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Klain to lead Biden White House in return of professionals

Ron Klain has checked all the boxes of a classic Washington striver: Georgetown, Harvard Law, Supreme Court and Capitol Hill staffer, White House adviser and, along the way, of course, lobbyist and lawyer

Via AP news wire
Wednesday 02 December 2020 00:11 EST
Klain Profile
Klain Profile (Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

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Ron Klain has checked all the boxes of a classic Washington striver: Georgetown, Harvard Law, Supreme Court clerk and Capitol Hill staffer, White House adviser and, along the way, of course, lobbyist and lawyer.

Now he is preparing to serve as President-elect Joe Biden’s chief of staff, a job often referred to as the nation’s chief operating officer.

His gilded resume, deep knowledge of the gears and levers of power in the capital and decadeslong association with Biden have also done something unusual in today’s Washington: drawn praise from both sides of the ideological divide.

The 59-year-old father of three has a reputation among Democrats and, strikingly, even some Republicans for competence — a notable attribute after an administration that rewarded and dismissed people based on their loyalty to President Donald Trump

“This is not a time for inexperienced novices,” said Valerie Jarrett, who worked as senior adviser to President Barack Obama while Klain was then-Vice President Biden’s chief of staff. “We’ve seen over the past four years how much can go wrong when people who actually don’t understand how the government works are in charge.”

Klain is a throwback, representing the return of the experienced Washington hand — equal parts wonky master of obscure policy and power-shaping consigliere.

“He has a quiet profile among the wider public and an enormous profile among those who understand real power,” said Evan Osnos, author of a new Biden biography, “Joe Biden: The Life, The Run and What Matters Now.”

Osnos points to the fact that Klain’s appointment as chief of staff was “applauded by an almost impossibly wide spectrum” of politicians and pundits — from left-wing standard-bearer Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York to conservative commentator Hugh Hewitt.

The Indianapolis native has been a top aide in all three branches of government, plus an unofficial permanent fourth, the K Street influence industry.

And he has been a quiet presence with a seat at the table for some epochal political moments spanning three decades.

He helped lead Vice President Al Gore’s legal team during the 2000 election’s Florida vote recount; he was chief counsel to the Senate Judiciary Committee (chaired by then-Sen. Biden) during the acrimonious confirmation hearings of Justice Clarence Thomas; and he helped shepherd President Bill Clinton’s nomination of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg.

Jarrett recalls an old Klain mantra that comes into play again as Biden prepares to assume the presidency while Trump continues to openly question the election result and declare, without proof, widespread voter fraud.

“Ignore the noise,” Klain, then Obama’s Ebola czar, told the White House team as anxiety swirled that the virus was coming to American shores. “Ignore the noise. Focus on the facts.”

Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., hired a young Klain, who had clerked for Supreme Court Justice Byron White, for what was then Markey’s House staff. What stood out, Markey says now, was Klain’s ability to digest and articulate the driest policy points in ways that human beings can understand.

“If you were on ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire,’ and you could dial a friend and the million dollars depended on it, Ron Klain is the one I would call,” Markey said.

Klain hasn’t always been considered the right man for the job. His 2014 appointment to head up Obama’s Ebola response team drew a round of public criticism because of his lack of medical experience.

But now Klain’s experiences with pandemic policy confer an air of authority on his critiques of the Trump administration’s strategies. More than a year before the coronavirus was even identified, Klain was warning that Trump’s presidential style was singularly unequipped to deal with a pandemic.

“The president is anti-science. He trades in attacking experts. He trades in conspiracy theories. All those things would lead to the loss of many lives in the event of an epidemic in the United States,” Klain said in the summer of 2018.

Klain has served as chief of staff to two vice presidents (Gore and Biden) and one attorney general (Janet Reno). He has worked with Biden in one form or another for more than 30 years.

Along the way, Klain also carved out a particular niche: go-to guy for presidential debate prep. He’s had a hand in debate preparations for Democratic presidential candidates going back to John Kerry in 2004. And Klain and his frequent partner, Karen Dunn, are credited with helping Obama successfully bounce back from a shaky performance in his first debate against Mitt Romney in 2012.

Washington is overflowing with smart lawyers, but to excel at presidential debate preparation requires a very specific mental wiring. Osnos likens it to a form of political empathy.

“You need to be able to fully inhabit the motives and interests of someone who completely doesn’t share your views,” he said.

There have been some missteps along the way. As Biden’s top deputy on the $800 billion Recovery Act stimulus package, Klain became publicly enmeshed in controversy surrounding Solyndra, a solar panel manufacturer that went bankrupt after receiving more than $500 million in stimulus funds. Klain, despite known doubts about the company’s viability, was later revealed to have signed off on an Obama visit to the Solyndra factory that became an embarrassment and opened the stimulus program to charges of mismanagement.

Klain’s professional bond with Biden has been through some ups and downs as well.

In the 2016 presidential race, Klain signed on as an adviser to presumptive Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton without waiting to see if Biden — who was mourning the recent death of his son Beau — would declare his candidacy.

The perceived defection produced hard feelings that were revealed by the WikiLeaks dump of hacked emails from Clinton campaign chief John Podesta. In an October 2015 email to Podesta, about a week before Biden announced he would not run, Klain acknowledged that his choice had damaged both Biden’s campaign prospects and his relationship with his longtime boss.

“It’s been a little hard for me to play such a role in the Biden demise,” Klain wrote then. “I am definitely dead to them — but I’m glad to be on Team HRC.”

But as Biden’s 2020 campaign heated up, Klain once again found himself deeply ensconced in the operation, serving as one of the public faces of the campaign and preparing his candidate for the most chaotic presidential debate in American history.

“Klain was able to get his way back into Bidenland by sheer competence,” Osnos said.

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Kellman reported from Tel Aviv. Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

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Follow Khalil at https://twitter.com/Ashrafkhalil and Kellman at https://twitter.com/APLaurieKellman

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