Biden’s stop the jitters moment

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Tuesday Mar 14,2023 09:59 pm
The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
Mar 14, 2023 View in browser
 
West Wing Playbook

By Lauren Egan

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

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President Joe Biden speaks about the banking system in the Roosevelt Room of the White House.

President Joe Biden speaks about the banking system in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

When President JOE BIDEN decided to speak Monday morning about the Silicon Valley Bank failure, he scheduled his remarks for 9 a.m. ET — an unusually early start to the day for the president.

Biden kept it to just five minutes, wrapping up his remarks by design 20 minutes before the U.S. stock market opened. He didn’t ad lib. And he didn’t take any shouted questions from reporters as he exited the Roosevelt Room.

Giving a presidential address in a fast-moving financial crisis is tricky business, said MICHELE DAVIS, who was a senior member of the Treasury Department’s communications team during the 2008 financial crisis. (She was played by CYNTHIA NIXON in the 2011 HBO movie about that meltdown, “Too Big to Fail.”)

“Almost no one speaks off the cuff during a time like this. Everything is pretty well scripted,” Davis said. “It’s really hard to correct something that’s been misinterpreted.”

Investors and financial markets parse every word that the president utters, looking for clues. Every carefully-planned decision the White House makes — from the timing of the speech to the length and setting of the address — is strategic. In 2007 and 2008, President GEORGE W. BUSH’s staffers read speeches out loud to each other and debated the worst possible way that the market could interpret the remarks. There were a lot of revisions and sleepless nights.

“You have to get every one of those words right,” said another Bush administration official, who asked not to use their name because their current employer did not authorize them to speak. “You have this situation where the president is on CNBC, futures are open, you could see a live reaction.”

While Biden addressed “the American people” in his remarks, Davis said that these types of speeches are fundamentally aimed at calming easily-spooked investors and restoring confidence in the banking system.

But while it’s critical for the president to reassure the public during shaky financial moments, it's equally important for him to know when to turn it over to officials from the Treasury Department, Federal Reserve and other bank regulators who are viewed as less political and more authoritative. Bush’s speechwriters would try to work in mentions of Treasury Secretary HANK PAULSON and give him credit on financial policy. Biden relied on a similar playbook on Monday, crediting Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN for taking “immediate action.”

“If everyone takes confidence in what the president was saying, we might not hear from him again,” Davis said. “When there’s a fast moving financial situation, the general approach is that the president speaks sparingly and uses the Treasury to respond from moment to moment.”

Communicating in a crisis like this one can feel like balancing on a knife’s edge. The policy solutions matter, but so does communicating them clearly, concisely and memorably. The right words can end a crisis in one fell swoop. Famously, MARIO DRAGHI, then the head of the European Central Bank, declared in 2012 that he would do “whatever it takes” to end the European sovereign debt crisis. Those three words marked the beginning of the effort that saved the euro.

On the other side of the coin, then-President DONALD TRUMP contributed to a steep stock market decline when he failed to clearly communicate his policy response to the Covid pandemic in a March, 11 2020, primetime speech that rattled investors. (Trump said that the U.S. was “suspending all travel from Europe,” only for his administration to later clarify that American citizens and permanent legal residents were exempt from the restriction.)

“There’s no second chance sometimes. Markets move so fast,” said Davis.

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POTUS PUZZLER

With help from the White House Historical Association 

Who is the Irish-born architect of the White House whose work as builder, mason, architect and civic leader also contributed to the early growth and development of Washington, D.C.?

(Answer at the bottom.)

The Oval

A LUCKY CHARM: In the spirit of St. Patrick’s Day, Biden is set to host the Taoiseach of Ireland LEO VARADKAR for a bilateral meeting and a celebration Friday at the White House.

The holiday is one of the president’s favorites and there is high expectation for sentimentality to spill. Alas, Biden does not drink so we don’t imagine him hitting up The Dubliner, as BARACK OBAMA did.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: Any story about Novo Nordisk lowering its insulin prices. White House deputy press secretary ANDREW BATES tweeted out this piece by WSJ’s PETER LOFTUS: “Novo, one of the biggest sellers of insulin in the U.S. and around the world, said Tuesday it would cut the list price of its NovoLog insulin by 75 percent and the prices for Novolin and Levemir by 65 percent starting in January 2024.” Bates included a quote from the president saying that the news “builds on the important progress we made last year when I signed a law to cap insulin at $35 for seniors.”

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: That despite economic progress, more tech layoffs are still happening. CNN’s CATHERINE THORBECKE reports that “Facebook-parent Meta plans to lay off another 10,000 workers, marking the second round of significant job cuts announced by the tech giant in four months. The latest layoffs come after Meta said in November it was eliminating about 13 percent of its workforce, or 11,000 jobs, in the company’s single largest round of cuts."

FEW TOOLS LEFT IN THE OLE TOOL BOX:: Biden signed an executive order Tuesday that works to expand background checks. He unveiled it during his visit to Monterey Park, Calif., where 11 people were shot and killed in January. The effort is the administration’s way of getting “the U.S. as close to universal background checks as possible” without legislation passed by Congress. Our MYAH WARD has more.

ICYMI: Biden revealed on Monday night that former President JIMMY CARTER, who is currently in hospice care, asked him to “do his eulogy – excuse me, I shouldn’t say that.” CNN’s DONALD JUDD has more details on the remarks. (West Wing Playbook wrote last year about how eulogies have become some of the most defining speeches of Biden’s presidency.)

WHEN ARE YOU FILING YOUR NEWSLETTER TOP, KID?: We’ve got a new addition to the West Wing Playbook family! POLITICO’s ELI STOKOLS and ELENA SCHNEIDER welcomed their son, RYNE HERRIOT, into the world on March 10. (Eli will return from leave in April!)

Tweet by Eli Stokols

Tweet by Eli Stokols | Twitter

THE BUREAUCRATS

MARTY WALSH PROTEGE GOES GLOBAL: DAN KOH, deputy Cabinet secretary of the White House and former chief of staff to one-time Labor Secretary MARTY WALSH, has been named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum, which released its 2023 class on Tuesday. Past Young Global Leaders have included Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG, USAID administrator SAMANTHA POWER, former National Economic Council director BRIAN DEESE, U.S. Ambassador to Spain JULISSA REYNOSO and White House chief of staff JEFF ZIENTS.

PERSONNEL MOVES: GREG SCHULTZ, former senior adviser to Biden’s 2020 campaign, is headed to the advisory board of a Washington, D.C.-based software company, Electo Analytics.

Agenda Setting

YEAH. ABOUT THAT MASSIVE DRILLING PROJECT: The Biden administration is facing backlash from environmentalists for approving the ConocoPhillips’ oil drilling project in Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve, teeing up a potential legal brawl, our NIINA H. FARAH reports. Green groups argue the administration’s approval of the project undermines its larger commitment to halve nationwide greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.

TOUGH DAY FOR THOSE WHO LIKE TO DRINK TOXIC CHEMICALS: The EPA is “proposing the first-ever federal drinking water limits for toxic chemicals used to make nonstick materials like Teflon, stain-resistant carpeting and military firefighting foam, which are estimated to be contaminating 200 million Americans’ drinking water,” our ANNIE SNIDER reports. It’s part of the administration’s larger effort to reign in the widespread contamination from PFAS (perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances) “forever” chemicals.

 

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What We're Reading

Giant seaweed blob twice the width of the US takes aim at Florida (The Hill’s Rachel Tucker)

Biden’s SVB Challenge: Prevent Financial Panic Without Stirring Populist Backlash (WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath)

Joe Biden, Scandinavian (Jeff Greenfield for POLITICO Magazine)

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

JAMES HOBAN was a young carpenter and architect in Ireland. He went on to collaborate with GEORGE WASHINGTON on the design and construction of the White House. Read more about Hoban in The White House: Designed by James Hoban, Built by Many Hands!

A CALL OUT — Do you think you have a harder trivia question? Send us your best one about the presidents with a citation and we may feature it.

Edited by Eun Kyung Kim and Sam Stein.

 

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