President Joe Biden’s re-election campaign has been forced to open a satellite headquarters near the White House in Washington, D.C. after senior staff complained about having to commute to Delaware. The office, which is funded by the Democratic National Committee (DNC), will serve primarily as a base of operations for the campaign’s chief strategist, Mike Donilon, and Jen O’Malley Dillon — who left the White House in January to serve as Biden’s campaign chair.
Some national Democrats, including former President Obama, have expressed concerns over Biden’s decentralized and chaotic campaign. The President has been unwilling to let several senior aides depart the White House for the campaign full-time, opting to keep them in Washington, D.C., instead. This has left the campaign’s headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, understaffed and relatively isolated from other aspects of Biden’s political operation in the nation’s capital.
Traditionally, presidents seeking re-election have located their campaign headquarters outside Washington, D.C. Biden chose his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware. Former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama based their re-election campaigns in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Chicago, Illinois, respectively. Meanwhile, former Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump established their headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.
Before the opening of the DNC-funded office, senior White House aides who were moonlighting on the re-election effort would meet in the White House residence to discuss campaign strategy after work hours. While Federal law prohibits using federal resources — including office space — for campaign activities, White House residence is exempt.