Biden Taps Two Negotiators to Reach Debt Ceiling Deal With Republicans
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- Joe Biden46th and current president of the United States
- Steve RicchettiAmerican political adviser and lobbyist
- Shalanda YoungAmerican political advisor
- Kevin McCarthyAmerican politician, 55th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
- Richard ShelbyUnited States Senator from Alabama
- Lindsey GrahamAmerican lawyer and politician
One of the biggest developments out of Tuesday’s debt ceiling meeting was President Joe Biden’s selection of two officials to negotiate directly with aides to Speaker Kevin McCarthy: Shalanda Young, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, and Steve Ricchetti, a White House senior adviser.
That decision appeared to mollify McCarthy, who noted after the meeting that “we finally have a formula that has proven to work in the past.”
Young and Ricchetti bring years of experience working with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to forge deals on critical pieces of legislation. But they will still face a difficult task in trying to reach an agreement to raise the debt ceiling before a potential default as soon as June 1. They are expected to work closely with Louisa Terrell, the director of the White House Office of Legislative Affairs.
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Here’s a look at the two key players who will represent Biden as policymakers work to avoid what many say would be an economically devastating default.
Shalanda Young
Young, a former senior aide on Capitol Hill, was confirmed by the Senate last year with a vote of 61-36 to oversee the Office of Management and Budget after serving as deputy budget director and acting director of the office. The agency oversees the federal budget and helps shape executive regulations.
Before joining the Biden administration, Young worked at the House Appropriations Committee for more than a decade, gaining credibility among members of both political parties.
Since joining the committee in 2007, she held various positions and eventually became the first Black woman to serve as its majority staff director in 2017. Young played a crucial role in shepherding trillions of dollars’ worth of pandemic relief packages and disaster aid into law, in addition to the annual negotiations over how to keep the government funded. In 2019, she helped negotiate an end to a spending fight that had led to the longest government shutdown in U.S. history.
“My work on the Appropriations Committee taught me that both sides can compromise without compromising their values — even when that means no one gets everything they want,” Young told lawmakers in 2021.
Her work has earned her bipartisan praise in both the House and Senate. Former Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, who served as the top Republican on the Appropriations Committee, endorsed Young to lead the budget office.
“She knows how to bring things together, and that’s what we as appropriators try to do,” Shelby said at the time.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., has also praised her work on Capitol Hill. “Everybody that deals with you on our side has nothing but good things to say,” Graham said in 2021.
Young previously worked at the National Institutes of Health and grew up in Clinton, Louisiana, earning degrees from Loyola University New Orleans and Tulane University.
Steve Ricchetti
Ricchetti, a former lobbyist who joined Biden’s vice presidential staff in 2012, is one of Biden’s most trusted advisers and a longtime confidant. He has often acted as a conduit among Biden, congressional lawmakers and donors.
After serving as a counselor to the vice president, he later rose to become chief of staff. One of his early jobs in Washington was as a legislative aide for President Bill Clinton.
As a counselor to Biden now, Ricchetti has helped broker deals on legislative packages that have become major tenets of the president’s domestic policy agenda. Ricchetti was a key player in negotiations over the $1.2 trillion infrastructure law, which Congress passed in 2021 after Biden and a bipartisan group of centrist senators struck a deal.
Ricchetti also communicated with senators to help the Biden administration pass a climate, health and tax package last year, maintaining an open channel with Sen. Joe Manchin, the conservative West Virginia Democrat.
He helped set up the initial structure of Biden’s 2020 campaign, later serving as chair. In that role, Ricchetti maintained deep relationships across Capitol Hill and in the donor community.
Ricchetti showed an aptitude for fundraising in his career in Washington, previously lobbying for the pharmaceutical industry. He ran a lucrative firm before joining Biden’s staff, compiling a client list that included General Motors, Experian, the American Hospital Association, AT&T, Eli Lilly, Nextel, Novartis, Pfizer and Fannie Mae. Soon after Biden took office, Ricchetti’s brother drew scrutiny for his work as a lobbyist.
In addition to advising on Biden’s political decisions, Ricchetti has reportedly overseen many of the president’s personal and financial decisions. He served as Biden’s business manager and negotiated his seven-figure book deal.
A Cleveland-area native, he earned a law degree from George Mason University.
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