The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Economy -- Kansas City, MO

Ford Stamping Plant
Liberty, Missouri 

12:53 P.M. CDT
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Missouri!  (Applause.)  Everybody give Jordan a big round of applause.  (Applause.) 
 
I just want to say about Jordan -- third generation Ford employee.  She’s going to school during the week, works at the plant on the weekends, getting a degree in business management -- and will be taking Alan’s place running the company in about -- (laughter) -- I don't know -- oh, it may take a few years.  But we're so proud of her.  And congratulations for everything that she represents.  When you see young people like that who are working so hard, making something of themselves, and are rooted in a community like this one, it really makes you proud. 
 
Before I get started, there are a couple other folks that I want to introduce that are working for you day in, day out.  First of all, your outstanding Governor, Jay Nixon, and his wife Georganne.  (Applause.)  The plant might not have been here had it not been for the great work of Jay.  (Applause.)  So that's important to know. 
 
We've got my outstanding Secretary of Health and Human Services, former governor of Kansas -- Kathleen Sebelius is in the house.  (Applause.)  She basically just came because her son and his fiancé are here.  (Laughter.)  But we're glad she’s here. 
One of my greatest friends and just a tough, smart, dedicated public servant -- Senator Claire McCaskill is here.  Give Claire a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Your former mayor, preacher, can do everything -- (applause) -- Emanuel Cleaver is in the house.  (Applause.)  Current Mayor of Kansas City, Sly James, is here.  (Applause.)  Mayor of Kansas City, Kansas, Mark Holland is here.  (Applause.)  And the Mayor right here in Liberty, Lyndell Brenton, and his lovely wife Roxanne are here.  Where are they?  (Applause.)  There they are. 
 
Now, when I said I was flying into Kansas City to see an incredible success story in action, I did not think I was going to be talking about the Chiefs.  (Applause.)
 
AUDIENCE:  Woo, woo, woo!
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Before you get carried away, I just want to point out that the Bears are 2-0.  (Laughter.) 
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo --
 
THE PRESIDENT:  I'm just saying.  (Laughter.)  And we're actually able to pass more than 10 yards. 
 
AUDIENCE:  Ooooh -- (laughter.)
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Just a little trash-talking.  We'll see how we're looking at the end of the season. 
 
I want to give special thanks to Ford’s CEO.  This is one of our outstanding business leaders, has helped to lead Ford to be the number-one automaker in the United States of America -- Alan Mulally is here.  And we're very proud of him.  (Applause.) 
 
It doesn’t matter if you’ve got an outstanding CEO if you don't have outstanding workers.  And the President of Local 249, Jeff Wright, is here.  (Applause.)  Your launch manager, Todd Jaranowski, I really like because he is a Bears and a Sox fan.  Come on, give Todd a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  And I very much appreciate him and some of the other folks showing me around this new stamping plant right here. 
 
Now, you may not be aware of this, but you and I have a little history together.  I may roll in a Cadillac these days -- (laughter) -- no, no, but it’s not my car.  I’m just -- I’m renting, just like my house.  (Laughter.)  The lease runs out in about three and a half years.  (Laughter.)  But before that, I was driving around in a 2008 Ford Escape.  (Applause.)  It came right off these assembly lines.  Some of you might have been involved in building it.  It was a great car.  Problem is I got Secret Service about a month after I bought the car, so I’ve only got 2,000 miles on it.  (Laughter.)  It is in mint condition. 
 
So I want to say thank you for building my car.  But I also came here to talk about what’s got to be the number-one priority in this country, and that is growing our economy, creating new jobs, and making sure that everyone who works hard in America has a chance to get ahead.  It’s our number-one priority.  (Applause.) 
 
Now, some of you remember, five years ago a financial crisis hit Wall Street.  It then turned into a devastating recession on Main Street and it came close to being another Great Depression. By the time I took office, the economy was shrinking at a rate of 8 percent a year -- unprecedented.  Our businesses were shedding 800,000 jobs a month.  And you had this perfect storm, and millions of Americans lost their jobs, their homes, their savings they had been working a lifetime to get. 
 
But what the recession also showed was the fact that for decades, middle-class families had been working harder and harder just to get by, hadn’t seen their incomes go up, hadn’t seen their wages go up.  Manufacturing was moving overseas.  And so what built our middle class had been buckling, had been weakening.
 
And I think if you ask most Americans when the economic crisis hit, they might not date it to Lehman Brothers collapsing. They’d talk to you about when they got a pink slip that they didn’t expect, or the bank took away their home, or they didn’t have health insurance, or maybe they were told the plant was shutting down and the assembly line was going quiet.  Those were tough times.
 
Five years ago, plants like this one were closing their doors.  And the day I stepped into the Oval Office, the American auto industry -- which is the heartbeat of American manufacturing -- (applause) -- heartbeat of manufacturing -- the auto industry was flat-lining. 
 
Ford was standing on its own two feet, had made some smart decisions.  But Alan will tell you, if GM and Chrysler had gone down, suppliers would go down; dealers would have gone down.  And all of that would have had a profound impact on Ford. 
 
I refused to let that happen.  So we worked with labor, we worked with management.  Everybody had to make some sacrifices. Everybody put some skin in the game.  We bet on the American worker.  We bet on you.  And today, that bet has paid off because the American auto industry has come roaring back.  (Applause.) 
 
The Big Three are all profitable, hiring new workers.  You’re not just building more cars –-- you’re building better cars, better trucks.  Look at what’s going on right here at the plant.  The new F-150 is built tougher than ever, more fuel-efficient than ever.  (Applause.)  You’ve got trouble making them fast enough.  You had to bring on a third shift of 900 workers just to keep up with demand.  (Applause.) 
 
And because Ford invested $1.1 billion in this plant, pretty soon, 1,100 more new workers will be joining you on these assembly lines in good, union jobs, building the Ford Transit.  (Applause.)
 
So more jobs building cars -- that means more jobs for suppliers.  It means more jobs for distributors.  It means more jobs for the folks who own the restaurant here in town, or the bar, depending on -- (laughter.)  It has an impact on your tax base.  It has an impact on the teacher who teaches your kids, the first responders who keeps you safe.  All those people are impacted by your success. 
 
And that fundamental idea that when everybody is doing -- when some of us are doing well, it’s okay, but when everybody has got a stake, that’s when things really start rolling -- that’s at the heart of every decision I’ve made as President.  Because when the middle class does better, we all do better.  Shareholders do better.  CEOs do better.  Workers do better.  Everybody does better.  (Applause.)
 
So in the depths of the crisis, we passed a Recovery Act to make sure that we put a floor below which this country couldn’t fall.  We put money in folks’ pockets with tax breaks.  We made sure that people were rebuilding roads and bridges, keeping things going, helping to keep teachers and firefighters and cops on the job.  Today, three and a half years later, our businesses have added 7.5 million new jobs -- 7.5 million new jobs.  (Applause.)
 
We helped responsible homeowners stay in their homes -- won one of the biggest settlements in history on behalf of people who had wrongfully lost their homes because banks hadn’t done things right.  Today, our housing market is healing. 
 
We took on a tax code that was too skewed towards the wealthy.  We gave tax cuts, locked them in for 98 percent of families.  We asked those in the top 2 percent to pay a little bit more.  Today, middle-class tax rates are near their all-time low.  The deficits are falling at the fastest rate since World War II.  That’s what we did.  (Applause.)
 
We invested in new American technologies to end our addiction to foreign oil.  Today we're generating more renewable energy than ever before, produce more natural gas than anybody in the world.  We're about to produce more of our own oil than we buy from overseas for the first time in nearly 20 years.  (Applause.)
 
And we took on a broken health care system.  (Applause.)  And in less than two weeks, millions of Americans who’ve been locked out of the insurance market are finally going to be able to get quality health care.  (Applause.)  Out of every 10 Americans who are currently uninsured, six out of those 10 are going to be able to get covered for less than $100 a month -- less than your cell phone bill.  (Applause.)  
 
So we've been working, just like you've been working, over these last four and a half years.  We've cleared away the rubble from the crisis.  We've started to lay a new foundation for economic growth, a new foundation for prosperity.  And everybody here, we all had to make some adjustments.  I'm assuming some folks had to tighten their belts, get rid of some debt, focus on things that really matter, cut out some things you didn't need. 
 
We’ve shown the world that the American people are tough, they're resilient.  The only thing built tougher than Ford trucks are American workers, the American people.  (Applause.)  That's what we've shown.
 
All right, so that's the good news.  But any working person, any middle-class family, they'll tell you we're not yet where we need to be.  The economy is growing, but it needs to grow faster. We're producing jobs, but we need to create more jobs and more good-paying jobs.  We've got to make sure that we're rebuilding an economy that doesn't work from the top down, works from the middle out; that gives ladder of opportunity to folks who still don't have a job.  (Applause.) 
 
We've got to make sure that workers are sharing in growth and productivity.  Right now, even though businesses are creating jobs, the top 1 percent took home 20 percent of the nation’s income last year.  The average worker barely saw a raise. 
 
AUDIENCE MEMBER:  That's not fair.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  It ain't fair.  It ain't right. 
 
So in many ways, the trends that have taken hold over the past few years of a winner-take-all economy, a few folks at the top doing better and better and better, everybody else treading water or losing ground -- that's not a model that we want.  And it's been made worse by this recession. 
 
So what I've been doing over the last couple months, I've been visiting towns like Liberty, traveling all across the country talking about what we need to do to reverse those trends, make sure we've got a better bargain for middle-class America: Good jobs that pay good wages; an education that prepares our kids for a global economy; a home that is secure; affordable health care that is there when you get sick; a secure retirement even if you’re not rich -- all those things that make for a secure life so you can raise your kids and have confidence that they're going to do better than you did.  That’s what I’m focused on.  That's what you’re focused on.  That’s what Congress should be focused on.  (Applause.)
 
Which brings me to the current situation.  (Laughter.)   Let me talk a little bit about what’s going on back in Washington.  Right now, Congress is in the middle of a budget debate.  Now, there’s nothing new about that.  Every year Congress has got to pass a budget, and it’s always a contentious process.  But right now our recovery still needs to build more strength, so it’s important that we get it right in Washington, because even though our success as a country is ultimately going to depend on great businesses like Ford, hard workers like you, government has to do some things. 
 
Congress has to pass a budget to make sure our education system works, and prepares our kids and our workers for the global economy. If we’re going to rebuild our roads, our bridges, our airports, our ports, government has got to be involved in that.  If we’re going to have scientific research and development -- I was looking at all these newfangled pieces of equipment here -- some of the things that allowed the efficiencies of this plant originated in laboratories and scientists doing work on the government’s dime.  That's how we always maintain our cutting-edge.  These are things that help us grow.  These are things that help the private sector succeed.
 
So when people tell you somehow government is irrelevant.  No, everything we do has some connection to making sure that we, collectively, as a democracy, are making some smart investments in the future.  (Applause.)  That's how it’s always been.
 
So what Congress is doing right now is important.  Unfortunately, right now the debate that going on in Congress is not meeting the test of helping middle-class families.  It’s just they're not focused on you.  They're focused on politics.  They're focused on trying to mess with me.  (Laughter.)  They're not focused on you.  They're not focused on you.  (Applause.)
 
  So there are two deadlines coming up that Congress has to meet.  And I want folks to pay attention to this.  Congress has to meet two deadlines, and they're coming up pretty quick. 
 
The first deadline:  The most basic constitutional duty Congress has is to pass a budget.  That’s Congress 101.  If they don’t pass a budget by September 30th -- what’s the date today?  The 20th.  All right, so if Congress doesn't pass a budget in 10 days, a week from Monday, the government will shut down.  A government shutdown shuts down many services that the American people rely on. 
 
This is not abstract.  Hundreds of thousands of Americans will not be allowed to go to work.  Our men and women in uniform, even those deployed overseas, won’t get their paychecks on time. Small businesses, they won’t get their loans processed. 
 
Now, none of that has to happen, as long as Congress passes a budget.  Number one -- passing a budget. 
 
Number two:  In the next few weeks, Congress must vote to allow the Department of the Treasury to pay America’s bills.  Our Treasury Department, that’s where we take in money and we pay it, right?  Real simple.  This is usually done with a simple, routine vote to raise what’s called the debt ceiling.  If you don’t raise the debt ceiling, America can't pay its bills. 
 
Since the 1950s, Congress has always passed it.  Every President has signed it -- Democrats, Republicans, Ronald Reagan -- (laughter) -- Lyndon Johnson -- it doesn’t matter.  This is just a routine thing that you've got to do so that Treasury can pay the bills.  If Congress doesn’t pass this debt ceiling in the next few weeks, the United States will default on its obligations.  That’s never happened in American history.  Basically, America becomes a deadbeat. 
 
If the world sees America not paying its bills, then they will not buy debt, Treasury bills from the United States, or if they do, they'll do it at much higher interest rates.  That means somebody wanting to buy an F-150 will have to pay much higher interest rates eventually, which means you will sell less cars.  That’s just one example of how profoundly destructive this could be.  This is not some abstract thing.
 
And this is important:  Raising the debt ceiling is not the same as approving more spending, any more than making your monthly payment adds to the total cost of your truck.  You don’t say, well, I'm not going to pay my bill, my note for my truck because I'm going to save money.  No, you're not saving money.  You already bought the truck, right?  (Laughter.)  You have to pay the bills.  You're not saving money.  You might have decided at the front end not to buy the truck, but once you've bought the truck you can't say you're saving money just by not paying the bills.  Does that make sense?  (Applause.) 
 
So raising the debt ceiling, it doesn’t cost a dime.  It does not add a penny to our deficits.  All it says is you've got to pay for what Congress already said we're spending money on.  If you don’t do it, we could have another financial crisis. 
 
And the fact is -- I know a lot of people are concerned about deficits -- our deficits are now coming down so quickly that by the end of this year we will have cut them in more than half since I took office.  (Applause.)  Cut deficits in half. 
 
So I just want to break this down one more time.  I go into a Ford dealership.  I drive off with a new F-150.  Unless I paid cash, I've still got to pay for it each month.  I can’t just say, you know, I’m not going to make my car payment this month.  That’s what Congress is threatening to do -- just saying, I'm not going to pay the bills. 
 
There are consequences to that.  The bill collector starts calling you, right?  Your credit goes south, and you've got all kinds of problems.  Same is true for a country. 
 
So if we don’t raise the debt ceiling, we're dead beats.  "If we fail to increase the debt limit, we would send our economy into a tailspin” -- that’s a quote, by the way, what I just said. You know who said it?  The Republican Speaker of the House John Boehner.
 
AUDIENCE:  Ooooh --
 
THE PRESIDENT:  The Republican Speaker has said if we don't pay our bills, we'll have an economic tailspin.  So this is not just my opinion.  This is everybody's opinion.
 
All right. Now, why haven't we already gotten it done if it's such a simple thing?  Everybody is nodding, they're all like, yes, why didn't we already get this done?  Democrats and some reasonable Republicans in Congress are willing to raise the debt ceiling and pass a sensible budget.  And I want to work with Democrats and Republicans to do just that.  Claire McCaskill, she’s ready to do it.  (Applause.)  Congressman Cleaver, he’s ready to do it.  (Applause.)  And if we just pass the budget, raise the debt ceiling, we can get back to focusing on growing this economy and creating jobs, educating our kids -- all the things we got to do. 
 
Unfortunately, there is a faction on the far right of the Republican Party right now -- it's not everybody, but it's a pretty big faction -- who convinced their leadership to threaten a government shutdown and potentially threaten to not raise the debt ceiling if they can't shut off the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare. 
 
Now, think about this.  They're not talking now about spending cuts.  They're not talking about entitlement reform.  They're not talking about any of that.  Now they're talking about something that has nothing to do with the budget -- right?  They're actually willing to plunge America into default if we can't defund the Affordable Care Act. 
 
Now, let’s put this in perspective.  The Affordable Care Act has been in law for three and a half years.  It passed both houses of Congress.  The Supreme Court ruled it constitutional.  It was an issue in last year’s elections.  The guy who was running against me said he was going to repeal it.  We won.  (Applause.)  So the voters were pretty clear on this. 
 
And then, Republicans in Congress, they've tried to repeal or sabotage this -- more than 40 times they've had these repeal votes.  Every time they fail.  This law that is in place is already providing people benefits.  It's not holding back economic growth; it's helping millions of Americans, including some of you or your family members that you may not be aware of. 
You can keep your kid on your own health insurance plan -- somebody is raising their hand right here -- until they're 26, because of the Affordable Care Act -- (applause) -- which is one of the main reasons why the number of uninsured among young people has gone down over the last three years. 
 
Seniors, they are benefitting right now from discounted prescription drug costs because of the law.  (Applause.)  If you’ve got health insurance, insurance companies can't impose lifetime limits on you.  They can't use the fine print not to pay if you get sick.  Insurance companies have to spend 80 percent of your premiums on your health care, not on administrative costs and CEO bonuses.  (Applause.)  Those are happening right now. 
And health care costs have actually increased at the slowest rate in 50 years.  So this is helping to reduce health care costs across the economy.  (Applause.)
 
Finally, starting on October 1st, it’s going to help millions of more people.  People who don't have health insurance right now, what it’s going to do is we’re going to set up pools so that just like a worker at Ford can benefit from good insurance rates because you got a lot of workers in one big pool, now people who don't have the good fortune to work at a big company like Ford, they can also get a good deal.  (Applause.)
 
Now, that's what -- so that's what they're fighting for.  They want to repeal all that, and they're saying, we’re going to hold our breath, and if you don't repeal it -- which I’ve already said I’m not going to do -- we’re going to send the economy into default.  They will send our economy into a tailspin, just like Speaker Boehner said.  They want to threaten default just to make sure that tens of millions of Americans continue not to have health care. 
 
Defunding Affordable Health Care would rob 25 million Americans of the chance to get health care coverage.  It would cut basic health care services for tens of millions of seniors on Medicare already.  That's what House Republicans are fighting for. 
 
And now they’ve gone beyond just holding Congress hostage, they're holding the whole country hostage.  One Republican senator called shutting down the government over the Affordable Care Act “the dumbest idea I’ve ever heard.”  I agree with him.  (Applause.)  But that's the strategy they're pursuing.  House of Representatives just voted on it today. 
 
Now, I tell you what, Missouri.  The American people have worked too hard for too long, digging out of a real crisis just to let politicians in Washington cause another crisis.  (Applause.)
 
This is the United States of America.  We’re not some banana republic.  This is not a deadbeat nation.  We don’t run out on our tab.  We’re the world’s bedrock investment.  The entire world looks to us to make sure the world economy is stable.  We can't just not pay our bills.  And even threatening something like that is the height of irresponsibility.
 
So what I’ve said is I will not negotiate over the full faith and credit of the United States.  (Applause.)  I am not going to allow anyone to harm this country’s reputation.  I’m not going to allow them to inflict economic pain on millions of our own people just so they can make an ideological point. 
 
But I need you to help.  I need you to help tell Congress, pay our bills on time.  Pass a budget on time.  Stop governing from crisis to crisis.  Put our focus back on where it should be: On you, the American people.  (Applause.)   On creating new jobs. On growing our economy.  On restoring security for middle-class families.  That’s what you deserve.  (Applause.)
 
I mean, I don't know -- it’s like they do this every six months.  (Laughter.)  Isn’t it?  I mean, I don't mind them disagreeing with me.  They don't like the Affordable Care Act, they’d rather have people not have health insurance, I’m happy to have that debate with them.  But you don't have to threaten to blow the whole thing up just because you don't get you way.  (Laughter.)  Right?  (Applause.)
 
I think about something that Jordan said.  Her grandfather worked in this plant; uncle, stepmom worked in this plant.  Now she and her brother work in this plant, punching in as part of the next generation of American workers at a great, iconic American company.  Our economy is coming back because of the resilience and determination of American workers like Jordan and her family. 
 
And every day, all over this country, there are men and women just like Jordan, just like her brother, they wake up, maybe pack a lunch for their kids, kiss them goodbye, go to work, live up to their responsibilities, do their jobs, pay their bills. 
 
Shouldn’t you expect the same thing from people in Washington? 
 
AUDIENCE:  Yes!  (Applause.)
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Shouldn’t you expect the same thing from members of Congress?  (Applause.)
 
Just do your job.  Don't be the other guy, be the guy who's doing your job.  No obstruction.  No games.  No holding the economic hostage -- economy hostage if you don’t get 100 percent of what you want. 
 
Nobody gets 100 percent of what you want.  You guys know that in your own lives, in your own families.  I don’t know how many people are married here, but you know you better learn not to expect getting 100 percent of what you want.  (Applause.)  Otherwise you'll be divorced real quick.  (Laughter.)  Especially you men, I'm telling you.  (Laughter.) 
 
So you should expect the same thing -- same common sense out of Congress.  You should expect some compassion.  You should expect some compromise.  You should expect the conviction of leaders who wake up and go to work every day, not to tear something down, but to build something better; not just for today but for the world we want to leave our kids. 
 
That’s my conviction.  That’s my commitment to you.  If we start thinking about you instead of politics and how you can get your base stirred up, then we're going to be able to get back to the point where this country is what we want it to be.  If Washington will act with the same decency and common purpose that you and Americans all across the country do every single day, the economy will be stronger not just a year from now or five years from now or 10 years from now, but 20 and 30 and 50 years from now. 
 
And as long as I have the privilege of serving you as your President, that’s what I'm going to be focused on.
 
Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless.  (Applause.)
 
END   
1:29 P.M CDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Proclamation -- National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Week, 2013

NATIONAL HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES WEEK, 2013

- - - - - - -

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

Before the Civil War, an education -- much less a college education -- was out of reach for most African Americans. There were few institutions focused on meeting the intellectual curiosity and spurring the academic growth of African American students. But as our Union began to heal from the wounds of war, and the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments were signed, a freed people demanded a freed mind, and courageous leaders began expanding what we now know as our Nation's Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).

More than a century and a half later, we cannot overstate the role HBCUs have played in the narrative of our country. These are the institutions that helped build a middle class and produced some of our Nation's preeminent thinkers and entrepreneurs, doctors and scientists, judges and lawyers, service members and educators. These are the schools where students banded together in open fields and assembly halls as part of a movement that pushed us closer to true freedom and equality for all. And these are the campuses where generations of students not only gained the education and skills necessary for the workforce, but also cultivated an understanding of history and knowledge of self that are necessary in life.

As we move toward our goal of having the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by 2020, HBCUs continue to provide pathways of opportunity for students across our country. Ensuring these schools have the resources they need to help students reach their fullest potential remains a top priority for my Administration, and we have taken steps to keep these institutions strong -- from providing funding for infrastructure and technology to increasing our investments in Pell Grants.

During National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Week, we pay tribute to the legacies of these proud halls of higher learning. And as we reflect on the past, let us also draw strength from the founders of these institutions and move forward with the work of making sure the doors to a quality education are open to all.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 22 through September 28, 2013, as National Historically Black Colleges and Universities Week. I call upon educators, public officials, professional organizations, corporations, and all Americans to observe this week with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities that acknowledge the countless contributions these institutions and their alumni have made to our country.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twentieth day of September, in the year of our Lord two thousand thirteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-eighth.

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Memorandum -- Designation of Officers of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to Act as Director of National Intelligence

MEMORANDUM FOR THE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE

SUBJECT: Designation of Officers of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to Act as Director of National Intelligence

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 3345 et seq. (the "Act"), it is hereby ordered that:

Section 1. Order of Succession. Subject to the provisions of sections 2 and 3 of this memorandum, and to the limitations set forth in the Act, the following officials of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, in the order listed, shall act as and perform the functions and duties of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) during any period in which the DNI and the Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence have died, resigned, or otherwise become unable to perform the functions and duties of the DNI:

(a) Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Intelligence Integration;

(b) Director of the National Counterterrorism Center;

(c) National Counterintelligence Executive; and

(d) Inspector General of the Intelligence Community.

Sec. 2. National Security Act of 1947. This memorandum shall not supersede the authority of the Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence to act for, and exercise the powers of, the DNI during the absence or disability of the DNI or during a vacancy in the position of the DNI (National Security Act of 1947, as amended, 50 U.S.C. 3026).

Sec. 3. Exceptions. (a) No individual who is serving in an office listed in section 1(a)-(d) of this memorandum in an acting capacity shall, by virtue of so serving, act as the DNI pursuant to this memorandum.

(b) No individual listed in section 1(a)-(d) of this memorandum shall act as the DNI unless that individual is otherwise eligible to so serve under the Act.

(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of this memorandum, the President retains discretion, to the extent permitted by law, to depart from this memorandum in designating an acting DNI.

(d) In the event that the Director of the National Counterterrorism Center acts as and performs the functions and duties of the DNI pursuant to section 1 of this memorandum, that individual shall not simultaneously serve as Director of the National Counterterrorism Center during that time, in accordance with 50 U.S.C. 3056.

Sec. 4. Revocation. The Presidential Memorandum of March 8, 2011 (Designation of Officers of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to Act as Director of National Intelligence), is hereby revoked.

Sec. 5. Judicial Review. This memorandum is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

Sec. 6. Publication. You are authorized and directed to publish this memorandum in the Federal Register.

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Memorandum -- Designation of Officers of the General Services Administration to Act as Administrator of General Services

MEMORANDUM FOR THE ADMINISTRATOR OF GENERAL SERVICES

SUBJECT: Designation of Officers of the General Services Administration to Act as Administrator of General Services

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including the Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998, 5 U.S.C. 3345 et seq. (the "Act"), it is hereby ordered that:

Section 1. Order of Succession. Subject to the provisions of section 2 of this memorandum, and to the limitations set forth in the Act, the following officials of the General Services Administration, in the order listed, shall act as and perform the functions and duties of the office of the Administrator of General Services (Administrator), during any period in which both the Administrator and Deputy Administrator have died, resigned, or otherwise become unable to perform the functions and duties of the office of Administrator:

(a) Chief of Staff;

(b) Commissioner, Public Buildings Service;

(c) Commissioner, Federal Acquisition Service;

(d) Chief Financial Officer;

(e) Regional Administrator, Greater Southwest Region (Region 7); and

(f) Regional Administrator, Great Lakes Region (Region 5).

Sec. 2. Exceptions. (a) No individual who is serving in an office listed in section 1 of this memorandum in an acting capacity, by virtue of so serving, shall act as Administrator pursuant to this memorandum.

(b) No individual listed in section 1 of this memorandum shall act as Administrator unless that individual is otherwise eligible to so serve under the Act.

(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of this memorandum, the President retains discretion, to the extent permitted by law, to depart from this memorandum in designating an acting Administrator.

 

Sec. 3. Prior Memorandum Superseded. This memorandum supersedes the President's Memorandum of March 19, 2002 (Designation of Officers of the General Services Administration).

Sec. 4. Judicial Review. This memorandum is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

Sec. 5. Publication. You are authorized and directed to publish this memorandum in the Federal Register.     

BARACK OBAMA

 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Proclamation -- National Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve Week, 2013

NATIONAL EMPLOYER SUPPORT OF THE GUARD AND RESERVE WEEK, 2013

- - - - - - -

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

Across generations, members of the United States Armed Forces have made America the greatest force for freedom and security the world has ever known. This week, we honor members of the National Guard and Reserve who carry that legacy forward. We thank the employers who support them; and we reaffirm our promise to provide our troops, our veterans, and our military families with the opportunities they have earned.

The men and women of the National Guard and Reserve come from every background, race, and creed, and demonstrate an unfaltering commitment to our Nation. On the field of battle and here at home, they place themselves in harm's way to protect our freedoms, our lives, and our communities. We are grateful to the employers that provide our Reservists and National Guard members extraordinary support and flexibility. We commend the businesses that help service members advance their civilian careers and ease transitions between military and civilian life.

America must pledge our full support to those who serve in our Armed Forces and their families. That is why First Lady Michelle Obama and Dr. Jill Biden launched the Joining Forces initiative -- a program that expands employment opportunities for veterans and military spouses. My Administration has also worked to connect veterans to the workforce through an online Veterans Job Bank and through the Veteran Gold Card program, which provide enhanced services to post-9/11 veterans. I also signed into law tax credits that provide incentives for businesses to hire returning heroes and wounded warriors.

The patriots who serve under our proud flag never lose that sense of service to one another or to country. This week, we pay tribute to these selfless men and women who wear the uniform, to their families, and to their dedicated employers, whose enduring commitment keeps our military strong and our Nation secure.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 22 through September 28, 2013, as National Employer Support of the Guard and Reserve Week. I call upon all Americans to join me in expressing our heartfelt thanks to the members of the National Guard and Reserve and their civilian employers. I also call on State and local officials, private organizations, and all military commanders, to observe this week with appropriate ceremonies and activities.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twentieth day of September, in the year of our Lord two thousand thirteen, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-eighth.

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Gaggle by Principal Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest en route Kansas City, Missouri

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Kansas City, Missouri

10:42 A.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  All right, I've got a little opener, and then we'll get to your questions -- and a week-ahead, don't let me forget.

Good morning, and welcome aboard Air Force One as we make our way to the heartlands.  The President will visit a Ford auto production plant on the north side of Kansas City, Missouri, where he will highlight the important progress our country has made in recovering from the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, a recession that was precipitated by the financial crisis that struck five years ago this week.

Since then, thanks to the grit and determination of American workers and American businesses, both of whom got strong support from policies put forward by this President, we're coming back.  We've created 7.5 million jobs.  The housing market is stronger. The economy is growing again.  The manufacturing sector is a particularly bright light.  In fact, the plant that we'll visit today has added shifts, and the trucks being produced are driven off car dealership lots at a rate of every 38 seconds last month.

But there’s more work that needs to be done to grow the economy faster and to create more jobs.  That's why threats from congressional Republicans to shut down the government and risk the full faith and credit of the United States of America come at a particularly bad time.  We continue to urge Congress to quickly fulfill the responsibility that they have been enshrined with in the Constitution, which is to pass a budget and pay the bills on time.

Then we can get to work on legitimately bipartisan ideas like investing in infrastructure, strengthening our schools, allowing responsible homeowners to refinance at these historically low rates, and expanding access to college.  We don't need another self-inflicted crisis from Congress.  We need policies, including ideas put forward by this President that are in the best interest of the economy and ensure a better bargain for the middle class.

So, with that, we'll take some questions.

Q    Josh, a top Iranian official told the Times that Iran wants a swift deal over its nuclear weapons -- I'm sorry -- over its nuclear program in order to get rid of the sanctions.  What is the U.S.’s response to that interview?  And is the U.S. open to a quick deal?

MR. EARNEST:  I saw the story that you're talking about, Josh.  We've seen a number of comments over the last several weeks from the Iranian regime.  We welcome those comments as they do indicate a willingness to act constructively -- to work constructively with the international community.  But the fact of the matter is actions are what are going to be determinative here. 

We have seen this President lead an international coalition to put in place a very strong sanctions regime against Iran.  And the reason for that is simple.  The Iranians, for a number of years now, have been unwilling to live up to their obligations to the international community as it relates to their nuclear program.  And these sanctions have tightened around the Iranian regime, further isolated them from the international community, taken a significant toll on their economy and put pressure on them to come back to the bargaining table.

So the United States, as the President has indicated on a number of occasions, stands ready to engage with the Iranians on the basis of mutual respect.  You’ll recall that this was a topic of extensive debate during the President’s first campaign for this office where he demonstrated -- or he signaled a willingness to engage with the Iranians. 

When this President took office, you will recall, the international community was divided about how exactly to confront the threat that was emanating from Iran.  But thanks to the President’s leadership, the international community is now united and can present a united front as we deal with the Iranians.  And over the course of these talks, the Iranians will have an opportunity to demonstrate that they are willing to live up to their promises and prove to the international community that the nuclear program they are pursuing is for exclusively peaceful means. 

Q    But, Josh, a lot of Iran experts say that there may be a really limited window before Rouhani gets sidelined by more hardliners who aren't opened to a deal with the U.S.  So are you worried you could miss out on an opportunity?

MR. EARNEST:  No.  As you’ve seen, the President -- like I said, the President has demonstrated a willingness to engage with the Iranians, and has done that for some time now.  You're aware of the fact that we have engaged with the Iranians through the P5-plus-1 process.  There have been some other contacts that have emerged in the news, including an exchange of letters between the American President and the Iranian President.  So this is an indication that there are some ongoing conversations.

But again, it’s actions that will be determinative here, and it’s actions that we need to see from the Iranians to demonstrate their seriousness of purpose as they come back to the international community and take advantage, we hope, of the opportunity to demonstrate in no uncertain terms to the international community that their nuclear program is for exclusively peaceful means.

Q    Josh, what are those conversations?  Is the President going to meet with his new counterpart next week at the U.N., or are there going to be any other bilats at different levels between our government and their government?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't have any specific meetings to read out to you.  I know that there’s been a lot of reporting on this, but at this time there’s no meeting on the President’s schedule right now while he’s at the United Nations with anyone representing the Iranian regime.

But I'm sure that many of you will be up there to cover the President’s activities at the United Nations and we'll certainly keep you posted on all the President’s activities.  We do anticipate that he’ll do a number of meetings up there, including a couple of bilateral meetings with other world leaders who are in New York for the General Assembly. 

We're going to do a conference call later on this afternoon. There’s still some aspects of the President’s schedule that are being locked down, and so they’ll be prepared to discuss those aspects of the President’s schedule at the conference call later this afternoon.

Q    One of those could be an Iranian schedule to be locked down, right?

MR. EARNEST:  Not necessarily.  We'll have more in terms of the President’s schedule later on today.

Q    Do you think you’ll have -- in this afternoon’s call, will you have the outline of the bilats and who they are?

MR. EARNEST:  I do anticipate that that would be the case, yes.

Q    During this period where there is some indication of a thaw with Iran, how willing is the United States to reduce some of its sanctions or ease back on some of its sanctions as a sign of good faith?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t want to get into previewing any sort of negotiations that may or may not occur.  But what I will say is that it is clear that the reason that the Iranians are demonstrating this willingness to approach the international community is because the international community is united in our belief that the regime needs to fulfill their obligations to the international community when it comes to their nuclear program. 

So the point is the pressure of this sanctions regime, that includes, I'll remind you, the Russians and the Chinese and others, is what has brought the Iranians to the table.  And what we would like to see from the Iranians beyond just some of the encouraging words that we've heard from them in the last few days are some demonstrable actions that demonstrate the seriousness of purpose as they pursue conversations about coming into compliance with international standards.

Q    So you need to see -- the United States needs to see action before there's any easing back on any sanctions?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we're going to have -- we have had a number of engagements with the Iranians and we'll continue to have conversations on the basis of mutual respect.  And over the course of those conversations, there will be an opportunity for the Iranians to demonstrate, through actions, the seriousness with which they're pursuing this endeavor.

Q    Is there anything you'd like to see in particular from Iran?

MR. EARNEST:  I'm not prepared to get into any sort of the details of the specific conversations that we're having with the Iranian regime at this point.

Q    On another question, is the President planning to meet with House and Senate leaders next week on the budget?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any meetings to read out to you at this point.  As Jay mentioned earlier this week, I do think that you can expect that the President will have conversations with congressional leaders in the days ahead, but I don’t have any specific meetings to talk to you about right now.

Q    Has he had any conversations this week with congressional leaders?  Has he had -- talked to anyone on the Hill about the CR, about the debt ceiling?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any conversations to read out right now.

Q    The EPA this morning announcing new regulations to have power plants at least curb 40 percent of their output, contain 40 percent of their output -- critics say it's overly burdensome and will lead to higher electricity rates.  Where does this fit into the President's all-of-the-above plan?

MR. EARNEST:  That’s a good question.  There was an announcement from the Environmental Protection Agency about some new standards that the administration is working to put in place that will, for the first time, put some limits on carbon emissions. 

Power plants, as you may have seen from some of their materials, are the single largest emitter of carbon pollution in this country.  They do account for about 40 percent of the carbon pollution that’s emitted into the atmosphere.  This is something that poses a significant health risk to American citizens and it's something that the President is concerned about. 

The President has talked about this issue as early as his inaugural address back in January.  The President talked a little bit more about his Climate Action Plan in the context of the speech he gave at Georgetown back in June.  And I think you can expect that we'll continue to take steps to implement that plan.

This does fall in line with the President's all-of-the-above approach to our energy production that certainly this would provide an incentive for power companies to consider other sources of energy, including renewable energy like wind and solar.  So those incentives are in place.  It also includes some incentives for power companies to consider some new technology that would allow them to use coal in power plants, but do it in a way that’s better for the environment and better for the public health of the American public.

So the President believes that there is a way for us to pursue these kinds of rules in a common-sense fashion that will prioritize both the economic interests of the country as well as the public health interests of families all across the country.

Q    Josh, this won't come as a surprise to you, but Mitch McConnell says it's a war on coal and jobs.  How do you respond to that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think I'd repeat what I just said, which is there is an opportunity for us to make good decisions that prioritize both the economic interests of the country as well as the public health interests of the country.

So the President -- or his administration, I should say, has announced the beginning of some important steps today that would, for the first time, place some limits on carbon pollution emitted by power plants.  Power plants are the largest emitter of carbon pollution.  And there's an opportunity for us to work with the industry to make power production more safe without damaging the economy.

Q    Manufacturers say that the CCS technology that you're referring to isn't commercially available yet, and manufacturers in particular are worried about the added costs this will bring to their businesses.  Is it kind of ironic that the President's going to a manufacturing plant today the same day that these are being announced, these regulations?
MR. EARNEST:  That’s a good question.  I actually do think that there is an interesting parallel here.  You'll recall that early in his administration, the President worked with the auto industry to put in place tough rules that actually increased some fuel-efficiency standards by American-produced automobiles and trucks.  We saw a lot of the same naysayers who said that this would be really bad for the auto industry.  But over the course of time in which those rules took effect, we have seen the auto industry strengthen significantly in terms of creating jobs and putting forward better products and improving sales and revenue. 
So there is an opportunity for us to work with the industry to put in place these kinds of rules that make their products better, that make their products safer, that encourage them -- incentivize them to innovate -- that that can have benefits not just for consumers, but also for the general public and for the broader economy.

Q    Josh, is there anything you can say about the Navy Yard memorial service on Sunday, what the President is going to talk about, who else might be there?  Any guidance here?

MR. EARNEST:  We put out some details last night that the memorial service will take place late Sunday afternoon at the Marine barracks in Southeast D.C.  The President will make remarks late in the afternoon, but I'm not in a position at this point to give you a preview of the President's remarks.

Q    Josh, can you talk a little bit about the House vote on the CR today, including defunding Obamacare?  Just about 10 days out, what does this say about the prospects for averting a government shutdown?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as I mentioned at the top, Josh, the United States Congress has a responsibility that's enshrined in the Constitution, a responsibility that was granted to them by the Founding Fathers of this country to pay the bills.  Congress should pay the bills on time.  And given how we have seen our economic recovery start to get some traction, threats not to pay the bills on time from Congress -- and from Republicans in Congress, I should point out -- are particularly poorly timed. 

Now, you've often heard me and others lament the lack of bipartisanship in dealing with some of these issues in Congress. And, unfortunately, that pattern will continue with what I expect will be -- and I think what most people expect will be -- a party line vote in the House of Representatives.  But there is one glimmer of bipartisanship in all of this.  I'm not the only person -- this administration is not the only group that has concerns about shutting down the government in protest of Obamacare. 

Senator Bob Corker, a Republican from Tennessee, said it was "silly" to do so.  Senator Richard Burr, a Republican from North Carolina, called it the "dumbest idea" he’d ever heard.  Republican Senator Kelly Ayotte from New Hampshire said it would be -- described it as not productive.  And even Senator Roy Blunt, whose state we're about to visit, said that he didn't support this idea.  And there was also an interesting news release from the Chamber of Commerce saying that a shutdown protesting Obamacare would not be in the best interest of America's businesses and it wouldn’t be in the best interest of America's economy.

So I do think there is actually bipartisan agreement that the tactics we're seeing from congressional Republicans are bad for the country and are bad for the economy.  And we are eager to sit down at the table with congressional Republicans and work out a solution that doesn't involve threats to shut down the government, that doesn't involve playing chicken with the full faith and credit of the United States of America.

We need Congress to fulfill their basic obligations, to fulfill their basic responsibilities, so that we can actually get about the hard work of putting in place the kinds of policies that are going to strengthen our economy.  The last thing we need is another self-inflicted crisis.  We actually need to get to work putting in place policies that we know are going to be good for the middle class -- things like opening up the doors to a college education to more families, reforming our schools, investing in infrastructure -- many of the things you've heard the President talk about before and many of the things that you'll hear the President talk about again today. 

Q    Josh, on a separate subject, Ron Binz, nominee for FERC, in confirmation hearings, the math is not looking very good.  Even Joe Manchin says that he will vote against him.  Are you guys going to still stick behind him?

MR. EARNEST:  Absolutely.  Mr. Binz is a highly qualified nominee who would do a great job at the FERC.  And we continue to work with Congress to ensure that he gets a fair hearing and gets confirmed in a timely fashion. 

Q    In terms of the week ahead, can you tell us whether the President will announce his pick for Fed Chair in the week ahead? 
MR. EARNEST:  I don't have any updated timing for you in terms of any personnel announcements, let alone the personnel announcements that many people are legitimately and understandably interested in.

Q    Can you rule it out?

MR. EARNEST:  I can't.  I'm just not in a position to offer additional timing at this point.

Q    Anything else for the week ahead?

MR. EARNEST:  On Monday, the President and First Lady will travel to New York City for the 68th session of the United Nations General Assembly.  The President and First Lady will remain overnight in New York City. 

On Tuesday, the President will deliver remarks to the U.N. General Assembly.  The First Lady will attend.  Later in the day, the President will attend the Clinton Global Initiative, where he and President Clinton will engage in a conversation about the benefits and future of health care reform in America and access to quality health care around the globe.  In the evening, the President will attend an event for the DNC before returning with the First Lady to the White House.

On Wednesday and Thursday, the President will attend meetings at the White House. 

And then on Friday, the President will welcome Prime Minister Singh of India to the White House for a bilateral meeting.  The meeting follows the Prime Minister's visit to Washington in 2009 and the President's memorable visit to India in 2010.  And it will highlight India's role in regional security and stability, and provide an opportunity for the two leaders to chart a course toward enhanced trade, investment, and development cooperation between the United States and India.

And there will be more detailed information about the President's schedule in New York during the U.N. General Assembly, including a handful of bilateral meetings, during the conference call this afternoon.

Q    Thanks, Josh.

MR. EARNEST:  All right.  Thank you, guys.

END
11:02 A.M. EDT

West Wing Week 9/20/13 or, "Every Moment of Every Day"

This week, the President responded to the shootings at the Navy Yard in DC, invited small business owners to the White House as he spoke on the 5 year anniversary of the financial crisis, addressed  the Business Roundtable and the Export Council, sat down for interviews with ABC & Telemundo, welcomed the Amir of Kuwait, newly appointed Foreign Ambassadors, and Youth of the Year winners, and the First Lady spoke on marketing healthier food to children.

Related Topics: Inside the White House

President Obama Meets with the Export Council

President Barack Obama delivers remarks at a meeting with the President's Export Council

President Barack Obama delivers remarks at a meeting with the President's Export Council, in Room 350 of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building of the White House, Sept. 19, 2013. Seated with the President, from left are: Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker; Council Vice-Chair Ursula Burns, Chairwoman and CEO of Xerox; and and Council Chair Jim McNerney, Jr., President and CEO, The Boeing Company (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Today President Obama met with his Export Council, a committee of government and private-sector leaders who advise him on trade and export related issues.

President Obama told the council that although there is more work to do five years after the start of the financial crisis, our economic recovery is well underway thanks to the grit and resilience of the American people, the work of our business sector and timely government response to the crisis .

“But I tell you, one of the biggest bright spots in our economy has been exports,” President Obama said, “the fact that "Made in America" means something and has provided a boost to our domestic economy, and has reminded the world just how competitive we are.”

Now, we can still do more when it comes to exports, and thanks in part to new trade deals that I’ve signed as well as obviously really great products and services that you’ve all designed, America now exports more to the rest of the world than ever before.  We’re on track to export even more this year.  Last year, $1 billion in exports supported nearly 50,000 jobs -- or 5,000 jobs in the United States.

President Obama said his Administration is focused on keeping that momentum going by completing Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations as well as expanding our trade relationship with Europe.

Related Topics: Trade and Exports, Economy

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of Vice President Biden’s Meeting with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi

Vice President Biden met today with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to discuss a wide range of bilateral, regional, and global issues, including Syria, North Korea, and Iran.  The Vice President and the Foreign Minister emphasized the importance of increasing practical cooperation on regional and global challenges.  

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by the Press Secretary Jay Carney , 09/19/13

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

 

1:28 P.M. EDT

MR. CARNEY:  Hello, everyone.  Good to have you here today  -- another beautiful day here in Washington, D.C., the nation’s capital.  Fabulous weather. 

I have a lot of toppers and I'm going to top with this one.

My first topper is, on Monday, September 23, the Vice President and Dr. Jill Biden will travel to Colorado to view damage from recent flooding and survey recovery efforts there.  The Vice President’s office will be releasing additional information as we get closer to Monday.  That's topper number one.

Topper number two, on Tuesday, President Obama will travel to New York to attend the Clinton Global Initiative, where he and President Clinton will engage in a conversation about the benefits and future of health care reform in America and access to quality health care around the globe.

I know that was confusing -- I said that he'll travel to New York.  He will be in New York, as you know, for the United Nations General Assembly.

Secondly, as you all know, following on the announcement that he'll be having this conversation with former President Clinton about the benefits and future of health care reform, this conversation will take place one week before the health insurance marketplaces open for business, and Americans who do not currently have insurance will be able to sign up for affordable, quality health plans that meet their needs. 

This conversation between the two Presidents will follow up on the health care speech President Clinton gave in Arkansas in early September and is part of a ramped-up public education effort to reach Americans who want to sign up for new affordable options in the health insurance marketplaces from October through March.

Finally, today the Senate Judiciary Committee approved Nina Pillard’s nomination to be a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia circuit.  There are now two highly qualified nominees for this court pending before the full Senate, and we urge their prompt confirmation.

As you may know, Pillard’s career includes landmark accomplishments on behalf of women and families.  She helped defend the constitutionality of the Family and Medical Leave Act and helped open the doors of the Virginia Military Institute to female students.  Today, Pillard is a professor at Georgetown Law School.  And I would remind you that the D.C. circuit has a strong tradition of judges who were previously innovative scholars, and that would include Antonin Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.  

Some Republicans continue to cynically raise arguments about that court’s workload, even though the court is more than a quarter vacant today.  During the last administration, these very same senators confirmed judges to the 9th, 10th, and 11th seats on this very same court.  And earlier this year, these same senators confirmed judges to circuit courts with fewer pending appeals per active judge than is the case at the D.C. Circuit.

Right now there are 14 judicial nominees pending in the Senate, including 12 who have the unanimous support of the Judiciary Committee, and we urge the Senate to consider Nina Pillard’s nomination and all of the President’s judicial nominees without delay.

That was a lot of toppers, and maybe we can just wrap it up.  Or I’ll take your questions.  Yes.

Q    I appreciate it.  Thanks, Jay.  Today, House Speaker John Boehner said the House won’t vote to increase the debt limit without including some spending cuts to reduce the deficit.  Is the President willing to give them?

MR. CARNEY:  The President has been and is willing to negotiate with Republicans over a broad compromise on budget, on funding and spending.  He has put forward his own proposal to do that.  And he urges Congress to act to make sure the government does not shut down and continues to be funded, and, if necessary, to pass a short-term extension of funding at current levels in order to allow for further negotiations on a broader budget agreement.

I would note that, in keeping with his promises, and the Democrats, in keeping with their promises, the President submitted a budget that represented compromise and tough choices for Democrats, with broad-based deficit reduction achieved through a balanced approach.  The Senate passed its own budget, as Republican leaders insisted they must. 

At the time, Republican leaders said we have to have regular order; we have to have a situation where the House passes a budget, the Senate passes a budget, and then, in accordance with regular order, a conference is established and a product is produced.  Except when that happened, and the Senate passed a budget, the House decided it did not want to join in a conference, and the House Republican leaders have refused to name conferees for the budget now for about six months.

So that’s a laying-down of the facts here when it comes to the President’s willingness to compromise to achieve resolution and find common ground on budget issues.  And he looks forward to doing that in the future.

On the matter of debt ceiling, the answer is, no, we will negotiate over Congress’s responsibility to pay the bills that Congress incurred -- Congress’s responsibility enshrined in the United States Constitution, which gives Congress power over the purse strings here in this country, to responsibly ensure that we do not default, that the United States is good -- is true to its word and that our full faith and credit will be upheld. 

It’s unconscionable to imagine that there are those in the Congress -- and now, apparently, because he couldn’t persuade them otherwise, the Speaker of the House has joined them, who believe that it is the right thing to do to threaten another recession, threaten economic calamity in this country and the globe, over their ideological desire to defund or delay the Affordable Care Act. 

We’ve had this battle.  That’s how it works:  You write legislation; you propose legislation; you pass legislation.  It becomes law.  If people think it’s inappropriate or unconstitutional, they take it to the Supreme Court -- through the court system to the Supreme Court.  In this case, that’s what happened and the Supreme Court upheld the law, and we’re implementing the law.  And if members of the Republican Party want to continue to try to overturn the law through legislation, they can -- they have been doing that nonstop for the past several years.  But they should not hold the full faith and credit of the United States hostage to their insistence that they get what they want in a manner that they couldn’t get through legislation. 

That’s our position.

Q    Will the White House urge House Democrats to vote for a clean debt ceiling, even though it would be at a level reflecting a continuation of the sequester?

MR. CARNEY:  As I said the other day and I think as recently as yesterday, and I think the SAP that we put out, the Statement of Administration Policy, says that we would be willing to accept a so-called clean CR at current spending levels for several months to allow for continued negotiations over a broader budget deal. 

What we won’t accept is further cuts in important investments in our economy.  I think it’s worth noting that the Republican -- House Republican budget approach enshrined in the Ryan budget was rejected by House Republicans, who could not even pass a transportation and housing bill out of committee.  I think that demonstrates that the Ryan budget is not acceptable even among House Republicans. 

But to answer your question, we would accept a clean CR for a short term in order to continue the negotiations over how we can find agreement over funding the government, ensuring that we’re protecting the middle class and helping it grow, that we’re creating jobs, and that we’re reducing our deficit in a responsible way. 

What Speaker Boehner didn’t note in his presentation today is that the deficit has been coming down dramatically.  It has been coming down and is now slated to be half the size it was when the President took office -- despite the enormous economic challenges that our nation faced when the President did take office and all that we had to do to avert a depression. 

But there is more work to be done.  And we can responsibly reduce our deficit in the mid and long term, and fund our necessary priorities to help the economy grow, and help the middle class, and create good-paying jobs here in the United States through investments in education and innovation, research and development and infrastructure.  We just have to do it in a responsible way. 

And we can’t go to the nation -- or we shouldn’t -- they shouldn’t go to the nation and say, we couldn’t get this through normal means, so we’re going to threaten your job, your welfare, your security and future, so that we can defund Obamacare, or delay it -- a proposition which would actually increase the deficit.  So this is supposed to be all about spending, but they want to increase the deficit to get what they -- what their ideology demands.

And I think we’ve seen, not just coming from here but from all corners, including many corners within the Republican Party, the view that this is a bad idea.  It’s bad for the economy.  It’s bad for the middle class.  It’s bad for the Republican Party.  Obviously that’s for Republican Party leaders and members to sort out, what’s good for them politically.  What we know is that this approach is bad for the American people.

Q    Can you just talk about Sunday?  Is there any more you can tell us about the President’s plans at the memorial service? Is he going to speak, and might we hear anything about gun control, like after Newtown?

MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have a preview beyond what I announced yesterday.  I think the President might speak, but I don’t have anything more specific than that to say about it.  When we have more information we’ll provide it.

Q    On Syria, in his interview with Fox, President Assad said that he thought it would cost about a billion dollars to destroy Syria's stockpile of chemical weapons, and he suggested that the United States should pay for it.  I'm wondering is the United States willing to finance the cost of destruction of --

MR. CARNEY:  A couple of things.  He also said that somebody else was responsible for mass murder of civilians using chemical weapons, including children.  And I suppose if you use poison gas to murder your own people, including the children of your own nation, you probably would deny it publicly.

We're working with the Russians on a framework that Secretary Kerry and Foreign Minister Lavrov worked out with their teams to implement a program that would identify, verify and remove from Assad's control the chemical weapon stockpiles in that country.  And this is obviously a complicated piece of business.  I don't have a cost figure associated with it.  What I can tell you is that it would be in the interest of the Syrian people, the interest of the people of the region, the interest of the United States and the people of the world to see those chemical weapon stockpiles safely removed from Syria -- removed from Assad's control and destroyed, so that he cannot use them again in the deplorably indiscriminate way that he used them against his own people.

Q    So when it comes, though, to the cost of doing that --

MR. CARNEY:  The folks working on the details of the plans might have more information about what it would take, what it will take to bring about the identification and transfer and ultimate destruction of the chemical weapons.  And we're working with our teams on that.

But two things I would say -- is that the use of those weapons is the absolute, clear responsibility of Assad.  The U.N. report, the inspectors’ report reinforces what we've been saying and what many nations around the world have agreed with us in saying that Assad was responsible for the attacks on August 21st. Attempts to suggest otherwise have become farcical in their weirdness and their disassociation from established facts. 

But none of that matters so much as the fact that Syria has now, for the first time in its history, acknowledged that they have chemical weapons and agreed to rid themselves of chemical weapons.  And Russia has obviously joined with the United States in producing this framework for achieving that.  Now, there's a lot of work to be done, but this is a significant development over these past days.  And we're going about the business of trying to make it happen.

Q    Looking ahead to next week, are you moving toward some kind of encounter at the U.N. between President Obama and President Rouhani?

MR. CARNEY:  We have no meetings scheduled, as I said yesterday.  We have met with the Iranians through the P5-plus-1 process.  We communicate with the Iranians through a variety of methods, as we've said in the past.  President Obama and the new President, Rouhani, have exchanged letters, as President Obama noted in a couple of interviews.  It has long been the position of President Obama since he was a candidate and this was a matter of debate during the Democratic primaries in 2008 as well as during the general election, that he would, as President, be willing to have bilateral negotiations with the Iranians provided that the Iranians were serious about addressing the international community’s insistence that they give up their nuclear weapons programs.  That is the position that we hold today.

The first words he uttered after he took the oath of office included this sentence -- he being the President:  “To those who cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know that you are on the wrong side of history, but that we will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.”

And that was a reference in his inaugural address to his position stated during the campaign and throughout his presidency that he’d be willing to have direct conversations and negotiations with the Iranians provided that the Iranians were serious about ridding themselves of their nuclear weapons program and honoring the international commitments that they’ve made.

Now, there have been a lot of very interesting things said out of Tehran and the new government, and encouraging things, but actions are more important than words.  And one of the reasons why we’re seeing this change in rhetoric we believe is because -- we know is because of the international consensus that has been established with the President’s leadership behind the proposition that Iran must give up its nuclear weapons program.  And that consensus has been backed with the most severe sanctions regime in history.  And that sanctions regime has inflicted enormous harm on the Iranian economy.  And the new President has made clear that he wants to -- or says that he wants to address that problem.  And to do that, he needs to demonstrate that he’s serious about resolving this conflict with the international community.

I’m going to move -- instead of going regular order here, I’m going to start on the right.  Starting on the right.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  Can I get your reaction to Ann Curry’s interview with Iran’s President, just following up on these questions, in which he says that he doesn't plan to make a chemical weapon?  But then when he was asked about --

MR. CARNEY:  I think you mean -- sorry -- nuclear weapons.

Q    Yes, sorry, nuclear weapon.  And then when he was asked about Israel, though, he described Israel as an “occupier and a usurper government.”  So, first of all, could you respond to his initial comments about nuclear weapons?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, as I was just saying in answer to Roberta, there’s no question that new Iranian government has been taking a different approach in the things that it has said about a lot of issues.  And it has taken some actions that suggest a new approach, and I don’t want to diminish that.  That’s obviously welcome.  And as I said yesterday, we are interested in testing the seriousness of those assertions -- the desire, the stated desire by the new government to improve its relationships with the international community, knowing that the only way to do that is to deal with this problem.  So I would put that statement and that interview within the context of other things that have been said along those lines. 

And then the second question?

Q    The comments about Israel -- he calls it a "usurper government."  When he was asked directly about whether he believed whether the Holocaust was a myth, he sort of dodged that question.  So how do you square -- 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think that obviously -- I didn’t see the full text of the interview, so I'm taking your description of it in answering this question.  But these are obviously important issues, and we have seen certainly from President Rouhani's predecessor incredibly offensive statements with regards to Israel and the Jewish people.  So we are assessing and evaluating all the things that the new government is saying and doing.

Q    Did the President see the interview or the transcript?

MR. CARNEY:  The President is very, as he always is, up to date on developments on this issue.  I don’t know that he saw the interview, but I know he's certainly aware of many of the things that the new President has been saying, and members of his government have been saying.

Q    And then on Syria -- yesterday, a State Department spokesperson said about the Saturday deadline for Assad turning over his list of chemical weapons, she said, "We've never said that was a hard and fast deadline."  So do you expect to actually get a full accounting of Assad's chemical weapons by the first deadline?  And is it a hard and fast deadline?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, let me be clear about that.  We developed this framework because it is our stated goal to prevent Assad from ever using chemical weapons again.  And fulfilling this framework by removing those weapons from his control and destroying them would achieve that goal.  We believe the situation is so serious that action needs to be taken as swiftly as possible so the Assad regime can never use these weapons again.  And we expect the Syrian regime to abide by the timeline in the framework, and for Russia to hold the Assad regime to account.

Now, we need to stress that these are timelines and goals, and we are all aware that something as complicated as destroying a massive stockpile of chemical weapons takes time.  And as we've said -- 

Q    So it's not --

MR. CARNEY:  The framework makes a distinction -- and this is what's important, and this goes to the question -- between the initial information provided by Syria that would fall under a one-week timeframe and the formal CWC Declaration -- the Chemical Weapons Convention Declaration -- which is on a 30-day timeframe.

So we are looking at both and we will evaluate Syria's compliance as we see information from Syria.

Q    So I just want to be clear.  If they don’t give you a full accounting by Saturday, it doesn’t necessarily indicate the deal has fallen apart?

MR. CARNEY:  There's an initial provision of information, and that is the one-week deadline.  And we'll evaluate compliance when we see what the Syrians have provided.  And then there’s the 30-day deadline in accordance with the convention.

Yes.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  I’m not asking you about a Fed action, but asking you about the President’s performance on the economy. When the Fed says that the economy is simply not strong enough to take the training wheels off, is that not an indictment of the President’s policies, since he’s had five years now?

MR. CARNEY:  No.  I think that -- again, without commenting on Fed policy -- it is something that this President says every time he speaks about the economy, that we have more work to do.  What all the actions taken at various levels to address these severe economic straits we were in as a nation were meant to do was to help propel this economy in a different direction --

Q    But they’re saying it hasn’t -- you got us out of another potential depression, but the economy has not propelled. They haven’t taken the training wheels off.  Why is that?

MR. CARNEY:  The economy is not where we need it to be --

Q    Right.  Why?

MR. CARNEY:  What is true is that the economy policies that produced the worst recession in our lifetimes, that had us headed for a global depression with the prospect of 25 percent unemployment, created a situation where when the President was taking office, the nation was losing 800,000 jobs a month.  The nation’s economy was contracting at an annual rate of 8 percent. We ultimately lost more than 8 million jobs. 

And thanks to the grit and determination and resilience of the American people, thanks to policies that were put in place in the months and years after the economic collapse, we have seen this country grow steadily and produce 7.5 million private sector jobs.  By definition, that is not a completion of the job. 

And the fact is the unemployment rate is still too high; too many Americans are still looking for jobs.  And that’s why we should be investing in education, not slashing education, which Republicans, especially in the House, say we should be doing.  It’s why we should be investing in our infrastructure to create jobs today and create the foundation for future job growth and economic growth down the line.  And we should be investing in research and development and other aspects of our economy that will help it grow and help it create jobs, instead of cutting all that in order, in part, to preserve tax breaks for corporations that are unnecessary, or other privileges that don’t help our economy grow.

Q    Except, on that point of education, on August 2, 2011, the President signs a Budget Control Act of 2011 -- the last time we had this big debt ceiling fight -- into law.  And he says, “We have $2 trillion in deficit reduction,” the President says, “yet it also allows us to keep making key investments in things like education and research that lead to new jobs, and assures we’re not cutting too abruptly while the economy is still fragile.”  August 2011.  Here we are more than two years later, you’re saying the same thing about we need to invest in education --

MR. CARNEY:  And how many jobs has the economy created since then?

Q    And Bernanke yesterday said it’s not keeping up, that people are leaving the workforce. That's why the unemployment --

MR. CARNEY:  You and I, we’re going to do this on Crossfire one day, I promise.  And let’s be clear that I’ll be on one side and you’ll be on the other.  But what was true then is true today that we need to continue to invest in education.  We need to continue to invest in infrastructure.  We need to continue to invest in areas --

Q    The budget of 2011 did that, according to the President.  Two years later --

MR. CARNEY:  Okay, first of all, as we discussed yesterday, you need to -- we need to help you with your facts about what happened in 2011.  There was a $1.1 trillion non-defense discretionary cut, which allowed for us to preserve key investments in education and elsewhere.  There was a call for additional deficit reduction, which the President proposed a plan to do, which was balanced and the Republicans rejected.  A super committee was tasked with finding a way to achieve that, and if that was not achieved after another year, the sequester would kick into place. 

Now, the sequester is indiscriminant, across-the-board cuts, which Republicans bemoaned, until, lacking an alternative, they celebrated, including significant cuts to our military readiness and cuts to Head Start and other programs that are vital to millions of American families across the country.

So again, if you’re suggesting by this that we ought to be cutting education, you should say so.  If you’re suggesting we ought to be -- that's what the Republican budget proposes -- that we ought to be cutting -- we ought not to be funding infrastructure.

Q    The President said we were making those investments.  Two years later, the Fed says it’s just not growing.

MR. CARNEY:  Ed, have we been growing?  Has the economy been growing?  Yes, it is.

Q    Those are facts.  That's what he said.  He said it’s just not growing quick enough for us to take the training wheels off.

MR. CARNEY:  The President believes entirely that we need to continue to make the key investments to have the economy grow and create jobs.  And he agrees entirely with those who would say that the economic policies that were in place that helped precipitate the worst financial crisis and the worst economic crisis in our lifetimes are mirrored by the Republican proposals that we see today.  Republicans have put forward ideas that would bring us back to policies that caused the worst job loss of our lifetimes.  That's a bad idea.

Q    Last one is -- since you said you wanted to focus on facts, yesterday you and the President talked about how “never in the history of America has the debt ceiling been used to extort a President.”   You probably saw The Washington Post looked at that, looked at the facts and gave you four Pinocchios.  So are you going to correct that today?

MR. CARNEY:  There is no question that prior to 2011, there has never been a case where one party with one ideological agenda has threatened to default on the United States obligations for the first time in its --

Q    -- not the first time --

MR. CARNEY:  Did not -- was default --

Q    Richard Nixon wanted to lift the debt ceiling and Ted Kennedy and other Democrats brought up a campaign finance reform bill because of Watergate, correct?

MR. CARNEY:  No question.  Was anybody threatening default?

Q    -- another party, right?  Ted Kennedy --

MR. CARNEY:  Was anybody threatening default?  Was anybody saying, if I don't get this --

Q    They were days away.

MR. CARNEY:  -- if I don't get what I want, we'll allow the economy to default?

    

Q    That's what Ted Kennedy was demanding -- a campaign finance reform bill.  Days away.

MR. CARNEY:  Ed, again, go look at the facts.  Go look at the history. 

Q    So why did The Washington Post give you four Pinocchios?

MR. CARNEY:  You can ask The Washington Post.

Q    So you're going to continue to say this has never happened before?

MR. CARNEY:  Ed, why don't we look at what Republicans have said?  Threatening default is a bad idea.

Q    Let's look at what The Washington Post said.  You still haven't answered.  The Washington Post says four Pinnocchios.

MR. CARNEY:  Does anybody else want to watch Ed and me debate?

Q    Well, you won't answer it -- four Pinocchios.

MR. CARNEY:  Yes, I said it is absolutely correct that prior to 2011, no party to the budget agreements of the past had ever threatened default if it did not get its way ideologically.  It did not happen.  And in 2011, we saw it happen.  And even the flirtation with default, the fact that there were members of Congress on Capitol Hill who said, we should default rather than reach an agreement with President Obama, a compromise with President Obama -- that took an enormous toll on our economy. 

And people who think that this is fun and games ought to tell it to those people who did not get jobs in August of 2011 or September of 2011 because of that behavior; people who struggled to pay their bills for longer than they should have because of that decision.  It was a mistake then, and I think the American people saw it as a mistake.  And a lot of people, including a lot of Republicans, see it as a mistake today.

Jim.

Q    Jay, what has the President done in the last 24 hours to prevent a shutdown or default?  And is he just stepping back and watching the Republicans duke it out?  Is that what the strategy is at the White House?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, he didn't make any videos, but he did meet with leading members of the business community to talk about the need for all of us to work together to grow the economy, ensure that the middle class is strong and getting stronger, and to avoid both a government shutdown and a default. 

I think you saw a statement from the Chamber of Commerce.  You've seen statements from across the board, including, as I've noted, from Republicans of all stripes who believe that the strategy, if you can call it that, employed by House Republicans is a recipe for economic disaster and, at least according to them, trouble for the Republican Party. 

The President has made clear that he’s willing to discuss how we move forward on our budget issues.  He’s put forward a compromise budget proposal.  He spent a lot of time this year meeting with Republicans who said they were interested in finding common ground on our budget challenges.  And even as he has done that, we've presided over economic growth and job creation, and a reduction of our deficit by half.

He understands we need to do more, but we need to do it in a way that’s fair to the middle class.  What is not fair to the middle class is a shutdown that hurts the middle class.  What is not fair to the middle class is default for the sake of the ideological goal of defunding or delaying the Affordable Care Act “I’m either going to take your job -- make sure you lose your job, or take away your access to health insurance” -- that’s the choice.

Q    Are you quietly rooting for Ted Cruz?

MR. CARNEY:  I saw that somebody suggested he might be a secret ally of the Democrats.  I’m not sure that’s the case.  But I think that a lot of people have noted that the effort to defund the Affordable Care Act is going nowhere, and wasting time on it when we have urgent deadlines to protect our economy and allow it to grow and help the middle class is quixotic at best.

Q    And, Jay, speaking of Obamacare and jobs lost, the Cleveland Clinic says that because of concerns with health care reform, it’s cutting $330 million out of its budget, that there may be jobs lost as a result.  What does the President have to say to Americans who may lose their jobs due to the implementation of Obamacare?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I have not seen any specifics on that particular report.  What I can say is that there is no data that bears out the assertion that the economy is losing jobs because of the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.  What we have seen, even though you --

Q    A spokesman for the Cleveland Clinic is saying --

MR. CARNEY:  Again, Jim, I appreciate it, and I’m saying I don’t know the details of that story.  What I can tell you is that when Republicans stand up and say that the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare is raising health care costs, they stand there and say that with a straight face, knowing that the last three years have seen a reduction in the growth of health care -- the lowest increase in health care costs in 50 years, in the three years since the Affordable Care Act was passed.  Okay?  So the cost of health care has -- the rate of increase has been going down dramatically, and partly that is due to the Affordable Care Act. 

What we have seen in the data is that the vast majority of the jobs created of those 7.5 million -- vast majority are full-time jobs, not part-time jobs, as Republicans and opponents of the Affordable Care Act will tell you -- again, contradicting the evidence that people are only creating part-time jobs in order to --

Q    You’re saying that there is no evidence that any jobs will be lost due to the implementation of health care?

MR. CARNEY:  I'm saying that there’s no data that backs that up.  I’m not saying that there isn’t anecdotal evidence.  There is some anecdotal evidence, some people -- there has been an ongoing trend of employers, for example, shedding employees from employer-sponsored health care plans.  One of the reasons why we needed health care reform was to deal with that growing problem. And then when you see some employers say, well, now we’re continuing that trend but this time we’re going to blame it on a new law, it doesn’t really pass the seriousness test because this has been a trend that’s been ongoing for a long time. 

And one of the reasons why, for people who cannot or do not have access to employer-based insurance, can now buy -- when the marketplaces are in effect, can now buy insurance at affordable rates that they could not buy before.  They did not have access to affordable rates.  I said the other day that there was a study that just came out that showed that nearly six in 10 Americans who are uninsured will have access to health insurance at a cost of less than $100 per month. 

And if all governors followed the Republican governors in some states who have fully implemented or are fully implementing the Affordable Care Act, including the expansion in Medicaid, that nearly eight in 10 uninsured Americans would have that access.  That’s a huge deal for those Americans.  It may not be a huge deal for people who don’t really offer alternatives or care that much about whether those uninsured Americans get health insurance, but it certainly matters to them and their families.

Q    And you mentioned the video.  You’re obviously referring to Speaker Boehner’s video.  Is that right?

MR. CARNEY:  Might have been.  (Laughter.)

Q    -- that his office put out this morning, saying that the President is more willing to negotiate with Vladimir Putin than he is with House Republicans.

MR. CARNEY:  I’d say two things.  One, the President will be --

Q    -- he has spent more time with Vladimir Putin.

MR. CARNEY:  That is irrefutably false.  The President has spent an enormous amount of time with John Boehner over the years.  And I have no doubt and you can expect that the President will be in conversations with congressional leaders in the coming days about the need to deal with these pressing deadlines.  The video I thought demonstrated a little Putin envy, a little odd bit of Putin envy on behalf of the Speaker.  (Laughter.)  But maybe he can explain that.

Q    What is Putin envy, exactly?

Q    Jay, the President’s Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, Stephen Rapp, said yesterday that President Assad should absolutely be charged for crimes against humanity and war crimes. Is it the policy of the U.S. government that Assad should be charged for war crimes?

MR. CARNEY:  There is no doubt that the Assad regime is responsible for crimes against humanity and violation of the laws of war.  Since the regime began its brutal campaign against the Syria people, the United States has been clear that those responsible for the atrocities in Syria must be held accountable.

We have worked to support efforts by the international community to gather evidence that could help build the foundation for future efforts to hold accountable those responsible for those atrocities in Syria.  And these efforts include the U.N. Independent Commission of Inquiry on Syria, established by the U.N. Human Rights Council, and the Syrian Justice and Accountability Center, an independent organization that the international community established in 2012.

So it’s our view that Assad and his regime are responsible for these, and we have undertaken all these efforts that I just described.

Q    So are you saying it is the policy that Assad should be charged with war crimes?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, our position that those responsible for the atrocities in Syria, atrocities that are clearly crimes against humanity, must be held accountable.  Syria itself is not an ICC state party, and we have seen that there is no realistic prospect that the Security Council will refer the Syrian situation to the ICC or agree to establish a U.N. tribunal, as was done for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.  But we still believe that those responsible for these atrocities must be held accountable.

Q    So I want to ask you about something you said at least twice over the past week from that podium.  You said that Assad, in a network interview, claimed that he did not have chemical weapons.  What were you talking about?  And is that statement true?

MR. CARNEY:  Prior to the agreement by the Syrian government, the Assad government, to the Russian proposition agreed to with the United States that Assad would give up his chemical weapons, they have insisted for years that they do not possess chemical weapons.  And when asked, they have demurred or refused to answer, or said at different times that they don’t have them.  I don’t think anybody doubts that that was their position and that it has changed in the wake of the credible threat of U.S. force in response to Assad’s use of chemical weapons and the developments that we’ve seen since then.

Q    But, Jay, you have said before that you would never -- it’s important to have credibility and to get the facts right from the podium.  So I’m just asking you very specifically -- because you said this twice -- you said, and the most recent one was just on Monday -- “President Assad, in a taped interview, appeared on a network claiming that Syria did not have chemical weapons.”  You said that a week ago today.

MR. CARNEY:  Look, I don’t have the transcript of the interview.  There’s no question that --

Q    I have it here.  He did not say that.  In fact, he said exactly the opposite.  He said, “We never said that we have it, and we never said that we don’t have it.”  Now, you said twice --

MR. CARNEY:  Okay, Jon --

Q    I’m just asking --

MR. CARNEY:  Okay, fair point.

Q    -- did you speak inaccurately?  Was that inaccurate?

MR. CARNEY:  I will concede, having not seen the transcript recently, that he did not -- I’m taking your word for it -- say, we don’t have them.  He refused to answer the question.  And for 20 years Syria refused to answer the question.  If it is now ABC’s position that, in fact, Syria has all along admitted --

Q    ABC is not the issue.  I’m trying to get at whether or not you’re speaking accurately from the podium.  And if you want to correct the record, that’s fine.  Because Assad said in his latest interview that he’s never said one way or the other, and you’ve said otherwise.  It’s just a matter of credibility here.

MR. CARNEY:  Five nations in the world, Syria among them, have refused to sign the Chemical Weapons Convention.

Q    I understand.  I’m asking about what you said about the interview Assad did last week.

MR. CARNEY:  And I understand.  What was clear from that interview -- and I accept the time you spent dissecting these words -- but I accept that Assad did not admit that he has chemical weapons, nor did he deny that he had them.  What the world has known for 20 years, since the CWC was opened for signatories, is that Syria would not admit to having stockpiles of chemical weapons, even though the world knew they had them, and that that changed because of the pressure placed on Syria by the United States and its allies.

Major.

Q    President Rouhani said in his interview that he has complete authority to negotiate a nuclear weapons deal with the United States.  Does this government believe that?

MR. CARNEY:  What we believe is that the dramatic effects on the Iranian economy of the unprecedented sanctions regime has made it clear to leaders of that country that it would be in their best interests to deal with this problem.  Whether they will deal with it remains to be seen. 

And the President has made it his policy from the time he ran for office and took office that he is willing to meet with and the United States is willing to have bilateral negotiations with Iran if Iran is serious about addressing the problem that the international community asserts that exists, which is that Iran continues to pursue a nuclear weapon.

Q    This goes to an assessment I’m trying to gather about this new government --

MR. CARNEY:  About who’s in charge.

Q    -- and who’s in charge, and what do we deduce differently about Rouhani than we did about Ahmadinejad, and its relationship with the clerics and the leadership above the presidency in Iran.

MR. CARNEY:  These are excellent questions and ones that I know keep Iran experts up late at night.  And I think that the only way to know the answer to those questions is to test the proposition, is to test the assertions of the Rouhani government that it wants to improve its relations with the international community, including the United States, knowing that the only way to do that is to solve this problem, which is come clean with the international community; rejoin it by agreeing to in a verifiable way give up its nuclear weapons ambitions.

Q    In the last couple of days, Iran has released 11 political prisoners, some of them with notable histories in Iran. Rouhani also said in his interview that he would be open to social media access in Iran that had been denied for years.  Where would you place these two developments in the arc --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’d say that the release of political prisoners is a concrete action.  And I would say that rhetorically entertaining the idea of providing access to social media is rhetoric.  And it’s welcome rhetoric.  And I think that we are all watching very closely and with interest, and listening closely and with interest to the things that the new leadership has been saying. 

And we are very interested in testing whether or not their claimed desire to improve relations with the international community will be backed up by action, and we hope it is.  We believe, as we’ve said all along, that there is still an opportunity to resolve this issue diplomatically.  It is certainly in the world's interest to resolve it diplomatically.  And we continue to pursue that through the P5-plus-1, through various means.  But actions, in this case -- words are no substitute for actions.  And we need to follow through on these openings and see how serious the Iranians are.

Q    I know you told us there's nothing scheduled in New York.  What I'm more curious about is if it's even too early to suggest a meeting between these two particular leaders.

MR. CARNEY:  I would say no, because, as I noted when I did not do justice in my reading of a sentence from the President's first inaugural, that he has been saying all along and did so as a candidate that he’d be willing to have that meeting, and he’d be willing to have the U.S. meet and negotiate directly in a bilateral way with the Iranians, as well as, of course, through the P5-plus-1, provided that Iran demonstrates a seriousness about dealing with this nuclear weapons program.  And we will see.  We will see. 

Q    So it's possible?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I would just say that in general, it's possible.  But it has always been possible.  The extended hand has been there from the moment the President was sworn into office.

Q    Might be more possible considering the events we've just been talking about.

MR. CARNEY:  I would say that we obviously notice a significant change in language and tone from the new Iranian government when compared to its predecessor.  It's rather dramatic.  But it's important when we're talking about this incredibly serious matter of a nuclear weapons program that we not just take Iran's words for it, that we back it up and see if it's real.

Q    Two quick questions on Syria.  Getting back to what we discussed earlier, forgetting or setting aside for a moment the $1 billion figure that Assad mentioned, that seems more -- a substantive question is the willingness of this government to state publicly it will finance, to whatever degree necessary, because it is such a priority, the pursuit of nonproliferation, getting rid of these weapons, the mechanisms by which they will be destroyed, and that price is really no object, that whatever the price is required, the money will be found, and if it needs to come from the United States it will be there.  Can you say that?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think that this is all premature.  I haven't seen anything beyond what President Assad has said about --

Q    But it’s going to cost -- everyone knows that.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, let's just --

Q    What I'm trying to get at is the commitment of the United States government to prioritize that in tax dollars, because it's --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we certainly believe that successfully implementing this framework -- and by successfully, I mean removing from his control Assad's chemical weapons and ultimately destroying them -- is very much in the interest of the United States, and is, as a matter of cost, comparatively, when you talk about using military force.  Again, without dealing with numbers, the use of military force is costly no matter how you look at it even when you're talking about something of limited duration and scope. 

So it is profoundly in our interest and it is an economical proposition, broadly speaking, to remove successfully Assad's weapons from him and destroy them.  I would also say that this is a goal that is an international goal, and it is a goal that is being worked on with partner nations, and worked on with fellow members of the United Nations Security Council.  So the responsibility for fulfilling the framework will not rest with the United States only.

Q    One last thing about the Saturday deadline.  You obviously know, as people scrutinize Syrian compliance, the first and lowest hurdle of that compliance is providing information they already possess.  That should not be a difficult timeline for the Syrians to meet, since they already have the information themselves.  And any slippage of that Saturday deadline would suggest to people looking on the outside that the United States might be flexible in ways it ought not to be to achieve compliance. 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, we will evaluate --

Q    -- information they already possess should be handed over to prove their seriousness with complying with this particular --

MR. CARNEY:  I wouldn't disagree with that.  And I think that we will evaluate Syria's seriousness about compliance, based on a variety of benchmarks.  And the first one is the seven-day deadline. 

Q    The expectation of this government is that that information is provided on Saturday and not a day later?

MR. CARNEY:  We certainly expect that Syria will uphold its responsibility to provide this initial piece of information.  And we will evaluate their seriousness based on both their timeliness and the content of their submission.

Q    Can you tell us what the White House's purpose was in calling the Hill yesterday on the Fed nomination?

MR. CARNEY:  I'm not aware that the White House called the Hill on the Fed nomination or any nomination.  You have to frame your question in a way that I can answer it.

Q    We heard that the White House -- it was reported that White House officials placed some calls to Banking Committee members to talk about the Fed nomination.

MR. CARNEY:  I don't have anything new for you on that or any other personnel matter.

Q    Jay, the stock market, of course, yesterday rose to new highs.  I'm sure you know about that.

MR. CARNEY:  Let me just say I don't comment on Fed policy.

Q    I know that.  I'm not asking about Fed policy this time.  But does the President have any concerns that a potential government shutdown, or a potential default, or both would damage investor confidence?

MR. CARNEY:  Oh, yes.  Unquestionably.  Because history proves that it would be damaging to confidence in the U.S. economy, especially when there's even a flirtation with default. We saw it in the summer of 2011.  Every economist will tell you that our economy took a hit because of the suggestion that we might actually default because of the ideological demands placed on those negotiations by Republicans. 

That was a bad outcome and wholly unnecessary.  And we need to make sure that we don't repeat it -- which is why we should -- when it comes to the responsibility, never unmet, of ensuring that Congress pays the bills it incurs, it should just be done.  And nobody should attach poison pills to it and say that if I don't get my poison pill, then let default happen.  That's just irresponsible.  And that's the position we’ve taken because of the threat to our economy that even the flirtation with default poses.

Q    All right.  To follow on Major’s question on Iran, is it accurate then to say that the White House is open to or preparing for a meeting?

MR. CARNEY:  There are no meetings currently planned.

Q    I understand that.

MR. CARNEY:  And the openness question I answered.  We’ve been open as a general proposition to bilateral discussions with the Iranians since the President took office.  And that was a controversial position in the Democratic primaries.  It was a controversial position in the general election in 2008, but it was the position the President believed was the right one to take.  And it’s the position he holds today.  It’s conditioned upon Iran being serious about wanting to resolve this obstacle, which is its insistence on developing a nuclear weapons program.

The way to rejoin the international community and relieve the pressure on the Iranian economy that has been imposed on it by this sanctions regime is to come to terms with the international community, forsake and give up in a verifiable way Iran’s nuclear weapons program, and then move forward.  So we believe there’s a window of opportunity that remains open to do that.  It will not remain open forever, and we have been certainly interested in some of what we have heard from the new Iranian government about their interest in improving relations with the international community.

Q    And what about the trip tomorrow?  Can you tell us anything -- is that part of the middle class tour thing?

MR. CARNEY:  I think we'll have more information on it, but the answer is, he will be, obviously, talking about the economy. 

Cheryl.

Q    Yesterday, to the business roundtable, the President said he was willing to discuss Republican priorities.  Is one of those priorities the Keystone Pipeline?  Was that on the table?

MR. CARNEY:  I mean, if the President said he was willing to discuss Republican priorities, I think that’s consistent with what he's said all along and demonstrated in all the negotiations he's had over the years with Republicans over economic and budget policy.  I don’t have a specific item to hang on it.  The decision about that pipeline obviously is something that’s reviewed and evaluated and housed over -- by and over at the State Department. 

So I think what the President said goes to what we've been discussing earlier, which is, when it comes to reaching a broader budget agreement, the President has consistently been willing to seek common ground and to make reasonable concessions to Republicans and to their priorities.  What he has not been willing to do is stick it to the middle class in order to achieve some of their ideological agenda priorities, and reach a compromise that benefits the wealthy and corporations, rewards insurance companies, but doesn’t help the middle class -- in fact, hurts the middle class.

But, as you saw in his budget submission this year, as you saw in his negotiations with the Speaker of the House at the end of last year, he has been willing to put forward a plan that addresses some of their stated priorities, and a plan that, as scored by outside groups, would significantly reduce the deficit further beyond what we've done thus far, and do it in a way that goes beyond the sequester, replaces the sequester, but allows for investments in the middle class and investments in our future by doing it in a balanced way.  That’s his position, as it ever has been. 

Mr. Nakamura.

Q    Jay, on immigration -- the President said the other day in the interview with Telemundo that there's nothing more he can do about deportations.  But immigration advocates are calling this a moral crisis, the number of deportations under the Obama administration.  Is the White House basically saying that if Congress does not pass immigration reform, your hands are tied, there's nothing else you can do, and these high numbers of deportations will continue the next three years?

MR. CARNEY:  What he has said and what he said in that interview is that there isn't a plan B here to comprehensive immigration reform.  And when it comes to deportations, or trying to freeze them, he said, "To do so would be ignoring the law in a way that I think would be very difficult to defend legally.  So that is not an option."  And that’s just the case. 

Q    So there are no other options?  There's no other things the White House can do other to stop or --

MR. CARNEY:  Pass immigration reform, comprehensive immigration reform.  The whole purpose of doing immigration reform in a comprehensive way is that doing it that way solves a lot of problems, helps the economy, helps the middle class, increases growth, reduces the deficit, and resolves a lot of the problems around the 11 million undocumented people in this country, and provides a clear path to citizenship with a lot of hurdles along the way, but a clear path.

So it was that approach that garnered a broad, bipartisan majority in the Senate.  And it is that approach that if the Speaker of the House took a break from the civil war he's engaged in with his own party and put the Senate bill on the floor, would get a majority in the House, and then the President could sign it into law and do the Republican Party a huge favor by removing this problem for their political future.

Q    Some of the White House allies on immigration, some of the groups have said in recent days after that interview, that the President -- if immigration reform isn't passed, and in some ways it's out of the President's hands, he could go down as having one of the worst records on immigration because of those high levels of deportations.  What's your reaction to that?

MR. CARNEY:  The President is obligated to enforce the law.  And as he said in Telemundo, there's not -- immigration reform proponents should not believe that there is some plan B here that is a viable alternative to the House of Representatives doing the right thing by America and allowing a bill that has broad support across the country, that has broad bipartisan support in the Senate come to the floor so that it can be voted on and passed.  Just do it.  It won’t hurt.  And the benefits will be enormous for the economy, for the middle class, and even for the Republican Party.

Q    Two quick Congress questions.  You said earlier that the President would be in conversations with congressional leaders in the coming days.  Can you elaborate on who he will speak with, when, and in what format?

MR. CARNEY:  I can only say that you can expect that he’ll have conversations with leaders in Congress about these looming deadlines and about the need for Congress to do the right thing, make sure they don't shut down the government and make sure they don't default.  I don't have any more details for you.

Q    And there are some congressional Democrats who believe a short-term continuing resolution locking in sequester and what they believe are huge cuts in investments to education, infrastructure, other things the President believes in, would be a bad thing, perhaps even worse than shutdown.  Why is a short-term CR better in the President’s view?

MR. CARNEY:  Than shutdown?

Q    Yes.

MR. CARNEY:  The administration is willing to support a short-term continuing resolution to allow critical government functions to operate without interruption, and looks forward to working with the Congress on appropriations legislation for the remainder of the fiscal year that preserves critical national priorities, protects national security, and makes investments to spur economic growth and job creation for years to come.

That's our position that we should -- that as an alternative to a bigger budget deal, which unfortunately doesn't look achievable between now and October 1st, the government must not be allowed to shut down, and that we would be willing to support a short-term continuing resolution to allow time for further negotiations.

We have seen because of the -- in one of the episodic examples of the House Republicans’ inability to pass legislation, the bill through the transportation and housing committee that was based on the Ryan budget failed.  The House Republican budget is not an option, obviously.  And we need to negotiate further to find a compromise that allows for investments that are necessary to spur economic growth.

Q    When the President has done these middle class economic events on the road before, Republicans often accuse him of engaging in campaign-style politics, particularly when there are crises in Washington.  Can you address that concern?

MR. CARNEY:  The President of the United States, as was true of all of his predecessors and will be true of all of his successors, believes that it is absolutely the right thing to do to travel around the country to talk about his agenda and what we need to do as a nation to grow the economy.  He’ll continue to do that.  And, ultimately, members of Congress of both parties should cast their votes based on what they believe is right for the country, not because this President or any President says they should vote one way or the other.

And so, because we live in a democracy, and because we have representative government and we have Congress, and two houses of Congress, it’s important to talk to the people who then are able to express their own opinion about what they think we should be doing in Washington.  And he’ll continue to do it.

Q    Can I also ask -- in 2011, it was reported that in the White House some were arguing that Republicans should get their shutdown and learn their lesson.  That’s obviously not the White House’s public posture now; it’s not the President’s opinion.  But have there been any people in the White House arguing for that this time around?

MR. CARNEY:  Not that I’ve heard.  Look, it is not good -- it would not be good for the middle class of this country, or for our general economy, to see a lapse in the funding of government, essential government operations.  It hasn’t been in the past, and it wouldn’t be in the near future.  So that’s why, in answer to Jonathan’s question, we are willing to accept a short-term continuing resolution keeping funding at current levels to avert a shutdown and allow us time to continue to negotiate over a sensible compromise on a broader budget agreement.  All of that would be easier if the House would simply appoint conferees, as they said they would, to negotiate the budget passed by the Senate and the House.  But because they haven’t done that for the past six months, and we obviously need a little more time, we would support that short-term CR.

But it is not our policy and not our view that a shutdown would be anything but bad.

April.

Q    Jay, on two subjects.  Debate on the Hill right now -- Democrats and Republicans are fighting over SNAP.  Where does the White House stand when it comes to these large cuts in SNAP?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, as we said at the time when this was evolving, it’s unconscionable in our view to literally take food out of the mouths of hungry Americans in order to, again, achieve some ideological goal.  And there’s a very interesting article in National Review Online right now that argues that this is bad policy for the Republicans, that conservatives are crazy to do this and they should not do it.  It is wrong. 

This program lifts 4 million people out of poverty every year.  And to punish them when we can protect the most vulnerable Americans, move forward economically, grow our economy, invest in our economy, and reduce the deficit if we do it in a balanced and responsible way, is just terrible policy and it’s insensitive.

Q    I want to go to another subject.  I’m looking at a February 25th, 2013 briefing on whitehouse.gov with Janet Napolitano standing at that podium where you are, and all of this comes to play in the midst of a possible government shutdown October 1, the money woes in October that could be coming.  And one thing that’s striking, it says -- and it kind of goes to the Navy Yard situation as well -- she responded to Ed Henry and she said, look, I don’t think we can maintain the same level of security at all places around the country with sequester as without sequester.  Did sequester affect what happened at the Navy Yard?  Were there less patrol officers there because of sequester?

MR. CARNEY:  I think I got this question earlier in the week, and I don’t have an answer to that.  I’ve seen some answers from people who have in-line responsibility for it -- well, no, from folks at the Navy or the Navy Yard, and I would refer you to them.  I’m not aware that that was an issue, and I think that what you saw was a rather remarkably fast first responders response, based on the accounts I’ve read.  But having said that, I would refer you to the Navy Department, to Pentagon on it.

Q    And staying in line on the financial picture, with that -- with what Janet Napolitano said in February, and again, looking at the picture in October, the possibilities of the picture in October, where will the nation stand?  I mean, we asked her at that time, would we be vulnerable?  She said yes --“yes.”  Will the nation -- if there is a shutdown and other things happen in October, how vulnerable will this nation be with sequester already in play?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, there’s no question, April, that a shutdown would have negative effects on millions of people and on our economy.  And it’s wholly unnecessary to entertain a shutdown, again, for the purposes for achieving some empty political victory, which would turn to dust and ashes pretty quickly politically. 

So we don't need to do that.  We need to just responsibly find common-sense solutions to our budget challenges and not refight, re-litigate old battles.  And, in that spirit, we've said that we would accept a short-term continuing resolution to allow for further negotiation.  We've also said that in the name of the economy and in the proposition that the United States always pays its bills and meets its obligations, nobody should be entertaining for political purposes the prospects of default.

Chris, and then Mike.

Q    The Oklahoma National Guard announced this week that it will no longer accept spousal benefit applications for troops in same-sex marriages, despite guidance from the administration saying these benefits should be available nationwide.  This means Oklahoma is joining Texas, Mississippi, and Louisiana in withholding these benefits.  Is the President aware of this and believe these installations are violating federal policy?

MR. CARNEY:  I do not know the answer to the question about the President.  I would refer you to the Department of Defense on it.  And I can take your question and we can talk about it later.  I'm just not aware of these developments.

Q    Just a quick question, Jay.  Why is the Vice President going to Colorado, not the President?  Will the President be looking at a trip later?

MR. CARNEY:  I don't have any scheduling announcements for the President.  Obviously, the President is going to the United Nations General Assembly on Monday and Tuesday.  And the Vice President is going out to view the damage caused by the terrible flooding in Colorado and to meet with affected families.

Q    -- scheduling thing?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think it's entirely appropriate for the Vice President to make this visit with Dr. Biden.  I don't have any other updates on the President's schedule.

END
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