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'Everyone is in a state of grief'

Presented by the Clean Hydrogen Future Coalition (CHFC): The power players, latest policy developments, and intriguing whispers percolating inside the West Wing.
Oct 13, 2023 View in browser
 

By Lauren Egan, Myah Ward and Lawrence Ukenye

Presented by the Clean Hydrogen Future Coalition (CHFC)

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

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It’s been a challenging week as the Jewish community — and the world — have tried to make sense of Hamas’ brutal attack on Israel and the devastating violence that has since plagued the region.

For staffers in the White House with ties to the region, there’s been little time to pause and process the events since waking up to the horrific news Saturday. West Wing Playbook caught up with White House Jewish liaison SHELLEY GREENSPAN to hear about the experiences of staffers these past few days. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

How are you doing?

I'm hanging in there. This week has been draining and heartbreaking and challenging on so many levels. Everyone is in a state of grief and shock. 

Do you have any friends or family in Israel right now?

Yes, I have a lot of friends in Israel. They’re scared. There are some staffers here who have family members affected by this — it’s the mixture of the professional and the personal aspect when it comes to a role like this during such a tragic time. 

I’m getting inundated with emails and frantic calls from people who have either lost loved ones or they’re missing or kidnapped. We’re doing whatever we can to bring them home.

What do you say to those people when they reach out?

I take this responsibility serving as a bridge between the American Jewish community and the administration incredibly seriously, but especially at a time like this. They need to know that we have their back, that we have Israel’s back. Getting out there into the community, answering phones and being responsive on a human level is extremely important.

You were in the room Wednesday for a White House meeting with Jewish leaders, when President JOE BIDEN gave an impassioned speech in defense of Israel. What was it like to be there?

When word got out that we were hosting this roundtable with Jewish community leaders, I was inundated with calls from senior staff and principals wanting to attend — just to sit there and be in solidarity with the Jewish community. 

(Senior White House adviser) Mitch Landrieu ended up coming. He sat in the back. I still haven’t had a chance to thank him, but he sat there listening for two and a half hours. 

Towards the end, one of the stakeholders that joined from the Orthodox Union shared that it was this week 80 years ago that a group of 400 rabbis came to D.C. to meet with President Franklin Roosevelt about Jews being persecuted in Europe. FDR refused to meet with them. Look where we are now — not only are we welcoming Jews during a time of need, but this entire administration is committed to standing with Israel and supporting Jewish Americans.

What else have White House staffers been doing this week to check in on each other?

It’s been from the highest levels in this White House down to junior staffers. (Homeland security adviser) Liz Sherwood-Randall the other day pulled me aside just to see how I was doing. I’ve had friends drop off lunch for me.

When I had this crazy idea of lighting up the White House in blue and white, I didn’t think it would go anywhere. Those things are planned weeks in advance. I was watching the email chain, because you need many layers of support to make anything here happen, and seeing how quickly people responded, ‘Of course, we should do this. We need to show our support for Israel.’ I was so touched. 

College campuses have been a flashpoint of debate since the attack. Some student groups have blamed Israel entirely. Does that concern you? 

This is definitely a concern of mine and a concern throughout the administration. But it’s also not a new concern. In May we launched the first ever National Strategy to Combat Antisemitism. I’m grateful that we have this foundation to lean on when there is an uptick — because we probably will see an uptick — in antisemitic incidents. And it’s a really scary, scary time to be a Jew on a college campus right now, unfortunately.

What’s been the hardest part of your job this week?

Wanting to be there for the entirety of the American Jewish community and wanting them to know all of what President Biden is doing on their behalf while also simultaneously dealing with my own grief and my own sense of mourning and shock.

I’m doing my best to compartmentalize.

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POTUS PUZZLER

Which first lady was a shrewd investor in the bond market?

(Answer at bottom.)

The Oval

IT DOESN’T GET ANY EASIER: White House officials met with speaker-less House lawmakers on Friday to discuss plans to provide aid to Israel, our ADAM CANCRYN and JENNIFER HABERKORN report. Rep. PATRICK MCHENRY (R-N.C.), who is serving as the chamber’s acting speaker, attended the meeting along with House appropriators and members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

The President, meanwhile, is increasingly facing pressure from members of his own party to ensure Israel follows international law in its campaign in Gaza, our HOLLY OTTERBEIN reports. A group of progressive lawmakers, led by Rep. PRAMILA JAYAPAL (D-Wash.), penned a letter to Biden and Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN seeking pledges the U.S. will provide humanitarian assistance as the war escalates.

At the start of his Bidenomics speech in Philadelphia, the president said it was a priority to “urgently address the humanitarian crisis in Gaza,” noting that his team is working with Israel and other countries in the region. “The overwhelming majority of Palestinians have nothing to do with Hamas,” Biden said.

A TOUGH CALL TO MAKE: The president on Friday spoke to the families of the 14 Americans unaccounted for in the Middle East via Zoom for more than an hour. “They’re going through agony, not knowing what the status of their sons, daughters, husbands, wives, children. You know, it’s gut wrenching. I assured them my personal commitment to do everything possible to return every missing American to their families… We are not going to stop until we bring them home,” Biden said.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU TO READ: Anything about how Biden’s support for Israel has boosted his popularity in the country and generated praise from some Republicans. The New York Times’ JONATHAN WEISMAN and LISA LERER write that the president’s support for Israel “amounted to a return to the kind of staunch bipartisan bond between Israel and the United States that had been questioned during the Trump administration.”

Bloomberg’s JORDAN FABIAN also noted that DAVID FRIEDMAN, former President DONALD TRUMP’s ambassador to Israel, praised Biden’s support for Israel. White House deputy communications director HERBIE ZISKEND retweeted Fabian’s piece.

WHAT THE WHITE HOUSE DOESN’T WANT YOU TO READ: This piece by Bloomberg’s KATHERINE GRIFFITHS about how a series of economic and political challenges could negatively affect an increasingly resilient U.S. economy. JPMorgan Chase President DANIEL PINTO believes a variety of things could go wrong, including issues related to the war in Ukraine and Hamas’ recent attacks against Israel.

 

A message from the Clean Hydrogen Future Coalition (CHFC):

Now’s not the right time for hourly matching and additionality. 45V is supposed to make getting into new, low carbon industries easier and less expensive. Hourly matching and additionality would do the opposite – increasing the cost of producing clean hydrogen. It’s time to say no to hourly matching and additionality.

 
THE BUREAUCRATS

CABINET VISITS TO ISRAEL CONTINUE: Secretary of Defense LLOYD AUSTIN met Prime Minister BENJAMIN NETANYAHU and Israeli defense officials on Friday to discuss plans to provide future military assistance, Axios’ BARAK RAVID reports. Austin told Netanyahu that actions committed by Hamas are “worse than ISIS.”

PERSONNEL MOVES: TRISHA ANN CASTANEDA is now chief of staff and policy adviser for the Gender Policy Council at the White House, our DANIEL LIPPMAN has learned. She most recently was adviser to the director of the Office of Management and Budget.

— ALIA SCHECHTER is now adviser to the counselor to the president. She most recently was adviser to the director of the Office of Legislative Affairs. Schechter replaces MARIANA ADAME, who is now director of congressional outreach for the Office of Presidential Personnel, Lippman has also learned.

— DILPREET SIDHU has rejoined the National Security Council as deputy chief of staff and a special assistant to the president, according to Lippman. She most recently was deputy chief of staff to the deputy secretary of defense.

— ROBERT GORDON will begin serving on Monday as deputy director for economic mobility at the Domestic Policy Council, WaPo’s DAN DIAMOND posted on X. He most recently served as HHS’s assistant secretary for financial resources.

 

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Agenda Setting

A LABOR STANDOFF (NO, NOT THAT ONE) RESOLVED: More than 75,000 healthcare workers reached an agreement with Kaiser Permanente on Friday to end the largest ever healthcare strike in U.S. history, WaPo’s AARON GREGG reports.

Biden commended the deal in a statement, echoing his long standing support for unions. “I always say collective bargaining works,” he said. “I’m heartened to see health care workers and their employers take this critical step towards securing the pay, benefits, and working conditions these heroes deserve.”

SUBSIDY SPLURGE: The Energy Department selected seven regional clean hydrogen hubs around the country to receive $7 billion in federal funding from the 2021 infrastructure law, our KELSEY TAMBORRINO reports for Pro subscribers.

The administration hopes this funding will accelerate hydrogen production, and help industries transition away from fossil fuels. As Kelsey notes, the seven hubs will bring in over $40 billion in private investment and eliminate 25 million metric tons of carbon emissions from end use annually.

 

A message from the Clean Hydrogen Future Coalition (CHFC):

 
What We're Reading

Israel’s 9/11 moment: Sorrow, rage and few good options (POLITICO’s Nahal Toosi)

Trapped in Gaza, Palestinian Americans Say They Feel Abandoned (NYT’s Sharon Otterman, Anna Betts, Anushka Patil and Karen Zraick)

Stunning State Department Memo Warns Diplomats: No Gaza ‘De-Escalation’ Talk (Huff Post’s Akbar Shahid Ahmed)

POTUS PUZZLER ANSWER

Early in the American Revolution, ABIGAIL ADAMS proved herself an adept securities speculator, according to “Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution,” a 2007 book by WOODY HOLTON.

One of the bonds she purchased had depreciated to 15 percent of its face value, and she held onto it until it reached 85 percent — more than five times what she had paid for it.

Even after her husband helped negotiate peace with Britain in 1783, Adams wanted to continue dealing in depreciated government paper.

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.

 

A message from the Clean Hydrogen Future Coalition (CHFC):

This is the moment to add tens of thousands of jobs to the US economy and jump start a new industry. Don’t let it pass America by. See why it’s not the right time for hourly matching and additionality.

 
 

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

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