Hard times for a famed Biden fan

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Tuesday Oct 10,2023 09:46 pm
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West Wing Playbook

By Daniel Lippman, Lauren Egan and Lawrence Ukenye

Presented by the Clean Hydrogen Future Coalition (CHFC)

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The name JACQUELYN ASBIE probably doesn’t resonate much for many. But for the politically attuned, it may ring familiar.

She was the New York Times security guard captured on video telling then-candidate JOE BIDEN how much she loved him while he rode the elevator up to an endorsement interview with the paper’s editorial board.

Biden didn’t win the endorsement. But that moment, which went viral, mattered more: affirming his status as the candidate of the worker, not the intellectual elite that resided in the Ivory towers of the nation’s foremost paper above.

It mattered for Asbie, too. She went on to nominate Biden at the Democratic National Convention. For a moment, she was not just a national surrogate but an emblem of a presidential campaign.

But tough times have since fallen on her. Asbie, 35, said she got in a major car accident that left her injured and her car totaled. She was fired from that Times job last year for allegedly forging expense receipts. She said she got into an argument in late September with her parents, who then cut her off and took out a protective order against her for refusing to leave their house. She has resorted to a GoFundMe campaign to pay her bills.

“Currently seeking Shelter, Food, transportation and clothes. Help to get back on my feet for good! Been a long year and a hard struggle,” she wrote on the campaign’s website. As of Tuesday afternoon, out of a $5,000 goal, she’s raised $1,856 from 40.

Asbie does see her story as an illustration of larger problems that have taken place across society in recent years. She is worse off economically than when Biden took office. Much of it, she acknowledged, is because of irregular employment. She’s now about to start a job that would pay significantly less: $16.95 an hour at a grocery warehouse compared to the $32 an hour she made at the Times. But some of it is the high cost of living.

“Inflation shouldn’t be the way it is. And I think that’s the number one key that’s bothering me right now,” she said. “Inflation is super crazy and super high. And you have people like me that can't even get housing because it’s overly crowded.”

Asbie views the administration’s performance as “kind of up and down,” but still finds herself defending Biden as a politician and person.

“I kind of looked at people as you know, if you’re upper class or you’re a manager, and I’m just a regular worker, or you’re a celebrity, and I’m just working a nine to five, that you think you’re better than me,” she said. “And I didn’t feel that from him.”

She supports Biden’s reelection but is preoccupied with matters far from politics. “I have my own issues right now,” she said. “I’m drained from fighting for myself, and nobody else has helped me. And that’s the truth.”

Asbie currently lives in her hometown of Rochester, N.Y., on her cousin’s couch but is planning to go to a shelter next week. Though Biden promised she could visit him in the White House in a campaign video, a trip has yet to be finalized.

“We have been in touch with Jacquelyn about hosting her and her family members here at the White House,” White House spokesperson ROBYN PATTERSON told West Wing Playbook. “We continue to hope to host her here soon.”

Asked what she would tell Biden if she could speak to him again, Asbie said: “Take care of those that take care of you.”

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POTUS PUZZLER

Thanks to the White House Historical Association for this question!

Which first lady was the first president general to the Daughters of the American Revolution?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

IN SOLIDARITY WITH ISRAEL: Biden on Tuesday emphatically voiced U.S. support for Israel and vowed to provide military assistance, our MYAH WARD and ADAM CANCRYN report. “When Congress returns, we’re going to ask them to take urgent action to fund the national security requirements of our critical partners,” Biden said during a speech. The president also said he’s directing U.S. officials to share intelligence with Israel and that the nation will aid Israel’s efforts to recover hostages.

National security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN later told reporters at the press briefing that the U.S. has the “budget wherewithal” to provide military support for Ukraine and Israel. “We firmly reject the notion that the United States of America cannot at once support the freedom-loving people of Ukraine and support the state of Israel,” he said. The Washington Post’s JOHN HUDSON reports that Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN will visit Israel this week to show support for the embattled country after Hamas’ attacks.

BIDEN’S 99 PROBLEMS: The outbreak of violence in Israel is among a growing list of crises facing Biden that could affect his ability to project the steadiness he ran on as a presidential candidate, our JONATHAN LEMIRE, ADAM CANCRYN and JENNIFER HABERKORN report. The pursuit of additional military funding for Ukraine, the influx of migrants, a looming government shutdown and chaos in the House all require Biden to react in ways that could define his legacy. Although the White House has asserted that the president is aware of the gravity of the challenges he faces, many Republicans and some of Biden’s allies privately argue he should be out there more publicly.

TWO PROFILES, SAME HARRIS: The Atlantic’s ELAINA PLOTT CALABRO and The New York Times’ ASTEAD W. HERNDON took swings at a subject that's caused plenty of public and private hand-wringing from Democrats: Vice President KAMALA HARRIS’ role as Biden’s No. 2.

The themes may strike readers as familiar; a subgenre of Biden White House reporting. Both stories note that while Biden’s age remains a concern for voters ahead of next year’s election, Harris has yet to break through with the electorate. Both also note that the VP tends to be scripted and cautious. Herndon, in particular, portrays Harris as almost instinctively defensive, constantly responding to his questions with questions of her own and even walking out of the room after answering his last question: What do you bring to the ticket?

While it felt familiar, it continues to strike a nerve, too. Former chief of staff RON KLAIN took a jab at the profiles by posting a picture on X, saying that for those “in search of Kamala Harris,” she was meeting with Biden and other senior administration officials to discuss the situation in Israel.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: This tweet by Israel’s former Defense minister BENNY GANTZ thanking Biden for his administration’s “unwavering support and regional leadership.”

“President Biden, 50 years after your first visit to Israel as a young Senator, your support for Israel has remained steadfast and ironclad,” Gantz wrote. “I want to thank you and the administration wholeheartedly.” The Biden campaign’s senior adviser for communications, TJ DUCKLO, retweeted the post.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by New York Magazine’s ERIC LEVITZ about the limited number of options available to the Biden administration to address the country’s influx of migrants. While Levitz describes the level of migration as a “national asset” given America's aging population and shortage of workers, he said the situation will burden taxpayers and local municipalities without legislation from Congress. “Although [Biden] has plenty of tools for making migrants’ lives harder, he has relatively few for resolving the fundamental problems posed by the existing asylum system,” Levitz writes.

 

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THE BUREAUCRATS

PERSONNEL MOVES: EVE KHADIJIAH BOYLE is now a senior policy adviser and STEM Next Opportunity Fund Fellow at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. She most recently was associate director of training and engagement strategy at Howard University.

— JONATHAN RING has been promoted to deputy assistant national cyber director for technology security at the Office of the National Director. He most recently served as the office’s director of operations and incident response.

— ALEXANDRA ROBINSON has left the Labor Department, where she was interim head speechwriter, our Daniel Lippman has learned. She is now head speechwriter for Senate Judiciary Committee under its chair, Sen. DICK DURBIN (D-Ill.).

 

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Agenda Setting

CALL FOR RETALIATION: A growing chorus of Republicans are calling on Biden to punish Iran for the violence in Israel over the weekend — even though there’s no definitive proof Tehran played a direct role — by refreezing $6 billion in assets the U.S. released as part of a prisoner exchange last month, our MATT BERG and NAHAL TOOSI report. GOP lawmakers note that Hamas, the militant group that carried out attacks in Israel, has long relied on Iran for military support.

Sen. MARSHA BLACKBURN (R-Tenn.) and 19 other senators penned a letter to the White House, claiming the assets aren’t only available to Iran for humanitarian use as the White House has claimed. Jake Sullivan told reporters the U.S. “does not regret bringing home American citizens who have been unjustly detained abroad.”

THE NEXT BIG SWING ON STUDENT DEBT: The Biden administration will work to address what a top Education Department official calls “pervasive problems” in the nation’s student loan system, our MICHAEL STRATFORD reports for Pro s. Education Undersecretary JAMES KVAAL said the administration wants to invoke its authority under the Higher Education Act to help distressed borrowers make progress on paying down debt.

A federal rulemaking panel began debating Biden’s next attempt at mass student loan forgiveness on Tuesday and will continue Wednesday.

 

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What We're Reading

Jake Sullivan’s Trial by Combat (New Yorker’s Susan Glasser)

‘We’ve Been Shaken Out of This Fantasy’: How the Left Sees the War in Israel (POLITICO's Alexander Burns)

The Oppo Book

CHI CHUKWUKA was a standout football player in Colorado long before he began serving as senior adviser at the Department of Housing and Urban Development. He was named to the state’s All-Centennial League team as a senior at Overland High School.

Chukwuka also later went on to play defensive end at Colorado Mesa University, where he recorded six tackles and a blocked kick during the 2016 season. It’s an exciting time for Colorado college football and we’re sure Chukwuka wishes he could dust off his cleats and get back on the field!

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

President BENJAMIN HARRISON’s wife, first lady CAROLINE HARRISON, served as the first president general to the Daughters of the American Revolution. She delegated many day-to-day duties of the position and spoke at the First Continental Congress for the organization in February 1892, in addition to various other contributions, according to the White House Historical Association.

To learn more about the legacies of the first ladies, listen to The White House 1600 Sessions Podcast episode, “U.S. First Ladies: Making History and Leaving Legacies.”

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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