SCOOP: Manchin ‘refused’ a call from W.H. before killing BBB

From: POLITICO Playbook - Sunday Dec 19,2021 05:51 pm
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DRIVING THE DAY

Less than 30 minutes before he killed the Democratic Party’s most important piece of legislation, an aide was dispatched by Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) to give the White House and congressional leadership a heads up.

The senator himself was about to go live and was prepping for his interview with BRET BAIER on “Fox News Sunday.” He was out of town with family and doing the hit via satellite, but still had his best Sunday show attire. He wore a red tie and pin-striped suit. His hair looked perfect. It would probably be one of the most viral video clips of his long career.

At the White House, there was panic and disbelief. He sent an aide to tell the president of the United States that he was about to go on Fox News and put a bullet in BBB?

Top White House officials scrambled to call the senator and talk him out of what he was about to do.

“We tried to head him off,” a senior White House official told Playbook, but Manchin “refused to take a call from White House staff.”

At Fox News’ Washington studio, Baier was hosting his first episode of “Fox News Sunday” since CHRIS WALLACE abruptly decamped for CNN+ last weekend. The show’s staff knew how much attention would be on them and how important it was, in the ongoing war between news and opinion at Fox, to prove that the news side still could drive the conversation about the network.

Manchin didn’t give Baier a heads up about the news he was about to break.

There was a long wind up about all the efforts the senator says he’s made:

“Well, Bret, you know, this is a mammoth piece of legislation, and I have had my reservations from the beginning when they heard about it a five and half months ago and I’ve been working diligently every day, every minute of every day, I’ve been working on this, meeting with — whether it’d be the president, President [JOE] BIDEN, whether it’d be Majority Leader [CHUCK] SCHUMER and his staff, whether it would be with NANCY PELOSI, all of my colleagues. I mean, from all different spectrums of the political spectrum, if you will, from the right to the left. I’ve done everything humanly possible.”

And then a big pivot to his familiar list of concerns about inflation and the debt:

“Where I’m at right now, the inflation that I was concerned about, it’s not transitory; it’s real, it’s harming every West Virginian. It’s making it almost difficult for them to continue, to go to their jobs — the cost of gasoline, the cost of groceries, the cost of utility bills, all of these things are hitting in every aspect of their life.

“And … then you have the debt that we’re carrying, $29 trillion. You have, also, the geopolitical unrest that we have. You have the Covid — the [Omicron] variant — and that is wreaking havoc again, people are concerned. I’ve been with my family, I know everyone is concerned.”

Manchin has said all that before, but then he added the news, a death blow to BBB, which can’t pass without his vote:

“So when you have these things coming at you the way they are right now, I’ve always said this, Bret: If I can't go home and explain it to the people of West Virginia, I can't vote for it. And I cannot vote to continue with this piece of legislation. I just can’t.

“I’ve tried everything humanly possible. I can’t get there.”

Sometimes, it’s hard to realize when a typical “talking points” interview suddenly turns into an important moment in history. Baier took a second to process the enormity of what he was being told.

“You’re done? This is — is this a no?”

It was.

“This is a no on this legislation,” Manchin said, giving Democrats a shred of hope that, if not this, then other legislation could still be crafted to satisfy the West Virginia senator. “I have tried everything I know to do.” Watch the full interview here

In Congress, there was disgust among Democrats . “Manchin didn’t have the courage to call the White House or Democratic leadership himself ahead of time,” said one Democrat familiar with the morning’s drama.

At the White House, the disbelief turned to a sense of betrayal. Last week, Manchin offered the president a proposal “in the $1.75T ball park.” Aides were debating Sunday morning whether they should release the Manchin document or not. “It is in writing,” said the same official. “Listen to what Manchin himself said all week. How many times did he say he ‘did not oppose’ the bill, just wanted to line up programs with pay fors?”

In Congress, among Republican moderates who helped crafted the bipartisan infrastructure bill, there was a sense of victory. “This is vindication for every Republican who supported the bipartisan infrastructure bill,” said a senior GOP aide. “Every Republican who claimed that BIF would pave the way for BBB was flat out wrong. Today doesn’t happen without BIF getting done.”

BBB is dead. The only question is whether some new, more Manchin-shaped bill can be revived that salvages some key pieces of the Biden climate and social policy agenda.

“Look, with Manchin you never know,” said the senior White House official. “I’ve never seen anything like this… The guy shook hands with the president. He made us a written offer on Tuesday that had holes but was doable. If he flipped away from that so quickly, maybe he can flip back.”

As of this writing, that seems unlikely. The relationship between the White House and Manchin is deeply frayed.

At noon, the White House released a long statement detailing the history of Manchin’s repeated assurances to the president that he would support some version of BBB that was close to what the rest of his party had negotiated.

“Senator Manchin’s comments this morning on FOX are at odds with his discussions this week with the president, with White House staff, and with his own public utterances,” the statement from JEN PSAKI said. “Weeks ago, Senator Manchin committed to the president, at his home in Wilmington, to support the Build Back Better framework that the President then subsequently announced. Senator Manchin pledged repeatedly to negotiate on finalizing that framework ‘in good faith.’

“On Tuesday of this week, Senator Manchin came to the White House and submitted — to the president, in person, directly — a written outline for a Build Back Better bill that was the same size and scope as the president’s framework, and covered many of the same priorities. While that framework was missing key priorities, we believed it could lead to a compromise acceptable to all. Senator Manchin promised to continue conversations in the days ahead, and to work with us to reach that common ground. If his comments on FOX and written statement indicate an end to that effort, they represent a sudden and inexplicable reversal in his position, and a breach of his commitments to the president and the senator’s colleagues in the House and Senate.”

She added, “Just as Senator Manchin reversed his position on Build Back Better this morning, we will continue to press him to see if he will reverse his position yet again, to honor his prior commitments and be true to his word.” The full statement

Essentially, Psaki is calling Manchin a liar. Picking up the pieces from here won’t be easy. In fact, one senior Democratic aide texted us minutes after the White House press release came out with this assessment: “Whoever at the White House who thinks it’s a good idea to go scorched earth needs to be fired… He’s the president. He’s supposed to be the adult.” Further reading: “White House lights up Manchin after he crushes Biden's megabill,” by Burgess Everett and Jonathan Lemire

MEANWHILE, IN WEST VIRGINIA — A headline on the homepage of the Charleston Gazette-Mail, Manchin’s hometown paper: “‘We need this so bad’: Build Back Better backers say bill would protect WV’s most vulnerable as Manchin resists”

BERNIE WANTS A VOTE — Sen. BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.) on CNN’s “State of the Union”: “I think he’s going to have a lot of explaining to do to the people of West Virginia to tell him why he doesn’t have the guts to take on the drug companies to lower the cost of prescription drugs, why he is not prepared to expand home health care.”

Sanders also called for the bill to be brought to the floor , regardless of Manchin’s opinions: “We have been dealing with Mr. Manchin for month after month after month. But if he doesn't have the courage to do the right thing for the working families of West Virginia and America, let him vote no in front of the whole world.”

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Good Sunday morning. Thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line and tell us what you think happens next with the Biden legislative agenda: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.

SUNDAY BEST …

Rep. ADAM KINZINGER (R-Ill.) on ABC’s “This Week” on whether the Jan. 6 committee has more text messages: “There are more texts out there that we haven't released where it’s folks not saying things like, ‘Hey, MARK MEADOWS , why don't you make sure all the votes are counted and then whoever has the most wins?’ It’s going around the nuances of the law, or it’s saying, ‘Here’s how we can use this technicality to win.’ … We’re going to pursue — doggedly — everything, to the ends of the Earth, and that includes … members of Congress that had any involvement.”

— On whether the committee will subpoena former President DONALD TRUMP: “If we need it, yes. Nobody should be above the law, but we also recognize we can get the information without him at this point, and, obviously, when you subpoena the former president, that comes with a whole kind of, you know, circus environment.”

Maryland GOP Gov. LARRY HOGAN on “Fox News Sunday” on whether Republicans can win the presidency in 2024 with Trump as the nominee: “I think that’d be bad for the party and, you know, bad for President Trump and bad for the country. So, I don’t think he’s going to run it.”

Colorado Democratic Gov. JARED POLIS on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on what he wants to hear from Biden’s Covid speech this week: “I would say, ‘Stop talking about the vaccine as a booster; talk about it as three doses that are needed for effective prevention.’ … It essentially negates the risk. Nothing is risk-free in life … but if you're boosted, you can feel very confident that if you get Covid, it’ll be a minor case. I’d also say we need to focus on prices, increases in prices and costs that people across the country are facing.”

 

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PHOTO OF THE DAY

Volunteers place wreaths on tombstones at Arlington National Cemetery, on December 18, 2021 in Arlington, Virginia.

Volunteers place wreaths on tombstones at Arlington National Cemetery on Saturday, Dec. 18. | Al Drago/Getty Images

IN MEMORIAM — via Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Tamar Hallerman and Daniel Malloy: Former Sen. JOHNNY ISAKSON (R-Ga.) “76, died Sunday morning. In Congress, Isakson helped craft the No Child Left Behind education law and, later, its replacement. He worked to reform the Department of Veterans Affairs, immigration policy and health care. He was something of an anomaly in hyperpolarized Washington: a conservative willing to work with Democrats and disdainful of shrill rhetoric. He was so internally popular that his Republican colleagues handed him two committee chairmanships when the party took the Senate in 2015.” The full obituary

OMI-CHRONICLES

The early indicators from Denmark, with one of the world’s best coronavirus tracking systems, are a flashing red light for the rest of the world, WaPo’s Chico Harlan reports from Copenhagen . Even if the Omicron variant is somewhat milder, the median modeling scenario in Denmark foresees a massive wave of Covid-19 cases into January inundating hospitals well beyond what they’ve experienced thus far in the pandemic.

Here in the U.S.

AP: Hospitals are already worn out and struggling. “Ohio became the latest state to summon the National Guard to help overwhelmed medical facilities. Experts in Nebraska warned that its hospitals soon may need to ration care. Medical officials in Kansas and Missouri are delaying surgeries, turning away transfers and desperately trying to hire traveling nurses.”

WaPo: The nation’s coronavirus testing infrastructure is coming under strain as skyrocketing demand in some areas runs into availability and capacity problems. “Public health experts warn each hurdle, from the price tag of a rapid test to a several day wait for a PCR test, makes it harder to battle a winter surge.”

N.Y. Post: New York state hit a single-day record for new Covid cases on Saturday: 21,908. It broke the state’s previous all-time high… which was set on Friday.

We want to stress: This is before any Omicron wave has peaked.

“Officials hope that the peak of the Omicron wave will be over by early February,” our former colleague Dan Diamond, now at WaPo, writes in a Facebook note to friends and family that he’s made public. “Every expert I’ve interviewed, including some of the nation’s top health officials, has adjusted his or her mindset and now is mentally bracing to test positive after spending two years dodging the virus. ‘Breakthrough’ cases are going to be normalized in a hurry, if they aren’t already.” Related: “What to Do if You Test Positive for Covid-19 as Omicron Variant Surges,” by WSJ’s Sumathi Reddy

Biden will address the nation Tuesday with both “new steps the administration is taking to help communities in need of assistance” and, per a White House official, “a stark warning of what the winter will look like for Americans that choose to remain unvaccinated.” More from NBC

— How the White House is reframing its message: “Administration officials have been debating how to shift public attention from the total number of cases … toward the number of severe infections,” with an eye toward the virus’s long-term endemicity, CNN’s Kevin Liptak and Jeremy Diamond report in their behind-the-scenes look at Biden’s last stark warning to the unvaccinated — which came just three days ago.

— How they’re shifting policy: The Labor Department said Saturday it will extend the testing portion of the vaccination-or-testing mandate for many large businesses, moving it from Jan. 4 to Feb. 9. The administration said the delay was due to any uncertainty created by the legal challenges to the mandate, which a federal court has now allowed to go ahead. Penalties for non-compliance with the vaccine mandate will begin Jan. 10. More from USA Today

Meanwhile, some sort-of good news: CDC statistics have wrongly counted millions of second or third coronavirus vaccine shots as first jabs, reports Bloomberg’s Josh Wingrove, which means we’ve likely been understating both the number of fully vaccinated Americans and the number of fully unvaccinated Americans. The downside, of course, is that it’s “the country’s health system, unlike its G-7 peers, is exceptionally fragmented.”

PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — WaPo’s Marissa Lang reports on “a growing dread” in D.C. as the city stares down the prospect of an exploding outbreak over the coming weeks.

MEDIAWATCH — CNN is closing its offices for non-essential employees due to the surge, WSJ’s Benjamin Mullin scooped.

THE WHITE HOUSE

SOMBER DAY — In Delaware on Saturday, President JOE BIDEN marked the 49th anniversary of the car crash that killed his wife NEILIA and baby daughter NAOMI. He went to their gravesites at the Saint Joseph on the Brandywine Roman Catholic Church, the AP reports from Greenville.

 

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POLITICS ROUNDUP

2022 WATCH — Former Rep. MAX ROSE (D-N.Y.) tells N.Y. Mag’s Nia Prater that he’s running to win his old seat back in large part because of Jan. 6 and the state of the Republican Party. He accuses the GOP of “secretly, privately luxuriating in this spike in inflation and they want it to continue” because it hurts Biden politically.

UNDER THE REDISTRICTING HOOD — By now, it’s an obvious fact that Republican mapmakers are gerrymandering Democrats out of power. But NYT’s Nick Corasaniti and Reid Epstein highlight a less discussed element of the redistricting process: Across several states, white Republicans are drawing Black Democrats into tougher districts. And Supreme Court decisions that gutted the Voting Rights Act and allowed partisan gerrymandering leave few opportunities for recourse.

GETTING TO KNOW GAVIN — California Gov. GAVIN NEWSOM’s “propensity for rattling off numbers and facts can feed into the public image of a self-assured and all-too-polished politician. But it’s also a byproduct of insecurities over learning issues that seeped into his consciousness at an early age,” L.A. Times’ Taryn Luna and Phil Willon write in a piece that centers on Newsom’s struggles with dyslexia. “I’m in a sort of perpetual place of trying to overcompensate, trying to prove something to myself,” Newsom said.

A glimpse at the governor’s daily routing: “California’s most powerful politician often begins his day around 6 a.m. alone in his office, struggling to read. With his headphones on and the door closed, Gov. Gavin Newsom goes through his daily briefing binder once. Then a second time. Then a third. … He distills pages of notes onto yellow cards and slides them into his pocket to study during the ride to news conferences or speaking engagements. Newsom says the painstaking system helps him retain information[.]”

CONGRESS

FROM 30,000 FEET — NYT’s Jonathan Weisman opens this year-end congressional retrospective with a dizzying step back: Congress has gotten so dysfunctional that “lawmakers in both parties [are] wondering if the legislative branch can be rehabilitated without major changes to its rules of operations.” The shadow of the Jan. 6 insurrection to overthrow democracy has cast a long shadow over the entire year, and hardly anybody on either side of the aisle is happy these days.

THE NEW COLD WAR — In case you haven’t followed the wild war of words last week between Russian lawmaker ALEKSEI ZHURAVLYOV and Rep. RUBEN GALLEGO (D-Ariz.), The Daily Beast’s Julia Davis breaks it down : After Gallego spoke out about Russian aggression toward Ukraine, Zhuravlyov called for him to be kidnapped, prompting Gallego to retort, “Fuck around and find out.” In the latest developments, Zhuravlyov insinuated a death threat and said Gallego would be going around “in a bulletproof vest.” Gallego responded Saturday, “No amount of threats will stop me from making sure Ukraine has the weaponry it needs.”

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

BLOCKBUSTER INVESTIGATION — In the first of a two-part NYT series on “a way of war gone badly wrong,” Azmat Khan unveils a secret trove of Pentagon documents that show the operations and costs of the U.S. drone and bomb war in the Middle East since 2014. It’s a massive journalistic undertaking looking at casualty assessments, visiting more than 100 sites and discovering hundreds of uncounted deaths. She writes that “the air war has been marked by deeply flawed intelligence, rushed and often imprecise targeting, and the deaths of thousands of civilians, many of them children,” while “pledges of transparency and accountability have given way to opacity and impunity.” Read “the Civilian Casualty Files” themselves Top takeaways from the investigation

BLINKEN AND YOU MISS IT — CBS’ Christina Ruffini explains what happened with Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN’s curtailed eight-day trip to the U.K. and Southeast Asia. In addition to the traveling journalist who tested positive for the coronavirus, two Air Force members on the plane’s crew tested positive, which was not previously reported.

MEDIAWATCH

DREAMING OF 2022 — CNBC’s Alex Sherman surveyed 10 media executives anonymously to get their predictions for the industry in the year to come. Among the news media guesses: that Vice will sell itself in pieces instead of getting one buyer, and that Vox Media will go public.

 

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.

 
 
PLAYBOOKERS

Jerry Nadler sent Zabar’s babkas to his staffers and Judiciary Committee members to wish them happy holidays (not the first time he’s leaned on their babkas at a moment of significance).

SPOTTED: FBI Director Chris Wray walking his dog on Kalorama Road NW on Saturday afternoon.

TRANSITIONS — Tony McComiskey is now director of scheduling for Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.). He most recently was director of scheduling and operations for Rep. Cindy Axne (D-Iowa). … Alex Allen Reuss is now director of strategic comms for Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts. She most recently was principal at Penn Ave Strategies and is a Trump DOJ alum.

WEEKEND WEDDING — Jake Rubenstein, chief of staff to Terry McAuliffe, and Caroline Corl, assistant secretary of the Commonwealth in Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam’s office, got married in Richmond, Va., on Saturday. The ceremony was officiated by Northam and McAuliffe. Pics

WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Jim Billimoria, director of B2B comms at American Express and a Trump SBA alum, and Danielle Ruckert, associate VP at RH Strategic Communications, welcomed Sloane Billimoria on Friday morning. Pic

— Jennifer Thomas, VP of corporate affairs at Honda, and Frederik De Pue, chef/owner of Flamant in Annapolis and soon to be The Henri in D.C., welcomed Juliette Isabel De Pue on Friday.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) … Reps. Adrian Smith (R-Neb.), Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) and Pat Fallon (R-Texas) … White House’s Chris Meagher and Maggie Polachek … retired Marine Gen. Jim JonesRonan FarrowTal Kopan of the San Francisco Chronicle … CNN’s Josh Freedom du Lac … Puck’s Teddy Schleifer Jenny Murphy Michael Duncan of Cavalry … Ann Lewis … NPR’s Kelsey SnellKasey Hampton Ethan Todras-Whitehill of Swing Left … Ryan Jackson … HUD’s Nicole Lindler Sameer Punyani Amy Best Weiss of American Express … Patrick VentrellKelsey Moran Erin Taylor of the Climate Reality Project … Molly Fratianne Ann McDaniel Shannon McGahn of the National Association of Realtors … Tomicah Tillemann … POLITICO’s Alec Gaffney Rebecca Edgar Chloe Brown of House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer’s office … Max McClellan Kate Roberts of 76 Group

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