered:

Almost two years after Charlottesville, when Mr. Trump refused to condemn white supremacists after their deadly clash with a crowd protesting them, presidential statements widely condemned as racist are still putting White House officials in the awkward position of having to defend comments they privately wish Mr. Trump had not made. But they are also causing less heartburn in the West Wing than they used to.

After Charlottesville, Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter and a White House adviser, issued her own statement on Twitter, saying there was “no place in society for racism, white supremacy and neo-nazis.” It was a notable corrective to her father.

On Monday, Ms. Trump declined to comment on her father’s latest remarks, which even some Republican lawmakers called “racist and xenophobic” and demanded an apology.

To be fair, Ivanka was a bit busy today, what with a jam-packed schedule of congratulating a company for hiring 25 workers (out of the 125 they pledged), and seemingly trying to take credit for Accenture’s retraining initiative (which was started about four years ago). And hey, maybe she was addressing the matter behind the scenes, like when she reportedly insisted to Gary Cohn after Charlottesville that her father was not a racist and didn‘t say any of the things he said at a press conference with cameras rolling.