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Presented by the Computer & Communications Industry Association: The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
Oct 04, 2023 View in browser
 

By Lauren Egan, Myah Ward and Lawrence Ukenye

Presented by

Welcome to POLITICO’s West Wing Playbook, your guide to the people and power centers in the Biden administration. With help from producer Raymond Rapada.

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The White House has a bunch of perks that come with working in it: the bowling alley, the mess, ostentatious holiday parties and ceremonies where dignitaries mingle.

It also has a meditation room, the type of office addition befitting a generation of employees trying to find better work-life balance.

But no one seems to use it.

In fact, no one even seems to know where it is (somewhere in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, they assume). Some staffers even posed a more metaphysical question: If there is no meditation happening in the meditation room, is it simply just a … room?

“When I first started it was a thing that people would say. Like ‘Oh, we have a meditation room here,’” said one White House staffer. “Please tell me if you find out where it is.”

Former chief of staff RON KLAIN said he “didn’t know it existed until now.” Even current chief of staff JEFF ZIENTS, a Transcendental Meditation aficionado, hasn’t stepped foot in the meditation room, according to a person familiar with his schedule. He prefers to practice at home at 4:30 a.m. before going into work.

“I’ve never known anyone to use it and couldn’t tell you where it is,” said another staffer.

West Wing Playbook reached out to the White House to see if this SCHRÖDINGER meditation room does, in fact, exist. An official confirmed it does, but did not provide more details, including the room’s location. At this point, we’d like some photographic evidence before confidently reporting its existence.

White House staffers said that they appreciated the spirit of the mysterious room. And while they liked the idea of devoting a few minutes in their work day to reset, the reality is that, even if they knew where the room was, they probably wouldn’t schedule a midday meditation break into their daily routine. Their jobs are too busy, according to the ones who talked to us. It’s a good day when they can break away to grab lunch at a reasonable hour.

Meditation has become much more popular in recent years, with a seemingly endless supply of guided apps and wellness articles touting its health benefits. But it’s unclear under which administration the meditation room was first established.

A 1976 New York Times report describes how “meditation clubs have sprung up from the Capitol to the Pentagon and White House” as a way to “dissolve stress and fatigue,” but makes no mention of a dedicated room on campus. JEN PSAKI told TIME that during the Obama administration she would find a moment to meditate while walking the colonnade that connects the West Wing to the East Wing. When asked by West Wing Playbook whether she ever used the actual meditation room during her White House career, Psaki responded: “Nope not tracking.”

Some type of mediation room, however, does appear to date back at least to the Trump administration. POLITICO’s NAHAL TOOSI wrote in a 2019 piece that Trump’s National Security Council staffers would huddle “atop” EEOB in a “small informal ‘meditation room’” to quietly share information that they wanted to keep from career NSC staff.

To the Biden staffers still in search of your zen, we recommend you start by checking out the top floor of EEOB. Send us a pic if you find it. Invite us to the next on-campus session.

MESSAGE US — Are you someone who has actually used the White House meditation room? We want to hear from you. And we’ll keep you anonymous! Email us at [email protected].

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POTUS PUZZLER

Thanks to the White House Historical Association for this question!

Which president’s rural property was known as the “ranch in the sky?”

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

THINGS ARE GETTING DICEY: President JOE BIDEN admits the fate of Ukraine funding “does worry me” but believes that bipartisan support continues to exist in both congressional chambers. During a White House event Wednesday on student loan payments, the president told reporters that he plans to give a “major speech” on the issue soon. Press secretary KARINE JEAN-PIERRE declined to provide any details minutes later during the White House briefing.

Amid all the GOP infighting, the Pentagon did send Kyiv 1 million rounds of ammunition that the U.S. seized from Iran, our LARA SELIGMAN writes.

OH KEVIN, MY KEVIN: The White House wasn’t popping champagne bottles over seeing Rep. KEVIN MCCARTHY (R-Calif.) booted as speaker, our ADAM CANCRYN, JENNIFER HABERKORN, LARA SELIGMAN and SAM STEIN report. The former House leader’s demotion casts doubt about how the federal government will avert a shutdown within the next 44 days and whether there will be new U.S. aid for Ukraine. Still, many in the White House viewed McCarthy as a fickle and unpredictable partner who often squashed any goodwill he earned in private negotiations because of his public comments.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: This piece by Bloomberg’s MARIO PARKER. It argues that House conservatives’ mutiny against McCarthy, coupled with DONALD TRUMP’s ongoing fraud trial, risks damaging any Republican advantage among voters. “Democrats have countered voter questions about Biden’s age by painting Republicans’ as chaotic and out of step with Americans on their positions,” Parker writes.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by our ORIANA PAWLYK about how MIKE WHITAKER, Biden’s pick to lead the FAA, “bounced” his personal plane on a runway during a botched landing in 2015. Whitaker has discussed the incident publicly multiple times and has “broad support from labor unions and industry stakeholders” from the White House, Pawlyk writes. The issue, however, did not come up during Whitaker’s Senate confirmation hearing on Wednesday.

AND THIS ONE TOO… by NPR’s DANIELLE KURTZLEBEN, who writes that even if Trump loses voter support if convicted of a crime, his supporters would still be more excited about his candidacy than Biden’s. An NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll released Wednesday found 43 percent of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents would be “very satisfied” to have Trump as the party’s nominee, while only 30 percent of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents felt the same about Biden.

 

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THE BUREAUCRATS

A JOB WITH ARROWS TO TAKE: Education Secretary MIGUEL CARDONA has helped Biden navigate a minefield of issues surrounding the president’s student loan forgiveness efforts. He’s also become a bulwark against conservative efforts to “shape teachings about race, gender and sexuality in classrooms,” Bloomberg’s AKAYLA GARDNER reports.

Cardona’s influence may continue growing, with student debt and classroom curricula likely to remain critical issues in next year’s election and as polling suggests Democrats’ long-held advantage among voters on education is slipping.

SECOND IN COMMAND STEPS AWAY: TOMMY BEAUDREAU is stepping down from his role as deputy secretary at the Department of Interior, the department announced Wednesday. Beaudreau joined the administration in 2021 and helped oversee decisions on oil, energy and conservation. He served at the department for a combined 10 years in both the Obama and Biden administrations.

 

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Agenda Setting

STEP IT UP, JOE: Our LISA KASHINSKY reports that top Massachusetts Democrats are lashing out at Biden over the nation’s immigration crisis as the state struggles to house more than 11,000 migrants and counting in its family emergency shelter system. Gov. MAURA HEALEY, who’s on Biden’s national campaign advisory board, is asking state lawmakers for another $250 million to prop up the overburdened shelter system. And those lawmakers, in turn, are imploring the Biden administration to step up.

“We need someone to take charge of this and say ‘this is what you can expect,’” Massachusetts House Speaker RON MARIANO, a Democrat, told reporters on Wednesday. “The guy’s running for president,” he added, audibly frustrated. “He better start paying attention to this.”

This is the second Democratic-run state this week to demand more help from Biden on migrant sheltering.

MORE RELIEF: Speaking of federal student debt, Biden announced another round of relief on Wednesday. The latest tranche provides $9 billion in forgiveness to 125,000 borrowers through existing programs that allow the government to waive debt for certain peoples. Our MICHAEL STRATFORD has the details for Pro subscribers. 

YOU POLLUTE, YOU PAY: The Biden administration is weighing whether to use a complex formula to determine how to penalize companies that emit greenhouse gasses, our JEAN CHEMNICK reports for Pro subscribers. The fines — known as the social cost of greenhouse gasses — may be imposed by the EPA because the agency has multiple laws that allow for monetary penalties, including the Clean Air Act.

 

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What We're Reading

Are Rising Bond Yields and Deficits a National Crisis? (New York Mag’s Eric Levitz)

Some Americans Jailed in Russia Fear Being Left Behind (WSJ’s Brett Forrest)

Rudy Giuliani sues Joe Biden for calling him a ‘Russian pawn’ (CNN’s Zachary Cohen and Alison Main)

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

President RONALD REAGAN’s ranch in the Santa Ynez Mountains was named Rancho del Cielo, which translates into “ranch in the sky.” The Reagan family was very fond of the property and the house served as a sanctuary during Reagan’s presidency, according to the White House Historical Association.

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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