Visiting daddy at work! Ivanka shares sweet snap of her and 'personal assistant' baby Theodore at the White House as husband Jared is seen leaving for work early again 

  • Ivanka Trump posted sweet snap of baby Theodore at the White House Tuesday 
  • She seen holding the 10-month-old who she says is her 'personal assistant' 
  • Meanwhile, Jared Kushner, was seen leaving home to attend listening session
  • President Donald Trump met with county sheriffs earlier on Tuesday 
  • Administration returned to court to demand reinstatement of Muslim travel ban  

Baby Theodore has a new position in the White House as 'personal assistant' to his mother Ivanka Trump.

Ivanka shared a sweet photo of her and her 10-month-old son on Instagram as she held him while on the phone at the White House on Tuesday. 

'Taking a call in the White House with my personal assistant Theodore,' she wrote in the caption of the photo. 

Baby Theodore has a new position in the White House as 'personal assistant' to his mother Ivanka Trump. Ivanka shared a sweet photo of her and her 10-month-old son on Instagram as she held him while on the phone at the White House on Tuesday

Baby Theodore has a new position in the White House as 'personal assistant' to his mother Ivanka Trump. Ivanka shared a sweet photo of her and her 10-month-old son on Instagram as she held him while on the phone at the White House on Tuesday

The sweet photo was captured just days after Nordstrom presidents, Peter, Erik and Black Nordstrom, dropped Ivanka's clothing, handbags, shoes and accessories (Ivanka above on Friday)

The sweet photo was captured just days after Nordstrom presidents, Peter, Erik and Black Nordstrom, dropped Ivanka's clothing, handbags, shoes and accessories (Ivanka above on Friday)

An adorable Theodore appeared to be flashing a wide smile as his mother handled business. 

The photo was captured just a day after it was revealed that Nordstrom presidents, Peter, Erik and Black Nordstrom, sent an email criticizing President Donald Trump's ban on immigrants from seven Muslim-majority nations entering the US.

Just days before, the retail giant dropped Ivanka's clothing line. The Seattle-based retailer announced that they would no longer be carrying Ivanka's line of clothing, handbags, shoes and accessories.

That decision was due to poor sales of Ivanka's merchandise they said at the time. 

Meanwhile, Ivanka's husband, Jared Kushner, was spotted hurrying from the family's home Tuesday morning to attend a listening session at the White House alongside his father-in-law and president, Trump.

Kushner, who is the senior White House adviser, accompanied the president to the session in which Trump met with county sheriffs in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.

The Trump administration returned to court on Tuesday to argue it has broad authority over national security and to demand reinstatement of a travel ban on seven Muslim-majority countries that stranded refugees.

Justice Department attorneys made the case for Trump's contested travel ban to be reinstated, in a high-stakes hearing before a federal court of appeal in California.

Meanwhile, Ivanka's husband, Jared Kushner, was spotted hurrying from the family's home Tuesday morning to attend a listening session at the White House alongside his father-in-law and president, Trump

Meanwhile, Ivanka's husband, Jared Kushner, was spotted hurrying from the family's home Tuesday morning to attend a listening session at the White House alongside his father-in-law and president, Trump

Kushner, who is the senior White House adviser, accompanied Trump to a listening session in which the president met with county sheriffs

Kushner, who is the senior White House adviser, accompanied Trump to a listening session in which the president met with county sheriffs

The Trump administration returned to court Tuesday to demand reinstatement of its travel ban on 7 Muslim-majority countries that stranded refugees

The Trump administration returned to court Tuesday to demand reinstatement of its travel ban on 7 Muslim-majority countries that stranded refugees

The latest twist in the legal showdown comes four days after a federal judge suspended Trump's decree, opening US borders back up to refugees and travelers from the seven mostly-Muslim nations it targeted.

Three judges from the appellate court in San Francisco began hearing an hour of oral arguments to determine whether to lift the injunction, or uphold it.

A court spokesman said a ruling would likely come later this week.

Trump's January 27 executive order barred entry to all refugees for 120 days, and to travelers from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for 90 days, triggering chaos at US airports and worldwide condemnation.

The White House defends the decree as essential for national security, giving the new administration time to beef up vetting procedures to keep potential terrorists out of the country. 

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