Two Biden nominees hit Senate speed bumps

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Mar 08, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 27: Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti attends the 2022 Los Angeles City College Foundation Gala at the Skirball Cultural Center on October 27, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amanda Edwards/Getty Images)

Eric Garcetti, nominated as U.S. ambassador to India, lost the support of Senate Foreign Relations ranking member Jim Risch (R-Idaho). | Amanda Edwards/Getty Images

NOMINEE TRAVAILS — A pair of high-profile nominees hit some speed bumps in the Senate today:

— Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) announced that he’d vote against DANIEL WERFEL’s nomination as IRS commissioner. Though Manchin said Werfel is “supremely qualified,” he’s withholding his support over a separate dispute with the Treasury Department regarding electric vehicle tax credits: “I have zero faith he will be given the autonomy to perform the job in accordance with the law,” Manchin said in a statement.

But Sen. RON WYDEN (D-Ore.) said he still expects Werfel to have enough bipartisan backing to be confirmed on the floor. The chamber just invoked cloture on the nomination, 51-44.

— ERIC GARCETTI, nominated as U.S. ambassador to India, lost the support of Senate Foreign Relations ranking member JIM RISCH (R-Idaho), who said “new evidence” gave him pause about Garcetti’s judgment. Almost 600 days into Garcetti’s nomination, questions about his handling of sexual misconduct allegations against a top adviser continue to dog him. “We must ensure that any chief of mission will, without question, protect our foreign service officers and embassy staff from all types of harassment,” Risch said.

The committee vote on Garcetti’s nomination was postponed to 2 p.m. today.

More big news from Senate Foreign Relations: The committee voted 13-8 to repeal the authorizations for use of military force in Iraq from 1991 and 2002.

BUDGET BURST — President JOE BIDEN’s budget proposal coming tomorrow will include a 5.2% raise for federal employees, which would be the biggest since 1980 but way below the 8.7% increase that many Democrats and labor unions want, WaPo’s Lisa Rein reports. On the flip side, 5.2% will be too steep a raise for House Republicans to support.

And his plan would cut deficits by almost $3 trillion over the next 10 years, AP’s Josh Boak scooped. That’s almost $1 trillion more than he promised in his State of the Union, as he tries to put Republicans on the back foot.

Meanwhile, as House Republicans gear up to present their balanced budget proposal, they’re anticipating a politically difficult reveal of a plan that would make massive cuts to popular initiatives, NYT’s Carl Hulse and Catie Edmondson report. Led by RUSS VOUGHT, the strategy might slash foreign aid by 45%, do away with Obamacare Medicaid expansions and add work requirements to food stamps and Medicaid.

But don’t expect it to drop very soon: House Budget Chair JODEY ARRINGTON (R-Texas) told CNN’s Melanie Zanona that Republicans are in “no rush” and expect to put it out in early to mid-May.

BIG NEWS IN KENTUCKY — “U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland issues scathing report into LMPD practices,” by the Louisville Courier Journal’s Billy Kobin and Andrew Wolfson: “The department, for years, ‘has practiced an aggressive style of policing that it deploys selectively, especially against Black people, but also against vulnerable people throughout the city,’ U.S. Attorney General MERRICK GARLAND said.”

Good Wednesday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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JUDICIARY SQUARE

SCHLAPP CASE LATEST — The man suing prominent Republican campaign operative MATT SCHLAPP over an alleged sexual assault cannot proceed anonymously in the case, a Virginia judge ruled today, our Josh Gerstein reports. “The court finds that the plaintiff has not established, I think, a heavy burden of establishing both a concrete need for secrecy and identifying the consequences that would likely befall him if forced to proceed in his own name,” Alexandria Circuit Court Judge LISA KEMLER declared after hearing arguments from both sides.

The accuser, who worked on HERSCHEL WALKER’s unsuccessful Senate campaign in Georgia last year, claims in his $9.4 million suit that Schlapp groped and fondled him during an October visit to back Walker. Schlapp has denied the claim. Schlapp’s lawyer, BENJAMIN CHEW, said in court today that the accuser has past ties to white supremacists and a “highly checkered employment record.”

The accuser’s attorney, TIMOTHY HYLAND, argued identifying his client could lead to threats and invasion of privacy. He noted that a federal judge in Washington granted the accuser’s bid to remain anonymous in a related lawsuit filed there.

As she denied the accuser’s right to proceed as a “John Doe” in the Virginia case, Kemler also floated the idea of a gag order on the parties, but didn’t impose one “at this time.” POLITICO policy is not to name individuals alleging sexual assault.

WAR IN UKRAINE

WHERE McCARTHY WON’T GO — Ukrainian President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer that he’s inviting Speaker KEVIN McCARTHY to visit and see the war up close. “He has to come here to see how we work, what’s happening here, what war caused us, which people are fighting now, who are fighting now. And then after that, make your assumptions,” Zelensky said. “He never visited Kyiv or Ukraine, and I think it would help him with his position.” But McCarthy shrugged out of it in comments to Manu Raju: “I don’t have to go to Ukraine to understand where there’s a blank check or not,” he said. “I will continue to get my briefings and others, but I don’t have to go to Ukraine or Kyiv to see it.”

JAN. 6 AND ITS AFTERMATH

HOUSE GOP UNBOWED — Criticisms of his TUCKER CARLSON Jan. 6 footage release be damned, McCarthy and his fellow House Republicans are plowing ahead with plans for multiple Jan. 6 investigations of their own, CNN’s Annie Grayer, Melanie Zanona and Manu Raju detail. Rep. BARRY LOUDERMILK (R-Ga.) will lead a probe investigating the last Jan. 6 congressional investigation, along with security problems from the day. And there may even be a probe into how Jan. 6 defendants have been treated.

Zinger from Sen. JOHN CORNYN (R-Texas): “I think they need to watch a little less cable TV.”

And the White House is stepping up its criticism of Carlson, with a rare statement to Chris Cadelago calling him out by name as “not credible.”

 

We’re spilling the tea (and drinking tons of it in our newsroom) in U.K. politics with our latest newsletter, London Playbook PM. Get to know all the movers and shakers in Westminster and never miss a beat of British politics with a free subscription. Don’t miss out, we’ve got some exciting moves coming. Sign up today.

 
 

2024 WATCH

GALLEGO OPENS UP — As he runs for Senate, Rep. RUBEN GALLEGO (D-Ariz.) is being open about his experiences with PTSD from his time in Iraq, WaPo’s Ben Terris writes in a new Style section profile. Gallego’s mental health struggles have at times propelled him toward political ambition, but he’s also put in years of work to recover — and to share his journey publicly. The story traces his path from an abusive childhood to Harvard to war to Congress. “Gallego has made the bet that voters have a better and more nuanced understanding about mental health struggles than they may have had in the past.”

Notable line, from Gallego on Harvard: “‘I used to serve drinks at PETE BUTTIGIEG’s little political club at the Institute of Politics,’ he said. ‘I hated them all.’” … LIS SMITH rolled her eyes in response: “.@RubenGallego wants you to know that he is *so* cool.”

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — VIVEK RAMASWAMY today will demand that the RNC lay out now how it will decide who makes it to the presidential debates, not wait until later in the race. “Vivek has a renewed focus on exposing corruption in the political system,” his campaign spokesperson TRICIA McLAUGHLIN said in a statement. He’ll “call on the RNC to immediately release its criteria for debate stage placement to avoid any game playing later, much like the DNC did to BERNIE SANDERS in 2015-2016.”

DIVIDED LOYALTIES — South Carolina Republicans are struggling to choose between NIKKI HALEY and potential presidential contender Sen. TIM SCOTT, The State’s Alex Roarty reports. Plenty of GOP politicos in the state have close ties to both, and Scott has already begun staffing up for a run, with local chatter growing that he’ll join Haley in the field. And “the public ambivalence about which candidate to support could carry on longer than most people expect.”

MORE POLITICS

CRIME PAYS — House Democrats’ votes to preserve D.C.’s local criminal code changes — which are set to be steamrolled in the Senate today — are already the subject of new GOP attack ads, Axios’ Andrew Solender reports. The NRCC is putting five figures behind digital ads targeting 15 House Dems.

FASCINATING FINDINGS — Republicans’ attacks on “wokeness” might have limited political utility, a new poll from USA Today/Ipsos indicates: By a 56% to 39% margin, Americans say the term means awareness of social injustices, not excessive political correctness, Susan Page reports. The more positive connotation is held by a narrow majority of independents and even more than a third of Republicans. Still, a 42% plurality of independents say that being called “woke” is an insult. Plus more interesting (and varied) results on teaching about race, book censorship and gender-neutral pronouns

NEW ON THE SCENE — ZACK CARROLL, JANE HUGHES and JOSHUA KARP are launching Liftoff Campaigns, a new Democratic digital/comms firm that Jessica Piper reports “aims to align candidates’ fundraising pleas with their carefully crafted campaign messaging” — i.e., make them less annoying and more effective.

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

SPY GAMES — It’s becoming increasingly difficult for the U.S. to gather intelligence about Chinese state decision-making, NBC’s Dan De Luce reports, thanks to President XI JINPING’s “tightening grip on power, his government’s vast electronic surveillance apparatus, a crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong, and a strict three-year Covid lockdown.”

 

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PLAYBOOKERS

IN MEMORIAM — “Barbara Everitt Bryant, first woman to oversee census, dies at 96,” by WaPo’s Harrison Smith

OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at Pearl Street Warehouse last night celebrating Rep. Greg Murphy’s (R-N.C.) 60th birthday with karaoke: House Majority Leader Steve Scalise and Reps. David Rouzer (R-N.C.), Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-Iowa), Rob Wittman (R-Va.), Scott Fitzgerald (R-Wis.), Ron Estes (R-Kan.), Beth Van Duyne (R-Texas) and Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.).

EMILY’s List held its sixth annual pre-Oscars breakfast yesterday in LA, with a focus on “How Women Change The World” in entertainment and storytelling in politics. SPOTTED: Garcelle Beauvais, Sophia Bush, Amber Riley, Lisa Ann Walter, Yvette Nicole Brown, Jennifer Lin, Wendy Greuel, Gloria Calderón Kellett, Cookie Johnson, Justin Mikita, Ron Livingston, Leigh McGowan, Kate Siegel, Anjali Bhimani, Samantha Sloyan, Baron Davis, California Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, LA Mayor Karen Bass, Massachusetts AG Andrea Campbell, California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, Michael Tubbs and Laphonza Butler.

MEDIA MOVE — Jackson Richman is now a Washington correspondent at The Epoch Times. He most recently was a writer at Mediaite.

WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Maya James is now special assistant in the office of Cabinet affairs at the White House. She most recently was a book reviewer at Locus Magazine.

TRANSITIONS — Evan Turnage is now chief counsel for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Josh Sisco reports. He previously was senior counsel with focus on competition policy for Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). … Ariel Judah is now director of U.S. government affairs at Red Bull North America. He most recently was director of federal relations for former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, and is a Jon Kyl alum. … Quentin Dupouy is now legislative assistant for Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.). He previously was digital director and legislative aide for Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.). …

… Naseam Alavi is now special adviser to the chief of staff at the Department of Education. She most recently was director of the Office of Partnership Engagement for the private sector at DHS. … The Center for Justice Innovation is adding Theron Pride as managing director of national initiatives and research, Dan Lavoie as chief external affairs officer and Sherene Crawford as chief of staff to the executive director. … Kyle Scott is now grants manager at Connector Labs. He most recently ran for treasurer of Harris County, Texas.

ENGAGED — Joelle Gamble, chief economist at the Department of Labor and incoming deputy director of the National Economic Council, and Zac Copeland, an associate at Gibson Dunn, got engaged Sunday on the Georgetown waterfront. Pic

WEEKEND WEDDING — Joanna Miller, a senior adviser at Save America PAC and a Trump White House alum, and Greg Wischer, VP of operations at Westwin Elements, got married at St. Stephen Martyr Catholic Church on Saturday, with the reception at the Willard. The couple met through mutual friends in fall 2020 at a party at her old apartment in the West End. PicAnother pic

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Chelsea Jarrett, deputy chief of staff to Rep. Hal Rogers (R-Ky.), and Ben Jarrett, associate at Innovative Federal Strategies and an Appalachian Regional Commission and John Carter alum, welcomed Nora Elizabeth Jarrett on Feb. 25.Pic

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California Today: Winter’s grip

So much snow has transformed the landscape across the state.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Wednesday. Readers share photos of their neighborhoods transformed by snow. Plus, Gov. Gavin Newsom won't deliver a State of the State address this year.

The Owens River Gorge in eastern California.Stephen Cunha

Winter weather in the Golden State, of all places, continues to draw national attention this year.

First, atmospheric rivers flooded towns and swallowed cars. Then, snow fell in Silicon Valley, Santa Cruz, Oakland and a whole host of places unaccustomed to it. Graupel, an ice-snow combo, dusted the Hollywood sign. Yosemite National Park closed indefinitely after record snowfall buried cabins and blanketed roads.

And starting Thursday, another set of heavy storms is expected to hit much of the state, which could bring more flooding and rain damage. I don't need to tell you — it's been a wild winter.

Late last month I was driving in Paso Robles, a city on the Central Coast known for its wineries and olive groves, when I noticed the tops of the gently sloping green hills sprinkled with snow. I'd never seen anything like it.

The small town of Shandon in San Luis Obispo County last month.Soumya Karlamangla/The New York Times

Twenty miles east in Shandon, a small community also in San Luis Obispo County, the skies were mostly blue — but the roofs of cars, small homes and wooden barns were all blanketed in snow. I watched as a father and daughter, bundled in scarves and jackets, assembled a wobbly snowman from what had fallen on a grassy field in the city's park.

Today we're sharing photos you emailed us of what this winter has looked like in your neck of the woods. Leslie Bates, a reader who lives in Gualala on the Mendocino Coast, said that she had been sending snow pictures to her brother who lives in the Catskills in New York: "The world turned upside down!"

Craig Whichard's cabin in Arnold.Craig Whichard

Sandra Sincek, who lives in Julian, a small mountain town northeast of San Diego, described her child's first sled run of the year.

"Occasionally we will get a few inches of snow, but this was a glorious winter event," she wrote. "When the clouds finally parted, our son carried his wooden snow sled to the top of the hill, carefully positioned it, climbed in, and let go."

Craig Whichard wrote to us from his cabin in Arnold, on the western side of the Sierra Nevada and about 70 miles east of Stockton. He said that the five feet of snow that fell late last month was more than he'd seen in his 14 years there.

"It is truly a winter wonderland," he wrote.

In Cloverdale in Sonoma County.Star Carpenter
A geodesic dome in the Santa Cruz mountains.Karrie Gaylord
The view from Hollister in San Benito County.Susan Heck
Snow-capped San Gabriel Mountains, seen from Glassell Park in Los Angeles.Emily Zuzik Holmes

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Snow-covered mountains behind the Hollywood sign.Patrick T. Fallon/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The rest of the news

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Bay Bridge lights: A light installation on the Bay Bridge installed in 2013 was turned off on Sunday after its creators said it could no longer endure the region's harsh conditions.
  • Synagogue shooting: Dmitri Mishin, 51, is accused of firing blanks inside a synagogue in San Francisco's Richmond District. On Tuesday a judge dropped hate crime enhancements against him, though Mishin still faces felony charges, The San Francisco Standard reports.
Kay Chun's butternut squash pasta with brown-butter bread crumbs.Christopher Testani for The New York Times.

What we're eating

10 recipes that will make you a better cook.

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China Cove at California's Point Lobos State Reserve.Eros Hoagland for The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Sunday Stevens, who recommends Carmel-by-the-Sea:

"I know so many people say this, but it is uniquely California. Recharge for a few days if you can. The charm is a salve to city life. Just taking a walk through the residential streets and looking at the beautiful houses is meditative. Or taking a walk down to the Carmel Beach and seeing the incredible sunset is an instant reboot on life. And the hikes along Point Lobos State Reserve are beyond compare. Every step you take is another glory of nature. It will recharge every molecule of joy within you."

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.

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What we're recommending

At the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles, the new musical "The Lonely Few" puts a romance between two women at its very heart.

A North Pacific right whale in the North Pacific Ocean.Marine Mammal Commission/Handout via Reuters

And before you go, some good news

On Sunday morning, Pualani Dalton was steering a whale-watching boat in Monterey Bay when she spotted a creature in the distance. She assumed it was a humpback whale, a common species along the California coast.

But, upon closer inspection, the whale turned out to be a North Pacific right whale, one of only about 30 living along the U.S. and Canadian Pacific Coast, according to The San Francisco Chronicle. North Pacific right whales have been critically endangered since the 1970s, when they were almost hunted to extinction.

"It was hard to believe," said Dane McDermott, a marine biologist who was on board during the sighting. "It's like you have found a zebra when you were looking for horses."

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

Briana Scalia, Isabella Grullón Paz and Lyna Bentahar contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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