Playbook PM: The coming Biden PR blitz

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Aug 02, 2021 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Ryan Lizza, Eugene Daniels, Garrett Ross and Eli Okun

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DEPARTMENT OF CARTS AND HORSES — This morning we teased the White House comms plan to make August a "Month of Action." JOE, JILL, KAMALA, DOUG and a host of cabinet officials are planning a daily barrage of events during the congressional recess to promote Biden's agenda, including while he's on vacation this month.

Some additional details from a White House official:

— 14 Cabinet secretaries are fanning out to more than two dozen cities in 13 states and D.C.

— Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN is heading to Atlanta to talk "Build Back Better."

— Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG is going to New Jersey, Texas, and Nevada to talk BIF. (Editor's note: Who designed Pete's itinerary, the vice president? Where are the Midwest swing states?)

— Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH and Commerce Secretary GINA RAIMONDO will team up for an event in NYC next Wednesday.

We're always a tad skeptical of this sort of chest-thumping from government flaks, but FWIW the White House is also hyping the fact that the comms team has created "an internal war room" that will "lead this push, coordinate across departments and work closely with Cabinet agencies, Congressional leadership, and outside allies."

Of course, all of this may be putting the cart before the horse. Unless Congress actually acts on the infrastructure deal and reconciliation bill, and unless the White House fixes its messy response to the Delta surge and avoids any near-term economic setbacks, there won't be much action to promote in the "Month of Action."

MORE FROM THE AP: "Pro-Biden groups to spend $100 million on August ad blitz," by Jonathan Lemire: "An array of progressive and pro-White House groups plans to spend nearly $100 million to promote President Joe Biden's agenda over the next month to pressure Congress while lawmakers are on their August recess. …

"An outside coalition of progressive organizations launched a war room and is planning to host over 1,000 events and actions over the next six weeks, The Associated Press learned. The goal, officials said, was to bombard the home districts of members of Congress with ads — both televised and digital — to keep the pressure on to follow through on their votes as well as to underscore much of the agenda's popularity with the public."

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PANDEMIC

THE GLOBAL EFFORT — "Where a Vast Global Vaccination Program Went Wrong," by NYT's Benjamin Mueller and Rebecca Robbins: "Known as Covax, the program was supposed to be a global powerhouse, a multibillion-dollar alliance of international health bodies and nonprofits that would ensure through sheer buying power that poor countries received vaccines as quickly as the rich. Instead, Covax has struggled to acquire doses: It stands half a billion short of its goal. Poor countries are dangerously unprotected as the Delta variant runs rampant, just the scenario that Covax was created to prevent.

"The urgent need to vaccinate the world goes far beyond protecting people in poor nations. The longer the virus circulates, the more dangerous it can become, even for vaccinated people in wealthy countries. … Even as Covax officials scramble to fill that funding gap, the overriding question is whether the program can move beyond its mistakes, and beyond an imbalance of power that has left it at the mercy of wealthy countries and pharmaceutical companies."

"Refugees pushed to back of the line amid vaccine shortages," by AP's Victoria Milko and Aniruddha Ghosal in New Delhi

RIPPLE EFFECT — "Lack of Foreign Workers Has Seasonal Businesses Scrambling," by NYT's Patricia Cohen and Sydney Ember in Salt Lake City: "The Biden administration responded to frantic pleas from small businesses in the spring. It did not renew a pandemic-related suspension of the J-1 program, which provides short-term visas designed for foreign students who come to the United States to work and travel.

"Soon after, it raised the quota on temporary visas under the H-2B program for temporary nonagricultural workers, which are issued through a lottery. But travel restrictions, backlogs and delays at foreign consulates in approving applicants have still left businesses from Maine to California in the lurch."

CONGRESS

FOR YOUR RADAR — "3 congressional Democrats seemingly violated a federal transparency law by improperly disclosing financial trades," by Insider's Dave Levinthal, Warren Rojas and Camila DeChalus: "Three Democratic members of Congress appear to have violated a federal transparency law by disclosing their stock trades weeks or months late. Massachusetts Rep. LORI TRAHAN and Florida Reps. DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ and KATHY CASTOR each signaled their tardiness on thousands of dollars worth of financial transactions via their own recently filed congressional records.

"In Trahan's case, she sold up to $15,000 in the software company Stella Connect. … Wasserman Schultz, a former chair of the Democratic National Committee, purchased up to $15,000 in a telecommunications product company Westell Technologies in October 2020 but didn't disclose the trade until July 27, according to her report submitted to House officials. … Castor's latest congressional records show that she failed to disclose within the prescribed 45 days up to $45,000 worth of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. stock she acquired last summer."

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president's ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today.

 
 

POLICY CORNER

IMMIGRATION FILES — "Government watchdog launches review into troubled Fort Bliss facility for migrant children," by CNN's Priscilla Alvarez

"Biden administration sued by ACLU over migrant expulsions," by Sabrina Rodríguez: "The American Civil Liberties Union on Monday announced it will resume a lawsuit against the Biden administration to force an end to the use of a provision of U.S. health code known as Title 42 to expel migrant families arriving at the border. … The move to go back to court comes after negotiations between the ACLU and the Biden administration fell apart."

HANDLE WITH CARE — "Biden's child care plan faces a test: Building enough centers, hiring enough workers," by Eleanor Mueller: "President Joe Biden's proposal to help millions of more families afford child care must overcome a critical hurdle first: The nation currently lacks enough facilities and workers to staff them. While Biden's plan also includes money for new child care centers and hiring incentives, Democrats acknowledge that many families wouldn't immediately benefit from the infusion of resources. …

"At the height of the pandemic, 60 percent of child care programs around the country had closed and one-third of the child care workforce had lost their jobs. More than 1 in 4 child care facilities were still shuttered as of December. A survey released Tuesday by the National Association for the Education of Young Children found that 4 in 5 child care providers said they had a staffing shortage. More than 1 in 3 child care workers said they were considering leaving their job this year, and an equal number of providers said they were considering shutting down their programs."

CENSUS WATCH — "Census Data Change to Protect Privacy Rattles Researchers, Minority Groups," by WSJ's Paul Overberg: "A plan to protect the confidentiality of Americans' responses to the 2020 census by injecting small, calculated distortions into the results is raising concerns that it will erode their usability for research and distribution of state and federal funds.

"The Census Bureau is due to release the first major results of the decennial count in mid-August. … The bureau will adjust most of those statistics to prevent someone from recombining them in a way that would disclose information about an individual respondent. Testing by the bureau shows that improvements in data science, computing power and commercial databases make that feasible."

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

PULLOUT FALLOUT — "Thousands more Afghans can resettle in U.S. as refugees, says State Dept.," Reuters: "Thousands more Afghans who may be targets of Taliban violence due to their U.S. affiliations will have the opportunity to resettle as refugees in the United States under a new program announced by the State Department on Monday. …

"Those who worked as employees of contractors, locally employed staff and interpreters and translators for the U.S. government or armed forces are eligible for the new designation, as well as Afghans employed by a U.S.-based media organization or non-governmental organization (NGO), the State Department said. The new program for Afghans requires applicants to be referred by a U.S. agency or for the senior-most U.S. citizen employee of an NGO or media organization headquartered in the United States."

LOOKING FOR ANSWERS — "Havana Syndrome stokes fear and frustration among diplomats over response from State Department," by CNN's Kylie Atwood, Natasha Bertrand and Katie Bo Williams: "Of particular concern is a lack of information from leadership, including what some say has been a hands-off approach from Secretary of State Tony Blinken who has yet to meet with any of the State Department victims despite saying he would prioritize the incidents.

"Fear of the mysterious illness is impacting diplomats' career decisions, sources say, with some foreign service officers deciding against taking jobs that they worry could make them targets of the unexplained phenomenon that has sickened hundreds of US officials over the past few years. … Diplomats and intelligence sources who spoke to CNN said they want basic information such as the number of people affected and locations of the incidents -- data that the State Department used to release publicly in press briefings about the incidents in Cuba and China."

 

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JAN. 6 FALLOUT

BRINGING UP THE PAST — "CIA feud complicates Jan. 6 probe," by Betsy Woodruff Swan: " DAVID BUCKLEY is now the top Democratic staffer on the select committee investigating the insurrection. But 11 years ago, he was a CIA inspector general who made clear upon taking office that he wanted a cultural shift: Buckley sought a more aggressive approach to rooting out alleged wrongdoing in the agency, prioritizing probes that could lead to criminal prosecutions over inside-the-family resolutions, according to multiple people familiar with the dynamics there.

"The shift Buckley imposed was risky. And a dust-up inside the cloistered spy agency during his tenure there — linked to a case involving $3 million and numerous meals at Hooters — shows what's at stake when government watchdogs disagree over who counts as a whistleblower. It's a question Buckley may be called on to judge as part of his role in the Jan. 6 probe, and whistleblower advocates warn that his reputation could deter potential witnesses from coming forward."

POLITICS ROUNDUP

THE NEW MARCH ON WASHINGTON — "Dozens of legislators from other states to join Texas lawmakers in D.C. to lobby for voting bills," by WaPo's Vanessa Williams: "The lawmakers represent more than 20 states, including some in which Republican-led legislatures have passed or are considering new voting restrictions, and will urge senators to pass the For the People Act, or at least show progress on a federal voting law, before their summer recess. They are scheduled to rally outside the Capitol on Tuesday and press their case during other public events and private meetings."

RECALL ME MAYBE — "What election? California Democrats worry over recall apathy," by AP's Kathleen Ronayne and Michael Blood in Sacramento: "California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM has a simple way to beat back the recall election that could force him out of his job: Get Democrats to vote. But it may not be as easy as it sounds. …

"Interviews with about 20 voters across Sacramento, Fresno and Los Angeles reveal the challenges Newsom faces just two weeks before ballots start arriving in voters' mailboxes ahead of the Sept. 14 contest. While a handful of voters had decisive plans to vote for Newsom, many were aware of the recall but hadn't yet formed an opinion, did not know when the election was scheduled, or were lukewarm on Newsom."

PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION

GOING UP — "With uptick in enrollment, Howard University braces for housing shortage," by WaPo's Lauren Lumpkin

PLAYBOOKERS

TRANSITIONS — Sam Jammal is now chief of staff at Mosaic, a solar energy and home improvement financing company. He most recently was VP of regulatory affairs and assistant general counsel at Firefly, and is an Obama Commerce, Michael Bennet and Tony Cárdenas alum. … Erica Elliott Richardson is joining the Investment Company Institute as chief public comms officer. She most recently was a managing director at FTI Consulting. … Sarah Brown is now VP of biogas business development and external affairs at Nacelle Solutions. She previously was executive director of industry relations at the American Farm Bureau Federation.

ENGAGED — Katelyn Williams, senior manager of political and external affairs at the Edison Electric Institute and a Cathy McMorris Rodgers alum, and Ryan Dierker, senior policy adviser for Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.), got engaged Saturday at her family's place in Pound Ridge, N.Y. Pic Another pic

WEEKEND WEDDING — Irene Lin, campaign manager for Wisconsin Senate candidate Tom Nelson, and Girma Parris, who teaches political science at Case Western Reserve, had a wedding party at Abigail DC on Saturday. The two met at an "Ideas and Politics" Ph.D. seminar at Johns Hopkins and got married Jan. 20 at the courthouse in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. SPOTTED at the party: Chantale Wong, Jennifer Van Der Heide, Antonia Pogacar, Namrata Mujumdar, Illy Jaffer, Dan Mauer, Diana Hwang, Anh Phan, Nisha Jain and Sirat Attapit.

BONUS BIRTHDAY: Rep. Burgess Owens (R-Utah) (7-0)

 

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California Today: A California Today Farewell

Reflecting on almost three years of chronicling the biggest news in the Golden State.
Yosemite National Park in 2018.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Good morning.

A little while after I moved to Texas in 2016, someone told me that Dallas is an easy place to live, but a hard place to love. I've thought about that description a lot — not so much because of what it says about Dallas (although it's true), but because its inverse maps pretty neatly onto the Golden State.

California, with its stunning natural beauty and its infinite diversity, is an easy place to love. But it can be a difficult place to live.

Every day for the better part of three years, I've tried to capture that duality in some small way for the readers of California Today.

I've interviewed artists, activists, historians, scientists, governors, senators and mayors. I talked with a Van Nuys family about what it's like to live in your car, and a Santa Rosa couple about what it's like to lose a home to a wildfire, only to have to flee again two years later.

I've written about earthquakes, drought, protests, politics (so much politics), policing, museum exhibitions and music, sometimes in the same newsletter. I asked a Japanese American actor whose face I grew up seeing about Asian representation in Hollywood, and former Gov. Jerry Brown about the Doomsday Clock.

I learned more about the lives of Biddy Mason, Larry Itliong, Dorothea Lange, Bayard Rustin and Ahn Chang-Ho.

And yet, now, as I say goodbye to a job that has taken up more mental real estate than is probably healthy, what stands out most in my mind is the community we've built here.

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Thousands of people joined a protest in Los Angeles in June 2020 after the death of George Floyd.Bryan Denton for The New York Times

Over the past wrenching year and a half, I was fortunate to be able to do most of my work from home. Still, marking the passage of time by chronicling death counts and lockdowns, unsurprisingly, took an emotional toll.

Hearing from readers — about how you were surviving, or simply that you found the information in California Today useful — was a source of human connection in a period of profound isolation that kept me going.

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I also had smart, creative colleagues like Sona Patel, Julie Bloom, Marie Tae McDermott and so many others across The Times newsroom, who helped answer our most pressing questions and made sure the newsletter made it to your inbox each morning.

Of course, the pandemic, catastrophic fires and widespread demands for criminal justice reform didn't exactly bond Californians in common cause. Rather, they shined a light on our foundational divides and the stubbornness of our biggest problems.

We still have to contend with unsustainable housing costs, which are forcing out many of the same Californians who have for months risked their lives to do essential work. We are facing a future marked by extreme heat and smoke-filled skies. Oh, and we have that election coming up over whether to remove our governor from office.

But I'm hopeful. What I've seen unite Californians, for all of our foibles and contradictions, is that we never stop trying to bridge the gap between the California Dream and our messy, earthbound reality.

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Besides, I'm not going anywhere. I'll still be living in Los Angeles, learning and writing for The Times about the state that — in spite of everything — I love most.

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Here's what else to know today

Vickie Gaddy, a nurse at an intensive care unit in Santa Monica. Doctors at the hospital say more younger people with Covid-19 are being sent to the I.C.U.Isadora Kosofsky for The New York Times

By Jordan Allen and Mariel Wamsley

  • They thought the worst of the pandemic was behind them. Then a new wave of cases arrived at the I.C.U. at Providence Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica.
  • As coronavirus cases rise across the United States, the fight against the pandemic is focused on an estimated 93 million people who are eligible for shots but have chosen not to get them. As for who these people are? It boils down to about two groups.
  • A survey of data from 10 states shows that more than one million doses have gone to waste since the nation began administering Covid-19 vaccines in December.
  • According to The San Francisco Chronicle, millennials are driving the latest coronavirus surge.
  • Cal Matters reports that low-income Californians enrolled in Medi-Cal have been vaccinated at the lowest rates in the state.
  • The U.S. Forest Service, which is responsible for a large portion of California's land, has allowed forest fires to burn for centuries as a strategy for thinning out overgrowth. The Los Angeles Times explains why many state and local agencies disagree with this method and have focused instead on stomping out fires early.
  • The Dixie fire is burning 244,888 acres, up 500 acres from Saturday, The Enterprise-Record reports. It is now the 11th largest fire in state history.
  • A new study, published in the journal Nature Communications, draws on multiple areas of research to find out how many future lives will be lost as a result of rising temperatures if humanity keeps producing greenhouse gas emissions at high rates. The findings are soberingly high.
  • Two people, Anthony Barajas, who was popular on TikTok, and Rylee Goodrich, were each shot in the head at a theater in Corona, in what the district attorney said was an unprovoked attack.
  • Disney's new movie "Jungle Cruise," starring Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt, arrived in theaters and on Disney+ over the weekend. Depressing ticket sales suggest that the Delta variant might continue to disrupt moviegoing.
  • After a 13-month delay, Randy Shell at Jacobs Park will open on Friday, according to The Del Mar Times. The 10,000-person capacity outdoor concert venue will be the new home of the San Diego Symphony, and the rest of the site will be a public park for most of the year.
  • Read our conversation with Snoop Dogg on how he has transcended his hip-hop roots and become culturally ubiquitous, growing from a shy musician to a multiplatform entrepreneur with several new ventures in the cannabis industry.

California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: CAtoday@nytimes.com. Were you forwarded this email? Sign up for California Today here and read every edition online here.

Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, graduated from U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter.

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