“I see a lot of similarities between Jordan and her father,” said Miriam Wheeler, co-head of the real estate finance group in the Americas at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which has lent the developers money. “But I think she’s also bringing fresh ideas to the company.”

While Jordan is the most-visible of Selig’s children at the firm, her older brother David also works there. Her sister Lauren left the business in 2012 and now produces films. That family involvement sets the company apart from other developers.

“You’re not doing deals with an institutional landlord,” said Matt Walters, a CBRE Group senior vice president who has represented some of the Seligs’ tenants. “You’re doing deals with a massive mom-and-pop operation.”

Martin and Jordan admit that working with family comes with pros and cons and there are inevitable disagreements, particularly when it comes to politics.

In a city where Donald Trump supporters are a distinct minority, Martin isn’t shy about backing the president. “He’s the best guy around,” said Martin, who donated $5,600 in April to Trump’s 2020 re-election campaign, as well as $50,000 to the Trump Victory joint fundraising committee.

Jordan, who has made political donations to Republicans and Democrats, said she doesn’t support Trump. She’d also rather not talk about the president. When the interview turned to politics, she tried to steer the conversation back to their new developments.

“While I appreciate my father’s willingness to talk about politics, I wouldn’t mind redirecting the conversation,” she said, after which Martin insisted, “Go ahead, ask me anything you want.”

Both said that his views haven’t affected their business. But it has drawn some unwanted attention. This year and last, protesters gathered outside the Seligs’ headquarters, which also houses a local office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, to draw attention to family separations at the border. In one testy exchange, Martin asked demonstrators why they don’t “get a job.”

Other protesters have questioned how Selig, once a refugee himself, could provide space to an administration with such hard-line immigration policies.

“It’s a government lease” and they have a right to put in whatever agency they want, he said, waving away the matter. “I don’t judge that.”