Wikipedia page for Biden’s new Covid czar scrubbed of politically damaging material

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Jeff Zients, the man President-elect Joe Biden has put in charge of his administration’s response to Covid-19, "fell in love with" the culture at Bain & Co. He later founded his own private equity firm, Portfolio Logic. He joined the board of Facebook after the Cambridge Analytica scandal. One chief executive on Obama’s Jobs Council remarked that he thought Zients, then a top Obama aide, was a Republican.

That was the Jeff Zients people read about on Wikipedia. At least, until a few months ago.

The Democratic consulting firm Saguaro Strategies scrubbed those details from Zients’ page this summer and fall as he became a more important figure on Biden’s team and was tapped to co-chair the transition. The firm — which made the edits using the easily decipherable username “Saguarostrat” — corrected some inaccuracies, but its overall goal was to portray Zients as more progressive and remove or massage anything that could be politically damaging.

At the top of the section about Zients’ role in advocating for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which faced left-wing opposition, the firm included Zients’ argument that it was “the most progressive trade agreement there’s ever been.” His amorous quotes about Bain were deleted and replaced with a description of the company as a “management consulting firm that provides advice to public, private, and non-profit organizations.”

They added that Zients left Facebook “over differences with company leadership over governance and its policies around political discourse” although Zients has never said that publicly. The transition team has declined several POLITICO requests for interviews with Zients about why he left Facebook.

A Saguaro Strategies staffer confirmed the Wikipedia account was linked to the firm but declined to comment further. Asked whether Zients had any knowledge of the changes and if he or someone connected to the Biden campaign hired Saguaro, the Biden transition did not respond. After POLITICO reached out, the username was changed to Cactus78910. One user later deleted the TPP section altogether, but it didn’t appear to be politically motivated.

The changes to Zients’ Wikipedia page are hardly the first example of incoming Biden administration officials attempting to scrub or refurbish their online images, although it is one of the more clumsy ones.

WestExec Advisors, the firm co-founded by Biden’s nominee for secretary of State, Tony Blinken, that has also employed other incoming administration officials, also deleted mentions of some of their China-related work from their website this summer, just before Biden became the Democratic nominee, the Free Beacon and The Wall Street Journal found. The deletions come as both parties have become more hawkish on China.

Neera Tanden, whom Biden tapped this week as his Office of Management and Budget director, appears to have cleaned up her Twitter feed in advance of her confirmation hearing, deleting more than 1,000 tweets last month, the Daily Beast reported. “Apparently a lot of people think #MoscowMitch is a threat,” she wrote in a now-deleted tweet using the epithet Democrats threw at Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

A sudden surge of edits to someone’s Wikipedia page can be a promising tea leaf that he or she is angling for — or on the verge of — getting a high-profile political post. In June, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ Wikipedia page was edited far more than the other contenders for vice president and the majority of the edits were by a single person, as The Intercept first reported.

While such steps seem obvious, past social media posts have continued to generate controversies for Democrats and Republicans alike. Many Trump political appointees have been upended the last four years for past racist or cospiratorial posts. Others were blackballed for making anti-Trump comments online before he was elected president. And several staffers in the Democratic primary were privately dismissed, publicly fired, or not hired in the first place because of posting.

While a handful of Washington law firms specialize in “pre-vetting” potential Cabinet picks and guiding them through the confirmation process, lawyers don’t typically undertake tasks such as revising clients’ Wikipedia pages, according to two people familiar with the process. Such work is more likely to be undertaken by consulting firms.

But lawyers do advise clients on cleaning up their social media presences — and it’s an increasingly time-consuming part of the process. “We are seeing a lot more social media issues coming up,” said James Joseph, a tax lawyer at Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer who has advised clients and Democratic transitions on vetting.


CORRECTION: A previous version of this report incorrectly named a company Zients once worked at. It is management consultancy Bain & Co., not the affiliated venture capital firm founded by Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah).