President Obama Welcomes the Jackie Robinson West All Stars to the White House

President Barack Obama welcomes the Jackie Robinson West All Stars to the Oval Office

President Barack Obama welcomes the Jackie Robinson West All Stars to the Oval Office, Nov. 6, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Earlier this afternoon, the Jackie Robinson West All Stars -- the U.S. champions in this year's Little League World Series -- stopped by the White House for a visit with the President and the First Lady.

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President Obama awards the Medal of Honor to First Lt. Cushing

November 06, 2014 | 9:57 | Public Domain

On November 6, 2014, President Obama awarded the Medal of Honor to First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing, who fought in the Civil War.

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President Obama Awards the Medal of Honor to First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing

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Earlier this afternoon, President Obama awarded the Medal of Honor to First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing for his heroic acts of bravery while serving as an artillery commander during the Civil War.

On July 3, 1863, Lieutenant Cushing went above and beyond the call of duty when fighting against Confederate forces. Even after being struck twice, he refused to abandon his command. As a result, his gallant efforts helped open wide gaps in the Confederate Army's line of command.

The Medal of Honor is typically awarded within a few years of the action, but as the President noted, “sometimes even the most extraordinary stories can get lost in the passage of time.” At today's ceremony, the President was joined by more than two dozen of Lieutenant Cushing's family members. Helen Loring Ensign, a cousin twice removed of the Lieutenant, accepted the award on his behalf.


“For this American family, this story isn’t some piece of obscure history -- it is an integral part of who they are. And today, our whole nation shares their pride, and celebrates what this story says about who we are.”


Kajal Singh is an intern in the White House Office of Digital Strategy.
Related Topics: Grab Bag

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on the Anniversary of the Shepard Byrd Hate Crimes Act

Five years ago, I was proud to sign the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crime Prevention Act into law – a law that strengthened the protections against crimes based on the color of our skin, the love in our hearts, the faith we practice, or the place of our birth. 

This law gave the Justice Department new tools for prosecuting criminals.  It directed new resources to law enforcement agencies, so they could better serve their communities.  And it did what we want all our laws to do: it reflected and strengthened our core national values.  By recognizing violent bigotry as an especially dangerous crime – one that not only harms individuals, but threatens the social fabric that binds our country together – the Shepard Byrd Hate Crimes Act has made it possible for more Americans to live freely, openly and safely, and has reinforced our nation’s sacred commitment to equality for all. 

Since this law was passed, the FBI and Department of Justice have vigorously investigated and prosecuted dozens of hate crime cases nationwide, including attacks on minorities, gays and lesbians, and people with disabilities.  The number of individuals charged with hate crimes has increased significantly over the past five years. And state and local law enforcement officers and other community members have received training in how to recognize and address hate crimes. The law is working.

Our job isn’t done. We must continue to stand together against intolerance and hate wherever they occur, and respond decisively when they lead to violence.  Ours is a country built on the notion that all people are created equal.  It’s up to us to make that ideal real, in our words and deeds as well as in our laws – to ensure that, in America, everyone is treated with the respect and dignity they deserve, no matter who they are or who they love. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Barack Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key Administration posts:

  •          Michael A. Strautmanis – Member, President’s Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities
  •          Lorna M. Johnson – Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
  •          Lisa M. Caputo – Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board
  •          Elizabeth B. Castor – Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board

President Obama said, “I am honored that these talented individuals have decided to serve our country.  They bring their years of experience and expertise to this Administration, and I look forward to working with them in the months and years to come.”

President Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Michael A. Strautmanis, Appointee for Member, President's Committee for People with Intellectual Disabilities

Michael A. Strautmanis is Vice President of Strategic Programs for Corporate Citizenship at the Walt Disney Company.  Mr. Strautmanis previously served as Deputy Assistant to the President and Counselor for Strategic Engagement at the White House from 2011 to 2013.  Mr. Strautmanis was also Chief of Staff for the Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs at the White House from 2009 to 2011.  He was Senior Counsel for Obama for America from 2007 to 2009 and previously served as Chief Counsel and Deputy Chief of Staff for then-Senator Obama.  Earlier in his career, Mr. Strautmanis served as Chief of Staff to the General Counsel at the U.S. Agency for International Development from 1998 to 2000.  He began his career practicing complex litigation and employment law at Sidley Austin in Chicago.  Mr. Strautmanis received a B.S. from the University of Illinois and a J.D. from the University of Illinois College of Law.

Lorna M. Johnson, Appointee for Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Lorna M. Johnson is Administrative Director and Chief Financial Officer of Advanced Family Care Medical Group, which she founded in 1995. She has been a Certified Nurse Midwife and Nurse Practitioner since 1995 and has practiced at Advanced Family Care Medical Group since 1995.  She also practiced at the California Hospital Medical Center from 1995 to 1997, the Daniel Freeman Memorial Hospital in 1995, and the Van Ness Manchester Women’s Clinic from 1995 to 1996.  Ms. Johnson was a Lecturer and Assistant Clinical Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles from 1995 to 2000 and was named Honorary Consul for Jamaica in California in 2011.  Ms. Johnson is the Founder of a non-profit, Compassion for Teen Life.  She was a member of the National Finance Committee for the Obama for America campaign in 2012.  Ms. Johnson received a B.S. from the University of La Verne and an M.S. from the University of Southern California.

Lisa M. Caputo, Appointee for Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board

Lisa M. Caputo is Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing and Communications Officer for The Travelers Companies, Inc., positions she has held since 2011.  She was first appointed to the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board in 2010.  Ms. Caputo held several executive positions at Citigroup from 2000 to 2011, including Executive Vice President of Global Marketing and Corporate Affairs and Chief Marketing Officer.  In addition, Citigroup created a membership business, Women & Co., which she led as Chair and CEO from 2000 to 2010.  She held senior executive marketing and communications positions with The Walt Disney Company from 1998 to 1999 and the CBS Corporation from 1996 to 1998.  Prior to her business career, from 1993 to 1996, she served as Deputy Assistant to the President and Press Secretary to the First Lady at the White House.  Ms. Caputo is a member of the Board of Directors of Best Buy Co., Inc., The Sesame Workshop, WNET Channel 13, and New Visions for Public Schools.  Ms. Caputo received a B.A. from Brown University and an M.A. in Journalism from Northwestern University.

Elizabeth B. Castor, Appointee for Member, J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board

Elizabeth B. Castor is the former President of the University of South Florida (USF), a position she held from 1994 to 1999.  She was first appointed to the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board in 2011 and was elected Vice Chair in 2014.  From 1986 to 1994, she was the Florida Commissioner of Education and the first woman ever elected to the Florida cabinet.  She served as a Florida State Senator after being elected in 1976, then again in 1982 and 1984.  Ms. Castor has held various leadership positions in education, most recently as the Executive Director of the Patel Center for Global Solutions at USF.  She is a member of the Tampa Bay Committee on Foreign Relations and the Society of International Business Fellows.  Ms. Castor received a B.A. from Rowan University and an M.Ed. from the University of Miami.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Benjamin Rhodes’ Meeting with Non-Governmental Organizations Working to Promote Human Rights and Democracy in Burma

Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications and Assistant to the President Benjamin Rhodes met today with representatives of non-governmental organizations working to promote human rights and democracy in Burma.  Mr. Rhodes noted that human rights and democracy are at the core of our bilateral agenda with Burma, engaged the group on their concerns about the challenges confronting reform in Burma, and outlined the President’s priorities for future engagement with the Government of Burma.  Mr. Rhodes underscored the importance of addressing the humanitarian needs, rights, and status of the Rohingya community in Rakhine State, and other Muslim minority communities throughout Burma.  He emphasized the need for constitutional reforms that transfer political power to a civilian-led, elected government and ensure the people of Burma can elect the leader of their choice.  He also discussed the status of the ongoing ceasefire negotiations with ethnic nationalities, the 2015 elections, the importance of establishing an office representing the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in Burma, and concerns about media freedoms, protection of the rights of women, and political prisoners.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Medal of Honor Presentation to First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing

Roosevelt Room

12:01 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Please, everyone, have a seat.  Well, on behalf of Michelle and myself, welcome to the White House.  One hundred fifty-one years ago, as our country struggled for its survival, President Lincoln dedicated the battlefield at Gettysburg as “a final resting place for those who died here, that the nation might live.”  Today, the nation that lived pauses to pay tribute to one of those who died there -- to bestow the Medal of Honor, our highest military decoration, upon First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing.

Now, typically, this medal must be awarded within a few years of the action.  But sometimes even the most extraordinary stories can get lost in the passage of time.  So I want to thank the more than two dozen family members of Lieutenant Cushing who are here -- including his cousin, twice removed, Helen Loring Ensign, from Palm Desert, California, who will accept this medal.  For this American family, this story isn’t some piece of obscure history -- it is an integral part of who they are.  And today, our whole nation shares their pride, and celebrates what this story says about who we are.

This award would not have been possible without the tireless efforts of supporters who worked for decades to make this day a reality.  And I want to especially acknowledge Margaret Zerwekh, who is a historian from Delafield, Wisconsin, where Lieutenant Cushing was born.  And there’s Margaret back there.  Good to see you, Margaret.  Margaret is also the granddaughter of a Union veteran, and lives on a property that was once owned by Cushing’s father.  When she discovered this story, she spent over 25 years researching, writing letters, and raising her voice to ensure that this American soldier received the recognition that he so richly he deserved.  And what’s more, she even managed to bring Republicans and Democrats together -- (laughter) -- to make this happen.  Margaret, we may call on you again sometime in the next several months.  (Laughter.) 

Yet this medal is about more than one soldier or one family.  It reflects our obligations as a country to the men and women in our armed services -- obligations that continue long after they return home, after they’ve removed their uniforms, and even -- perhaps especially -- after they’ve laid down their lives.  And so this medal is a reminder that no matter how long it takes, it is never too late to do the right thing. 

Alonzo, or “Lon,” Cushing was raised by his widowed mother in Fredonia, NY with his siblings, including three brothers who also fought for the Union.  As the congressman who recommended Lon to West Point wrote, “His mother is poor, but highly committed and her son will do honor to the position.”  After graduating from West Point, Lon was assigned to Battery A, 4th United States Artillery.  From Bull Run to Antietam, from Chancellorsville to Fredericksburg, Lon fought bravely and developed a reputation for his cool, his competence, and his courage under fire.

But it was at Gettysburg, what one newspaper later called “emphatically a soldiers’ battle,” where Lon would be immortalized.  It was July 3rd, 1863, the final day of a grueling three-day fight.  Lon commanded his battery along the wall on Cemetery Ridge, fending off punishing fire from General Lee’s Confederate troops in advance of what we now know as Pickett’s Charge.  In the chaos and smoke, Lon and his men could barely see ahead of them.  One colonel later described the “terrible grandeur of that rain of missiles and that chaos of strange and terror-spreading sounds.”

Lon was hit and badly wounded.  His first sergeant -- a soldier by the name of Frederick Fuger -- urged him to go to the rear.  But Lon refused and said he’d “fight it out, or die in the attempt.”  Bleeding and weak, he moved his remaining guns closer to the front.  Over 10,000 Confederate infantrymen advanced, elbow to elbow, in rows over a mile wide.  Peering through field glasses, Lon ordered his men to continue firing at the advancing columns.  He used his own thumb to stop his gun’s vent, burning his fingers to the bone.  When he was hit the final time, as a poet later wrote, “His gun spoke out for him once more before he fell to the ground.”  And Alonzo Cushing was just 22 years old.

In a letter to Lon’s sister, Fuger wrote that the bravery of their men that day “was entirely due to your brother’s training and example set on numerous battlefields.”  Etched on Lon’s tombstone at West Point is the simple epitaph, “Faithful unto death.”  And his memory will be honored later this month, when one of our Navy’s cruisers -- the USS Gettysburg -- dedicates its officer’s dining hall as the “Cushing Wardroom.”

And here today, we know that Lon and the others who fell that day could not -- we know -- we know what they could not -- that Gettysburg was a turning point in the Civil War.  It’s also proof, if any was needed, that it was thousands of unknown young soldiers, committing unsung acts of heroism, who saved our union, and freed a people, and reaffirmed our nation as “one Nation, under God, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all.”  I’m mindful that I might not be standing here today, as President, had it not been for the ultimate sacrifices of those courageous Americans.

Today we honor just one of those men, Lieutenant Alonzo Cushing, who, as Lincoln said, gave their “last full measure of devotion.”  His story is part of our larger American story -- one that continues today.  The spirit, the courage, the determination that he demonstrated lives on in our brave men and women in uniform who this very day are serving and making sure that they are defending the freedoms that Alonzo helped to preserve.  And it’s incumbent on all of us as Americans to uphold the values that they fight for, and to continue to honor their service long after they leave the battlefield -- for decades, even centuries to come.

So with that, I’d like to ask Helen to join me for the reading of the citation.  

MILITARY AIDE:  The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, March 3rd, 1863, has awarded in the name of Congress the Medal of Honor to First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing, United States Army.

First Lieutenant Alonzo H. Cushing distinguished himself by acts of bravery above and beyond the call of duty while serving as an artillery commander in Battery A, 4th U.S. Artillery, Army of the Potomac at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania on July 3rd, 1863 during the American Civil War.  

That morning, Confederate forces led by General Robert E. Lee began cannonading First Lieutenant Cushing’s position on Cemetery Ridge.  Using field glasses, First Lieutenant Cushing directed fire for his own artillery battery.  He refused to leave the battlefield after being struck in the shoulder by a shell fragment.  As he continued to direct fire, he was struck again -- this time suffering grievous damage to his abdomen.

Still refusing to abandon his command, he boldly stood tall in the face of Major General George E. Pickett’s charge and continued to direct devastating fire into oncoming forces.  As the Confederate forces closed in, First Lieutenant Cushing was struck in the mouth by an enemy bullet and fell dead beside his gun.

His gallant stand and fearless leadership inflicted severe casualties upon Confederate forces and opened wide gaps in their lines, directly impacting the Union force’s ability to repel Pickett’s charge.  First Lieutenant Cushing’s extraordinary heroism and selflessness above and beyond the call of duty at the cost of his own life are in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, Battery A, 4th U.S. Artillery, Army of the Potomac, and the United States Army.

END
12:12 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on the Anniversary of the Birth of Guru Nanak Dev Ji

I want to congratulate our Sikh friends in the United States and around the world on the anniversary of the birth of the first Sikh Guru, Guru Nanak Dev Ji. During his lifetime in the 15th and 16th centuries, Guru Nanak traveled throughout the region and world promoting equality, diversity, compassion, and tolerance, which became the core principles of Sikhism. The Sikh American community enriches the United States every day with its embodiment of these values, which are shared not just by Sikhs but by all Americans.

The President Holds a Press Conference After the Midterm Elections

November 05, 2014 | 01:13:19 | Public Domain

President Obama addresses the White House press corps after the 2014 midterm elections, November 5, 2014.

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Signs Nevada Disaster Declaration

The President today declared a major disaster exists in the State of Nevada and ordered federal aid to supplement state, tribal, and local recovery efforts in the area affected by severe storms and flooding during the period of September 7-9, 2014. 

Federal funding is available to state, tribal, and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storms and flooding on the Moapa Band of Paiutes Reservation.

Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures in all areas within the state.

W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named Mark H. Landry as the Federal Coordinating Officer for federal recovery operations in the affected area. 

FEMA said additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the state and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.