Susan Rice needs those TPS reports

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Tuesday Nov 23,2021 11:12 pm
Nov 23, 2021 View in browser
 
West Wing Playbook

By Alex Thompson , Daniel Lippman and Tina Sfondeles

Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With Allie Bice.

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When people applied to join SUSAN RICE’s staff at the White House Domestic Policy Council (DPC) this year, some were surprised at a particular request: a writing sample.

Those who got the job soon discovered why. Inside a West Wing already stuffed with briefing papers, Rice stands out for requesting, devouring, and deploying an incredible number of memos, White House officials say.

Briefing memos, information memos, decision memos — she prints most of them out and sticks them in a hefty binder to review. Aides have to prepare extra for Mondays because they know Rice will have spent her weekend reading through the binder and will have follow-up questions.

When other parts of the administration want her to participate in an event, Rice’s team often requests a memo before she says “yes.” If she does agree to take part, she usually asks for another memo to prepare for the event, according to two White House officials.

Aides have had to step-up their writing game as wordiness, along with improper grammar and punctuation, are quickly spotted and marked up. Rice, a veteran foreign policy wonk who’s taken on an entirely new policy portfolio in the Biden White House, is adamant that nothing sloppy should ever end up on the president’s desk.

“A stickler for proper grammar and punctuation, I have a particular pet peeve about proper comma usage,” she wrote in her memoir “Tough Love.” At one point, her chief of staff at the United Nations had to stop Rice from giving an all-staff seminar on the comma, as Rice self-deprecatingly recalled in her book. A White House aide also noted she's a firm defender of the Oxford comma.

“Susan takes this seriously — if she tells you your memo is really good, that's a big deal,” ERIN PELTON, who has worked with her for many years, told West Wing Playbook.

For Christmas one year during the Obama administration, Rice's deputy at the National Security Council, current Secretary of State TONY BLINKEN, gave her a stamp with the letters “KMBA” on it, to mark any memos she didn’t like. The acronym stood for a common epithet of hers: “kiss my Black ass.” Asked if she uses the stamp, her office said no.

"She is a very sharp writer,” said MEREDITH WEBSTER, her former chief of staff at the DPC. “I did some of my best writing because of her. She's reading every single piece, and if it stretches to multiple pages it better be useful information and a reason why. If a memo goes into the secretary of State or others, she will read it and edit it and if she has to be the original author, she will."

While a few people in the West Wing think the former Rhodes Scholar goes overboard on the memos, others credit them for her widely-regarded preparation and her effectiveness in bureaucratic turf battles. One White House official noted that when Biden starts peppering aides with questions and follow-ups until he’s satisfied or they run out of responses, Rice and deputy chief of staff BRUCE REED are often the last two people ready with answers.

Rice credits RAND BEERS, a mentor at the NSC at the beginning of the Clinton administration, with teaching her to write “coherent, persuasive memos to the president and national security advisor.” Beers explained to West Wing Playbook memo-writing can be such a distinct skill in the executive branch.

“The art form is in many ways the art of bureaucratic politics, as the executive branch internally is political in its own way,” he wrote in a text message. “It is somewhat akin to court politics in the European monarchies. And the memo is how lower level people can demonstrate their excellence to those above and more broadly to others in other departments and agencies.”

PROGRAMMING NOTE — We'll be off for Thanksgiving this Thursday and Friday but back to our normal schedule on Monday, Nov. 29.

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POTUS PUZZLER

From the University of Virginia’s Miller Center

Who was the first sitting president to be served with a subpoena?

(Answer at the bottom.)

The Oval

FIRST IN WEST WING PLAYBOOK BERNADETTE HOBSON is now director of strategic partnerships at the Economic Development Administration within the Department of Commerce, Daniel Lippman shares. She most recently was a senior associate director for priority placements in the Presidential Personnel Office at the White House.

KLOUT WAR: Vice President KAMALA HARRIS’ director of press operations PETER VELZ tweeted today that newly hired press assistant WILLIAM FAIRFAX gained 15K Twitter followers overnight (after he tweeted his new gig yesterday), and that VINCENT EVANS, deputy director of public engagement and intergovernmental affairs for the VP’s office, is “low-key jealous and hoping for a similar uplift.” If you want to help the cause (or war), he’s @VinceEvans46.

RON BURGUNDY REDUX: Biden again today read “end of quote” off a teleprompter, during remarks about the economy and lowering prices for the American people. POTUS read it very quickly under his breath and then scratched his nose. So we’re thinking he realized he did it. Biden also read “end of quote” during a speech on the campaign trail in September 2020 . Our condolences to the poor aide tasked with uploading the next speech into the teleprompter

DEPARTURES: DONALD SHERMAN, a special assistant to the president for racial and economic justice, has left the White House and returned to the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, Lippman reported.

We asked the White House if they had hired a replacement. They declined to comment.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: A New York Times op-ed by JAMELLE BOUIE that likens Biden’s first year in the White House to RONALD REAGAN’s first year as president. Bouie writes that the “structural position of the office makes it difficult to be both popular and ambitious.”

“…Before you jump on your hobby horse, it’s worth looking at the bigger picture. It is hard to act as an ambitious president without incurring a penalty, even if your policies are popular, as Biden’s are . It is also hard, as president, to be popular, period. Every person who has held the office has hit a rough spot and struggled to regain his footing,” Bouie writes. “Biden is down now. If the usual pattern is any indication, he’ll recover. And in the same way that the decline was largely out of his hands, we’ll have to remember that the upswing was as well.”

Biden chief of staff RON KLAIN retweeted the column, adding, “P-E-R-S-P-E-C-T-I-V-E.”

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: A Bloomberg story that points out shoplifting crimes are getting more brazen in the U.S., and it’s affecting the stock market.

“On Tuesday, the impact of shoplifting reached Wall Street, with Best Buy Co. shares plunging after the electronics retailer said widespread theft contributed to a decrease in one gauge of profitability,” AUGUSTA SARAIVA and LINDSEY RUPP write. “Last month, Walgreens said it would close five San Francisco stores after theft rates there spiked.”

The uptick comes as Biden gets credit, including from Walmart CEO DOUG McMILLON, for the administration’s actions to ease retail supply chain issues ahead of the holidays.

Agenda Setting

SOUNDING THE ALARM — The Biden administration argued in a court filing submitted today that the Cincinnati-based 6th Circuit Court of Appeals should lift an order halting its vaccine-or-test mandate for private employers, suggesting the delay could have “significant” impacts outside the workplace.

“Simply put, delaying the Standard would likely cost many lives per day, in addition to large numbers of hospitalizations, other serious health effects, and tremendous expenses. That is a confluence of harms of the highest order,” the government lawyers wrote. REBECCA RAINEY has more on the legal battle over the private employer mandate here.

What We're Reading

What Biden and Xi can learn from the Cold War nuclear arms race (former Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Rose Gottemoeller in POLITICO)

President Biden’s new helicopter hits a setback: It’s unreliable in a crisis (Bloomberg’s Anthony Capaccio and Jennifer Jacobs)

EPA chief’s environmental justice tour leaves people wondering about concrete actions (E&E’s Kelsey Brugger)

Where's Joe

He delivered remarks about the economy and lowering prices at the White House this afternoon. The president Vice President Harris, first lady JILL BIDEN and second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF also participated in a service project at the DC Central Kitchen.

He and Jill head to Nantucket, Mass. this evening for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Where's Kamala

She accompanied the president to DC Central Kitchen.

The Oppo Book

When Surgeon General VIVEK MURTHY was being interviewed on “CBS This Morning” in April of this year, something kept popping up in the background of his screen.

Anchor GAYLE KING stopped the program to clarify: “Something keeps popping up on your screen. We want the viewers to know we see it too, we don’t know what the hell it is.”

“Everything is safe? Everything is good?” she asked. “There’s something that looks like a dog or something popping up around you but all is good?”

Murthy smiled and hoisted his son up onto his lap and answered, “It’s my little boy.” They laughed about the exchange, and he heard the next question with his son on his lap. Watch the full clip here.

Editors’ note: Vivek is all of us work-from-home parents in 2021.

 

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POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

THOMAS JEFFERSON, whose testimony was sought by the defense in the 1807 treason trial of AARON BURR, Jefferson's former vice president. Jefferson refused to comply, a decision never challenged in court, and Burr was eventually acquitted.

For information on presidents defying subpoenas and other key presidential milestones, visit millercenter.org.

Got a better question? Send us your hardest trivia question on the presidents and we may feature it on Wednesdays. 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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Allie Bice @alliebice

 

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