Is covering Psaki live worth Covid?

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Tuesday Dec 21,2021 11:18 pm
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West Wing Playbook

By Max Tani, Tina Sfondeles and Alex Thompson

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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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As members of the White House press corps sat down in the briefing room packed shoulder-to-shoulder on Monday, one journalist sarcastically addressed what other attendees were clearly thinking: “At least we’re all socially distanced.”

The Omicron variant ripping through Washington D.C. has come to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., too. And it’s left much of the White House press corps — crammed tightly into the small confines of the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room — asking questions like: Is it worth getting infected with Covid-19 to lob JEN PSAKI a question that she will likely respond to with prepared talking points? Can my KN95 mask stand up to the spittle coming from the television broadcasters trying to make a viral moment?

On Tuesday, the White House Correspondents Association announced that a reporter who attended the press briefing room on Monday later tested positive for Covid-19. It was the second time in a week the organization needed to send out guidance to reporters about a possible Covid exposure.

Just a few days earlier, the WHCA announced that at least one administration official who attended the organization’s indoor Christmas party later tested positive for the virus (several POLITICO reporters attended said party). And Tuesday’s email came just a day after the White House itself said President JOE BIDEN had been in close contact with a “mid-level” staffer who later tested positive. (‘Who has Covid?’ has become something of a grim parlor game among some White House aides with varying theories on the identity of said “mid-level” official).

West Wing Playbook spoke with several reporters in the briefing room who attended the briefings this week. The view was a mix of apprehension at the idea of Omicron disrupting their holiday plans and resignation that they probably were screwed, considering the tight confines in which they work and the astronomical spread currently happening in the nation's capital. At one point before Monday’s briefing, one reporter insisted to others that despite repeatedly coughing, they had earlier tested negative for Covid-19.

“Why are we all here?” another reporter from a major newspaper quipped to a colleague in the hallway near the press room on Monday. "We're superspreaders."

One knowledgeable source told West Wing Playbook that the WHCA had privately expressed concern to the White House about the possibility of spread among the press corps. While there have not been any known instances in recent days of a journalist infecting another journalist at the White House, some members expressed nervousness that the increased transmissibility of the Omicron variant, which now makes up the vast majority of new Covid cases in the U.S., made it all but inevitable. The organization also expressed concerns that positive cases could reduce the number of available pool reporters.

“Why must reporters feel compelled to put themselves at risk if so many other interactions with reporters are done virtually?" wondered one member of the association.

High vaccination rates among members of the White House press corps has alleviated some concern about catching a serious case of Covid from a possible exposure in the briefing room. According to an email sent to members of the organization last week, 97 percent of respondents to a recent survey of the WHCA press corps are vaccinated and boosted, and Psaki said on Monday at least 99 percent of White House staffers are vaccinated and boosted.

The White House itself is attempting to operate in a state of relative normalcy. Despite canceling the White House Christmas party, it has still been hosting pre-scheduled holiday tours, which even the unvaccinated can attend with a negative PCR test result, according to an invitation shared with West Wing Playbook. During briefings on Monday and Tuesday, Psaki reiterated that the Biden administration also opposed broad lockdowns in response to the recent surge of cases and that the no-longer-novel coronavirus was "not the same threat to fully vaccinated individuals as it was in March 2020."

But anxiety is still evident. On Sunday, the White House Correspondents Association sent guidance to its members advising journalists not to come to the briefings unless necessary. If they did come, the organization suggested wearing KN95 masks and taking an at-home antigen test (if you could manage to get your hands on one).

Correspondents took the precautions they could. Multiple journalists said that before the briefing, they trekked up to the Capitol building, which was administering free PCR tests with quick turnaround times for those who arrived early enough to beat the lines. Few reporters lingered after the briefings to chat in the small enclosed spaces.

Before Tuesday’s briefing, NPR White House correspondent TAMARA KEITH asked correspondents to spread out if they could in order to reduce possible exposures to Covid. But the attempts were futile: As the briefing began, she and the others in the press pool ended up shoulder to shoulder to secure a better position to pose a question to Psaki.

Asked for comment, a White House official said it was their "priority" to ensure "the health and safety of everyone on the White House campus" alongside protecting the "access that the press has to the White House." The official added, "We believe it is important that credentialed reporters are able to do their work. We’re in close touch with the leadership of the WHCA, and believe reporters should continue to able to cover the President and the press briefings."

OUT OF OFFICE: West Wing Playbook won’t publish from Friday, Dec. 24 through Friday, Dec. 31. We’ll be back Monday, Jan. 3. We hope absence makes the heart grow fonder.

Do you work in the Biden administration? Are you in touch with the White House? Are you PRONITA GUPTA, special assistant to the president for labor and workers?

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POTUS PUZZLER

From the University of Virginia’s Miller Center

Which president took a break during Middle East peace negotiations to re-arrange library books in a nearby room?

(Answer at the bottom.)

The Oval

DEFENSIVE ON TESTING — People throughout the country are struggling to get Covid tests ahead of holiday gatherings with family. But Biden today pushed back against suggestions that the administration has failed to do enough to avert shortages of popular at-home tests, drawing private eyerolls from many medical experts who think the Biden team has belly flopped on testing, our health care reporter DAVID LIM told us today.

Asked by CNN’s PHILL MATTINGLY today if it’s a “failure” that there aren’t enough tests for people that want one, Biden responded “no, it’s not.” He added: “I don’t think anybody anticipated that this was going to be as rapidly spreading as it did.”

The White House is trying to ramp up its testing program with an announcement today that the government will purchase 500 million at-home tests this winter and start delivering them to homes in January. But Lim pointed out to us that it’s extremely unlikely that all these tests will be available quickly. There are only approximately 200 million at-home tests being made per month in the U.S. right now. Read his whole thread on Twitter.

ROUGH WATTERS: Dr. ANTHONY FAUCI called on Fox News’ JESSE WATTERS to be fired on Tuesday morning after he rallied young conservatives to “ambush” the Biden adviser. Fox News said no, basically. Check out JEREMY BARR’s write-up in The Washington Post to understand it all.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: Really, any story about the historic pace of judicial confirmations under Biden. There’s the Huffington Post story by JENNIFER BENDERY today that reminds everyone that Biden has confirmed more lifetime federal judges than decades of past presidents by this point in their terms. Or the Washington Post story from SEUNG MIN KIM and ANN E. MARIMOW from over the weekend on the same topic. White House and DNC aides have all pushed such stories.

It’s been a key priority for POTUS, and it’s a definite success, just in time for all the “how did Biden fare in his first year” stories.

The Senate has confirmed 40 of the lifetime federal judges Biden has nominated this year — 11 on appeals courts and 29 on district courts, from a diverse mix of backgrounds and communities.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: An analysis by CNN’s HARRY ENTEN , who writes that Biden’s economic ratings are worse than even former President JIMMY CARTER’s. POTUS earned a 44 percent approval rating among registered voters for his economic performance, making for a -9 net approval rating, in the latest CNN/SSRS poll. On average at this point over the last 44 years, the sitting president has had a net economic approval rating of +5 points — meaning Biden’s is 18 points worse than the average.

“Carter's economic net approval rating of -8 points in an early January 1978 CBS News/New York Times poll was the lowest around this point in a presidency before Biden's -13 points,” Enten writes.

 

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.

 
 
THE BUREAUCRATS

WHERE MARTY SLEEPS — Reps. VIRGINIA FOXX (R-N.C.) and JAMES COMER (R-K.Y.) sent a letter to the Department of Labor today asking for more information on Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH’s schedule.

“Including the eight days you were apparently working in Washington, D.C. in September, you were here just 40 days over the course of your first six months as Secretary of Labor,” the lawmakers wrote on Tuesday . “American workers should always be the primary focus of the Secretary of Labor. We are concerned that your calendars suggest your focus is elsewhere.” It is the second letter Republican members of Congress have sent to Walsh since October (WWP also covered some of this in November).

The Labor Department pointed us to what they told Bloomberg’s REBECCA RAINEY which is that Walsh spends most of his time on the road to “hear directly” from workers and businesses. “He has visited 60 cities in 30 states since joining the department, and will continue to spend significant time connecting directly with the people he serves,” a DOL spokesperson told Rainey, adding that Walsh “personally pays for all travel” between Boston and Washington.

POLITICO's LISA KASHINSKY in Boston told us that Walsh might be in hot water with DC Republicans, but he’s winning plaudits back home from unions and members of the states all-Democratic delegation for mediating a tentative agreement between striking nurses at St. Vincent Hospital in Worcester and parent company Tenet Healthcare more than nine months after nurses headed for the picket line. Hundreds of nurses are now set to ratify a new contract in January and end the longest nurses’ strike nationally in over 15 years.

Agenda Setting

FROM NO TO MAYBE? The Biden administration is considering extending the freeze on federal student loan payments amid the surge of Covid cases and pushback from Democrats, MICHAEL STRATFORD reports. The White House had previously said it was evaluating the impact of the Omicron variant but was still preparing to restart the collection of monthly payments on Feb. 1.

REVERSAL: Under intense pressure from criminal justice reform advocates, the Justice Department today reversed a Trump-era legal opinion that could have required several thousand federal convicts who had been released to home confinement because of the pandemic to return to prison once an end was declared to the pandemic-related national emergency, JOSH GERSTEIN reports.

We wrote about Biden’s prisoner dilemma back in July. Criminal justice reform advocates praised Tuesday’s news. But they also called for Biden to go further.

"We also recognize that the threat of eventual return to prison is still present, so we ask President Biden to use his clemency powers to provide permanent relief to families,” said UDI OFER, director of the Justice Division at the American Civil Liberties Union. “A future administration may force people back to prison, so families will not have permanent closure until their cases are fully resolved."

 

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What We're Reading

Net neutrality is poised for a comeback as Biden tries to get last FCC commissioner confirmed (CNBC’s Lauren Feiner)

Fauci on what Covid could look like one year from now (The Atlantic’s Peter Nicholas)

Biden administration moves to expand solar power on U.S. land (AP’s Matthew Brown)

What We're Watching

ANTHONY FAUCI will appear on MSNBC’s “The Beat with Ari Melber” at 6 p.m. ET.

CDC Director ROCHELLE WALENSKY will appear on MSNBC’s “All In with Chris Hayes” at 8 p.m. ET.

Press secretary Jen Psaki will appear on MSNBC’s “Way Too Early with Jonathan Lemire” tomorrow at 5 a.m. ET.

Where's Joe

He and Vice President KAMALA HARRIS received the President’s Daily Brief. In the afternoon, he delivered remarks about the coronavirus pandemic.

Where's Kamala

With the president.

The Oppo Book

White House rapid response director MICHAEL GWIN really learned the meaning of discipline while working on the campaign trail for then-presidential candidate BARACK OBAMA in 2012.

As an undergrad at Georgetown University, "on a typical day, Gwin would hear his alarm at 7:45 a.m. and stumble out of bed 30 minutes later," a 2012 article in Hindsight Lens, an outlet covering student life, reported.

But that didn’t fly on the Obama campaign, which “pushed him hard,” the story continues.

Gwin told the outlet that “life here is totally different than what I was used to on campus. I was a good but not overly diligent student my first two years, primarily because I didn’t put in as much work as I should have."

Working for Obama’s campaign, Gwin would arrive promptly at the headquarters in Des Moines, Iowa at 9 a.m. and work into the night. (Honestly, he probably is nostalgic for that schedule now.)

“The whole experience was sort of a crash course on the real world and something that will definitely be helpful as I return to school,” he said.

 

DON’T MISS CONGRESS MINUTES: Need to follow the action on Capitol Hill blow-by-blow? Check out Minutes, POLITICO’s new platform that delivers the latest exclusives, twists and much more in real time. Get it on your desktop or download the POLITICO mobile app for iOS or Android. CHECK OUT CONGRESS MINUTES HERE.

 
 
POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

BILL CLINTON did in 1998 during the meetings that led to the Wye River Memorandum.

MADELEINE ALBRIGHT, the secretary of State at the time, remembers the story this way: “There’s a house at the Wye plantation that belonged to the people who owned it. We were having a very interesting dinner with Arafat and Netanyahu and [Israeli] Foreign Minister [Shlomo] Ben-Ami and a note taker. There’s a library. All of a sudden, the president starts reorganizing the books. I said, ‘Mr. President, this is not your library.’ He said, ‘They need reorganizing.’ ”

Join the Miller Center and presidential experts live online, on Jan. 13 to discuss President Biden’s first year. Register here

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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