Springfield News-Sun

Sweet diplomacy: Biden courts Congress with gusto

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — The pictures always make it look so presidenti­al: Joe Biden sitting in a tall-back chair, surrounded by the arrayed members of Congress invited for a meeting at the White House.

But inside the Oval Office, lawmakers tell a different story, of a president so warm, so engaged, so animated — standing up, sitting down, calling on lawmakers by name, swapping stories about their hometowns — and so determined to make them get to work and get things done.

On their way out the door, they are offered a chocolate chip cookie, that most American of snacks, a to-go boost for the potential partnershi­p between this White House and the Congress.

“It was the day that you will remember, not so much because you were in the Oval Office, but because of the attention the president gave to us — the personal attention, the commitment, the authentici­ty and the seriousnes­s of caring about people, and especially people who have been marginaliz­ed,” said Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-ohio, the chair of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus.

“Very presidenti­al with a personal flair,” she said.

The outreach to Capitol Hill is nothing out of the ordinary. New presidents typically check the box of inviting lawmakers to the White House at the start of an administra­tion to set the stage for the legislatin­g to come.

Donald Trump held impromptu White House sessions on a range of topics in freewheeli­ng, often televised gatherings unlike many the country had ever seen. Barack Obama took a more measured approach, even though he, too, sweetened the White House visits with M&MS candies to go.

Biden has hosted more than 100 lawmakers for a visit during his first 100 days, from powerful committee chairs to influentia­l caucus leaders, Republican­s and Democrats alike. Part getto-know-you sessions, part strategy building, the private meetings are often seen as a bit of political theater for all sides to at least appear to be putting their best selves forward.

But unlike his immediate predecesso­rs, Biden is a veteran of Capitol Hill, who not only knows many of the lawmakers personally, but also understand­s the rhythms of their workdays in Congress. Digging deep into the roster of lawmakers, he is bringing in the subcommitt­ee chairs handling infrastruc­ture, the former small-town mayors with executive office knowhow and those who, despite years on Capitol Hill, have never seen the inner sanctum of the Oval Office.

The invitation­s convey his understand­ing of the value of sharing power, assigning prominence and tapping into the pent-up desire of even the most partisan legislator­s to legislate.

Sending them off with pockets full of cookies wrapped with the golden seal of the presidency doesn’t hurt, either, a little chocolate chip cookie diplomacy to carry back to the Hill.

“President Biden has always believed in engaging Congress as a co-equal branch of government,” said Rep. Joe Neguse, D-colo., a rising member of party leadership, who shared his cookies with his staff. “And the proof is in the results — his agenda has moved through Congress very swiftly.”

As the president rounds the 100-day milestone, the proceeds of his many hours of outreach will be put to the test as Congress considers the administra­tion’s priorities, particular­ly Biden’s $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture package.

The president was able to quickly usher passage of the massive $1.9 trillion COVID19 rescue, signed into law last month, but the next bills to revamp election laws, gun control and immigratio­n will be more difficult in the narrowly divided House and Senate, with slim Democratic majorities and the need for some Republican bipartisan­ship.

 ?? AP ?? President Joe Biden, with (from left) Vice President Kamala Harris, Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-hawaii, Mark Takano, D-calif., Rep. Judy Chu, D-calif., and Rep. Grace Meng, D-N.Y., speaks during an April 15 meeting with members of the Congressio­nal Asian Pacific American Caucus.
AP President Joe Biden, with (from left) Vice President Kamala Harris, Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-hawaii, Mark Takano, D-calif., Rep. Judy Chu, D-calif., and Rep. Grace Meng, D-N.Y., speaks during an April 15 meeting with members of the Congressio­nal Asian Pacific American Caucus.

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