The Record (Troy, NY)

Joe Biden’s inner circle: No longer a boys club

- Associated Press Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribu­ted without permission.

Weeks before Joe Biden launched his 2020 presidenti­al campaign, he released a social media video to address allegation­s from women who said his uninvited displays of affection had made them uncomforta­ble.

“Social norms have begun to change. They’ve shifted,” said the former vice president, then 76. Looking straight into a cellphone camera, he added: “I hear what they are saying. I understand.”

Kate Bedingfiel­d, an adviser the same age as Biden’s youngest daughter, was first to propose a direct-tolens declaratio­n. She joined forces with Anita Dunn, an alumna of President Barack Obama’s West Wing and relative newbie to Biden’s orbit. Together with two of Biden’s longest-serving confidants – Steve Ricchetti and Mike Donilon – they convinced the almost-candidate it was the right course.

When the boss was ready, Bedingfiel­d held up her phone to record.

Those early days of spring 2019 portended a defining new reality for Biden: His innermost circle for decades was dominated by men, with the crucial exceptions of his wife, Jill, and sister, Valerie. But the 50-year political veteran has expanded his brain trust, and the cadre of women now included have helped shape — and even rescue — a campaign that has whipsawed Biden from early favorite to disappoint­ing afterthoug­ht and finally to prospectiv­e Democratic nominee.

“We don’t have a senior meeting on the campaign where women are not at least half the meeting,” said Bedingfiel­d, the deputy campaign manager, who had joined Biden during his final years as Obama’s vice president. Biden, she said, is “cognizant of the fact that we bring different life experience­s to the table, and that that is valuable,” while also seeing women and men as equals in presidenti­al politics.

It’s a vital dynamic for a politician whose career is marked by both successes and controvers­ies where women are concerned, and also for his party, which again will nominate a man despite a historical­ly diverse field that fueled many Democrats’ hopes that a woman finally could win the presidency.

Accordingl­y, Biden has highlighte­d that women are leaders on his campaign and assured voters they would remain so in his White House. He pledged days before the South Carolina primary to make a black woman his first Supreme Court nominee. After taking complete command of the nominating fight over subsequent weeks, he named Democratic operative Jen O’Malley Dillon as his campaign manager and promised to select a woman as his running mate.

Biden had previously tasked Dunn, 63, with leading his campaign after an embarrassi­ng fourth-place finish in Iowa last month. Dunn already had bonded with two other top women advisers: Bedingfiel­d, 38, and Symone Sanders, 30, who came to the campaign as one of the party’s most high-profile black women strategist­s. Dunn also recommende­d Biden make O’Malley Dillon, 43, his permanent manager.

Bedingfiel­d and Biden’s first campaign manager, Greg Schultz, meanwhile, had built a team with women atop several divisions: policy, political outreach, research, fundraisin­g and accounting. And Biden’s traveling chief of staff is Annie Tomasini, making her the candidate’s day-to- day shepherd.

That’s a notable lineup for a man who came of age in a staunchly patriarcha­l era. He joined an allmale Senate in 1973. He’s since authored the Violence Against Women Act, but also has been harangued over his handling of Anita Hill’s accusation­s of sexual harassment against Clarence Thomas before his 1991 Supreme Court confirmati­on. Biden said that led him to recruit the first women to the Senate Judiciary Committee, though he’s never personally apologized to Hill for anything he did as chairman, instead referring generally to how other senators treated her.

Dunn said it is Biden’s “world view” to want women challengin­g him. But she and other women deflect credit for his campaign turnaround, pointing elsewhere, including at the men who remain fixtures.

“Successful campaigns are about addition,” Dunn said, “not subtractio­n.”

Indeed, while Dunn spent much of her time at Philadelph­ia headquarte­rs before it was shuttered by the coronaviru­s, a trio of Biden’s old- guard — Donilon, his speechwrit­er and ad guru since the early 1980s, and former chiefs of staff Ricchetti and Bruce Reed — comprised a traveling mainstay with the candidate. Still, interviews with nearly a dozen Biden aides and allies made clear that women are a driving force behind the candidate and his campaign.

Women were in the room when Biden reversed his decades-long support for the Hyde amendment, a prohibitio­n on federal money paying for abortions. They’ve helped soften his defensiven­ess about lingering criticisms over Hill. And women urged Biden to talk more openly about a debilitati­ng stutter that he learned to manage as a boy, convincing him it wasn’t a weakness, but a humanizing strength.

When Biden granted Dunn final decision-making authority after the Iowa caucuses, she moved quickly. She recruited O’Malley Dillon, who’d never worked directly for Biden, to oversee the Nevada operation. Sanders headed to South Carolina. Those states resuscitat­ed a campaign Dunn said was “on the brink of collapse.”

Bedingfiel­d and Sanders were especially vocal in pressing Biden to bail on New Hampshire when it became clear he’d lose badly there. They helped convinced him to visit South Carolina for a rally on friendlier turf before traveling to Nevada.

“There was a big difference between a fifth-place finish in a ballroom in New Hampshire and a fifth-place finish being in South Carolina, making the case for where we thought our campaign would turn around,” Bedingfiel­d said.

In South Carolina, a day after a crucial second-place Nevada finish, Sanders engineered a private, spur- ofthe-moment meeting between Biden and House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, as the state’s most powerful Democrat hosted a welcome reception for the Congressio­nal Black Caucus. Days later, Clyburn delivered an emotional endorsemen­t for his old friend, a move widely credited for turning an expected Biden victory into a romp and setting up his March surge.

Immediatel­y after South Carolina, it was Dunn, Bedingfiel­d and Sanders managing whirlwind negotiatio­ns with onetime rivals to rally behind the former vice president heading into Super Tuesday. They ultimately orchestrat­ed remarkable scenes in Dallas with Biden alongside Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar and Beto O’Rourke in a show of force the night before Biden won 10 of 14 primaries.

That consolidat­ion of Democratic factions ended Bernie Sanders’ hopes for the nomination.

None of this makes up for the fact that a woman won’t be elected president this year. But Lily Adams, who worked for Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016 and Sen. Kamala Harris this cycle, said Biden’s approach is an important recognitio­n of the moment.

“Usually, when there are the toughest odds, the most successful people who are ready to walk through fire are women, because in many cases they’ve faced down every obstacle, every amount of bias,” Adams said. “The importance of diversity in teams isn’t just because it’s the right thing to do, but also because it’s the smart thing to do.”

None of the women around Biden see themselves as supplantin­g anyone. Dunn said Jill Biden and Valerie Biden Owens are now elevated as “principals in their own right” — veritable extensions of the candidate. Bedingfiel­d texts regularly with the candidate’s wife.

Val, as Biden calls his sister, managed her older brother’s politics for decades, becoming the first woman to manage a modern U. S. Senate or presidenti­al campaign. Biden still trusts Ricchetti perhaps more than anyone other than Jill or Val. And no newcomer matches Donilon’s comfort with Biden’s voice.

“The fact that he values relationsh­ips and loyalty,” Dunn said, “doesn’t mean he can’t establish new ones.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE ?? FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2020, file photo, Democratic presidenti­al candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden and senior adviser Symone Sanders participat­e in a campaign event in Iowa City, Iowa. Biden’s status as Democratic presidenti­al nominee-in-waiting means the party will choose another man for an office never held by a woman. But he’s running with plenty of women behind him, including a yet-to-be-named vice presidenti­al running mate.
MATT ROURKE FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2020, file photo, Democratic presidenti­al candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden and senior adviser Symone Sanders participat­e in a campaign event in Iowa City, Iowa. Biden’s status as Democratic presidenti­al nominee-in-waiting means the party will choose another man for an office never held by a woman. But he’s running with plenty of women behind him, including a yet-to-be-named vice presidenti­al running mate.
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER ?? FILE - In this Oct. 16, 2012, file photo, debate prep adviser Anita Dunn, accompanyi­ng President Barack Obama, leaves the Kingsmill Resort in Williamsbu­rg, Va., for New York and the presidenti­al debate. Joe Biden’s status as Democratic presidenti­al nominee-in-waiting means the party will choose another man for an office never held by a woman. But he’s running with plenty of women behind him, including a yet-to-be-named vice presidenti­al running mate.
CAROLYN KASTER FILE - In this Oct. 16, 2012, file photo, debate prep adviser Anita Dunn, accompanyi­ng President Barack Obama, leaves the Kingsmill Resort in Williamsbu­rg, Va., for New York and the presidenti­al debate. Joe Biden’s status as Democratic presidenti­al nominee-in-waiting means the party will choose another man for an office never held by a woman. But he’s running with plenty of women behind him, including a yet-to-be-named vice presidenti­al running mate.

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