Who will save the books?

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Friday Sep 08,2023 09:21 pm
The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
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West Wing Playbook

By Lawrence Ukenye, Lauren Egan and Eli Stokols

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

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As part of Pride Month this past June, President JOE BIDEN vowed to appoint a “book ban coordinator” in addition to a slew of other actions aimed at protecting LGBTQ students.

“LGBTQ Americans, especially children: You’re loved, you’re heard and this administration has your back, I mean it,” Biden said during a press conference. “We are not relenting one single second to make sure that they’re protected.”

Nearly three months later, however, there’s been no outward movement in filling the role. Last week, as students started returning to classrooms and libraries, White House press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE was asked for an update on the post. She said she didn’t have one and referred reporters to the Education Department.

A spokesperson for the Education Department would not answer questions about when it planned to fill the coordinator role described by Biden. Instead, the spokesperson said a “senior official” working in the department would help enforce federal civil rights laws as it provides school districts with information on “resources and trainings" in the coming weeks.

Biden’s attempts to counter conservative efforts to restrict access to certain books — primarily those dealing with sexuality and race — is one of the higher profile counterpunches he’s thrown in the culture wars. It’s been called government overreach by opponents, with Fox News commentators mocking the idea of a “book ban coordinator” shortly after it was announced and others describing the role of regulating published works that discuss sexual identity as a “porn enforcer.”

But Biden has made fighting these book restrictions part of his campaign’s opening reelection theme — a component of a broader message suggesting that Republicans are determined to roll back rights and limit freedoms.

Educators themselves are looking for guidance. In Bucks County, Pa., a county Biden won in 2020 but represented by Rep. BRIAN FITZPATRICK (R-Pa.), local officials have succeeded in banning books from school libraries. The county’s restrictions, officially known as library policy 109.2, target books that contain types of “sexualized content” or “implied depictions of sexual acts.”

KATHERINE SEMISCH, co-founder for Advocates for Inclusive Education, has fought to oppose restrictions in Bucks County, but feels the lack of clarity leaves teachers vulnerable.

“You go to school and you do your best, then somebody calls your principal, and the next thing you know you are in deep hot water for something that you did in innocence and only with the best intentions toward the kids at heart,” Semisch told West Wing Playbook. “Like who wants that job?”

Aside from providing educators with more clarity on how to navigate the restrictions, a “book ban coordinator” — or whatever title the administration picks — could demonstrate that the administration cares about the issue as much as they profess to.

The Education Department has worked with some school districts to resolve cases brought forth by parents who believe book restrictions are creating hostile environments for students. The department’s Office of Civil Rights recently required a Georgia school district to commit to supporting students after community members expressed concerns that restrictions were excluding diverse authors, including those with LGBTQ backgrounds.

"We've created a censorship snowball, and that's why it's important there be careful guidance to encourage districts to think very hard about what they're censoring and how they're doing it," said ROBERT KIM, executive director at the Education Law Center.

Some of Biden’s allies have forcefully criticized book restriction efforts including Maryland Gov. WES MOORE, who said in an MSNBC interview that they were equivalent to “castrating” children. Michigan Gov. GRETCHEN WHITMER also mentioned the issue during a debate last year against Republican challenger TUDOR DIXON: “Do you really think books are more dangerous than guns?” she said.

Despite the tough talk from Democrats, Semisch, a retired English teacher, believes that local leaders should be the primary decision makers about public education even as they operate within the confines of federal guidance.

“I think that a national conversation about what is appropriate for our students could help shed some light on some of the motives behind all of it,” she said.

MESSAGE US — Are you THE MYSTERY BOOK BAN COORDINATOR? We want to hear from you. And we’ll keep you anonymous! Email us at westwingtips@politico.com.


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CROW, IT’S DELICIOUS: We took a totally justifiable but admittedly snide shot at the Detroit Lions in an edition of the newsletter this week, predicting that they’d break their fans’ hearts once again on Thursday night. Well, they didn’t. KADARIUS TONEY They beat the Chiefs 21-20. And Rep. DEBBIE DINGELL (D-Mich.) let us know it, with an email that included the following text — “How did we do last Night?” — and the added attachment.

Detroit Lions "We are Back" image

 

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POTUS PUZZLER

Thanks to the White House Historical Association for this question!

Who was the only president to serve as a U.S. representative after his time in the White House?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

WORLD'S LARGEST DEMOCRACY, FOLKS: When Biden arrived in India on Friday and met with Prime Minister NARENDRA MODI at his residence, reporters were not invited inside for the customary pool spray. Instead, the press corps was “sequestered in a van, out of eyesight of the two leaders — an unusual situation for the reporters and photographers who follow the U.S. President at home and around the world to witness and record his public appearances,” writes Reuters’ NANDITA BOSE from New Delhi.

Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said that the administration made multiple requests for additional press access around the G20 summit, but ultimately were denied. National security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN, communications director BEN LABOLT, deputy national security adviser JON FINER and deputy assistant to the president and coordinator for the Indo-Pacific KURT CAMPBELL all reached out to their Indian counterparts to push for more access.

“We are doing our darndest, doing our best to do everything that we can to get you access,” Jean-Pierre told reporters. “The free press is the pillar of our democracy. We believe that wholeheartedly.”

THAT NEW CAR SMELL: Journalists on Thursday got a tour of the newly-renovated White House Situation Room, which was closed for a year for a $50 million facelift. The New York Times’ MICHAEL D. SHEAR reports that the upgraded facility is designed with advanced communication technology that should prevent adversaries from being able to listen in to sensitive conversations. The room was last renovated in 2006 but the new design should allow seamless upgrades that won’t result in its complete closure.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: This opinion piece by the WaPo’s DANA MILBANK calling BS on the attacks that the Republican National Committee has leveled against Biden from its Twitter account, including mocking the president on multiple occasions for petting a dog and his love of ice cream. “I’m just coming to grips with the fact that I work for a dog-petting monster,” deputy press secretary ANDREW BATES told Milbank for the piece.

Milbank writes that the @RNCResearch account, which the White House hates, might be trying to create a “public impression that Biden is non compos mentis,” but the thinness of the attacks “is also inadvertently fueling a rather different impression: This is the best it’s got?”

On Friday, the account appeared to note, mock or attack (we don’t know) Biden for applauding the dancers who had greeted him in New Delhi.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by the NYT’s JONATHAN WEISMAN and NICHOLAS FANDOS about how an influx of migrants to big cities like New York and Chicago is straining local resources and starting to fracture the Democratic Party.

“Humanitarian impulses are crashing into desperate resource constraints and once-loyal Democratic allies have reluctantly joined Republicans to train their fire on President Biden,” the pair write. “Mr. Biden himself appears to want nothing to do with the issue publicly, forgoing the kind of high-profile leadership local officials have been clamoring for. … Some Democrats fear that their standard-bearer for 2024 may be misreading the potency of a volatile issue heading into an election year.”

THE BUREAUCRATS

IN IT FOR THE LONG HAUL: All of Biden’s Cabinet members have opted to remain in his administration through the end of his first term, after chief of staff JEFF ZIENTS told top officials to make up their minds by Labor Day, NBC News’ MONICA ALBA reports.

As West Wing Playbook reported last month, White House staffers have been mulling their future since late summer is a natural time to alert colleagues if they plan to depart due to how long it takes to fill vacancies.

FIRST IN WEST WING PLAYBOOK: TATE MITCHELL is heading to the Department of Agriculture to be chief of staff for the comms department, DANIEL LIPPMAN has learned. She currently is associate director of press operations for the vice president.

MORE PERSONNEL MOVES: ADAM COHEN has been named deputy director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. Cohen was previously the director of the Executive Office of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces at the U.S. Department of Justice.

— SHARMILA L. MURTHY has been promoted to be director for environmental justice at the White House Council on Environmental Quality.

PSAKI, NOT BOMBING: Former White House press secretary turned cable news host JEN PSAKI is getting added to MSNBC’s primetime lineup, the Hollywood Reporter’s ALEX WEPRIN writes. “Inside with Jen Psaki” will now air at 8 pm on Monday nights, replacing an hour of “All In with Chris Hayes,” which will only air Tuesday through Friday.

Agenda Setting

CHATGP-PAY YOUR DAMN TAXES: The IRS has begun deploying artificial intelligence to investigate tax evasion as part of $80 billion allocated under the Inflation Reduction Act, NYT’s ALAN RAPPEPORT reports. The high-tech effort aims to help the federal government generate more tax revenue through tracking down evaders who used advanced tactics to avoid paying what they owe.

The administration has worked to show the increased technology is targeted at the rich amid Republican concerns that IRA money for the tax collection agency would be used to go after the middle class.

What We're Reading

Kim Kardashian: My Plea to Joe Biden to Stop Another Armenian Genocide (Kim Kardashian and Dr. Eric Esrailian for Rolling Stone)

‘Bidenomics’ is going global. The world is skeptical. (POLITICO’s Gavin Bade)

Rahm Emanuel’s Musing About China Leaders Stirs New Controversy (Bloomberg’s Jacob Gu)

The Sierra Club hired its first Black leader. Turmoil over racial equity followed. (WaPo’s Maxine Joselow)

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, who was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1803, returned to Congress following his presidency. He served nearly 17 years in the House of Representatives, where he earned the nickname "Old Man Eloquent."

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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