The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 11/4/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:23 P.M. EST

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  I apologize for the delay.  We had a little miscommunication on the two-minute situation today, so apologize for that. 

Let’s go right to the questions.  Jim, would you like to get us started?

Q    Thanks, Josh.  Looking at the President’s schedule today, it doesn’t have anything that suggests that today is Election Day.   And I’m wondering whether you know --

MR. EARNEST:  The President early voted.

Q    True, but the rest of the nation is still voting today.

MR. EARNEST:  They are.

Q    Does he simply not want to take on a high profile on a day that looks like it could go against Democrats?

MR. EARNEST:  Jim, the President is focused today on a couple of core American priorities.  He obviously is spending time meeting with his Secretary of Defense today in the weekly meeting he convenes with Secretary Hagel.  He’s sitting down with the Director of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, to discuss a range of international economic issues.  This principally is a meeting for important discussions to take place in advance of the President’s travel to Asia and eventually to the G20 meeting in Australia next week.  The President is also convening the members of his team who have been focused on responding to the Ebola situation.

So the President has a pretty full schedule today.  And it’s an important part of his leadership of the country to be focused on these priorities. 

At the same time, the President, over the course of the last several months, has spent a lot of time talking publicly about the elections.  Many of them have come in the context of fundraisers, and the President has aggressively made the case for Democrats who share his view that policies that benefit middle-class families should be the priority in Washington, D.C.  The President has also had the opportunity to make this case in a series of rallies and other public events to drum up support for Democratic candidates -- governors, senators, in some cases even some House members.  So the President has aggressively made the case for Democrats. 

But the other thing that happens to be true -- and this is even true when the President himself was a candidate on the ballot -- that this is a time for field operations to thrive and for campaigns and their organizational energy to be focused on turning out their supporters.  So it’s not really a day when candidates, even those candidates who are on the ballot, are hosting big rallies or doing other big public events.

Q    But in that regard, is the President doing anything today to mobilize voters, robocalls, calls to radio stations?  We have -- the Vice President made several of those today.  Is he doing anything like that?

MR. EARNEST:  I would anticipate that the President will do a couple of activities like that.  As I mentioned yesterday, the President has taped a number of robocalls in support of Democratic candidates.  Many of those I’m confident will be airing today, on Election Day, encouraging people to turn out and vote.

I don’t know of any specific radio interviews that the President is doing today, but we can follow up with you if he is up doing some.  I wouldn’t be surprised if he does.

Q    Do you know what states he’s been focusing on in terms of robocalls and those kinds of --

MR. EARNEST:  I can’t in advance, but after the elections we may be able to provide some more information on that.

Q    Yesterday you cautioned us not to draw broad conclusions about the results of this election.  You rightly pointed out that several of these close Senate races are in red states that the President did not win, and I might add and not campaign in either.  But he has campaigned in seven or eight blue states where he did win for governor campaigns.  And I’m wondering if you can indeed draw conclusions from the results of those races, and if Democrats were not to win in those races, would that be a reflection on the President’s ability to mobilize his core supporters and ultimately hurt his ability over the next two years to command the bully pulpit?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I’ll say as a general matter that there are strong Democratic candidates that are at the top of the ballot in these governors’ races, and we feel good about the chances of Democratic candidates either being elected or being reelected in these states.  These include big states like California and New York.

But ultimately, it’s the quality of these candidates that is going to be the driver of their success in this election.  And there was ample opportunity for the President to raise money, lend his campaign apparatus expertise to benefit these campaigns. The President also had the opportunity to actually do some campaigning with some of these gubernatorial candidates, as well. So the President was looking to be supportive of these Democratic candidates for governor but ultimately it’s these governors -- or these candidates whose record is on the ballot and the President is interested in being supportive of them. 

I mean, there is ample -- we talked about this a little bit yesterday -- there is ample data to indicate that the vast majority of voters across the country are making decisions in this election based on the candidates themselves and not on President Obama.  The most recent poll that I have in front of me is actually from the CNN poll from last week that indicated 54 percent of those who were covered in the poll were not trying to send a message to President Obama with their vote.  Of those who -- I would say on top of that, 17 percent of voters said that they were trying to send a message to President Obama in the context of the election, and that was a message of support to the President. 

So I think that is an indication that the vast majority of voters are making a decision on Election Day based on the merits associated with the candidates at the top of the ballot.  And we’ve seen in a number of ways that the President has sought to boost the prospects of those individual candidates, whether it’s raising money or campaigning or lending his campaign infrastructure’s expertise.

Q    If I could ask on another subject -- foreign policy diplomats are telling the AP that Russia has informed the U.S. that it will boycott the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit.  This seems to be a major setback for the President, who has made kind of guarding the nuclear arsenal a key aspect of his presidency.  Does Russia’s decision significantly weaken the President’s hand when it comes to convincing other countries to submit themselves to international oversight?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me start by saying, Jim, that the United States regrets Russia’s decision not to participate in last week’s preparatory meeting for the 2016 Nuclear Security Summit.  As far as the United States is concerned, the door remains open to Russia joining future meetings like this. 

The Nuclear Security Summit brings together more than 50 countries and four international institutions to take concrete action to secure nuclear materials, and the group that meets as a part of the Nuclear Security Summit has made significant progress over the course of the last four and a half years.  The personal attention of world leaders at the biannual conference is a unique mechanism to spur more aggressive action towards success on this important security priority.  We’d hope that Russia still shares the view that securing loose nuclear materials and combatting the threat of nuclear terrorism remains a priority well worth the personal attention of world leaders. 

The only thing I would add to this, Jim, is simply to note that President Obama is the one who has been leading this effort, that this idea of a Nuclear Security Summit is something that was conceived under President Obama, and more than 50 countries have participated in it.  So it is clear which country and which world leader is driving this process in a way that not only enhances the safety of the American people, but also enhances the safety and security of people around the globe.  And we certainly would welcome Russia making a tangible and constructive contribution to that effort.

Q    Can you confirm that Russia has submitted this notice to the U.S. that they will boycott them, though?

MR. EARNEST:  I think what I’m confirming is that they declined to participate in preparatory meetings for the summit that took place last week.  The door remains open to their continued participation if they were to decide to do so.

Roberta.

Q    So just to be clear, has Russia informed the U.S. that it will boycott future meetings and this 2016 meeting that Jim referred to?

MR. EARNEST:  The only thing that I’m aware of is that Russia declined to participate in last week’s preparatory meetings.  And if they choose to participate in future meetings as the planning for this important summit continues, we’d welcome their participation.

Q    The President met with his economic advisers yesterday, and I was wondering if you had any readout about what they discussed, what they're looking at, and whether they talked about the plunge in oil prices that we're seeing.

MR. EARNEST:  I don't have a detailed readout of the meeting.  The President has, for a long time, urged his top advisers to understand that his top domestic priority is expanding economic opportunity for the middle class.  And his team has been hard at work on implementing ideas and policies that would do exactly that. 

Some of these are ideas that the President can execute unilaterally through the use of executive power.  In other circumstances, we're talking about efforts to work with Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill to try to advance this priority. Surely, expanding economic opportunity for middle-class families is something that Democrats and Republicans should be able to agree on. 

Based on anybody who has any familiarity with the U.S. political system, I think it’s safe to assume that the environment for cooperation will improve once the elections have taken place.  Whether that leads to actual concrete action remains to be seen.  It certainly will -- the only thing I do feel safe in predicting is that the President will continue to make expanding economic opportunity for middle-class families a top priority.

Q    How will the big drop in oil prices affect his priorities when it comes to expanding economic opportunities, working on either economic, energy or climate initiatives?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’ll say a couple things about that.  I do think that there are many families across the country that feel like they benefit from the fall at the pump -- the falling prices at the pump that they see.  And a lot of that is a testament to the kind of historic levels of production that we're seeing here in this country both in terms of oil and gas, but also as it relates to renewable fuels.

The President has also put in place fuel standards that have significantly enhanced the fuel efficiency of cars that are on the road in the United States today.  That also is saving middle-class families at the pump.  It also reinvigorated the U.S. auto industry in a way that has created a significant economic growth and saved or created hundreds of thousands, if not more than a million jobs.

So there is a pretty strong economic benefit associated with the advancement of the domestic energy industry under this President’s leadership.  And as we move forward, and as we continue to look for opportunities to expand economic growth, to create jobs and expand economic opportunities for middle-class families, the American energy sector will continue to be an important part of that.

Jim.

Q    Josh, is today a referendum on the President?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I think, as your own poll that I cited earlier indicates, it’s not.  The fact is the voters -- again, the voters who at least pick up the phone to talk to people who are conducting the poll for CNN, indicated that at least a majority of them were not trying to send a message to the President with their vote, that something else was driving their decision. 

Q    Another poll showed that the American people, though, see the country moving in the wrong direction.

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, but it’s tough to discount those CNN polls, though, isn’t?  (Laughter.) 

Q    It is tough.  I agree. 

MR. EARNEST:  It is.  Probably tougher for you than for me. 

Q    We have a really good polling unit, no question about it.

MR. EARNEST:  It’s true.  It’s true.

Q    But you can cherry-pick certain metrics, but the American people do believe that the country is moving in the wrong direction.  The President has had six years to get the country moving in the right direction.  And you have a lot of Republican candidates in some pretty key states, in states that the President won, who are running against the President.  They’re not running against so much the candidate on the other side of the aisle, they’re running against the President.  Isn’t that fair to say?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I think you have to look at what the -- I think what the important thing here is what’s driving the voters’ decisions.  And the folks at CNN, who do some good work on this, have obviously unearthed some data on this.  I think there will be more data in the form of exit polls tonight that will give us greater insight into what’s driving the vote. 

I don’t think it’s a particularly controversial notion to cite that most voters I think are deciding who to vote for based on the name that’s on the ballot, not the name that’s not.  And that said, the President has sought to support Democratic candidates, particularly those who share his view that policies benefitting middle-class families should be at the top of the agenda.  This stands in pretty stark contrast to the approach that’s been taken by a lot of Republicans.  They have a philosophy that’s different.  They think that policymaking should be geared toward driving benefits to those at the top with the expectation that people lower down the totem pole will benefit.

The President has a different view, which is that our economy is best when the middle class is growing and thriving and at its most dynamic.  That is the philosophy that the President has pursued.  I think most Democratic candidates across the country agree with that general philosophy.  Some might describe it differently, but I think that those visions are pretty consistent. 

And that’s why the President has worked so hard to benefit Democratic candidates in states all across the country, in some, as Jim pointed out, in some states where the President didn’t do very well in the presidential elections, and in some states where the President did pretty well in the presidential elections.  And it’s been up to those individual candidates, those Democratic candidates, to make decisions for themselves about how best the President and his support can be used to their benefit in the elections.

Q    And just to follow up on that, I mean, any second thoughts on the President keeping a low profile in some of those key states?  I know you can’t tell these campaigns how to run their operations, but -- for example, this radio spot that the President cut for Kay Hagan.  The White House didn’t announce it. Kay Hagan’s campaign was sort of not really eager to confirm it. It was the Tillis campaign that was putting it out there on their social media.  Why was that?  It was sort of a stealth radio spot on the part of the President.  Why didn’t the White House come out and say, hey, the President endorsed Kay Hagan, put out a radio spot?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, because, ultimately, what’s driving the decisions that are made by the White House on these political issues as they relate to Election Day are driven by what’s in the best interest of the candidates that we’re trying to support.  And nobody knows better what’s in the best interest of those candidates than the candidates themselves.  Senator Hagan has a track record in North Carolina.  She knows the voters of North Carolina very well.  And so ultimately she and her campaign team are going to make the decision about how to announce the President’s support for her campaign and how to announce the President’s participation in a radio ad benefitting her campaign. And she certainly is entitled to -- again, it’s her name that’s on the ballot, and it’s she and her team who should decide how best to use the President and his popularity in North Carolina to benefit her campaign.

Q    And come tomorrow -- and I know you don’t want to engage in hypotheticals and every vote has to be counted -- but if the Republicans do take the Senate, do you believe that the Republican Party, do you believe that Mitch McConnell is interested in compromise?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I’m not going to entertain that hypothetical.  If that eventuality does come about then we’ll have ample opportunity to discuss it.

Q    And just to move to a different foreign policy issue, al Nusra.  There were reports that U.S. officials are weighing whether to strike al Nusra in Syria.  Is there anything you can say about that?  Is that something that’s under consideration?  And wouldn’t that be an escalation of the campaign there in Iraq and Syria if you’re going after three terror groups as opposed to two in ISIS and Khorasan?

MR. EARNEST:  I’ve seen those reports, Jim, but I don’t have a whole lot to say about future military planning that may or may not be underway by the United States and our coalition partners. I can say that, as a general matter, the United States remains concerned about all threats emanating from Syria, including the threat that’s posed by the Nusra Front.  That’s driven by the fact that the Nusra Front has been public in threatening the West. 

What we will continue to do here in the United States is to work closely with our coalition partners to take strikes in Syria that are focused principally on denying a safe haven to those extremists and organizations that are seeking to do harm to the United States of America or our allies.  And that’s been the element of our strategy that has been front and center.  That is the strategy that has attracted the strong support of more than 60 nations around the globe. 

At the same time, we’re also keenly aware of the fact that the success of this broader strategy is contingent upon a local fighting force on the ground in Syria that can take the fight to ISIL and other extremist organizations that are seeking to establish a safe haven there.  These military strikes are impactful and they’re important, but they will be successful when they are backing up an effective fighting force on the ground.  And that’s why you’ve seen the United States implement this strategy to ramp up the assistance, the training and equipping operation to moderate fighters in Syria.  And we’re, again, in close cooperation with nations like Turkey and Saudi Arabia, who have agreed to host those training and equipping efforts.

So there is a strategy that is underway and that strategy is principally driven -- or is principally focused on denying a safe haven to extremist organizations who might have designs on attacking the U.S.

Q    And just very quickly -- immigration executive action.  Do you think we’ll see that before the President leaves for Asia?

MR. EARNEST:  I think you’ll see an announcement from the White House before the end of the year, but I don’t have any update in terms of timing for you on that.

Jim.

Q    On the election, on the close races, there seems to be this conventional wisdom that turnout is very, very important.  Do you believe -- while the White House, while you’ve said here that it’s up to the candidates to decide, do the political people in the White House believe that some candidates are missing the boat by not using the President of the United States to help with turnout, to energize voters to get to the polls?

MR. EARNEST:  Jim, what I can tell you is that all of the President’s political advisors and the President himself believes, as somebody who has run both statewide and national campaigns, that it’s the candidates themselves who should get to determine the strategy.

Q    But you get to have an opinion.  They can make the decision, but does the White House believe that they’re making a bad decision by not having him out there?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, it’s the White House’s view that it is the prerogative of anybody who is going to put their name on the ballot that they should get to determine their campaign strategy. And what we have said -- and this is I think a reflection of the President’s commitment to supporting these candidates -- that they should get to drive that decision about strategy.  And the President is eager to do what they ask to support them.  And, in fact, the executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has recently said that the President did every single thing that Senate Democrats have asked him to do to support their campaigns. 

So I think that’s indicative of the President’s commitment to supporting Democrats in the United States Senate and ultimately -- I mean, the only way you test this, really, Jim, is to evaluate the outcome on Election Day, and those votes are being cast right now, and at that point we’ll have an opportunity to evaluate the success of any individual candidate’s strategy. 

Q    Away from politics for a moment.  On the issue of Cuba, more and more, it does appear as though the United States is out alone on Cuba.  In the past, the President himself has, in fact, backed, before he was President, dropping the embargo against Cuba.  And recently, there have been editorials in The New York Times about cooperation with Cuba.  Is the President, in the last two years, more open to starting a dialogue with Cuba -- perhaps a prisoner exchange involving the prisoners here in the United States and Alan Gross in Cuba?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as a general matter, Jim, let me just say that the United States believes that Mr. Gross should be released immediately; that his detention is certainly not appropriate, it’s not justified, and it’s time for him to be reunited with his family here at home.  He is, after all, a development worker, and it’s time for him to come home.

We have also indicated that his continued detention is an obstacle in the relationship between the United States and Cuba and certainly would interfere with any effort along the lines of what you’re talking about.

So the President has been pretty clear that it’s -- as he said in the past, that it’s worth reconsidering our policy as it relates to Cuba, reflecting, however, the significant concerns the United States retains about their human rights record, their failure to observe basic human rights, as it relates to not just the illegitimate detention of Mr. Gross, but as it relates to the basic rights to free speech and political expression of the people of Cuba.  And we continue to have concerns about that. 

But again, I think the bottom line here is that Cuba’s failure to release Mr. Gross is hurting the relationship between the United States and Cuba. 

Q    And is the United States open to any negotiations with Cuba about Mr. Gross and whether or not the three Miami -- the three people in Miami who are being held -- in Florida, I should say, not Miami -- who are Cuban -- is there any negotiations there?  Are they open to any negotiations?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I don’t have any negotiations to talk about from here other than to say that both publicly and privately the United States has been clear that Mr. Gross should be released

Q    And finally, if I could, we talked about the Russians not going to this conference.  I ask you again what I asked you a while back, and that is, is that causing the United States in any way to relook at whether or not the sanctions have been a positive or a negative in the big picture, understanding that the sanctions have done what you -- what the White House wanted it to do, which was hurt the Russian government, hurt the Russian economy -- but in the end, has that actually hurt the cause of world peace and the American cause of peace and stability in the world?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I think it’s a legitimate question to ask, and I think that the success and -- or its effectiveness, I should say, of the sanctions regime is something that is regularly reviewed by the President’s team here at the White House.

I think it’s pretty clear, however, that the impact -- the negative impact on global security and well-being is most significant when it comes to the destabilizing actions that Russia has taken in Ukraine; that there’s a basic international norm at stake here and that norm is that it’s not appropriate for big countries to interfere with smaller countries who happen to be on their border; that other sovereign countries should have the opportunity -- their citizens should have the opportunity to determine their future.  And that is the international principle that the United States and our allies in Europe are standing up for.

And pursuant to that support for the people of Ukraine, the United States, in close concert with our European allies, has put in place a sanctions regime that has exacted a significant toll on the Russian economy.

The President himself has been clear as recently as the announcement earlier this fall of a stepped up sanctions regime that the international community is prepared in response to constructive steps from Russia to start rolling back that sanctions regime.  So there is an opportunity here.  The open question remains will the Russians seize it.

At the same time, I would be remiss if I did not acknowledge that there were others areas where the United States and Russia continue to cooperate very effectively in a way that enhances the national security of both the United States and Russia.  Whether it is working closely in the context of the P5-plus-1 negotiations to resolve the international community’s concerns about Iran’s nuclear program, or working closely with the Syrians to eradicate their declared chemical weapons stockpile, the Russians have engaged with the international community to achieve important progress.

Now, as it relates to the Iran negotiations, obviously, there’s a lot more work to be done.  But so far we have seen the Russians play a constructive role in those talks, and there’s no doubt that the talks have benefitted from constructive Russian involvement there. 

As I discussed a little bit yesterday, this also relates to the space program, that the United States and Russia continue to work very closely to support the International Space Station.  Recently there was a U.S. astronaut that was transported to the International Space Station via a Russian rocket that was launched in Russia.  That is an indication that the relations between our two countries are complicated, to say the least.  But where there are opportunities to cooperate in pursuit of mutually held goals in many areas, the cooperation continues and continues effectively.

Jared.

Q    Josh, the President has in recent events sounded wistful that this is the last election that he will have a lot of influence in, as President. 

MR. EARNEST:  I think what the President has said is that this is the last campaign that will have a direct bearing on his own presidency, that the people who are being elected will basically serve in office throughout the two remaining years of his presidency.  I don't want to leave you or anyone else with the impression that the President won’t be actively engaged in supporting Democrats in 2016 up and down the ballot, I’m sure.

Q    And since it reflects him and it reflects the work that he’s chosen to do, and since this will be the most expensive midterm we’ve ever seen, what has the President done to limit in the six years that he’s been in office the power of money in elections?  Because we’ve heard him talk about the outside influence that millionaires and billionaires have, but we haven’t seen policies from the administration that would limit their ability to use that influence.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I think the best example that I can tell you off the top of my head is the administration’s strong support for the DISCLOSE Act.  This is a proposal that was put forward by Democrats in Congress to increase transparency and to try to make sure that we are not drowning out the voices of average Americans in our political process.  That is a piece of legislation that the President strongly supported.  He’s worked closely with Democrats in both the House and the Senate to try to advance that legislation.  But it’s not surprising that Republicans, who are the chief benefactors of special interest money, are the ones who are blocking legislation that would reduce the influence of special interest money. 

So I think everybody knows what’s going on here.  And the President has been pretty clear about his support for the kind of legislation that he believes is in the best interest of the country, and consistent with the kinds of principles for public service that the President has articulated on many occasions.

Q    And you said that there won’t be a unilateral disarming of political funding.  But I guess until the DISCLOSE Act or some other measures gets traction, is the only thing to stop a bad guy with a billion dollars a good guy with a billion dollars?  (Laughter.)

MR. EARNEST:  That's an interesting analogy.  I think that the President’s preference would be that the best way to ensure that the voices of average Americans are not drowned out in the political process is to have greater transparency and to have to limits on some political activities.

Q    And does the President think that he’ll get the opportunity to do that in whatever Congress comes in the next session?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jared, I guess it does seem unlikely that something like that is going to happen as long as Republicans retain the majority in the House of Representatives. After all, many of those Republicans are there because they have enjoyed the strong support of special interest money, like the money that you're talking about.  So it seems unlikely that they're going to reverse course.  But I’m confident that they’ll be asked again, but I think I’m realistic about the outcome.

Q    And you talk about -- just in your answers right now -- you're talking about Republicans who are soliciting that money.  But the President and Democrats have also solicited that money, right?

MR. EARNEST:  I think what I’m talking about are Republicans in Congress who have benefited significantly from special interest money that’s unregulated, that’s undisclosed.  And they have benefited from the system, given the rules that are currently in place.  And I think it is merely an observation in human nature that they're unlikely to change the rules of the game that they're already winning.  Right -- 

Q    I’m sorry, but everyone is at the trough, right?

MR. EARNEST:  -- is that like controversial?

Q    No, I’m just -- but you seem to want to make it about one party that's benefitting.

MR. EARNEST:  That's right, Jared, because there is one party who is supporting legislation to curtail the influence of unregulated special interest money, and one party who is activity blocking that legislation, right?  So I think it’s pretty clear to see who is on which side.

Justin.

Q    I wanted to ask you about comments the Vice President made in a CNN interview that aired yesterday.  And he was asked about the flap last month with Turkey and he pretty emphatically said that he did not apologize twice to the Turkish President, which seems to directly contradict what you said at the time.  So I’m wondering, did the Vice President apologize?  And if so, where is the confusion stemming from?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, Jared, I think the difference is -- this might be a matter of semantics.  I’m not in a position to -- I obviously didn't listen in on the phone call between the Vice President and President Erdogan.  But there is a statement that was put out from the Vice President’s office that reflected that I had related as well.

Q    That he had apologized.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that's what -- the statement from his office certainly indicated that.  I think the point that the Vice President was making is that the message that he was trying to deliver specifically to President Erdogan related to his regret about the way that his comments were interpreted, and he wanted to make sure that he was clarifying exactly what he had said, or at least what he had meant when he spoke to President Erdogan.  And he believed, given the strength of his personal relationship with President Erdogan, that that required a personal phone call. That was the appropriate thing for him to do.  And that's what he did.

Q    Are you worried that him saying that he didn't apologize could create a diplomatic flap?  It’s certainly already garnered a lot of media attention in Turkey, and this is obviously an important alliance.  It has a lot of ramifications, especially for ISIS.

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, there’s no question that the relationship between the United States and Turkey is an important one.  There have been some steps that the Turks have taken in recent weeks that have been very beneficial to the international coalition against ISIL that the United States is leading.

One of the reasons that the United States of America has such a strong relationship with Turkey is because you have somebody like Vice President Biden who has decades of experience in working with the leaders of that country to strengthen the relationship between the United States and Turkey.  So I’m confident that any sort of confusion that may have been created by the Vice President’s original comments were subsequently cleared up in the phone call that he placed to President Erdogan a couple of days later.

Q    Then one last one on the Vice President.  In a radio interview earlier this morning, he predicted that Democrats would end up with around 52 seats.  Is that kind of the working number that you guys are going with?  Is that victory or success for you guys tonight?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't think it’s a surprise to anybody that the Vice President is braver than I am and he’s more willing to hazard a guess about that.  It probably is rooted in his superior knowledge of American politics.  This is somebody who has spent a lot of time over the last several month working aggressively to campaign in support of Democratic candidates.  So I certainly would put a lot of stock in his own analysis of this situation.  But the great thing about Election Day finally being here is that we’ll know the results of these elections very shortly.

Q    Well, just to ask it slightly differently, what is success tonight?  Is it holding the Senate?  Is that what you guys are hoping for?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say a couple -- let me step back and say one thing about this, that over the course of the next 24, 48, or maybe even 72 hours, many of you will be spending a lot of time talking about and interpreting whether or not the elections were good for Democrats, or good for Republicans.  Were they bad for the President?  Or were they bad for Speaker Boehner?  I think the one thing that we can agree on at this point is that the fact that we're having Election Day today is good for the country; that it’s an opportunity -- this is the one day in which the playing field is leveled and that the voice of the average American is not drowned out by special interests and significant sums of money; that this is the day when nobody can change the fact that one person gets one vote.  And it’s an important opportunity for people to make their voice heard in this democracy. 

I think it’s the reason that -- at least when I came into work today, I had a little bounce in my step, that there’s something about Election Day that appeals to our idealism.  There will be plenty of an opportunity for us to sort of sift through the results and decide whether a particular outcome is good or bad for a political party or a particular office holder.  But for one day, I'm going to try to enjoy the idealism that Election Day inspires in me and so many others across the country, I think.

April.  Speaking of idealism, let’s go the April.  (Laughter.) 

Q    The world is good today. 

MR. EARNEST:  It is.

Q    Yes.  Josh, you said yesterday the President agreed with Vice President Joe Biden in his assessment that Dems would win the Senate.  Does he still feel that way today, the day that Americans are going to vote?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes.  The President and everybody here at the White House continues to be optimistic. 

Q    Is that it?

MR. EARNEST:  I think so.  (Laughter.) 

Q    Well, my next question -- the Associated Press came upon some emails from the Freedom of Information Act as it relates to an incident that happened in 2010 with Shirley Sherrod.  She was fired because of a videotape that was not properly presented of her comments from Andrew Breitbart -- the late Andrew Breitbart.  Now, at this time, is the White House able to say from all of this information that you were involved in some way with the firing?

MR. EARNEST:  The decision to ask for Ms. Sherrod’s resignation was made by the Department of Agriculture, and then the White House was informed of that decision.   That is what the White House has said since 2010, and I don't think there’s anything in the emails that were reported on by the Associated Press that changed that.

Q    But it says that Vilsack was waiting for acknowledgment and the word to go ahead on the White House, if I'm reading this correctly. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, ii think even Secretary Vilsack and other officials at the Department of Agriculture have indicated that it was their decision to ask Ms. Sherrod for her resignation.  And that's what we said in 2010, and that's what we're saying in 2014.

Q    So in 2014 -- I just want to be correct -- you're saying that you had nothing to do with her firing -- the White House had nothing to do with her firing.  It was all on the Agriculture Department’s hands and on them.

MR. EARNEST:  I think just for the sake of accuracy, I'll say it again, that what we have said -- what we said in 2010 and what we're saying today is that the decision to ask for Ms. Sherrod’s resignation was made by the Department of Agriculture.

Q    So there was tick-tock about possibilities and the decision was made there, but there could have been back-and-forth here -- are you at least acknowledging that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the emails that were reported on today indicate that there were conversations between the Department of Agriculture and the White House, but they did not rebut the assertion that we have been pretty consistent about, which is that this decision was made by the Department of Agriculture.  And that's the decision to ask for the resignation.

Q    -- still regrets that she was fired wrongfully?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I mean, we've litigated all this and I think, again -- I didn’t have a chance to read the AP story, but I don't think that --

Q    But beyond the AP story, a woman was fired wrongfully for a news story, and years later she’s still hurt.  There’s still lawsuits that are going through. 

MR. EARNEST:  There are.

Q    I mean, is there -- she was a federal government employee.  She was fired under this administration.  Whether it was through Vilsack or what have you, it was under this administration.  Is there a feeling of regret of what happened?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think my understanding is that the Secretary of Agriculture has already indicated that that was the case, and he did that many years ago.  And that sentiment has not changed.

Zeke.

Q    Apparently, the Vice President did a radio interview earlier today -- I think it was in Connecticut -- and spoke about the Kansas Senate race where he said, regarding independent candidate Greg Orman, that “he’ll be with us.”  I was wondering whether the White House has any special intelligence over which party Mr. Orman will caucus with if he’s elected to the Senate. Has there been any conversation between the Vice President or the President or somebody at the White House and this candidate?

MR. EARNEST:  There’s no conversations that I’m aware of along those lines.  It’s my understanding that Mr. Orman has not indicated which party he’ll caucus with.  And I can’t account for any conversations that the Vice President may have had, but I’m certainly not aware of any special knowledge that’s retained by any White House staffer that I’ve spoken to about this issue.  I have not spoken to the Vice President about it, so I don’t know who he’s talked to.  But Mr. Orman is running as an independent. He’s not running as a Democrat.  So I think we’ll have to determine whether or not he’s elected to the United States Senate before we have a conversation about which --

Q    Does he have the President’s endorsement, or the White House’s endorsement, if the Vice President is seemingly encouraging voters indirectly to cast ballots for him?

MR. EARNEST:  The President hasn’t made an endorsement in that race.  There’s no Democratic candidate in the race.

Q    And circling back to the old conversation regarding robocalls and the President’s involvement today and yesterday, why can’t you provide a list now while polls are still open?  People are obviously interested in who the President is working on his behalf.  I’m sure that’s why the call for Senator Hagan yesterday was brought up earlier.  Why can’t the White House release that now?  Why do you have to wait until later today?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, for two reasons.  One is, the people who -- I mean, in terms of voters wanting to know whether or not they can expect a robocall from the President, well, they can answer the phone and if they get a robocalls from the President, they’ll -- his voice is pretty distinctive.  I think they’ll recognize it.

The second thing is, we have deferred to the individual campaigns to make decisions about how and when and whether to release this information.  Once the campaigns are over then we’ll have a little bit more latitude to share some more of that information with you.

Lesley.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  I know the DOJ has dispatched election monitors to several states to do monitoring and evaluation of how it’s going.  And I wanted to see, is the White House concerned or worried at all about any of the new election rules and laws and whether they’ll have a negative effect on turnout?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think that remains to be seen.  We have expressed our concerns in the past about the important role that the Voting Rights Act played in guaranteeing the right of eligible citizens to cast a ballot. 

I can tell you that the Attorney General has announced that the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice will send federal monitors to polling places in 18 states across the country.  These monitors will be on the ground gathering information on numerous aspects of local election procedures, including questions related to whether or not the voters were treated differently based on their race or their color, whether jurisdictions are adequately serving the rights of individuals with disabilities, and whether jurisdictions are complying with requirements to provide bilingual election materials and assistance in areas of need.

So there are some areas that the election monitors are focusing on.  But it is all motivated to this idea that every eligible American citizen should be able to cast a ballot if they choose to do so today.  And that is a principle, I think, again  -- Election Day tends to be a unifying day, and I think this is the kind of principle that Democrats, independents and Republicans can all agree on.

Bill.

Q    Whether your optimism and the President’s and the Vice President’s about the Senate is warranted or not, the fact is that whichever way it goes, the gridlock which exists today is likely to persist.  So can you tell us what this administration really hopes to accomplish in the last two years?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Bill, as I pointed out earlier, I would anticipate that we’ll have more extensive conversations about this topic after the election results are in.  But as a general matter, I think that the President has been clear about a few things.  The first is that he is bound and determined to do everything that he can using his power in the executive branch to make progress on behalf of middle-class families in this country. And the President, regardless of the outcome of the election, will continue to act aggressively to use his executive authority to help middle-class families.

Q    On what specific --

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the best example of something like this would be on immigration reform; that Republicans have not demonstrated at this point any willingness to consider the bipartisan proposal that passed through the Senate, so the President has indicated that before the end of the year he’s prepared to use his executive authority to try to fix those elements of the immigration system that he can fix using his executive authority.  So you can anticipate an announcement on that before the end of the year.

So, regardless of the outcome over the course of the next two years, the President will look for ways to use his executive authority to benefit middle-class families.

The second thing is the President is going to continue to look for partners on Capitol Hill, Democrats or Republicans, who are willing to work with him on policies that benefit middle-class families.  I keep saying that because that is the item that’s at the top of the President’s agenda, and the President is going to leave no stone unturned in his effort to try to make progress on some of these issues.

There might be opportunities for Democrats and Republicans to agree on an issue like early childhood education.  There are a lot of Republicans at the state level that have supported investments in early childhood education programs.  These kinds of high-quality programs have proven to be a very good investment because successful completion of a high-quality early childhood education program is closely correlated with things like higher graduation rates, higher literacy rates, and lower teen pregnancy rates, lower incarceration rates.  So the bang for the buck in terms of an investment in early childhood education programs is pretty good, particularly when you’re evaluating its impact on middle-class families.

Q    What other programs would he seek bipartisan agreement on?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think all of them, because if anything is going to move through Congress it’s going to require bipartisan agreement.

Q    What are the priorities?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the priority as I’ve generally stated is expanding economic opportunity for middle-class families.  That is the priority.  And whether it’s --

Q    That’s not a program.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I can’t sort of like run through the list of programs here, but we’ll eventually have an opportunity to talk about this in the months ahead.  But one area where it seems like we should be able to find bipartisan agreement would be investments in early childhood education.  We’ve talked quite a bit about infrastructure over the last several months.  That would be another opportunity for Democrats and Republicans to agree on a program that would create jobs in the short term and strengthen our economy over the long term.

The other thing that -- so that’s the second category.  We’ll look for opportunities to work with Democrats or Republicans to advance policies like this through the Congress.

The third thing that the President and his administration will be focusing on over the next couple of years will be on implementing so many of the important achievements that have been passed or carried out by the President using his executive authority over the last six years.  So we need to continue to be focused on implementing the Affordable Care Act.  The next enrollment period is coming up in just a couple of weeks, and that obviously has attracted the attention of a lot of officials over at HHS.  And so that’s one area of implementation where the President is focused.

The President met just yesterday with the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Janet Yellen.  She, along with a whole other set of independent financial regulators are focused on putting in place regulations under the Wall Street Reform legislation that was passed in 2010.  That will continue to be a close focus of the administration to make sure that our financial system remains in check in a way that protects the interest of middle-class families.

And when the President does make an announcement related to immigration reform, there will be a whole set of implementation issues around that as well.  So that will take up a lot of time and attention, making sure that the achievements that have already been achieved are successfully implemented. 

The other thing that I think that you can also expect to hear the President talk a lot about over the remaining two years that he has in office are some issues that, maybe even like campaign finance reform that Jared was talking about earlier are the kinds of issues that the President believes strongly in that House Republicans have demonstrated they’re clearly opposed to.  That means that the likelihood of passing the DISCLOSE Act, for example, is rather remote.  But the President is going to continue to talk about that issue and he’s going to continue to try to push that issue.

That also applies to the area of climate change.  There are still too many Republicans in Congress who even deny the basic scientific fact that climate change is occurring and something that policymakers should be concerned about.  So the President will use his executive action to take some additional steps, but he’s also going to continue to talk about this issue in a way that lays the groundwork for action by future Presidents and future Congresses.

So, again, that maybe was a little longwinded, but it gives you a pretty good idea of how this President and this White House are looking at the important two years that lie ahead for this country.

Wendell.

Q    Over the past two days I’ve gotten robocalls from the President, the Vice President and the First Lady -- and I did recognize all their voices -- for Anthony Brown.  (Laughter.)  I live in Maryland.  Were these recent decisions --

MR. EARNEST:  That’s good.  (Laughter.)  If you had told me you lived in Virginia I would be very concerned right now.  Maybe I would not be quite as optimistic about our prospects in the election if that were the case.

Q    Were these recent decisions?

MR. EARNEST:  Were what recent decisions?

Q    To make the robocalls.  Did the campaign come to you fairly recently?  Or is this something that has been planned for quite a while?

MR. EARNEST:  It’s my understanding that the President’s general participation in these kinds of get-out-the-vote activities is something that had been on the books for quite a while.  As it relates to support for Mr. Brown’s campaign, obviously the President appeared with him publicly a couple of weeks ago.  So the President’s support and engagement in his campaign is something that we’ve been talking about at least for a couple of weeks.

Q    We had a robocall go out today or yesterday for Kay Hagan.  Also a recent decision?  Because she has been a bit standoffish, to say the least.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t know when these individual decisions were made in terms of when specific requests from campaigns came in, so it’s hard for me to evaluate that.  The President on a number of occasions has made it clear that he supports Senator Hagan’s campaign.  But in terms of --

Q    I'm trying to see if there’s been a kind of decision recently that maybe her running from the President was not such a good idea.

MR. EARNEST:  Again, I think that’s probably something that you can best determine by talking to the individual campaigns themselves.  It’s my understanding that the President’s commitment to do -- to engage in get-out-the-vote activities, like taping robocalls, is something that has been planned for quite some time.

Q    Can you talk about some of the issues the President will pursue by executive order, if he has to, over the next couple of years?  In 2016, the electoral map favors Democrats much more than it does today.  Can we assume the President will take that into consideration, and that these suggestions that he may be more willing to compromise over the next couple of years might be a bit premature?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think -- that's an interesting question.  The President I think has been and displayed a willingness to compromise with Republicans in support -- or in pursuit of the kinds of goals that the President has identified. So I think the President stands ready, regardless of what the map looks like in 2016, to work with Republicans to make progress for middle-class families.  So the President is not going to let politics get in the way.

Q    There is the supposition that if the Senate falls to the Republicans, the Republicans will then present -- will vote on several dozen bills that have passed the House that were rejected by the administration, Harry Reid refused to bring up.  How is the President likely to deal with that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what the President will do is he’ll evaluate each of those pieces of legislation based on the criteria that he’s laid out in terms of what impact they would have on middle-class families --

Q    His OMB folks have basically rejected all of them, recommended vetoes for all of them.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, it’s certainly not surprising -- House Republicans have amassed a pretty strong track record of legislation that's not in the best interests of middle-class families, and that's something that's been discussed on the campaign trail quite a bit.  So I don't think it’s a surprise that the President is opposed to those bills for that reason.

Q    So we're going to see some vetoes?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, it depends on what the Senate and House decide to pass, which I think will be contingent at least a little bit on the outcome of the elections.

Roger.  Roger, before I get to your question, I understand that you had a personnel announcement that you made earlier this week, so let me just congratulate you on your announcement on your retirement.

Q    Thanks.  Oil prices are about -- they're the lowest in about three years right now.  The Strategic Petroleum Reserve has 691 million barrels in it.  Its capacity is 727 million.  Is it a good time to fill it?

MR. EARNEST:  Roger, just as a general matter, I can tell you that the administration -- in particular the experts in the administration are closely and continuously monitoring the global oil supply and demand situation.  Any sort of announcements about the Strategic Petroleum Reserve would not be made by me here at the podium, but would rather come from the agency that's responsible for maintaining it.

Q    On a follow-up, would filling it be one of those items that would benefit the middle class?

MR. EARNEST:  What I think I would say is that those are decisions -- decisions related to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve are made by I believe the Department of Energy.  And so they are the ones who are in the best position to evaluate what sort of impact that would have on the broader market.

Q    But certainly the White House is consulted on something like this.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, certainly the White House is regularly briefed on and even directly monitoring the global oil supply and its impact on demand.  But I don't have anything to preview as it relates to any possible SPR announcements.

Q    Do you know, is there any discussion here at the White House about that right now?  Because oil prices are down so much.

MR. EARNEST:  It’s certainly possible, but there are none that I’m aware of.

John.

Q    Thank you, Josh. 

MR. EARNEST:  I see you voted today, John. 

Q    Oh, yes, in the District of Columbia. 

MR. EARNEST:  I see.  Thanks for being a good citizen.

Q    Thank you.  No robocalls, though.  (Laughter.)  Quick question --

MR. EARNEST:  Maybe you were on a different list.  (Laughter.)

Q    Okay.  Talking about legislation that the White House and a Republican-controlled Congress, if that's the case, can agree on, several Republican members are saying they're looking for bipartisan measures that perhaps will go to the President desk with support from both parties and he could sign.  And what comes up are Congressman McCarthy’s recent memo to members about government reform and making the process work, as well as repeal on the tax on medical devices, or the Upton Act, which passed last year with 39 Democratic votes and allows people who are happy with their health care to keep it and not have it canceled. Are any of these things, things the President would consider signing if they passed with bipartisan support?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we’ll have to see.  The Senate will obviously have to act on those pieces of legislation if they choose to do so.  I can tell you just as general matter that the President does stand ready to work with Democrats and Republicans who are interested in advancing policies that would benefit middle-class families. 

So I haven’t studied each of the specific proposals that are mentioned by Mr. McCarthy in his memo, but I can assure you that if they start to -- if they pass the House and start to move in the Senate, that they will get close examination from the White House.  And the one thing I can tell you, again, regardless of the outcome of the elections, is the President will stand ready to work with Democrats or Republicans, whether they're in the majority or the minority, to try to advance the prospects of middle-class families in this country.

Q    One other thing.

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, sir.

Q    Burkina Faso -- is the administration going to look at it in the way that it did Honduras some years ago when the Micheletti government came in and cut some aid?  Or will they continue relations with Lieutanant Colonel Zida in the same way they did with Mr. Sisi before he was elected?

MR. EARNEST:  John, let me just say as a general -- I don't know that I can compare it necessarily to the Honduras situation that you laid out.  But I think I can say more broadly that the United States remains concerned about the unfolding events in Burkina Faso, and we offer condolences to the families of those who have been killed and injured there recently.

We call on all parties to avoid further violence and work together toward a peaceful transition of power.  The United States condemns the military’s attempts to impose its will on the people of Burkina Faso.  And we call on the military to immediately transfer power to civilian authorities.

We're encouraged by reports that the military will cede power to a transitional government.  We are further encouraged by calls by the African Union for a return to civilian authority in no more than two weeks and the African Union’s stated intent to impose consequences if such actions are not taken. 

For that reason we welcome the African Union’s appointment of a special envoy for Burkina Faso.  We urge that this process should occur under civilian leadership that is guided by the spirit of the constitution so that Burkina Faso can move immediately toward free and fair presidential elections.

Julie, I’ll give -- actually, I’ll come back to Chris.  So Julie, then Chris.

Q    Given that you’ve said and the President said last week or suggested that these midterms are going to have a concrete effect on the last two years of his presidency, didn't it behoove him to use his own political judgment regardless of what others were saying -- it worked pretty well for him in two presidential campaigns -- about where to get involved and how to get involved?  And just separately, on the last two years, is he concerned that it’s going to be more difficult for him to govern and to accomplish some of these aims you've been talking about if Republicans take the Senate?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’ll say a couple of things.  There’s a lot in there.  The first is I think it is too early to evaluate the strategy that was employed by individual candidates.  Again, it’s not even that the votes are being counted yet, they're still being cast.  So I’ll reserve judgment -- others may not -- I’m going to reserve judgment on that strategy -- on the strategy that was employed by individual campaigns until we actually see the results of the election.  

I will say that as a general matter I don't think it is a controversial notion for the President to adopt a posture whereby candidates who’s names are on the ballot are the ones who are driving the strategy for the election.  That is I think a pretty common-sense notion.  And failure to do that I think could lead to some rather strange outcomes. 

So that said, the administration and the President have worked closely with the Democratic campaign committees and the individual campaigns to do everything possible to -- or at least everything that these candidates believed was in their best interest to advance their candidacies.  And that's why you’ve seen the President tape robocalls.  Obviously, the President spent a lot of time raising money to support these campaigns.  The President has also appeared at some rallies for gubernatorial and Senate candidates to try to boost their candidacies and turn out voters. 

The President has also lent the organizational and technical expertise of his campaign apparatus to benefit these individual campaigns.  So you do have individual campaigns in some states, at least, drawing on the same reservoir of activists and supporters and volunteers that benefitted the President’s campaign in 2012.  We do anticipate that will benefit the campaign of some Democratic candidates in 2014. 

So there were a number of ways that the President was asked to be helpful by these individual candidates.  And again, as the executive director of the DSCC himself said, the President and his team have done everything that Senate Democrats have asked of him.  So I think that's indicative of some pretty close coordination and collaboration.  And it is indicative of the leading role that these candidates should play in determining the strategy that will best benefit their candidacies.  And we’ll all have an opportunity after Election Day to evaluate those strategies.

Q    How big of a setback will it be for him and for his agenda if Republicans take control of the Senate?

MR. EARNEST:  I think the President himself as spoken at great length, or at least many times, about his view that he’s more likely to have partners in Congress who share his commitment to middle-class priorities if Democrats are in the majority.  Unfortunately, the vast majority of Republicans have repeatedly adopted an approach that places the interests of the wealthy and well-connected ahead of the middle class.  And the President I think, as you all have chronicled, has struggled to work with individuals who are unwilling to try to put the interests of middle-class families first.

But the President is going to continue to seek some common ground.  And even if there are areas of disagreement on some issues, maybe there’s an opportunity to compromise on some others.  And like I said, I think any observer of American politics would conclude that the likelihood of cooperation and collaboration and the identification of common ground is more likely after the election have passed.  So we’ll take a look again after the elections have passed and into the New Year next year for opportunities to work with Republicans to advance an agenda that puts middle-class families at the top of the priority list.

Chris, we’ll wrap it up with you.

Q    I know you said to Jim and to Wendell today that each individual campaign had some prerogatives, that they make their own decisions.  But a big supporter of the President -- Congressman Clyburn -- today suggested that Democrats should have done a better job at messaging what he thinks the President has done well -- things like Obamacare.  Others have suggested good news in the economy, things like a lower unemployment rate.  Was this a missed opportunity by many campaigns not to align themselves more closely?

MR. EARNEST:  I think that's a hard conclusion to draw in advance of the election results being reported.  So I’m going to reserve judgment on the strategy that was implemented by these individual campaigns.

Again, I think for very good and logical reasons, the White House concluded that it should be the responsibility of those individuals who have their names at the top of the ballot to drive the strategy.  And the White House and the President indicated they would follow their lead and do everything that we could to support the campaigns, to benefit their campaigns.

And their senior strategists who are responsible for running these campaigns have indicated that the President has done everything that was asked of him by these Democratic candidates. And I think that's indicative of the President’s commitment to supporting those candidates who believe that middle-class families and the issues they care about should dominate the agenda.

Q    Just a couple quick things.  Tonight, is there any plan for us to hear from the President tonight?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't anticipate you’ll hear from him tonight.

Q    And any word now on who might be watching the results with him?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't know who will be watching the results with him.  I know that he’ll be watching the results in the White House residence.  But if we can get you some more information about how the President is getting those results -- I mean, the one thing I’ll say is that I do anticipate that the President will be updated regularly by members of the Office of Political Strategy and Outreach here at the White House, who have been in touch with some of the campaign strategists who are working on these campaigns, to give him some updated information about the returns.

So he’ll be gathering some information that's not publicly reported right away.  But he’ll be monitoring the results like many other Americans tonight.

Q    Has he got any information yet?  Has he gotten any reports yet today?

MR. EARNEST:  I know that he’s been periodically sort of updated.  I don't know that he’s received any sort of formal briefing or anything.  But he’ll continue to receive updates over the course of the evening tonight.

Thanks a lot, everybody.  Happy Election Day.

END
1:30 P.M. EST 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Meeting on Ebola

The President on Tuesday afternoon convened his national security and public health teams to discuss Ebola preparedness at home and the whole-of-government approach to contain the epidemic at its source in West Africa. The President’s advisors noted the Department of Health and Human Services-led effort to ensure hospitals and our broader health system are prepared to identify and isolate an Ebola case and, as necessary, stabilize, transport, or treat the patient. The President’s team then updated him on the rigorous, multilayered measures in place to screen individuals traveling from the affected West African countries. His advisors also discussed the monitoring requirements to which these individuals are subject upon arrival in the United States. They noted that many states have adopted measures that track closely with the science-based federal guidelines that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued last week. On the international front, participants agreed that, despite initial signs of progress in Liberia, we must continue to tackle this challenge aggressively with all of the tools, both civilian and military, at our disposal—and in close coordination with the selfless health care workers who have admirably chosen to deploy to the frontlines. The President reminded his team that only by containing and ending the epidemic in West Africa will we be able to ensure there are no additional cases domestically.

Participants:

  • The Vice President
  • Chuck Hagel, Secretary of Defense
  • Sylvia Burwell, Secretary of Health and Human Services
  • Jeh Johnson, Secretary of Homeland Secretary
  • Denis McDonough, Chief of Staff
  • Susan Rice, National Security Advisor
  • Rajiv Shah, Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (via video teleconference)
  • Samantha Power, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations (via video teleconference)
  • Lisa Monaco, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism
  • Ron Klain, Ebola Response Coordinator
  • Thomas Frieden, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Rand Beers, Deputy Assistant to the President for Homeland Security
  • Nancy Powell, Ebola Coordinator, Department of State
  • Gayle Smith, Senior Director for Development and Democracy, National Security Council

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the Press Secretary on the President’s Travel to Asia

The President will travel to China, Burma and Australia from November 10-16.  In China from November 10-12, President Obama will attend the APEC Leaders Meeting and APEC CEO Summit.  Upon the conclusion of the APEC Leaders Meeting, the President will participate in a state visit with President Xi Jinping of China.  In Burma from November 12-14, President Obama will attend the East Asia Summit (EAS) and the U.S.-ASEAN Summit in Nay Pi Taw, and hold a bilateral meeting with President Thein Sein.  In Rangoon on November 14, the President will participate in a town hall event with participants in the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI) and meet with Aung San Suu Kyi.  In Brisbane, Australia from November 15-16, the President will participate in the G20 Leaders Summit and deliver a speech on U.S. leadership in the Asia-Pacific.  Details on additional meetings and events will be forthcoming. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Signs Hawaii Disaster Declaration

The President today declared a major disaster exists in the State of Hawaii and ordered federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts in the area affected by the Pu’u ‘Ō’ō volcanic eruption and lava flow beginning on September 4, 2014, and continuing.

Federal funding is available to state and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency protective measures taken as a result of the Pu’u ‘Ō’ō volcanic eruption and lava flow in Hawaii County.

Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures in Hawaii County.

W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named Kenneth K. Suiso 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.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 11/3/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:16 P.M. EST

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  It's nice to see you all.  I don't have any announcements at the top, so we'll go straight to questions.  I think we will do a little departure from the standard protocol today and we will allow the first question today to be asked by the most recently married person in the room.  (Laughter.)  So I don't know who that might be.  Oh, it's Julie.  (Laughter.)  Congratulations, Julie.

Q    Thank you.  Great to be back.  Just in time for the election.

MR. EARNEST:  Indeed.

Q    The President has nothing on his public schedule today. It doesn’t appear as though he has anything on his public schedule tomorrow for Election Day at this point.  Is he going to do anything more in public?  Will we see from him, hear from him? Is he going to be doing robocalls to try to reach out to voters between now and when the polls close tomorrow?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Julie, you’ve covered enough campaigns to know that we are entering a different phase of the election cycle, which is this is when successful campaigns, at least, turn their attention from some of the broader arguments that are carried over the television waves and are focused on a ground campaign to make sure that their voters are turning out on Election Day. 

And some of my Democratic colleagues who are following this election a little bit more closely than I am tell me that they have a lot of confidence heading into Election Day in the ground campaigns that Democratic candidates up and down the ballot in states across the country are running.  That makes a big difference in close races, and there are any number of close races that all of you have been closely covering.

As long as we're talking about the President, I think it is relevant to note that many of those ground campaigns are actually based on a strategy that was successfully implemented by this President in the context of his reelection campaign in 2012.  So that is one important way that this President and his campaign apparatus are benefiting campaigns even here, up to the very last day of the campaign.

Q    He has previously been involved in get-out-the-vote efforts through radio call-ins, through robocalls, local television interviews.  Will he be doing any of those things today or tomorrow?

MR. EARNEST:  I would anticipate that you’ll see more of -- that you will see the President engaged in those kinds of activities.  I'm not trying to be obtuse here.  In some cases, there are situations where the President has taped robocalls in the last couple of weeks that will, of course, be timed to run over the course of the final week and in the final days before Election Day.

Q    Is it possible to get a list of states or cities, towns?

MR. EARNEST:  I can get you some information along those lines for you, yes.

Q    Okay.  The Vice President said in an interview that aired this morning -- he predicted that Democrats will keep control of the Senate.  Does the President agree with his prediction?

MR. EARNEST:  He does.  And again, it is rooted in this idea that if -- as voters hone in on the central question in this campaign, which is are you going to be supportive of a candidate who is fighting for policies that benefit middle-class families, that is a very strong argument for Democrats to effectively make in the context of this campaign.  They’re also backed by a tried and true ground campaign strategy that in the context of a very close race can provide a 2 to 3 point margin that could eventually make up the difference. 

Those strategies are rooted in strategies that were successfully implemented by the President’s team in the context of his reelection campaign.  So that certainly is a way that the President has made an important, tangible contribution to benefit Democrats on the ballot tomorrow.

Q    I just want to switch to a different topic.  On August 14th, the President said that police in Ferguson, Missouri shouldn’t be arresting or bullying journalists, and that the police there needed to be more transparent about their actions.  But I'm sure you’ve seen this report that some of my colleagues at AP have from new FAA tapes that show that the administration was working with local police to keep media helicopters grounded from having aerial coverage over the protest in Missouri.  Didn’t the President’s instructions about transparency apply to his own administration?

MR. EARNEST:  Julie, I've seen those reports -- I didn’t read them all the way through.  What I can tell you are a couple of things about the policies that were put in place by the FAA.  And again, this is based on what the FAA has said, and so for follow-up questions, I'd encourage you to contact them.  I know your colleagues have already been in touch with them.

The FAA did make a decision -- consistent with the priority they place on the safety and security of the traveling public,   the FAA made a decision to implement a temporary flight restriction in the vicinity of Ferguson after there were reports that shots had been fired at a police helicopter.  Within 12 to 14 hours of that initial temporary flight restriction, the FAA updated that flight restriction that removed any restrictions for media who were seeking to operate in the area.  And that is -- again, that is the consequence of the policies that were put in place here by the FAA.

I know that there were a number of conversations via email and other places that were cited in the report.  I can't account for those conversations.  What I can account for are what the FAA says about the policies that were put in place.  And in this case, what the FAA says is that they took the prudent step of implementing this temporary flight restriction in the immediate aftermath of reports of shots fired at a police helicopter, but within 12 to 14 hours, that flight restriction was updated in a way to remove restrictions for reporters who were seeking to operate in the area.

Q    But what the conversations show is that a lot of the focus was not on police helicopters and safety of law enforcement; it was specifically on keeping media helicopters out of the area.  So I'm wondering if the administration feels like that was an appropriate decision to keep media helicopters out of the area for however amount of time.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, it's the FAA’s responsibility to make decisions about the safety and security of the traveling public. So, in this case, they took what they would describe as --

Q    But they were having conversations that did not necessarily focus on that.  They focused on media access to the area. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I guess we can focus on the conversations, or we can focus on the policies that they put in place, and --

Q    But if the policies were put in place because of specific conversations about the media access --

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think you're getting to the right question, which is this question about the fact that the discussions were about media access, but the flight restrictions that were put in place didn’t have any impact on media access.  So, again, I can't account -- the updated flight restriction didn’t have any impact on media access.

So I can't account for the conversations, but I can account for what the FAA says about the practical impact of the policies that they put in place related to this temporary flight restriction.  And the fact is that the policies that were put in place by the FAA were focused on safety and only had an impact on media coverage for 12 to 14 hours until the temporary flight restriction was updated in a way that allowed media to essentially operate freely in that vicinity.

Roberta.

Q    Why did the President want to meet with Janet Yellen today?  And what should we take away from this about the timing, anything about the timing, in terms of the election tomorrow or the Fed just finishing QE?

MR. EARNEST:  The President has, over the course of his almost six years in office now, met periodically with the Chair of the Federal Reserve.  He met on a number of occasions with Chairman Bernanke.  This is the first opportunity that the President has had to meet one-on-one with Janet Yellen.  She did, however, participate in a meeting of financial regulators that the President convened at the White House last month.  But in terms of a one-on-one meeting, this was the first opportunity that they’ve had to do that since she was confirmed into the position as the Chair of the Federal Reserve.

Their discussion will focus on the long-term outlook for the American economy.  As we've discussed on a number of occasions in this room, the resilience of the American economy has been on full display recently as we've looked at numbers related to job creation and numbers even as recently as last week indicating that economic growth continues to be strong in the United States and continues to be, in fact, the envy of the developed world.  That is thanks in part to the policies that this President put in place early on in his administration when he took office in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

But the bulk of the credit goes to the hard work and determination of America’s workers and the ingenuity and innovation of America’s entrepreneurs to really kick-start American growth, to demonstrate its resiliency and help us make such a substantial recovery since that economic downturn. 

Now, what the President is focused on is putting in place policies that will benefit the middle class to ensure that they are enjoying the benefits of the kind of resilience the American economy is showing.

But obviously the Fed is an independent body, they make their own policies.  But there is an opportunity for the President and the Chair of the Fed to have conversations.  That doesn’t -- but those conversations, at least in the context of today, are focused on the long-term outlook for the American economy and even the longer-term impact of the global economy as well.

I will say one other thing, which is that it's an appropriate conversation for the President to have prior to his departure for Asia, which he'll do this coming weekend.  Over the course of his trip to Asia, he'll have the opportunity to talk about the importance and the benefits of opening up markets overseas to American products.  And they’ll convene at the -- world leaders will convene in Australia at the G20 meeting, which is sort of the largest international economic body of the world’s 20 largest economies, to have some discussions about the global economy.  And so the President having this conversation with the Chair of the Fed makes sense in advance of that meeting.

Q    And does he plan to raise with her the two vacancies on the Fed board?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't have any readout of the meeting beyond what I've just said.  But I would anticipate we'll have a readout of the meeting after it concludes, and so you can ask again then.

Q    When should we expect names to be put forward for those two vacancies?  Jeff Zients was talking about that back in June; he said it would be soon.  Do you anticipate that's something that's going to come soon and perhaps in the lame duck session?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't have any update on timing at this point. 

Michelle.

Q    Hi.  We're seeing so many candidates be put on the defensive because of the President’s policies.  How would you describe what the President has done during this election cycle that has been most effective, and how, in the White House’s opinion?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think one thing I would do is I would encourage you to check with the candidates themselves.  And I think those candidates that appeared with the President on stage over the weekend were pretty spirited --

Q    In your -- in the White House’s opinion.

MR. EARNEST:  The reason I -- I'm not trying to dodge the question.  What I'm trying to do is to indicate to you that the way that we make decisions about the way the President can most benefit these campaigns is to ask the campaigns themselves what the President can do to help out those candidates who share the President’s view that policies that benefit middle-class families should be at the top of the domestic policymaking agenda.  So that’s the reason I suggest you check with the campaigns.

I did happen to notice that the Executive Director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee had the opportunity last week to note that the President of the United States had done everything the DSCC had asked him to do.  And that is an indication of the President’s commitment, again, to boosting those candidates for office or those candidates for reelection that are strong advocates for the middle class.

Q    Anything you think has been most effective?  Whether it’s fundraising, or -- I mean, what do you think the President has done that has been most effective during this cycle?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I think it’s going to vary by state.  In some cases, making sure that the DSCC and the DNC and the DCCC have access to financial resources to promote, or, in some cases, defend Democratic candidates is a way that the President can contribute to the success of Democrats that is more significant than anybody else can do, frankly.  The President retains a significant capacity to enlist his supporters to offer their financial support to Democratic campaign committees.

The President, as I mentioned in response to Julie’s question, has also lent his campaign apparatus to these Democratic campaign committees and to individual Democratic candidates to help them identify volunteers and supporters, and to turn out Democratic voters on Election Day.  The President had tremendous success in 2012 -- which all of you wrote about -- in engaging young people and African Americans and Hispanics and Asians in the electoral process in the last campaign, and presumably, those efforts can be replicated to some degree by Democratic candidates who are on the ballot this time.

Q    And we also heard the Vice President today say that even if the Republicans do take the Senate, that it won’t make that much of a difference, it won’t be that big of a deal.  Do you agree with that?

MR. EARNEST:  I think that every time that you have a midterm or presidential election, the consequences are significant.  And that is why, even outside of the context of express advocacy for individual candidates, you’ve heard the President talk about the importance of voting and the importance of people being engaged in their democracy; that it’s an important part of citizenship for people to follow the issues and to make their voices heard on Election Day.  And that’s true regardless of which candidate you’re supporting and regardless of which party you have joined.  And I think that’s the kind of sentiment that even the Vice President would agree with. 

Major.

Q    You think that Republicans will gain seats in the Senate but just fall short?  Is that a sense of your prediction?

MR. EARNEST:  You guys are following this more closely than I am, so I wouldn’t --

Q    But, I mean, you say that you think they’re going to -- Democrats are going to hold on -- you wouldn’t dispute that Republicans are likely to pick up a few seats?

MR. EARNEST:  I would refrain from hazarding a guess.

Q    But you have hazarded a guess.  You said Democrats are going to hold.

MR. EARNEST:  I do think that Democrats will retain the majority.  But in terms of the counting of seats, you guys are following this more closely than I am.  I’m not going to get -- I’m not going to do that two days before the election -- or one day before the election.

Q    Okay.  One before.  (Laughter.) 

MR. EARNEST:  Whatever it is.

Q    One day.  One day. 

MR. EARNEST:  Those who are listening to my impassioned plea to participate in the elections, please note that the elections are actually tomorrow and not on Wednesday.

Q    The Vice President also said, if -- and I know you don’t concede this -- but if Republicans were to take control of the Senate, the White House would not have to change its method of dealing with the Senate Republican majority or change any of its legislative tactics.  Why not?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I --

Q    First of all, do you agree with that?  And if you do, why wouldn’t there need to be a change or a shift in how to try to get things accomplished when you have Republicans in the Senate and Republicans in the House running things?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not going to -- the other thing that I have refrained from doing is sort of speculating about what sort of posture the White House is going to take in light of different outcomes.  What I can tell you without any wariness is that regardless of who is in the majority in the Senate -- I continue to think it’s going to be Democrats, but we’ll see -- regardless of who’s in the control of the Senate, this administration is going to continue to strongly advocate for policies that benefit middle-class families all across the country, and the administration is going to retain a willingness to work with anybody in either party who shares that commitment, even if it is on one specific issue; that we should be able to put aside our partisan affiliation to, for example, focus on policies that would allow us to invest in infrastructure.

This is an issue that has not traditionally been subject to intense partisan wrangling.  There’s no such thing as a Democratic bridge or a Republican bridge, but rather, Democrats and Republicans should be able to work together to modernize bridges in communities all across the country.  That would create jobs in the short term, but also lay a longer-term foundation for our economic strength.  And that will continue to be the priority that this President places as it relates to his domestic agenda, regardless of whether Democrats or Republicans are in the majority.

Now, I guess the one thing I will say is that we’re also always going to be willing to -- signaling an open -- let me say it this way -- signaling an openness to working with anybody, either a Democrat or Republican, to advance your agenda means an openness to changing your tactics.  If we can succeed in moving a piece of legislation that ultimately benefits middle-class families without compromising a principle but that may envision a change in some kind of tactic, of course the President is going to be open to doing exactly that.

Ultimately, the President believes that there is more that can and should be done by Washington, D.C. to support our economy as it continues to recover from the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.  And we’ve seen tremendous resilience in the American economy.  What we need to see is greater evidence that the benefits of that recovery are accruing to middle-class families across the country.

Q    Did you just say that you haven’t done any planning here at the White House or --

MR. EARNEST:  No, I didn’t say that.

Q    -- had conversations about how to adapt to legislative strategy if Republicans take control of the Senate?  Because that’s not the impression I get. 

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t think I said anything related to our internal planning, and that’s not something I’m prepared to talk about from here.

Q    Okay.  You mentioned infrastructure.  I’d like you to talk to us about trade, because you have trade negotiations that are nearing, possibly at completion.  The last time we were in Asia, the President was vexed that people said the deal didn’t get done and he thought that was premature.  Clearly, there's a great expectation that these negotiations are going to come to fruition sometime soon.  When you’re in Asia, you talk about the export markets a lot.  Democratic leaders in the Senate had no interest in bringing that issue to the floor, even if it had been negotiated or not.  Republicans do.  Is that an area where, A, you think you can get a deal soon, and, B, you might find a more hospitable legislative climate if Republicans take control of the Senate?

MR. EARNEST:  Major, I do not anticipate that there will be a significant breakthrough in trade talks while the President is traveling in Asia.  This is an opinion that has been shared by Ambassador Froman over at the United States Office of the Trade Representative.  He can give you a better update about where those conversations stand.  But I would not anticipate any sort of breakthrough in those broader negotiations while the President is traveling next week. 

That being said, we do -- I would anticipate that any sort of agreement that the President reaches with other countries as it goes through the process of moving through Congress, we’re going to rely on a bipartisan majority to get that done.  We’re going to need to work with Democrats and Republicans to strike -- to validate any agreement like that.

But I don’t want to get ahead of the process.  What we’re counting on is continued negotiations led by -- very ably, I might add -- by Ambassador Froman.  And from there, we’re going to be looking for -- well, let me back up and say one other thing, which is that I’m confident that Ambassador Froman is carefully following the President’s direction, that any sort of agreement that’s reached is going to be clearly in the best interests of American workers and American businesses, American farmers, in some instances.  And that will be the criteria by which these kinds of agreements are reached.  And that is the -- I assume that will be the criteria by which Democrats and Republicans on the Hill will evaluate this agreement.  And so when we get to that stage in this, we’re going to be ready to work with Democrats and Republicans to make progress.

Q    One last question on the politics tomorrow.  What is the White House listening for?  What message do you think you hope to hear?  Are you prepared, if that is a message rendered through the elections themselves tell you something different about what you think the country wants to hear and in fact what it actually wants to send as far as a signal to the White House?

MR. EARNEST:  I’ll say two things about that.  The first is, it is important to understand, as important as this election is, as I described to Michelle, a midterm election is different than a presidential election, particularly this year.  The Senate contests that are, understandably, so closely followed, the vast majority of them are actually taking place in states that the President did not win in the last presidential election.  So the electorate is different this time than it is in a traditional presidential election.  And that is what is -- that will be part of the calculation that’s made as we consider what sort of conclusion should be appropriately drawn from the election.

I guess, in other words, it would not be wise to draw as broad a conclusion about the outcome of this election as you would from a national presidential election simply by virtue of the map and the fact of the states where this contest is taking place.  That said, this election is extraordinarily important.  And that’s why you’ve seen the President make a concerted effort to benefit Democrats up and down the ballot.

The second thing I’ll say is I think this is true even in nonelection years, particularly the last couple of years that there is intense frustration on the part of the electorate with the failure of Washington, D.C. to put in place policies that are helpful to middle-class families, and that, time and again, we have seen Republicans repeatedly block common-sense proposals that would benefit middle-class families.  And that’s everything from some of the infrastructure proposals that we were talking about before to even something as simple and common sense as immigration reform that’s already passed through the Senate in bipartisan fashion.

So I am confident that in the day or two after the election, we’ll be talking about how voters continue to want to see their elected representatives in Washington, D.C. putting aside their partisan labels and focusing on what those elected representatives can do for middle-class families back home.

Q    Since you opened the door to this, would you say that the map is less meaningful in states like North Carolina, Iowa, New Hampshire, where the President was successful and there are very close races involving Democrats?  I know the point you’re making about Montana, Arkansas, Alaska.  But there are other states up for grabs where the President did well, and we remember well Iowa.  Are those results resonant in a way that you can’t discount as a way of sending a signal to the President and this White House about what it’s done or what it’s failed to accomplish?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the other thing that we’ve seen -- and this has been true in a lot of the polling data that’s been conducted recently, as well, about what’s motivating the votes of individuals who are considering casting a ballot on Election Day.  And the vast majority of people say that their vote is determined by something other than sending a message to the President of the United States.  So I would take those voters at their word.

And the last thing I’ll say is, I hope I didn’t overstate -- and we can -- I’m not suggesting that we’re in a position where there should be no conclusion that’s drawn from the outcome of this election.  Of course, there should be.  But that conclusion and any analysis that you do is different than the analysis that you would do on a true national election.

April.

Q    Josh, I want to talk about an election, not tomorrow’s, but 2016 and Joe Biden’s comment to Gloria Borger.  Is there any talk around the White House about is Biden the best person to fill the job?  Because he told Gloria Borger, part of his answer to her, he said, “Am I convinced I’m in best positioned of anyone else to lead the country next four years?”  Is there any conversation around this White House about that?  And has he posed that question to the President?

MR. EARNEST:  I think the point that the Vice President was making, April, is that this is a question that the Vice President needs to resolve for himself, and that will determine whether or not he chooses to pursue his candidacy in 2016.  So that’s a decision that he’ll make for himself, and he’s the one who’s in the best position to explain to you how he’s going to make that decision.  But the only conversations that I’m aware of about the Vice President here in the White House center on the important role that he’s playing right now as the Vice President of the United States to advance a whole range of administration priorities.

Q    Well, since he is in the position -- he’s the only one in the position to make the determination if he is that person -- he happens to be right now the person if this President of the United States if unable to fulfill his duties, he would step into that role.  So does this President feel that he is the person for the next four years?

MR. EARNEST:  The President is not focused on the 2016 elections.  The President has on a number of occasions talked about the variety of reasons that he chose Vice President Biden to be his running mate all the way back in 2008.  And part of that criteria was the ability of Vice President Biden to play such an important leading role in the country.  But again, I wouldn’t read anything into any sort of decisions that are a long way out from being made.

Q    Are you gently side-stepping the answer to that because you have Hillary Clinton, your former strong Secretary of State, and you have your Vice President who could possibly be in this President’s shoes if anything were to happen?  Is that the reason why you’re navigating so well through that question?

MR. EARNEST:  I have to say that there are a variety of reasons why I’m side-stepping that question.  (Laughter.)

Christi.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  The Free Syrian Army this weekend suffered some serious setbacks in northern Syria, if not a total collapse.  How does the White House read that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not in a position to confirm.  I’ve seen a couple of those reports.  I’m not in a position to confirm those specific reports; we’re still assessing them.  And we certainly are aware that moderate forces in Syria are engaged in a multi-front conflict, and that multi-front conflict is taking a toll on them, there’s no doubt about that.  That is in part why you’ve seen the administration discuss the need to ramp up the training and assistance that the United States is offering to Syrian opposition fighters -- moderate Syrian opposition fighters.
 
Again, even though that assessment is still ongoing, I would also remind you of something that the President said just a few weeks ago back out at Joint Base Andrews when he was meeting with the chiefs of defense from countries who are participating in our international coalition against ISIL.  The President indicated that, “This is going to be a long-term campaign.  There are not quick fixes involved.  We’re still at the early stages.  And as with any military effort, there will be days of progress and there are going to be periods of setback.”

So this is not a short-term proposition.  And the United States and members of our coalition understand that this is going to be -- this is going to require a sustained effort and a sustained commitment.

Q    Where do you go -- (inaudible) -- for these moderate partners in Syria?  I mean, they seem to just be up against so very much, and there was defections, people running for the border.  I mean, are your hopes barely dashed at this point that you’ll at the near term have any chance of building up a strong replacement?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Christi, we have indicated that the train-and-equipping efforts that will be run out of the Department of Defense in close coordination with nations like Turkey and Saudi Arabia that have agreed to host these training operations are longer-term propositions, that these are not the kinds of things that you stand up and that individuals complete overnight.  Rather, this will require a sustained commitment.
 
And the United States and our coalition partners are mindful of two things.  We’re mindful, A, of the important role that local ground forces will have to play in taking the fight to ISIL on the ground in Syria.  We’re also mindful of the fact that those kinds of forces, with that significant capacity to take on hardened fighters like those in ISIL, take some time to train and equip and stand up and organize.

So those efforts are underway.  I’d refer you to the Department of Defense who may be able to offer you an up-to-date assessment about where those training-and-equipping missions currently stand.  But we understand that at the very front end here, that this is not a short-term proposition.

Bob.

Q    Josh, the Vice President may be right in one way, in that without 60 votes any major piece of legislation is not likely to pass in the Senate.  But the Democrats did change the rules regarding nominations, federal nominations, judicial nominations, and they could very well gum up the works in terms of bureaucratic positions, as well as the judiciary.  Is the White House prepared for that?  And do you have a significant number of appointments that still need to be made?

MR. EARNEST:  There are still some appointments that are languishing on the floor.  I would say that even when they’ve served in the minority, that Republicans have been very pretty effective in gumming up the works on a whole variety of things, including relatively non-controversial appointments to positions in the administration.
 
So while there is a substantial import associated with this election, with significant consequences, I’m not sure you’ve identified one of them in this question at least.

Cheryl.

Q    Thanks.  So Congress is coming back November 12th, for a few weeks at least, for a lame-duck session.  What are your priorities in this small window, your legislative priorities?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Cheryl, we’ll have more to say about that in the days and weeks ahead.  I don’t have a pronouncement to make from here.  I think that there are a couple of things we know are going to happen before the end of the year, or at least likely to happen before the end of the year.  The one thing we know that’s going to happen before the end of the year is the President is going to take action to use his executive authority to fix those aspects of our broken immigration system that can be fixed using executive authority.

The President, as we’ve said on many occasions, has been disappointed that House Republicans have blocked common-sense bipartisan legislation that passed through the Senate to come up for a vote in the House of Representatives.  That’s certainly something they could consider in the lame duck, and we’d welcome in doing so, but that will have to be a decision that’s made by House Republicans in that instance.

So as it relates to our legislative priorities, I anticipate we’ll have more to say about this in the days and weeks ahead.

Chris.

Q    When the President -- and we talked about this in this room before -- when he said he’s not on the ballot but his policies are, did he nationalize this election to the detriment of Democratic candidates?

MR. EARNEST:  Chris, the point that the President was making, and has made on a number of occasions, is that his name, in fact, is not on the ballot.  And again, I think, as I mentioned to Major, I believe, the polls indicate that most voters are making up their minds about which candidates to support for reasons that don’t involve the President of the United States.  That’s not particularly surprising, because, again, is not on the ballot.
 
The reason that the President said that he was aggressively advocating in support of candidates up and down the ballot all across the country is that those candidates are committed to fighting for policies that benefit middle-class families.  The President also is committed to policies that benefit middle-class families.  And the President is eager to have partners in Congress who share that priority.  And that has animated the President’s support for House candidates, for Senate candidates, and even candidates for governor.
 
The President spent a lot of time talking about that on the road over the last few days.  And we’re hopeful that the voters will make a decision to send representatives from their home state or their home district with marching orders to back the kinds of policies that we know will benefit middle-class families.

Q    Anticipating that you will say that decisions are not made based on polling, our recent poll shows 44 percent say they like the President; that’s down from 60 percent in 2012.  Two-thirds say they want to see him change either a “great deal” or “quite a bit.”  What do those kinds of numbers mean for a post-election strategy?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, before we spend a lot of time talking about the post-election strategy, we should convene the election.  What I can tell you is that --

Q    But doesn’t that impact whether the Democrats or the Republicans -- doesn’t the President’s own standing with the American public affect, no matter who controls the Senate?

MR. EARNEST:  Of course the President’s standing will have some impact.  But what I would encourage you to do is to consult polling that even NBC has done, that concludes that the vast majority of voters are not making their decision in this election based on their appraisal of the President.  They’re basing that on a variety of other things, including, I think understandably, their appraisal of the two candidates who are standing for office.

So we’ll have the option to evaluate the results of the election.  And I can tell you that regardless of the outcome, one thing the President will continue to do is to use -- is to fight for the policies that he believes should be at the top of the agenda, which is policies that will expand the economic opportunity for middle-class families.
 
And the things that won’t change about his tactic is he’s going to continue to be open to working with anybody -- a Democrat, Republican or even independent -- who shares that priority.

Q    And anything on where exactly he’ll be watching the returns and with whom?

MR. EARNEST:  He’ll be here at the White House tomorrow night.  I don’t know who will be watching with him.

Q    Will we get that read before?

MR. EARNEST:  Probably not in advance, but we’ll see what we can do to keep you updated on his activities tomorrow night.

Q    Is there an election party?

MR. EARNEST:  Not that I know of.

Q    Is there a menu --

Q    Is there a wine list?  (Laughter.)
 
MR. EARNEST:  Yeah, exactly.  Exactly.
 
Ed.

Q    Josh, I want to go back to Chris’s -- the substance of her question, though, about the poll number, because there were a bunch of things you were talking about.  But the specific thing she asked, which is 67 percent of the public, regardless of how they vote or whatever, but 67 percent of the public says in this NBC/Wall Street Journal poll that they want to see the President make substantial change in the direction of his leadership.  Agree?  Disagree?
MR. EARNEST:  I guess --

Q    Sixty-percent of registered voters would like to see either a “great deal” of change or “quite a bit” of change to Mr. Obama’s direction.  So your point is valid, that we don’t know what the results are yet, it’s a smaller number of states in the entire country in terms of the key Senate battles, for example.  But this is just a snapshot.  But when 67 percent of the public is saying we want to see a substantial change to how the President is approaching this -- his job, his leadership -- how does the White House address that?  Will he make substantial changes, regardless if he wins or loses?

MR. EARNEST:  Ed, my sense is -- and again, I’m not a pollster, so there are probably others who have conducted a more thorough analysis of this data.  But my initial reaction is to say that voters are understandably frustrated with Washington, D.C., and they hold the President, the most powerful person in Washington, accountable for that.

Q    So what’s he going to do about it?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what they should also do is they should also examine the priorities that the President has been fighting for.  My guess is -- again, there are others who have done more analysis on this than I have.  My guess is that there are some people who say the President should do more to work with Republicans on some of these issues.  There are just as many people in that poll who will probably say the President spent too much time working with a bunch of Republicans that aren’t interested in middle-class families or policies that benefit middle-class families, and the President needs to fight harder on his own.

So I don’t think that that one particular poll number is indicative of a unified point of view by the electorate, other than their general frustration with Washington, D.C.; the President on a number of occasions has said that he shares that frustration.  The President has indicated on a number of occasions that he understands why he is part of the target of that frustration.  And it’s why you’re going to see the President continue to demonstrate a willingness to work with anybody -- Democrat or Republican -- who’s willing to fight for the kinds of priorities that the President has identified.

Q    Again, so this is not -- it’s a snapshot; it’s not what everybody in the country thinks.  But let me drill down on one other part.  Among Mr. Obama’s own party, it says 47 percent -- 47 percent of Democrats said they want substantial change in the way he leads the country.  So talk to those Democrats then.  Forget about the Republicans.  Is the President going to change the way he leads the country?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Ed, again, in light of the elections, I’m confident that at some point you’ll have the opportunity to hear from the President when he’ll discuss the outcome here.  So I don’t want to get into sort of the post-election analysis before the election has been held.  But --

Q    And I’m not asking for that.  I’m asking for the President’s approach.  There’s been a whole series of stories in the last few days, administration officials speculating to bring in new people; is he going to have a different agenda.  I get you can’t give us all the details now -- you’re still weighing that.  But I’m not hearing you say the President is prepared to change at all.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I haven't looked at the poll, but my guess is those who have done the analytics here aren’t going to suggest that the way that the President can sort of change his leadership is by hiring and firing a couple of staff members at the White House.  I think what the people in that poll are saying is consistent with our broader understanding about where the electorate is right now -- are saying they want to see more from Washington, D.C. in the way of policies that will benefit middle-class families.  That’s something that the President has been fighting for for quite some time.
 
We have not gotten much, if any, cooperation from Republicans in Congress on this.  So we’ll have to see what the outcome of the election is.  Just as importantly, we’ll have to see what lessons individual members of Congress derive from the outcome of those elections.  And we’ll see if it causes some Republicans to look for more opportunities to work with the President to advance the kind of middle-class agenda that traditionally hasn’t gotten bogged down in partisan wrangling.

So again, that would be an optimistic, hopeful outcome, but we’ll see what the outcome is.

Q    Two other quick things.  One on Iran and an opportunity for the President to work with Congress.  Republicans and Democrats, like Bob Menendez, have been saying they want him to come to Congress with any sort of deal, if there’s a nuclear deal with Iran.  And since we last had a briefing here, there was an audio tape that emerged in which Ben Rhodes was privately saying that you’re looking at ways to get around Congress, basically, to push this deal through.  What can you say about that?  And on the tape there’s sort of laughter about the idea of going around Congress.  So for all this talk about working with Congress, can you tell us how that applies in this field?

MR. EARNEST:  I haven't heard the tape, but what I have heard are the readouts of any number of conversations that have taken place between senior administration officials and Democrats and Republicans in Congress who are regularly being updated by this administration on the status of our conversations with Iran.  The fact is -- and I’ve said this many times -- we wouldn’t have succeeded in bringing Iran to the negotiating table had the administration and Congress been unable to work so closely on this matter.
 
I think this is actually one of the instances where we can point to successful cooperation between Democrats and Republicans in Congress and the administration in putting in place a sanctions regime that has exacted a significant toll on the Iranian economy.  That sanctions regime would not have been successful without the skilled implementation of that regime by this administration, by working so closely with our partners to do the diplomacy that’s necessary to really tighten the crank on the Iranians.  And that’s why the administration has continued to work closely with Congress to update them on the status of our ongoing negotiations.

The other thing that I’ll say about this is that listening to the public comments of members of Congress it’s pretty clear that views on this particular situation and the best way to resolve it don’t really break down along partisan lines; that there are people with different views and different philosophies in terms of how the executive branch should protect and defend the interests of the United States of America in dealing with nations like Iran.
 
Let me just say one last thing, which is that there continues to be ongoing discussions between technical experts -- or among technical experts, both in Iran and members of the P5-plus-1, and it’s all geared toward resolving not just the United States’ concern about the Iran nuclear program, but about the international community’s concerns about the Iran nuclear program.  The best way to resolve that is not through military action, but we can get an enduring diplomatic solution where the Iranians themselves in the context of that agreement would agree in a verifiable, transparent way to confirm for the international community that their nuclear program is only geared toward peaceful civilian purposes.

Q    Last one.  You referenced this in a previous answer about hiring and firing around here.  There’s been a whole series of leaks in the last few days, administration officials speculating about who’s coming and going, officials mocking the Secretary of State that he’s off message.  Is this White House fracturing?

MR. EARNEST:  No, Ed.  There is a complete unity of opinion that the President’s view and that the President’s commitment to both expanding economic opportunity for the middle class and doing everything we can to protect the American people around the globe continues to be at the top of our agenda here.  And I can tell you that the President’s team is wholly unified in pursuit of those goals.

Peter.

Q    Josh, when you said a few minutes ago that the public should examine the President’s priorities, are you saying that after six years the public is unaware of his priorities?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t mean to suggest that.  I think the President has tried to be very clear about what he believes in, what he stands for and what he’s fighting for, and what he’s fighting for are policies on the domestic side that benefit middle-class families; that expand economic opportunity for middle-class families.  And when it comes to our foreign policy, the President is committed to ensuring that American influence around the globe is a force for good and used in a way that strengthens the security and stability of the United States of America.

Q    When you look at the election landscape and you make a comment like you did about the -- that the public should examine the President’s priorities, do you anywhere in your gut feel that there was a failure to communicate those priorities the right way?

MR. EARNEST:  Not at all.  The President continues to believe, and I continue to believe, that the argument shapes up well for Democrats in this election.  And some of that is because the President has played an important role in making that argument.  But ultimately, it’s up to these individual candidates to make the case for themselves.  And if they -- many of those candidates I think will make a case about their commitment to fighting for policies that benefit middle-class families.

And the President is eager to boost that argument, to boost those candidates, and to do what he can to help them.  And whether that’s doing interviews with radio hosts or taping robocall messages, or lending his campaign apparatus expertise to individual candidates, the President is all in and doing everything that he can to support Democratic candidates.

Roger.

Q    Thanks.  Back to the Fed.  Does the President think the Fed could be doing more things to help the middle class? 

MR. EARNEST:  Roger, as you know, the Federal Reserve has maintained a long tradition of independence in terms of their policymaking.  And it’s perceived by some as an infringement on that independence for me to make comments about the substantive policy decisions that are made by the Fed.  So, in deference to that point of view, I’m not going to be in a position to answer your question.

Q    Okay, understood.  Is the President happy with the Fed’s performance since Yellen took over?  (Laughter.) 

MR. EARNEST:  Again, only out of an abundance of caution, I’m going to refrain from answering that question just for the same reason.

Q    Okay, one more stab.  He’s going to Asia next week. 

MR. EARNEST:  Yes.

Q    Chinese currency has been a major trade issue for years. 

MR. EARNEST:  It has.

Q    Is he going to raise that issue with the Chinese President?

MR. EARNEST:  As you know, Roger, there are a number of issues that are regularly raised by the President in the context of his conversations with --

Q    This has usually been one of them.  I just want an affirmation that it’s going to come again.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, this is typically the domain not of the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, usually, but in this case, the Secretary of the Treasury.  And so I’d refer you to the Treasury Department for any possible conversations that could be taking place between the United States and China. 

Q    Would you rule that out?

MR. EARNEST:  I would not.

Dave.

Q    Josh, there was a mechanical problem on Air Force One last night during the President’s campaign trip.  Do you have any information about whether -- how that problem was detected?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not aware of the details of that problem that was reported and that necessitated a change in aircraft last night.  I’d refer you to the United States Air Force, who flies and maintains those planes, for a more detailed assessment.  Again, I think a lot of the details about the President’s aircraft are not something that they spend a lot of time talking about publicly.  I don’t know if they’ll be in a position to answer your question, but if anybody can it will be them.

Justin.

Q    You're suggesting in your answer to Ed’s question that the American people probably wouldn’t be interested in hiring or firing of staff.  And so I’m wondering if that’s an indication that we shouldn’t expect what we’ve seen from other Presidents, which is kind of a significant turnover or the departure of a key figure of the administration kind of in the aftermath of tomorrow’s election.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Justin, as was the case in previous presidencies, traditionally, after a midterm election it’s not uncommon for members of the President’s staff to use the opportunity of that election or its aftermath to leave the White House and sort of engage in a transition.  So I would anticipate that there will be members -- colleagues of mine here at the White House who will do exactly that.  I don’t know who those people are.  I don’t know of anybody who’s leaving.  I just suspect that that’s likely to be the case. 

I think what will be different is that there have been some Presidents who have felt compelled in the aftermath of midterm elections to publicly fire high-profile members of the administration.  At this point, I don’t anticipate that that will happen later this week.

Q    And I just wanted to ask about -- yesterday in Connecticut, the President got interrupted I think five different times during his speech by immigration protestors.  This is something that’s happened on nearly every one of his campaign stops.  And so when we’re talking about communications and how effective you guys have been in communicating, why do you think the President hasn’t been effective in communicating to obviously passionate advocates of immigration reform that he continues to be an ally to them?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the first thing, Justin, I’d say about that is I think it is an exaggeration to say that it’s happened at nearly every one of the President’s campaign stops.  I mean, the President did three events over the weekend and it happened in one of them.  I attended an event with the President on Thursday night in Maine and it didn’t occur there either.

So, that being said, I will stipulate, however, that there are advocates at some of the campaign events that the President has hosted who have expressed some frustration with the stalled progress of comprehensive immigration reform.  The President, as he’s said on many occasions, shares that frustration.  And I do think that those sorts of protests are evidence of the growing frustration by people who care most about this issue that Congress -- in this case, House Republicans -- have been unable to do something that seems so simple, so nonpartisan, and so common sense, which is to pass common-sense immigration reform legislation that’s already passed in bipartisan fashion by the Senate.

And the fact is we know that if it were put up for a vote on the floor of the House of Representatives that this bill would pass; that there is bipartisan support, in fact, majority support, for common-sense immigration reform legislation in the House of Representatives.  The only reason that vote hasn’t occurred is because there are members of the House Republican leadership that are preventing that bill from coming up for a vote.

What the President has said is that I strongly disagree with your opposition to this bill, but at least allow it to come up for a vote, at least allow the elected representatives of the American people to consider this piece of legislation that’s already passed with strong bipartisan support in the Senate -- if for no other reason that it would have strong and significant consequences for our broader economy, for our budget deficit, and certainly for people who are seeking to immigrate to this country.

Q    The reason that I ask is one of the polls that’s been cited already -- the ABC poll today -- showed that since the beginning of the year, the President’s favorability has fallen nearly 20 percent with Hispanic voters.  Obviously that’s, as the head of the party, an issue for Democrats headed into tomorrow’s election.  I mean, I know that you guys said when you decided to delay the action you were willing to take the political hit for it.  Do you think that this political hit is hurting Democrats headed into tomorrow?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, we’ll have to see what the polls say about that.  And my guess, though, is no, that what you are seeing is that you’re going to see voters make up their minds for a whole variety of reasons, most of them having to do with the candidates who are actually on the ballot.

The other thing I think that this highlights -- and this is something that we have talked about previously -- that the decision by the President to delay the announcement about executive actions to solve or at least address some of the problems associated with our broken immigration system had less to do with trying to dictate the outcome of specific elections and more with trying to deflect the political heat that would be focused on this specific issue.

Kerry.

Q    Last week, on the Secret Service, it became known that the CDC worker did not have a criminal -- felony criminal record. I am wondering if the White House, if the President knew that information before last week and if that changes -- or if there is any second-guessing in the White House about the decision to dismiss the Secret Service Director.  Because that incident was sort of was widely believed to sort of be the last straw for Julia Pierson, so I’m just looking for some reaction to the news that that incident was seemingly not as severe as it seemed at the time and whether there is any second-guessing on dismissing Julia Pierson.

MR. EARNEST:  I’ll say a couple things about that.  The President was briefed on this incident shortly before it was reported publicly.  I don’t know of any subsequent briefings that the President has received.  The President does continue to believe that new leadership has been needed at the Secret Service, and that’s related to the number of incidents that had cropped up around the United States Secret Service in the last several weeks. 

So I can tell you that, consistent with the views of the President, the Department of Homeland Security, under the direction of the Deputy Secretary, has completed their review of the fence-jumping incident that occurred six or so weeks ago.  That review, you’ll recall, was a careful examination of what exactly transpired that evening and considered carefully whether sort of any updated or any updates were needed to the security posture here at the White House.  That report has been conveyed to the Secretary of Homeland Security, who will forward it to this independent panel of experts that he’s appointed to consider that review and also to consider the criteria for who the next director of the United States Secret Service should be.  And I would anticipate that at an appropriate time, that there will be more that the Department of Homeland Security will be able to say about this review and about the recommendations from this independent panel.

J.C., I’ll give you the last one.

Q    Josh, in light of the two recent crashes of private-sector spacecraft, including Sir Richard Branson’s failed attempted -- tragic failed attempt, and the U.S. strained relationship with Russia, is this administration reconsidering its funding of NASA?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, J.C., I can tell you that we’ve often talked about the complicated relationship that the United States has with Russia; that for all of our strenuous disagreements about Russia’s conduct in Ukraine and along their border with Ukraine, we’ve also demonstrated an ability to cooperate with them on other issues in our clear mutual interest.  The first of those was the successful eradication of Syria’s declared chemical weapons stockpile. 

We have continued to see cooperation with the Russians in the context of the P5-plus-1 talks with Iran.  And we have continued to see cooperation between the United States and Russia as it relates to the International Space Station; that there -- as recently as a few weeks ago, I believe, an American astronaut was transported to the International Space Station aboard a Russia-launched rocket.  That is indicative of the kind of ongoing cooperation that exists between the United States and Russia, as it relates to our space program.

So in terms of the more recent news related to the space program, I would say that we continue to believe and are proud of the fact that the United States is on an ambitious and sustainable path of space exploration, and that the development of a commercial space industry in this country has had significant economic benefits for communities all across the country.  It also is something that has led to important innovation -- that this kind of competition has yielded innovative results and advancements for the space industry.  It also builds in redundancies into the system.  So the President continues to believe overall in the value of investments in our space program and in space exploration. 

And despite some of the more setbacks -- in some cases, tragic setbacks -- the President continues to be optimistic about the future of the U.S. space program.  Even as we sit here today, there is a rover -- or there are multiple rovers on the surface of Mars.  There are Americans who are living and working every day aboard the International Space Station that is in orbit around the globe.  There is spacecraft right now that have extended beyond -- they’ve traveled beyond our solar system and are conducting important research that’s being beamed back to Planet Earth. 

And we continue to see NASA technology and instruments in space that are used to collect data and offer advice to scientists who are looking to mitigate the impact of climate change on Planet Earth.  So this is an indication that NASA continues to make a substantial contribution to science, to the welfare not just of this country but of our planet.

Q    There’s no regret from this administration that they couldn’t be more robust in funding or working with Congress to fund NASA?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we’ve been clear about what our priorities are and we are clear about the fact that we are pleased that the United States, under the leadership of NASA, continues to be on an ambitious, sustainable path of space exploration.

Thanks, everybody.  We’ll see you tomorrow.

END  
1:13 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Meeting with Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen

The President and Chair Yellen met today in the Oval Office as part of an ongoing dialogue on the state of the economy, financial reform, and other economic issues. They discussed implementation of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act—which includes the most sweeping set of financial regulatory reforms since the Great Depression and the strongest consumer protections in history that have afforded millions of hard-working Americans new rights and protections within the financial sector. They also discussed the near and long-term growth outlook, both in the United States and globally.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on the Illegal Separatist Elections in Eastern Ukraine

The United States condemns the illegitimate, so-called “elections” held on Sunday by Russia-backed separatists in parts of Donetsk and Luhansk.  These sham elections contravened Ukraine’s constitution, the law on “special status,” and the most basic electoral norms.  Both Russia and its separatist proxies had agreed to honor Ukraine’s special status electoral law when they signed the Minsk Protocol of September 5.  They therefore violated the terms of that protocol with these so-called “elections” on November 2.   As we have said previously, the United States will not recognize the authority of any individuals claiming to represent parts of Donetsk and Luhansk on the basis of this illegal vote. 

We are concerned by a Russian Foreign Ministry statement today that seeks to legitimizes these sham “elections.”  We also continue to be concerned by reports that Russia is once more moving its troops and military equipment to portions of the international border.  The Russia-Ukraine border remains unmonitored and outside of Ukrainian government control despite Russia’s commitment to facilitate the establishment of an effective international monitoring mission.  We are also concerned by OSCE reports that OSCE Special Monitoring Mission UAVs operating east of the control line have come under attack in recent days.  More broadly, Moscow’s continued failure to fulfill its obligations under the Minsk agreements calls into question its commitment to supporting a peaceful resolution to the conflict in parts of eastern Ukraine. 

We call on Russia’s leaders to adhere to the commitments they made in Minsk to include the full withdrawal of foreign forces, the restoration of Ukrainian control of its sovereignty over the border with OSCE monitoring, and local elections in accordance with the special status law, which set these for December 7.  As we have said repeatedly, Russia has a choice.  If it supports the peace process and adheres to its Minsk commitments, the costs for Russia’s destabilizing actions against Ukraine will lessen.  Should Moscow continue to ignore the commitments that it made in Minsk and continue its destabilizing and dangerous actions, the costs to Russia will rise.

Ensuring Economic Equality and Opportunity for Women and America’s Working Families

President Barack Obama holds a women's roundtable discussion prior to remarks on the economy at Rhode Island College in Providence, Rhode Island, Oct. 31, 2014. Labor Secretary Thomas Perez attends at right.

President Barack Obama holds a women's roundtable discussion prior to remarks on the economy at Rhode Island College in Providence, Rhode Island, Oct. 31, 2014. Labor Secretary Thomas Perez attends at right. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Last week, in Providence, President Obama delivered remarks on the importance of empowering women and girls in our economy. “When women succeed, America succeeds, and we need leaders who understand that,” he told the audience at Rhode Island College (RIC).

But before delivering those remarks, I had the pleasure of joining the President and Labor Secretary Tom Perez, for a roundtable with the President of Rhode Island College, local woman business owners, working moms, and an RIC student to discuss what we need to do to ensure that 21st century workplaces meet the needs of our 21st century workforce -- which is increasingly being led by women.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Rally for Tom Wolf for Governor

Liacouras Center
Temple University
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

7:29 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Philly!  (Applause.)  Hello, Temple! (Applause.)  Give it up for your next governor, Tom Wolf!  (Applause.)  We've also got one of the best senators in the country -- Bob Casey.  (Applause.)  Congressman Chaka Fattah.  (Applause.)  Your Mayor, Michael Nutter.  (Applause.)  One of your state senators, and your next lieutenant governor, Mike Stack!  (Applause.)  

We’ve got three outstanding congressional candidates here today that deserve your vote, so I want you guys to pay attention -- you got to go all the way down the ballot.  We've got Dr. Manan Trivedi who is going to be a great member of Congress -- (applause) -- served his country with the Marines in Iraq.  We've got Kevin Strouse, who served his country as an Army Ranger in Iraq and Afghanistan.  (Applause.)  We've got Brendan Boyle, who’s lived out the American Dream as the first in his family to go to college.  (Applause.)  All three of them, they’re young, they’re sharp, they’re hardworking.  They’re ready to fight for you if you send them to Washington.  Make sure to vote for them. (Applause.)

And we’ve got all of you.  (Applause.)  This is a good-looking crowd right here.  (Applause.)  Now, those of you, if you’ve got a seat, if you want to sit down feel free.

AUDIENCE:  Nooo --

THE PRESIDENT:  You want to stand up.  All right, that's good.  (Laughter.)  That's good, because I'm going to try to get you out of your seats, because we've got some work to do.  (Applause.)  Because two days from now, you get to choose your future.  Now, if you came to this rally, I suspect you already know there’s an election and you are planning to vote.  (Applause.)  Otherwise you thought there was a basketball game here, and that's not the case.  (Laughter.)  So I need all of you to go grab your friends, grab your classmates, talk to your coworkers.  Knock on some doors.  Make some phone calls.  Check out IWillVote.com --

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  I love you!

THE PRESIDENT:  I love you, too, but I need you to vote.  (Applause.)  So go to IWillVote.com, find out where your polling place is.  And then take your people -- your friends, your neighbors -- to the polls.  (Applause.)  And when you do, make sure they vote for Tom Wolf.  (Applause.)

Let me tell you why.  Let me tell you why.  First of all, Tom is just a nice guy.  (Laughter.)  You can tell he’s a sincere person.  He’s not a professional politician.  He’s somebody who knows how to create jobs, knows how to start a business, knows how to serve the public.  He’s in it for the right reasons.  You know he’s going to do a good job.  But also I need everybody to recognize the moment we're in.  The country has made real progress since the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes.  (Applause.)

You think about where we were when I came into office.  The economy was in free fall.  The auto industry was about to disappear.  Housing prices were collapsing, financial system in chaos.  Our unemployment rate went over 10 percent.  And now, over the past four and a half years, America’s businesses have created more than 10 million new jobs.  (Applause.)  Over the past six months, our economy has grown at the fastest pace in more than a decade.  (Applause.)  There’s almost no economic measure where we're not doing better -- deficits cut by more than half; energy production up; high school graduation rates up; college attendance rates up.  (Applause.)  Clean energy, we've doubled.  Carbon emissions, we have slowed.  So we've made progress on every item.    

But what we also know, the reason we're here, is because we've got so much more work to do.  Not everybody has felt growth in the economy.  You know right here in Pennsylvania that, unfortunately, because we've had a governor who doesn’t always work with us, Pennsylvania ranks second to last in the country in job growth.  Second to last.  You don't want to be second to last.

AUDIENCE:  No!

THE PRESIDENT:  And over the next week, you’ve got a chance to change that.  You can choose a governor who doesn’t put political ideology first, he puts you first.  (Applause.)  And that's the kind of governor you want.  (Applause.)

And Tom understands the economy.  As a successful businessman, Tom helped grow his family’s company into the largest supplier of kitchen cabinets in the United States.  Now, there are a lot of kitchen cabinets in the United States, so -- (laughter) -- I'm just saying.  You think about how many kitchen cabinets there are.  If you're the largest, that's a lot of kitchen cabinets.  (Laughter.)

In 2006, he left that business to serve as your Secretary of Revenue.  Then in 2009, he was getting ready to run for governor, but he got a phone call.  The company he had spent 25 years growing -- the company he had left three years earlier -- was facing a very tough time because it was right when the recession was hitting, so like thousands of other businesses across the country, it was on the brink of bankruptcy.  And Tom could have decided, you know what, that’s not my problem anymore.  But he wasn’t going to turn his back on his former employees.  So he put his future on hold, bought the company back, started sourcing cabinets made in America to compete with Chinese imports.  (Applause.)  Made sure his workers earned good benefits and good wages.  He gave more than 20 percent of his profits back to his employees -- (applause) -- because Tom believes if you work hard, then everybody in your company should share its success -- not just folks at the top, but the workers who are actually doing the work.  (Applause.)  

So Tom doesn’t just -- he doesn’t just talk the talk.  Talk is cheap.  He walked the walk.  (Applause.)  He’s walking that walk.  Tom knows how to create jobs here in Pennsylvania.  He’s done it.  And now he’s running because he believes that if you work hard in this state, if you work hard in this country, you should share in the country’s success.  (Applause.)  And Tom has proven that when the going gets tough, he’s got your back.

That’s what this election is all about.  When you step in the voting booth, you’re making a choice not just about party, not just about candidates.  You're making a choice about two very different visions of America.  And you’ve got to ask yourself who is going to be fighting for you?  Who going to be on your side?  Who cares about the single mom?  Who cares about the student who’s maybe the first in their family to go to college?  (Applause.)  Who’s going to fight for you?

AUDIENCE:  Tom Wolf!

THE PRESIDENT:  Tom Wolf -- that's a good answer.  (Laughter.)  You're paying attention.

Now, listen.  Listen, I want to say this.  Republicans are patriots, too.  They love their families.  They want what’s best for the country.  But I was trying to explain -- I was down in Connecticut -- I was trying to explain there are a lot of people in my family who I really love, but I wouldn't put them in charge.  (Laughter.)  Because they got bad ideas.  (Laughter.)  Right?  So I'm not saying there’s anything wrong with the Republican leadership as sort of like -- as Americans.  I'm just saying they’ve got bad ideas.  (Applause.)

They keep on offering this theory of the economy -- you give more tax breaks to folks at the top; you cut investments in things like education; you loosen up regulations on the big banks and polluters and credit card companies; you cut the safety net for folks who’ve fallen on hard times -- and somehow everybody is going to get better off.

Here’s the thing.  I guess if we hadn’t tried that for 10 years, resulting in ultimate disaster, maybe they’d have an argument.  But we did try it.  It didn’t work.  We can't go back to that.  We've got to go forward with Tom Wolf.  (Applause.)

Tom has a different vision for what this country should look like, and it's rooted in that core belief in America, the notion that prosperity doesn’t trickle down from the top.  Prosperity derives from a thriving middle class and folks working their way up into the middle class.  And when everybody is doing well, then the entire country does well.  That's his understanding of how the economy works.  (Applause.)

Tom wants to build Pennsylvania’s economy from the middle class out.  And he’s not ideological about it.  Look, here’s the thing you know about Tom.  He doesn’t care whether the idea is  Republican or Democrat as long as it works.  He’s a practical person who just wants to make it work for the people of Pennsylvania.

So he knows, for example, that education is the key not just to economic growth but also to personal advancement in a modern economy.  So he’s not going to run on an agenda of slashing budgets for our schools, or laying off thousands of teachers.  He knows teachers matter.  He knows you should support teachers, not run down teachers -- (applause) -- that we should respect teachers and treat them as the professionals they are.  (Applause.)

He knows we should invest in our kids and early childhood education, and make college a reality for more young people, and make it more affordable.  That's Tom’s plan for Pennsylvania.  (Applause.)

Tom believes that in a democracy like ours, elected officials serve the public, not the other way around.  So he's not running to serve special interests or the status quo.  He’s running to change the way business is done in Harrisburg. 

He believes that nobody who works full-time in this country should have to raise a family in poverty.  (Applause.)  We had one Republican governor recently say the minimum wage “serves no purpose.”  You're not going to hear Tom say that -- because he knows the difference that a little bit of money can make for that hardworking mom or dad who’s trying to make ends meet, save maybe for their kids’ college education, pay a few bills.  (Applause.)

That's why Tom isn't running against a minimum wage increase; he’s running to give Pennsylvania a raise.  (Applause.)  

Tom Wolf believes that America is stronger when women are full and equal participants in the economy.  (Applause.)  It's bad enough that we got Republicans in Congress who voted no on a fair pay law.  You had one Republican who’s running for national office say, “You could argue that money is more important for men.”  That's a quote.  He said that.  Now, I know he didn’t talk to Michelle when he said that.  (Laughter.)  I know he didn’t talk -- he didn’t talk to you, either, did he?

AUDIENCE:  No!

THE PRESIDENT:  If we’re going to strengthen the middle class for the 21st century, we need leaders who understand the 21st century, and understand that women are in the workforce, and understand that women are increasingly breadwinners in their family, and understand that they should be able to get paid the same as men for doing the same job.  (Applause.)  And while we're at it, we should make sure that women have control of their health care choices -- not some politician.  (Applause.) 

You know, it’s funny -- when you ask Republicans about climate change, they say, “I’m not a scientist.”  (Laughter.)  That's what they say.  But when you ask them about a woman’s right to make her own health care decisions, they all act like they’re doctors.  (Applause.)  I want women to make those decisions.  I mean, “Mad Men” is a good show, but we don't want that show in Harrisburg.

AUDIENCE:  Right!

THE PRESIDENT:  Because when women succeed, America succeeds.  (Applause.)  And I want Malia and Sasha to have the same opportunities as somebody’s son.  (Applause.)  That should be common sense.

So, look, here’s the bottom line.  The biggest corporations, they don’t need another champion.  The wealthiest Americans don’t need another champion.  They’re doing just fine.  But what is in need of a champion is somebody who understands opportunity for all is what America is all about, opportunity for all is what  Pennsylvania is all about.  (Applause.)  And that's what Tom believes.   

But, listen, you all have to vote.  That's what this comes down to.  You’ve got to vote!

You know, I was talking to one of my staff members, and we were just running through the numbers.  The number of eligible voters who vote typically in a midterm is like in the 30s.  I mean, Ukraine just went through an election -- they got a war going on, they had about 60 percent turnout.  (Laughter.)  There is no excuse for us to just give away our power.  (Applause.)  If you wonder why things don't happen, if you wonder why sometimes elected officials don't seem responsive, it's because so many of us stay at home.  (Applause.)

So I know I'm preaching to the choir, but I'm hoping you then take this message to folks who aren't planning to vote.  If you believe that we don't need to give millionaires another tax break, maybe give child care tax breaks to families who are really struggling -- (applause) -- you’ve got to vote for it.  If you believe that our kids should have the best schools, then you’ve got to vote for it.  (Applause.)  If you think that we should make it easier for young people to go to college without ending up with tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of debt, you’ve got to vote for it.  (Applause.)  If you believe that an honest day’s work deserves an honest day’s pay, you’ve got to vote for it.  (Applause.)

You got to vote!  You got to vote!  (Applause.)  Vote!  (Applause.)  You got to vote!

AUDIENCE:  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  This is straightforward.  I got a simple message:  We got to vote.

AUDIENCE:  Got to vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  Four years ago, Democrats lost --

AUDIENCE:  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  Vote!  (Applause.)  Vote!  Vote!  Vote!

AUDIENCE:  Vote, vote, vote, vote, vote --

Good job!  Can I just say, by the way, it took me forever to cut those letters out.  (Laughter.)  I mean, I had one of those little scissors and I mean -- (laughter.)

Listen, four years ago, the Democrats lost the governor’s race in Pennsylvania by 20 votes per precinct -- 20 votes.  That was your cousin Pookie -- (laughter) -- not voting.  That was Jim, who was like drinking beer -- (laughter) -- and playing his -- setting up his fantasy football for next week, and he didn’t vote.  That's what happens.  Twenty votes could decide whether millions of hardworking Pennsylvanians get the raise they deserve.  Those 20 votes could decide whether teachers get the support they need, and whether our kids get a fair shot.  (Applause.)  Twenty votes.  Your vote matters.  It decides the course that Pennsylvania will take.

So I don't just need you to vote -- because I know all of you are going to vote.  (Applause.)   You’ve got to get involved. There are organizers here.  As you’re going out, you should try to hook up with them and talk to them about volunteering.  Go to WolfForPA.com, volunteer.  Make some phone calls.  Knock on some doors.  Grab people you know.  The election is too important to leave it to somebody else.  It's up to you.  And you.  Make a difference.  (Applause.)

Listen, I know that the hardest thing in politics is changing a stubborn status quo.  And to the young people here especially, I want to emphasize this.  Sometimes it seems like folks in power care more about power than they care about you.  I know that.  And you’re fed information every day that says nothing is changing and everything is terrible.  And when we do make progress, you don't hear about that.  You hear about some conflict or phony controversy.  And over time, you get cynical and you think, you know what, what I do doesn’t make a difference.  And so you don't get involved.  You don't go out there and organize.  Sometimes you don't even bother to vote.

And I'm just here to say, especially to the young people, don't buy that.  Don't buy it.  (Applause.)  Because despite the cynics, America is making progress.  This country always makes progress.  Despite unyielding opposition, there are workers right now who have jobs who didn’t have them before.  There are families who have health insurance who didn’t have them before.  (Applause.)  There are students who are going to college who couldn’t afford it before.  (Applause.)  There are troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan with their families who weren't at home before.  (Applause.)  

Cynicism is sometimes passed off as wisdom.  There’s nothing wise about it.  Cynicism didn’t put a man on the moon.  Cynicism never started a business, or cured a disease, or fueled a young mind.  Cynicism is a choice.  And hope is a better choice.  (Applause.)  

Hope is what gave young people the courage to march for civil rights, and voting rights, and workers’ rights, and women’s rights, and immigrants’ rights, and gay rights.  (Applause.)    Hope is what built this country -- a belief that there are better days ahead; a belief that together, we can build up our middle class; that we can pass down something better for our kids.  That's what built Pennsylvania.  That's what built America

-- the belief that America’s best days are still ahead.

You’ve got to believe it, and you’ve got to act on it.  You’ve got to vote.  And you’ve got to vote for Tom Wolf.  And when you do, I guarantee you a better future for the people of Pennsylvania and the people of this country.  (Applause.) 

God bless you.  God bless America.  Let’s get to work!  (Applause.)

END
7:51 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by The President at Rally for Governor Dan Malloy -- Bridgeport, Connecticut

Central High School
Bridgeport, Connecticut

3:48 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Bridgeport! (Applause.) Are you fired up?

AUDIENCE: Yes!

THE PRESIDENT: Give it up for Dan Malloy, your outstanding governor! (Applause.) It's good to be back in Connecticut. (Applause.) Give it up for your Lieutenant Governor, Nancy Wyman -- (applause) -- your outstanding Senators, Dick Blumenthal -- (applause) -- Chris Murphy; -- (applause) -- your Representatives, Joe Courtney, Rosa DeLauro, Jim Himes, Elizabeth Esty -- even though she couldn't be here today -- and your Mayor, Bill Finch. (Applause.) And thanks for having me at Central. (Applause.) Go Hilltoppers! (Applause.)

I've got to say, the Hilltoppers made me feel very welcome. (Applause.) They had all kinds of stuff up on the wall -- Welcome, President Obama; We love you, President Obama. (Applause.) They had a big painting somebody had made, which was very good -- although I noticed, like the mole on my nose was really prominent. (Laughter.) So there was big circle right there. (Laughter.)

So, Connecticut, two days. Two days. Two days, and you get to choose the governor who will lead you for the next four years. I can't vote in Connecticut, bt I'll tell you who I'd vote for. I'd want Dan Malloy leading us for another four years. (Applause.) Four more years! Four more years!

AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT: Four more years!

Now, what that means -- since it seems like you all agree with me -- what that means is you’ve got to grab your friends, you’ve got to grab your classmates, you’ve got to grab your coworkers. You got to knock on some doors. You’ve got to make some phone calls. You need to visit IWillVote.com -- you’ve got to find your polling place. And then you’ve got to take everybody you know to cast their ballot for Dan Malloy. (Applause.)

See, I'm assuming if you took time to come to the rally that you're going to vote. (Applause.) Unless you thought the basketball season started early and you showed up thinking there was a game. (Laughter.) But here’s why it's so important for you to get other people to vote.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT: I love you. I appreciate you, too. Thank you. Hold on, young lady. Hold on a second. Hold on. Hold on. You're a DREAMer, and I gave you relief administratively, and we're going to work on the next one. The Republicans are blocking immigration reform. That's one more reason why we need a Democratic Senate. (Applause.) So I support you. I'm with you. I'm with you. I'm with you. And you need to go protest the Republicans. (Applause.) Because I'm not the one blocking it.

Now, let me talk about Dan Malloy. Dan Malloy won a tough election last time. He took office facing record job losses, massive deficits, the worst recession in decades. But he took on a tough challenge. He made the tough calls. And while it has not always been easy and it has not always been without sacrifice, there is progress here in Connecticut to be proud of. You’ve had the fastest job growth in decades. You’ve had the lowest unemployment rate in five years; a budget that is actually balanced; a rainy day fund that is actually funded.

And thanks to leaders like Dan -- (audience interruption.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Be quiet!

AUDIENCE: Shame on you!

THE PRESIDENT: Shame on you.

AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years! Four more years! (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT: So, listen, here’s the good thing about a democracy, is everybody can speak. As I said before, it's always ironic that the folks who are shouting don't understand that we actually support their issue. (Applause.) The folks who don't support the issue are the ones who are voting against Dan Malloy. So they need to go to the other rally and focus on them. (Applause.)

Now, where was I? Where was I? I was talking about four more years. (Applause.) Thank you. All right, let’s try it again. You’ve got leaders like Dan with the kind of commitment to working families that Connecticut needs. And thanks to him, and thanks to the grit and the resilience of the American people, the country as a whole has made real progress. You think about when I came into office, we were seeing the worst economic crisis in our lifetimes. Unemployment was about 800,000 per month we were losing jobs. And over the past four and a half years, America has created more than 10 million new jobs. We've created more jobs than Japan, Europe, and all the advanced countries combined. (Applause.) Over the past six months, our economy has grown at the fastest pace in more than 10 years. There’s almost no economic measure where we are not doing better now than when Dan took office or when I took office. (Applause.)

But, Bridgeport, we’re here today because Dan and I and all the congressional delegation here, they understand we've got more work to do. (Applause.) We’ve got more work to do to make sure that all kids grow up in an America where it doesn’t matter who you are, what you look like, where you came from, what your last name is, who you love. What matters is, are you willing to work hard; are you willing to take responsibility -- because if you are, you deserve to be able to make it in America. That's what the American Dream is all about. (Applause.)

So when you cast that vote on Tuesday, you’ve got a choice to make. It’s more than a choice between candidates or political parties. (Audience interruption.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Get out!

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Get out of here!

AUDIENCE: Boooo --

THE PRESIDENT: That's okay.

AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years! (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT: It’s a choice that we've got to make. Hold on a second. Hold on a second, everybody. Quiet down. It's a choice that we've got to make between two very different visions of America. And by the way, I just want to say -- because we've now had, like, three folks -- I am sympathetic to those who are concerned about immigration, because the truth of the matter is, is that we're a country of immigrants. (Applause.) That's why we fought for immigration reform. It's the other party that's blocked it. Unfortunately, folks get frustrated and so they want to yell at everybody. And I understand that. But this is part of why elections are so important, because we do have two different visions of America.

Now, the vision I have, the vision Dan has, is one that embraces immigrants. The other side has a very different vision, which is why they’ve blocked legislation that would solve it. And so, in all these issues, it comes down to a very simple issue: Who’s going to fight for your future? (Applause.) Who is going to fight on your behalf?

Listen, Republicans are patriots. They love their country. They love their family --

AUDIENCE MEMBER: No, they don't!

THE PRESIDENT: No, they do. There are some good folks. But here’s the thing. But here’s the thing. (Audience interruption.) Hold on a second. Here’s the thing. This is a rowdy crowd today. (Applause.) But here’s the thing. Hold on, hold on. Quiet down. Quiet down. Listen, just because folks are good folks doesn’t mean they’ve got good ideas. (Applause.) I was telling folks in Wisconsin the other day, I've got some family members who I love, but they got bad ideas. (Laughter.) So I don't want them in charge of anything. (Laughter.) Some of them will be over for Thanksgiving, and I'll hug them and I'll give them a piece of pie, but I wouldn't want to put them in charge. (Laughter.)

And that's sort of what we've got going with the Republican Party right now, because they just keep on offering a theory of the economy time and time again that has undermined the middle class. It's not like we haven't tried it. We tried it: Tax breaks for folks who don't need them, at the very top. Fewer investments in things like education. Looser rules on big banks or polluters. Cutting the safety net for folks if they fall on hard times. We tried all that stuff. It did not work. And so we don't want to go back to that vision.

And Dan has a very different vision for what the future looks like. It's a vision rooted in the conviction that in America, prosperity never trickles down from the top. It grows from a rising, thriving middle class. (Applause.) It grows because we give folks ladders into the middle class. We believe in an economy that grows for the many, not just for the few. And Dan -- this is personal for him. We were talking on the helicopter ride over. (Laughter.) It was a little windy. (Laughter.) But Dan was talking about sort of what it meant growing up with a learning disability and having a few people there who believed in him and fought for him, and some resources that were given so that he could show really what he could do. And you don't lose that sense of being the underdog. You don't lose that sense of somebody else giving you a hand up. And that's what his politics are based on.

He’s not running to cut his own taxes -- he’s running to cut taxes for that single mom who needs a little help with her child care. (Applause.) He’s not looking to give advantages to big corporations who already have lobbyists looking out for them. He’s running to fight for you. And he knows that ideas should be judged not on whether they’re Democratic or Republican, but on whether they work or not.

And we believe in this country that education isn’t just the key to economic growth, it’s the surest path into the middle class. (Applause.) And while some governors are saying “tough luck” to parents who can’t afford to send their kids to private schools, Dan’s worked to invest in our public schools -- just like this one -- (applause) -- to bring down the cost of higher education, to make college a reality for young people. That's what Dan believes because it worked in his own life.

We believe in access to affordable health care, that it's not a privilege, it's a right. (Applause.) There are governors out there who’ve kept hardworking Americans from getting health insurance. Dan has expanded Medicaid to tens of thousands of folks here in Connecticut. They didn’t have health insurance before; now they have it. (Applause.)

There are some governors out there who’ve been trying to keep the Affordable Care Act from working. Dan has helped to create one of the best marketplaces in the country -- and cut the numbers of people without health insurance in Connecticut in half. (Applause.) And this shouldn’t be a blue or a red issue. This shouldn’t be a Democratic or Republican issue. This is an American issue. (Applause.) Why would you run on a platform of giving fewer people health insurance? That doesn’t make any sense.

Dan believes that in America, nobody who works full-time should ever have to raise their family in poverty. (Applause.) Not all governors believe that. You had one Republican governor claim that the minimum wage “serves no purpose.” Tell that to all the folks who are struggling to get by. Dan understands it makes a difference. He knows the difference it can make to that hardworking mom or dad who’s trying to make ends meet. While some folks in this state tried to come up with an excuse to oppose minimum wage increases, Dan fought to give Connecticut a raise. That's what he fought for. That's what he believes. (Applause.)

Now, earlier this year, I went to New Britain with Dan and three other New England governors. We had lunch at a sandwich shop where the owners paid their employees a living wage of at least $10 an hour. A few weeks later, Dan became the first governor in the country to sign a law lifting the minimum wage in this state to $10.10 an hour. (Applause.) And 130,000 hardworking folks across Connecticut got the raise they deserve. (Applause.)

We believe in an America where we do better when women are full and equal participants in our economy. (Applause.) We've had some issues in Washington with Republicans saying no to a national fair pay law. We had one Republicans running for national office right now who said -- and I'm quoting -- “You could argue that money is more important for men.”

AUDIENCE: Booo --

THE PRESIDENT: I don't know who he was talking to. He wasn’t talking to Michelle. (Laughter.) If we’re going to strengthen the middle class for the 21st century, then we need leaders with a 21st century mind-set. They need to understand that women need to get paid fairly. (Applause.) Let’s make sure that every woman is getting paid the same for doing the same job -- (applause.)

And let’s make sure every woman controls her own health care choices -- not her boss, or not some politician. (Applause.) Republicans are funny. (Laughter.) If you ask them, do they believe in climate change, they say, “I’m not a scientist.” (Laughter.) If you ask them, does a woman have a right to make her own health care choices, suddenly, they’re all doctors. (Laughter.) When women succeed, America succeeds. (Applause.) We've got to understand that. And so you can't support candidates who think that “Mad Men” is not just a good show but a model for how to behave. (Laughter.) We need a different approach.

Look, so here’s the bottom line, Connecticut. The biggest corporations, they don’t need another champion. The wealthiest Americans don’t need another champion. You do. (Applause.) You need somebody to fight for you. (Applause.) You need somebody who understands that opportunity -- opening up opportunity for all people is what Connecticut is about. Opportunity for all.

But none of that happens unless you go vote.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: That's right!

THE PRESIDENT: If you want something better, you’ve got to vote for it. (Applause.) If you believe working families need more tax breaks, not millionaires -- you’ve got to vote for it. If you think we should be investing in our kids’ schools and in early childhood education and making college more affordable -- you got to vote for it. (Applause.) I meet so many young people who’ve got an opportunity to do better, but they don't -- they aren't getting the kind of stuff that they need. (Audience interruption.)

AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT: So the question is, are we going to vote?

AUDIENCE: Yes!

THE PRESIDENT: You can't say we're going to give an honest day’s pay for an honest day’s work, and then not vote. You can't say, well, Dan Malloy is doing a good job, and then not vote.

AUDIENCE: Right!

THE PRESIDENT: Four years ago, Dan won the governor’s race by just four votes per precinct. Four votes. Because of those four extra votes, 130,000 Connecticut workers got a raise. (Applause.) Because of those four votes, Connecticut families gained access to health insurance to take care of their kids. (Applause.) Those four votes helped cut your uninsured rate in half, put Connecticut on a path for universal pre-K for every child, brought your unemployment rate down. (Applause.)

So your vote matters. Don't let people tell you it doesn’t. On Tuesday, your vote will determine the course for Connecticut. So we need your vote. But we need, more importantly, the vote of your friends, your neighbors, your colleagues. Go talk to one of the organizers in this room, or go to DanMalloy2014.com -- volunteer these last couple of days. Make some phone calls. Knock on some doors. Grab everybody you know, get them out to vote. (Applause.) Don't stay home. Don't let somebody else choose your future for you. (Applause.)

Look, the hardest thing in politics is changing the status quo. And it’s even harder when folks in power are ignoring what you have to say and seem to not really be listening to ordinary families. And then the media is feeding you information that says, well, it's not going to make a difference, this is how it's going to be. And so you get cynical. You don’t think you’re going to make a difference. You don’t get involved. You don't organize. You don't vote.

And I'm here to tell you, don’t buy it. (Applause.) Despite all the cynicism, America is making progress. Despite unyielding opposition, there are workers who have jobs today that didn’t have it before. (Applause.) There are families who have health insurance today that didn’t have it before. There are kids going to college today that didn’t have the opportunity to go to college before. (Applause.) There are troops who were in Afghanistan who are now home with their families because of your vote. (Applause.)

Cynicism didn’t put a man on the moon. Cynicism has never won a war, or cured a disease, or built a business, or fed a young mind. Cynicism is a choice. And hope is a better choice. (Applause.)

Hope is what gave young people the strength to march for civil rights, and voting rights, and women’s rights, and workers’ rights, and gay rights, and immigrants’ rights. (Applause.) Hope is what put a man on the moon. Hope is what defeated fascism. Hope is what America is all about. (Applause.) Hope in better days; hope in building up a middle class; hope in handing down something better to our kids. (Applause.)

That's why you have to vote. That's what Dan Malloy believes. (Applause.) That's what you have to remember on Tuesday, November 4th. (Applause.)

Thank you. God bless you. God bless America. (Applause.)

END
3:14 P.M. EST