All politics is local. But Biden isn't.

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Thursday Nov 11,2021 11:06 pm
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West Wing Playbook

By Tina Sfondeles and Alex Thompson

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President JOE BIDEN did his first local news interview Monday, more than 10 months into his administration. The lucky outlet: WKRC-TV, a Cincinnati TV station.

In the seven-minute interview with reporter KYLE INSKEEP, Biden rolled off the top of his tongue the exact dollar amounts that Ohio and next door Kentucky would receive from his recently passed $1 trillion infrastructure bill. He addressed concerns about supply chain backlogs and downplayed his drop in the polls. He seemed genuinely comfortable. Which raises the question: why doesn’t he do these more?

Local TV interviews are considered—in D.C. circles at least—non-confrontational forums to reach voters about provincial interests and concerns. They’re easy pickings, by and large, with the main downside being that they take up time and the boss can, occasionally, slip up.

A senior White House official told us the Cincinnati station was selected for the interview because Biden had traveled there in July for a CNN town hall, where he pushed for passage of his bipartisan infrastructure bill. The official called the Brent Spence Bridge, which connects Cincinnati with northern Kentucky across the Ohio River, an “iconic example of underinvestment in infrastructure.”

The interview with WKRC marks Biden’s 11th one-on-one interview as president — local or national. By way of context, former President DONALD TRUMP conducted 11 local radio and TV interviews out of 78 interviews his first year in office. And former President BARACK OBAMA did six local radio and TV interviews out of 157 interviews in his first year, presidential watcher and former CBS White House reporter MARK KNOLLER tells us.

The White House and its allies have downplayed these disparities by arguing that the only people who care about how much Biden talks to the press are members of the press. But privately — and increasingly publicly — Democrats have encouraged the president to be more public-facing, and to lean on local news too.

The WKRC interview comes as the White House has gone into overdrive this week to promote the local benefits of the infrastructure bill, which Biden plans to sign into law at a ceremony on Monday. The press shop has been blasting out “what they’re reading in the states” roundups of local coverage of the legislation. White House senior associate communications director MATT HILL tapped out a 21-tweet thread earlier this week highlighting the coverage , including articles in the Hartford Courant, Texas Tribune and The Kansas City Star.

But it’s unclear if, in the near term, Biden is going to be doing any more interviews like the one he did for WKRC-TV. “I would expect that there will be more from the president,” a senior White House official said. “It’s something that we always endeavor to do more of…Between interviews and everything else, I think you’ll continue to see more regional media with the president and vice president and the Cabinet."

So far, the White House has been leaning on Cabinet secretaries and other lesser-known administration officials to get the local message out. Energy Secretary JENNIFER GRANHOLM and National Economic Council deputy director DAVID KAMIN conducted local media calls this week in Missouri and Idaho. Yesterday, Department of Transportation Deputy Secretary POLLY TROTTENBERG and SAMANTHA SILVERBERG, special assistant to the president for transportation and infrastructure policy, hosted a call for regional reporters about the infrastructure deal’s transportation numbers.

“They’ve done a bunch of regional press interviews where they summarize the introductory remarks and the standard remarks that they give to anybody, but then when we get to the Q & A, we’re all asking about local projects, and they know about the local projects,” JONATHAN SALANT , the Washington correspondent for NJ Advance Media told us of the DOT call. “They really knew the information. It wasn’t just gratuitous buzzwords, which I hate.”

Salant, a former president of the Regional Reporters Association who is now on the board of directors, said the group of more than 50 reporters has put out a formal interview request for Biden. Salant was one of the regional reporters who interviewed President GEORGE H.W. BUSH in an auditorium in the old Executive Office Building. Trump also hosted a handful of regional reporters for an interview.

Biden’s arms-length approach, by contrast, has irked some of its members, especially after the president castigated the White House press corps for its recent coverage of the supply chain bottlenecks.

"By the way, you all write for a living. I haven't seen any of you explain the supply chain very well," Biden told reporters on Saturday. "No, no I'm not being critical. I'm being deadly earnest," he responded. "This is a confusing time."

One element that could be hampering the White House’s local press outreach is that its regional press team is not operating at its normal capacity. It currently has just two regional communications directors — RYKIA DORSEY CRAIG and SETH SCHUSTER — after the departures of PAIGE HILL and IKE HAJINAZARIAN. We reported last month that Hill left for a job at SKDK. Hajinazarian left the White House last month for a media relations job at Ketchum in New York.

INTRODUCING ‘POTUS PUZZLER’ — Regular readers of this newsletter know we try to keep our trivia questions fun, really difficult, and a little nerdy. Starting this week, we are partnering with the Miller Center of Public Affairs, a nonpartisan research center and preeminent authority on the American presidency based at the University of Virginia, to help us test your White House know-how.

BUT, BUT, BUT: We have been pleasantly surprised by the stupendous reader-submitted trivia we’ve received, so we are going to keep featuring a POTUS Puzzler from a reader every Wednesday. Keep sending us your toughest, most fun presidential questions. And thanks for reading.

Do you work in the Biden administration? Are you in touch with the White House? Are you MATTHEW I. HERNANDEZ, vetting chief of staff for the office of presidential personnel?

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POTUS PUZZLER

From the University of Virginia’s Miller Center

During the 1972 Democratic primaries, who suggested sending a postcard to all Democrats in New Hampshire saying, “write in Ted Kennedy, a man you can elect”?

(Answer at the bottom.)

The Oval

ON THE ROAD AGAIN — Eager to make the in-person sale to voters on his bipartisan infrastructure bill, Biden is hitting the road next week. After he signs the bill on Monday, he’s going to New Hampshire on Tuesday and Detroit on Wednesday.

The White House press shop also appeared to give the scoops of the visits to local outlets WMUR and The Detroit News, respectively.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: A pair of LARRY SUMMERS interviews. Really. Almost the entire White House communications department was pushing out quotes from Summers — who has been frustrating this White House for months with his critiques of Biden’s economic agenda.

Summers has been taking a recent victory lap for his early warnings about inflation, but he has also been clear that he doesn’t believe Democrats’ $1.75 trillion Build Back Better bill poses a serious inflationary risk. “I think that it would be a tragic error if having made a mistake of spending too much at the beginning of the year, we spent too little now,” Summers told MSNBC today, in a clip pushed out by the White House

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This dispatch from POLITICO Europe’s RYM MOMTAZ on Vice President KAMALA HARRIS ’ Paris trip. “A closed-door dinner, no local media interviews and mostly formal events: Kamala Harris’ visit to Paris was meant to launch her on the international scene but has offered the U.S. vice president little opportunity so far to connect with the French people,” Momtaz wrote.

“Harris’ unique profile as the first woman and first Black and Indian vice president could have attracted more curiosity. Instead, French media coverage has been minimal. Her bilateral meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday evening did not get prime billing on newscasts or in newspapers, and her presence at the Armistice Day commemoration was mentioned in passing.”

WHEN IN PARIS: Second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF’s office posted a photo of his swing by a Yiddish bakery in Paris’ Le Marais district today. His spokesperson told us he ordered a knish and a latke.

Earlier in the day, Emhoff visited the Memorial de la Shoah and participated in a listening session with France’s Minister for Gender Equality, Diversity, and Equal Opportunities.

 

BECOME A GLOBAL INSIDER: The world is more connected than ever. It has never been more essential to identify, unpack and analyze important news, trends and decisions shaping our future — and we’ve got you covered! Every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Global Insider author Ryan Heath navigates the global news maze and connects you to power players and events changing our world. Don’t miss out on this influential global community. Subscribe now.

 
 
Agenda Setting

DRONES FOR SALE — The State Department is considering the sale of armed drones to Indonesia, but concerns over human rights abuses and the country’s past purchases of Russian equipment have set off a debate inside the Biden administration over approving the move, PAUL McLEARY and LEE HUDSON report.

 

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What We're Reading

Why the Fed’s only Democrat could unseat the current chair (Washington Post’s Rachel Siegel)

The White House says its plans will slow inflation. The big question is: When? (New York Times’ Jeanna Smialek and Jim Tankersley)

Where's Joe

President Joe Biden salutes before placing a wreath during a centennial ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery.

President Joe Biden salutes before placing a wreath during a centennial ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington National Cemetery. | Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty Images

He hosted veterans and other military officials ahead of his visit to Arlington National Cemetery. Following the meeting, he and first lady JILL BIDEN took part in the Presidential Armed Forces Full Honor Wreath-Laying Ceremony on the 100th anniversary of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

He also delivered remarks at the National Veterans Day Observance at the Memorial Amphitheater.

Where's Kamala

In Paris with the second gentleman. Harris participated in an Armistice Day ceremony at the Arc de Triomphe, and spoke at the Paris Peace Forum at the Grand Halle de La Villette.

In the evening, she and Emhoff attended a dinner hosted by French President EMMANUEL MACRON and first lady BRIGITTE MACRON at the Élysée Palace.

 

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The Oppo Book

Vice presidential speechwriter, KATE CHILDS-GRAHAM, stays grounded by turning to words of Mother THEODORE GUERIN, a French-American nun also known as Saint Theodora, who once said: “I have already exceeded the amount of work my head can bear.”

Childs-Graham told a Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College publication in Sept. 2021 that “it is a comfort to know that this great woman, this saint, at times too felt overwhelmed. And, yet, she persevered.”

Childs-Graham went further than just reciting words. As part of the College’s chorale, she said she “performed a song cycle inspired by Mother Theodore’s writings. … It was nearly 20 years ago but the tune of ‘I sleep but my heart watches’ still rings in my ears.”

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

RICHARD NIXON, whose campaign financed a write-in campaign for Sen. EDWARD KENNEDY (D-Mass.) during the Democratic primaries for the 1972 election. Kennedy had already decided not to run, but the Nixon campaign wanted Democratic front-runner EDMUND MUSKIE to perform poorly in the New Hampshire primary.

For resources on Dick’s dirty tricks and all presidential campaigns, visit millercenter.org/the-presidency

We want your trivia, but we also want your feedback. What should we be covering in this newsletter that we’re not? What are we getting wrong? Please let us know.

Edited by Emily Cadei

 

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