Biden really has a bridge to sell you

The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
Jul 05, 2023 View in browser
 
West Wing Playbook

By Eli Stokols, Holly Otterbein 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.

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In the passenger seat of an electric vehicle cruising through western Tennessee last week, MITCH LANDRIEU was fired up — talking into his cell phone about as fast as the speed limit, his voice booming.

President JOE BIDEN’s infrastructure coordinator, in the midst of a summer-long road trip highlighting the administration’s industrial policy, had just visited an electric vehicle charging station and a plant converted to produce fiber optic cable. But he was calling to talk about how the reopening of Interstate 95 in Philadelphia, just 12 days after a deadly bridge collapse, provided evidence of “Bidenomics” success, a tangible improvement people can see and feel that will be a centerpiece of the president’s 2024 campaign.

“We’re in the process of rebuilding America,” Landrieu told West Wing Playbook. “Laying cable, modernizing cars and making them, making the parts … it takes time to completely rebuild the country from the bottom up … but people are going to see the benefits.”

The speedy repair of the I-95 bridge, as Landrieu sees it, was largely the result of the Biden administration’s work: The 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law that provided funding for repairs, strong coordination between the White House and local leaders, and the president’s own directive that aides make the repairs their top priority.

After the collapse, local officials were alarmed — as was Biden, no stranger to the area. Beyond commuter headaches, they worried about the impact on supply chains if the East Coast’s main ground transportation artery was closed for months, as many initially projected.

“When I woke up that Sunday morning, my phone had blown up,” said Rep. BRENDAN BOYLE (D-Pa.), whose district was home to the collapsed bridge. “My first call was to the White House.” After connecting with senior aides including ANITA DUNN and STEVE RICHETTI, Boyle got a call from Biden “assuring me they were going to move heaven and earth.”

By that point, Landrieu had already assured Pennsylvania Gov. JOSH SHAPIRO that federal funding from the infrastructure law would be available. Federal Highway Administration Administrator SHAILEN BRATT was already on the ground, setting up a command center with local officials.

“The president called me that Monday and said, ‘Mitch, this is the No. 1 priority in the country,’” Landrieu recalled.

Inside the White House, deputy chief of staff JEN O’MALLEY DILLON and the intergovernmental affairs team helped oversee coordination. PennDot’s MIKE CARROLL, a former state lawmaker who knew Shapiro and Boyle well from their days in Harrisburg, had offered a potential quick fix: Use 2,000 tons of aggregate made from recycled glass to fill in the area beneath the now collapsed bridge to reopen the interstate on top of it.

PennDot already had experience using the glass material, which was available from a facility in Delaware County just 17 miles away. Just as auspiciously, there was a contractor doing work on the highway that officials redirected to the bridge repair effort. Weather largely cooperated. And there were no qualms about keeping the four local union crews working around the clock — and paying their overtime — because the federal funding was already in place.

“We had a team of people that knew each other well. Nothing can move that fast if no one trusts each other, so you’ve got to build that,” said Landrieu. “That has allowed us to respond very quickly when we have catastrophic events and the president says, ‘Run to that fire.’”

Biden, who received written progress reports from Landrieu every day, joined Shapiro, Boyle and other local officials for a flyover and press conference the weekend after the collapse. In the Philadelphia area, people were fixated on the progress. In addition to the governor holding daily briefings, Shapiro’s office set up a livestream so the public could watch repairs. The reopening just 12 days after the bridge collapse became a cause for celebration — not quite Phillies championship parade levels, but close. The Phillies Phanatic and Gritty, the Flyer’s hairy orange mascot, were among the first to traverse the road atop a firetruck.

“I have never gotten more compliments,” said Philadelphia Mayor JIM KENNEY. “I think the PR part was handled quite well. I didn’t expect Gritty on the fire truck but there he was. This was a tragedy because we lost that driver, but overall the way this came out, people were confident about their government’s ability to do stuff.”

Few states will be as critical to Biden’s reelection as Pennsylvania. But while Shapiro’s statewide approval rating is now at 57 percent following the I-95 reopening, the president, who carried Pennsylvania in 2020, remains well under the 50 percent mark.

SHARIF STREET, chair of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party and a state senator, said Biden, Shapiro and the city's building trades all deserve credit for the quick fix. But he said Biden in particular isn't getting the kudos he is owed.

"He doesn't get the credit he deserves for most of what he does," Street said. "If a good thing happens, he only gets half the credit. If a bad thing happens, he gets twice the blame."

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POTUS PUZZLER

Which president had the presidential daily brief redesigned to include a special Polish section?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

COCAINE BEAR LIVES: It may forever remain a mystery: Who left a small amount of cocaine in a small storage cubby outside the West Executive Drive entrance over the weekend? A law enforcement official told our DANIEL LIPPMAN that the culprit may never be found given the high amount of traffic at that particular White House entrance where “many people have authorized access, including staff or visitors coming in for West Wing tours.”

At Wednesday’s briefing, press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE expressed confidence that the Secret Service “will get to the bottom of this,” while noting the president and first lady were both out of town over the weekend.

ON A SLIGHTLY EDGIER TOPIC: Biden met with Swedish Prime Minister ULF KRISTERSSON today, a week ahead of the NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania. The meeting was focused largely on Sweden’s pending accession to the alliance, which Turkey continues to hold up. “I want to reiterate: The United States fully, fully, fully supports Sweden’s membership in NATO,” Biden said. “The bottom line is simple: Sweden is going to make our alliance stronger.”

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: Anything about how Biden is outpacing his recent predecessors on federal judicial confirmations. In an “ICYMI” email Wednesday morning, the White House press shop highlighted articles from the NYT’s CARL HULSE, The New Republic’s MICHAEL TOMASKY and HuffPost’s JENNIFER BENDERY on the topic. The White House particularly wanted readers to pay attention to this line in Hulse’s piece about how Democrats “have transformed the Senate into a judicial confirmation factory.”

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by the NYT’s KATIE ROGERS about the 4-year-old girl in rural Arkansas who the president refuses to publicly acknowledge as his grandchild. The girl has not met her father, HUNTER BIDEN, or her grandfather but is aware of both, Rogers wrote. The president’s son and the girl’s mother, LUNDEN ROBERTS, agreed last week to a settlement over child support, averting a potentially messy trial. The drama has clashed with Biden’s public image as “centered around his devotion to his family,” the story notes. “In strategy meetings in recent years, aides have been told that the Bidens have six, not seven, grandchildren, according to two people familiar with the discussions.”

On Wednesday, the WSJ’s CATHERINE LUCEY asked Jean-Pierre if Biden acknowledges the girl as his granddaughter and received a curt response. “I don’t have anything to share from here,” she said.

THE BUREAUCRATS

FIRST IN WEST WING PLAYBOOK: The Office of Personnel Management has launched two new centralized USAJOBS portals focused on national security and STEM jobs in the U.S. government, Lippman has learned. They are similar to portals OPM launched back in January on federal tech jobs and internships in the federal government.

In a statement to West Wing Playbook, OPM director KIRAN AHUJA said: “These USAJOBS portals create a one-stop shop for positions in tech, national security, STEM, early career talent, and more. We know that millions of Americans want to serve their community and do impactful work, so our goal is giving them a place to see the full range of incredible jobs serving in the federal government.”

PERSONNEL MOVES: URSELA OJEDA has been promoted to director for immigration policy at the Domestic Policy Council, Lippman has also learned. She had been DPC’s deputy director for immigration.

STAFFING UP: Chief of protocol RUFUS GIFFORD is expected to depart the State Department at the end of the month to join Biden’s reelection campaign, Bloomberg’s NANCY COOK and JUSTIN SINK report. Gifford, who was a deputy campaign manager in 2020 and oversaw fundraising for BARACK OBAMA’s 2012 reelection, is expected to take the lead on outreach to Democratic donors.

Filling the Ranks

YES, THAT ELLIOTT ABRAMS: Biden on Monday officially nominated ELLIOTT ABRAMS, a leading neoconservative who has served under three Republican presidents, to the bipartisan United States Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy. As CNN’s JACK FORREST notes, Abrams served most recently as President DONALD TRUMP’s special envoy to Iran and Venezuela. He was part of a slate of Republican nominees that the president was obligated to nominate for largely ceremonial posts. Still, it didn’t go over well among some progressives who noted that Abrams has been highly critical of Biden’s foreign policy. Also, he has some controversial history.

Abrams, an assistant secretary of State under President RONALD REAGAN, pleaded guilty in 1991 to withholding information about the Iran-Contra affair. He was later pardoned by President GEORGE H.W. BUSH.

Agenda Setting

CRACKING DOWN: The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration has cracked down on pipeline violators with a record amount of fines that topped more than $11 million last year, our MIKE SORAGHAN reports for Pro subscribers.

The figure is a stark contrast to the Trump administration, when the agency averaged only $4.5 million fines per year. Despite the administration’s effort to penalize companies — especially those who risk harming vulnerable communities — pipeline backers and climate advocates remain split on whether the new fines are due to actual risks or heightened vigilance from the Biden administration.

A MIGHTY WIND: The Department of Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management on Wednesday approved New Jersey’s plan to build its first offshore wind farm, which is set to power more than 380,000 homes and create roughly 3,000 jobs.

The project, dubbed Ocean Wind 1, is the third offshore wind project approved by the Biden administration, joining others currently under construction in Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

What We're Reading

The D.N.C. Has a Primary Problem (NYT's Ross Barkan)

Xi Jinping warned Vladimir Putin against nuclear attack in Ukraine (FT’s Max Seddon, James Kynge, John Paul Rathbone and Felicia Schwartz)

The Podcast Campaigners (TIME’s Vera Bergengruen)

This July 4 was hot. Earth’s hottest day on record, in fact. (WaPo’s Leo Sands)

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

CIA director BILL CASEY heard President RONALD REAGAN express a desire for more information on Poland and had the presidential daily brief redesigned to include a special Polish section, according to JOHN PRADOS, author of "Freeing the President's Daily Brief” from “Unredacted: The National Security Archive Blog.”

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

Edited by Eun Kyung Kim and Sam Stein.

 

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