POLITICS
A possible Tanden replacement privately touts her
own Senate support
Ann O’Leary has publicly rallied to Tanden's side.
Privately, too. But she’s also mentioned that, as a possible OMB nominee, she
could survive confirmation.
By
CHRISTOPHER CADELAGO
02/24/2021
02:29 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/24/ann-oleary-neera-tanden-omb-471361
A leading
fallback option to head Joe Biden’s Office of Management and Budget has
privately touted her own possible support in the Senate even as she encourages
the confirmation of her embattled friend, Neera Tanden, to the post.
Ann
O’Leary, who recently served as California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s chief of staff,
has emerged in recent days as a possible replacement for Tanden should her
nomination to OMB fail. A longtime Democratic operative and Hillary Clinton
campaign alum, O’Leary was in consideration for the post during the first
go-around, and her name has reemerged alongside the possibility that the spot
could come open again.
Publicly,
O’Leary has rallied behind Tanden, whose path through the Senate remains barely
visible after Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and a host of Republican moderates
announced their opposition to her, citing her mean tweets at them and overt
partisanship.
Privately,
too, O’Leary has reiterated her belief that the White House could and should
still muster the votes needed for Tanden’s confirmation—noting that Tanden is
qualified for the job and that her friends and allies should come to her side
and not back down from defending her.
It's a
message that synced with administration officials who have refused to retreat
from the nomination despite mounting evidence it’s going down.
But, at the
same time, O’Leary has not shied away from touting her own qualification for
the Biden administration’s top budget job should that no longer be the case. In
conversations with numerous Democratic associates since her name began
appearing in news stories as a possible fallback option, O’Leary has portrayed
herself as a skilled policy architect and less partisan alternative, according
to three Democrats familiar with the exchanges. O’Leary has gone as far as
telling them that she could be confirmed by the Senate, two of the sources told
POLITICO.
Reached by
phone Wednesday, O’Leary restated her support for Tanden.
“Neera
Tanden is exceptionally well qualified and should be confirmed for this
position,” O’Leary said. “I have worked with her for years and years, and I
can’t imagine a better advocate for President Biden to get his budget through
Congress and help manage the policies of this administration. I am 1,000
percent behind her.”
One friend
who spoke with O’Leary said the feeling they got from their conversation was
that she was not campaigning for the OMB post. But the timing of O’Leary’s
private comments raised eyebrows for others given her stated commitment to
Tanden’s Senate confirmation battle and their history together. The two, at one
point in time, were considered part of an exceedingly small “brain trust” for
Hillary Clinton that included Heather Boushey, who now is on the Biden White
House’s Council of Economic Advisers.
O’Leary’s
private conversations in recent days also lend credence to a dynamic the White
House itself has refused to publicly acknowledge: that Tanden’s chances of
confirmation are increasingly dim and that machinations are underway to be her
replacement.
Several
alternatives have emerged with competing constituencies in their corners. House
Democrats are making the case for Shalanda Young, Biden’s deputy director
nominee at OMB, whom they know from her time as staff director of the
Appropriations Committee. Support for Shalanda on the Hill is so strong that
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and lieutenants, including Rep. Jim Clyburn, were on board
before Biden named Tanden. Progressives in the party are coalescing behind Gene
Sperling, a former National Economic Council director.
O’Leary has
a close relationship with White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain, who she would
likely need the backing of to secure the OMB nomination if one opens. But she
faces headwinds from her tenure with Newsom, a Democrat whose stewardship of
the state amid the coronavirus crisis has been so uneven that opponents are
closing in on the signatures to qualify a recall effort.
While
O’Leary has loyal allies in California, including current and former Newsom
aides who praise her policy command and record of accomplishments with Newsom,
she confounded other advisers who argued that she struggled to get up to speed
on the inner workings of Sacramento and its complex power dynamics.
She also
co-chaired the state’s now-defunct Covid business task force with billionaire
environmentalist Tom Steyer that ultimately was more for optics than actually
addressing the issues at hand, with some high-profile defections at the end
including Bob Iger.
The
possible recall campaign, which comes against the backdrop of shuttered schools
and irate business owners who blame their struggles on the state’s see-sawing
coronavirus restrictions, could form the basis for critics trying to thwart an
O’Leary Senate confirmation.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário