Donald Trump Jr. and Family Welcomed Tristan

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Donald Trump Jr. and wife Vanessa Haydon welcomed son named Tristan Milos Trump, who named after his maternal grandfather, born Sunday at 2:59 am. Tristan joins his sister and Kai Madison Trump, 4, and Donald John Trump III, 2.

Donald tells, “Mother and baby are doing great. He’s looking forward to meeting you.”

Kai,Donald III and Tristan also have cousin, Arabella Rose, 2, whose mum is aunt Ivanka and grandpa Donald’s youngest, Barron William Trump, 5, who will enliven the playground.

Although they were known from wealth and success, Trump children still had to work hard to get ahead. Donald Jr told earlier this year during the Autism Speaks event in New York.

“It would be difficult to say we weren’t spoiled, you’d laugh at us, and your readers would laugh at us. But what they tried to do is we were spoiled in the right ways. When we were spoiled, we got great vacations, we got to travel, we got great schools, we got to do very interesting things, but they always kept us financially hungry, so we always had to work for anything we wanted.”

“And I don’t mean clean your room, and you get whatever you want. I mean, you start a project at the beginning of the summer, and at the end of the summer, you’re going to have earned what you wanted. They always kept us that way. We didn’t get everything we wanted whenever we wanted it. I think that element of hunger built an appetite for understanding work, appreciating the value of a dollar, not being afraid to get your hands dirty and get in and do something.”

“My first job, I was 14, and I worked as the dock attendant in Atlantic City,” he says. “It was at the casino, and we, in theory, owned them, but I was hooking up boats and electrical systems. Probably the bottom rung of the ladder.”

“I’m probably the first graduate of the Wharton School of Finance to move to Colorado to work in a bar for about a year just to get some stuff out of my system,” he says. “I’m a little bit more normal than most people would assume.”

“It was great. After graduating from Wharton, I wanted to make sure – if I’m going to work for him, he’s not going to subsidize my career at the expense of his business. I said ‘hey listen, if I’m going to do it, I’ve gotta go all-in. And if I’m going to do it, I have to make sure that’s what I want. I always knew it was, but I wanted to try something different – do the total antithesis of that, and see how I like it. It was great, it was fun, but when I got back into the working world – the real working world, in NYC – I knew I wanted to do that forever.”

“I owe my parents,” he says. “At the time, it would’ve been easier to say ‘hey, I’d really like that, that would be great,’ but they would’ve done us no favors. Both of my parents really did a good job.”

Welcomed to the world, Tristan Trump.