How the White House botched the Neera nomination
They believed they could hold the party and that a bit
of contrition and some outside validators would suffice. It’s not looking good.
By NATASHA
KORECKI and BURGESS EVERETT
02/23/2021
08:11 PM EST
Updated:
02/23/2021 09:32 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/23/neera-tanden-confirmation-471265
Just about
everyone in Washington, D.C., could see that Neera Tanden’s nomination to head
the Office of Management and Budget was beleaguered from the beginning —
everyone, that is, except the White House.
At the time
her nomination was announced, Democrats didn’t even control the Senate and
Tanden’s history of sharp-elbowed politics and highly personal Twitter attacks
had made her enemies on the left and right. But Biden and his team, headed by
White House chief of staff Ron Klain, felt strongly that they could sway
Republicans to back her. When Democrats won the runoffs in Georgia, their
gamble looked more prescient.
Today, the
White House can’t even get all Democrats on board. And Mitch McConnell is
urging the GOP to band together to take Tanden down.
Biden and
his aides insist that Tanden’s prospects are not doomed. But her fate now
hinges on Sen. Lisa Murkowski swooping in to save the nomination. Even if the
independent-minded Alaska Republican were to do that, the saga would still mark
one of the biggest missteps of Biden’s still-young presidency, one that raises
questions about the White House’s political acumen and its ability to manage
relations on the Hill. The president himself on Tuesday seemed to accept that
the Tanden nom could end in defeat.
“We’re
going to push,” Biden said on Tuesday. “We still think there’s a shot, a good
shot.”
Tanden’s
nomination became imperiled last Friday when Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.)
announced his opposition, a development that took Democrats by surprise. But
the seeds of her rocky reception on the Hill were planted with White House
miscalculations weeks beforehand — among them, that moderate Senate Democrats
would rally behind the president’s slate of nominees and that Republican
resistance would soften.
“Around
here the opposition is always looking for the person that they can put a fight
up about. And she would be the obvious one to cull from the herd,” said one
Senate Democrat, referring to the wall of GOP opposition Tanden faced from the
beginning.
For a
while, the White House felt Tanden would avoid her current fate. She atoned for
her now infamous Twitter behavior and put forward her personal story of a
hardscrabble life, living on food stamps and raised by a single mother. And
allies like former Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who consults
frequently with the White House, predicted that both parties would get on board
due to the historic nature of her nomination: Tanden would become the first
South Asian woman to head up the agency. Inside the White House, endorsements
from the Chamber of Commerce and former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels — an ex-OMB
chief himself — were pushed out in hopes that they would give Republicans cover
to back her.
Elsewhere,
there was a belief that the Trump years, in which the Senate confirmed Mick
Mulvaney and Russ Vought as OMB directors after long careers in conservative
politics, would make it difficult to oppose a nominee because of the tenor of
her tweets.
“The truth
is that she’s been critical of the left and the right. What the hell? I
actually know her, I think she’s a good person,” said Sen. Jon Tester
(D-Mont.). “I don’t think the fight’s over with. Not ‘til she’s either pulled
or the vote is negative.”
But those
bets weren’t supplemented by an aggressive lobbying effort on Tanden’s behalf.
One senior Democratic Senate staffer complained that even early on in her
confirmation fight, the White House was lackluster in its advocacy for her and
tone-deaf to the chillier reception she was getting on the Hill. There were
questions about how many champions she even had at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
“Who does
she have? Ron Klain. That’s her constituency,” the staffer said.
A source
close to the White House though countered that Biden personally had backed
Tanden from the start and thought she was “making a strong case to Republicans
and Democrats for their support.”
Still,
several Democrats said Biden has no strong ties or loyalty to her. Tanden is a
product of the Clinton world and is close to John Podesta, who she worked with
at the Center for American Progress and who had advocated for her placement in
the Biden administration. Democrats also argue that a scuttled Tanden
nomination is not a terrible political outcome for Biden, as it gives Manchin
and Republicans a chance to say they broke with Biden on something on one front
while giving them cover to back his agenda elsewhere.
Lawmakers,
meanwhile, felt little in the way of arm-twisting to get behind Tanden’s
nomination. As of Monday, she had held 35 meetings with senators — though it
was unclear with whom. Administration officials had sought early meetings with
moderates like Manchin, but he didn’t speak with her before their meeting on
Monday — after he’d already announced opposition to her nomination.
And there
was open confusion among staff about whether she had a sherpa (she did) to help
with her nomination and senators said that they had been unpersuaded by the
notion that Tanden was uniquely qualified for the post.
”Doesn’t
seem like she had much of a chance,” said Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va).
“There’s a part of me that says, why do you put people up for positions — and
this isn’t just Biden that does this — where you know they have so much baggage
that it’s going to be a difficult climb?”
Tanden has
tried to remedy perceived shortcomings in recent days. Twenty four hours after
the White House said she’d had those 35 meetings, Press Secretary Jen Psaki
said Tanden had talked with 44 senators. Tanden had asked the staff of Sen.
Susan Collins (R-Maine) for a meeting, though Collins dug in further the more
she sifted through Tanden’s record.
By Tuesday
Collins said that the installation of Topher Spiro, a former Center for
American Progress staffer and a Collins critic on Twitter, at the OMB “raises
questions of whether she’s even capable of leaving behind her extremely
partisan approach.” Collins called Spiro a “troll of mine.”
“Why would
you put someone who is a troll against a United States senator in a key
position in OMB?” she asked. She suggested Jeff Zients — Biden’s point man on
the Covid crisis — would have been a far better choice than Tanden. The
administration declined to comment on Spiro, who has deleted several tweets
attacking Collins, which were posted years ago.
On
Wednesday, two committees will hold votes on Tanden. Senate Budget Chairman
Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), whom Tanden had targeted in the past, has not yet said
he supports her. Neither has Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), who serves on the
Homeland Security Committee.
Through it
all, White House has continued to stand its ground. “We do believe there’s more
than one path,” a source close to the nomination talks said Tuesday, but would
not get more specific than to say it involved Republicans.
Mitch
McConnell, meanwhile, has told his caucus he wants Republicans to stick together
on the Tanden vote, according to two sources with knowledge of the Senate
minority leader’s remarks.
Republicans
believe Murkowski, who was in attendance but did not respond to McConnell’s
plea, is the only one GOP lawmaker seriously considering supporting Tanden. But
even she seems unlikely — it hardly helps her back home to vote to convict
Trump in his impeachment trial and then turn around and save Biden’s most
endangered nominee.
Other
Republicans who generally believe Biden should see his Cabinet confirmed saw no
reason to give the president that much deference. Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) met
with Tanden and said he heard “from a number of Neera Tanden’s colleagues and
friends who have been very supportive.”
But he
found her conduct “not consistent with how I’ve voted in the past,” he said,
“and the criticisms that I’ve leveled at others in the past for their mean
tweets. And not consistent with the president’s vision of a more friendly
environment.”
Marianne
LeVine contributed to this report.


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