Biden's other age problem

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Thursday Jul 13,2023 09:53 pm
The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
Jul 13, 2023 View in browser
 
West Wing Playbook

By Myah Ward, Eli Stokols and Lauren Egan

Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With help from Lawrence Ukenye and producer Raymond Rapada.

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JOE BIDEN’s Gen Z whisperer has a warning for the president: Get going on addressing youth enthusiasm now, or it may be too late.

JOHN DELLA VOLPE, one of the Biden 2020 campaign pollsters, has issued these admonitions in briefings with the president’s reelection team and in conversations with top White House aides.

Having analyzed youth voter data for more than two decades, he told West Wing Playbook that voters under 30 today are less likely to identify as Democrats compared to spring 2019. More consider themselves independents, and fewer see politics as a “meaningful way to create change.”

The last three cycles saw historic levels of youth participation — and the cohort is as progressive as ever — but if these voters stay home in 2024 as a result of these shifts in attitudes, Della Volpe said, it could doom the incumbent president and Democrats.

“I feel like it’s a responsibility to ring this alarm now, when there’s time to do something about it,” said Della Volpe, the director of polling at the Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics. “These voters gotta buy into the values of the party and the candidates … and to appreciate the fact that politics can make a difference. You can’t do that in a full-week ad buy after Labor Day.”

Biden world insists it’s not taking young people for granted. One of Della Volpe’s former students, RICHARD SWEENEY, was recently hired by senior Biden aides as a White House policy analyst with a special focus on young people. Sweeney will be meeting with young advocates and working across departments — the Office of Public Engagement, the Office of Political Strategy and Outreach, digital and comms — to reach young people on priorities such as climate, LGBTQ issues and abortion rights, a White House official said.

And CHRISTIAN TOM, who until last August worked under former Office of Digital Strategy director ROB FLAHERTY, just returned to the White House last week to lead that operation and find new ways to engage with young people.

Yes, that will mean more White House celeb sightings like BTS and OLIVIA RODRIGO. But Tom’s office is working closely with senior advisers who monitor focus group research to ensure they’re hitting key policy issues. His team is also deploying a rapid response strategy that leans on its social media influencer network.

After the Supreme Court’s student loan decision came down last month, senior White House officials hopped on a Zoom call with a couple dozen influencers who synthesized the information on their respective accounts, driving around 6 million views across TikTok, Instagram and Twitter, according to a White House official. One user, VIVIAN, a former Wall Street trader also known as @yourrichbff, posted a video breaking down the decision, and this week posted another Tiktok highlighting what comes next.

On the campaign side, Flaherty will join the reelect in a senior role, where he’ll have a hand in digital strategy, though his official title and start date haven’t been announced.

Biden’s team will also lean on young surrogates like “Tennessee Three” Rep. JUSTIN JONES, 27, who was expelled by Republicans after protesting in support of gun restrictions, and Rep. MAXWELL FROST (D-Fla.), a 26-year-old member of the president’s national advisory board.

“Youth turnout is something that we should never think is in the bag. This surge we’ve seen since 2018, even though it has really kept up over the last three cycles, is also very new,” Frost told West Wing Playbook.

Messaging on Biden’s record is a piece of it, but surrogates will also tap into opposition to DONALD TRUMP and a rollback of rights. Finding new ways to do this is vital, Frost said.

A video of Frost on stage in Washington with Paramore and his RON DESANTIS F-bomb went viral last month, but a bigger impact occurred the next week when the band let Frost’s team set up a table at its Orlando show and collect signatures to get an abortion constitutional amendment on the Florida ballot in 2024. They secured around 1,800 signatures at the venue in just hours.

For its part, the DNC is training young voters on how to mobilize on college campuses, working with gun violence prevention groups and providing resources to help these voters land jobs in Democratic politics.

The DNC will also leverage partnerships with youth voter groups like NextGen America, the country’s largest youth voter operation. The organization plans to spend tens of millions to get Biden reelected, said its president, CRISTINA TZINTZÚN RAMIREZ.

“No candidate can alone win with the youth vote,” she said, “but I can promise you that if a Democrat doesn’t have the youth vote, they will lose.”

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OOPS, WE DID IT AGAIN: In Wednesday’s edition, we made an error in a correction of a previous error. It’s RIMA DODIN, not Rema, who is now serving as chief of staff to Sen. BRIAN SCHATZ (D-Hawaii). The senator’s staff called us today in anger, saying it was disrespectful. We agree. We explained that we did not, in fact, set out to screw up twice in a row, shocking as that may be. We regret the error(s) and pledge to be better.

[Take a deep breath and step away from the Twitter, ROBYN PATTERSON and MIKE INACAY, we know — now at least — it’s REEMA.]

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POTUS PUZZLER

Which president is rumored to have taught his pet parrot how to curse?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

A BLOW FOR THE BLOW INVESTIGATION: After intense speculation, the Secret Service plans to close its investigation on cocaine discovered in the White House more than a week ago, our JORDAIN CARNEY reports.

While a law enforcement official previously told POLITICO they believed the investigation was unlikely to produce an individual responsible, reporters and some lawmakers repeatedly pressed the administration for details, prompting the White House to tamp down some of the heedless rumors about the substance’s source.

It’s unclear if, as part of the investigation, the Secret Service took our suggestion to look for the person who REALLY JUST WANTS TO TALK RIGHT NOW.

BIDEN DECLARES PUTIN’S ‘ALREADY LOST’: In his final appearance overseas, Biden touted NATO’s newfound strength while in the capital of its newest member, Finland, and declared Russian President VLADIMIR PUTIN “has already lost” the war in Ukraine.

As our JONATHAN LEMIRE and ALEXANDER WARD report, Biden’s comments came five years to the week after President Donald Trump stood in the same high-ceilinged room inside Finland’s presidential palace beside Putin and declared that he believed the Russian leader’s denial of 2016 election interference over U.S. intelligence officials.

‘SERIOUS’ ABOUT A PRISONER SWAP: Biden also said during his Helsinki press conference that talks with the Kremlin have not yet opened up a path to Russia releasing the WSJ’s EVAN GERSHKOVICH, who’s been detained in Moscow since March. But as our CHRISTINE MUI reports, he vowed to continue working to secure Gershkovich’s release. “I’m serious on a prisoner exchange,” Biden said. “And I’m serious about doing all we can to free Americans being illegally held in Russia or anywhere else for that matter, and that process is underway.”

STUDENT LOAN NEXT STEPS: Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA will join Congressional Progressive Caucus members for a call Friday on the administration's next steps on student debt cancellation, West Wing Playbook has learned. The call will focus on the benefits for borrowers of the new Saving on A Valuable Education repayment plan and outline how the administration is trying to help borrowers get relief. In an interview with Time that was published Thursday, Cardona hit Republicans for opposing student loan debt relief noting that many of them “have gotten over a million dollars in debt relief themselves. So the hypocrisy here is stunning.”

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: This piece by the Washington Post’s NICK MIROFF and TOLUSE OLORUNNIPA about how the administration’s effort to revamp the asylum-seeking process has resulted in a 70 percent decrease in illegal border crossings. The reduction provides Biden some reprieve from an issue Republicans have repeatedly criticized him for handling — with some GOP lawmakers even proposing impeachment. IAN SAMS, White House spokesperson for oversight and investigations, tweeted out the piece.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by CNN’s EDWARD-ISAAC DOVERE about how Biden’s super slow campaign build-out is causing anxiety in some Democratic circles. “If Trump wins next November and everyone says, ‘How did that happen,’ one of the questions will be: what was the Biden campaign doing in the summer of 2023?” a person who worked in a senior role on Biden’s 2020 campaign told Dovere.

BAD NEWS BABES, NOT SO BAD!: The media team prevailed in Wednesday night’s Congressional Women’s Softball Game. Final score: 15-9. More importantly, participants set a new fundraising record, raising $589,718 for the Young Survivors Coalition.

MEDIA MOVES: JULIA MARSH is moving west to head up POLITICO’s California operation as editorial director and DEBRA KAHN will take on a new role as the California policy editor with a particular focus on a new California Climate newsletter launching next month. The moves, announced Thursday, are part of POLITICO’s expansion in the Golden State.

THE BUREAUCRATS

FIRST IN WEST WING PLAYBOOK: CHRISTINE HARADA has been named senior adviser for the Office of Federal Procurement Policy at OMB, DANIEL LIPPMAN has learned. She most recently was the executive director of the Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council.

— ELLIE WARNER started this week as deputy director at the White House Visitors Office. She previously worked at the Meridian International Center and is an alum of Virginia Sens. TIM KAINE and MARK WARNER and Gov. TERRY MCAULIFFE.

MORE PERSONNEL MOVES: STERLIN WATERS is now special assistant to the deputy National Cyber Director. He most recently was a research assistant for the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

Filling the Ranks

THE BEEF THAT KEEPS ON GIVING: Biden on Thursday criticized Sen. TOMMY TUBERVILLE (R-Ala.) for his ongoing blockade of military promotions, our ERIC BAZAIL-EIMIL reports.

“The idea that we don’t have a chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the idea that we have all these promotions and we don’t know what’s going to happen, the idea that we’re injecting into fundamental foreign policy decisions what, in fact, is a domestic social debate is bizarre,” Biden said while taking questions from reporters in Helsinki.

Defense Secretary LLOYD AUSTIN spoke briefly with Tuberville on Thursday about the hold, and both agreed to talk again next week, our LARA SELIGMAN tweeted.

STAMP OF DISAPPROVAL: Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.) plans to oppose JULIE SU’s nomination to become secretary of the Labor Department, our BURGESS EVERETT, JENNIFER HABERKORN and NICK NIEDZWIADEK report. Weirdly enough, the White House urged not only Manchin to reconsider but KYRSTEN SINEMA (I-Ariz.), too.

Why is that weird? Sinema hasn’t publicly stated her position on Su, giving the impression that she’s told the White House privately that she’s opposed. That would more or less tank the nomination since Su can only afford to lose one vote among senators who caucus with the Democrats. No Republicans have indicated they’d support her.

Agenda Setting

A HISTORIC MOVE: The Federal Drug Administration on Thursday approved Opill, the country’s first daily over-the-counter contraceptive, our KATHERINE ELLEN FOLEY and ALICE MIRANDA OLLSTEIN reported.

The move follows months of pressure by the Biden administration on the FDA after the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade last year. Despite the support from reproductive care advocates, many progressives note that the approval still falls short of replacing broad abortion access.

CYBER GAMEPLAN: The White House on Thursday released a plan on how it will implement the National Cybersecurity Strategy it unveiled earlier this year. The report details a five-phase plan aimed at defending critical infrastructure, disrupting threat attackers and working with the State Department to form international partnerships.

The plan is expected to be updated next year to incorporate initiatives as they’re completed.

What We're Reading

Arizona escalates probe into alleged efforts to swing election for Trump (WaPo’s Yvonne Wingett Sanchez)

Opinion: America’s Student Loans Were Never Going to Be Repaid (Laura Beamer and Marshall Steinbaum for the NYT with graphics by Taylor Maggiacomo)

White House warns reporter Simon Ateba about his press-room outbursts (WaPo’s Paul Farhi)

The Oppo Book

Vice President KAMALA HARRIS met second gentleman DOUG EMHOFF on a blind date set up by one of her friends, she admitted during an April appearance on “The Jennifer Hudson Show.”

“My best friend called me one day and said ‘I met him, I think it’s it. Don’t Google him, just go out with him,’” Harris said. “The first date was a blind date and the rest is history.”

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

ANDREW JACKSON. The pet parrot’s cursing abilities might have gone unnoticed if it weren’t for its outburst at Jackson’s funeral. Presumably overcome with grief, the parrot had to be removed from the service after it wouldn’t stop cursing, according to The Tennessean.

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

Edited by Eun Kyung Kim and Sam Stein.

 

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