Marty Walsh heads back to Boston

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Feb 07, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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Labor Secretary Marty Walsh speaks during a briefing at the White House in Washington, May 16, 2022.

Marty Walsh would be the first Cabinet secretary in the line of succession to leave President Joe Biden’s administration after a remarkably stable first two years. | Susan Walsh/AP Photo

SHIPPING UP TO BOSTON — Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH will leave his post to become executive director of the NHL Players’ Association, with an announcement expected in the coming days, Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli scooped. Walsh met with the executive board and got a green light last week, though the formality of an official yes vote hasn’t happened yet and Walsh couldn’t leave before the State of the Union. His contract is expected to include a roughly $3 million annual salary and allow him to live in Boston.

Walsh would be the first Cabinet secretary in the line of succession to leave President JOE BIDEN’s administration after a remarkably stable first two years.

Palace intrigue: “Walsh emerged as a candidate for the position only within the last three weeks. Sources indicated [executive search firm] RUSSELL REYNOLDS was rebuffed by Walsh over multiple attempts to include him earlier in the process, but Walsh had a change of circumstance once he was not selected as Biden’s next chief of staff,” per Seravalli. Walsh had also considered running for office again in Massachusetts, Lisa Kashinsky notes.

Walsh’s departure, of course, would also create a new Cabinet opening. Other senior officials have left, like chief of staff RON KLAIN and Office of Science and Technology Policy Director ERIC LANDER. But Labor secretary looks poised to be the first Cabinet role to require a new Senate confirmation since the early days of the administration.

That the news broke this morning is less than ideal timing for Biden, who likely would have preferred to avoid any distractions ahead of tonight’s State of the Union.

Here’s what else you should be reading ahead of SOTU:

— The view from the GOP: Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY told his conference this morning to be on good behavior tonight, “reminding them that the ‘cameras are on’ and the ‘mics are hot,’” per CNN’s Melanie Zanona. He later slipped in a dig at NANCY PELOSI, telling reporters, “We have a code of ethics of how we should portray ourselves. … That’s exactly what we’ll do. We’re not going to do childish games tearing up a speech.”

— The speech that won’t die: White House aides across multiple administrations have wanted to kill or shrink the State of the Union — to make it more interesting and accessible by shortening it or moving it around the country. There’s no constitutional imperative for the speech to unfold as it always does. But presidents want to keep it the same, NBC’s Peter Nicholas reports. The prominent platform, the pomp and circumstance, the tradition and the viewership: They can’t give it up.

More speech previews: “Biden to Outline Plan to Crack Down on Illegal Fentanyl Distribution,” by WSJ’s Andrew Restuccia and Tarini Parti … “Biden to Lay Down Economic Challenge to House Republicans,” by NYT’s Peter Baker … “In his SOTU, Biden will call for plugging gaps in his health policies,” by WaPo’s Rachel Roubein … “State of the Union? Congress doesn’t fully reflect diversity,” by AP’s Lisa Mascaro

Good Tuesday afternoon, and thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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ALL POLITICS

IT’S ELECTION DAY SOMEWHERE — Control of the Pennsylvania state House will be decided today in three Pittsburgh-area special elections for seats whose November winners died or were elected to higher office. Democrats are expected to win all three and officially flip control of the chamber by a one-seat margin — but any Republican upset would keep the House in GOP hands. Turnout is expected to be low. Details from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

WHAT HAS DEMS SALIVATING — The discourse around the Fair Tax may not die down anytime soon: Democrats have loved attacking Republicans over the proposal to replace the tax code with a big sales tax, and Semafor’s Joseph Zeballos-Roig and Shelby Talcott report that it could be a vulnerability for several 2024 GOP contenders. MIKE PENCE, MIKE POMPEO, NIKKI HALEY and Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS have all backed the idea at some point. DONALD TRUMP smells an opening on the issue too: He opposes the Fair Tax, and is indicating that he could hammer fellow Republicans for wanting to raise a tax.

Important context from NYT’s Maggie Haberman: “This discussion is taking place as if Trump didn’t sign a tax bill that slashed corporate rates by a lot, and is more a reminder that Trump often reinvents himself devoid of context.”

SCHIFF STAFFS UP — Rep. ADAM SCHIFF’s (D-Calif.) Senate campaign is getting an independent expenditure committee, Standing Strong PAC, our California Playbook colleagues scooped. KYLE LAYMAN will lead the IE, along with Bearstar Strategies, JESSE FERGUSON, MOLLY MURPHY and NATALIE LeBLANC.

NOTE OF SKEPTICISM — After the Koch network said this weekend that it would jump into the 2024 GOP presidential primary against Trump, the news got broad media coverage. But Popular Information’s Judd Legum, Rebecca Crosby and Tesnim Zekeria write that the press shouldn’t be so quick to accept their word as fact: “[F]or years, [CHARLES] KOCH has repeatedly announced he was reorienting his political strategy away from far-right Republicans, including Trump — with no discernible change in his actual political activity. After each media-assisted rebrand, Koch quietly resumed business as usual. The reality is that few individuals have spent more money to legitimize Trump and his allies.”

THE ECONOMY

NEW RECORD — The U.S. trade deficit hit an all-time high last year of $948 billion, jumping more than 12% from 2021, per new Commerce Department data out today. “A record value of imports in 2022 reflects in part a push by retailers to replenish inventories well ahead of peak selling periods and avoid a repeat of shortages and supply-chain delays that clogged West Coast ports in 2021,” notes Bloomberg’s Augusta Saraiva.

IMMIGRATION FILES — “Migrants Are Doing Better Than Ever Thanks to Tight Labor Market,” by WSJ’s Santiago PĂ©rez and Michelle Hackman: “Migrants who come to the U.S. to find work are now being hired more quickly, at higher pay and under better working conditions than at any time in recent memory.”

 

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.

 
 

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

BALLOON FALLOUT — The Chinese spy balloon incident has quickly deflated some Democrats’ hopes that the new congressional panel on China competition could present a rare opportunity for bipartisanship, The Daily Beast’s Sam Brodey and Ursula Perano report. After Republicans hammered the Biden administration over its handling of the balloon — striking some Democrats as unfair and needlessly partisan — panel members like Reps. ANDY KIM (D-N.J.) and JAKE AUCHINCLOSS (D-Mass.) say they’re disappointed with the GOP or growing more pessimistic about the committee. Republicans say they see the balloon as a Chinese test for the U.S. that the Biden administration didn’t ace.

— The all-senators briefing on the balloon will take place at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Punchbowl’s Andrew Desiderio reports.

— Experts think the worsening of U.S.-China ties means it could take a while for Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN’s trip to get rescheduled, WaPo’s Christian Shepherd and Lyric Li report. It also amounts to “a tough test for a crop of newly installed Chinese diplomats, as they attempt to mend what Beijing considers its most important bilateral relationship.” They’ll have to balance contrition with the desire not to appear like they’re giving in to the U.S.

— The balloon has also ramped up Republican antipathy toward TikTok, which isn’t directly connected but is getting caught up in increasing tough-on-China talk, NBC’s David Ingram and Scott Wong report.

— Hot job, via Daybook: Intelligence Specialist (China) at the U.S. Air Force.

A MILESTONE THE U.S. WON’T LIKE — China has now surpassed the U.S. in its number of intercontinental ballistic missile launchers on land, WSJ’s Michael Gordon scooped. U.S. Strategic Command notified the congressional armed services committees of the news last month. The shift is fueling calls from some Republicans to expand the American nuclear arsenal. Caveats: Many of China’s launchers are empty silos, and the U.S. still leads on other missile metrics.

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — “How U.S.-China Tensions Could Affect Who Buys the House Next Door,” by NYT’s J. David Goodman in Houston: “Chinese owners have very slowly expanded their holdings in U.S. agricultural land in recent decades, but the increasingly hostile political climate has made the topic a rising concern, with at least 11 states considering some form of new legislation related to foreign ownership of farmland or real estate … Some of the new and proposed laws go beyond targeting Chinese nationals to broadly take aim at ownership by all foreign governments, businesses and new immigrants. Other laws, like the one under consideration in Texas, single out countries seen as particular security threats.”

CONGRESS

HOT ON THE RIGHT — Republicans were outraged this morning that Twitter suspended Sen. STEVE DAINES’ (R-Mont.) account apparently because he posted a photo of him and his wife hunting. ELON MUSK said the situation is being fixed.

HAPPENING TOMORROW — “Twitter hearing a test of new House GOP majority's seriousness,” by Yahoo’s Jon Ward

NIGHT OF THE HUNTER — “GOP’s Probe Into Hunter Biden Risks Political Blowback,” by Bloomberg’s Billy House and Jarrell Dillard

 

JOIN POLITICO ON 2/9 TO HEAR FROM AMERICA’S GOVERNORS: In a divided Congress, more legislative and policy enforcement will shift to the states, meaning governors will take a leading role in setting the agenda for the nation. Join POLITICO on Thursday, Feb. 9 at World Wide Technology's D.C. Innovation Center for The Fifty: America's Governors, presented by Cisco, where we will examine where innovations are taking shape and new regulatory red lines, the future of reproductive health, and how climate change is being addressed across a series of one-on-one interviews. REGISTER HERE.

 
 

TRUMP CARDS

THE INVESTIGATIONS — “Trump Charges in Georgia Over 2020 Could Lead to Bigger Fed Case,” by Bloomberg’s Chris Strohm, Zoe Tillman and Billy House: “If [Fulton County, Ga., DA FANI] WILLIS goes first, that case would road-test possible testimony, helping to determine what evidence holds up in court and providing a blueprint for prosecutions involving other battleground states where Trump and his supporters tried to undermine President Joe Biden’s win. Legal experts say nothing stops a US special counsel overseeing the federal Trump probe [from] pursuing similar charges at the federal level, regardless of what Willis ultimately does.”

POLICY CORNER

ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS UNDER FIRE — The DHS secretary is staring down a possible impeachment from House Republicans, who have elevated him as the man culpable for problems at the southern border. NYT’s Eileen Sullivan and Zolan Kanno-Youngs talked to two dozen people who have worked with Mayorkas to get a sense of how he’s actually doing in the job: He’s “an embattled secretary who may have had good intentions with his immigration policy goals but has been hamstrung by elements outside his control. … Still, Mr. Mayorkas, who has pledged to execute the Biden administration’s promise to create a fairer and more humane immigration system, is running behind schedule on delivering those results.”

DIPPING INTO CHIPS — It’s implementation time: The Commerce Department later this month will explain the process for semiconductor manufacturers to apply for new Chips Act funding, WSJ’s Yuka Hayashi scooped. Secretary GINA RAIMONDO will give a related speech Feb. 23.

UP IN THE AIR — “As Southwest, FAA probes begin, fallout could shape flying for years,” by WaPo’s Lori Aratani, Ian Duncan and Michael Laris

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

WASN’T ME — “‘I started a riot for the sitting president’: Why Ali Alexander won’t go to jail for his role in Jan. 6,” by Raw Story’s Jordan Green: “[ALI] ALEXANDER has displayed an uncanny ability to walk right up to the line of incitement, eluding prosecution in the largest criminal inquiry in the Justice Department’s history. … This is the story of how Alexander became the nation’s most untouchable J6er — for now.”

PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVES — Daniella Diaz is now a congressional reporter at POLITICO. She previously was a Hill reporter for CNN. … Chad Day is returning to the AP as its new chief elections analyst. He most recently was a national political reporter at the WSJ.

TRANSITIONS — Jonathan Gilad is now government affairs director for the National Emergency Number Association. He previously was associate VP for association solutions at MCI USA. … Emily Duncan will be SVP for federal affairs at American Electric Power. She previously was VP of government relations for National Grid. … Kristin Rudman is now media and comms manager at Squire Patton Boggs. She most recently was senior director at the Levinson Group. …

… Katherine Lugar will be EVP of global corporate affairs at Hilton. She currently is president and CEO of the American Beverage Association, departing in March. … David Stier is now a partner at DLA Piper. He previously was a trial attorney with the DOJ’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section’s Bank Integrity Unit. … Abby Spring is now SVP of strategic engagement at the Conservation Fund. She previously was founder and president of Spring Global LLC, and is an Edelman alum.

ENGAGED — Ryan Emery, a surgeon, proposed to Kristin Strobel, director of state and local government affairs at Microsoft, over the weekend at sunset overlooking Poipu Beach in Kauai, Hawaii. They met online. PicAnother pic

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California Today: The world that shaped Octavia Butler

A tour of the places that shaped the science fiction writer.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. Octavia Butler's acclaimed works were shaped by her life in California. Plus, Kamala Harris is struggling to carve out a lane for herself.

Joshua Trujillo/seattlepi.com, via Associated Press

Octavia Butler wrote 12 novels and won each of science fiction's highest honors. She was the first science fiction writer to be awarded a MacArthur "genius" grant.

In 2020, 14 years after her death, one of her novels, "Parable of the Sower," appeared on The New York Times's best-seller list for the first time, a testament to how much readers still connect with her writing today.

And much of that work was greatly shaped by her life in California. Butler was born and went to school in Pasadena. Her mother cleaned houses in the city's wealthy neighborhoods, and Butler became a fixture at the Peter Pan Room, the children's section of the elegant Pasadena Central Library. As an adult, she regularly traveled across the Southland, scrutinizing the world around her and drawing on those observations for her books.

"Southern California was really her inspiration," said Lynell George, a journalist based in Los Angeles who wrote the book "A Handful of Earth, A Handful of Sky: The World of Octavia E. Butler."

George recently wrote a piece for The Times that allows readers to explore Butler's universe, both through the author's own words but also through mesmerizing images of the places that made her. There are the stacks at the Central Library in downtown Los Angeles and the bus seats where Butler spent hours making sketches of potential characters. Butler never learned to drive, so she relied on the city's public transportation options.

"Los Angeles is so spread out that almost any bus ride will be a long one," Butler once observed. "The time proved perfect for writing."

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To understand Butler's life, George dug through hundreds of boxes of archives at the Huntington Library in San Marino that contain the author's voluminous notebooks and meticulous research. In her notes, Butler had recorded the changing seasonal colors of the hills and mountains surrounding Pasadena, or how long it took for random magnolia and pomegranate trees to grow heavy with blooms or fruit. She even measured the trees' growth year to year to gauge how well they were doing.

These close observations, along with an obsession with the news, gave Butler insight into the dangers of climate change, which played a central role in many of her novels. George's reporting has further revealed to her just how much Butler was observing the natural world, and learning from what she saw.

"Sometimes I will see an address scribbled in a notebook, and she's commented on whether or not a particular tree was going to survive," George said, adding that at least once she had checked on one of her predictions. "She was right: It was not there."

For the past few years, Butler's work has been experiencing something of a renaissance, as there are several ongoing TV and film adaptations based on her fiction, including "Kindred," her 1979 novel about a Black woman who is yanked back in time to the antebellum, and her 2005 vampire novel, "Fledgling." Her Times best-seller list appearance in 2020 was a longtime dream of hers. In 2021, NASA named the Mars landing site for the Perseverance rover the Octavia E. Butler Landing.

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"It's been quite a ride watching what has happened, given all the things she was hoping for that she didn't see in her lifetime," George told me. "That's been magnificent and poignant."

For more:

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Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press

The rest of the news

  • Tuition bill: A proposed bill would create a five-year pilot program to allow low-income students who live in Mexico, within 45 miles of the California border, to pay in-state tuition to attend one of seven campuses in the San Diego and Imperial Valley County Community College Association, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Kamala Harris: Even Harris's allies are tired of waiting for her to define her vice presidency.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • P-22: Wildlife officials and representatives from the Los Angeles region's tribal communities are debating what to do with the remains of P-22, the famed Los Angeles mountain lion who died late last year, The Associated Press reports.
  • Huntington Park: Officers in Huntington Park are facing national backlash after footage revealed that they fatally shot a man who had recently had both of his legs amputated and was using a wheelchair, and appeared to be fleeing, The Guardian reports.
  • Orange County killing: Vanroy Evan Smith, a 39-year-old Long Beach man, was charged on Friday with murder in the stabbing of a doctor who was riding his bicycle on the Pacific Coast Highway, The Orange County Register reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Mojave sheep: Proposals to build a high-speed electric rail and revive a long-dead solar project in the Mojave National Preserve have led to a clash with conservationists over how best to protect the region's bighorn sheep populations, The Los Angeles Times reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
Sam Chen/Aloha PhotoVideo, for Pacific Sotheby's International Realty

What you get

For $3.5 million: A Spanish-style house in Los Angeles, a 1925 Mediterranean-style home in San Francisco or a renovated 1978 retreat in Encinitas.

Christopher Testani for The New York Times.

What we're eating

Photographers at Carrizo Plain National Monument.George Rose/Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Andrew Carter, who lives in Hanford. Andrew recommends Carrizo Plain National Monument in rural San Luis Obispo County:

"In the spring, it's incredibly beautiful — green grass and wildflowers galore. Given the wet winter, this spring should be amazing with a potential wildflower superbloom. The national monument web page provides a link to a wildflower hotline updated weekly during March, April and May.

The monument is beautiful year-round, not just during wildflower season, although it can be extremely hot in the summer. Depending on time of year, Soda Lake may or may not have water in it. If not, you'll see wide alkali flats.

I camped at the KCL Campground off Soda Lake Road one year during non-wildflower season. I was the only person in the campground. I watched dusk fall over the red, brown and tan plain. The colors shifted to gray and then black. Other than the road in, there was no sign of man. Such incredible quiet and peacefulness.

I've also hiked through the fields in the foothills on the west side of the plain and hiked the Caliente Mountain Ridge Trail to Caliente Mountain, which provides views east over the plain and south to Cuyama Valley and the Los Padres National Forest beyond. Bring lots of water, especially for the ridge hike.

There are other trails to enjoy — the Painted Rock Trail to the Painted Rock Native American cultural site, the Travis Ranch trail through the old Travers Ranch homestead and the Wallace Creek Trail along the San Andreas Fault. Due to movement along the fault, the creek makes a right-hand turn and then a left-hand turn to cross it.

Clearly, a lot to see and do."

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

We're looking for recommendations for where to see the best art in California. What galleries have you visited over and over? Which exhibits do you insist on taking all out-of-town visitors?

Email us at CAToday@nytimes.com with your suggestions, and a few lines on why it's your pick.

Christine Sadoy Photography

And before you go, some good news

In 1992, Niffer Marie Desmond and her friend Caitlyn Meeks hosted a late night radio show called "The Bucket Sisters" at U.C. Santa Cruz, where they were undergraduates. On the show, they played CDs that were stacked on a shelf in the campus studio.

One night, they stumbled upon a CD called "Lo Fidelity, Hi Anxiety" by Paul Allen Petroskey, whose artist name is Weird Paul.

Typically, they would play a couple of songs from each CD. But this time, they played the entire album. "I thought to myself, 'I have to see if I can find more of these, and I want to meet this guy,'" Desmond said.

But it would be another eight years, in 2006, before she finally found him on Myspace — or rather, he found her. On her profile, she had listed Weird Paul as one of her favorite musicians. Petroskey, who has released 33 albums, had used a Myspace search tool to see those who had listed him as their favorite musician. When Desmond's profile popped up, he decided to send her a friend request.

That Myspace connection was the first chapter of their love story. Another took place last month, when Desmond and Petroskey got married.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

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

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