The Van Hollen backchannel

From: POLITICO West Wing Playbook - Thursday Feb 15,2024 11:00 pm
Presented by Center Forward: The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
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By Jennifer Haberkorn, Lauren Egan, Myah Ward and Ben Johansen

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As Senate Democrats tried to revive President JOE BIDEN’s request for billions of dollars in foreign aid last month, national security adviser JAKE SULLIVAN put in a call to Sen. CHRIS VAN HOLLEN.

The Maryland Democrat and a dozen progressive colleagues had recently gone public with an amendment to require that any country receiving U.S. weapons comply with humanitarian laws. That effort threatened to produce a messy intraparty debate over whether Biden should be doing more to encourage Israel to protect Palestinian civilians as it fights Hamas.

But Sullivan wasn’t calling to complain. To Van Hollen’s surprise, the administration was open to converting the amendment — which would have only applied to new funding — into a memo with the force of law, meaning it would apply to all U.S. military aid and stay in effect even if the president’s supplemental bill didn't make it through the House.

Biden issued the order last week and it won the approval of most Senate progressives. The chamber passed the supplemental on Tuesday.

“There's no requirement right now that if you want to receive American weapons, you have to facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance in conflict zones where those weapons are being used,” said Van Hollen. He called the new policy “a very important tool to both pressure recipient countries but also to pressure the Biden administration to take action to insist on what the [policy’s] promise requires.”

White House officials have stressed that the directive didn’t impose new standards for military aid and that the administration had already been following the underlying policy. NSC spokesperson ADRIENNE WATSON said the directive was not being issued because the administration believed a country was violating the standards. “If we did, you’d have heard about it long ago – and seen the consequences,” she said.

But the fact that Biden took the step still underscores what type of political pressures he responds to. For months, the White House has been under an intense public barrage to more fully address humanitarian issues in Gaza and Israel’s aggressive conduct of the war.

The administration responded by publicly calling for more aid to be sent into Gaza and with a more fulsome pushback to proposed military operations. On Wednesday, it announced it was expanding an executive authority to temporarily shield certain Palestinians in the U.S. from deportation.

But in this case, it was the inside game — including private pleas from senators, legislative horsetrading and the concern over a high-profile failed vote — that moved the president’s hand.

Early conversations between lawmakers and the administration began in December. But they got more serious in January, when Van Hollen and his progressive colleagues huddled with Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER, telling him they would insist on a vote to ensure military aid recipients complied with humanitarian laws. Their message was clear: if the bill made it to the floor, the Democrats could block the tens of billions of dollars the president had requested for Israel, Ukraine and Taiwan. 

Schumer told several people at the White House, including to Sullivan, that they needed to talk with the lawmakers, according to a person familiar with the situation who was granted anonymity to relay private conversations.

Over the course of several phone calls and meetings — Van Hollen’s staff counted up 11 hours of wordsmithing between the senator and NSC — the policy was drafted.

The policy requires that before the U.S. hands over weapons and military assistance to another country, the recipient provides written assurance that it will comply with humanitarian law, as well as facilitate U.S. humanitarian assistance in areas of conflict. It also requires the administration to provide Congress detailed reports on whether these countries are adhering to the requirements. If a country violates its assurances, the president can choose to take action up to suspending further deliveries.

The administration viewed the amendment demand and the public attention on the issue as an opportunity to be more clear and transparent that they hold recipient countries to these standards, according to an administration official granted anonymity to discuss the thinking behind writing the memo.

While the desire to ensure passage of the national security supplemental played a major role in Biden issuing the directive, other lawmakers said that the president’s own frustration with the situation in Gaza factored in, too. Sen. TIM KAINE (D-Va.), who backed the amendment push, said the White House “has not been happy” with the pace of humanitarian aid into the region and that the directive allowed them an opportunity to formalize it.

“I think there was an increasing sense of disquiet within the White House national security team about ‘we're fully in to help Israel defend itself against Hamas, but this is not just supposed to be a war against Palestinians,’” Kaine said. “The White House, more than the politics, may share the same concern and even frustration and felt like an amendment of this kind would give them a way to address their frustration.”

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POTUS PUZZLER

Who introduced the minimum age requirement of 35 for presidents?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

INDEPENDENCE, SCHMINDEPENDENCE: The day before special counsel ROBERT HUR released his report on Biden’s handling of classified documents, the White House wrote to Attorney General MERRICK GARLAND objecting to comments on the president’s memory, our BETSY WOODRUFF SWAN reports. In a previously undisclosed letter, White House counsel ED SISKEL said that Hur “openly, obviously and blatantly” violated the Justice Department’s own policies.

Siskel and the president’s personal lawyer, BOB BAUER, expressed their frustration over Hur’s description of Biden’s mental acuity: “A global and pejorative judgment on the President’s powers of recollection in general is uncalled for and unfounded.”

Such outreach suggests that the White House knew that the Hur report was a political time bomb. It also is the type of attempted influence of the DOJ operations that — in the abstract — Biden has publicly pledged to avoid.

POPCORN TIME: Special counsel Robert Hur will testify in front of the House Judiciary Committee on March 12, our JORDAIN CARNEY reports.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: This piece by CNN’s MATT EGAN, who writes that Republican-controlled states are benefiting the most from signature Biden laws. More than 50 percent of the investments made from the Inflation Reduction Act and CHIPS and Science Act have gone to red states, compared to 20 percent to Democratic controlled states.

Deputy press secretary ANDREW BATES shared the piece on X.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by AP’s AMANDA SEITZ on a federal watchdog report, released Thursday, that found the Biden administration struggled to properly vet and monitor the homes where they placed many newly-arrived migrant children in 2021. The report concluded that the Department of Health and Human Services failed to prove it ran basic safety checks, such as address or criminal background checks on the adults who took in children.

YEAH… THAT’S NOT HOW THE WHCA WORKS: In an email to members on Thursday, White House Correspondents’ Association president KELLY O’DONNELL called efforts by White House counsel spokesperson IAN SAMS to distribute a letter criticizing the media’s coverage of the special counsel’s report “misdirected.”

Sams initially asked O’Donnell earlier this week to distribute the letter — which he has since posted on X — to the WHCA member email list, but O’Donnell declined and encouraged him to use official White House communication channels. The White House on Thursday again tried to distribute the letter through a media pool chain.

As a non-profit organization that advocates for its members in their efforts to cover the presidency, the WHCA does not, cannot and will not serve as a repository for the government’s views of what’s in the news. The White House has far reach to make its positions known on the Hur report or any other matter,” O’Donnell wrote in the email. “In its 110-year history, our association has never controlled or policed the journalism that is published or broadcast by our members or their employers.”

DIPLOMATIC TALKS: The president will welcome Poland’s President ANDRZEJ DUDA and Prime Minister DONALD TUSK to the White House on March 12, press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE announced. The leaders will reaffirm their support for Ukraine during their meeting, which will coincide with the 25th anniversary of Poland’s accession to NATO.

A message from Center Forward:

America’s capital markets benefit our whole economy – with investments, innovation, economic growth and job creation. They enable everything from stable prices to strong pensions and clean energy. But the Federal Reserve is considering Basel III Endgame, which will weaken capital markets and undermine American competitiveness. Why would we hurt our economy at a time like this? See why companies and groups across America are speaking out against the proposal.

 
CAMPAIGN HQ

STRIKE A PO$E: Vogue’s ANNA WINTOUR will host a fundraiser with Biden campaign finance chair RUFUS GIFFORD during Paris Fashion Week in March, The Business of Fashion’s SHEENA BUTLER-YOUNG reports.

THE BUREAUCRATS

PERSONNEL MOVES: DALEEP SINGH, a key architect of the Biden administration’s economic sanctions on Russia, is coming back to the White House, Axios’ HANS NICHOLS reports. Singh will return to his previous role as deputy national security adviser for international economics. He will take over for MIKE PYLE, who leaves at the end of the month.

— RACHEL KARASIK has left the White House Council on Environment Quality, where she was adviser for chemical safety and plastic pollution prevention. She is now a research scientist at the Norwegian Institute for Water Research.

 

A message from Center Forward:

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Agenda Setting

TO RELEASE OR NOT RELEASE: Biden aides are privately weighing the potential political fallout if a transcript of his special counsel interview is released, NBC News’ MONICA ALBA reports. Aides anticipate a “lengthy partisan clash” over the transcript and are discussing how the interview could help or hurt Biden on the issues of his age and memory.

Aides are also considering whether it makes strategic sense to release only specific moments in the interview to help push back on critics of the president’s mental fitness.

THE OLE PUBLIC HEALTH V. POLITICAL BENEFIT DEBATE: A top Biden health official is pushing allies outside the government to press the administration on its pledge to ban menthol cigarettes nationwide, our ADAM CANCRYN and DAVID LIM report. ROBERT CALIFF, commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, has privately voiced concerns that White House support for the ban is waning. This comes amid warnings that outlawing a product popular with Black smokers could damage voter support within communities core to his reelection campaign.

STUDENT DEBT MOVE: The Biden administration took new steps on Thursday to expand eligibility for student loan forgiveness to include those facing “financial hardships,” our MICHAEL STRATFORD reports. The Education Department laid out a set of factors to identify financial hardship, including when “a borrower’s total student loan balance and required payments relative to household income, and whether a borrower has high-cost burdens for essential expenses like healthcare or childcare.”

What We're Reading

Democrats look to Nebraska to shore up Biden’s blue wall (WaPo’s Michael Scherer)

Biden-Netanyahu Relationship at Boiling Point as Rafah Invasion Looms (WSJ’s Dion Nissenbaum and Vivian Salama)

The Moneyball Theory of Presidential Social Media (The Atlantic’s Charlie Warzel)

A message from Center Forward:

The Federal Reserve’s Basel III Endgame will undermine the U.S. economy – and American competitiveness. That’s why so many companies, organizations and people are speaking out in rare agreement against the proposal and its harmful impact on capital markets and the U.S. economy – Republicans and Democrats, corporations and nonprofits, manufacturers and consumers, and even groups from California and Alabama. 
 
Organizations from across industries are urging the Fed to reconsider the rule, saying it would have “significant adverse consequences” and is “bad for consumers and bad for economic stability.” Even lawmakers from both sides of the aisle agree that the Fed should “carefully consider the proposal’s consequences on capital markets.”

America has spoken. Will the Fed listen?

Protect our Capital Markets. Protect our Economy.

 
The Oppo Book

While mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Transportation Secretary PETE BUTTIGIEG once had to trick JERRY SEINFELD into accepting a key to the city. During a performance there, Seinfeld initially declined the key. So what did Buttigieg do? He slipped into the audience, sitting in the crowd as the comedian took questions.

When he was called on, he twisted Seinfeld’s arm and asked if he would accept the key. “He was like, ‘What’s that? The key to the city?’ By the time he said that, I was up there. They couldn’t stop me because it was a city facility… Nobody refuses the key to the city,” he said in a 2019 interview with JIMMY FALLON.

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

GEORGE MASON introduced the age minimum for presidents, based on the idea that the president should serve in Congress first.

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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