The Riverside Press-Enterprise

A look at how speechwrit­ers delve into a president's mind

- By Seung Min Kim

Speechwrit­ing, in one sense, is essentiall­y being someone else’s mirror.

“You can try to find the right words,” said Dan Cluchey, a former speechwrit­er for President Joe Biden. “But ultimately, your job is to ensure that when the speech is done, that it has a reflection of the speaker.”

That concept is infinitely magnified in the role of the presidenti­al speechwrit­er. Over the course of U.S. history, those aides have absorbed the personalit­ies, the quirks, the speech cadences of the most powerful leader on the globe, capturing his thoughts for all manner of public remarks, from the mundane to the historic and most consequent­ial.

There are few times in a presidency that the art — and the rigorous, often painful process — of speechwrit­ing is more on display than during a State of the Union, when the vast array of a president’s policy aspiration­s and political messages come together in one, hour-plus carefully choreograp­hed address at the Capitol. Biden will deliver the annual address on Thursday.

It’s a process that former White House speechwrit­ers say take months, with untold lobbying and input from various federal agencies and others outside the president’s inner circle who are all working to ensure their favored proposals merit a mention. Speechwrit­ers have the unenviable task of taking dozens of ideas and stitching them into a cohesive narrative of a president’s vision for the year.

It’s less elegant prose, more laundry list of policy ideas.

Amid all those formalitie­s and constraint­s of a State of the Union address, there is also how a president executes the speech.

Biden’s biggest political liability remains his age (81) and voters’ questions about whether he is still up to the job (his doctor this past week declared him fit to serve ). His every word is watched by Republican operatives eager to capture any misspeak to plant doubt about Biden’s fitness among the public.

“This year, of course, is an election year. It also comes as there’s much more chatter about his age,” said Michael Waldman, who served as a speechwrit­er for President Bill Clinton. “People are really going to be scrutinizi­ng him for how he delivers the speech, as much as what he says.”

Biden will remain at Camp David through Tuesday and is expected to spend much of that time preparing for the State of the Union. Bruce Reed, the White House deputy chief of staff, accompanie­d Biden to the presidenti­al retreat outside Washington on Friday evening.

The White House has said lowering costs, shoring up democracy and protecting women’s reproducti­ve care will be among the topics that Biden will address on Thursday night.

Biden likely won’t top the list of the most talented presidenti­al orators. He has thrived the most during small chance encounters with Americans, where interactio­ns can be more off the cuff and intimate.

The plain-spoken Biden is known to hate Washington jargon and the alphabet soup of government acronyms, and he has challenged aides, when writing his remarks, to cut through the clutter and to get to the point with speed. Cluchey, who worked for Biden from 2018 to 2022, said the president was very engaged in the speech drafting process, all the way down to individual lines and words.

Biden can also come across as stiff at times when standing and reading from a teleprompt­er, but immediatel­y loosens up and appears more comfortabl­e when he switches to a hand-held microphone mid-remark. Biden has also learned to navigate a childhood stutter that he says helped him develop empathy for others facing similar challenges.

To become engrossed in another person’s voice, past presidenti­al speechwrit­ers list things that are critical. One is just doing a lot of listening to the principal, to get a sense of his rhythms and how he uses language.

Lots of direct conversati­on with the president is key, to try and get inside the commander in chief’s thinking and how that leader frames arguments and make their case.

“This is not an act of impression, where you’re simply just trying to get the accent down,” said Jeff Shesol, another former Clinton speechwrit­er. “What you really are learning to do and need to learn to do -— this is true of speechwrit­ers in any role, but particular­ly for a president — is to understand not just how he sounds, but how he thinks.”

Shesol added: “You’re absorbing not just the rhythms and cadences of speech, but you’re absorbing a worldview.”

Biden is “at his best when he’s most authentica­lly, most loosely, just speaking the plain truth,” Cluchey said. “The speechwrit­ing process even at its best has strictures around it.”

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