Playbook PM: Biden camp revs up contrast with Trump

Presented by Google: POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Sep 11, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

Presented by

Google

NOW LIVE — Inside Congress Live, POLITICO’s latest repository for all the Hill coverage you want, has up-to-the-moment coverage of Capitol protest arrests, the House spending saga and much more. Check it out here

U.S. President Joe Biden attends a business roundtable meeting at the Government Office in Hanoi, Vietnam, Monday, Sept. 11, 2023. (AP Photo/Minh Hoang, Pool)

The Biden reelect is trying to bolster the president's image and tarnish Donald Trump. | Minh Hoang, Pool/AP Photo

STEPPING IT UP — We’re past Labor Day, and as Washington revs up again for the fall, President’s JOE BIDEN reelection campaign is kicking into a new gear of tarring Republicans and promoting the president.

Over the next few months, the Biden campaign plans to highlight the GOP primary’s stampede to the right, putting unpopular Republican positions on abortion or guns front and center for Americans, The Messenger’s Dan Merica and Amie Parnes report. Ads that contrast Biden with Republicans could help the campaign turn the election into a choice, not a referendum, as Democrats tried to make happen in 2022 too.

And the campaign is stepping up its fundraising work by highlighting DONALD TRUMP’s threat to democracy more to juice its mediocre small-dollar numbers, NBC’s Allie Raffa and Peter Nicholas report. They’re trying to bolster fundraising rolls ahead of the end-of-quarter Sept. 30 deadline.

The Biden ads won’t all be negative: WaPo’s Michael Scherer digs into the unusual nature of the campaign’s big $25 million swing-state ad buy, which arrives more than a year earlier in the cycle than, for example, Trump’s reelect in 2020. The ad campaign’s goal is to transform voters’ image of Biden and help set a different narrative early, especially in a fragmented media environment. Various targeted ads will aim to reach Hispanic, Black and female voters. It’s not clear yet whether all the money will come from the campaign through the end of the year or if the DNC and state parties will step in. PATRICK BONSIGNORE, ADRIAN SAENZ and TERRANCE GREEN are overseeing the effort.

Biden’s five-day spin around the globe, though part of his official business, also has an ancillary political motivation for the president: reminding Americans of his vigor and abilities amid broad skepticism about his age, NYT’s Katie Rogers report and CNN’s Kevin Liptak and Jeremy Diamond report from India and Vietnam. “Back home and abroad, White House officials have publicly expressed irritation over news reports that describe the president as keeping the same languid campaign schedule as Mr. Trump,” Rogers writes.

The latest Biden-Trump contrast: Trump’s team is eyeing major new tax cuts to promote on the campaign trail and implement if he returns to the White House, WaPo’s Jeff Stein reports. Trump’s plan for massive new tariffs could pay for the tax cuts — and the cuts in turn could blunt the tariffs’ domestic pain, the former president’s campaign thinks. It’s far from a definitive policy platform yet, but the ideas being discussed include slashing the corporate tax rate to 15%, making further tax cuts for individuals and sending checks from tariff revenue to Americans.

The White House wasted no time in excoriating the ideas: “President Biden believes tax policies are the ultimate window into who a leader is really fighting for,” deputy press secretary ANDREW BATES said in a statement. “[A]nother wave of deficit-increasing tax welfare for big corporations — especially one directly tied to unprecedented price increases on American families — would turn back the clock to the trickledown economics that hollowed out the American middle class and added trillions to the national debt.”

One big headwind for Biden: A new WSJ poll tells an increasingly familiar story: Americans are starting to feel a bit better about the economy, but Biden is reaping basically no political benefit, Tarini Parti and David Harrison report. Positive feelings about the economy among independents, for instance, have risen 9 points since December. But with overall sentiment still quite low, few people credit Biden with any improvements.

One big tailwind for Biden: Republicans’ long-standing Electoral College advantage may finally be eroding, NYT’s Nate Cohn writes in a big new analysis. The key is shifting voter blocs and issue sets: The GOP has gained among voters of color and in less competitive states like New York and Florida, while Democrats have made inroads with white voters in purple states who prioritize issues like abortion and democracy. The upshot is that Cohn estimates the GOP’s Electoral College edge may have shrunk from 3.8 points in 2020 to just 0.7 points as of now, which could soothe Democrats’ anxiety over Biden’s and Trump’s roughly tied positions in many polls.

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

JOIN US — Tomorrow afternoon, Eugene is moderating a POLITICO event called “Business or Pleasure: Into the Age of the New Traveler.” It will feature a travel industry and labor panel, which includes SEIU International President MARY KAY HENRY, and a one-on-one interview with House Transportation and Infrastructure ranking member RICK LARSEN (D-Wash.). RSVP here

 

A message from Google:

Google expands Cybersecurity Clinics for critical jobs. To help thousands of students gain real-world experience for jobs critical to national security, Google in collaboration with the Consortium of Cybersecurity Clinics is awarding over $20M to support the creation and expansion of cybersecurity clinics at 20 higher education institutions. Learn more.

 

CONGRESS

SHUTDOWN SHOWDOWN — Rep. CHIP ROY (R-Texas), a Rules Committee member, isn’t backing down on spending cuts: Today, he wouldn’t even commit to supporting the Defense appropriations bill to come to the House floor this week, Jordain Carney reports. And he indicated to Semafor’s Joseph Zeballos-Roig that hard-right holdouts may have some competing demands for leadership in the spending fight: “Some people feel very strongly about holding the spending level. Some people want to see policy changes. Some people want to see both right now.”

FIRST PERSON — “I watched the newly-public security camera footage from January 6. I saw things I hadn’t seen before — including eerie scenes of lawmakers fleeing for their safety on one of the darkest days in American history,” by Insider’s Bryan Metzger

22 YEARS LATER

THE COMMEMORATIONS — Marking the 22nd anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, VP KAMALA HARRIS today spent about an hour at Ground Zero for a ceremony at the National September 11th Memorial, along with DHS Secretary ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS and top New York elected officials. Also at the event: Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS. (Politicians don’t speak at the ceremony; they bear witness as loved ones of the dead take the podium.)

Biden will speak in Alaska to mark the occasion later today, the first president to do so somewhere other than New York, the D.C. area or Pennsylvania. First lady JILL BIDEN will be at the Pentagon, and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF near Shanksville, Pa.

AROUND THE COUNTRY — “Bells toll as the U.S. marks 22 years since 9/11, from ground zero to Alaska,” by AP’s Jennifer Peltz and Karen Matthews: “People gathered at memorials, firehouses, city halls, campuses and elsewhere … ‘For those of us who lost people on that day, that day is still happening. Everybody else moves on. And you find a way to go forward, but that day is always happening for you,’ EDWARD EDELMAN said as he arrived at ground zero to honor his slain brother-in-law, DANIEL McGINLEY.”

STILL WAITING FOR JUSTICE — “Guantanamo trial for 9/11 mastermind in disarray on 22nd anniversary,” by USA Today’s Josh Meyer: “TERRY STRADA, a representative of many 9/11 families, said the possibility of such a plea agreement [to take the death penalty off the table] is just the latest — but probably the biggest — slap in the face yet for those demanding answers and accountability for al Qaeda’s suicide hijackings.”

 

GROWING IN THE GOLDEN STATE: POLITICO California is growing, reinforcing our role as the indispensable insider source for reporting on politics, policy and power. From the corridors of power in Sacramento and Los Angeles to the players and innovation hubs in Silicon Valley, we're your go-to for navigating the political landscape across the state. Exclusive scoops, essential daily newsletters, unmatched policy reporting and insights — POLITICO California is your key to unlocking Golden State politics. LEARN MORE.

 
 

2024 WATCH

THE DELEGATE DILEMMA — Trump and DeSantis are readying for a showdown at the California GOP state convention later this month over rules to determine how the state’s delegates will be allocated in the primary, NBC’s Allan Smith reports. This summer, the state party pushed through a rules change to turn California into a winner-take-all state if the No. 1 vote recipient crosses the 50% threshold. That raises the possibility that Trump could run away with all the delegates in the nation’s most populous state. DeSantis’ allies are mounting an effort to try to get the rule amended at the convention — but the bar is high to change it now, and one Trump ally says it was a mistake for the DeSantis folks to “telegraph” it in advance.

NOT SO SUPER — DeSantis’ heavy reliance on his super PAC Never Back Down has increasingly “sparked tension over strategic differences and communication barriers,” WSJ’s Alex Leary reports. JEFF ROE maintains that now is DeSantis’ moment as more voters start to tune in to the primary for the first time. But as the governor’s official campaign has shrunk, he’s had to cede more control over narrative and tactics to Never Back Down — and sometimes the public messaging flares to communicate between the two entities have backfired.

OFF THE DEEP END — False conspiracy theories about the pandemic have grown so widespread on the right that the majority of participants in a recent New Hampshire focus group thought the current Covid uptick was tied to Democrats trying to rig the election, Semafor’s Shelby Talcott reports. As viral misinformation festers, fears about “a mass reimposition of restrictions” at the federal level are playing a growing role in Republican primaries. Separately, even anti-Trump Republicans in the focus group want to send way less aid to Ukraine.

JUDICIARY SQUARE

THE LATEST FARA FLOP — “Prosecutors drop foreign-agent case against Trump transition adviser,” by Josh Gerstein: “In a court filing Monday, prosecutors indicated they’re giving up their long-running quest to convict BIJAN RAFIEKIAN, a California businessman and former business partner of Trump ally MICHAEL FLYNN, on charges of acting as an unregistered foreign agent for Turkey amid Trump’s successful White House bid seven years ago.”

MORE POLITICS

AFTERNOON READ — “Restore Roe, or Go Beyond It? The Question Is Fracturing the Abortion Rights Movement,” by Mother Jones’ Madison Pauly: “This fracturing has cast doubt on whether a version of [a Missouri abortion rights] initiative will even make it to the ballot next year. … At present, it’s unclear whether a campaign for an abortion-rights constitutional amendment would receive the support of the state’s sole former abortion provider — or from the national Planned Parenthood Action Fund.”

 

Enter the “room where it happens”, where global power players shape policy and politics, with Power Play. POLITICO’s brand-new podcast will host conversations with the leaders and power players shaping the biggest ideas and driving the global conversations, moderated by award-winning journalist Anne McElvoy. Sign up today to be notified of the first episodes in September – click here.

 
 

MEDIAWATCH

CHOTINER ON DOUTHAT — “Ross Douthat’s Theories of Persuasion,” by The New Yorker’s Isaac Chotiner: ROSS DOUTHAT, who joined the Times in 2009, occupies an all but vanished position: he is a Christian conservative who lives among liberals, writes for them, and — even when he is arguing against abortion, or against ‘woke progressivism’ — has their respectful attention. This is in part because he is curious, not only distraught, about the decline of faith in American life.”

PLAYBOOKERS

MEDIA MOVE — Dafna Linzer is now editorial director and EVP at U.S. News & World Report. She previously was executive editor of POLITICO.

TRANSITIONS — Udochi Onwubiko is joining Demos as director of economic justice. She previously was labor policy adviser in VP Kamala Harris’ office and senior policy adviser in the Wage and Hour Division at the Labor Department. … Adam Jorde is now a senior government affairs adviser at Wilkinson Barker Knauer. He previously was head of government affairs at Twilio and is a Kevin Cramer and John Thune alum. … Michelle Baker is joining Forbes Tate Partners as a public affairs partner. She previously was a chief of staff of health and EVP of corporate strategic initiatives at Ketchum.

WEEKEND WEDDING — Erica Pandey, a senior reporter at Axios, and Vincent Cicale, a senior associate scientist at Bristol Myers Squibb, got married Saturday at the Pleasantdale Chateau in New Jersey. Since her family is from Nepal, they had two ceremonies in one day. The couple met through mutual friends at a New Year’s Eve party in NYC right before the pandemic. PicAnother pic

Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com or text us at 202-556-3307. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike DeBonis, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producer Bethany Irvine.

 

A message from Google:

Advertisement Image

Students get hands-on experience at the cybersecurity clinics. Learn more.

 
 

Follow us on Twitter

Rachael Bade @rachaelmbade

Eugene Daniels @EugeneDaniels2

Ryan Lizza @RyanLizza

Eli Okun @eliokun

Garrett Ross @garrett_ross

 

Subscribe to the POLITICO Playbook family

Playbook  |  Playbook PM  |  California Playbook  |  Florida Playbook  |  Illinois Playbook  |  Massachusetts Playbook  |  New Jersey Playbook  |  New York Playbook  |  Ottawa Playbook  |  Brussels Playbook  |  London Playbook

View all our politics and policy newsletters

Follow us

Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Instagram Listen on Apple Podcast
 

To change your alert settings, please log in at https://www.politico.com/_login?base=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.politico.com/settings

This email was sent to ateebhassan000.ravian@blogger.com by: POLITICO, LLC 1000 Wilson Blvd. Arlington, VA, 22209, USA

Please click here and follow the steps to unsubscribe.

“Unhelpful comments” from Dublin are resonating with unionists in Northern Ireland

Breaking news from the Belfast News Letter
 
 
     
   
     
  Sep 11, 2023  
     
     
  Dublin comments 'unhelpful' amid efforts to restore Stormont says NI Secretary of State Chris Heaton-Harris  
     
  "Unhelpful comments" from Dublin are resonating with unionists in Northern Ireland while the UK Government continues its efforts to restore the Stormont powersharing institutions, Chris Heaton-Harris has said.  
     
Dublin comments 'unhelpful' amid efforts to restore Stormont says NI Secretary of State Chris Heaton-Harris
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
 
   
 
You have received this email as you are opted in to newsletters from the News Letter.
Log in or create an account to manage your newsletter preferences.
 
 
You can also change the types of emails you recieve from us or completely stop all emails.
 
 

National World Publishing Ltd
Published by National World Publishing Ltd

Registered in England and Wales (11499982). Suite D5, Joseph's Well, Hanover Walk, Leeds, England, LS3 1AB, United Kingdom.
We will process your personal data in accordance with our Privacy notice.
 

California Today: Inside Los Angeles’s Fraught Redistricting Process

A conversation with Jill Cowan, who spent months reporting on how members of the City Council redrew political maps to largely maintain their power.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Monday. Inside Los Angeles's fraught redistricting process. Plus, California may become the first state to ban caste discrimination.

Vermont Avenue in Koreatown in Los Angeles.Mark Abramson for The New York Times

You may remember the explosive recording of Los Angeles City Council members that was leaked last year. The profanity-laced audio, in which L.A. leaders can be heard mocking people in racist terms, stunned the city and prompted several high-profile resignations.

Less attention was paid to what the council members had actually gathered to discuss: the process of redistricting in Los Angeles, which is very much a fraught endeavor.

My colleagues Jill Cowan, Serge F. Kovaleski and Leanne Abraham recently published an article about that process, and the bruising power politics involved in running a city of 3.8 million people.

Their reporting reveals how council members largely ignored the stated goals of improving representation for Angelenos, and fought instead to push through new voting maps in 2021 that would allow them to keep their seats. This is essentially gerrymandering at the city level, much the way state lawmakers have redrawn legislative maps in many states to secure or expand their control over statehouses.

I spoke to Jill about the article, which you can read in full here. Our conversation has been lightly edited.

How did you come to this issue?

We had been reporting on the leaked recording of L.A. city officials making offensive comments, and there was, understandably, a lot of focus at that time on the language that they used. What we wanted to understand was what they were actually talking about: What was the context of this meeting? And when they were griping about a lack of Latino representation, what tangible changes were they trying to make?

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

I think the coverage of the leaked audio was probably the first time a lot of Angelenos had really heard about the redistricting process in L.A. Could you give us a primer on what it is and why it matters?

Every 10 years, after the census, Los Angeles, like other cities, is supposed to redraw its City Council district map to make representation around the city fairer and more equitable, based on where populations have shifted. It's a significant process in all big cities, but particularly in Los Angeles. The stakes are higher here than anywhere else because L.A. City Council districts have the largest populations in the country. This means that if you are elected to the L.A. City Council, you have a lot more power than a typical municipal official. That's in large part why so many former state lawmakers come back from Sacramento to run for the L.A. City Council, rather than the other way around.

How are the redistricting decisions made?

Los Angeles City Council members have the ultimate say over their own district boundaries, which, as our article shows, sets up a pretty intense competition: If council members were able to persuade a certain group of people living in their district to elect them, they want to keep those people as their constituents. And unlike at the state or federal level, where redistricting is party-oriented — meaning Democrats and Republicans are trying to pick up seats for their teams — the L.A. City Council is dominated by Democrats, so the fight is more like "Survivor" than, say, chess. The council members are out for themselves, unless they can make alliances.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

In essence, because everyone is on the same side — as in, they're almost all Democrats — no one is actually on the same side.

Yes, exactly! I think one of the fascinating things to me was that these redistricting fights are incredibly complex, and many date back decades. It was also interesting how much bald political maneuvering seems to be legal. After the recording emerged, a lot of people wondered whether the Voting Rights Act had been violated, but legal experts we spoke with for the article essentially said that the law was written to help prevent the most egregious racial gerrymandering in the South. Los Angeles in the 2020s is very different — it's much more diverse and much more geographically mixed. That actually could make Los Angeles a great test case for reforming the City Council to be more representative and more responsive, because the city is a kind of demographic preview of the nation more broadly.

How does the redistricting process affect everyday Angelenos?

Experts point to the string of corruption scandals at L.A. City Hall as an outgrowth of the powerful influence council members have over land use and development in their districts, which are, as I mentioned in the article, huge. And for all the big pronouncements about reform after the leak of the recording, people with power are typically not eager to give it up.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ad

So if Angelenos actually want reform, they have to stay engaged, even though the immediate outrage over the recording has mostly settled. City Council leaders who were vocal about no longer allowing elected leaders to essentially pick their own constituents, as has been the case with the current redistricting process, say they'll let voters decide next year. They've also said they want voters to decide whether to expand the Council, which was something a group of experts recommended as a way of combating corruption, but has been attempted before without success. Make sure you vote!

Enjoy all of The New York Times in one subscription — the original reporting and analysis, plus puzzles from Games, recipes from Cooking, product reviews from Wirecutter and sports journalism from The Athletic. Experience it all with a New York Times All Access subscription.

President Biden with Gov. Gavin Newsom in June.Doug Mills/The New York Times

The rest of the news

Southern California

Central California

Northern California

Calico Ghost Town Regional Park.Getty

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from John Mauger, who recommends a trip to a ghost town in San Bernardino County:

"One of my favorite places in California to take relatives or friends visiting me is Calico Ghost Town Regional Park, just a short drive outside Barstow. The location is now a county-operated park with regular hours of operation.

I have been lucky enough to have visited during Civil War re-enactment week, featuring not only one hundred or so blue and gray soldiers, but also dozens of people in period dress cooking, sewing and performing other duties to maintain the atmosphere of the 19th-century life.

It is an excellent day trip during ordinary days with something to captivate young and old visitors. You won't be disappointed."

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 recommending

Thirty-three nonfiction books to read this fall.

Tell us

Today we're asking about love: not whom you love, but what you love about your corner of California.

Email us a love letter to your California city, neighborhood or region — or to the Golden State as a whole — and we may share it in an upcoming newsletter. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

U.S. News & World Report ranked the San Jose metro area the second-best city in the country for families in 2023-24.Jim Wilson/The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

The Bay Area remains a top destination for those looking to raise a family, according to the latest U.S. News & World Report rankings.

The publication ranked the San Jose metro area the second-best city in the country for families in 2023-24, a boon for the region, which has been losing residents to more affordable West Coast cities, The Mercury News reports.

The publication, well known for its rankings, including its annual list of top colleges, cited San Jose's strong high school education system and high rates of college preparedness as assets, but subtracted points for towering housing costs and a high cost of living. The ranking also took into account quality of life and job opportunities, crime rates and average salaries.

Icing on the cake for Bay Area die-hards: San Jose was the only city in California to make the list.

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

Johnna Margalotti contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for California Today from The New York Times.

To stop receiving California Today, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018