The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Meet the four negotiator­s who could save the U.S. from default

- By Seung Min Kim and Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON >> President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy are turning to a select group of negotiator­s to help work out a deal to increase the nation’s borrowing authority and avoid the economic carnage that could ensue if the U.S. defaults on its debts.

The negotiator­s are racing to beat a deadline of June 1. That’s when the Treasury Department says the government could begin defaulting on its debts for the first time in history. And while White House and congressio­nal aides have been meeting on a daily basis, there has been concern that there were too many people in the room and not the right people.

Here’s a look at the “closers” — those Biden and McCarthy have appointed to get a deal done:

Rep. Garret Graves, Louisiana Republican

Graves, 51, is serving his fifth term in office representi­ng a congressio­nal district that includes Baton Rouge, which he won with more than 80% of the vote in November. He had entertaine­d the idea of running for governor in Louisiana but opted out in March.

When McCarthy was making his bid to win the House speaker’s gavel, Graves was one of the allies often seen meeting with Republican holdouts and working to win them over.

In many respects, he has carried that work over to the debt ceiling debate. Rep. Dusty Johnson, chair of a group called the Republican Main Street Caucus, describes Graves as a “facilitato­r” who soothes tensions in meetings. The group Johnson chairs is one of five such caucuses within the House GOP conference, sometimes referred to as the “five families.”

“He’s really been the individual that has helped bring people together in crafting the bill itself,” McCarthy said on Wednesday. “So he has a clear understand­ing of where members are.”

McCarthy added: “He understand­s policy. Many people would call him a policy wonk.”

Before joining Congress,

Graves served as chair of the Coastal Protection and Restoratio­n Authority of Louisiana, which led efforts after Hurricane Katrina to protect the state from future hurricanes through improved flood control, restored wetlands and other projects. Before that, he served more than a decade as a congressio­nal staffer, first as an intern for Louisiana Sen. John Breaux and then as an aide to Rep. Billy Tauzin. He also advised members in both chambers with stints as a committee aide.

Steve Ricchetti, Counselor to the President

Ricchetti is one of Biden’s closest and most trusted advisers, one of his top aides during Biden’s time as vice president and now in the White House. In the Biden administra­tion, Ricchetti has been relied on as someone who can clinch a bipartisan deal, including on a sweeping infrastruc­ture bill, one of the big achievemen­ts of the Biden presidency.

In the final days of negotiatio­ns for that bill, Biden tapped Ricchetti to close out an agreement with then-Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio, who led talks on behalf of GOP senators. The two Ohioans and veteran Washington operators finalized the infrastruc­ture deal, which would go on to pass the House and Senate with broad margins and be signed into law by Biden in November 2021.

During the months of infrastruc­ture negotiatio­ns, Biden praised the “skillful negotiatio­n” of his senior aides and Cabinet officials — a team that was led by Ricchetti.

Vital to Biden’s reputation as bipartisan dealmaker, Ricchetti maintains good relationsh­ips with many key Republican­s, particular­ly on Capitol Hill. But the former lobbyist’s ties to K Street, as well as the lobbying of his brother, Jeff, have attracted criticism from some on the left.

Ricchetti, an occasional golf partner for Biden, also served in senior roles in the Clinton White House.

Louisa Terrell, Director of the White House Office Of Legislativ­e

Affairs

A regular presence on Capitol Hill, Terrell has been the point person for lawmakers, serving under a president who came to the executive branch as a creature of the Senate.

She served as Biden’s deputy chief of staff in the Senate and as a special assistant for legislativ­e affairs to President Barack Obama. She was also chief of staff to Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., who was one of Biden’s opponents for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination in 2020.

Her Biden ties run deep. Terrell said in an interview with CNN last year that she first got to know the Biden family when she was just 5 years old, having met the future president’s son, Beau Biden, in their kindergart­en class in Wilmington, Delaware. Beau died in 2015 of glioblasto­ma.

“You want to represent what … the president wants you to do,” Terrell said in the CNN interview. “And then there’s always this other question of, what would Beau do? And I think of those things as kind of intertwine­d and they’re part of the background driver of how we do the work.”

Terrell also headed the Biden Foundation at its launch in 2017, an organizati­on meant as a platform for the then-former vice president to continue to promote his top priorities such as cancer research and support for military families. Terrell also worked at Facebook, now known as Meta.

Shalanda Young, Director of the Office of Management and Budget

Young, a veteran congressio­nal staffer with warm relationsh­ips on both sides of the aisle, comes into the debtlimit fight armed with years of experience negotiatin­g the nitty gritty details of federal government spending.

Before her administra­tion job, Young was the staff director on the House Appropriat­ions Committee, on the front lines of talks over annual funding bills and efforts to avert government shutdowns. Well-regarded by both Democrats and Republican­s, she’s carried those relationsh­ips over to the executive branch as Biden’s chief person on federal funding.

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