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House Dems wrangle with Bidenomics

A play-by-play preview of the day’s congressional news
Aug 08, 2023 View in browser
 

By Nicholas Wu, Anthony Adragna and Daniella Diaz

With an assist from POLITICO’s Hill team

Rep. Dina Titus (D-Nev.) is eager to tout the Biden administration's economic agenda with voters in her Las Vegas-area district. But not every Democrat is on board. | Carolyn Kaster, File/AP Photo


IT’S THE BIDENOMICS, STUPID

Bolstered by good economic news, House Democrats are channeling James Carville with their “it’s the economy, stupid” campaign approach this summer. But they’re not necessarily channeling the president’s Bidenomics.

Take Rep. Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.), a first-term lawmaker who only won his seat by less than a percentage point in 2022, a district President Joe Biden won by roughly 6 points in 2020. Vasquez is careful about pointing to economic progress — let alone crediting the president’s policies for it.

He anticipates that one upcoming meeting with a group representing Latino oil and gas workers, for example, will heavily feature the rising cost of housing and their working conditions.

“I'm hyper-focused on the district. I think the most important job that a congressperson can do is first listen, and then react,“ Vasquez said. “And so I'm not going to go into my district pushing a Democratic agenda that people don't feel is happening on the ground.”

It’s the delicate dance battleground Democrats will have to perform for the next year: They need to tout a recovering economy, yet stay sensitive to constituents who are still feeling the pain of inflation, high interest rates and ballooning housing prices. Democrats may be in better shape than they were in 2022, when the party was pummeled by bad headlines about inflation and recession fears, but lawmakers didn’t have an unpopular president directly on the ticket then.

Some purple-district Democrats want to give Biden more credit. Rep. Dina Titus (D-Nev.), who represents a Las Vegas-area seat Biden won by 9 points, said she’d talk up Bidenomics, “because it has made a difference.” What’s more, she wants the Democratic Congress that did the legwork to pass the landmark legislation to get its due, too.

“I don't shy away from that. I think the president has a good record to brag about. But I also remind people that that recovery legislation got us started on this road to prosperity,” she said.

There’s a problem with that theory. Most Americans haven’t heard much about the Inflation Reduction Act or many of its provisions, polls show, so Democrats have to explain not only how they believe it’s helped voters, but also the existence of the legislation.

Still, for first-term lawmakers like Rep. Eric Sorensen (D-Ill.), who can’t do much legislatively from the minority, the main substantive work they can brag about came from the last Congress.

“I think that we've got to understand that sometimes it's okay to toot our own horn,” he said.

— Nicholas Wu 

GOOD MORNING! Welcome to Huddle, the play-by-play guide to all things Capitol Hill, on this Tuesday, Aug. 8, where we’re relieved the Storm of the Decade was much milder than originally feared.

 

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ALL EYES ON THE BUCKEYE STATE

There’s a major, if slightly convoluted, indicator on how Ohio voters feel about abortion rights happening today. And Democrats worry other red states will follow suit.

In a wonky special election, Ohioans are voting on whether to raise the threshold for amending the state’s constitution via a ballot initiative. If this initiative, known as Issue 1, passes, future changes would require 60 percent rather than a simple majority to pass.

What’s really at issue here: There’s another ballot initiative coming up in November, which would codify abortion rights in the Ohio Constitution. If Issue 1 passes, it means a higher threshold for the abortion rights provision in a red state, rather than a simple majority. Democrats see this as a direct attempt by the GOP to circumvent the will of a majority of the state’s voters.

“If this were to pass, it would be something that very ideologically extreme folks in legislatures across the country might say, ‘Hey, we want to pursue that. It passed in Ohio,’” freshman Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio) told Huddle on Monday. “When it fails, it'll be a cautionary tale.”

Reminder: Republican officials tried to reinstate an Ohio law that banned abortions after cardiac activity is detected in the embryo, which typically happens around six weeks. The law is on hold for now, as it faces court challenges from state abortion clinics.

“This is not a Republican ballot measure. It's not a conservative ballot measure. It is an authoritarian ballot measure. It’s an anti-democratic ballot measure,” Landsman, who flipped a GOP-held seat in 2022, said. “Because citizens are very eager to restore reproductive freedom in Ohio — and hold elected officials accountable for any other freedom that may be taken away — this has huge implications for that. It would make it infinitely more difficult.”

On the ground in Ohio: Landsman said that he encountered a long line when he went to vote early last Wednesday and that he met one Ohioan who’d cut short a vacation to make sure they could cast a ballot.

“It suggested, one, there is energy and enthusiasm and people take their democracy very, very seriously. And when you threaten democracy, the democracy will spring into action,” Landsman said, adding that he thought the Aug. 8 election date was an effort to drive down turnout, a potential advantage for the GOP.

Recent public polling backs up Landsman’s assessment of Ohio voters’ feelings. A USA Today/Suffolk University poll conducted last month showed 57 percent of likely Ohio voters said they opposed Issue 1, including 41 percent of Republicans, while just 26 percent of respondents support it. That same poll showed support for November’s abortion amendment vote at 58 percent among those surveyed.

Mostly quiet from Ohio Republicans: It has support from conservatives like Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who has appeared in an ad supporting the measure, but many Republican lawmakers aren’t going out of their way to talk about it. We did hear from one congressman, Rep. Bill Johnson, who told Huddle: “The bottom line: Issue 1 is an opportunity to strengthen Ohio’s constitution, and that’s why I’m voting Yes!” 

Your Huddle hosts reached out to every Republican House member for an interview on this issue, as well as GOP Sen. J.D. Vance, who’s been supportive of the push in other venues. Granted, it’s recess, but the only response we got was from Johnson.

Related read: Ohio’s proxy war over abortion reaches its final battle, by Madison Fernandez and Alice Miranda Ollstein

MANCHIN CELEBRATES INFLATION REDUCTION ACT

It’s been anything but smooth, but one year in, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) is leaning into the benefits of the Climate, tax and health care legislation he played a crucial role in crafting.

In a statement to Huddle, Manchin talked up “one of the most historic pieces of legislation passed in decades,” including measures lowering the national debt, curbing prescription drug prices, capping insulin prices, securing health benefits to coal miners and what the senator called “all-of-the-above” energy provisions.

“These types of investments are exactly what I had in mind when I wrote” the Inflation Reduction Act, Manchin said.

The celebratory tone from the West Virginia senator is especially notable given his loud complaints in recent months over the Biden administration’s implementation of the law’s climate change provisions. Manchin nodded to that ongoing fight in his statement.

“While I have and will continue to fight the Biden Administration’s unrelenting efforts to manipulate the law to push their radical climate agenda at the expense of both our energy and fiscal security, I am also proud of the money it is saving hard-working families and the economic opportunities it is bringing to communities in West Virginia and across America,” Manchin said in his statement.

— Burgess Everett and Anthony Adragna

 

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HUDDLE HOTDISH

Hakeem Jeffries got a shout out from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu while leading a House Democratic congressional delegation.

Members toured local manufacturers and rode in very high fire trucks, among other activities while back in their districts.

QUICK LINKS 

The impeachment effort losing steam in the House GOP, by Jordain Carney

Once Rare, Impeachments and Censures Have Become the Norm in Congress, by Carl Hulse in The New York Times

Island Territories Urge Congress to Extend Rum, Tuna Tax Breaks, by Bloomberg Tax’s Samantha Handler

Senator Grassley expects Farm Bill debate to move into October, by WJAG radio’s Meghan Grebner

TRANSITIONS 

Eve Sparks is now the Press and Digital Assistant for the Committee on House Administration. She was most recently press assistant for Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.).

TODAY IN CONGRESS

The House convenes at 10:30 a.m. for a pro forma session.

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. for a pro forma session.

AROUND THE HILL

Other than your pro formas, *crickets*.

Trivia

MONDAY’S ANSWER: Alexandra Benton correctly answered that the Secret Service began protecting the president in 1902 in response to the assassination of President William McKinley. Many of y’all answered 1901 — the year of the assassination — but formal protection began the year after. The Secret Service began informal part-time protection of President Grover Cleveland in 1894.

TODAY’S QUESTION from Alexandra: When asked about what it is really like to live and work at the White House, this president said, “I don't know whether it's the finest public housing in America or the crown jewel of the federal prison system.” Which president was it?

The first person to correctly guess gets a mention in the next edition of Huddle. Send your answers to [email protected].

GET HUDDLE emailed to your phone each morning.

Follow Daniella and Anthony on X at @DaniellaMicaela and @AnthonyAdragna.

 

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This post first appeared on Test Sandbox Updates, please read the originial post: here

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