Monday, July 22, 2024

Biden couldn’t sell voters on the economy. Can Harris?

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POLITICO Morning Money

By Sam Sutton and Katy O'Donnell

Presented by 

Capital One

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Quick Fix

President Joe Biden failed to convince voters that his policies led to one of the most surprising economic turnarounds in decades. Now that he’s no longer atop the Democratic ticket, party loyalists have to reckon with whether Vice President Kamala Harris can make a more effective case.

“Republicans have had success in blaming Biden for inflation. Thus, it makes it easier for another Democrat to escape that branding,” said Brookings Institution senior fellow Aaron Klein, a former Treasury official and congressional economist. Still, while that may give Harris — or another Democrat — some flexibility to pivot away from the inflationary associations voters attached to Biden, they’ll have to lay out a clear economic vision to do so.

“This is the threshold question to any Democrat who wants the nomination: What would you do differently than Biden?” Klein said. If they don’t have an answer, “it's going to be pretty difficult for you to escape some of the negatives associated with the president's economic agenda.”

With voters consistently ranking the economy as a top issue of the 2024 campaign, Harris’s messaging on the topic will be one of the keys to shoring up party support and fending off any potential challengers at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next month.

The Trump campaign is already working to link Harris to the high prices that have pushed consumer sentiment to basement levels and kept it there. Ohio Sen. JD Vance, former President Donald Trump’s pick for Vice President, posted on X that Harris co-signed “open border and green scam policies that drove up the cost of housing and groceries. She owns all of these failures.”

Democrats are hopeful that Harris can inject some life into the narrative that the administration’s economic policies have worked. Felicia Wong, a Biden-Harris transition adviser who leads a 501c4 linked to the progressive economic think tank the Roosevelt Institute, told MM that Harris’s track record going after big banks and mortgage lenders as California attorney general would pair well with her skills as “a very, very good storyteller.”

If she campaigns on a message of making the “wealthy and corporations pay their fair share” to invest in services like child care, education and housing, “it's a great argument with respect to policy. It's a great argument with respect to politics,” Wong said.

That may require expanding on the administration’s current economic policy vision, Tara Raghuveer, director of the Tenant Union Federation, told Katy. And if “Harris is smart and if the party is smart — in this moment — they [will] actually talk about Donald Trump as a union buster and a slumlord,” she added. She called on Harris to continue to pursue the 5 percent rent cap Biden proposed earlier this month.

Harris might also benefit from economic tailwinds that never seemed to have a bearing on Biden’s approval ratings. Inflation has fallen steadily. The labor market is softening, but still healthy. The Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates in September. Collectively, that could give the Democratic candidate a boost going into the final weeks of the campaign, RSM principal and chief economist Joe Brusuelas told MM.

Perhaps most importantly, for the first time in weeks, there are signs that corporate Democrats and donors are a little more optimistic about the party’s chances in November.

Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a professor of management at the Yale School of Management who regularly consults with top U.S. CEOs, told MM that business leaders in the technology and venture capital communities are “are exhilarated over this choice.” Reid Hoffman, the founder of LinkedIn and one of the party’s biggest donors, posted on Sunday that Harris was the “right person for the right time” and cited her leadership on economic issues as a reason why she’s uniquely positioned to push back on Trump.

“Everyone is invigorated and excited for now,” Democratic Party strategist James Carville told Sam, adding that he thinks Democratic donors who had rebelled in the weeks following Biden’s disastrous debate performance on June 27 “are coming off their bench and grabbing their helmets.”

“My advice to her would be: You’ve got to tell people who you are,” he said. “Don’t overthink this shit. Go out there.”

IT’S MONDAY — So much for a peaceful Sunday. Are you a banker? Do you work in PE or the hedge fund world? What do you think a Harris administration would mean for your industry? Let me know at ssutton@politico.com and @samjsutton. And for all things housing and CFPB, contact Katy O’Donnell at kodonnell@politico.com.

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Driving the Week

MONDAY

TUESDAY … House Financial Services holds a hearing on "Insights into AI Applications in Financial Services and Housing” at 10 a.m. … The Niskanen Center and the Budget Lab at Yale host a webinar on how political risks and declining governance quality could harm U.S. credit ratings at 3 p.m.…

WEDNESDAY … The Peterson Institute for International Economics holds a virtual discussion on "The Evolution of European Banking Supervision” at 9 a.m.… House Financial Services National Security Subcommittee holds a hearing on "Examining DoD Platform Performance and Costs” at 10 a.m…. House Financial Services holds a hearing on "Housing Solutions” at 10:30 a.m…. The Brookings Institution holds a virtual discussion on "The changing landscape of economic opportunity by race and class in America” at 1 p.m…. Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman delivers opening remarks at a Dallas Fed conference at 4:05 p.m….

THURSDAY … Second-quarter GDP released at 8:30 a.m…. Senate Appropriations marks up the T-HUD spending bill, among others, at 9:30 a.m.... Senate Banking holds a hearing on “Advancing National Security through Export Controls, Investment Security, and the Defense Production Act” at 10 a.m....

FRIDAY … PCE index for June released at 8:30 a.m.

 

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2024 ELECTION

Coalesce — Major Democratic Party players quickly lined up behind Harris after Biden made his announcement, Lauren Egan, Lisa Kashinsky and Sarah Ferris report. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a key voice on Senate Banking and one of the most powerful progressives in Congress, said Harris’s emphasis on working to earn the nomination was a “very good sign.”

— Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia may re-register as a Democrat to throw his hat in the ring for the nomination, The Bulwark’s Sam Stein reported.

What would Harris’s platform look like? — Expect more calls to “tax the rich,” Brian Faler reports. She is “solidly in the mainstream of the Democratic Party, which has rallied in recent years around Robin Hood-style tax plans that would increase levies on high earners in order to finance expanded breaks for those further down the income ladder.”

— She’ll also inherit Biden’s political base with organized labor, Nick Niedzwiadek reports. The Trump campaign has sought to make inroads with labor groups — Teamsters President Sean O’Brien spoke at the Republican National Convention last week.

— There’s hope in the crypto world that Harris — who is a blank slate on digital asset regulation — will usher in a friendlier approach to their industry than the Biden administration. Colin McLaren, engagement director of the Cedar Innovation Foundation, a dark money pro-crypto advocacy group, told Jasper Goodman in a statement that “Biden’s decision to step aside comes [with] the opportunity for the top of the Democratic Party ticket to embrace crypto and blockchain technologies.”

On Wall Street

How investors are responding to Biden news So far, the reaction has been muted, Bloomberg’s Natalia Kniazhevich and Isabelle Lee report. But it “adds another variable into equations for how to trade the market this summer.”

— What would that look like? Well, Harris’s viability as a Trump opponent might prompt some investors to wind down bets that would have paid out in the event the former president secures a second term, Davide Barbuscia, Suzanne McGee and Matt Tracy of Reuters report.

— And while markets have mostly shrugged at the recent political tumult, there’s still a possibility that Friday’s Morning Money ages like brie in a sauna. “Biden stepping down is a whole new level of political uncertainty,” Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group, wrote in a note published Sunday. “This may be the catalyst for market volatility that is overdue.”

 

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Housing

Don’t look now, but is the GOP developing a housing agenda? — Rep. French Hill, who is running to lead the House Financial Services Committee next year, mentioned housing first when asked about the committee’s potential priorities, in an interview with our Zach Warmbrodt. Hill said it’s high time Republicans develop a plan beyond freeing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from government control.

“I’ve long thought that we needed Republican leadership — broad Republican leadership — in the housing policy arena,” Hill said.

Hill still thinks the question of what to do about Fannie and Freddie — the mortgage giants the government took over in September 2008 to stave off catastrophic losses — needs to be on the agenda, saying their conservatorship is "one of the largest, ill-fated aspects of the financial crisis resolution that remains unresolved." But he sees it as a problem that would require bicameral and executive branch effort to be settled.

The Arkansas Republican also wants to take a fresh look at federal housing programs. He cited the Community Development Block Grant program, Section 8 and public housing agencies as potential targets.

Housing “affordability is so tied to certain macro issues like mortgage rates, and the cost of building new rental and real wage growth,” he said. Most government housing programs, he said, are “demand-related and not supply-related … The biggest detriment to greater supply across the country is basically local decision-making in local areas.”

The affordability crisis also made it into the RNC’s 2024 platform, which calls for surplus federal lands to be sold off for the construction of affordable housing.

Rep. Mike Lawler, meanwhile, told POLITICO last week that housing is “one of the most fundamental issues we need to deal with as a country.”

“Republicans really have not had a housing plan since Jack Kemp,” Lawler said. “I’m actually in the process of coming up with a very robust housing plan that I’m going to be introducing in the coming weeks that really looks to tackle this issue.”

 

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Crypto

A crypto shake-up — One of Trump’s loudest supporters in the crypto industry is taking a step back from his firm following a series of scathing political posts on X, Declan Harty reports.

Messari CEO Ryan Selkis announced Friday that he would be moving into a senior adviser role at the crypto research and data firm. Selkis’s already fiery online rhetoric took on new heights in the wake of the assassination attempt on Trump, including one post that said “anyone that votes against Trump at this point can die in a fucking fire. Literal war.”

“This week was the first week in 6.5 years that my politics and rhetoric put the team in harm’s way,” Selkis wrote. “As such, I have decided to step aside as CEO.”

At the regulators

Secret bank ratings show OCC’s concern on handling risk — Bloomberg’s Hannah Levitt and Katanga Johnson report. “a key U.S. regulator has privately found that half of the major banks it oversees have an inadequate grasp of a broad swath of potential risks from cyber attacks to employee blunders.”

Treasury: Florida ‘fair access’ banking law may undermine national security laws — Our Michael Stratford: “The Biden administration is warning that a new Florida law that dictates when banks can refuse service to customers could undermine federal efforts to curb the flow of money to criminals and terrorists.”

NLRB waves white flag on joint employer lawsuit — More from Nick: Niedzwiadek: “The National Labor Relations Board on Friday dropped its appeal of a Texas judge’s ruling blocking the Biden administration’s joint-employment standard, leaving in place a looser Trump-era rule.”

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