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Tag: Joe Kennedy

  • Biden’s Northern Ireland ultimatum looks doomed to fail

    Biden’s Northern Ireland ultimatum looks doomed to fail

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    LONDON — Joe Biden is not someone known for his subtlety.

    His gaffe-prone nature — which saw him last week confuse the New Zealand rugby team with British forces from the Irish War of Independence — leaves little in the way of nuance.

    But he is also a sentimental man from a long gone era of Washington, who specializes in a type of homespun, aw-shucks affability that would be seen as naff in a younger president.

    His lack of subtlety was on show in Belfast last week as he issued a thinly veiled ultimatum to the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) — return to Northern Ireland’s power-sharing arrangements or risk losing billions of dollars in U.S. business investment.

    The DUP — a unionist party that does not take kindly to lectures from American presidents — is refusing to sit in Stormont, the Northern Ireland Assembly, due to its anger with the post-Brexit Northern Ireland protocol, which has created trade friction between the region and the rest of the U.K.

    The DUP is also refusing to support the U.K.-EU Windsor Framework, which aims to fix the economic problems created by the protocol, despite hopes it would see the party reconvene the Northern Irish Assembly.

    The president on Wednesday urged Northern Irish leaders to “unleash this incredible economic opportunity, which is just beginning.”

    However, American business groups paint a far more complex and nuanced view of future foreign investment into Northern Ireland than offered up by Biden.

    Biden told a Belfast crowd on Wednesday there were “scores of major American corporations wanting to come here” to invest, but that a suspended Stormont was acting as a block on that activity.

    One U.S. business figure, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Biden’s flighty rhetoric was “exaggerated” and that many businesses would be looking beyond the state of the regional assembly to make their investment decisions.

    The president spoke as if Ulster would be rewarded with floods of American greenbacks if the DUP reverses its intransigence, predicting that Northern Ireland’s gross domestic product (GDP) would soon be triple its 1998 level. Its GDP is currently around double the size of when the Good Friday Agreement was struck in 1998.

    Emanuel Adam, executive director of BritishAmerican Business, said this sounded like a “magic figure” unless Biden “knows something we don’t know about.” 

    DUP MP Ian Paisley Jr. told POLITICO that U.S. politicians for “too long” have “promised some economic El Dorado or bonanza if you only do what we say politically … but that bonanza has never arrived and people are not naive enough here to believe it ever will.”

    “A presidential visit is always welcome, but the glitter on top is not an economic driver,” he said.

    Joe Biden addresses a crowd of thousands on April 14, 2023 in Ballina, Ireland | Charles McQuillan/Getty Images

    Facing both ways

    The British government is hoping the Windsor Framework will ease economic tensions in Northern Ireland and create politically stable conditions for inward foreign direct investment.

    The framework removes many checks on goods going from Great Britain to Northern Ireland and has begun to slowly create a more collaborative relationship between London and Brussels on a number of fronts — two elements which have been warmly welcomed across the Atlantic.

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said Northern Ireland is in a “special” position of having access to the EU’s single market, to avoid a hard border with the Republic of Ireland, and the U.K.’s internal market.

    “That’s like the world’s most exciting economic zone,” Sunak said in February.

    Jake Colvin, head of Washington’s National Foreign Trade Council business group, said U.S. firms wanted to see “confidence that the frictions over the protocol have indeed been resolved.”

    “Businesses will look to mechanisms like the Windsor Framework to provide stability,” he said.

    Marjorie Chorlins, senior vice president for Europe at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said the Windsor Framework was “very important” for U.S. businesses and that “certainty about the relationship between the U.K. and the EU is critical.”

    She said a reconvened Stormont would mean more legislative stability on issues like skills and health care, but added that there were a whole range of other broader U.K. wide economic factors that will play a major part in investment decisions.

    This is particularly salient in a week where official figures showed the U.K.’s GDP flatlining and predictions that Britain will be the worst economic performer in the G20 this year.

    “We want to see a return to robust growth and prosperity for the U.K. broadly and are eager to work with government at all levels,” Chorlins said. 

    “Political and economic instability in the U.K. has been a challenge for businesses of all sizes.”

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said Northern Ireland is in a “special” position of having access to the EU’s single market | Pool photo by Paul Faith/Getty Images

    Her words underline just how much global reputational damage last year’s carousel of prime ministers caused for the U.K., with Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey recently warning of a “hangover effect” from Liz Truss’ premiership and the broader Westminster psychodrama of 2022.

    America’s Northern Ireland envoy Joe Kennedy, grandson of Robert Kennedy, accompanied the president last week and has been charged with drumming up U.S. corporate interest in Northern Ireland.

    Kennedy said Northern Ireland is already “the No. 1 foreign investment location for proximity and market access.”

    Northern Ireland has been home to £1.5 billion of American investment in the past decade and had the second-most FDI projects per capita out of all U.K. regions in 2021.

    Claire Hanna, Westminster MP for the nationalist SDLP, believes reconvening Stormont would “signal a seriousness that there isn’t going to be anymore mucking around.”

    “It’s also about the signal that the restoration of Stormont sends — that these are the accepted trading arrangements,” she said.

    Hanna says the DUP’s willingness to “demonize the two biggest trading blocs in the world — the U.S. and EU” — was damaging to the country’s future economic prospects.

    ‘The money goes south’

    At a more practical level, Biden’s ultimatum appears to carry zero weight with DUP representatives.

    DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson made it clear last week that he was unmoved by Biden’s economic proclamations and gave no guarantee his party would sit in the regional assembly in the foreseeable future.

    “President Biden is offering the hope of further American investment, which we always welcome,” Donaldson told POLITICO.

    “But fundamental to the success of our economy is our ability to trade within our biggest market, which is of course the United Kingdom.”

    A DUP official said U.S. governments had been promising extra American billions in exchange “for selling out to Sinn Féin and Dublin” since the 1990s and “when America talks about corporate investment, we get the crumbs and that investment really all ends up in the Republic [of Ireland].”

    “President Biden is offering the hope of further American investment, which we always welcome,” Donaldson said | Behal/Irish Government via Getty Images

    “The Americans talk big, but the money goes south,” the DUP official said.

    This underscores the stark reality that challenges Northern Ireland any time it pitches for U.S. investment — the competing proposition offered by its southern neighbor with its internationally low 12.5 percent rate on corporate profits.

    Emanuel Adam with BritishAmerican Business said there was a noticeable feeling in Washington that firms want to do business in Dublin.

    “When [Irish Prime Minister] Leo Varadkar and his team were here recently, I could tell how confident the Irish are these days,” he said. “There are not as many questions for them as there are around the U.K.”

    Biden’s economic ultimatum looks toothless from the DUP’s perspective and its resonance may be as short-lived as his trip to Belfast itself.

    This story has been updated to correct a historical reference.

    Shawn Pogatchnik

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  • President Biden to appoint former Rep. Joe Kennedy III as U.S. special envoy to Northern Ireland

    President Biden to appoint former Rep. Joe Kennedy III as U.S. special envoy to Northern Ireland

    President Biden will appoint former Massachusetts Democratic Rep. Joe Kennedy III – a grandson of former senator and Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy — to be the next U.S. special envoy to Northern Ireland, a U.S. official confirmed to CBS News. The position will focus on economic development and not the thorny negotiations involving the Northern Ireland Protocol. That protocol is meant to deal with maintaining an open border between Ireland and Northern Ireland as promised under the 1998 Good Friday Agreement but has been complicated by Britain’s exit from the European Union. 

    Despite the increasingly tense political situation in Northern Ireland ignited in part by Brexit, the Biden administration had left the position vacant until now. The Irish-American community had been urging Biden to appoint someone and had floated the name of former Rep. Bruce Morrison, a Connecticut Democrat, for the role.

    Kennedy, who has the cachet of his family legacy and historic ties to Ireland, will be a high-profile appointee who carries the weight of close ties to Mr. Biden himself. It will also be a perch from which the 42-year-old former congressman can relaunch his political career, which has stalled following his failed 2020 challenge to Sen. Ed Markey in the Massachusetts Democratic primary.

    Mick Mulvaney, President Trump’s appointee to the role, left the special envoy position in 2021. Mulvaney, a CBS contributor, told CBS News: “This is an excellent choice. Joe is extraordinarily capable and will do a great job of representing U.S. interests. There are very few bipartisan topics in Washington these days but preserving the Good Friday-Belfast Agreement is one of them. And Joe will have bipartisan support for his efforts.”

    The peace deal brought an end to 30 years of conflict in Northern Ireland, during which more than 3,000 people died. It was coordinated by former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell in partnership with both the British and Irish governments, and created a power-sharing assembly that intended to stabilize a society largely divided along sectarian lines.

    Unionists are predominantly Protestant and want continued ties to England. Nationalists are largely Catholic and want closer connections to the Republic of Ireland which gained independence from British rule in 1921.

    The coming year will be consequential in Northern Ireland as the UK, EU and Ireland work out the Northern Protocol.

    It will also be historic for the Kennedy family. The coming year will mark 60 years since President John F. Kennedy, America’s first Irish-Catholic president and the great-uncle of the former congressman, made a 1963 visit to his ancestral home in the country just five months before his assassination — the first visit of a sitting president to Ireland. Mr. Biden, the second Irish-Catholic president, is expected to visit before the end of his term.

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  • How College Basketball Coaches Help Promote Voting, Civic Engagement Among Student Athletes

    How College Basketball Coaches Help Promote Voting, Civic Engagement Among Student Athletes

    Over the summer, Joe Kennedy spoke with Eric Reveno and Lisa Kay Solomon about All Vote No Play, a non-profit organization they had founded two years ago. They were proud of what they accomplished, helping thousands of college athletes register to vote and learn the importance of civic engagement. Still, they thought they could do more.

    Each of the three had devoted themselves to the project, providing non-partisan resources to college coaches, administrators and athletes, but they also had full-time jobs: Solomon as a designer in residence and associate professor at Stanford University’s design school and Kennedy and Reveno as assistant men’s basketball coaches at Holy Cross and Oregon State, respectively.

    After thinking it over, Kennedy decided in September to step down at Holy Cross and become All Vote No Play’s first executive director, a role that suited him well considering his experience in politics and passion for working with coaches and athletes.

    “Joe’s got the background,” Reveno said. “He’s the natural to be the leader of moving this forward…He’s got the polish and the experience and knowledge to really strategize and figure out how to link those arenas of college athletics with voter registration, citizen building and civic engagement.”

    Kennedy grew up in a basketball family: his father, Pat Kennedy, was an NCAA Division 1 head men’s basketball coach from 1980 to 2015 for six schools, including stints at Florida State and DePaul. And in the 1960s, his uncle, Bob Kennedy, founded what would become the Hoop Group, which today is a leading grassroots basketball organization that runs camps, clinics, leagues and tournaments throughout the Northeast.

    As a child, Kennedy remembers his father watching C-Span and reading newspapers to follow what was going on in the political world, but no one in his family had run for office. He first started seriously getting into politics as a student at Northwestern
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    , where he played on the basketball team and majored in education and social policy.

    During the summer of 2006, Kennedy worked in Washington, D.C., in the office of then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama. Craig Robinson, an assistant coach at Northwestern with whom Kennedy had grown close, is the brother of Michelle Obama, Barack’s wife.

    “That really opened the door to being in that world and really seeing how the government works, how Congress works, and meeting some unbelievable people,” Kennedy said.

    After graduating from Northwestern in 2007, Kennedy worked on Obama’s 2008 Presidential campaign and then in the White House’s Office of Public Engagement during Obama’s first two years in office. Kennedy had several responsibilities in the White House, including helping with Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move! Initiative to reduce childhood obesity and organizing and running the events when professional and college sports teams visited the White House after winning championships.

    In October 2010, Kennedy left the White House to join Northwestern’s men’s basketball staff as director of operations working under Bill Carmody, who had coached Kennedy in college.

    “I decided to jump on that opportunity,” said Kennedy, who was a three-time Academic All-Big Ten selection in college and a team captain as a senior. “Basketball was always my first love. Going back to my alma mater, it just seemed like a unique opportunity.”

    After three years at Northwestern, Kennedy spent a year working as director of player personnel under then-head coach Craig Robinson at Oregon State and a year in the NBA as a video coordinator with the Sacramento Kings. Kennedy got back into college coaching in 2015 as an assistant when Carmody was hired as head coach at Holy Cross.

    In early June 2020, Kennedy was working in that same role at Holy Cross when he saw a Tweet from Reveno, who was then an assistant at Georgia Tech. Reveno had been in a team meeting via Zoom the day before in which the players and coaches were talking about protests in Atlanta surrounding the murder of George Floyd.

    “One of the players said, ‘Everybody’s got ideas on what we can do, but is anyone gonna vote?,’” Reveno said. “The next day, I woke up, and it was sort of an epiphany.”

    That day, June 3, 2020, after consulting with Georgia Tech head coach Josh Pastner, Reveno sent out the following via Twitter: “Federal election day, Nov 3rd, needs to be a NCAA mandatory off day. We must empower, educate and guide our athletes to be part of the change. We need action. There is symbolism in every holiday and it’s powerful.”

    Until then, Reveno hadn’t been involved in helping anyone vote, a situation he looks back at with regret, although he was far from alone in coaching circles. Reveno was highly educated with an undergraduate degree and MBA from Stanford and had built a strong reputation in basketball circles as an assistant at Stanford and Georgia Tech and head coach at the University of Portland. And he spent countless hours helping players in all aspects of their lives away from the court, just not when it came to politics.

    “I was competitive, and I was doing basketball, and I grew up in a generation where I’m not really that into politics was a cliché that we used,” Reveno said. “What we’ve learned in the last 10 years or so is that democracy doesn’t do great if we aren’t involved. And it’s as non-partisan as it could be. Our democracy depends on people voting.”

    He added: “I know there are a lot of coaches like me that are good guys, good women, that just needed that sort of push and guidance and how to do it and how to set it up. I said, ‘We need to do better.’”

    Shortly after sending that Tweet, Reveno reached out to numerous coaching friends, including Gonzaga’s Mark Few, who was immediately aboard with the idea and got the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) involved. Reveno’s wife suggested he name the initiative All Voice No Play, and it stuck.

    Kennedy had never met Reveno before, but he heard about the initiative and reached out to help, too. Kennedy helped get involvement from the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge, an affiliate of the non-profit Civic Nation. Others coaches were also heavily involved, including Boise State assistant Mike Burns. In all, more than 1,200 coaches representing 83% of NCAA Division 1 schools in 2020 signed a pledge to register all of their eligible athletes to vote and support voter education and turnout.

    In September 2020, at the behest of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, the NCAA Division 1 Council approved legislation that stated athletes would not practice or compete on the first Tuesday after Nov. 1 every year, coinciding with Election Day. The rule served as a major win for Reveno, Kennedy and every other coach involved.

    “I wanted to make it a rule so that we wouldn’t lose focus,” Reveno said. “I knew at that point the 2020 election was going to have good participation and get good attention. But I was worried about 2022, 24, 26, and I was really worried about 10 years from now. What’s it going to be like in 10 years? I wanted to systemically impact this so that it’s a habit of coaches to do this type of fundamental team building.”

    This year, the Division 1 Council amended the rule, allowing teams that are competing in the championship portion of their seasons to take a day off for civic engagement activities within 15 days before or after Election Day. Teams not in the championship portion of their seasons are still required to not practice or play games on Election Day.

    “I’m OK with that,” Reveno said. “Let’s say you’re a volleyball team and you play on Wednesday. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that volleyball team practicing (on Tuesday).”

    He added: “Like any NCAA thing, it’s a little bit jumbled up and not as clean as you’d like because there’s so many cooks in the kitchen. But the fact that it’s in there and people talk about it, and the fact that they even argue about it, I love. The fact we’re talking about it is great.”

    Besides voting, All Vote No Play is also about informing athletes with non-partisan resources such as videos and online materials to support civic engagement during non-federal election years. Solomon has been the driving force behind creating and designing those materials.

    Two years ago, Reveno contacted Solomon after he noticed she had created Vote By Design, a website offering free, non-partisan materials for teachers and students. Reveno’s players at Georgia Tech began using those materials, and Reveno last year asked Solomon to create materials for the broader college student audience. She was excited to help.

    “I know the power of student athletes to be influencers on their campus,” said Solomon, who played tennis at Cornell. “They’re often the most popular. They’re often the most watched. But they’ve been almost systematically overlooked from a civics standpoint. I thought, ‘Oh, my gosh, if you could get these prominent leaders on campuses to model pro-social behaviors, pro-democracy behaviors – what does it mean to be a good citizen and not just a voter – that’s a game changer for our future.’”

    Solomon mentioned a few athletes who have taken leadership roles on their campuses in promoting voting and civic engagement such as UCLA quarterback Chase Griffin, Stanford basketball player Sam Beskind and University of Pennsylvania volleyball player Elizabeth Ford. In September, nearly 2,000 people also participated in an All Vote No Play Zoom call featuring speeches from Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry, Stanford women’s basketball coach Tara VanDerveer and former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice.

    “We’re just creating civic wins and civic joy in ways that allow student athletes to do what they do best – to inspire others,” Solomon said. “For me, it’s been this personal project of inspiration and resilience, frankly…I find it endlessly inspiring.”

    The All Vote No Play leaders have been encouraged about the increased engagement among athletes and young people in general. For instance, a Tufts University study estimates that 50% of people between 18 and 29 years old voted in the 2020 Presidential election, a 11 percentage point increase from 2020.

    Still, Kennedy sees much more room for growth and uses a sports analogy to state his care, comparing the percentage voter turnout to free throw shooting. He plans on doing that through more outreach to coaches, administrators and players, an emphasis on fundraising and just having more time to devote to a cause that’s become a passion for him.

    “We’re nowhere near where we should be,” Kennedy said. “I want to get these young people to be shooting the ball like Steph Curry, where they’re shooting 92% from the foul line. They should be voting at 92% as a voting bloc….We want to be the leading organization in the country that’s really making a difference with young voters.”

    Tim Casey, Senior Contributor

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