In a typical Class A1 tube, no DC current flows in the grid, so the bias supply can have a high source impedance. Plate current is a strong function of grid voltage, so the grid bias voltage must be adjustable, and monitored frequently enough to maintain the current at the intended value as the tube ages.
Consequently, a fixed bias supply is an adjustable voltage, often with a resistor or choke or transformer winding between it an the grid (in order to maintain a high AC impedance presented to the driver), plus a method for monitoring the tube's current.
Cathode bias is a form of servo bias, using negative feedback to maintain the tube's current as it ages. Without that feedback, you must either monitor and adjust, or build in a substantial safety margin and be willing to tolerate wide variations in the operating current. That's why the WE 300B specs say the maximum DC current is 70mA for fixed bias, but 100mA for cathode bias.