Playbook PM: Biden gets a rare dose of good news

Presented by ACC and America's Plastic Makers: POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Mar 04, 2022 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun and Garrett Ross

Presented by

the American Chemistry Council

RARE SPOT OF BRIGHT NEWS — JOE BIDEN's presidency may be mired in inflationary woes and foreign conflicts, but the state of the U.S. economy remains strong:

  • The country added 678,000 jobs last month, according to today's monthly jobs report, beating expectations. The jobs gains were distributed across many sectors. 
  • The unemployment rate fell from 4% to 3.8%, getting close to pre-pandemic levels. 
  • The number of people who said Covid fears were preventing them from looking for work fell from 1.8 million to 1.2 million. The Labor Department data

The numbers were the latest indicator of robust economic health, as the U.S. emerges from the Omicron wave and continues to bounce back from pandemic-spurred recession. "This progress is the result of the new economic approach I talked about in the State of the Union — grow the economy from the bottom up and middle out," Biden trumpeted in a statement.

Wage growth was mostly flat month over month, in a surprise to some economists. That's a disappointment for workers struggling to keep pace with rising prices. On the flip side, wage growth itself is an inflationary pressure, so these numbers could foretell a slight respite. The jobs report likely won't change Fed Chair JEROME POWELL's plans to raise interest rates, WSJ's Nick Timiraos reports.

Notable caveat, via AP's Christopher Rugaber: "Friday's hiring figures were collected before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which has sent oil prices surging and has escalated risks and uncertainties for economies in Europe and the rest of the world."

POLL OF THE DAY — An outlier, or the start of something new? The White House will be hoping it's the latter when they see the latest NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll, which finds a potential rally-around-the-flag effect as Biden's approval rating rises 8 points from last month to 47%. Independents' support for Biden's handling of Ukraine jumped 17 points (and Democrats' support increased by even more).

— Also notable: Sixty-nine percent of poll respondents said they would support the sanctions the U.S. has levied against Russia even if they raise energy prices.

Happy Friday afternoon.

COMING ATTRACTIONS — VP KAMALA HARRIS is planning to travel to Poland soon, per CNN.

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WAR IN UKRAINE

LATEST DEVELOPMENTS …

— Russia is blocking access to Facebook, per a tweet by state-owned media outlet RIA Novosti.

— The sound of as many as a dozen explosions rocked Kyiv this morning, "in an apparent sign Russian missile strikes on and around the capital were intensifying," per Reuters. Still, many people in the capital were going about their daily lives.

— NATO says no dice for no fly: The Western military alliance won't risk direct conflict with Russia by establishing a no-fly zone above Ukraine, Secretary-General JENS STOLTENBERG said this morning. "If we did that, we would end up with something that could end in a full-fledged war in Europe." More from Bloomberg

The U.S. Embassy in Kyiv tweeted this morning, "It is a war crime to attack a nuclear power plant. Putin's shelling of Europe's largest nuclear plant takes his reign of terror one step further. #TheHague #Zaporizhzhia #StandwithUkraine" … But the State Department urgently ordered its embassies in the rest of the continent not to retweet the message, per NBC's Abigail Williams.

— As Russia advances on Ukraine's southern coast, Mariupol's mayor said they were "on the verge of a humanitarian catastrophe," per WaPo.

— German Chancellor OLAF SCHOLZ spoke with Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN for an hour today. Putin told Scholz there would be a third round of talks with Ukraine this weekend. More from Deutsche Welle

— By the numbers: The U.N.'s latest data shows 331 people have been confirmed killed (though the actual number is likely to be much higher), and 1.2 million refugees have fled the country. Latest from the AP

— U.S. assessment: Defense officials said this morning that Russia has now sent 92% of the 150,000 troops it had amassed outside Ukraine into the war. They also assessed that a majority of Ukraine's air combat power is still available.

— The BBC was forced to suspend operations in Russia today,the service announced, as what remains of a free press in the country shrivels up.

BEHIND THE SCENES — Paul McLeary delves into how the West, led by the U.K., is secretly moving shipments of weapons into Ukraine to assist in the conflict. Unable to fly in the lethal aid, Ukrainian allies are using "rat lines" to deliver them by road, putting them onto Ukrainian trucks at the borders in a "remarkable wartime improvisation," he writes.

COLLATERAL DAMAGE — Space has been one of the few ongoing arenas of U.S.-Russia partnership. But now DMITRY ROGOZIN, Russia's belligerent space chief, is threatening to end the cooperation, pull out of the International Space Station and blow up decades of working together, Bryan Bender reports.

THE VIEW FROM THE VALLEY — Big Tech is facing a much less costly decision on how to respond to Russia's manufactured crisis than other corporate sectors, because companies like Apple and Meta get just 1 to 2% of their revenue from the country, Emily Birnbaum reports . "That's not to say that it would be a simple decision for them to leave Russia entirely," she notes. "Many of the tech companies face complex ethical and reputational questions about free expression as they deliberate pulling powerful communication platforms that are used as much by dissidents and news outlets as by the Russian state."

 

SUBSCRIBE TO NATIONAL SECURITY DAILY : Keep up with the latest critical developments from Ukraine and across Europe in our daily newsletter, National Security Daily. The Russian invasion of Ukraine could disrupt the established world order and result in a refugee crisis, increased cyberattacks, rising energy costs and additional disruption to global supply chains. Go inside the top national security and foreign-policymaking shops for insight on the global threats faced by the U.S. and its allies and what actions world leaders are taking to address them. Subscribe today.

 
 

JUDICIARY SQUARE

SCOTUS WATCH — The Supreme Court's six-member conservative majority today reinstated the death penalty for Boston Marathon bomber DZHOKHAR TSARNAEV, reversing an appeals court decision and saying he'd received a fair trial. The three liberal justices dissented. More from The Boston Globe

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

LIKE A ROLLING STONE — Exclusive new video footage from the forthcoming documentary "A Storm Foretold" shows ROGER STONE working to overturn the 2020 election and then fleeing Washington on a private plane during the Jan. 6 insurrection, WaPo's Dalton Bennett and Jon Swaine report in a major look at Stone's involvement, full of wild details.

"Stone moved quickly after Trump's defeat to help mobilize the protest movement that drew thousands to the nation's capital on Jan. 6, 2021," they write. "A few hours before the Jan. 6 attack, the video shows, a member of the far-right Oath Keepers group — who has since pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy — was in Stone's suite at the Willard." (Stone told WaPo he had nothing to do with Jan. 6 and suggested the videos might be deepfakes.)

HOW CLOSE WE CAME — A former Senate staffer testified in court today about a backup plan to count the Electoral College ballots in an alternative location on Jan. 6 if the insurrection prevented them from returning to the Capitol, Kyle Cheney reports in Congress Minutes.

ALL POLITICS

NEW PA. SENATE POLL — MEHMET OZ's history as a celebrity doctor gave his Pennsylvania Senate campaign an early boost of name recognition and support. But a new poll indicates that all his TV footage, which has been ripe for attack ads, could be backfiring now: GOP primary voters say they're concerned about his views on guns and his ties to Turkey. The poll finds a former hedge fund executive DAVID MCCORMICK nabbing a 6-point lead over Oz, 25% to 19%, and dominating Oz by 30 points in a one-on-one matchup, per The Washington Free Beacon's Chuck Ross.

 

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

STICKING TO THEIR GUNS — Gun control advocates and progressives are blaming acting ATF Director MARVIN RICHARDSON for slow-walking a move to ban "ghost guns," NYT's Glenn Thrush reports. In January, just before Biden pledged to end online sales of the guns' components, Richardson exclusively told a Las Vegas gun industry convention that the change wouldn't come until June. "This jarring split screen — a president demanding action on gun violence and an industry-friendly subordinate pumping the brakes — infuriated some Biden allies," Thrush writes. But the administration is defending Richardson as doing his best in a tough role, and SUSAN RICE has rejected the idea of a gun violence office in the White House.

ANTITRUST THE PROCESS — DOJ has opened a civil antitrust probe into whether poultry companies improperly shared information with each other to suppress workers' wages, WSJ's Patrick Thomas and Brent Kendall scooped . "The department has put at least some companies on legal notice that they must preserve documents."

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

CULTURE WARS — A Tennessee school board's move to block eighth graders from reading "Maus" sparked national outrage. But the board is charging forward — and planning many more curriculum revision efforts, as a statewide GOP effort makes Tennessee the vanguard "of a nationwide conservative effort to reshape what students are learning and reading in public schools," NYT's Sophie Kasakove reports. She also finds teachers already self-censoring, and students hurrying to read and share the banned books with each other.

PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION

HAPPENING SATURDAY — A vehicle convoy inspired by the Canadian protests is real and it's arriving in D.C. this weekend, NBC's Ben Collins reports : "According to extremism researchers following the movement, the convoy now consists of several dozen tractor-trailer trucks and hundreds of cars." Their specific plans remain unclear at this point.

PLAYBOOKERS

LOOK WHO'S BACK — Bill Clinton is bringing back the Clinton Global Initiative leadership summits that he ended in 2016 during Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, with the big gathering happening again this September, per Bloomberg. "Just like the world we're living in, the September meeting will likely look different than the ones we held before," he wrote in a letter to CGI members. "But what will not be different is the spirit that has driven CGI from the very beginning—the idea that we can accomplish more together than we can apart."

MEDIA MOVES — NYT Opinion is adding Eliza Barclay to lead climate coverage and Andrew Trunsky as editorial assistant to Maureen Dowd. Barclay previously was science, health and climate editor at Vox. Trunsky previously was a fellow at the Daily Caller News Foundation. Announcement

NSC ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Eric Jacobstein is now director for Central America and Cuba at the National Security Council. He most recently was senior advisor at USAID's Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean.

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California Today: Who should get reparations?

A task force in charge of the state's reparations effort, the first in the nation, is struggling to decide which Black Californians should receive payments.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Friday. A state task force is struggling to decide which Black Californians should receive reparations. Plus, the governor's new strategy for California's mental health crisis.

When she was in the California Assembly, Secretary of State Shirley Weber wrote legislation creating the task force to study and recommend reparations.Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

If California were to provide reparations for Black residents, who exactly should qualify for the payments?

That's a question that has stumped the expert panel in charge of California's historic reparations effort, the first undertaking of its scale and one that could have major implications for the rest of the nation.

In 2020, California approved legislation to accomplish a tall order: Establish a "task force to study and develop reparation proposals for African Americans, with a special consideration for African Americans who are descendants of persons enslaved in the United States."

As you can see from that language, the law prioritizes people whose ancestors were enslaved, but doesn't detail exactly what that means. Some task force members want to limit payments to go only to people who can trace their lineage to someone enslaved in the United States, while others bristle at the idea of excluding any Black Californians.

"If you have Black skin, you are catching hell in this country," Lisa Holder, a lawyer and task force member, said last week during a task force meeting. "We have to embrace this concept that Black lives matter — not just a sliver of those Black lives."

For months, the nine-member task force has been hearing testimony and gathering evidence about the way Black Californians have been affected for generations by redlining, school segregation, voting restrictions and other discriminatory policies.

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The panel is supposed to finalize a report by the summer of 2023 that would detail who should get reparations, in what form and in what amounts. But at last week's meeting, nailing down an answer to the first question of eligibility did not prove easy.

First, Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of U.C. Berkeley's law school, testified that providing reparations based on lineage, as opposed to race, would make the effort less likely to be overturned in court. Dozens of public commenters who later called into the meeting overwhelmingly supported that approach.

"Please do not jeopardize justice for a people who've been oppressed for 400 years," one speaker, Tiffany Quarles, said. "We have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get this done and get it done right."

But some members of the task force opposed distinguishing between groups of Black Californians. All grapple with widespread anti-blackness left behind by decades of slavery, they said.

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Reginald Jones-Sawyer, who represents South Los Angeles in the State Assembly, pointed to President Barack Obama as a telling example:

If reparations were limited to people directly descended from enslaved people in the United States, Obama would not qualify, as his father is from Kenya and his mother is white.

"In essence, we're saying people like that, who're experiencing racism now — and you can't tell me Barack Obama didn't experience racism — could not be part of reparations," Jones-Sawyer said.

Others expressed concerns that it would be difficult for descendants of enslaved people to prove their ancestry so they could qualify for payments. Others said they worried that barring some Black Californians from reparations would cause unnecessary fighting within the Black community.

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Holder, the lawyer, shared a personal story: Fourteen years ago, her newborn died while she was in labor. She believes that doctors didn't listen to her or address her concerns because she is Black.

"No one asked me if my ancestors were enslaved in the United States, or if they were enslaved in Jamaica, or if they were enslaved in Barbados. All they saw was my Black skin," she said. "It's our task to not be too specific — to realize that this is a collective harm that requires a collective remedy."

Ultimately, the panel voted, 5-4, to postpone the decision about who should be eligible for reparations until its next meeting. The group will reconvene on March 29.

For more:

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Maggie Gwin, an actress based in Los Angeles, turned to real estate to support her family while she continued to audition for roles.Beth Coller for The New York Times

If you read one story, make it this

Paola Saliby

The rest of the news

  • Mental health proposal: Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled a much-anticipated proposal on Thursday to address the state's mental health crisis, CalMatters reports.
  • Abortion access: A new California bill would allow nurse practitioners to work independently of a doctor and perform abortions, The Associated Press reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Mask mandate: Los Angeles County will lift most indoor mask and vaccine verification mandates today.
  • Riverside County fire: A blaze that destroyed a group of mobile homes surrounded by agricultural fields near the Salton Sea displaced 30 people, The Associated Press reports.
  • Wintersburg Village: A fire has destroyed part of one of the oldest Japanese American settlements in Huntington Beach, LAist reports.
  • Capitol riot: The Beverly Hills physician Simone Gold pleaded guilty to unlawful entering and remaining in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • L.A. deputy charged: A former Los Angeles County sheriff's deputy was charged with voluntary manslaughter for killing an unarmed man as he tried to flee in his car, The Los Angeles Times reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Guns seized: Detectives investigating the sexual abuse of a teenage girl seized over 80 firearms and more than 50,000 rounds of ammunition after serving a search warrant at the Pebble Beach home of the suspect, The Associated Press reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Cutting class (size): The California Supreme Court declined to lift an enrollment cap on U.C. Berkeley, leaving the campus scrambling to cut in-person enrollment by at least 2,500 students.
  • Death of Stanford goalie: Goalkeeper Katie Meyer, who led the Cardinal to victory in the 2019 N.C.A.A. championship game, has died at age 22, The Associated Press reports.
Christopher Simpson for The New York Times

What we're eating

Red cabbage ragù.

George Rose/Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Kari Wishingrad, who recently spent a week in Bodega Bay, north of San Francisco:

"Our vacation home overlooked the ocean. The sounds of the foghorn and crashing waves lulled me to sleep every night. The air was fresh, clean and saturated with the salt of the Pacific. We were blessed with windy temps in the 50s and sun. Lots of sun!One of the highlights was waiting for the tide to go out around 3 p.m. We headed to Doran Beach and walked about a mile out to see the starfish, anemones and mussels cluster in, on and around the rocks.It was otherworldly — these creatures who revealed themselves so that we could observe, gaze and delight us with their unique forms and beauty!"

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.

Tell us

Join The New York Times for a free online event on Wednesday with two of the nation's most prominent Covid-19 experts.

Dr. Bob Wachter and Dr. Monica Gandhi, both at the University of California, San Francisco, have worked throughout the pandemic to explain the risks of Covid-19. And often, they have disagreed.

And before you go, some good news

A new grocery store opened this week in a pocket of Sacramento that had been considered a food desert.

The Rancho San Miguel Market opened on Wednesday in the city's Oak Park neighborhood. It stands at the site of another grocery store that closed in 2020, The Sacramento Bee reports.

"This is a wonderful step in getting more healthy food access to our community," a customer, Alberto Mercado, told The Bee. "We've been waiting for three years almost."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back on Monday. Enjoy your weekend. — Soumya

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Altoids containers (4 letters).

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

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