Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With help from Allie Bice. Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Eli | Email Lauren Programming Note: We’ll be off this Monday, May 29, for Memorial Day but we’ll be back in your inboxes on Tuesday, May 30. We hope absence makes the heart grow fonder. As we reported here yesterday, there appears to be a brewing sense of frustration — which, frankly, has grown quite palpable — among Democrats over the lack of a public presence from the White House during the debt ceiling fight. Officials in the party, especially lawmakers in the House, have been wondering why the president and his team aren’t out there more, trying to frame the contours of the debate. The matter may be one of strategic vision: Biden world simply thinks it’s wiser to not talk, do the work, and come off as the mature negotiator when a deal is done. But privately, even administration officials concede another problem: they’re lacking a roster of effective communicators. The top ranks of the White House have lost the individuals who were best suited to conduct public combat for it. RON KLAIN’s departure as chief of staff has proven critical in that regard (his replacement JEFF ZIENTS rarely engages in the type of public-facing politicking that Klain did). But the absences are clear elsewhere. Office of Management and Budget director SHALANDA YOUNG, a frequent briefing room guest, had not recently spoken with reporters about the debt ceiling, according to White House scribes. Press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE has had notable stumbles at the lectern. BRIAN DEESE, the former National Economic Council director and frequent Biden surrogate, is gone. Economic adviser JARED BERNSTEIN, another public presence on economic matters for Biden, is keeping a low profile as he awaits Senate confirmation to run the Council of Economic Advisers. And, of course, there is President JOE BIDEN, who has been media averse during this process, engaging the press only on occasion. Part of the approach is cultural. A White House with a comms shop that believes the online conversation doesn’t reflect reality isn’t jumping at the opportunity to engage more aggressively in that conversation. A number of Democratic operatives who routinely get talking points from the White House say they have not been as forthcoming in the past weeks — a signal, they believe, of the just how close to the vest they are trying to keep details of the negotiations. But this is also a president who frequently complains about the dearth of surrogates making his case on television, so much so that his nascent campaign has rolled out a 50-member advisory board of elected officials who will be tasked with carrying the president’s reelection message across multiple media platforms. Yet in the immediate term, as the White House is waging perhaps the most consequential political battle of the second half of Biden’s term, there is little organizational effort behind the scattered media appearances by Democratic lawmakers and other administration officials. Deputy Treasury Secretary WALLY ADEYEMO did appear Friday morning on CNN, emphatically asserting that Biden will not be invoking the 14th Amendment to raise the debt ceiling unilaterally, a move the president said Sunday he might consider more seriously if there was time to assess its legality ahead of the early June “X-date” when government funding could run out. But the White House decided against holding the usual daily briefing on Friday, pulling Jean-Pierre off the podium as a tenuous agreement between Biden and McCarthy appeared to be close at hand. That didn’t stop the press secretary from responding to the speaker on Twitter, where she countered his claims about the national debt increasing under Biden by asserting that the debt went up far more during the DONALD TRUMP presidency. MESSAGE US — Are you JOE BIDEN? We want to hear from you. But we won’t keep you anonymous! Email us at westwingtips@politico.com. Did someone forward this email to you? Subscribe here!
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