Highlights:
- Tiffany Trumps gets engaged to her boyfriend at the White House
- It is Donald Trump’s last day at the White House today
- Michael Boulos, Tiffany’s fiancé, is the heir to a multibillion dollar conglomerate
The youngest daughter of the President of the United States of America, Donald Trump, on Tuesday, announced that she is engaged to boyfriend Michael Boulos. It is also the last day of Donald Trump in the White House.
The first daughter posted on Instagram an image of the couple standing in the White House colonnade with the caption, “It has been an honor to celebrate many milestones, historic occasions and create memories with my family here at the White House, none more special than my engagement to my amazing fiancé Michael! Feeling blessed and excited for the next chapter!”
Boulos shared the same photo on his own Instagram account, with the caption, “Got engaged to the love of my life! Looking forward to our next chapter together.”
He also commented on his fiancee’s post, writing, “Love you honey.”
Tiffany Trump, 27, is the only child of the president from his second wife Marla Maples and graduated from the Georgetown University’s law school last spring whereas Michael Boulos, 23, is heir to a multibillion dollar Nigerian conglomerate.
After growing up in Lagos, he attended college in London, the city where the couple was first photographed together back in January 2018.
Tiffany Trump and Boulos have stayed under the radar when compared to the older children of president Trump whom he shares with ex-wife Ivana Trump: Don Jr., 43; Ivanka, 39; and Eric, 37 (Her youngest sibling, Barron, 14, is her father’s only child with first lady Melania Trump.)
However, Boulos has been pictured at several Trump events over the last couple of years, which includes the president’s February State of the Union address last year. His own family has also spent Thanksgiving with hers at Mar-a-Largo.
Tiffany Trump reappeared in the political spotlight when she came forward to campaign for her father’s re-election over the summer, as she appealed to the young voters in a speech at the Republican National Convention. She also headlined events in Michigan, Minnesota, Florida and North Carolina in the months leading up to the vote.
Back in October, Tiffany Trump made headlines at a “Trump Pride” event held in Tampa where she hit out at the media and the “fabricated lies” surrounding her father’s presidency. In her speech, Trump said that “prior to politics, he supported gays, lesbians, the L-G-B-Q-I-I-A-plus community,” fumbling the letters for groups covered under the widely accepted initialism.
Her comments, which included a claim that President Donald Trump will find a cure for AIDS in the coming 10 years, sparked ridicule across the social media platforms. The LGBTQ organization GLAAD also responded by tweeting a reminder about their Trump Accountability Project, which “catalogues the anti-LGBTQ statements and actions” – of which they documented more than 150 – by his administration.