Dan Pfeiffer: "House Republicans Just Voted to Sue President Obama"

Today, Senior Advisor Dan Pfeiffer sent the message below to the White House email list. Didn't get it? Sign up for updates.


The House of Representatives just took a vote -- and it wasn't to raise the minimum wage, put in place equal pay, create jobs, or reform our broken immigration system.

Instead, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives just voted to sue the President for using his executive authority. This lawsuit will waste valuable time and potentially millions of taxpayer dollars.

This is the least productive Congress in decades. And instead of doing their job, they are suing the President for doing his.

The President is committed to making a difference for the millions of hardworking Americans trying to do right by their families and communities. While Republicans in Congress continue to waste taxpayer money, this President is going to keep doing his job.

If you’re doing your own job -- and you support President Obama doing his -- add your name.

Related Topics: Additional Issues

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts

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

  • Manson K. Brown – Assistant Secretary for Environmental Observation and Prediction, Department of Commerce
  • Carmen Amalia Corrales – Member, Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation
  • Rafael J. López  – Commissioner on Children, Youth, and Families, Department of Health and Human Services

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

  • Evan Jonathan Wallach – Member, Board of Visitors to the United States Naval Academy
  • Christopher P. Lu – Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China
  • Tom Malinowski – Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China
  • Danny Russel – Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China
  • Stefan M. Selig – Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China
  • Sarah Sewall – Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China
  • Peggy L. Brookins – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • Kent McGuire – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • Evelynn M. Hammonds – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • Michael T. Nettles – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • Spencer Overton – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • Becky Pringle – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • John Rice – Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans
  • Regina Stanback Stroud – Member, President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans

Members of the Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China will continue serving in their current roles in addition to these appointments.

President Obama said, “These men and women have demonstrated knowledge and dedication throughout their careers.  I am grateful they have chosen to take on these important roles, and I look forward to working with them in the months and years to come.”

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

Vice Admiral Manson K. Brown, Nominee for Assistant Secretary for Environmental Observation and Prediction, Department of Commerce

Vice Admiral Manson K. Brown served as Deputy Commandant for Mission Support for the U.S. Coast Guard from 2012 to 2014.  He served as Commander of Coast Guard Pacific Area in California from 2010 to 2012 and as Commander of Coast Guard District 14 in Hawaii from 2008 to 2010.  Vice Admiral Brown’s previous tours of duty include Assistant Engineering Officer aboard the icebreaker “Glacier” and command of Coast Guard Sector Honolulu and Group Charleston.  In 2006, he assumed command of the Maintenance & Logistics Command Pacific of the Coast Guard, where he had previously served as Assistant Chief of the Civil Engineering Division.  In 2004, he served as Senior Advisor for Transportation to Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad, Iraq.  In 2003, Vice Admiral Brown served as the Chief of Officer Personnel Management at the Coast Guard Personnel Command.  From 1999 to 2002, he was the Military Assistant to the Secretary of Transportation.  He received a B.S. from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, an M.S. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and an M.S. from the Industrial College of the Armed Forces.

Carmen Amalia Corrales, Nominee for Member, Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation

Carmen Amalia Corrales is a Partner at Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, a position she has held since 1998.  Prior to joining Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP in 1990, Ms. Corrales served as a judicial clerk for Justice Marie Garibaldi of the New Jersey Supreme Court from 1989 to 1990.  She is a member of the Committee for the Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice, a Trustee of Bloomfield College, a member of the Board of Directors of the Academy of Political Science, and a member of the Board of the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra.  Ms. Corrales received a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

Rafael J. López, Nominee for Commissioner on Children, Youth, and Families, Department of Health and Human Services

Rafael J. López is a Senior Policy Advisor in the Office of Science and Technology Policy within the Executive Office of the President, a position he has held since 2013.  From 2010 to 2013, he was an Associate Director at the Annie E. Casey Foundation.  From 2009 to 2010, Mr. López served as the President and CEO of The Family League of Baltimore City, Inc.  From 2006 to 2009, he served as the Executive Director of the City of Los Angeles Commission for Children, Youth and Their Families.  Mr. López was Deputy Director of the City and County of San Francisco Department of Children, Youth, and Their Families in 2006 and was Senior Deputy for Health and Human Services for Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina from 2005 to 2006.  From 1999 to 2004, he served as the founding Executive Director of First 5 Santa Cruz County.  Mr. López received a B.A. from the University of California, Santa Cruz and an M.P.A. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

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

Judge Evan Jonathan Wallach, Appointee for Member, Board of Visitors to the United States Naval Academy

Judge Evan Jonathan Wallach serves on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, a position he has held since 2011.  He previously served on the U.S. Court of International Trade from 1995 to 2011.  He was a litigation partner at the law firm of Lionel Sawyer & Collins in Las Vegas, Nevada from 1982 to 1995.  He served as General Counsel and Public Policy Advisor to Senator Harry Reid from 1987 to 1988, and served in the Nevada National Guard as a Judge Advocate from 1989 to 1995.  Judge Wallach was an attorney in the International Affairs Division of the Judge Advocate of the Army at the Department of Defense.  He served in the U.S. Army from 1969 to 1971, where his awards included the Bronze Star, the Air Medal, and the RVN Cross of Gallantry with Palm.  Judge Wallach received a B.A. from the University of Arizona, a J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, and an L.L.B. from the University of Cambridge.

Christopher P. Lu, Appointee for Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China

Christopher P. Lu is the Deputy Secretary of Labor, a position he has held since April 2014.  Previously, he was a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress.  In 2013, he was a Fellow at The University of Chicago Institute of Politics and the Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy.  From 2009 to 2013, Mr. Lu was Assistant to the President and Cabinet Secretary at the White House.  In 2008, he served as Executive Director of the Obama-Biden Transition Project.  From 2005 to 2008, Mr. Lu served as Legislative Director and then as Acting Chief of Staff for then-Senator Barack Obama.  From 1997 to 2005, Mr. Lu was Deputy Chief Counsel of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform (Minority Staff).  He began his career as a law clerk to Judge Robert E. Cowen on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and as an attorney at Sidley Austin, LLP.  He was Co-Chair of the White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders from 2011 to 2013.  Mr. Lu received an A.B. from Princeton University and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

Tom Malinowski, Appointee for Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China

Tom Malinowski is the Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor at the Department of State (DOS), a position he has held since April 2014.  Previously, from 2001 to 2014, he was the Washington Director for Human Rights Watch.  From 1998 to 2001, Mr. Malinowski served as a Senior Director for Foreign Policy Speechwriting on the National Security Staff at the White House, and from 1994 to 1998 he was a speechwriter and member of the Policy Planning Staff at DOS.  Earlier in his career, he was a Research Assistant for the Ford Foundation from 1992 to 1993 and served as a Special Assistant to U.S. Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan in 1988.  Mr. Malinowski received a B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley and an M.Phil. from Oxford University.

Danny Russel, Appointee for Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China

Danny Russel is the Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs at the Department of State, a position he has held since July 2013.  Previously, from 2011 to 2013, he served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Asian Affairs.  From 2009 and 2011, Mr. Russel served as the Director for Japan, South Korea, and North Korea on the National Security Council and was the U.S. Consul General in Osaka-Kobe, Japan from 2005 to 2008.  From 2002 to 2005, he was Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in The Hague, Netherlands, and from 1999 to 2002 he was Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Nicosia, Cyprus.  Mr. Russel was Chief of Staff to the Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs from 1997 to 1999, and served as Special Assistant to the Under Secretary from 1995 to 1996.  He served as Political Section Unit Chief at the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, South Korea from 1992 to 1995, Political Advisor to the U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations from 1989 to 1992, and Branch Office Manager and Vice Counsel in Nagoya and Osaka, Japan from 1985 to 1989. 

Stefan M. Selig, Appointee for Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China

Stefan M. Selig is the Under Secretary for International Trade at the Department of Commerce, a position he has held since June 2014.  From 2009 to 2014, Mr. Selig was the Executive Vice Chairman of Global Corporate and Investment Banking at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.  From 1999 to 2009, he held various leadership roles at Banc of America Securities, including Vice Chairman of Global Investment Banking and Global Head of Mergers and Acquisitions.  From 1992 to 1999, Mr. Selig held various senior investment banking positions, including Co-Head of Mergers and Acquisitions at UBS Securities.  In 1988, he was a founding partner of Wasserstein Perella & Co.  Earlier in his career, he worked in the Mergers and Acquisitions Group at The First Boston Corporation and also served on the Board of Directors of Service for the UnderServed. Mr. Selig received a B.A. from Wesleyan University and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School.

Dr. Sarah Sewall, Appointee for Member, Congressional-Executive Commission on the People’s Republic of China

Dr. Sarah Sewall is the Under Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights at the Department of State, a position she has held since February 2014.  Previously, she was a Senior Lecturer in Public Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and a visiting professor at the Naval War College.  In 2012, she was Minerva Chair at the Naval War College, and from 2006 to 2009 she served as the Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University.  Dr. Sewall joined the Kennedy School in 2000 as Director of the National Security and Human Rights Program and founded the Mass Atrocity Response Operations Project and the Project on the Means of Intervention.  From 1998 to 1999, Dr. Sewall was Associate Director at the Committee on International Security Studies at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and she was a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow at Harvard’s Program on Negotiations in 1997.  From 1993 to 1996, she served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Peacekeeping and Humanitarian Assistance at the Department of Defense.  She was Senior Foreign Policy Advisor to Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell from 1987 to 1996.  In 2008, she directed the National Security Agency Review for the Obama-Biden Transition.  Dr. Sewall received a B.A. from Harvard University and a D.Phil. from Oxford University.

Peggy L. Brookins, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

Peggy L. Brookins is the Co-Founder, Director, and Mathematics Instructor for the Engineering and Manufacturing Institute of Technology at Forest High School in Ocala, Florida, where she has worked since 1978.  Ms. Brookins has also served on the Board of Directors of the National Board of Professional Teaching Standards, inBloom, The Conference Board of Mathematical Sciences Ad Hoc Committee on Teachers as Professionals, the Content Technical Working Group for the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, and as a commissioner on the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation.  Ms. Brookins has been inducted into the University of Florida Hall of Fame and is a Florida Education Association “Everyday Hero.” She is an Aspen Ideas Scholar, a National Board Certified Teacher, and received the Florida Education Association Excellence in Teaching Award.  Ms. Brookins received a B.S. from the University of Florida.

Dr. Kent McGuire, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

Dr. Kent McGuire is the President of the Southern Education Foundation (SEF), a position he has held since 2010.  Prior to joining SEF, Dr. McGuire served as Dean of the College of Education at Temple University from 2003 to 2010, where he was a tenured professor in the Department of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies.  Dr. McGuire was a Senior Vice President at MDRC, Inc. from 2001 to 2003, and served as Assistant Secretary of Educational Research and Improvement at the Department of Education from 1997 to 2001.  From 1994 to 1997, Dr. McGuire was a Program Officer at Pew Charitable Trusts, and from 1990 to 1994 he was a Program Director at Lilly Endowment, Inc.  He currently serves on a number of boards, including Cornerstone Literacy, the Harwood Institute, the Institute for Education Leadership, and The New Teacher Project.  Dr. McGuire received a B.A. from the University of Michigan, an M.A. from Columbia University Teacher’s College, and a Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Denver.

Dr. Evelynn M. Hammonds, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

Dr. Evelynn M. Hammonds is the Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science and Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University.  She has served as a Member of the President’s Board of Advisors on Historically Black Colleges and Universities since 2010.  From 2008 to 2013, Dr. Hammonds served as Dean of Harvard College and from 2005 to 2008 she was Senior Vice President for Faculty Development and Diversity at Harvard University.  Dr. Hammonds joined the Harvard faculty after teaching at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1993 to 2002, where she founded the Center for the Study of Diversity in Science, Technology, and Medicine.  She is a member of the Committee on Equal Opportunity in Science and Engineering, and serves on a number of boards, including the Board of Overseers of the Museum of Science in Boston and the Board of Trustees of Spelman College.  Dr. Hammonds received a B.S. from Spelman College, a B.E.E. from the Georgia Institute of Technology, an S.M. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a Ph.D. from Harvard University.

Dr. Michael T. Nettles, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

Dr. Michael T. Nettles is Senior Vice President and the Edmund W. Gordon Chair of the Policy Evaluation and Research Center at Educational Testing Service (ETS), positions he has held since 2006 and 2003, respectively.  He was previously Vice President of Policy Evaluation and Research from 2004 to 2006 and Executive Director of Policy Research from 2003 to 2004.  Dr. Nettles was a Professor of Education at the University of Michigan from 1992 to 2003, and served as the first Executive Director of the Fredrick D. Patterson Research Institute of the United Negro College Fund from 1996 to 1999.  Dr. Nettles previously served as Vice President for Assessment at the University of Tennessee System from 1989 to 1992, and was a Research Scientist at ETS from 1984 to 1989.  He was Assistant Director for Academic Affairs for the Tennessee Higher Education Commission from 1981 to 1984.  He serves on the boards of a number of organizations, including the Southern Education Foundation, the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education, Bank Street College of Education, and the Corporate and Philanthropic Council of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities.  Dr. Nettles received a B.A. from the University of Tennessee, and an M.A., M.S., and Ph.D. from Iowa State University.

Spencer Overton, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

Spencer Overton is a Professor of Law at The George Washington University Law School (GWU), a position he has held since 2002.  Mr. Overton is currently on leave from GWU, while he serves as the interim President of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies.  He also took a leave of absence from 2009 to 2010 to serve as Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Policy at the Department of Justice.  From 2000 to 2002, Mr. Overton was an Acting Professor of Law at the University of California, King Hall School of Law, and from 1999 to 2000 he was a Charles Hamilton Houston Fellow at Harvard Law School.  Mr. Overton practiced law at Debevoise & Plimpton from 1997 to 2000 and at Dickinson, Wright, Moon, Van Dusen, and Freeman from 1994 to 1996.  He began his career as a clerk for the Honorable Damon J. Keith of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit from 1993 to 1994.  Mr. Overton received a B.A. from Hampton University and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

Becky Pringle, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

Becky Pringle is the Secretary-Treasurer of the National Education Association (NEA), a position she has held since 2008.  Ms. Pringle previously served as a member of NEA’s Executive Committee and spent 31 years as a middle school science teacher in the Susquehanna School District in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.  Ms. Pringle has served on the Board of Directors for the NEA and for the Pennsylvania State Education Association.  She has chaired the NEA Reading Task Force, NEA Elementary and Secondary Education Act Advisory Committee, and the workgroup that developed the NEA’s Policy Statement on Teacher Evaluation and Accountability.  During her tenure on the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards, Ms. Pringle was elected Finance Chair.  She also served on the Blue Ribbon Panel on Teacher Preparation commissioned by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, and currently serves on the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation.  She has received numerous awards, including the Pennsylvania Academy’s Teaching Excellence Award.  Ms. Pringle received a B.S. from the University of Pittsburgh and an M.A. from Pennsylvania State University.

John Rice, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for African Americans

John Rice is the Founder and CEO of Management Leadership for Tomorrow (MLT).  Mr. Rice founded MLT in 1994 and became its full-time CEO in 2000.  He has served as a Member of the President’s Board of Advisors on Historically Black Colleges and Universities since 2010.  Mr. Rice previously worked for the National Basketball Association (NBA) as managing director of NBA Japan from 1998 to 2000 and as director of marketing for NBA Latin America from 1996 to 1998.  Mr. Rice worked for the Walt Disney Company in new business development and marketing from 1992 to 1996, and worked for AT&T as an account executive from 1988 to 1990.  Mr. Rice serves on the Board of Trustees of Yale University, is a Director of Walker & Dunlop Inc., and serves on the boards of several non-profits, including the American Management Association, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, and LIFT.  Mr. Rice received a B.A. from Yale University and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. 

Dr. Regina Stanback Stroud, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans

Dr. Regina Stanback Stroud is currently the President of Skyline College in San Bruno, California, a position she has held since 2011.  She previously served as the Vice President of Instruction at Skyline College from 2001 to 2010.  From 1997 to 2001, she was the Dean of Workforce and Economic Development at Mission College in Santa Clara, California.  Prior to that, Dr. Stanback Stroud was a Nursing Professor at Rancho Santiago College from 1985 to 1997 and at Craven Community College from 1983 to 1985.  From 1993 to 1995, she served in various leadership roles on the Academic Senate for California Community Colleges.  Dr. Stanback Stroud received a B.S.N. from Howard University, an M.S. from Golden Gate University, and an M.A. and an Ed.D. from Mills College.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Gaggle by Principal Deputy Press Secretary Eric Schultz en route Joint Base Andrews, 7/30/14

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Joint Base Andrews

1:47 P.M. CDT
MR. SCHULTZ:  Welcome aboard.  I have no announcements, so I’m happy to take your questions.
 

Q    We saw the statement condemning the attack on the school, the U.N. school.  Can you say whether the White House feels like Israel is doing enough to prevent civilian casualties?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Thank you, Nedra.  As you know, the United States does condemn the shelling of a U.N. school in Gaza which reportedly killed and injured innocent Palestinians, including children and U.N. humanitarian workers.
We are extremely concerned that the thousands of internally displaced Palestinians, who have been called on by the Israeli military to evacuate their homes, are not safe in these U.N.-designated shelters in Gaza.  We also condemn those responsible for hiding weapons in the United Nations facilities in Gaza.  All of these actions violate the international understanding of the U.N.’s neutrality. 
 

As you know, we first and foremost believe in Israel’s government -- in the Israeli government’s right to and obligation to defend their citizens.  They’ve chosen to take military action to provide for that protection.  But as you also note, we’ve been very clear that Israel needs to do more to live up to its own standards to limit the civilian casualties.
 

Q    Eric, has there been any response from Israel?  Have they taken responsibility for it?  Have they expressed regret? 
MR. SCHULTZ:  I understand, Roger, that the U.N. has put out a statement on its views.  But from our vantage point, we just want to underscore the importance of a full, prompt and thorough investigation.
 

Q    If the Israelis ask for any sort of ammunition to resupply, would the President be willing to authorize any sort of ammunition that we have available for Israelis in Israel?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t have anything for you on that.  I do know that we -- part of our commitment to working with the state of Israel is the significant resources we’ve done on the Iron Dome to help Israel protect its citizens.  Obviously, there’s an additional request pending in front of Congress, and we hope they move on that.
 

Q    Eric, on another subject -- on Russia.  It said its Central Bank today would help Russian banks counter the effect of the targeted sanctions imposed by the U.S. and EU.  Is there any concern out of the White House that it would have that effect?  That is to say, reduce the impact?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think our focus right now is on the major significant sanctions regime that was announced yesterday by both the Europeans and the United States.  We’ve already seen a significant impact on the Russian economy, on the sanctions that had been in place heretofore.  And I think we are just going to let the announcements from yesterday sink in, see what impact they have, and see if they cause President Putin to rethink his strategy.
 

Q    Well, if the Central Bank is going to help them out and subsidize them, that would have some effect, wouldn’t it?
MR. SCHULTZ:  Roger, I’m a lot of things; an economist is not one of them.  So I’m going to let others assess that.
 

Q    On Russia -- Russia has said that the complaint that -- the U.S. complaint that it violated the INF Treaty was unfounded and said that it believes that the U.S. production of armed drones are, in fact, violating that treaty.  I’m wondering what the White House response is to that, to both those points that Russia has made.
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Sure.  I don’t have anything to add to what my colleague so eloquently and articulately, Josh Earnest, explained a few days ago on this.  I’m just not -- because of the nature of the circumstances, I’m not in a public position to respond.
 

Q    What about a specific complaint that the production of armed drones are violating the treaty?  Can you knock that down, or respond to that in any way?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I haven’t seen that report, but I’m not sure that’s going to withstand scrutiny.
Q    Eric, the President attacked Republicans today for using taxpayer dollars to launch a political attack on him.  How is that different from him using taxpayer dollars to fly here to Missouri and to attack the Republicans?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Sure.  Well, let’s talk about what the President did here in Missouri.  And I appreciate that opportunity.  As you know, last night he met with four letter writers who have written him letters.  He receives 10 letters a night -- that’s out of the thousands that the White House receives from average folks around the country who share with him the economic -- well, who share with him lots of things, amongst them the challenges that they face.
 

The President got an opportunity to speak yesterday with folks about the economic challenges that they face every day, the opportunities that they see before him.  And that is really what drives the President when he’s back in Washington every single day.  And so that is why I think you see him working to raise the minimum wage, help alleviate the burden of college tuition these days, close the gender pay gap, and really do everything possible to create and expand economic opportunity and create jobs.
 

That’s what the President did here in Kansas City.  It is also worth noting the contrast with what Republicans are doing back in Washington.  They’re actually not doing anything to raise the minimum wage.  They’re not doing anything to close the gender pay gap.  They’re not doing anything to make college more affordable.  They’re not doing anything to cut carbon pollution.  What they’re doing right now is suing the President for doing his job and exercising his executive authority. 
 

They’re not only suing him for doing his job, they are doing it on behalf of the taxpayers.  Previous lawsuits against the President have cost upwards of millions of dollars.  And I think that’s the contrast the President was trying to make here in Kansas City.
 

Q    Just one other small question related to his comments today.  He suggested some dissatisfaction with the level of commitment to women on U.S. currency.  Will he be actually doing anything tangible to think about ways to promote women on currency?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I did hear those comments, Zack.  I don’t have anything to report to you on the faces on our currency right now.
 

Q    The President also talked about the agenda items that Congress has left to do in this next, like, 36 hours while they’re in town.  Is the administration actively working with Democrats and Republicans in Congress to try to get this transportation bill done, other things -- the border bill?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes.  The short answer is yes.  These are major priorities for the President both on the Highway Transportation Trust Fund.  As you know, we’ve talked a lot about infrastructure and long-term funding.  Obviously, there’s a patch that needs get through, needs to get approved.  We need -- Congress should be fulfilling its constitutional responsibilities to do that in the next few days along with the supplemental on the border spending and along with the VA accountability improvements.
 

Q    Which I think is supposed to pass at three.  So something will happen today.
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  We are very optimistic.
 

Q    But on the border supplemental, the House has proposed something that’s approximately, like -- I don’t do math -- but very short of what the White House is asking for with the things that I think the White House didn’t want.  How does the President feel about that?  Where does that go from here?  Or does it hit a dead end in the next 36 hours?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  You might not be good at math, but we can assure you that this bill would make the problem worse, and there’s a couple of reasons for that.  If this bill were to become law, young children who cannot defend themselves could be deported without adequate due process.  The bill would undercut public safety by creating a backlog that will ultimately require a shift in resources away from deporting known criminals. 
 

The situation on the border is a reminder that our immigration system is broken.  And after blocking a bipartisan bill to comprehensively fix our broken immigration system for over a year, House Republicans have once again shown zero interest in being part of the solution.  All the while, they’ve booked themselves on cable television talking about the urgency of the situation. 
 

Q    So you’re saying that the President would not sign that if it ever made it to him?
MR. SCHULTZ:  I’m telling you that, again, as my colleague Josh Earnest so eloquently articulated yesterday, we have serious objections with that bill.
 

Q    Eric, a housekeeping question.  The President is going to HUD tomorrow for remarks.  What’s that about?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Sure.  I think -- I don’t have any news to preview on that at this time.  I can tell you that we are pleased that the Senate confirmed the President’s HUD nominee.  I know that Secretary Castro is looking forward to getting to work and that there’s a lot of business to be done on that front.
 

Q    Is that what the remarks are about tomorrow?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t have remarks to preview for you right now. 
 

Q    Will there be news tomorrow at HUD on that? 
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Again, I don’t have anything to preview for you right now.
 

Q    Eric, did the President’s frustration that he was expressing with Congress today, I mean, does that extend to the Democratic-controlled Senate as well as the House?  For instance, the Senate hasn’t really run with his tax inversion idea.  Is he frustrated with the Democratic-controlled Senate?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Nedra, I think there has been some movement on the inversions piece, both in the Senate and in the House.  We encourage that process.  We want them to move on that faster.  I know the Senate has taken action on a supplemental that would do a lot more to address the problem at the border.  So we actually do see some progress on that front.
 

Q    Is the President being briefed on the Ebola outbreak in Africa?  And will it be addressed at the Africa summit and/or alter the Africa summit in any way?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes, we continue -- well, no, it will not alter the summit, but we do continue to monitor the outbreak of the Ebola virus in Guinea, in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria closely.  The President is indeed receiving regular updates, including speaking with his Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Advisor Lisa Monaco as early as yesterday before departing Washington.
 

The U.S. government, including the Departments of State, Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control, USAID and the Department of Defense, continue to provide a range of support and assistance to those countries and multinational organizations responding to the outbreak. 
 

This includes the provision of personal protective equipment and other essential supplies, public health messaging and technical expertise.  We’ve actually been engaged in this outbreak since March.  Obviously, our response has been ratcheted up in the past few weeks.
 

Q    Is he aware of the two Americans who have contracted the disease?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes.  And as the CDC has said, this is not a risk to the United States at this time.
 

Q    I want to ask about that.  Is the White House at all worried, though?  I mean, the U.K. expressed today concern about the spread of the disease.  How worried is the White House and the administration that the virus could make its way to the United States?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Roberta, as I said, we are aware of the reports that U.S. citizens have been diagnosed with the virus.  We have no higher priority than the protection of U.S. citizens overseas.  But again, as the CDC has stated, there’s no significant risk to the United States.
 

In terms of the summit, I would tell you that we’re working closely with regional governments to stem the spread of the virus.  We have no plans to change any elements of the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, as we believe all air travel continues to be safe here.
 

Q    Do you know if all the leaders are still going to come?  Or will some of them be forced to stay back because of the severity of the situation?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Again, I’m responsible for a lot of things; the travel of African leaders is not one of them.  So I’d encourage you to check in with them.
 

We good?
 

Q    Any response to the 4 percent growth in the GDP, but in the surprising upward tick in the numbers?
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Sure.  We believe that this is the latest indication of a strengthening economy.  Today’s report found that GDP increased 4 percent at an annual rate in the second quarter of 2014.  This strong growth is consistent with the recent further improvements in the labor market and other indicators.
 

As the President said today, though, there’s a lot more work to be doing.  That's why we find it unfortunate that the House of Representatives is not focused on creating jobs or growing the economy, but rather on a taxpayer-funded lawsuit aimed at the President for doing his job.
 

Q    House Republicans today announced a new slate of measures that they say are targeted at women and families and the economy.  Does the President have any -- have you guys seen anything about that or have any reaction?  It was happening during the speech.
 

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes, I haven’t seen those reports.  I’m happy to take a look at them.
Thank you, guys.

END
2:01 P.M. CDT

President Obama in Kansas City: “Let’s Get Some Work Done Together”

President Obama Outside Arthur Bryants

President Barack Obama talks with a youngster outside Arthur Bryant's Barbeque in Kansas City, Missouri, July 29, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Yesterday, President Obama traveled to Kansas City, Missouri for a short one-day trip to have dinner with several people who had written him letters, and to give a speech today on ensuring that the economy works for everyone.

Last night, the President had dinner at Arthur Bryant’s BBQ in Kansas City with four local residents who had written to him to share how they're working hard to get ahead in America.

Watch Press Secretary Josh Earnest call to invite the letter writers to dinner:

Watch on YouTube

This is just the latest stop the President has made while on the road to meet with hardworking Americans who have written him, and to let them know he’s listening.

Related Topics: Economy, Kansas, Missouri

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

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

Uptown Theater
Kansas City, Missouri

11:06 A.M. CDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Kansas City!  (Applause.)  Well, it is good to be back in Kansas City, back in the Midwest.  (Applause.)  And I have to say, I love these old theaters.  I mean, they are unbelievable.  This is just gorgeous. 

It is good to see Governor Jay Nixon here today.  (Applause.)  Congressman Emanuel Cleaver is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Lacy Clay is here.  (Applause.)  Mayor Sly James is here.  (Applause.)  And you’re here!  All of you are here.  (Applause.) 

Now, if you have a seat, feel free to sit down, because I don’t want everybody starting to fall out.  (Laughter.)  If you don’t have a seat, don’t sit down.  But bend your knees a little bit. 

It’s always good to spend a little time in Kansas City.  Last night, I had a chance to get some barbecue at Arthur Bryant’s.  (Applause.)  Now, they had run out of coleslaw, which I asked -- I said, did you save some coleslaw for me?  They said, no, they hadn’t saved any. 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT:  I’m sorry, what are you hollering about? 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  (Inaudible) to God --

THE PRESIDENT:  I believe in God.  Thanks for the prayer.  Amen.  Thank you.  (Applause.) 

AUDIENCE:  We love you!  We love you! 

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  I just want to be on record, though, because people have been asking me this question.  I deal with a lot of tough issues -- I am not going to decide who makes the best barbecue in Kansas City.  (Laughter.)  Bryant’s barbecue was tasty.  And Victor is right, I did plow through it pretty good.  (Laughter.)  But I have not had enough samples to make a definitive judgment, so I’m going to have to try some other barbecue the next time I come in.  I have to say, by the way, Victor was not shy about eating either.  (Laughter.)  So I just want to be clear.

But I had a chance -- I went there for the barbecue, but also I went there because I wanted to have a chance to talk to Victor and three other people from the area who took the time to sit down with me and talk, because they had written letters to me.  Some of you may know --

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  I wrote you, too!  (Laughter.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, you know what, if I had known, I would have had you over for dinner, too.  (Laughter.)

But what happens is, every night I read 10 letters that we receive.  We get 40,000 correspondence.  And then our correspondence office chooses 10, sort of a sample for me to take a look at.  And it gives me a chance to hear directly from the people I serve.  And folks tell me their stories -- they tell me their worries and their hopes and their hardships, their successes.  Some say I’m doing a good job.  (Applause.)  But other people say, “You’re an idiot.” 

AUDIENCE:  No!

THE PRESIDENT:  No, no, I mean, this is how I know that I’m getting a good sample of letters.  (Laughter.) 

Last week, a young girl wrote to ask me why aren’t there any women on our currency, and then she gave me like a long list of possible women to put on our dollar bills and quarters and stuff -- which I thought was a pretty good idea.

Now, Victor wrote to me to tell me about his life in Butler, and he told me that he has been unemployed for a while after he and his wife had had their first child.  But he refused to quit.  He earned his degree, found a full-time job.  He now helps folks with disabilities live independently.  And he’s just a good-hearted man.  (Applause.)  And you can tell, really, he’s doing great stuff.  And Victor described how he got through some tough times because of his Christian faith and his determination -- which are things that government programs and policies can’t replace.  You got to have that sense of purpose and perseverance.  That has to come from inside; you can’t legislate that. 

But he also said that he was able to afford health insurance because of the Affordable Care Act.  (Applause.)  And he also said that because of the income-based repayment plan that we had put in place, where you only have to pay 10 percent of your income maximum in repaying your loans each month, that was what allowed him and his family to keep a roof over their heads and support themselves.

And so I’m here because Victor is the sort of person I'm working for every single day -- (applause) -- somebody who never quits, somebody who is doing everything right, somebody who believes in the American Dream.  Somebody who just wants a chance to build a decent life for himself and his family.  And that's the vast majority of Americans.  That's who I'm fighting for right here in Kansas City and all across this country.  (Applause.)  That's why I ran for President in the first place, to fight for folks like that.  (Applause.) 

Now, we all know it hasn’t always been easy.  The crisis that hit near the end of my campaign back in 2008, it would end up costing millions of Americans their jobs, their homes, their sense of security.  But we have fought back.  We have got back off our feet, we have dusted ourselves off.  Today, our businesses have added nearly 10 million new jobs over the past 52 months.  (Applause.)  Construction is up.  Manufacturing is back.  Our energy, our technology, our auto industries, they’re all booming. 

The unemployment rate is at its lowest point since September of 2008.  (Applause.)  It's dropped faster than any time in 30 years.  This morning, we found out that in the second quarter of this year our economy grew at a strong pace, and businesses are investing, workers are building new homes, consumers are spending, America is exporting goods around the world.

So the decisions that we made -- to rescue our economy, to rescue the auto industry, to rebuild the economy on a new foundation, to invest in research and infrastructure, education -- all those things are starting to pay off. 

The world’s number-one oil and gas producer -- that's not Saudi Arabia; that's not Russia -- it's the United States of America.  (Applause.)  We've tripled the amount of electricity we get from wind.  (Applause.)  We've increased by 10 times the amount of electricity we get from the sun.  And all that is creating tens of thousands of jobs across the country. 

Our high school graduation rate is at a record high.  More young people are earning their college degrees than ever before.  (Applause.)  401(k)s have recovered their value.  Home prices are rising.  And, yes, millions of families now have the peace of mind, just like Victor’s family does, of getting quality, affordable health care when you need it.  It makes a difference in people’s lives.  (Applause.) 

And, look, Kansas City, none of this is an accident.  It’s thanks to the resilience and resolve of the American people.  It's also thanks to some decisions that we made early on.  And now America has recovered faster and come farther than just about any other advanced country on Earth.  And for the first time in more than a decade, if you ask business leaders around the world what’s the number-one place to invest, they don't say China anymore.  They say the United States of America.  (Applause.)  And our lead is growing.

So sometimes you wouldn’t know it if you were watching the news, but there are a lot of good reasons to be optimistic about America.  We hold the best cards.  Things are getting better.  The decisions we make now can make things even better than that.  In fact, the decisions we make now will determine whether the economic gains that we’re generating are broad based, whether they just go to a few at the top or whether we got an economy in which the middle class is growing and folks who are trying to get into the middle class have more rungs on the ladder; whether ordinary folks are benefiting from growth. 
And that’s what’s at stake right now -- making sure our economy works for every American.  See, I’m glad that GDP is growing, and I’m glad that corporate profits are high, and I’m glad that the stock market is booming.  But what really I want to see is a guy working nine to five, and then working some overtime, I want that guy making more than the minimum wage.  (Applause.) 
And what I really want is somebody who has worked for 20, 30 years being able to retire with some dignity and some respect.  (Applause.)  What I really want is a family that they have the capacity to save so that when their child is ready to go to college, they know they can help and that it’s affordable, and that that child is not going to be burdened down with debt.  That’s the measure of whether the economy is working; not just how well it’s doing overall, but is it doing well for ordinary folks who are working hard every single day and aren’t always getting a fair shot.  That’s what we’re fighting for.  That’s why I ran for President.  That’s what I’m focused on every day.  (Applause.)
  And that’s what sometimes Washington forgets.  Your lives and what you’re going through day to day -- the struggles, but also the opportunities and the hopes and the good things, but sometimes the rough things that happen -- that’s more important than some of the phony scandals or the fleeting stories that you see.  This is the challenge of our time -- how do we make sure we’ve got an economy that is working for everybody?   
Now, all of you are doing your part to help bring America back.  You’re doing your job.  Imagine how much further along we’d be, how much stronger our economy would be, if Congress was doing its job, too.  (Applause.)  We’d be doing great.  Every time I meet some of these folks who have written me letters, we sit down and talk, and they say, what’s going on in Washington?  Why -- 

What they tell me is, if Congress had the same priorities that ordinary families did, if they felt the same sense of urgency about things like the cost of college or the need for increases in the minimum wage, or how we’re making child care more affordable and improving early childhood education -- if that’s what they were thinking about, we could help a lot more families.  A lot more people would be getting ahead.  The economy would be doing better.  We could help a lot more families, and we should. 

We should be relentlessly focused on what I call an opportunity agenda, one that creates more jobs by investing in what’s always made our economy strong:  making sure that we’re on the cutting edge when it comes to clean energy; making sure that we’re rebuilding our infrastructure -- our roads, our bridges, our ports, our airports, our locks, our dams.  (Applause.)  Making sure that advanced manufacturing is happening right here in the United States so we can start bringing manufacturing jobs back to the Midwest and all across the country, jobs that pay a good wage.  (Applause.)  Investing in research and science that leads to new American industries. Training our workers -- really making a job-training program and using our community colleges in ways that allow people to constantly retrain for the new opportunities that are out there and to prepare our kids for the global competition that they’re going to face.  Making sure that hard work pays off with higher wages and higher incomes. 
If we do all these things, we’re going to strengthen the middle class, we’ll help more people get into the middle class.  Businesses, by the way, will do better.  If folks have more money in their pocket, then businesses have more customers.  (Applause.)  If businesses have more customers, they hire more workers.  If you hire more workers, they spend more money.  You spend more money, businesses have more customers -- they hire even more workers.  You start moving in the right direction.  (Applause.)  But it starts not from the top down, it starts from the middle out, the bottom up. 
Now, so far this year, Republicans in Congress keep blocking or voting down just about every idea that would have some of the biggest impact on middle-class and working-class families.  They’ve said no to raising the minimum wage.  They’ve said no to fair pay, making sure that women have the ability to make sure that they’re getting paid the same as men for doing the same job.  They’ve said no for fixing our broken immigration system.  Rather than investing in education, they actually voted to give another massive tax cut to the wealthiest Americans.  And they’ve been pushing to gut the rules that we put in place after the financial crisis to make sure big banks and credit card companies wouldn’t take advantage of consumers or cause another crisis.  So they haven’t been that helpful.  (Laughter.)  They have not been as constructive as I would have hoped.  (Laughter.)  
And these actions, they come with a cost.  When you block policies that would help millions of Americans right now, not only are those families hurt, but the whole economy is hurt.  So that’s why this year, my administration, what we’ve said was we want to work with Congress, we want to work with Republicans and Democrats to get things going, but we can’t wait.  So if they’re not going to do anything, we’ll do what we can on our own.  And we’ve taken more than 40 actions aimed at helping hardworking families like yours.  (Applause.)  That’s when we act -- when your Congress won’t.
So when Congress failed to pass equal pay legislation, I made sure that women got more protection in their fight for fair pay in the workplace, because I think that when women succeed, everybody succeeds.  (Applause.)  I want my daughters paid the same as your sons for doing the same job.  (Applause.) 
Congress had the chance to pass a law that would help lower interest rates on student loans.  They didn’t pass it.  I acted on my own to give millions of Americans a chance to cap their payments, the program that Victor has taken advantage of.  I don’t want our young people just saddled with debt before they’ve even gotten started in life.  (Applause.) 
When it comes to the minimum wage, last week marked five years since the last time the minimum wage went up.  Now, you know the cost of living went up.  The minimum wage didn’t go up.  So I went ahead on my own.  When it came to federal contractors, I said, if you want to get a federal contract, you’ve got to pay your workers at least $10.10 an hour.  (Applause.)  And I’ve been trying to work with governors and mayors, and in some cases with business owners, just calling them up directly.  How about giving your folks a raise?  And some of them have done it. 
And since I had first asked Congress to raise the minimum wage, businesses like the Gap -- you’ve got 13 states and D.C. -- they’ve gone ahead and raised their minimum wage.  It makes a difference in people’s lives.  (Applause.)  And, by the way, here’s something interesting:  The states that have increased their minimum wages this year, they’ve seen higher job growth than the states that didn’t increase their minimum wage.  (Applause.)  So remember, you give them a little bit more money, businesses have more customers.  They got more customers, they make more profit.  They make more profit, what do they do?  They hire more workers.  America deserves a raise, and it’s good for everybody.
So some of the things we’re doing without Congress are making a difference, but we could do so much more if Congress would just come on and help out a little bit.  (Applause.)  Just come on.  Come on and help out a little bit.  Stop being mad all the time.  (Applause.)  Stop just hating all the time.  Come on.  (Applause.)  Let’s get some work done together.  (Applause.)   
They did pass this workforce training act, and it was bipartisan.  There were Republicans and Democrats, and everybody was all pleased.  They came, we had a bill signing, and they were all in their suits.  I said, doesn’t this feel good?  (Laughter.)  We’re doing something.  It’s like, useful.  Nobody is shouting at each other.  (Laughter.)  It was really nice.  I said, let’s do this again.  Let’s do it more often.  (Applause.) 
I know they’re not that happy that I’m President, but that’s okay.  (Laughter.)  Come on.  I’ve only got a couple of years left.  Come on, let’s get some work done.  Then you can be mad at the next President. 
Look, we’ve got just today and tomorrow until Congress leaves town for a month.  And we’ve still got some serious work to do.  We’ve still got a chance to -- we got to put people to work rebuilding roads and bridges.  And the Highway Trust Fund is running out of money; we got to get that done.  We’ve got to get some resources to fight wildfires out West.  That’s a serious situation.  We need more resources to deal with the situation in the southern part of the border with some of those kids.  We got to be able to deal with that in a proper way.  (Applause.) 
So there’s a bunch of stuff that needs to get done.  Unfortunately, I think the main vote -- correct me if I’m wrong here, Congressman -- the main vote that they’ve scheduled for today is whether or not they decide to sue me for doing my job. 
AUDIENCE:  Booo --
THE PRESIDENT:  No, no, no -- first of all, here’s something I always say -- do not boo, vote.  Booing doesn’t help.  Voting helps.  (Applause.) 
But think about this -- they have announced that they’re going to sue me for taking executive actions to help people.  So they’re mad because I’m doing my job.  And, by the way, I’ve told them -- I said, I’d be happy to do it with you.  So the only reason I’m doing it on my own is because you don’t do anything.  (Applause.)  But if you want, let’s work together. 
I mean, everybody recognizes this is a political stunt, but it’s worse than that, because every vote they’re taking like that means a vote they’re not taking to actually help you.  When they have taken 50 votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act, that was time that could have been spent working constructively to help you on some things.  (Applause.)  And, by the way, you know who is paying for this suit they’re going to file?  You. 
AUDIENCE MEMBER:  No!
THE PRESIDENT:  No, no -- you’re paying for it.  And it’s estimated that by the time the thing was done, I would have already left office.  So it’s not a productive thing to do. 
But here’s what I want people to remember.  Every single day, as depressing sometimes as what goes on in Washington may be, I see the inherent goodness and generosity of the American people.  I see it every day.  I see it in all of you.  I saw it in the four people that I had dinner with last night. 
In addition to Victor, one guy who joined us was a guy named Mark Turner.  He works with high schools dropouts to help get them back on track.  He used to be a successful corporate executive, decided he wanted to give something back.  (Applause.)  You got Valerie McCaw.  Valerie is a single mom, engineer, owns a small business.  She’s doing great things.  Even though sometimes it’s a struggle making sure she keeps her business afloat, she’s persevered and is helping her son get his college education.  Then you got Becky Forrest.  She’s a fireplug.  She’s president of the Town Fork Creek Neighborhood Association.  She’s got so many things going on -- after-school programs and mentoring programs, and basketball leagues, and all kinds of things at a community center -- I couldn’t keep track of all of them.  (Laughter.) 
And to listen to them talk, it made you optimistic.  It reminded you there are good people out here.  Everybody is out there trying to do their best, trying to look after their families, trying to raise their kids, trying to give something back -- working with their church, working with their synagogues, working with their places of faith.  Just trying to give something back and give some meaning to their lives.  And they’re responsible.  And we all make mistakes and we all have regrets, but generally speaking, people are decent.

And so the question is, how can we do a better job at capturing that spirit in Washington, in our government?  The American people are working harder than ever to support families, to strengthen communities.  And so instead of suing me for doing my job, let’s -- I want Congress to do its job and make life a little better for the Americans who sent them there in the first place.  (Applause.)  Stop posturing. 

And, by the way, there’s one place to start.  I talked about this last week, but I want to talk about this a little more.  Right now, there’s a loophole in the tax code that lets a small but growing group of corporations leave the country; they declare themselves no longer American companies just to get out of paying their fair share of taxes -- even though most of their operations are here, they’ve always been American companies, they took advantage of all the benefits of being an American company, but now their accountant has convinced them maybe they can get out of paying some taxes.

They’re renouncing their citizenship even though they’re keeping most of their business here.  I mean, it’s just an accounting trick, but it hurts our country’s finances, and it adds to the deficit and sticks you with the tab -- because if they’re not paying their share and stashing their money offshore, you don’t have that option.  It ain’t right.  Not only is it not right, it ain’t right.  (Laughter and applause.)  It ain’t right.  I hope everybody is clear on the distinction.  There are some things are not right.  And then there’s some things that just ain’t right.  (Laughter and applause.)  And this ain’t right.  (Laughter.) 

I mean, you don’t have accountants figuring all this stuff out for you, trying to game the system.  These companies shouldn’t either.  And they shouldn’t turn their back on the country that made their success possible.  And, by the way, this can be fixed.  For the last two years I’ve put forward plans to cut corporate taxes, close loopholes, make it more reliable, make it clearer.  And to Republicans, I say, join with me.  Let’s work to close this unpatriotic tax loophole for good.  Let’s use the savings that we get from closing the loophole to invest in things like education that are good for everybody.

Don’t double down on top-down economics.  Let’s really fight to make sure that everybody gets a chance and, by the way, that everybody plays by the same rules.  (Applause.)  We could do so much more if we got that kind of economic patriotism that says we rise or fall as one nation and as one people.  And that’s what Victor believes. 

When Victor wrote me his letter, he said, “I believe, regardless of political party, we can all do something to help our citizens to have a chance at a job, have food in their stomachs, have access to great education and health care.”  That’s what economic patriotism is.  (Applause.)  That’s what we should all be working on.   

Instead of tax breaks for folks who don’t need them, let’s give tax breaks to working families to help them pay for child care and college.  Don't reward companies shipping jobs overseas; let’s give tax breaks to companies investing right here in Missouri, right here in the Midwest.  (Applause.)  Let’s give every citizen access to preschool and college and affordable health care.  And let’s make sure women get a fair wage.  (Applause.)  Let’s make sure anybody who is working full-time isn't living in poverty.  (Applause.) 

These are not un-American ideas; these are patriotic ideas.  This is how we built America.  (Applause.)
 
So just remember this:  The hardest thing to do is to bring about real change.  It's hard.  You’ve got a stubborn status quo.  And folks in Washington, sometimes they’re focused on everything but your concerns.  And there are special interests and there are lobbyists, and they’re paid to maintain the status quo that's working for somebody.  And they’re counting on you getting cynical, so you don’t vote and you don’t get involved, and people just say, you know what, none of this is going to make a difference.  And the more you do that, then the more power the special interests have, and the more entrenched the status quo becomes.

You can't afford to be cynical.  Cynicism is fashionable sometimes.  You see it all over our culture, all over TV; everybody likes just putting stuff down and being cynical and being negative, and that shows somehow that you're sophisticated and you're cool.  You know what -- cynicism didn’t put a man on the moon.  Cynicism didn’t win women the right to vote.  Cynicism did not get a Civil Rights Act signed.  Cynicism has never won a war.  Cynicism has never cured a disease.  Cynicism has never started a business.  Cynicism has never fed a young mind.  (Applause.) 

I do not believe in a cynical America; I believe in an optimistic America that is making progress.  (Applause.)  And I believe despite unyielding opposition, there are workers right now who have jobs who didn’t have them before because of what we've done; and folks who got health care who didn’t have it because of the work that we've done; and students who are going to college who couldn’t afford it before; and troops who’ve come home after tour after tour of duty because of what we've done.  (Applause.) 

You don't have time to be cynical.  Hope is a better choice.  (Applause.)  That's what I need you for.

Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  (Applause.)

END
11:39 A.M. CDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

G-7 Leaders Statement on Ukraine

We, the leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, the President of the European Council, and the President of the European Commission, join in expressing our grave concern about Russia’s continued actions to undermine Ukraine’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, and independence.  We once again condemn Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea, and actions to de-stabilize eastern Ukraine.  Those actions are unacceptable and violate international law.

We condemn the tragic downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 and the deaths of 298 innocent civilians.  We demand a prompt, full, unimpeded, and transparent international investigation.  We call upon all sides to establish, maintain, and fully respect a cease-fire at and around the crash site, as demanded by UN Security Council resolution 2166, so that the investigators can take up their work and to recover the remains of all victims and their personal possessions.

This terrible event should have marked a watershed in this conflict, causing Russia to suspend its support for illegal armed groups in Ukraine, secure its border with Ukraine, and stop the increasing flow of weapons, equipment, and militants across the border in order to achieve rapid and tangible results in de-escalation.

Regrettably, however, Russia has not changed course.  This week, we have all announced additional coordinated sanctions on Russia, including sanctions on specific companies operating in key sectors of the Russian economy.  We believe it is essential to demonstrate to the Russian leadership that it must stop its support for the separatists in eastern Ukraine and tangibly participate in creating the necessary conditions for the political process.

We remain convinced that there must be a political solution to the current conflict, which is causing rising numbers of civilian casualties.  We call for a peaceful settlement of the crisis in Ukraine and underline the need to implement President Poroshenko’s peace plan without any further delay.  To this end, we urge all parties to establish a swift, genuine, and sustainable general cease-fire on the basis of the Berlin Declaration of 2 July with the aim of maintaining Ukraine’s territorial integrity.  We call upon Russia to use its influence with the separatist groups and ensure effective border control, including through OSCE observers.   We support the OSCE and the Trilateral Contact Group as central players in creating the conditions for a ceasefire.

Russia still has the opportunity to choose the path of de-escalation, which would lead to the removal of these sanctions.  If it does not do so, however, we remain ready to further intensify the costs of its adverse actions.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

White House Announces New Executive Secretary / Chief of Staff for the National Security Council Staff

Today, National Security Adviser Susan E. Rice announced that Suzy George will be named Deputy Assistant to the President, Executive Secretary of the National Security Council and Chief of Staff of the National Security Council staff.  Ms. George will succeed Brian McKeon, who will soon depart the White House to become the Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy at the Department of Defense.

Ambassador Rice said, “Suzy George brings a wealth of foreign policy, government and management experience to this position, through her long service at the Department of State and as a principal with the Albright Stonebridge Group.  Her service at the highest levels of the State Department, where she engaged with senior leaders across the U.S. government and with foreign partners, gives me great confidence in her ability to lead the National Security Council staff.”

Ms. George has served as a principal at the Albright Stonebridge Group LLC, an international strategic consulting firm, and previously with The Albright Group LLC, since 2001.  From 1997-2001, Ms. George served as the Deputy Chief of Staff in the Department of State, overseeing the management and coordination of travel and meetings, as a liaison to the White House and other Cabinet departments, and working across the Department on a range of foreign policy initiatives for Secretary Madeleine  Albright. 

Ms. George has a BA from Mount Holyoke College, and a JD from the George Washington University Law School.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 07/29/14

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:25 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Happy Tuesday.  I have one, quick piece of business to dispense with before we begin with questions.

As you’ll recall, yesterday I began by speaking about the impact of the Affordable Care Act on extending the life of the Medicare Trust Fund.  Today we have some additional good news.  There is now available new data showing how the Affordable Care Act is helping millions of seniors save on their prescription drugs.  The Affordable Care Act makes Medicare prescription drugs more affordable by gradually closing the gap in coverage known as the doughnut hole where beneficiaries had to pay the full cost of their medications out of pocket. 

Information released today by the Department of Health and Human Services shows that more than 8.2 million seniors and people with disabilities who are covered by Medicare continue to enjoy prescription drug savings as a result of the Affordable Care Act, saving a total of $11.5 billion since 2010.  That comes out to an average of about $1,400 per beneficiary in doughnut hole discounts.

Now, in my home state of Missouri, where the President is traveling today, seniors have saved more than $229 million on prescription drugs since 2010, thanks to the Affordable Care Act -- $229 million goes a long way in the state of Missouri.  More than 34,000 seniors in the “Show-Me” state are seeing savings in the doughnut hole just in the first six months of this year alone.

So, more good news about the impact that the Affordable Care Act is having on people all across the country -- in this case, senior citizens.

So with that, Jim, do you want to get us started?

Q    Thanks, Josh.  Thanks for the doughnut hole discounts.  (Laughter.) 

MR. EARNEST:  They may not be good for your health, actually.  (Laughter.)

Q    Diplomats in Europe are saying that the EU has adopted new economic sanctions against the Russians.  When can we expect the U.S. to follow these?  Tony Blinken said yesterday that we would come afterwards.  When do we expect to see U.S. sanctions?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I can tell you that -- I don't want to get ahead of a formal announcement from European leaders, but for months the United States, at a variety of levels, going all the way up to the President, has been engaged in an effort to work in close coordination with our allies to impose economic costs on Russia for their destabilizing activities in Ukraine.  We welcome these early indications that European countries are going to take additional steps today to impose additional economic costs on Russia.  We believe that that's welcome news, and we certainly look forward to continuing to coordinate with them as they move forward.

In terms of economic sanctions that -- additional economic sanctions that could be imposed by the United States, let me say one other thing about this.  You’ll recall that just over two weeks ago, the President did make an announcement about sectoral sanctions that the United States was putting in place against Russia.  And we do anticipate that the announcement from the Europeans later today will track pretty closely with the previous announcements that have been made by this administration.

In terms of additional U.S. sanctions, we have made clear that those -- that additional sanctions and additional costs could be imposed on Russia, and we do anticipate that we'll have some news on that soon.

Q    Today?

MR. EARNEST:  As soon as today. 

Q    As soon as today.  Okay.  Can you talk a little bit about this formal accusation that Russia violated the 1987 missile treaty, and why the administration has made a determination to make that formal accusation now, since it has been an issue for quite some time?

MR. EARNEST:  Jim, it's correct, the United States has determined, according to an intelligence analysis, that the Russian Federation is in violation of its obligations under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.  Specifically, the 2014 Compliance Report, which is something that we have filed on an annual basis, includes the determination that the Russian Federation is in violation of that treaty and that treaty’s obligations not to possess, produce or flight-test a ground-launched cruise missile with a range capability of 500 to 5,500 kilometers, or to possess or produce launchers of such missiles.

This is a very serious matter which we have attempted to address with Russia for some time now.  The United States is committed to the viability of the INF Treaty.  It is our view that the INF Treaty and the agreements that are part of it are in the broad national security interest of every party that has agreed to that treaty.  That includes the United States, obviously.  It includes Russia.  It includes the other 11 successor states of the former Soviet Union that are also parties to that treaty.  The adherence to that treaty also provides important safeguards for our allies in Western Europe and even some of our allies in the Asia Pacific region as well. 

So this is a priority.  This is a concern, a serious concern that we have raised with the Russians on a number of occasions through our standard diplomatic channels.  I know that there have been reports that the President informed President Putin by a letter of our determination and as an indication that this is a matter that merits the serious attention of the leaders of both the United States and Russia.

Q    But Congress has been asking the President and the administration to do this for some time.  Why now and not before?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, these determinations are rooted primarily in the kind of intelligence analysis that I can’t discuss from the podium.  But it is true that this is something that we have been reviewing for some time and has been the subject of conversations within the administration and with members of Congress as well.

Q    The House is moving on a pared-down immigration -- I’m sorry -- border security bill today, I believe $690 million, quite a fraction of what you had asked for.  And it also contained some changes in the 2008 law.  In the statement of administration policy yesterday, you said that the House bill injects partisan provisions that are unworkable and would increase cost without solving the problem.  I wonder what it is that that refers to, since the administration itself had asked for changes in the 2008 law, along the lines of what the House bill does.

MR. EARNEST:  There’s a lot there in that question.  Let me try to take those elements one at a time.  First, as it relates to language where you ended up, it is correct that almost a month ago -- I think even more than a month ago now -- the administration did put forward a specific request for Congress to take action in granting additional authority that could be used by the Secretary of Homeland Security to incorporate some flexibility in enforcing the law so that we could actually do a better job of enforcing that law more efficiently.

The language that has been put forward by Senator Cornyn and Congressman Cuellar doesn’t -- it actually undermines the desire for more flexibility.  It actually puts in place a couple of arbitrary and stringent restrictions that, for example, require immigration judges to process certain cases within seven days.  That sort of inflexible approach only risks bottling up the system further.

We have seen in other policymaking contexts that adding arbitrary deadlines to an already overburdened system only makes the problem worse.  And we are concerned that by putting in place these kinds of arbitrary deadlines, it puts the due process rights of those who are going through these proceedings at risk. It also could force the court system to divert resources from other higher-priority cases -- the cases of criminals or others that pose or could pose a national security threat or a public safety threat -- and direct them toward trying to meet this arbitrary seven-day restriction.

So rather than granting the administration additional flexibility to more effectively enforce the law, it puts in place arbitrary constraints that make the enforcement of that law more difficult.  And that’s what our concern is.

Q    Josh, the SAP refers to partisan provisions, and the example you just provided is from a bipartisan bill.  So how can that --

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as far as I know, I think that that “bipartisan bill” was supported by one Democrat.  So maybe I have a more stringent definition of bipartisanship, at least in this case.  So that’s the first thing.

In terms of the broader supplemental package that the House has put forward today, you’re right that it falls well short of the resource request that this administration has put forward.  We’ve seen a lot of House Republicans booking themselves on cable television to talk about what a serious problem this is at the border, but yet they are refusing to take the kind of action that would ensure the administration has the necessary resources to deal with what they themselves describe as a serious problem.

The other thing that is notable -- and again, this piece of legislation was introduced just shortly before I walked out here, so I only got a top-line briefing on this -- but it is my understanding that this package does not include funding for wildfires.  As you know, there's a very serious situation out West where there are communities that are threatened in the midst of a pretty challenging wildfire season.  This administration needs additional resources to make sure that we can protect homes and communities from those wildfires, and we would like to have additional resources to do that.

I would also make note of the fact that we were just talking yesterday about the valuable contribution that the Iron Dome system has made to protecting the lives of innocent civilians in our allies’ -- in Israel, one of our closest, strongest allies.  It is unfortunate that this Republican proposal does not include the requested funding for Iron Dome. 

As you know, that system has been used to great effect in recent weeks, unfortunately.  It’s had to be used in recent weeks to protect the lives of innocent civilians -- in this case, innocent Israeli civilians.  And the Israeli government has made a request of the U.S. government for additional funding so that additional resources could be devoted to restocking that system, and we’re disappointed that Republicans did not include that in the proposal as we had requested.

Steve.

Q    Josh, on the INF Treaty, what exactly did the Russians do?  Did they launch a cruise missile?  And what sort of response are you getting to your complaints from them?

MR. EARNEST:  Steve, I’m not able to detail the intelligence behind the analysis that led to the determination that was included in the 2014 Compliance Report, so it’s difficult for me to answer in a lot of detail the basics of your question.  But let me repeat that there is an obligation on both countries -- on all parties, I should say, who have signed that treaty not to possess, produce or flight-test a ground-launched cruise missile with a range capability of 500 to 5,500 kilometers, or to possess or produce launchers of such missiles.  We have raised concerns with the Russians about the importance of complying with this aspect of the treaty, and I guess suffice it to say that the response that we received from them was unsatisfactory.

Q    Separately, Israeli TV says all parties have agreed to a Gaza cease-fire.  Is this something you’re aware of?

MR. EARNEST:  That is not something I was aware of before I walked out here, but that may have been a breaking-news item on Israeli television.  As you know, this administration and the President and Secretary Kerry have all been pushing both sides to impose an immediate cease-fire out of concern for the well-being of innocent civilians on both sides of that border.  So we’ll have to look into those reports, but if true, it would certainly reflect what this administration has been encouraging both sides to pursue.

Q    And lastly, Speaker Boehner says, “We have no plans to impeach the President.”  He called it a scam to raise money, raising this issue.  Was it a scam?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, if that’s the case, then I suspect that there may be members of the Republican conference that didn’t receive the memo.  We’ve seen comments in recent months from Congressman Steve King from Iowa, Congressman Ted Yoho from Florida, Congressman Lou Barletta from Pennsylvania, the distinguished Congressman Steve Stockman from Texas; his fellow Texan, Blake Farenthold, has raised this prospect.  We’ve even seen Kerry Bentivolio from Michigan call this a “dream come true.”  I think that was about nine or 10 months ago.  So it’s an indication that if this is the case then maybe the Speaker should direct that attention and that message to members of his own conference.

Michelle.

Q    On Ukraine again, the fact that Ukraine has now fired missiles at the rebels, does the U.S. see that as an escalation of this, and doesn’t that just raise the possibility that Russia will use its own missiles that the U.S. is so concerned about as it concerns the treaty?

MR. EARNEST:  We have seen evidence to indicate that the Russians have fired weapons from the Russian side of the border aimed squarely at Ukrainian forces.  That’s something that the President’s Deputy National Security Advisor, Tony Blinken, mentioned from this podium just yesterday.  That does reflect what we think is an escalation in this conflict, and it only underscores the importance of the international community taking action to impose further economic costs on the Russians to get them to reevaluate their strategy in Ukraine.

Q    No, I mean Ukraine firing missiles now at the rebels.  Apparently they’ve used ballistic missiles as well. 

MR. EARNEST:  Oh, I misunderstood your question.

Q    That’s okay.

MR. EARNEST:  I was referring to previous reports that Russian forces on the Russian side of the border were targeting the Ukrainian military forces on the Ukrainian side of the border.

Q    Is the U.S. concerned that Ukraine is now dangerously escalating this past the point that it could or should?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not in a position to talk about those specific reports.  It is our view, however, that military actions that are taken by the Ukrainian military reflect the aggressive efforts of Russian separatists to perpetuate the violence in that region of the world.  So I’m not in a position to talk about those specific reports, but we do continue to be concerned about ongoing violence there and we do encourage the Russians to use their influence with the Russian-backed separatists to lay down their arms and to try to resolve their differences diplomatically.

Q    And today we heard Kerry again emphasizing a diplomatic solution, saying that Putin has all of these choices.  But hasn’t this now gotten past that point?  I mean, Russian has contributed to the downing of a commercial plane and has annexed part of its neighbor.  So at this point what would a diplomatic solution even look like in the U.S.’s view?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what we have said is that it is possible for us to set up a political dialogue that would allow the people of Ukraine to determine the future of their country.  There is a debate in that country that raises questions about what sort of relationship Ukraine should have with their neighbor Russia.  It raises questions about what sort of relationship Ukraine should have with their economic partners in Western Europe. 

Now, many of those questions have been resolved, because in the last six months or so -- maybe it’s a little bit longer than that, eight or nine months -- we’ve seen the election of a new Ukrainian President; we’ve seen that Ukrainian President sign an association agreement with the Europeans that was the subject of so much dispute, that led to the departure of the previous President.  So that is an indication that the Ukrainian people do want to have a strong relationship with Europe.

The point that the United States and much of the international community has been trying to make is their strong relationship with Western Europe shouldn’t -- doesn't necessarily mean that they have to have an adversarial or contentious relationship with their neighbor Russia.  It is possible for the Ukrainian people to have strong relationships with both.  Unfortunately, what we have seen is we’ve seen the Russians feel undermined by the desire of the Ukrainian people to have a relationship with the West.  And that is what has led them to unnecessarily and improperly interfere with the affairs of the Ukrainian government and the Ukrainian people.

So, ultimately, what we would like to see is a way to resolve this politically so that the Ukrainian people do continue to hold the authority to make decisions about the future of their country, and that they have the freedom to make decisions about what they would like their relationship to be with countries around the world -- even holding open the prospect that Ukraine has a strong and thriving relationship with Russia.  Their strong relationship with the West would not preclude their close ties to their neighbor.

Q    Really quickly, the Russian Foreign Minister just announced that he’s agreed with John Kerry to work toward ways to implement the agreements in Geneva back in April.  How does the U.S. view these announcements periodically from the Foreign Minister?  Do you see that as positive, or do you just see it as more lip service that really means nothing?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what we have seen throughout this conflict in Ukraine are announcements from the Russians that are not necessarily backed up by concrete actions.  And that has been the source of some disappointment and even some frustration on the part of the international community.  That is why you’ve seen the international community progressively take the kinds of steps that have imposed greater costs on the Russians to further isolate them. 

All of this is part of not just putting in place a sanctions regime for the sake of sanctions.  Rather the sanctions regime is geared toward prompting President Putin principally, but the broader Russian government, to reevaluate their strategy in Ukraine.  Their efforts to destabilize Ukraine have weakened their country politically and have hurt their relationship with their neighbor.  It also, after the imposition of some of these sanctions, has had a negative impact on the Russian economy.

So what we need is we need President Putin to reevaluate his strategy and actually participate constructively in that situation by engaging in the kinds of facilitated diplomatic talks that would de-escalate that conflict and allow the people of Ukraine to make the kinds of decisions that they should make about the future of their country. 

Margaret. 

Q    We know that the President is waiting until the end of the summer but is likely to make some fairly big moves on immigration.  And now we understand from lawmakers on the Hill and advocates that the White House has begun talking about the possibility of the executive order to issue at least some work permits before the end of the year.  And I’m going to go out on a limb and anticipate that you might not want to get ahead of an official announcement -- 

MR. EARNEST:  You know me so well.

Q    I was wondering if you could talk in some general terms at least about whether this is something that you’re exploring, the politics of exploring it before midterm, and how many people you’re looking realistically to cover.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Margaret, you’ll recall that in the Rose Garden about a month ago, the President delivered a statement in which he communicated to the American public and to all of you that he had been informed by the Speaker of the House that House Republicans were for the foreseeable future going to block the common-sense, bipartisan immigration reform bill that passed the Senate.  And in response to that declaration from the Speaker of the House, the President announced his intention to review the authority that was vested in the executive branch to see what tools were available to him to address some of the problems with our broken immigration system that House Republicans won’t allow the Congress to solve. 

The President is not comfortable just sitting in place, waiting for Congress to act, particularly when Congress, in bipartisan fashion in the Senate at least, has identified a common-sense approach for addressing so many of these problems.

So what is underway right now is a review, at the order of the President, by the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Attorney General to consider what options are available to the President.  What those options reflect is a determination by this President, as I mentioned, to act where Congress hasn’t, but to do so within the confines of the law. 

That’s why we’re taking our time to carefully review what the existing law is and what steps it allows the President to take in terms of addressing the problems that are caused by our broken immigration system.  And once that review has been concluded and it has been made clear to the President what options are available to him I anticipate that we’ll have an announcement about steps that the President has decided to take to address some of these problems. 

Q    -- speak from the podium, though, that this work permit is one of those options that’s being studied right now, that your team is considering presenting --  

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not in a position to talk about what sorts of things are currently under review.  That review is being conducted by the Department of Justice and by the Department of Homeland Security.  And for the content and timing of that review, you can check with them, but I wouldn’t spend a whole lot of time waiting for an answer.

Bill.

Q    What concerns exactly do you have about the Russian testing of missiles?  It’s been going -- you’ve known about it since 2008.  What do you believe they’re trying to do? 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Bill, it’s hard for me to talk in specific detail about the intelligence analysis that led us to this specific determination.  I think it would be fair for you to conclude that the concerns we have specifically relate to the Russians failing to uphold their obligation not to possess, produce or flight-test a ground-launched cruise missile with a range capability between 500 and 5,500 kilometers, or to possess or produce launchers of missiles like that.

It is correct that the concerns that we’ve had about this have been raised with the Russians.  It’s correct that our concerns have been discussed inside the administration for some time.  And it’s correct to assume that we’ve had conversations with our partners on the relevant committees in Congress about this, as well.  The reason for all of that consultation and careful study is that the INF Treaty, as it is known, is an important part of our national security.  It also provides for the national security for the people of Russia.  It also provides the national security of some of our strongest allies both in Western Europe and the Asia Pacific region.

So this is a top priority.  That is why it has been raised at the presidential level.  And we’re going to continue to work with Russia -- we’ve offered to engage in a high-level dialogue with them so that they can resolve our concerns of this matter.

Q    Do you feel that they would use these missiles or make them available to other states?

MR. EARNEST:  Our concern principally now is with their commitment to this treaty, and that is what we intend to hold them accountable for, which is living up to the commitments that they made in the context of this treaty.  And, again, we don’t do so solely because it’s in the interest of the United States and our national security for them to do so; we believe that it is in the strong national security interest of our allies and we actually believe it’s in the strong national security interests of the Russians to abide by this agreement.  We’re going to hold them to living up to the commitments that they made, and we’re going to continue to live up to those commitments because, again, we believe it’s in the clear national security interests of the United States of America for us to do so.

Q    -- have looked into this and they consider the matter closed.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we have had, as I alluded to a little bit earlier, some conversations with the Russians about this where we raised our concerns, and again, it is fair for you to conclude that their response to our concerns was wholly unsatisfactory, and that is why additional talks are merited.  And we hope that the Russians will take us up on our offer to conduct those conversations at a pretty high level.

Q    One more time -- are you concerned that they could possibly use or make available these missiles for other purposes?

MR. EARNEST:  We are concerned with ensuring that the Russians live up to the commitments that they made in the context of the INF Treaty for a whole host of reasons.  Certainly proliferation -- the proliferation risk associated with these kinds of weapons is part of the wide range of concerns that makes this treaty such an important document.

Wendell.

Q    Vladimir Putin was quoted last year as saying that former President Gorbachev’s decision to sign the INF Treaty was debatable at best.  Why do you believe he has any commitment to the treaty?  And what if he does not?  What if he wants to get rid of it?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that's certainly -- I would assume that's the kind of thing that would come up in the high-level talks that we’re offering to have with the Russians.

What we believe is really important is for both sides to live up to the agreements that have already been signed.  The United States has lived up to our end of the agreement.  We believe that doing so is in the clear national security interest of the United States, it’s in the clear interest of our allies in Western Europe and in the Asia Pacific, and we believe it is in the clear interest of the Russian people for this treaty to remain in effect and for both sides -- and for all sides, all parties to live up to the agreements that they made in the context of this agreement.

Q    But what if he does not?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that is the subject of some conversation.  And we look forward to having a dialogue at a high level to assess the willingness of the Russian regime to live up to the obligations that they’ve made.

Q    And what about Putin’s claim that the U.S. plans to station Aegis missiles in Romania is itself a violation of the treaty?

MR. EARNEST:  It is not.  Again, the United States remains committed to abiding by these security agreements that we have signed with Russia.  And again, we do that because it is in the clear national security interest of the United States to live up to the commitments that we have made on the international scene. We can do that in the context of also providing for the national security of our allies in Europe, and we’re going to continue to do that as well.

Q    Why is it not a violation of the treaty?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’d refer you to the State Department for sort of the detailed ins and outs of these kinds of treaty agreements.  But we take them very seriously.  It’s also why we take it seriously when our partners who also sign these treaties don't live up to the commitments that they’ve made.

Chris.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  Israeli TV is now retracting that report on the cease-fire. 

MR. EARNEST:  Thanks for keeping us up to date here. 

Q    Shocking.  But in the context of the criticism which most people would suggest it’s hard to remember when there has been such hostility in Israeli media against a U.S. Secretary of State -- in fact, Secretary Kerry again defended his record, saying 29 years in the Senate, 100 percent voting record.  But is all of this having a negative impact on his ability to help broker a real cease-fire?

MR. EARNEST:  We do not think so.  The United States certainly does not think so.  Secretary Kerry, as Mr. Blinken noted yesterday, is a strong defender of our allies in Israel.  And that is why I guess I would be so bold as to suggest that it is in the interest of the Israeli people for the harsh words that we’ve seen directed at the Secretary not affect his ability to continue to be a strong advocate for them.

Secretary Kerry has worked doggedly over the last year or so since he took office -- I guess it has been a little longer than that -- pressing both sides in terms of a broader -- to the negotiating table in search of a broader peace agreement.  What he has been engaged in more recently is working with Palestinian leaders, Israeli leaders, other leaders in the Arab world, U.N. officials, to try to put in place a permanent cessation of hostilities based on the November 2012 cease-fire agreement.

Secretary Kerry has been working hard on that effort because, again, it’s in the clear interest of American national security for that cease-fire to be put in place.  It also will provide for the protection of innocent civilians on both sides of the border that, right now, are caught in the cross-fire. 

And so he is going to continue to work very hard on this, and he is an important element of resolving this situation because he is somebody who is well-versed in all these issues; he is somebody who has the clear backing of the President of the United States; he is somebody that has very good relationships with both Israeli leaders and Palestinian leaders.  This is credibility that he has built up through his years of service to this administration in pursuit of that goal.  And I anticipate, and this administration anticipates, and the President anticipates that he is going to continue to be hard at work on this.

Q    As you know, there have been multiple reports in the Israeli media quoting senior Israeli officials, one of the toughest in Haaretz yesterday, saying that senior officials believed that the proposal put forward by John Kerry was a “strategic terrorist attack.”  Do you not believe those reports? How would you categorize the feelings of senior officials then if you don’t think that that’s the case?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think -- let’s start with the facts.  The facts are that the cease-fire proposal that was put forward by the Egyptians two weeks ago -- this is the cease-fire agreement that Israel readily accepted -- included many of the elements that some anonymous Israeli officials are now suggesting were wrongly included in the document that was circulated by Secretary Kerry.  That’s the second thing that’s important to understand, is this is a document that was circulated among the parties that reflected an attempt to get a dialogue going between the parties.  This did not reflect a specific American proposal. This reflected an effort to try to find some common ground and to elicit comment from the Israelis to try to find the kind of cease-fire agreement that they would believe would be in their best interests, and would also provide for greater security of their citizens.

So this is part of the diplomatic effort that was underway, and it is in line with the proposal that the Israelis had readily agreed to a couple of weeks ago.  So those facts as it relates to the document that we circulated by Secretary Kerry are really important in this case.

In terms of the broader relationship, again, we’ve said for a couple of days now that those comments were pretty disappointing.  But our determination, and more importantly, Secretary Kerry’s determination to try to put in place an immediate cease-fire that would end the crossfire that so many civilians -- innocent civilians are caught in the middle of right now continues to be a top priority.  And I know that he’s working very hard as we speak in pursuit of that agreement.

Bob.

Q    Josh, back to the sanctions anticipated today.  I don't suppose you're going to want to put it this way, but isn’t it perhaps a fair assessment to say that it took the shooting-down of a commercial jetliner to have the European leaders get some serious shivers finally about Vladimir Putin?  Isn’t that the tipping point of all of this?

MR. EARNEST:  I would leave that sort of analysis to others.  I would point out a couple of things.  The first is the announcement that we anticipate later today from the Europeans is the culmination of months of diplomatic work that has been conducted by members of this administration, and it reflects the commitment of the international community, led by this President, to respond to Russia’s destabilizing activities in Ukraine.

Now, I think the President himself, when he spoke at this podium 10 days or so ago, acknowledged that the downing of that jetliner with 300 innocent people aboard was a head-snapper and would attract the attention of the international community in a way that this conflict hadn’t previously.  So I think it is certainly reasonable, the prospect that you floated, that the downing of this airliner contributed significantly to the Europeans’ willingness to step up to the plate and take the kind of serious action that this administration and this country put in place against Russia a couple of weeks ago. 

But this work continues.  This is not the finish line here. There are still -- we need to assess whether or not these economic costs that are being imposed on Russia have the desired effect.  The desired effect, again, is to get President Putin to reevaluate his strategy for Ukraine, and that remains to be seen. But I suspect we’ll have a little more on this today after the Europeans announce their decision.

April.

Q    Josh, Monday starts the U.S.-Africa Summit.  Could you talk to us about it?  And what news will come out of this investment in Africa?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t want to give away all of the news six days before the conference starts, but --

Q    Give us some.  (Laughter.) 

MR. EARNEST:  -- I’ll give it a shot here.  The President is looking forward to welcoming leaders from across the African continent to our Nation’s Capital for a three-day U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit.  This summit, the largest event any U.S. President has held with African heads of state and government, will build on the President’s trip to Africa in the summer of 2013, and it will strengthen ties between the United States and one of the world’s most dynamic and fastest-growing regions.

Specifically, the summit will advance the administration’s focus on trade and investment in Africa, and highlight America’s commitment to Africa’s security, its democratic development, and its people.  At the same time, it will highlight the depth and breadth of the U.S. commitment to the African continent, advance our shared priorities, and enable discussion of concrete ideas to deepen that partnership.  At its core, this summit is about fostering stronger ties between the United States and Africa. 

Q    So when you talk about this, is this -- we understand the investment piece, but is this also going to shore up some of the African countries that may have some issues with policy as well as -- domestic policy as well as security -- as many Africa nations are places where terrorists do go and run and stay there to breed and hide -- is this part of that as well?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what I do anticipate that we’re going to discuss in the context of this summit, April, is a wide range of topics.  You touched on some of them there.  But we do want to try to encourage progress in a few key areas that are so critical to the future of that continent.  Those areas include expanding trade and investment ties, engaging young African leaders, promoting inclusive, sustainable development, expanding cooperation on peace and security, and gaining a better future for Africa’s next generation.

You saw the President allude to some of that in the town hall meeting that he did in the context of the Young African Leaders Initiative just yesterday, where the President talked about the importance of engaging Africa’s young leaders. 

All across that continent we see that there is a whole generation of young leaders who are poised to decide the future of that continent and their individual countries, and the opportunity that we can seize to engage them and conduct discussions about trade and investment and leadership, and promoting inclusive, sustainable development, and a focus on peace and security are the kinds of things that may not pay dividends right away, but they are the kinds of things that will build strong ties between the U.S. and one of the most dynamic regions of the world.

Q    One last question on investment and trade.  I asked this question of you a couple weeks ago and I’m hoping I get an answer now.  I asked you about how China in the past -- there’s a concern about how China was investing particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, making promises that at one time they were not keeping.  They were taking more out than they were giving.  Will there be some forms of accountability for these investments from these U.S. companies, U.S. organizations, that there is a mutual win-win, versus you take more than you give -- you put in?

MR. EARNEST:  I think the operating premise of the summit is the idea that there is an opportunity for both the African continent and the United States of America to benefit from stronger ties between our countries and our people. 

Those ties benefit both sides in a variety of ways, I think. We certainly would benefit from some of the security arrangements that are already in place with some countries in that region.  But encouraging the leaders of these countries to play a more constructive role in fostering peace and security is certainly one obvious way that these kinds of stronger relationships could benefit the American people in a way that they would also benefit the African people, as well.

I think the same could be said of economic ties between business interests in Africa and business interests in the United States who are looking for growing markets.  Some of these African countries include among the fastest-growing, most dynamic economic markets in the world.  So giving American businesses the opportunity to invest in those areas certainly makes good business sense for a lot of companies here in the U.S., but also would stand to yield significant economic benefits for people who live in those countries.  So this will be the topic of a lot of conversation both at a government level, but also among the private sector leaders who are participating in the summit. 

Lesley.

Q    Do you have any reaction to a letter sent to the White House by Senators from Colorado and Washington asking for more clarity and perhaps a unified approach in helping license marijuana businesses?  They said that -- they have criticism that at times it seems like some different arms of the government have been at odds over how to enforce the law.

MR. EARNEST:  I haven’t seen that letter, Lesley, but I’d refer you to the Department of Justice, who, as we discussed yesterday, has put in place some guidelines for administering the law in the unique circumstances that exist in Colorado and Washington State. 

Q    What about some of the criticism, though, that -- like the Bureau of Land Management is doing one thing on water reclamation and DOJ is enforcing it in a different manner -- is there any sort of review underway?

MR. EARNEST:  Not that I’m aware of.  But as it relates to the Bureau of Land Management, I’d encourage you to check with the Department of the Interior, and they may be able to give you some more details about how they’re untangling any regulatory knots that may exist there. 

Jon.

Q    Josh, back to the situation in Gaza.  The President talked to Prime Minister Netanyahu on Sunday.

MR. EARNEST:  That’s correct.

Q    You put out a readout saying that, “The President made clear the strategic imperative of instituting an immediate, unconditional humanitarian cease-fire that ends hostilities now.” The Israelis responded by going to some of their most aggressive offensive operations into Gaza of the entire conflict.  What is the President’s level of frustration with the fact that he gives a very strong what looks almost like an order -- gives very strong words telling the Israeli Prime Minister that we must have “an immediate, unconditional humanitarian cease-fire” and then, he goes in the opposite direction?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jon, we’ve been pretty steadfast.  And I think it’s also included in that readout that the United States continues to not just acknowledge but support the Israeli government’s right to take steps to defend their civilians.  And that Israeli right to self-defense is something that the President doesn’t just respect, he supports. 

Q    Does he support what the Israelis have done over the last 24 hours, or what they have done in the hours after that phone call?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what the President has said is that he supports the Israeli government’s right to make those decisions. What we have also suggested is that Russia -- that the Israelis need to do more to live up to the standards that they have set for themselves to ensure the safety of innocent civilians on both sides of that border, including Palestinian people. 

So it is apparent from the reports that we have seen about the civilian deaths that there is more that the Israeli military can and should do to account for the safety of Palestinian civilians.  It’s important to remember, though, that there is a distinction here, which is that Hamas is routinely targeting innocent civilians on the other side of the border.  The Israeli military puts in place standards to try to protect Palestinian civilians -- innocent Palestinian civilians.  That said, we believe that the Israeli military should do more to live up to those standards. 

Q    And moving on to the question of impeachment, did you coordinate your comments on Monday about impeachment with the -- I’m sorry, did you coordinate your comments on Friday about impeachment with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee?

MR. EARNEST:  Not that I’m aware of.

Q    You don’t know if you coordinated, or you didn’t?  I mean, the reason why I ask is Dan Pfeiffer says what he says Friday morning, that impeachment is a real possibility the White House is concerned about.  You go a little bit further from the podium during the briefing.  And then within hours, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is putting out fundraising emails quoting what you said with a red alert:  the White House says impeachment is a real possibility, we’re concerned about impeachment.  So I’m just wondering, it seems -- Pfeiffer says something, you say something, then you have a fundraising drive that they’re now saying is one of the most successful fundraising drives of the cycle.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what I know, Jon, is that the comments that I made on Friday were in response to questions from people who were asking about the prospect of Republicans in Congress taking that step.  So it would be --

Q    And you don’t know if you coordinated with the DCCC?

MR. EARNEST:  I guess what I’m saying is that it would be difficult for me to coordinate what I was going to say in response to a question that hadn’t been asked yet.

Q    Well, you had your answer, which was quite forward-leaning, saying the top Republicans are pushing impeachment, and I think your answer at the time was, for an example, was Sarah Palin.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, true.  That was not an answer that I had discussed with anybody at the DCCC in advance.  Again, this was based on my own reading of the newspaper a couple days before I got asked the question.

Q    And you’re a pretty calm guy -- (laughter) -- but the DCCC put out a fundraiser saying -- this is after your words -- “It’s Saturday and we’re in the office freaking out.”  Is the White House freaking out about the possibility of impeachment?

MR. EARNEST:  I think it would be appropriate for you to characterize the White House sentiment that we are very disappointed that, in this pivotal week before Congress embarks on a five-week long August recess, as they have in previous years, that they’re spending so much time debating a taxpayer-funded lawsuit that they are prepared to file against the President just for doing his job, instead of focusing on some of these other priorities that should get done before Labor Day.

Q    You’re not freaking out about impeachment?

MR. EARNEST:  I think it is fair to say that we believe that the Republican priorities that they have articulated are completely wrong and don’t reflect the view of so many middle-class families; that their elected leaders in Washington, D.C., should be focused on putting into place the kinds of policies that are going to expand economic opportunity for the middle class; and that efforts to focus on these political partisan attacks don’t create jobs, they don’t reduce the deficit, they don’t make things better for middle-class families.  That’s why the President is focused on these priorities.  We wish that House Republicans would be focused on them, too.

Q    Now, specifically on the priorities, one big thing is dealing with the border crisis.  So the Senate -- Senate Democrats have moved in one direction; House Republicans are moving in another direction.  Both are putting out -- off money, saying that they would appropriate money to deal with the crisis -- obviously the Republicans less in the House.  There’s a little -- there’s disagreement on some of the policy.  Are you going to insist -- is the White House going to insist that Congress delay its five-week congressional recess until it can resolve the differences between those two approaches and deal with the border crisis?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any proclamations to make about our views of the congressional schedule at this point other than to observe that this administration, more than three weeks ago, put forward our own specific request about what we felt like needed to be done, and here we are, three days before Congress is prepared to leave town for the remainder of the summer, and we see a preliminary proposal from House Republicans.  That is not acting with a sense of urgency that we feel is necessary to deal with this situation. 

This administration has demonstrated a whole-of-government approach to try to deal with the problem at the border and to make sure that we’re mitigating the impact that’s having on communities across the border.  Unfortunately, that whole-of-government approach that has a sense of urgency doesn’t include Republicans in Congress right now.

Cheryl.

Q    Just to follow, but would you veto -- would the President veto the House bill as it stands now, the House supplemental?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, I was just briefed on the very top-line details.  I understand that our folks here at the White House, our experts here at the White House are reviewing the details of that legislation, and if we get to a position where we have a more specific position to express, we’ll let you know.

Q    And can I also ask, do you have any readout of the meeting that was this morning with the House Democrats?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have a readout in front of me.

Let’s move around a little bit.  Zeke.

Q    I know you don’t want to go into too much detail about how that determination was made, but was the decision to go public last night at all tied to the current state of relations, or lack thereof, between the United States and Russia -- to send a letter -- start distributing that information to the press related to the ongoing conflict in Ukraine?

MR. EARNEST:  No, it was not.  As we’ve talked about before, Zeke, the relationship between the United States and Russia is a multifaceted one.  We have worked in cooperative fashion with the Russians even in the midst of this turmoil in Ukraine to rid Syria of their declared chemical weapons stockpile.  That was an important -- that reflected important cooperation between our two governments in pursuit of a goal that was in the clear national security interests of the American people, of the Russian people, and of people around the globe.  We’ve also been working closely with the Russians as it relates to the ongoing P5-plus-1 talks with Iran.  So it is possible for us to consider a wide range of aspects in our relationship. 

Dealing with these issues in isolation, this is yet another factor in our relationship with Russia and it is something that we continue to be concerned about.  The decision to reach this determination, again, was based on intelligence analysis.  And the decision to make it public was based on our filing of the 2014 Compliance Report, something that's done on an annual basis. And the letter that was sent from President Obama to President Putin is pursuant to the filing of that Compliance Report and our intention to make clear to the Russian government that this is a very serious matter.

Q    Just to drill down there for a second, you mentioned earlier that there was concerns of -- potentially about proliferation of these weapons.  And we’re seeing in eastern Ukraine, the separatists are being sort of given surface-to-air missiles, as the administration alleges, as well as heavy weaponry, artillery and the like.  So that's not a factor here in that -- was it a factor in that determination?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, this is a difficult question you’re asking primarily because you’re asking about our -- you’re alluding to an intelligence analysis that's difficult for me to discuss from here.  Let me just say as a top-line matter, we have on many occasions expressed our serious concerns about heavy weapons being transferred from Russia across the border into Ukraine.  We have seen those heavy weapons used by Russian-backed separatists, occasionally with very tragic results.

As it relates to our concerns about Russia’s obligations under the treaty, I’m not in a position to talk about some of that intelligence analysis, but what I can say is that our concerns about the Russians living up to their obligations not to possess, produce or flight-test a ground-launch cruise missile with a range capability of 500 to 5,500 kilometers, or possess or produce launchers of such missiles is a concern that we would have even if the Russians were acting in a much more responsible fashion in Ukraine.

Q    And just finally, there seems to be another dustup now between Secretary Kerry and the Israeli government, with Secretary Kerry saying a couple of hours ago that Prime Minister Netanyahu had asked him to broker a cease-fire in a call late last night; now the senior Israeli officials are telling reporters that that conversation didn’t happen, in fact it was the other way around.  I was wondering if you could clarify -- do you know whether, in their conversation with the President on Sunday, or with Secretary Kerry last night, did Prime Minister Netanyahu ask the U.S. government to broker a cease-fire?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the United States has been engaged -- I’m not in a position to read out a phone call between the Secretary of State and the Israeli Prime Minister.  I’d refer you to the State Department for that.  I might hold it up as evidence that there is -- that there continues to be an important role played by the Secretary of State in working on this situation.

However, it is the view of the United States that it is in the clear interest of people on both sides of that conflict for an immediate cease-fire to be put in place.  It is tragic the violence that we’ve seen in that region, and it is tragic how many innocent lives have been lost as a result of that conflict.
 
That is why the Secretary of State, the President of the United States, and other American officials are working so hard to try to put in place that cease-fire.  Enough tragedy has been experienced by people on both sides of that conflict.  It needs to come to an end.  And it’s time for parties on both sides to try to reserve their differences diplomatically. 

Mark.

Q    Josh, can you elaborate at all on what you describe as a “wholly unsatisfactory response” by Russia to the INF charge? 

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not in a position to elaborate on that further.  I think that’s a pretty colorful description.

Q    -- the diplomatic equivalent of “bite me”?  (Laughter.)

MR. EARNEST:  That might be an even more colorful description of that conversation, but I’m not in a position to describe that conversation any further.

Q    Okay.  And on Ukraine, the administration continues to ask that there be unfettered access for an investigation into the crash site.  At what point does it go beyond the point where it would be of any value by virtue of the fact that it’s been 10 days that all of the material is out in the open, tampered with, stolen? 

MR. EARNEST:  There are experts who could make that assessment.  And what we want to ensure is that the Dutch and the Australians and others who are working with the government of Ukraine to try to finalize a plan for international investigators to get access to that site, that they’re in a position to do their work.  And we want these international investigators to carefully look at what evidence does remain to get the best possible assessment about what exactly happened. 

It should be clearly in the interest of everybody involved on both sides of this debate for us to get a fair, unbiased, international assessment of what exactly happened.  And that’s why we’re supporting the efforts of the Dutch, the Australians and the Ukrainians to allow international investigators to get unfettered access to the scene.

Isaac.

Q    Given all that you’ve said about the impeachment situation -- Dan Pfeiffer said it’s a serious topic being bandied about --

MR. EARNEST:  -- and Ted Yoho and Steve Stockman and others have said about this situation.

Q    Does the White House feel, and does the President feel that Democrats should stop fundraising on this topic?

MR. EARNEST:  It is up to Democrats to make their own decisions about ensuring that their candidates have the resources necessary to run successful campaigns in the fall.  That’s always been the case.  And I’m not in a position to comment on their strategy or tactics at this point.

Q    But aren’t they just as culpable in making this a topic that’s being run about?  I mean, there were, I don't know, 20 fundraising emails the DCCC and the House Majority PAC put out about impeachment over the weekend.

MR. EARNEST:  I think the people who are culpable for this are the people who have the prospect of voting to do exactly what they say should be done.  That is something that we believe reflects a whole set of priorities that stand in stark contrast to the priorities that are shared by middle-class families all across the country. 

Again, what the vast majority of people want their elected leaders in Washington, D.C., to be focused on, and what the President is focused on, is what can we do to put in place policies that will make it easier for middle-class families to raise a family, send their kids to college, save for retirement, buy a home, to live the American Dream. 

And that continues to be the President’s focal point when it comes to his domestic policy agenda.  You’re going to hear the President talk about this quite a bit more tomorrow.  Unfortunately, that does not seem to be the priority that is shared by Kerry Bentivolio, who says that impeaching the President would be “a dream come true.” 

Q    You want Republicans to stop talking about it, but not the Democrats to stop fundraising on it?

MR. EARNEST:  No, what I’m suggesting is that the priorities of the Republican Congress are all wrong.  And I will leave it to Democratic strategists, who have a much better sense than I do about the best way to raise money for their campaign committees. What we would all benefit from, and what middle-class families across the country would benefit from would be from elected leaders in Washington, D.C. doing what the President is doing, which is setting aside partisan differences and trying to find common ground in pursuit of policies that everybody agrees would be in the best interest of middle-class families.

Kathleen, I’ll give you the last one. 

Q    Just to clarify on the missile treaty, can you confirm that the letter yesterday was the first time that the President has raised this issue with Putin directly?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m going to have to check on that.  I believe that it is, but let me check with our national security folks and we will let you know.  I know that this was raised at a variety of levels prior to that letter being sent.  I don’t know if it was raised between the two Presidents prior to that letter being sent.  So let me check on it.

Thanks, everybody.  Have a good day. 

END  
1:22 P.M. EDT

The President Speaks on the Situation in Ukraine

July 29, 2014 | 10:48 | Public Domain

President Obama delivers a statement updating the public on the situation in Ukraine.

Download mp4 (396MB) | mp3 (10MB)

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Background Conference Call on Ukraine

Via Telephone

3:58 P.M. EDT

MS. LUCAS MAGNUSON:  Hi, good afternoon, everyone.  Thanks for your patience.  Welcome to the call to explain the sanctions that we just rolled out -- that the President just spoke to.  This call will be on background.  All information will be attributable to senior administration officials.
 

With that, I will turn it over to senior administration official number one. 
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Great.  Thanks, everybody, for getting on the call.  I’ll just make a few comments to give an overview, and then hand it over to my colleagues to go into more details about what both the United States and Europe did today.
 

First of all, you have seen since the shoot-down of MH17 the United States make very clear that we believe there needs to be greater costs imposed on Russia for its actions.  That includes the shoot-down of MH17 from Russian-backed separatist-controlled areas, and it also includes the continued efforts by Russia to arm and support the separatists who are inside of Ukraine.
 

And we have put out a substantial amount of information in the last several days.  We believe that military equipment -- including artillery, armored vehicles and air defense equipment -- recently departed from the deployment area west of Rostov, and we’re concerned that this would continue the flow of support to the separatists. 
We have seen Russia continue to accumulate a significant amount of equipment at a deployment site in southwest Russia that includes tanks of a type that are no longer used by the Russian military, as well as armored vehicles, multiple rocket launchers, artillery, and air defense systems.  We saw additional towed artillery departed this site this week, and we are concerned that it will be transferred to separatist fighters.
 

I’d also note that after recapturing several Ukrainian cities last weekend, Ukrainian officials discovered caches of weapons that they assert came from Russia, and that includes MANPADS, mines, grenades, MREs, vehicles, and a pontoon bridge. 

And we’ve also seen a buildup of Russian forces near the Ukrainian border.
 

So all of that is in addition to the flow of heavy weapons and support that we’ve seen from Russia into Ukraine over the last several weeks, and it has not abated since the tragic shoot-down of MH17.
 

The President has focused, since the beginning of this crisis, on coordinating with a broad, international coalition, specifically with our European allies in particular.  And since the shoot-down of MH17, he has spoken many times to

European leaders, including several conversations with Prime Minister Rutte of the Netherlands, given the Dutch lead in the investigation, and most recently yesterday doing a videoconference call with his counterparts from Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy.
 

And we have very much encouraged the Europeans to take additional steps to impose sanctions in key sectors of the Russian economy.  And today, the Europeans followed through on that commitment.  And this is entirely consistent with the conversations that the President had with European leaders in Brussels at the G7, at the EU.  We have been working this issue for several weeks, if not months now, and today we see the coordinated action that is a result of that leadership by the President.
 

Let me just say a few things.  My colleagues will get into the additional sanctions imposed by the Treasury Department and the Commerce Department.  I do just want to note that today’s actions include steps by a range of U.S. agencies.  So, for instance, USDA is suspending all bilateral export credit and development finance for Russia.  OPIC has suspended consideration of any new financing and insurance transactions in Russia.  And as a result of the sanctions imposed today, the Export-Import Bank is imposing a hold on all new transactions for exports to Russia.  So these are very broad actions across the U.S. government.
 

But with that, I’ll turn it over to my colleague from Treasury. 
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you.  And let me just give a quick overview of the actions we’ve taken today, and of course we’ll be available for questions should people want to go into more detail. 
These actions today of course build on a series of actions that we’ve rolled out over the last month to respond to the provocations from Russia.  We have targeted leaders who have been responsible for the Russian intervention.  We’ve targeted cronies or oligarchs.  We’ve targeted separatist leaders and groups, and others responsible for the violence and instability.  And we’ve also taken a number of steps that target sectors of the Russian economy and go after key firms within those sectors.  You’re seeing more of that today.
 

Today, we have expanded the list of financial institutions that are sanctioned under Executive Order 13662 to include three additional major Russian state-owned banks.  These are VTB Bank, Bank of Moscow, and Russian Agricultural Bank.  As with our actions two weeks ago, we are prohibiting U.S. persons from dealing in any new equity from these banks or of these banks, and issuing or handling any new debt of longer than 90-day maturity. 
 

As a practical matter, this will close those banks off from the U.S. as sources of medium- or long-term financing.  And I would note that these three, as well as the two banks that we designated under this measure two weeks ago, hold a very extensive amount of U.S. dollar-denominated debt. 
 

Second, we designated today a Russian defense technology firm under Executive Order 13661.  The name is United Shipbuilding Corporation.  It’s been designated for operating in the Russian arms and defense sector, and it expands on the list of eight firms that we designated just two weeks ago.  As a result of this action, any assets that it holds or tries to move through the U.S. financial system will be blocked, and any transactions with U.S. persons are prohibited.
 

I want to stress the significance of the steps we’ve taken today, and you’ll shortly hear about additional actions from my colleague at the Commerce Department.  Executive Order 13662 authorized Secretary Lew to identify sectors of the Russian economy and then to select specific targets for action.  This is a broad, powerful and flexible tool.  We’ve used it today in that way, and we have made very clear that we can and will continue to increase pressure if Russia does not change course.
 

We’ve already seen substantial impact on the Russian economy from the actions we’ve taken to date.  And we’ve seen the Russian ruble depreciating nearly 8 percent just since the beginning of the year, despite heavy intervention by the Russian Central Bank.  The Russian Central Bank has spent over $30 billion this year in an effort to stabilize the ruble and, as you can hear, quite unsuccessfully. 
 

Third, the IMF expects as much as a $100 billion of capital flight from Russia this year.  And we’ve seen Standard & Poor’s downgrade Russia’s sovereign credit rating to BBB-, one notch above junk status. 
Those four indicators that I just cited are before the actions that we announced today and the actions that the EU is preparing to announce. 
 

With that, I want to turn it over to my colleague from the Commerce Department.
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you.  So the Commerce Department has announced two actions today.  First, in line with the Treasury announcement on the action on United Shipbuilding Corporation, we are adding them to our entity list. 
 

We already have eight Russian defense enterprises that have been sanctioned by Treasury on our entity list.  To remind everyone the consequence of a foreign party being on the Commerce entity list, is it imposes an export license requirement for all items in the U.S. economy going to that entity regardless of their significance and regardless of whether they’re exported directly from the United States or re-exported from a foreign country.  It also includes the re-export of foreign-made end items if they include U.S. content that’s over 25 percent of the value of that foreign-made item.  So it’s really the trade equivalent -- or a complement to the Treasury’s financial sanctions in that respect.
 

I’d also remind everyone that we had previously announced defense-related export licensing policy.  We are not approving any licenses for military items to any end-user in Russia or dual-use items to any military end-user in Russia or end use.
The other piece of our announcement today is that we are going to impose export license requirements on a universe of technologies if they’re to be exported or re-exported to Russian deepwater, Arctic offshore, or shale oil production activities. 

And these are designed not to impact Russian current production but to impact their ability to produce in more technologically challenging future projects.  And we’ll have a regulation that will be published in the Federal Register in the next few days that will impose this export license requirement for energy-related technologies in, as I said, deepwater, Arctic offshore, and shale projects.
 

And so those are the Commerce actions that are being announced today.  From that, I guess I turn it over to my colleague from the State Department.
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  The European Union today announced a series of measures of its own, including some strong sanctions.  I’d commend you the statement by Herman Van Rompuy, the President of the European Council, that came out a few hours ago.
 

The European Union sanctions are the result of obviously the work of all 28 members and the commission, but follow a period of many weeks of close consultations between the United States, the European Union, a number of member states, and other governments as part of the President’s instructions that we coordinate our sanctions and the international reaction to Russia’s aggression against Ukraine.
 

So the European Union steps are strong.  They are significant.  They represent a new step for Europe, and one which we and the Europeans have taken together.  Those steps include financial sanctions -- that is, the Europeans have limited access to European capital markets for Russian-state banks.  That is their equivalent to some of the steps that we have taken both on July 16th and today.  The Europeans have imposed an embargo on trade and arms with Russia, which is forward-looking.
 

You heard my colleague mention that we have a similar restriction on arms exports to Russia in place.  They have established an export ban for dual-use goods for military end-users, which is something also similar to what we have.  And finally, the European Union has curtailed Russian access to sensitive technology by restricting the export of such technologies in the field of the oil sector.  Again, that is very similar to what we have done.
In the world of sanctions, which is a complicated world -- made more so by the differences between our legal systems -- this represents a high degree of coordination, and one which we think helps advance our common policy of sending a message to Russia about its behavior in Ukraine.
 

So we welcome the European Union statement today.  We’re glad we’ve worked with them.  We think that the cooperation has had the right impact, both on Russia and around the world in that it shows our determination to respond to what the Russians have been doing in Ukraine.
 

Q    Hi, guys.  Thanks for doing the call.  Appreciate it.  I wonder if you could elaborate on the last part, the impact of these energy, technology sanctions, and particularly on the cooperation between Russian firms and ExxonMobil, BP, other Western firms.  What kind of impact will this have on the kind of projects that they’ve been doing?  Or is this strictly a more theoretical thing in terms of teaser things they might want to do down the road?
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  The intention of the oil technology licensing restrictions is not to affect current oil production or Russian sales right now, but it does have and will have a cumulative impact on development of future fields, particularly the exotic fields -- Arctic, deep sea, and shale.   And the impact of these restrictions will grow over time. 
I think my colleague from Commerce can talk about more specific impacts of projects.
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Yes, the thing to keep in mind on this is, in these three areas -- the deepwater, the Arctic offshore, and the shale -- the Russians are generally just at the beginning stages of trying to develop that kind of exploration and production.  So certainly, to the extent they're looking to get commodities, software, technology for those forward-looking projects, this will have a significant impact, with the U.S. and the Europeans having very similar restrictive policies for those items.
 

Q    Similar to Peter’s question, can you give us a sense of what portion of the energy industry -- it sounds like you’ve covered that -- and what portion of the financial industry are going to be affected by this?  When you mentioned these few banks, does this affect 25 percent of their financial sector, or 10 percent?  Just some sense of the portion.  Or is this just nibbling at the very edges?
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  So let me talk to the financial side.  With the three banks we’ve designated today, all of which are in the top six of Russia’s overall banks, we’ve hit 30 percent of the Russian banking sector in terms of assets.  And all of this has of course been focused on the state-owned side.  We have not been targeting private Russian banks.
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  If you combine the three banks we've designated today and the two banks which the United States designated on July 16th, I believe that we have hit five of the six largest state-owned banks in Russia.
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I'd just add to that that what you’re also seeing is there’s a direct impact that comes from the target of our sanctions, but then there’s a broader impact on the investment climate in Russia.  Essentially, Russia is not a very good bet right now for international investors.  And that broader chilling impact has effects related to capital flight, which has been substantial this year; with respect to growth rates, which have been revised down.  So you have the immediate impact from the sanctions, but then when people see the collective movement of the United States and Europe into these key sectors, including the financial sector, that also shapes the environment for the Russian economy generally.
 

Q    The story was somewhat similar about the banks as to targeting the largest state banks.  Can we get a sense, though, what percentage of the consumers are affected by the state banks?  I know Bank of Moscow clearly has a fairly large consumer reach, but are you making an effort not to touch the average Russian, or do you want the average Russian to feel some of this pain to pressure the government?
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  You’ve seen the actions that we've taken here are very carefully constructed.  These are not prohibitions that would attach to a Russian account holder moving money and dollars, or moving money abroad.  These prohibitions are targeting the banks themselves and their long-term stability. 
 

So it's not a blocking.  What it is, is a prohibition on them obtaining medium- or long-term debt financing, or issuing any new equity.  And between the action that we took and the EU took -- that we've taken and that the EU has taken -- basically they’re out of business in the longer-term debt market, because all of that is supplied in the euro and the dollar.  And the banks we’ve named today, just to give you a sense:  VTB Bank currently holds $21 billion in foreign debt -- 80 percent of that is in dollars; Russian Agricultural Bank, 90 percent is in dollars; and for Bank of Moscow, 100 percent of their current debt is denominated in dollars.
 

So you’re talking about a real vulnerability, especially when the EU and U.S. act in concert as we’ve done today. 
 

Q    Just a basic question.  What exactly do we want the Russians to do, to see these things scaled back?  I mean, what’s our -- specifically at this point, what are we demanding?  And if they continue on their current course, is there another round in the offing or is this really the big one?
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  First of all, when we were at the G7 meeting, and in subsequent conversations that the Europeans have had with President Putin, we’ve been very clear about what are the conditions that need to be met by Russia.  Number one, they needed to recognize the Poroshenko government as the legitimately elected government of Ukraine.  Number two, they needed to stop the provision of arms and materiel across the border into Ukraine.  They needed to stop their buildup of military forces along that border.  And they needed to use their significant influence on the separatists to bring them into a political dialogue with the government in Kyiv.
 

And President Poroshenko put forward a peace plan, along with Chancellor Merkel and President Hollande’s support, that made clear that the Ukrainian government was prepared to abide by a cease-fire and engage in discussions with the separatists in eastern Ukraine about decentralization; that Russia could be a part of that dialogue as well.  But we saw both the separatists and Russia fail to live up to those terms. 
 

So there still is an off-ramp available to Russia and to President Putin.  And the basic elements of that off-ramp have been very clear for the last several weeks:  Stopping the flow of weapons and support to the separatists; pressing them to come to the table in peaceful dialogue; de-escalating the Russian buildup along the border; and engaging in a political settlement inside of Ukraine with the government of Kyiv that addresses the interests of all of the people of Ukraine.  And that continues to be available to Russia, and we will continue to hold that door open.  So that’s the first question. 
 

On the second question, these are the very powerful sectoral sanctions that you’ve heard us describe for a number of months now.  We always have additional targets that we could add to these sanctions; however, I think today’s step is a very substantial move by the United States and Europe together, and we will certainly want the impact of these sanctions to sink in and to test Russia’s willingness and capacity to take the path of de-escalation.
 

So again, we always have additional sanctions available to us, but I think this is the very significant step that you’ve heard us describe as the United States and Europe moving into sectoral sanctions together.  We, of course, have moved into sectors with our last round of sanctions, and now the Europeans have joined us there.  And again, I think this will send a powerful message about Russia’s behavior in supporting these separatists, and a powerful message to the people of Ukraine that the international community is supporting their sovereignty and territorial integrity.
 

Q    Hi.  You just actually answered the question I had about whether or not you were talking about -- there was some kind of talk of an off-ramp with Putin, but I think you just answered it. 
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thanks.  We’ll take -- got time for like two more questions.
 

Q    Thanks.  At the outset, you described the military buildup along the border and inside Russia in a way that obviously raises the question of whether expanded military action may be ahead.  So I want to ask whether there are any non-economic sanctions, measures that the U.S. and/or its allies are taking to deal with the possibility of military escalation in eastern Ukraine.
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Sure.  Let me just say a couple of things here. 
 

First of all, this is continuing a pattern that we’ve seen of Russian buildup along its border of arms and heavy weapons and materiel flowing across the border, and frankly, even Russian leadership among the separatists.  As we’ve pointed out, a number of the separatist leaders are actually Russians, not simply ethnic Russians, but Russian citizens with Russian addresses.  And we pointed out earlier in the week the artillery that we’ve seen fired across the border, as well.  So this has been a disturbing pattern of Russian support for the separatists.
The economic cost of the sanctions we believe are the most significant tool that we have to shape Russian decision-making, and so that's why we focused our efforts with Europe on what we can do to impose a cost on Russia and to isolate it internationally.
 

But we also have other elements of our policy that are focused on support for the Ukrainian government, and that includes very significant economic assistance as Ukraine reforms and stabilizes its economy.  That includes support to the Ukrainian military, and we have ramped up our non-lethal support in areas like night-vision goggles, body armor, communications equipment.  And we regularly discuss with the Ukrainians what their needs are in that respect, again, not with the intent of seeking to overnight bring the Ukrainian military into parity with the Russian military -- that's not going to happen -- but rather with the intent of filling some immediate needs for the Ukrainians while also having a longer-term conversation with them about how we can help train and equip their security forces in a way that helps them modernize and professionalize over time.
 

So again, I think our immediate focus is on sending a message to Russia about the cost of its actions.  And the fact of the matter is Russia finds itself today more isolated than at any time since the end of the Cold War, suffering the economic impacts of these sanctions, the political and diplomatic isolation that comes with its decision-making in Ukraine.  And that to us is the most powerful incentive we have to try to shape their calculus.
 

I’d also add the Europeans moved in a very strong fashion today, but this is hardly just the United States and Europe.  Canada has been very strong in imposing sanctions on Russia.  Japan has joined us through the G7 and has imposed some of their own sanctions.  The Australians have been very outspoken since the shoot-down of MH17.  So increasingly, this is a global chorus of voices that are speaking in opposition to what Russia is doing to its Ukraine policy.
 

Q    Hey, guys, just a quick question on the big three banks, including VTB.  I know you’ve talked a little bit about the effect on consumers, but does it mean at all that credit cards could stop working tomorrow for Russians?  Or are they affected at all, especially Visa, MasterCard and American Express, that kind of thing?
 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I think your question goes to impacts we saw earlier when we designated -- froze the assets of and prohibited all transactions with Rossiya Bank, which is a bank controlled by and owned by Russian cronies that we had designated.  The actions we've taken with respect to these five major state-owned banks is not asset-blocking and it would not prohibit the provision of credit card services.  It goes to their ability to obtain medium- and short-term debt financing prospectively from the U.S. and from Europe.
 

MS. LUCAS MAGNUSON:  All right. Thanks, everyone, for joining.  That concludes the call.  Just as a reminder, all this information is on background attributable to senior administration officials.  And have a nice day.  Thank you. 

END  
4:28 P.M. EDT