Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Biden works to leverage Senate ties in effort to power his agenda

- By Luke Broadwater

WASHINGTON — As Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska walked the halls of the Capitol recently, the two moderate Republican­s marveled to each other about how much time President Joe Biden had spent with them during a meeting in the Oval Office.

The session had been scheduled for an hour, but then it stretched on and on, doubling in length as the conversati­on bubbled. The president, who has at times angered the left wing of his party by insisting there is still room for compromise with Republican­s, told the lawmakers that he felt like he was back in the Senate, which he “liked the best” of any job he’s had.

Biden, it seemed, did not want the meeting to end.

“We go back a long, long time,” Collins, a senator for 24 years, said of Biden, who served in the body for 36 years. “He loves the Senate.”

Weeks into his presidency, Biden’s identity as a creature of the Senate and a deft navigator of its clubby idiosyncra­sies has become a defining feature of his governing approach. He has leveraged his relationsh­ips with Republican­s like Collins to create space and pressure for bipartisan compromise­s, even if none have yet materializ­ed. And he has taken a hands-on approach to rallying Democratic lawmakers around his agenda, in the process ensuring that his party has a singular message and unified front against the many obstacles standing in his way.

To be sure, Biden is encounteri­ng a deeply polarized Senate that at times bears little resemblanc­e to the one in which he served more than a decade ago, and he has made clear that he is willing to bypass Republican­s on issues where he has the votes to do so and public opinion on his side. For all his chummy meetings and talk of bipartisan­ship, it now appears highly likely that his $1.9 trillion stimulus plan will be forced through on partisan votes over the opposition of Republican­s — including many Biden has actively courted — who say it is far too large.

Still, the president is personally working Capitol Hill in a way that his recent predecesso­rs could not, leveraging decades-old relationsh­ips and experience in Congress that they did not have.

The approach reflects the challenges Biden faces in maneuverin­g his priorities through an evenly split Senate, which has elevated the importance of working closely with its members. Already, he has transforme­d the West Wing into a veritable

revolving door for senators.

Not long after his session with 10 Republican­s that included Collins and Murkowski, a contingent from Delaware, Sens. Tom Carper and Chris Coons, both Democrats and allies of the president, met with him for an hour. After them came a group of top-ranking Democrats, including Sen. Chuck Schumer, the majority leader from New York, who were in the Oval Office for 90 minutes. Earlier this month, a bipartisan group of senators sat down with Biden to discuss infrastruc­ture.

Afterward, Biden exchanged letters and phone calls with the senators, including Collins.

The sessions are starkly different from the sort former President Donald Trump held with lawmakers in either party, especially the anger-fueled, insultfill­ed meetings he had with top Democrats, complete with the president’s name-calling (he once told House Speaker Nancy Pelosi she was a “third-rate” politician) and boasting (“I hate ISIS more than you do,” he told her).

Instead, Biden has gone out of his way to court Republican­s, treating them to his first official Oval Office meeting — an honor he knew, as a former senator, would flatter them — from which they emerged with no agreements, but a palpable sense of bonhomie.

“The president was very gracious,” Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., who discussed education funding with Biden, said after their

meeting. “If we’re going to go forward as a country, we have to do a better job than we’ve been doing of figuring where those who disagree with us are coming from.”

Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., who gushed to the president about how nice it was to talk with other humans during the pandemic, confessed to his colleagues after their meeting that Biden “knew more about his plan than we did, and Joe Biden knew more about the Republican­s’ plan than they did,” Carper recalled.

When weather prevented Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., from attending in person, he called in to a meeting with Biden, whom he later described as “cordial,” “interested” and “engaged.” Rounds told the president that he had personally received a stimulus check — evidence, the senator argued, that the next round of relief payments should be more targeted.

“He made it clear that he thought that the relationsh­ips that he had establishe­d in the United States Senate were still pretty important,” Rounds said. “But he didn’t give up any of the aces that he may have in his hand.”

Yet Biden is using the sessions to cultivate relationsh­ips with important potential allies.

Sen. Jon Tester, a centrist Democrat from Montana who could be a crucial swing vote on the stimulus plan, said after his audience with Biden that in his 14 years in the Senate, no president

had ever invited him to the Oval Office before.

“I’m going to be honest with you: It was pretty emotional for me,” Tester said. “I told the president that.”

Senators who had visited during Trump’s term remarked at the makeover of the room. Biden had taken down a portrait of populist President Andrew Jackson and replaced it with one of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who helped bring America out of the Depression with the creation of robust government programs. As they looked around the room, they saw busts of the Martin Luther King Jr., Cesar Chavez and Robert F. Kennedy, each civil rights heroes.

After talking with his colleagues, Coons said some of the younger Republican senators were “genuinely surprised” after meeting Biden, because they had a “two-dimensiona­l picture” of him from conservati­ve news media.

“They said: ‘He was so genuine. He was so welcoming, and he really knew his numbers,’” Coons said.

For long-serving senators, Biden’s rise to the presidency is in some ways akin to a hometown boy who has made it big. Unlike Trump — who showed little interest in lawmaking — or even former President Barack Obama, who spent only a short time in the Senate and had a frosty relationsh­ip with Republican leader Mitch McConnell, Biden’s six terms in the institutio­n produced many deep and lasting friendship­s.

Few are more enduring than his friendship with Collins, who became an enemy of the left after her 2018 vote to confirm Justice Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court but was neverthele­ss reelected easily in November to a fifth term.

During their years in the Senate, Biden and Collins worked together on the reauthoriz­ation of the Violence Against Women Act, traveled together to Rome for the funeral of Pope John Paul II in 2005 and were even once honored together as Irish Americans of the Year.

In 2016, on the Senate floor, Collins rose to praise Biden, calling him a “good and decent man.”

“He is everybody’s friend but nobody’s fool,” Collins said.

The next year, Biden returned the favor, cutting a video for Collins praising her as she received the 2017 Claddagh Award from the Maine Irish Heritage Center.

“I’m crazy about her,” Biden said, before addressing Collins directly. “I’ve been lucky enough to call you a friend for a long, long time.”

Throughout his time in the Senate, Biden even forged a working relationsh­ip with the famously reserved McConnell of Kentucky. In 2011, they made a joint appearance at the University of Louisville.

“You want to see whether or not a Republican and Democrat really like one another,” Biden told the audience. “Well, I’m here to tell you we do.”

So far, the relationsh­ips have not translated into deal-making. Democrats now control both chambers of Congress, meaning Republican­s have little leverage to force changes to Biden’s fiscal initiative­s.

During the first meeting with Republican­s, some of the senators left the White House sensing that Biden and his staff were engaged in something of a good cop-bad cop routine.

Several Republican­s later said privately that they felt insulted by Biden’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, who repeatedly shook his head in disapprova­l as Collins and the other Republican­s talked, said people familiar with their thinking, who detailed it on condition of anonymity.

“Our members who were in the meeting felt that the president seemed to be more interested in that than his staff,” McConnell told reporters of the possibilit­y of bipartisan­ship.

That may be partly because the Senate that Biden remembers is far different from the Senate of today, which is known more for partisansh­ip and paralysis than friendship and deals.

 ?? DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and other Republican senators meet with reporters Feb. 1 outside the White House after a meeting with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. Biden has made it clear during his first weeks in office that he plans to try to capitalize on his deep experience and relationsh­ips on Capitol Hill to get things done.
DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and other Republican senators meet with reporters Feb. 1 outside the White House after a meeting with President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. Biden has made it clear during his first weeks in office that he plans to try to capitalize on his deep experience and relationsh­ips on Capitol Hill to get things done.

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