Key Words: Biden’s campaign manager called Mitch McConnell ‘terrible’ and Republicans something even worse — before saying bipartisanship is possible

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President-elect Joe Biden’s incoming deputy chief of staff got candid in an interview for Glamour magazine — and it’s spurred some backlash among Republicans.

Can’t imagine why: “In the primary, people would mock [Biden], like, ‘You think you can work with Republicans?’ I’m not saying they’re not a bunch of f—ers. Mitch McConnell is terrible.”

That was Jen O’Malley Dillon, Biden’s campaign manager, speaking with “Untamed” author and activist Glennon Doyle in an interview that hit this week. The women were discussing how O’Malley Dillon ran a presidential campaign during such an unprecedented year while also raising children, and the compromises that a person has to make to juggle work and home life. This led to discussing the art of political compromise, and whether Democrats and Republicans will be able to work together following such a bitter and divisive election.

“The atmosphere in the world now is like, ‘Oh, if you compromise, you don’t believe in something,’” O’Malley Dillon said. “No, it’s: I believe in it so much that I’m going to work to find a path we can both go down together.”

And this led to her colorful comments about compromising with Republicans, which raised eyebrows and led critics to accuse her of lacking class and professionalism. “Do you want actual unity and bipartisanship?” tweeted one reader, adding, “you are the posing deputy chief of staff, yet already degrading the opposition.”

Of course, those who oppose the Republican party and the Trump administration called O’Malley Dillon a hero. Many also praised her frank talk on embracing her role as a working mother.

It should be noted that her full quote expressed optimism about the new administration being able to reach across the aisle and work with Republicans. Here it is in its entirety:

“The president-elect was able to connect with people over this sense of unity. In the primary, people would mock him, like, ‘You think you can work with Republicans?’ I’m not saying they’re not a bunch of f—ers. Mitch McConnell is terrible. But this sense that you couldn’t wish for that, you couldn’t wish for this bipartisan ideal? He rejected that. From start to finish, he set out with this idea that unity was possible, that together we are stronger, that we, as a country, need healing, and our politics needs that too.”

She admitted that this won’t be easy. “You can’t do politics alone. If the other person is not willing to do the work, then that becomes really hard,” she continued. “But I think, more than not, people want to see impact. They want to see us moving in a path forward … And this overhang of this negative, polarized electorate that politics has created is the thing that I think we can break down.”

O’Malley Dillon has been a political strategist and worked on presidential campaigns for the past 20 years, including President Barack Obama’s campaigns in 2008 and 2012, and the Beto O’Rourke 2020 presidential campaign. She is the first woman to manage a successful Democratic presidential campaign, as well as the first woman to run a campaign that won against an incumbent president.