Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Alex | Email Tina Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With help from Allie Bice. There are no interns roaming the halls of President JOE BIDEN’s White House ...at least not yet. The Biden White House hasn’t had interns on its campus yet because of the Covid-19 pandemic, which forced many full-time staffers to work from home into the summer. And it opted not to do remote internships the way many companies have. The absence may linger past the summer, however. While the Trump and Obama administrations posted their fall internship applications in early March, the Biden White House has yet to post any application information about its main internship program on its website. The only internship applications online so far are for a fall internship with the White House Council on Environmental Quality. The White House “get involved” page also has information about the White House fellowship program, which is different from internships because it isn’t for undergraduate students. Applicants have already been chosen for the year. We checked in with the White House, and they said they’re hoping for a “later launch” of the fall program, “as a result of the global pandemic and the phased approach to return to work unfolding across the federal government.” Though the internship program is on hold, the White House is still paying someone to manage it: JULIAN J. MILLER earns $80,000 a year as the program’s director, according to a disclosure released on July 1. Interns usually flow through the White House in the spring, summer and fall, with about 100 students selected a semester. Both the Obama and Trump archived sites say assignments given to White House interns day to day could include research, managing “incoming inquiries,” attending meetings, writing memos and staffing events. The slots are extremely coveted, offering the chance to roam the halls of power at the highest level while contributing to the success of an administration. And a number of former White House interns have gone onto prominent roles in national politics and media, including longtime Hillary Clinton aide HUMA ABEDIN, former secretary of Housing and Urban Development JULIAN CASTRO, Biden senior adviser ANITA DUNN, Fox News’ NEIL CAVUTO, NBC News’ BRIAN WILLIAMS and former deputy attorney general LISA MONACO. But, as of now, they are also unpaid, which has fed an ongoing debate about the fairness of the system. CARLOS MARK VERA, the co-founder of the nonprofit Pay Our Interns, has led the charge to get compensation. He said his group is getting closer to a win. House Democrats have included $4.5 million in an appropriations bill that would go towards paying White House and Executive Office of the President interns for the first time. The measure is awaiting Senate action on a bill to fund the Executive Office of the President. Vera said it’s up to the White House how much they want to pay their interns, but the campaign is pushing for $15 an hour. It’s part of a larger push to get the federal government to phase out unpaid internships, entirely. Biden in late June signed an executive order that established an initiative to advance diversity, equity and inclusion in the federal workforce. Among other things, it directed federal agencies to reduce their reliance on unpaid interns and bump up the number of paid opportunities. According to a fact sheet, the goal of that executive order was to create a federal workforce “that looks like America,” since unpaid slots inherently disadvantage those from poorer backgrounds who can least afford to work without compensation. Depending on when Congress reaches a spending deal and when the White House decides to restart the program, interns there could begin receiving pay as early as this fall. Vera and his group are urging the White House to post applications soon. “This is a missed opportunity for a lot of young people that are juniors, seniors in college that really want this experience,” Vera said. “So we're really strongly encouraging the White House to launch it sooner rather than later so people can apply because people are looking for fall internships right now.” Do you work in the Biden administration? Are you in touch with the White House? Are you JULIAN J. MILLER? We want to hear from you — and we’ll keep you anonymous: westwingtips@politico.com. Or if you want to stay really anonymous send us a tip through SecureDrop, Signal, Telegram, or Whatsapp here. |