Playbook PM: What the Hill press corps should be reading

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Feb 16, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Rachael Bade, Garrett Ross and Eli Okun

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The "Otter" app has become a favorite tool among Washington journalists — a mostly smooth, fast transcription service used by the D.C. press corps to share audio bites from the president and lawmakers. It makes life simpler and increases access among the press to powerful figures. On Capitol Hill, poolers have used it to share files during the pandemic.

But the app presents its own vulnerabilities and risks, as our colleague Phelim Kine recounts in his journey "down the rabbit hole — talking to cybersecurity experts, press freedom advocates and a former government official."

How it started: Phelim received "an odd note from Otter.ai … It read: 'Hey Phelim, to help us improve your Otter's experience, what was the purpose of this particular recording with titled "Mustafa Aksu" created at "2021-11-08 11:02:41"?' Three responses were offered: 'Personal transcription,' 'Meeting or group collaboration,' and 'Other.'

"I froze. Was this a phishing attack? Was Otter or some entity that had access to Otter's servers spying on my conversations? I contacted Otter to verify if this was indeed a real survey or some clever phishing ruse. An initial confirmation that the survey was legitimate was followed by a denial from the same Otter representative, laced with a warning that I 'not respond to that survey and delete it.' My communications with Otter were all restricted to email and were sporadic, often confusing and contradictory."

The takeaway: "Otter and its competitors, which include Descript, Rev, Temi and the U.K.-based Trint, are digital warehouses whose advantages of speed and convenience are bracketed by what experts say can be lax privacy and security protections that may endanger sensitive text and audio data, the identities of reporters and the potentially vulnerable sources they contact."

Good Wednesday afternoon. We have a clarification to make. In case you were confused by this line in today's Playbook, it referred to Biden's approval ratings specifically for his handling of the pandemic: "Voter opinions about President JOE BIDEN's handling of the pandemic continue to be an enormous anchor weighing down Democrats: Just 39% of registered voters approve of the job he's doing, while 57% disapprove." Biden's overall approval rating in the latest POLITICO-Morning Consult poll was 43%, with 53% disapproval.

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RUSSIA-UKRAINE LATEST

— Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN cautioned that the recent promise from Russia that it would pull back forces from the Ukrainian border appears to be empty. "Unfortunately, there's a difference between what Russia says and what it does, and what we're seeing is no meaningful pullback. The contrary, we continue to see forces, especially forces that would be in the vanguard of any renewed aggression against Ukraine, continuing to be at the border to mass at the border," Blinken said on ABC's "Good Morning America." (More from Quint Forgey)

— NATO Secretary-General JENS STOLTENBERG echoed Blinken's assessment, saying "we have not seen any de-escalation on the ground. On the contrary, it appears that Russia continues its military buildup," per WSJ's Yaroslav Trofimov, Thomas Grove and Ann Simmons.

— However, a Ukrainian intelligence report indicates that "the number of Russian forces remains insufficient for an invasion," CNN's Matthew Chance reports. "According to the new Ukrainian intelligence report, 87 Russian Battalion Tactical Groups (BTGs) are on constant alert around Ukraine, up from 53 which are usually based in the area. BTGs are formations that consist of 800 to 1,000 Russian troops.

"The numbers are consistent with the latest U.S. assessment of the Russian troop buildup, but deviates from Western statements by playing down the threat of a full-scale invasion. … Instead, Ukrainian intelligence believes that Russia has focused its efforts on 'destabilizing Ukraine's internal situation' using punitive economic and energy-related tactics, as well as cyberattacks."

ON THE PERIPHERY — NYT's Andrew Higgins reports from Redzikowo, Poland, the site of a "highly sensitive U.S. military installation, expected to be operational this year, which Washington insists will help defend Europe and the United States from ballistic missiles fired by rogue states like Iran." But Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN, "the military base in Poland, and another in Romania, are evidence of what he sees as the threat posed by NATO's eastward expansion — and part of his justification for his military encirclement of Ukraine."

Also worth paying attention to: "Rising oil prices and fears of a Russian invasion of Ukraine have created a dilemma for Saudi Arabia: Help the West by pumping more crude to tame the market, or stand by a five-year-old oil alliance that is helping Moscow at the expense of Washington. For now, the world's largest crude exporter is sticking with Russia," write WSJ's Benoit Faucon in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and Summer Said in Dubai.

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

W.H. REJECTS TRUMP 'PRIVILEGE' CLAIM ON VISITOR LOGS — Biden cleared the way for a trove of Trump administration documents to be released to the Jan. 6 select committee, rejecting Trump's claims of executive privilege and ordering the National Archives to hand over the documents, Kyle Cheney writes. "As a matter of policy, and subject to limited exceptions, the Biden Administration voluntarily discloses such visitor logs on a monthly basis. The Obama Administration followed the same practice," White House Counsel DANA REMUS said in a letter to National Archivist DAVID FERRIERO dated Feb. 15. "As practice under that policy demonstrates, preserving the confidentiality of this type of record generally is not necessary to protect long-term institutional interests of the Executive Branch."

— What's next: "It's unclear if Trump will launch another court action to prevent the newly identified records from reaching lawmakers. It's also unclear how the new tranche of records differs from earlier ones that were the subject of Trump's lawsuit."

 

BECOME A GLOBAL INSIDER:  The world is more connected than ever. It has never been more essential to identify, unpack and analyze important news, trends and decisions shaping our future — and we've got you covered! Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Global Insider author Ryan Heath navigates the global news maze and connects you to power players and events changing our world. Don't miss out on this influential global community. Subscribe now.

 
 

ALL POLITICS

MIZZOU MOVES — In the Missouri GOP Senate primary, the hot topic isn't Biden or railing against Democrats. "Instead, they're focusing on another target — China," Phelim Kine writes. "Most of the candidates vying to replace ROY BLUNT , the retiring GOP Missouri senator, call China a growing military, economic and public health threat. And they've vowed in person and through online videos to strike back if elected. … Ahead of the Feb. 22 filing opening, the contest has become a preview of how U.S. politicians may weaponize public antipathy toward China as a campaign focus in November's midterms and the 2024 presidential race."

— Meanwhile, Sen.TED CRUZ (R-Texas) officially endorsed Missouri A.G. ERIC SCHMITT for the seat, Fox News' Paul Steinhauser reports. It comes after Sen. JOSH HAWLEY (R-Mo.) backed Rep. VICKY HARTZLER in the race.

— And that's not all in the Show-Me State: "Newly released polling in Missouri bolsters an argument Senate Republican leadership has made for months: Former Gov. ERIC GREITENS could be an unusually weak red-state nominee," Natalie Allison reports . "Greitens, who resigned mid-term in 2018, has led the crowded Republican field in early polling for the state's open Senate seat. But according to a recent survey done for a private third-party and obtained by POLITICO, Greitens would have just a slim lead over Democrat LUCAS KUNCE if the general election were held today."

2022 WATCH — As a slate of progressive candidates look to primary incumbent Democrats across the country, Rep. HAKEEM JEFFRIES (D-N.Y.) is trying to tame the field. "Jeffries and two of his House Democrat allies rolled out its first slate of endorsements on Wednesday from Team Blue PAC, a political action committee intended to protect incumbents from intraparty attacks," Rolling Stone's Kara Voght reports . "The endorsement and its attendant $5,000 campaign contributions are the strongest demonstration of support yet from Jeffries and his allies — and serve as a warning shot to primary challengers seeking to unseat incumbents as Democrats fight to hold onto their fragile majorities." The endorsements: Reps. SHONTEL BROWN (D-Ohio), DANNY DAVIS (D-Ill.), CAROLYN MALONEY (D-N.Y.), DONALD PAYNE JR. (D-N.J.) and DINA TITUS (D-Nev.).

— In Ohio, retiring GOP Rep. ROB PORTMAN has officially endorsed JANE TIMKEN to replace him, Cleveland.com's Andrew Tobias reports.

IN THE TANK IN CALI — In California, Dem Sen. DIANNE FEINSTEIN's approval numbers "have tumbled to the lowest point in her three-decade Senate career, with just 30% of California voters giving her positive marks in a new UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies poll co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Times," LAT's Melanie Mason reports.

— Also worth noting: Both Biden and Vice President KAMALA HARRIS are underwater in the Golden State. Biden's net approval is -1 (47% approve, 48% disapprove), and Harris' is -8 (38% approve, 46% disapprove).

DEEP IN THE HEART — BETO O'ROURKE might be running anew in 2022, but it won't be easy for him to shake the specter of 2020, NYT's J. David Goodman writes from Tyler, Texas. "Mr. O'Rourke's presidential campaign shadows his run for governor, complicating his effort to present himself as a pragmatic, there-for-you Texan who embraces responsible gun ownership and wants to win over moderate voters. His 2020 campaign remarks have figured prominently in attacks by [incumbent Texas Gov. GREG] ABBOTT and are familiar to many voters in a state where Democrats also proudly own guns. Mr. O'Rourke counts himself among their number — he and his wife own firearms, his campaign said — and he appears well aware of the liability."

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

STUDY: WEST'S MEGADROUGHT WORST IN 1,200 YEARS — Experts are raising the red flag, warning that the climate situation in the American West is worse than it even seems. "'What we're seeing in 2022 is good snow, generally, in some places -- but at the same time, not consistent,'" Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner CAMILLE TOUTON told CNN . "'You're seeing record events, followed by record dry months. Now add to that low reservoir level, because we didn't get a lot of inflow into our reservoirs last year.' The bigger picture is stark. The West's megadrought is the region's worst in at least 1,200 years, according to a study published Monday, and researchers said the human-caused climate crisis has made the megadrought 72% worse. Western water experts echoed the concern that the term 'drought' may be insufficient to capture the region's current hydrology."

 

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.

 
 

TRUMP CARDS

INTERIOR I.G.: ZINKE BROKE ETHICS RULES — RYAN ZINKE during his time serving as Interior secretary during the Trump administration "broke federal ethics rules repeatedly by improperly participating in real estate negotiations with the chairman of the energy giant Halliburton at the time and other developers," WaPo's Anna Phillips and Lisa Rein report. "Interior Department Inspector General MARK GREENBLATT found that while Zinke was in office, he sent dozens of emails and text messages, held phone calls and met in his office with developers to discuss the design of a large commercial and residential development in his hometown of Whitefish, Mont. Zinke continued to represent his family's foundation in the negotiations for nearly a year, investigators found, even after committing to federal officials that he would resign from the foundation and would not do any work on its behalf after he joined the Trump administration."

PLAYBOOKERS

Laura Ingraham gave Pete Buttigieg the devil-horns-and-pitchfork treatment on Tuesday night's show, complete with a cartoony, wiry mustache and goatee.

Meta's policy head honcho Nick Clegg is getting a promotion, which will allow CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg to take a step back.

Rory Stewart this week published a report for the Atlantic Council presenting a plan to tackle the world refugee crisis.

SPOTTED: Former NBA player Enes Kanter Freedom walking in the Senate basement. ( h/t The Daily Beast's Ursula Perano)

IN MEMORIAM — "Peter Earnest, a veteran of the CIA's Cold War clandestine operations who ran agents in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, then helped promote and preserve the history of espionage while serving as the founding executive director of the International Spy Museum in Washington, died Feb. 13 at a hospital in Arlington, Va. He was 88. … Through his speeches, books, interviews with journalists and leadership of the Spy Museum, Mr. Earnest helped demystify the world's second-oldest profession, introducing people to the techniques, influence, triumphs and shortcomings of intelligence gathering around the globe." Full obituary by WaPo's Harrison Smith

MEDIA MOVES — WaPo's Jacqueline Alemany is now an MSNBC and NBC News contributor. Announcement Darius Tahir will be a health tech correspondent at Kaiser Health News. He currently is an eHealth reporter at POLITICO.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Nicole Porreca is joining Boeing as director for international operations and policy. She previously was a senior foreign policy adviser for Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.) and is an Obama NSC and State Department alum.

TRANSITIONS — Rob Childers is now a director of government affairs at S&P Global. He previously was counsel for Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.). … Melanie Meyers is now campaign manager for Regan Deering's Illinois congressional campaign. She most recently was campaign manager for Jeanine Lawson's Virginia congressional campaign, and is a Pete Stauber and Tom Tiffany alum. …

… Brigid Hasson Richelieu is now senior comms manager at the Financial Services Forum. She most recently was a senior public relations director at Rational 360. … Josh Withrow is joining the R Street Institute as a fellow on their technology and innovation policy team. He previously was director of technology policy at National Taxpayers Union, and is a FreedomWorks alum.

 

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California Today: The future of L.A.’s mask mandate

Barbara Ferrer, the county's top public health official, talks about what a future with Covid-19 looks like.

It's Wednesday. Los Angeles's top public health official discusses the future. Plus, San Francisco voters oust school board members.

The Super Bowl was held at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood on Sunday.Ben Solomon for The New York Times

For almost two years, as the coronavirus has surged and receded and surged again in Los Angeles, Barbara Ferrer, the county's public health director, has been a steady voice of caution.

Even when California officials eased restrictions throughout the pandemic, Ferrer's office kept many of those rules in place. Indoor dining was shuttered in Los Angeles for much longer than in many parts of the state. Although California's indoor mask mandate has expired as of today, Los Angeles County's requirement will remain in effect.

Still, just before the Super Bowl drew tens of thousands of visitors to the region, Ferrer told me she was hopeful that the event wouldn't lead to the kind of increase in Covid-19 cases that have followed other big celebrations.

"We are fully open in Los Angeles County and I'm glad we're fully open," she said. "But we've done it by layering in sensible protections."

I talked with Ferrer about how she's thinking about the future. Here's our conversation, lightly edited:

What will you be watching in the aftermath of the Super Bowl, and on what kind of timeline?

We usually will see the uptick somewhere around Day 10. Omicron seems to have a shorter incubation period, so we could see an uptick a little bit earlier. It's going to be hard to see the impact, unless it's pretty significant, because cases are declining and I think we're going to continue to decline. The impact might be more of slowing the rate of the decline.

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There are going to be confounding variables. The governor is lifting the indoor masking requirement in many places, but that won't be the case in L.A. County. There will be some confusion, and there may be places where people are going to be taking off their masks a bit early. And when everybody starts taking off those masks indoors, there'll be more spread.

We're not in a place where we don't have to worry about transmission yet.

A sign requiring face masks at a pharmacy in the Van Nuys section of Los Angeles last month.Richard Vogel/Associated Press

So do you think it's safe for the state to be lifting the indoor mask mandate?

Case rates are all over the place in the state. And that's why the governor has always been clear that your local health departments will look at the data and make a decision at the local level about what makes sense.

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You've said that, based on projections, Los Angeles County's indoor masking requirement could be lifted next month. Can you talk through that?

If the rate of decline in new cases continues at about 3.5 percent every day, we'd get there in 25 to 30 days. And then, we've given ourselves a two-week window to make sure it's a stable number. So that's why we're looking at the middle of March or the end of March.

I think asking ourselves to all get through another month with masks on is really going to be worth it, because if we can get the rates down much lower, a lot of things become safer.

How are you approaching what comes after that indoor mask mandate is lifted? There's been a lot of discussion recently about what "endemicity" might look like. What will restrictions look like in Los Angeles in the longer term?

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What I've welcomed with the pandemic is the ability to respond to the changing circumstances. That's probably everyone's greatest source of frustration, as well.

The near future holds for us a host of better therapeutics that will be more widely available, and that'll be a game changer. It's just like having access to antigen testing has been a game changer.

So while everyone would like us to have the crystal ball, I think what we can do is acknowledge that we live in a country with enormous resources that have helped make it possible for us to develop a larger cadre of tools that help us mitigate the endless challenges of an unpredictable virus. I don't think the unpredictable virus part is changing.

The way to think about it is when we're in the valley — case rates are low, transmission is low, we don't have a lot of emerging variants of concern — we can remove some of the protection layers that we add in when we're in the surges. But I don't know anybody that can predict there are going to be no more surges.

Do you think we'll ever reach a point where we're not toggling between levels of restriction? Like there might be advisories about wearing masks or getting vaccines, but there aren't mandates?

I am confident we'll get there. For a couple of reasons, we're not there yet.

One is we've messed up in the past on access. The next powerful tool is going to be these therapeutics, and we really need to make sure that it's not lip service to say that there's good access for everyone.

We also have to recognize that whenever there's a lot more transmission, essential workers get hit the hardest, and many of those essential workers are also low-wage workers.

So I would say the second area we need to focus on as a country and as a state is where the jurisdiction lies on protecting workers.

We shouldn't be this far along in a pandemic and still be trying to decide what the standards are going to be for workplace safety around infectious diseases. We should have really, really strong standards, including requirements around employers providing the best masks, not the cheapest.

For more:

  • On Monday, state public health officials said a school mask mandate would remain in place at least until Feb. 28. Some parents are getting impatient, CalMatters reports.
  • Track case rates and vaccinations across California here.

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Lake Mead, the largest artificial reservoir in the United States, is at a third of its capacity.Patrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

If you read one story, make it this

California returns as climate leader, with help from the White House.

Mexico supplies about 80 percent of the avocados eaten in the United States.Celia Talbot Tobin for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Avocado ban: The United States is temporarily blocking all imports of avocados from Mexico because of a threat to safety inspectors. California, which supplies roughly 15 percent of the U.S. avocado market, cannot produce enough to meet demand.
  • Sea level rise: Government scientists said that sea levels along the coastal United States would rise by a foot or more by 2050.
  • Supreme Court nominee: Justice Patricia Guerrero, an appeals court judge from San Diego, was nominated as the first Latina to serve on the California Supreme Court, The Associated Press reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Coachella: The music festival will return in April, but concertgoers will not be required to wear masks or be vaccinated against the coronavirus.
  • Bomb threat: A motorist approaching the North Island Naval Air Station near San Diego was found to have bomb-making materials, The Associated Press reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Homelessness lawsuit: A judge denied a motion to dismiss a lawsuit against the city of San Luis Obispo that contended that unhoused people were being treated unlawfully for living outdoors or in their vehicles, The Associated Press reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • San Francisco recall: Voters ousted three members of the San Francisco Board of Education on Tuesday in a recall election fueled by pandemic angst.
  • Potential breach of privacy: The San Francisco Police Department used DNA from a victim's rape kit to identify her as a suspect in another case. Chesa Boudin, the city's district attorney, said victims were "being treated like criminals."
  • Primate problem: A doctors' group has filed a complaint against U.C. Davis, alleging that a primate research program funded by Elon Musk was a violation of the Animal Welfare Act, reports The Sacramento Bee.
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times

What we're drinking

Orange wines, a genre worthy of exploration.

Where we're traveling

Today's travel tip comes from Betty Van Wagenen:

"I live in the BEST PLACE to visit in California: Carmel-by-the-Sea on the central coast of California, next to Monterey. Not only is Carmel BTS small (one square mile, easily navigated and fewer than 2,000 permanent residents), it boasts a BEAUTIFUL three-mile-long beach — walking distance from the center of town — where dogs can roam off leash with owners.

Carmel BTS is absolutely charming, full of great little shops, unique stores and art galleries, as well as the best dining anywhere. A spectacular drive south along Highway 1 takes motorists to Big Sur, which is only 45 minutes away with views that are spectacular.

I always loved to visit Carmel while living in Silicon Valley for 35 years. But now that I'm a resident of Carmel-by-the-Sea, I consider myself the luckiest person on earth!"

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

What we're watching

Where to stream "Power of the Dog" and more 2022 Oscar nominees.

And before you go, some good news

The almond orchards of Colusa County are blooming a little earlier than usual. But the floral display is stunning. See the drone video by John Hannon for Sacramento Valley Water.

Thanks for reading. We'll be back tomorrow.

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Figure skating jump (4 letters).

Soumya Karlamangla, Briana Scalia and Mariel Wamsley contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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