Editor’s note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day’s biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro. It’s Joe Biden’s economy now. That’s exactly how the White House wants it. The administration on Monday kicked off a three-week roadshow to showcase how policies addressing everything from broadband infrastructure to insulin prices have started to yield economic benefits to working class Americans. White House officials are pitching congressional Democrats on incorporating the themes of the “Investing in America” tour — which has ushered the portmanteau “Bidenomics” to the discourse — into their messaging as the 2024 campaign begins. The trouble with Bidenomics has been that Americans haven’t been especially impressed with the administration’s handling of the economy through his first two and a half years in office (Republican leaders in Congress aren’t faring much better.) Sure, the unemployment rate is close to historic lows — particularly among Black and Hispanic populations — and, yes, wage growth climbed even as inflation carved away at consumer spending power. Still, the economy’s resilience hasn’t provided the administration with the sort of boost one would normally expect. Anita Dunn, one of the president’s closest advisers and strategists, said during an appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” that the aim of the new messaging rollout is to highlight how “people are just starting to really feel the effects of these programs that were put in place the first two years of Joe Biden's presidency.” The extent to which Biden and his lieutenants can sell voters on that point will have tremendous bearing on his ability to secure a second term. To be sure, the Bidenomics rollout is coming at an opportune moment — there are some signs Wall Street and consumers are starting to shake off some of the negative vibes that dogged economic outlooks for the last year. But it also comes with political risk. Taking ownership of the economy’s resilience will make it that much harder to defray any blame if the U.S. enters a slump between now and November 2024. While Dunn dismissed the notion that Republicans might be able to co-opt the “Bidenomics” tag in the event of a downturn — “Even if the economy is doing well, the Republicans will say it's doing poorly. So we're not going to spend a huge amount of time worrying,” she said — it’s now easier to blame the White House if that slump occurs. “We've had a fair amount of fiscal stimulus in the system from the Biden administration and their policies,” Unlimited Funds CEO Bob Elliott, who previously led research at Ray Dalio’s hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, told MM on Monday evening. “That has moved [the economy] to a point where we're likely to get a downturn, meaningfully closer to the election than if the Biden administration hadn’t been as stimulative and if the Fed had been more aggressive.” “It’s pushing the recession risk close to the election,” he added. IT’S TUESDAY — Sam’s in D.C. this week for POLITICO Days. Want to spare him from an internal meeting? Send tips, gossip and suggestions to ssutton@politico.com and to Zach at zwarmbrodt@politico.com.
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