The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President and FBI Director James Comey

 
12:34 P.M. EDT
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you, FBI.  (Applause.) Thank you so much.  Please, everybody, be seated -- those of you who have seats.  (Laughter.)  
 
Well, good afternoon, everybody.  I am so proud to be here and to stand once again with so many dedicated men and women of the FBI.  You are the best of the best.  Day in and day out, you work tirelessly to confront the most dangerous threats our nation faces.  You serve with courage; you serve with integrity.  You protect Americans at home and abroad.  You lock up criminals.  You secure the homeland against the threat of terrorism.  Without a lot of fanfare, without seeking the spotlight, you do your jobs, all the while upholding our most cherished values and the rule of law.
 
Fidelity, Bravery, Integrity:  That’s your motto.  And today, we’re here to welcome a remarkable new leader for this remarkable institution, one who lives those principles out every single day:  Mr. Jim Comey.
 
Before I get to Jim, I want to thank all the predecessors who are here today.  We are grateful for your service.  I have to give a special shout-out to Bob Mueller, who served longer than he was supposed to, but he was such an extraordinary leader through some of the most difficult times that we've had in national security.  And I consider him a friend and I'm so grateful for him and Ann being here today.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.) 
 
Now, Jim has dedicated his life to defending our laws -- to making sure that all Americans can trust our justice system to protect their rights and their well-being.  He’s the grandson of a beat cop.  He’s the prosecutor who helped bring down the Gambinos.  He’s the relentless attorney who fought to stem the bloody tide of gun violence, rub out white-collar crime, deliver justice to terrorists.  It’s just about impossible to find a matter of justice he has not tackled, and it’s hard to imagine somebody who is not more uniquely qualified to lead a bureau that covers all of it -- traditional threats like violent and organized crime to the constantly changing threats like terrorism and cyber-security.  So he’s got the resume.  
 
But, of course, Jim is also a famously cool character -- the calmest in the room during a crisis.  Here’s what a fellow former prosecutor said about him.  He said, “You know that Rudyard Kipling line -- ‘If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs’-- that’s Jim.”  
 
There’s also a story from the time during his prosecution of the Gambino crime family.  One of the defendants was an alleged hit man named Lorenzo.  And during the trial, Jim won an award from the New York City Bar Association.  When the court convened the next morning, everybody was buzzing about it, and suddenly, a note was passed down from the defendant’s table, across the aisle to the prosecutor’s table.  It was handed to Jim, and it read:  “Dear Jim, congratulations on your award.  No one deserves it more than you.  You’re a true professional.  Sincerely, Lorenzo.”  (Laughter.)    
 
“Sincerely, Lorenzo.”  Now, we don't know how sincere he was.  (Laughter.)  We don't know whether this was a veiled threat, or a plea for leniency, or an honest compliment.  But I think it is fair to say that Jim has won the respect of folks across the spectrum -- including Lorenzo.  (Laughter.)   
 
He’s the perfect leader for an organization whose walls are graced by the words of a legendary former director:  “The most effective weapon against crime is cooperation.”  Jim has worked with many of the more than 35,000 men and women of the FBI over the course of his long and distinguished career.  And it’s his admiration and respect for all of you, individually, his recognition of the hard work that you do every day -- sometimes under extraordinarily difficult circumstances -- not just the folks out in the field, but also folks working the back rooms, doing the hard work, out of sight -- his recognition that your mission is important is what compelled him to answer the call to serve his country again.
 
The FBI joins forces with our intelligence, our military, and homeland security professionals to break up all manner of threats -- from taking down drug rings to stopping those who prey on children, to breaking up al Qaeda cells to disrupting their activities, thwarting their plots.  And your mission keeps expanding because the nature of the threats are always changing.  
 
Unfortunately, the resources allotted to that mission has been reduced by sequestration.  I’ll keep fighting for those resources because our country asks and expects a lot from you, and we should make sure you’ve got the resources you need to do the job.  Especially when many of your colleagues put their lives on the line on a daily basis, all to serve and protect our fellow citizens -- the least we can do is make sure you’ve got the resources for it and that your operations are not disrupted because of politics in this town.  (Applause.) 
 
Now the good news is things like courage, leadership, judgment, and compassion -- those resources are, potentially, at least, inexhaustible.  That's why it’s critical that we seek out the best people to serve -- folks who have earned the public trust; who have excellent judgment, even in the most difficult circumstances; those who possess not just a keen knowledge of the law, but also a moral compass that they -- and we -- can always count on.  
 
And that’s who we’ve got in Jim Comey.  I’ll tell you I interviewed a number of extraordinary candidates for this job, all with sterling credentials.  But what gave me confidence that this was the right man for the job wasn’t his degrees and it wasn’t his resume; it was in talking to him and seeing his amazing family, a sense that this somebody who knows what’s right and what’s wrong, and is willing to act on that basis every single day.  And that’s why I’m so grateful that he’s signed up to serve again.  
 
I will spare you yet another joke about how today, no one stands taller.  (Laughter.)  I simply want to thank Jim for accepting this role.  I want to thank Patrice and the five remarkable children that they’ve got -- because jobs like this are a team effort, as you well know.
 
And I want to thank most all the men and women of the FBI.  I’m proud of your work.  I’m grateful for your service.  I’m absolutely confident that this agency will continue to flourish with Jim at the helm.  And if he gets lost in the building, I want you guys to help him out.  (Laughter.)  Because I guarantee you that he’s going to have your back, make sure you’ve got his back as well.
 
Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  (Applause.)  
 
MR. JOYCE:  And now, ladies and gentlemen, it is my honor to introduce the seventh Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation -- James B. Comey.  (Applause.) 
 
MR. COMEY:  Thank you, Sean.  Thank you, Mr. President.  Thank you so much for gracing us with your presence, for honoring us, and for speaking so eloquently about the mission of the FBI and its great people.  
 
Thank you also to my friends and family who are gathered here today.  My entire life is literally represented in this crowd, and it is a pretty picture.  These are the people that I have known and loved literally my entire life and from whom I have learned so much.  
I’m especially grateful that my dad and my sister and my brothers could be here today.  I wish so much that Mom could be here to enjoy this amazing day.  I can still hear ringing in my entire teenage years her voice as she snapped open the shades every single morning and said, “Rise and shine and show the world what you’re made of.”  I found it less inspiring at the time -- (laughter) -- but it made us who we are.  And I’ll never forget that.
 
And to my five troops and my amazing bride, who talked me into being interviewed for this job -- of course, with the caveat that she’d be okay because the President would never pick me.  (Laughter.)  I got to tell you, this is your last chance to talk to him about it.  (Laughter.)  
 
Mr. President, I am so grateful for this honor and this opportunity to serve with the men and women of the FBI.  They are standing all around this great courtyard, and standing on duty all around this country and around this world at this moment.  I know already that this is the best job I have ever had and will ever have.  
 
That’s because I have a front row seat to watch the work of a remarkable group of people who serve this country, folks from all walks of life who joined the FBI for the same reason -- they were teachers and soldiers, and police officers and scholars, and software engineers, and people from all walks of life who wanted to do good for a living.  They wanted jobs with moral content, and so they joined this great organization.
 
I thought about them as I stood in this courtyard just a week ago and showed a visiting foreign leader the statue that overlooks this ceremony.  It’s an artist’s depiction of the words from our shield that the President mentioned:  Fidelity, Bravery, and Integrity. And as I thought about that statue and those words and this ceremony, I thought I would take just a couple of minutes and tell you what those words mean and why I think they belong on our shield.
 
First, fidelity.  The dictionary defines fidelity as a strict and continuing faithfulness to an obligation, trust, or duty.  To my mind, that word on our shield reminds us that the FBI must abide two obligations at the same time.  First, the FBI must be independent of all political forces or interests in this country.  In a real sense, it must stand apart from other institutions in American life.  But, second, at the same time, it must be part of the United States Department of Justice, and constrained by the rule of law and the checks and balances built into our brilliant design by our nation’s founders.  
 
There is a tension reflected in those two aspects of fidelity, those two values that I see in that word, and I think that tension is reflected in the 10-year term that I’ve just begun.  The term is 10 years to ensure independence.  But it is a fixed term of years to ensure that power does not become concentrated in one person and unconstrained.  The need for reflection and restraint of power is what led Louis Freeh to order that all new agent classes visit the Holocaust Museum here in Washington so they could see and feel and hear in a palpable way the consequences of abuse of power on a massive almost unimaginable scale.  Bob Mueller continued that practice.  And I will again, when we have agents graduating from Quantico.  
 
The balance reflected in my term is also a product of lessons hard learned from the history of this great institution.  Our first half-century or so was a time of great progress and achievement for this country, and for the Bureau.  But it also saw abuse and overreach -- most famously with respect to Martin Luther King and others, who were viewed as internal security threats.  
 
As I think about the unique balance represented by fidelity to independence on the one hand, and the rule of law on the other, I think it also makes sense for me to offer those in training a reminder closer to our own history.  I’m going to direct that all new agents and analysts also visit the Martin Luther King Memorial here in Washington.  I think it will serve as a different kind of lesson -- (applause) -- one more personal to the Bureau, of the dangers in becoming untethered to oversight and accountability.
 
 That word fidelity belongs on our shield.
 
 Next, bravery.  We have perpetrated a myth in our society that being brave means not being afraid, but that’s wrong.  Mark Twain once said that bravery “is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear.”  If you’ve ever talked to a special agent that you know well and you ask he or she about a dangerous encounter they were involved in, they’ll almost always give you the same answer, “yeah, I did it, but I was scared to heck the whole time.”  But that’s the essence of bravery.  
 
Only a crazy person wouldn't fear approaching a car with tinted windows during a late-night car stop, or pounding up a flight of stairs to execute a search warrant, or fast-roping from a helicopter down into hostile fire.  Real agents, like real people, feel that fear in the pit of their stomachs.  But you know the difference between them and most folks?  They do it anyway, and they volunteer to do that for a living.  
 
What makes the bravery of the men and women of the FBI so special is that they know exactly what they're in for.  They spend weeks and weeks in an academy learning just how hard and dangerous this work is.  Then they raise their right hands and take an oath, and do that work anyway.  They have seen the Wall of Honor -- that I hope so much my friends and guests and family will get to see inside this building -- with pictures and links to the lives of those who gave the last full measure of devotion for their country as FBI employees.  
 
Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman said this:  "I would define true courage to be a perfect sensibility of the measure of danger and a mental willingness to endure it."  
 
I called a special agent a few weeks ago after he had been shot during an arrest.  I knew before I called him that he had already been injured severely twice in his Bureau career, once in a terrorist bombing and once in a helicopter crash.  Yet when I got him on the phone, I got the strong sense he couldn’t wait to get me off the phone.  He was embarrassed by my call.  “Mr. Director, it was a through and through wound.  No big deal.”  He was more worried about his Bureau car, which he had left at the scene of the shooting.  (Laughter.)  He felt okay, though, because his wife -- also a special agent -- was going to go get the car, so everything was fine.  (Laughter.) 
 
The men and women of this organization understand perfectly the danger they're in every day and choose to endure it because they believe in this mission.  That's why bravery belongs on our shield.  
 
And, finally, integrity.  Integrity is derived from the Latin word "integer," meaning whole.  A person of integrity is complete, undivided.  Sincerity, decency, trustworthy are synonyms of integrity.  It's on our shield because it is the quality that makes possible all the good that we do.  Because everything we do requires that we be believed, whether that's promising a source that we will protect her, telling a jury what we saw or heard, or telling a congressional oversight committee or the American people what we are doing with our power and our authorities.  We must be believed.  
 
Without integrity, all is lost.  We cannot do the good that all of these amazing people signed up to do.  The FBI's reputation for integrity is a gift given to every new employee by those who went before.  But it is a gift that must be protected and earned every single day.  We protect that gift by making mistakes and admitting them, by making promises and keeping them, and by realizing that nothing -- no case, no source, no fear of embarrassment -- is worth jeopardizing the gift of integrity.  Integrity must be on the FBI shield.
 
So, you see, those three words -- Fidelity, Bravery, Integrity -- capture the essence of the FBI and its people.  And they also explain why I am here.  I wanted to be here to work alongside those people, to represent them, to help them accomplish their mission, and to just be their colleague.
 
It is an honor and a challenge beyond description.  I will do my absolute best to be worthy of it.  Thank you very much. (Applause.) 
 
 END               
12:55 P.M.     

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Weekly Address: Enrolling in the Affordable Care Act Marketplace

WASHINGTON, DC— In this week’s address, President Obama discussed the launch of the Health Insurance Marketplace for the Affordable Care Act, which gives millions of Americans the opportunity to have access to affordable and reliable healthcare—many for the first time. 

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, October 26, 2013.

Remarks for President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
October 26, 2013

Hi, everybody. A few weeks ago, we launched an important new part of the Affordable Care Act.  

It’s called the Marketplace.  And for Americans without health insurance, and Americans who buy insurance on their own because they can’t get it at work, it’s a very big deal.  

If you’re one of those people, the Affordable Care Act makes you part of a big group plan for the first time.  The Marketplace is where you can apply and shop for affordable new health insurance choices.  It gathers insurers under one system to compete for your business.  And that choice and competition have actually helped bring prices down.

Ultimately, the easiest way to buy insurance in this Marketplace will be a new website, HealthCare.gov.  But as you may have heard, the site isn’t working the way it’s supposed to yet.  That’s frustrating for all of us who have worked so hard to make sure everyone who needs it gets health care.  And it’s especially frustrating for the Americans who’ve been trying to get covered.  The site has been visited more than 20 million times so far.  Nearly 700,000 people have applied for coverage already.  That proves just how much demand there is for these new quality, affordable health care choices.  And that’s why, in the coming weeks, we are going to get it working as smoothly as it’s supposed to.  We’ve got people working overtime, 24/7, to boost capacity and address these problems, every single day.

But even as we improve the website, remember that the website isn’t the only way to apply for coverage under these new plans.  We’ve updated HealthCare.gov to offer more information about enrolling over the phone, by mail, or in person with a specially-trained navigator who can help answer your questions.  Just call 1-800-318-2596 or visit LocalHelp.HealthCare.gov.  Don’t worry – these plans will not sell out.  We’re only a few weeks into a six-month open enrollment period, and everyone who wants insurance through the Marketplace will get it.

Some people have poked fun at me this week for sounding like an insurance salesman.  And that’s okay.  I’d still be out there championing this law even if the website were perfect.  I’ll never stop fighting to help more hardworking Americans know the economic security of health care.  That’s something we should all want.

That’s why it’s also interesting to see Republicans in Congress expressing so much concern that people are having trouble buying health insurance through the new website – especially considering they’ve spent the last few years so obsessed with denying those same people access to health insurance that they just shut down the government and threatened default over it. 

As I’ve said many times before, I’m willing to work with anyone, on any idea, who’s actually willing to make this law perform better.  But it’s well past the time for folks to stop rooting for its failure.  Because hardworking, middle-class families are rooting for its success.

The Affordable Care Act gives people who’ve been stuck with sky-high premiums because of preexisting conditions the chance to get affordable insurance for the first time.  

This law means that women can finally buy coverage that doesn’t charge them higher premiums than men for the same care.  

And everyone who already has health insurance, whether through your employer, Medicare, or Medicaid, will keep the benefits and protections this law has already put in place.  Three million more young adults have health insurance on their parents’ plans because of the Affordable Care Act.  More than six million people on Medicare have saved an average of $1,000 on their prescription medicine because of the Affordable Care Act.  Last year, more than 8 million Americans received half a billion dollars in refunds from their insurers because of the Affordable Care Act.  And for tens of millions of women, preventive care like mammograms and birth control are free because of the Affordable Care Act.  

That’s all part of this law, and it’s here to stay.

We did not fight so hard for this reform for so many years just to build a website.  We did it to free millions of American families from the awful fear that one illness or injury – to yourself or your child – might cost you everything you’d worked so hard to build.  We did it to cement the principle that in this country, the security of health care is not a privilege for a fortunate few, but a right for every one of us to enjoy.  We have already delivered on part of that promise, and we will not rest until the work is done.

Thank you, and have a great weekend.

 

 

Weekly Address: Enrolling in the Affordable Care Act Marketplace

In this week’s address, President Obama discusses the launch of the Health Insurance Marketplace for the Affordable Care Act, which gives millions of Americans the opportunity to have access to affordable and reliable healthcare—many for the first time. 

Transcript | Download mp4 | Download mp3

Related Topics: Health Care

Weekly Address: Enrolling in the Affordable Care Act Marketplace

October 26, 2013 | 4:46 | Public Domain

In this week’s address, President Obama discusses the launch of the Health Insurance Marketplace for the Affordable Care Act, which gives millions of Americans the opportunity to have access to affordable and reliable healthcare—many for the first time.

Download mp4 (174MB) | mp3 (11MB)

Read the Transcript

Weekly Address: Enrolling in the Affordable Care Act Marketplace

WASHINGTON, DC— In this week’s address, President Obama discussed the launch of the Health Insurance Marketplace for the Affordable Care Act, which gives millions of Americans the opportunity to have access to affordable and reliable healthcare—many for the first time. 

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, October 26, 2013.

Remarks for President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
October 26, 2013

Hi, everybody. A few weeks ago, we launched an important new part of the Affordable Care Act.  

It’s called the Marketplace.  And for Americans without health insurance, and Americans who buy insurance on their own because they can’t get it at work, it’s a very big deal.  

If you’re one of those people, the Affordable Care Act makes you part of a big group plan for the first time.  The Marketplace is where you can apply and shop for affordable new health insurance choices.  It gathers insurers under one system to compete for your business.  And that choice and competition have actually helped bring prices down.

Ultimately, the easiest way to buy insurance in this Marketplace will be a new website, HealthCare.gov.  But as you may have heard, the site isn’t working the way it’s supposed to yet.  That’s frustrating for all of us who have worked so hard to make sure everyone who needs it gets health care.  And it’s especially frustrating for the Americans who’ve been trying to get covered.  The site has been visited more than 20 million times so far.  Nearly 700,000 people have applied for coverage already.  That proves just how much demand there is for these new quality, affordable health care choices.  And that’s why, in the coming weeks, we are going to get it working as smoothly as it’s supposed to.  We’ve got people working overtime, 24/7, to boost capacity and address these problems, every single day.

But even as we improve the website, remember that the website isn’t the only way to apply for coverage under these new plans.  We’ve updated HealthCare.gov to offer more information about enrolling over the phone, by mail, or in person with a specially-trained navigator who can help answer your questions.  Just call 1-800-318-2596 or visit LocalHelp.HealthCare.gov.  Don’t worry – these plans will not sell out.  We’re only a few weeks into a six-month open enrollment period, and everyone who wants insurance through the Marketplace will get it.

Some people have poked fun at me this week for sounding like an insurance salesman.  And that’s okay.  I’d still be out there championing this law even if the website were perfect.  I’ll never stop fighting to help more hardworking Americans know the economic security of health care.  That’s something we should all want.

That’s why it’s also interesting to see Republicans in Congress expressing so much concern that people are having trouble buying health insurance through the new website – especially considering they’ve spent the last few years so obsessed with denying those same people access to health insurance that they just shut down the government and threatened default over it. 

As I’ve said many times before, I’m willing to work with anyone, on any idea, who’s actually willing to make this law perform better.  But it’s well past the time for folks to stop rooting for its failure.  Because hardworking, middle-class families are rooting for its success.

The Affordable Care Act gives people who’ve been stuck with sky-high premiums because of preexisting conditions the chance to get affordable insurance for the first time.  

This law means that women can finally buy coverage that doesn’t charge them higher premiums than men for the same care.  

And everyone who already has health insurance, whether through your employer, Medicare, or Medicaid, will keep the benefits and protections this law has already put in place.  Three million more young adults have health insurance on their parents’ plans because of the Affordable Care Act.  More than six million people on Medicare have saved an average of $1,000 on their prescription medicine because of the Affordable Care Act.  Last year, more than 8 million Americans received half a billion dollars in refunds from their insurers because of the Affordable Care Act.  And for tens of millions of women, preventive care like mammograms and birth control are free because of the Affordable Care Act.  

That’s all part of this law, and it’s here to stay.

We did not fight so hard for this reform for so many years just to build a website.  We did it to free millions of American families from the awful fear that one illness or injury – to yourself or your child – might cost you everything you’d worked so hard to build.  We did it to cement the principle that in this country, the security of health care is not a privilege for a fortunate few, but a right for every one of us to enjoy.  We have already delivered on part of that promise, and we will not rest until the work is done.

Thank you, and have a great weekend.

 

 

Close Transcript

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a DCCC Event

Private Residence
New York, New York

6:38 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Good to see you.  Thank you, everybody, thank you!  (Applause.) Everybody, have a seat.  Have a seat.  Have a seat.  It is wonderful to be here.  Thank you so much to all of you, not just for what you're doing now for the Democratic Party, but what so many of you have done in the past.

There are a couple of people I want to acknowledge.  Obviously, first of all, Denis and Karen, thank you so much for your incredible hospitality.  (Applause.)  To Ken and Kathryn, thank you so much for everything that you do as well.  (Applause.)  Our outstanding leader in the House of Representatives and inductee into the Women’s Hall of Fame -- Nancy Pelosi.  (Applause.)  Steve Israel, for the thankless, but critical job that he has done -- thank you.  (Applause.)  And then three outstanding members of the delegation -- Nita Lowey, Tim Bishop and Paul Tonko -- thank you guys for the great work that you guys do.  (Applause.)

I want to spend most of my time just answering questions and having a good conversation with you.  But today I had this wonderful visit in the afternoon -- some of you may have seen -- I went over to P-Tech, a high school collaboration with not only the New York Public School System, but also with IBM and the city colleges and the CUNY system.  And the concept is that we can get young people engaged in STEM education -- science, technology, engineering, math -- and create a pathway for them so that they enter in 9th grade and they can go through, effectively, grade 14, and by the time they finish, not only have they completed their high school degree, they’ve completed an associate’s degree.  And IBM has basically designed the curriculum in such a way where these young people are at the front of the line in applying for jobs with IBM.

And there are mentorship programs, and these young people -- I had a chance to spend time in the classroom, and they were incredible.  And they were doing projects and they were working on computers, and they had a peer teaching system.  And I asked them if they could help me help Malia with some math homework because -- (laughter) -- I don't know if some of you have experienced this where you get to the point where your children ask you for help and you suddenly realize you have no idea what’s going on.  (Laughter.) 

And the enthusiasm and the sense of possibility that these young people expressed made you incredibly optimistic about the country.  And that's what we should be thinking about every single day.  That's what Washington should be about every single day.  Because there are young people like that all across the country where, when you meet them, you're optimistic.  Regardless of the news, regardless of the blogs, when you see what’s happening on the ground, it reminds you of why this is the greatest country on Earth. 

Now, that spirit obviously hasn’t always been reflected in Washington, and we just went through an episode that expressed Washington’s dysfunctions in ways that we haven't seen in quite some time.  I don't have to comment on it too much.  I think everybody saw how destructive it was.  But it was a symptom of a larger challenge that we have, and that's that too often our politics have become detached from the day-to-day lives of ordinary people, and ideology ends up overcoming common sense, and folks are more determined to beat the other side than they are to actually deliver for the people who sent them there.  And that's why the stakes for next year are high, and that's why the commitment that all of you have expressed by being here tonight is so important. 

If you scan this room and you talk to people, my suspicion is there are a wide range of views on a lot of issues -- on social issues, on economic issues.  We're not uniform.  And one of the great things about the Democratic Party has always been that there is a lot of room for dissent.  It’s not always pleasant for me and Nancy, but it’s healthy, because our basic principle is how do we get at the right answer; how do we figure out a problem in front of us and make sure that in everything we do, we're keeping uppermost in our minds providing opportunity and growing the economy, and creating jobs and building a middle class.  And we don't assume that we have a monopoly on wisdom and so we want that debate and that discussion.

So not everybody here agrees on everything, but we agree on the vision of what this country should be, that it is one in which opportunity and prosperity should be broad-based.  We believe that every child should have a chance, regardless of what they look like, where they come from, what their last name is.  We believe in treating everybody fairly, regardless of what they look like or who they love, or what God they worship.  And we believe that government has a role to play.  And part of what the debate and the battle has been about over the last several years i, what role do we have as a country, collectively, to create the platform and the tools for people to succeed.

So the shutdown was about more than just health care.  It was about sort of a contrast in visions about what our obligations are to each other as fellow citizens.  And we've got the better side of that argument, one that's truer to our history.  But we're going to have to continue to push.  We're going to have to continue to fight.

As we close out the new year, we still have a chance to get immigration reform done and a chance to affirm that we're a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants.  As we come to the end of the year, we still have a chance to do something like the farm bill that is important for rural America, but is also important for making sure that kids don't go hungry in this country, and we've got a budget that is going to have to reflect our priorities.  And if we're not investing in places like P-Tech, if we're not investing in science and technology, if we're not making sure that we're rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our airports -- if we're not doing those things, then we're not true to the vision that allowed a lot of us to be in a room like this even though we weren’t born into a room like this.

So the stakes are high.  And the one thing I'm absolutely confident about is that if we work hard, that we can make a case to the American people and we can win.  Because what we care about  -- and what was expressed in that school that I was in today -- is what this country is all about.  And what I also know is, is that when Nancy Pelosi is Speaker of the House of Representatives, she acts on behalf of that vision, even when it’s hard and even when it’s inconvenient, and even when it runs contrary to the politics and the polls.  I've seen it before and I'll see it again.  But I'll only be able to see it because of all of you.

So thank you so much, everybody.  Appreciate it.  (Applause.)

END
6:48 P.M. EDT

"P-TECH Is Proof of What Can Be Accomplished, But We’ve Got to Have the Courage to Do It."

President Barack Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan talk with students while visiting a classroom at the Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-TECH)

President Barack Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan talk with students while visiting a classroom at the Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-TECH) in Brooklyn, NY, Oct. 25, 2013. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Marine One landed in Brooklyn on Friday, when President Obama paid a visit to P-TECH -- a cutting-edge early-college high school formed by a partnership between IBM and the City University of New York. 

The President spoke about the need for a balanced, reasonable budget that frees up resources for the things that we know promote long-term economic growth: things like rebuilding our manufacturing base, upgrading our transportation and information networks, supporting basic research and development,  including educating our kids and workers so that they can be competitive in a global economy. That includes making room for more schools like P-TECH. 

The President praised the school, which offers college-level courses in math and science and offers students a high school diploma and an Associate's Degree in computer systems or electromechanical engineering:

... At a moment when the cost of higher education keeps going up -- and Arne and I are working hard to make sure that we’re doing everything we can to reduce the burden of student loans on young people -- here’s how much two years of college will cost P-TECH students and their families:  Zero. Nothing. 

Related Topics: Education, Urban Policy, New York

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 10/24/2013

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:47 P.M. EDT

MR. CARNEY:  Good afternoon.  Thanks, everyone, for being here.  I have a couple things.  First, I wanted to note that this evening, in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, both the White House North Portico and Naval Observatory Anchor will be lit pink.  Breast cancer touches every corner of the United States.  In 2013 alone, more than 230,000 women and over 2,000 men will be diagnosed with breast cancer.  And tens of thousands will die from this horrible disease. 

Early detection can decrease the risk of death from breast cancer.  And the President believes that everyone should have access to preventive services.  Under the Affordable Care Act, most health insurance plans fully cover recommended screenings, and insurers are prohibited from setting lifetime dollar limits. And next year, insurance companies will no longer be able to put dollar limits on annual benefits or deny insurance because of preexisting conditions, such as breast cancer.  The law is designed to give women everywhere the chance to take advantage of these free preventive services and apply for affordable coverage in their own state if they are uninsured.

Also before I take your questions, I just wanted to note that today is October 24th, and on this day a number of years ago, my mother was born, and I'd like to wish her a happy birthday.

Q    All right! 

MR. CARNEY:  Happy birthday, Mom.

Q    Happy birthday.

MR. CARNEY:  See, I made sure I remembered Mom -- (laughter.)

So, with that, I'll take your questions.  Nedra.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  I want to follow up on your comment in yesterday’s briefing about how the United States is not and will not monitor German Chancellor Merkel’s communications.  Lawmakers in Berlin have objected to that answer because you didn’t say whether her communications were monitored in the past.  So I want to ask you, has the United States monitored the Chancellor’s phone calls in the past?

MR. CARNEY:  Nedra, we are not going to comment publicly on every specified, alleged intelligence activity.  And as a matter of policy, we have made clear that the United States gathers foreign intelligence of the type gathered by all nations.  As I mentioned yesterday, the President spoke with Chancellor Merkel, reassured her that the United States is not and will not monitor the Chancellor’s communications.  And we have also said, broadly, that, at the President’s direction, we are reviewing the way that we gather intelligence to ensure that we properly balance the security concerns of our citizens and allies with the privacy concerns that all people share.

So I have nothing more for you on that except to say the President and the Chancellor spoke.  I made clear what our policy is, and when it comes to specific allegations about intelligence matters, we have diplomatic relations and channels that we use in order to discuss these issues that have clearly caused some tension in our relationships with other nations around the world, and that is where we are having those discussions. 

And we are also, at the President’s direction, engaged in a review of the way that we gather our intelligence and making sure that we properly balance the security concerns that we have and our allies have with privacy concerns of everyone.

Q    Despite that phone call between the President and the Chancellor, she seems to still be pretty upset.  She said today that trust with the United States now has to be built anew.  And Germany’s Defense Minister is saying that Europe can't simply return to business as usual in the midst of these allegations.  So is the White House concerned that not fully responding to these allegations has harmed the relationship?

MR. CARNEY:  We have direct communications through diplomatic channels at the highest level and other levels with our very close allies in Germany, and the United States greatly values our close cooperation with Germany on a broad range of shared security challenges.  And as the President has said, the United States is reviewing the way that we gather intelligence to ensure that we achieve that balance that I spoke about.

Beyond that, I'm just not going to, in this case or in other cases, get into specific allegations that have been made in published reports.  We're reviewing the way that we gather intelligence.  We are discussing the issues that have caused tension, the reports that have caused tension in some of our relationships directly with the countries involved.  And we're going to continue to do that.

Q    And on the President's call today for immigration reform by the end of this year, that seems like a pretty ambitious goal given the calendar and politics right now.  In fact, right after the President was done speaking, Speaker Boehner's office put out a statement objecting to the Senate bill that the President was advocating as massive, Obamacare-style legislation.  So how difficult does the White House see passage of this legislation this year?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, it was always going to be a challenge and it remains a challenge.  But what is absolutely true, as the President said today, is that there is bipartisan support for comprehensive immigration reform.  And there is broad support beyond Washington from corners that don't often come together in agreement on an issue, and that includes business and labor, law enforcement and faith communities.  And there is a great deal of consensus behind the need to pass comprehensive immigration reform of the kind that has passed the Senate.

Now, how we get there through the House is obviously up to House leaders.  And there are a variety of ways that you can reach the ultimate goal, which is a comprehensive bill that the President can sign into law.  The House's approach will be up to the House.  There is a comprehensive bill that House Democrats have put together that is similar to the Senate bill and reflects the President's principles.  But the means by which we arrive at our destination is in some ways, of course, up to the lawmakers who control the houses of Congress. 

But the destination is where I think there is a huge consensus that we need to get to -- which is a terrible sentence, but I will try again.  There is a significant consensus around the idea that we need to arrive at comprehensive immigration reform that achieves the four objectives that the President has laid out.  And business supports that, and labor supports that, and religious community leaders support that, law enforcement leaders support that.  It's good for the economy.

Like I said yesterday, if Republicans need an explanation and an argument for why this is right, there are ample conservative arguments to make for comprehensive immigration reform, including establishing fair play for everyone, including enhancing our border security, including creating greater economic growth and causing further job creation.  So there's a lot to recommend comprehensive immigration reform to Republicans and Democrats alike.  And we hope, as the President said today, that the House will act and that we arrive at a point where a bill can land on the President's desk that he can sign into law. And that would be good for the economy and good for the middle class and the right thing to do.

Q    But you acknowledge it will be difficult to do that?

MR. CARNEY:  Absolutely, of course.  None of this stuff is easy.  Again, I think, noting an article that I alluded to yesterday, the suggestion that when the President went out and said we can and should try to achieve comprehensive immigration reform before the end of the year, we can and should try to achieve a budget deal before the end of the year, and we can and should try to achieve a bipartisan farm bill before the end of the year -- the suggestion that he laid those out because they were easy is obviously kind of ridiculous.  These aren’t easy, but they’re important.  And they are items that have earned bipartisan support already in Congress, and that alone suggests that there’s a way to get from where we are now to completion.

Yes, Jeff.

Q    Jay, one of the contractors for healthcare.gov said on Capitol Hill today that the administration was warned in advance about risks of the rollout.  Were those warnings not heeded?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, Jeff, as we’ve been discussing now for some time, we knew and said prior to October 1st that there would be some glitches or hiccups or problems with the rollout of a large-scale and complex website like healthcare.gov.  But what we did not know was that we would encounter the kind of and scale of problems that we’ve seen.  And that’s unacceptable.  And that’s why the President and the Secretary have made sure that some of the best minds in the country, working with the existing teams, are tackling these problems and improving the website every day for the Americans who want to use it and for the millions of Americans who have demonstrated an interest in shopping for and enrolling in health insurance plans that are affordable for many of them for the first time in their lives.

Q    Tying that question to immigration, Republicans in the House have said they don’t want to have a big immigration bill like Obamacare that nobody understands.  Are you concerned at all the problems with healthcare.gov and with the rollout will affect the President’s ability to pass immigration reform?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, as I said to Nedra, the fact of the matter is we need to pass comprehensive immigration reform because all of the four key components of it will help our economy increase and improve border security.

Q    But the question is, will the Obamacare issues right now hurt that ability?

MR. CARNEY:  There’s no connection between the Affordable Care Act and comprehensive immigration reform.  And what I would remind Republican critics of it is that there is enormous support in communities across the country, including business communities and faith communities and law enforcement communities, for comprehensive immigration reform.  I would also note that comprehensive immigration reform passed the Senate with significant Republican support, and I think there is a distinction to be drawn there with the Affordable Care Act. 

I also don’t think that the idea that we should make affordable insurance available to millions of Americans through the existing private market is very complicated.  There’s no question that the website is a big piece of business, and it’s challenging, and it’s not meeting the standards that the President wants it to meet and that the Secretary wants it to meet. 

And that’s why we’re grinding away with these teams of tech experts to make fixes to the system so that the experience that consumers have every day improves every day, and that we can make sure that Americans across the country are getting the information they need so that they’re aware that there are four ways to apply and enroll for insurance through the Affordable Care Act, through these marketplaces.  And the website is just one of them.

Q    Can you envision a way, however, to get immigration reform passed and achieve the four objectives that the President has laid out without doing a big “comprehensive bill” like the Senate?

MR. CARNEY:  Immigration reform needs to be comprehensive.

Q    Can you get, can you achieve that --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, if you’re asking --

Q    -- in a piecemeal way that the House Republicans are supporting?

MR. CARNEY:  I am not a Hill expert in terms of how the procedure works, but as I understand it, the Hill could -- the House could pass one or several bills related to immigration reform and that that could be conferenced with the Senate immigration bill.  But in terms of what the President will sign, it’s got to be a comprehensive immigration reform bill and it has to meet the criteria it set. 

It does not have to be word-for-word the way he would write it.  That’s already the case with the Senate bill, and it’s already the case with the House version -- the House Democratic version.  But in terms of what ultimately becomes law, yes, the President believes that the only way to get this done -- the way to make sure that we get the broad bipartisan support and the broad support from communities around the country is that it be comprehensive.

Let me move around.  We had an experience -- oh, Kristen.

Q    Jay, thanks. 

MR. CARNEY:  And then Chris.

Q    Also on the hearing today, one of the contractors said that he wished that there had been more time to test the site.  So just to get at that issue in another way, was the administration so wed to the October 1st launch site that you didn’t provide enough time for testing?

MR. CARNEY:  Kristen, we’re focused not on Monday-morning quarterbacking, but on improving the access that Americans have to the information they need so that they can shop for and purchase affordable health insurance. 

As I said yesterday, obviously tests were done, and what we learned upon launch is that the problems with the site were greater than we expected and anticipated, significantly, and that significant work needed to be done to fix those problems.  And that’s what’s happening.  We are still only three and a half weeks into a six-month process, and the teams that are in place are making progress every day.  And we’re going to, as I said yesterday, make sure that information about the progress that’s being made is available to you through regular briefings at CMS and information that's being provided from the teams that are working on the improvements.

So our focus is on getting it right, because the endgame here is that -- the fact that there are problems with healthcare.gov is something that we acknowledge, and that's why we’re addressing it head on.  The fact that some critics of the Affordable Care Act who have worked assiduously for years to try to do away with it, repeal it, defund it, sabotage it, are now expressing grave concern about the fact that the website isn’t functioning properly I think should be taken with a grain of salt.  Because we’re focused on getting affordable health insurance to the American people.  Some folks in Washington -- especially Republicans, of course, principally, or entirely Republicans -- have been focused on preventing that from happening.

Q    This contractor, Jay, said that a system of this magnitude should require months of testing, and that that didn't happen.  So I guess the question is why wasn’t there --

MR. CARNEY:  Kristen, what I just said is there will be -- there are regular briefings at CMS where you can get your questions answered about the work that's being done to improve this.

The basis of your question goes to the heart of the matter: Should the website have been functioning more effectively on October 1st?  The answer is yes.  We acknowledge that.  The President said that in the Rose Garden.  We’re not satisfied; he’s not satisfied; Secretary Sebelius is not satisfied.  The website is improving every day.  The consumer experience is improving every day, incrementally.  And what we’re focused on and what those teams are focused on is on making those improvements so that the goal here can be achieved, which is the availability of affordable health insurance to millions of Americans.

Q    Does the President now think the launch date should have been pushed back, knowing what he knows now about the testing?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, what the President believes is that the website should have been better functioning on October 1st. 

What you’re asking me and what -- again, these questions stem from the general direction of people who wanted to either eliminate Obamacare or delay it so they could eliminate it later -- gets to the other heart of the matter which is how much longer do you ask Americans with preexisting conditions to go without health insurance?  How much longer do you ask the single mom with breast cancer -- on the day that we light the White House and the Naval Observatory in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month -- how much longer do you ask her to go without health insurance, to go without coverage?  And the answer is, the time is now, and it's available now. 

From day one, Americans have been able to shop for, apply for and enroll in affordable health insurance plans.  What is also true is that one portal through which they can do that has been inadequate and has functioned poorly, And we are fixing that every day.

Q    Just one on Pakistan, Jay.  Did President Obama give the Prime Minister yesterday any assurances or any indication that he would possibly be amenable to scaling back the drone attacks, or giving Pakistan more sort of advanced warning about when those attacks might occur at targets?

MR. CARNEY:  Kristen, we obviously had an important meeting with the Prime Minister of Pakistan -- the President had one.  It was a productive meeting here at the White House, and our relationship with Pakistan continues on a positive trajectory.

The meeting provided an opportunity for the leaders to discuss concrete cooperation on issues of mutual concern, such as energy, trade and economic development, regional stability, and countering violent extremism.  We want to advance our shared interest in a stable, secure and prosperous Pakistan that is contributing to regional and international security and prosperity, and we want to find ways for our countries to cooperate.

As I've said in the past, obviously we don’t agree on everything with Pakistan, but it is important even where we have differences on some issues that we work together to cooperate where we can.  And we have a strong ongoing dialogue with Pakistan regarding all aspects of our bilateral relationship and shared interests, including security and counterterrorism cooperation, and we work together to address concerns that Pakistan has in these areas.

So all the issues are on the table when these leaders meet. And the meeting yesterday was very productive, as was the series of meetings that were held during the course of the Prime Minister's visit. 

Mark.

Q    Jay, is there some naiveté on the part of some of our allies --

MR. CARNEY:  Naiveté?

Q    -- when it comes to intelligence-gathering by friends? Doesn’t the U.S. assume that some of our allies might be trying to find out what we're up to, just as we might be trying to find out what our allies are up to?  Are precautions taken for the President, with every phone call that he makes on his cell phone or any other communication, to protect those communications?  You know, isn't it a “buyer beware” kind of situation for our allies?

MR. CARNEY:  Mark, what I would say is that we acknowledge that the United States gathers intelligence much as other nations gather foreign intelligence.  The revelations that have appeared of late have obviously caused tensions in our relationships with some countries, and we are dealing with that set of issues through diplomatic channels.  And we are also, as the President has said clearly and publicly, engaged in a review of our intelligence-gathering operations with an eye to the need to find a balance between our security needs and the security needs of our allies, on the one hand, and the privacy concerns that everyone shares.

So I think that’s the broad way to answer your question, the first part, is that we obviously gather foreign intelligence much as other nations do. 

Q    Do you see these expressions of outrage by foreign leaders more for domestic consumption than it is because they’re shocked and appalled that there’s intelligence-gathering going on?

MR. CARNEY:  Mark, I would say that we have, when it comes to Germany and some other nations that we’ve discussed broadly in relation to this issue, we have enormously important and valuable and deep friendships and alliances with countries that require us to take very seriously concerns that are expressed.  And we do that in leader-to-leader conversations and in the conversations that we have at every level in our diplomatic relations.  These are very important relations for the United States -- economically, in terms of national security -- and we will, of course, work to maintain the strongest possible ties with our closest allies.

Mara, and then Christie.

Q    Can you just clarify the Dick Durbin situation?  Yesterday it seemed like you were throwing him under the bus, but now it seems more complicated.

MR. CARNEY:  Let me just say that yesterday I was simply saying that the quote attributed to a Republican lawmaker in the House GOP meeting with the President was not accurate.  I wasn’t accusing anybody of anything.  And what I can tell you is that there was a miscommunication when the White House read out that meeting to Senate Democrats, and we regret the misunderstanding.

Q    So you led -- somebody here led him to believe --

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not going to get into either private meetings between congressional leaders and the President, or private meetings between White House officials and members and leaders of Congress.  We tend not to read out private conversations.  But what I will say is that the quote attributed to the lawmakers was not accurate, but there was a miscommunication in the readout of that meeting between the White House and Senate Democrats, and we regret that.

We’re, again, focused on trying to find areas of common ground with lawmakers of both parties to move the American people’s agenda forward.

Christie.

Q    I have a question on immigration, but if I could follow up on that for just a minute.  Is there a logical explanation for how that miscommunication happened?  Was there a member, for example, who refused to look at the President in a meeting?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I’m not going to read out the conversations or the body language of the private meetings between the President and lawmakers.  What was important about that meeting is that it took place at a time when Republicans in the House chose to shut down the government over an ideological pursuit. 

And the issues that were discussed in that meeting, as was the case in every meeting that the President had with House and Senate Democrats and Republicans, had to do with how we need to reopen the government and how we needed to make sure that we did not default for the first time in our history, and how the decision to shut down the government and the decision to flirt with default was doing measurable harm to the American economy and measurable harm to the American people, as Jason Furman documented the other day.  So that was the substance and importance of all those meetings.

Q    Has anybody from the White House asked Senator Durbin to take down that Facebook --

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think that what I can say about this is what I've said.  We've got a lot of important business to do in this town on behalf of the American people and we look forward to getting at it.

Q    On immigration, can you say how and when the President got to the point he was on this morning where he wasn't just insisting on passage of the Senate bill, but rather inviting ideas from House Republicans?  Is that something new?  Do you think that -- is that a new?

MR. CARNEY:  I think that he has been keeping with where he has always been on this issue and others.  I mean, one of the great things about this issue is that there has been significant bipartisan cooperation.  And that just doesn't mean -- or that doesn't just mean Republicans signing up for a Democratic proposal.  It means Democrats and Republicans working together, as they did in the Senate, putting all their ideas on the table and putting together a comprehensive piece of legislation that reflected everyone's interests and everyone's input.  And that's the bipartisan nature at its core of the comprehensive immigration reform bill that passed the Senate.

And we believe that should a bill like that be allowed to get an up or down vote on the floor of the House that there would be a majority in the House in support of it, and that that majority would be made up of Democrats and Republicans. 

And there is just an enormous number of positive reasons to be for this, and they're economic and they're about our competitiveness, and they're about law and order and security.  And they're about -- if, for those who care about these things -- and I know, disproportionately, in Washington, there are people who care about these things -- they're also about the need for the Republican Party to, as John Boehner has said, the Speaker of the House, to address this issue; as Chairman Ryan has said -- Paul Ryan has said, that the Republican Party needs to tackle this issue.  And we think those sentiments reflect what we've been saying all along, which is that there is a real opportunity here for bipartisan cooperation. 

Q    Following up on that point, he said this morning, I'll be listening.  If there are ideas, I’ll be listening. 

MR. CARNEY:  He will be.

Q    Does the President envision a framework whereby he would be involved in those conversations? 

MR. CARNEY:  Sure.  Well, Christie, I would say that he has been all year long, and we've documented some of the conversations and meetings that he has said on this issue with Republicans.  And as I've said many times, we don't read out every meeting and conversation that he has with lawmakers, but this has been a major priority of the President’s all year long, and it continues to be.  And he will continue to be engaged with Republicans and Democrats in the effort to try to get this from where it is to its final destination, which is passed and signed into law.

So you should believe the President when he says he wants this done by the end of the year.  And is it difficult?  Absolutely.  Is it possible?  Yes.  And we’ve seen that it’s possible because of the bipartisan support in the Senate, the general bipartisan support for the idea of comprehensive immigration reform even in the House, and the broad consensus across the country in support of the idea.

Jon.

Q    First, if I could follow up on that, is there any specific Republican in the House he’s been working with on this in recent weeks?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think in recent weeks we’ve been dealing with the Republican decision to shut down the government and threaten default.  We’ve also been dealing a little bit with the rollout of the Affordable Care Act.  But the President made clear on that day that the government was reopened that this is a priority.

And I just have to say, Jon, as I said to Mara yesterday, the idea that everything revolves around whether or not any President is sitting down with the Speaker of the House is just  -- that's not a reflection of how things get done in Washington, okay?  The House of Representatives has within its power the capacity to put a version of the Senate bill, its own version of the Senate bill on the floor today -- well, if they were in session.  Are they in session?  I think they are.  Anyway, if they're in session. 

So our position is well known.  The President’s willingness to work with lawmakers of both parties on this issue is well known.  It was demonstrated in the way that we moved forward in the Senate.  And we’re going to continue that effort.

Q    Okay.  I want to ask about the health care rollout.  We’re three and a half weeks in.  Can you now tell me how many people have enrolled through healthcare.gov?

MR. CARNEY:  As I said yesterday, we’re going to provide monthly --

Q    Is that because you don't know?  Does the White House not know how many people have enrolled?  Or you just don't want to tell us?

MR. CARNEY:  Jon, as I said yesterday, this is a process of gathering information from online enrollments, from paper application enrollments, from in-person enrollments and --

Q    But I asked you specifically online.  Can you tell me how many people have been enrolled online?

MR. CARNEY:  What I can tell you is that we're going to provide information monthly about enrollments that --

Q    So you don't know?  Do you not know?

MR. CARNEY:  Jon, what I'm telling you is that we're going to make public that information when we have gathered it on a monthly basis.  I am also saying, in response to your question, that when it comes to enrollments, there are multiple sources through which -- and avenues through which people are enrolling, and we're gathering that information both from states and through the federal marketplaces, through online applications, through mail applications, through in-person applications and phone applications. 

So what we're going to do is provide regular monthly information about enrollments as well as other data.  What we're also doing, as I announced yesterday, is having regular briefings at CMS, because that’s closer to the ground of where the website issues are being dealt with, on the progress being made to deal with the website challenges that we've seen.

Q    You said this is one portal.  Are you saying that the telephone applications are working just fine?

MR. CARNEY:  I'm saying that people can -- there are four ways that people can enroll and get information about the benefits available to them and the plans that are on the table from which they can choose.  If you're now going to say that people have had trouble with the call-in centers, I'm not going to dispute that.  What I am going to say is --

Q    So there is a problem with the call-in centers?

MR. CARNEY:  No, I'm not saying there's a problem, Jon.  But I've already had this question a bunch of times and what I'm going to say is what we're providing is as many avenues as possible for people to get the information they need.  And wait times at the call-in centers are low.  We've increased staffing during peak hours to improve that method of getting information and shopping and enrolling.  And we're going to keep at this every day, and every day we're going to make more progress.  Because the goal here is not a perfect website or a perfect call-in center; it's to get Americans who want affordable health insurance the insurance that they desire.

Q    In hindsight, seeing all the problems with the rollout, wouldn’t it have made more sense to delay it for a little while?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, as I said in answer to an earlier question, we expected the website to function at a higher level than it has functioned, on October 1st.  And the fact that it has not and that there have been these problems is unacceptable.  The President has said that, the Secretary has said that, and I have said that, others have said it.  And that is just the ground truth.

We are working every day to improve that, because that’s what the American people want.  I mean, one of the indisputable facts about the rollout has been the enormous amount of interest in learning about the options available and finding out that you can, with the subsidies available, buy truly affordable health insurance -- for many people, for the first time in a long time, if not their entire lives.

Q    Because the contractors said they could have used more time.  They only had two weeks to test this, and they could have used a few months to test it.  So, I mean, if you could have had a smoother -- I mean, I’m just asking in hindsight -- you could have delayed this by a couple months, had it tested and maybe had a smooth rollout. 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, Jon, I think if you’re asking me do we wish that there had been a better and more effective website on October 1st -- absolutely.  If you’re asking me, as was asked earlier, do we think it’s right and appropriate to ask Americans with preexisting conditions to wait longer for affordable health insurance, the answer is no.

Q    No, I was asking if you wanted more time to get it right.

MR. CARNEY:  Here’s another fact that I understand is not often reported:  People are enrolling every day, and they’ve been enrolling every day since October 1st. 

Q    But you won’t tell us how many.  I mean, that would be great to know.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, good reporters out there across the country have been reporting on individuals who are getting and enrolling in health insurance.  It’s a fact.  And I know that every news organization here has done that, and that’s an important fact to report, in addition to the troubles that have been apparent on the website.  So people have been getting into the system and out of the system since day one.  The experience on healthcare.gov has been far below the standards we expected, and that is why we are working every day to make the improvements that we’re making. 

Major.

Q    Jay, can you, from the podium, describe what happened yesterday with the shift from the February 15th to the March 31st deadline, and by what authority that was carried out?  Is that something that is simply in the available latitude of HHS?  Because it looked, the legislation, like it was a fixed date.  Is that something that you need to go back to have changed through Congress or anything like that?

MR. CARNEY:  I appreciate the question because I know there was some confusion last night.  The individual mandate timing has not changed.  The deadline for signing up for insurance was and is March 31st.  What I also said on Monday is that the administration has been working on basically aligning the deadlines for enrollment and enforcement -- February 15th and March 31st.  And today, if there is no course correction, individuals who have bought insurance on the marketplaces by March 31st could nevertheless be penalized for not having their insurance start by March 31st, and we are working to issue guidance that would make sure that doesn’t happen. 

So in other words, if you have insurance by March 31st because you’ve purchased it but it hasn’t kicked in, you should not be penalized.  And we’re working to make sure that that does not happen.  But that is simply an alignment of deadlines.  It does not change the mandate, does not change the end date.

What I will say is that this is still in the works.  A lot of reporting on this has gotten ahead of the actual facts, and the guidance has not been finalized.  When it is, I’m sure that HHS, CMS and even I will be able to tell you that it’s done.  But it’s not done.

Q    And so this is something that can be done within the existing authority of HHS, it does not require any legislative remedy?

MR. CARNEY:  That is my understanding.  I would certainly encourage you to call into the briefing done today at CMS.

Q    Right.  And I want to follow up on Nedra’s earlier questions -- and I know you’re constrained, and I’m not trying to -- well, I am trying to force you out of that constraint if I can, but I understand it and I appreciate it.

MR. CARNEY:  And I understand that, so go for it.

Q    So you understand that by saying the United States is not monitoring and will not, that invites a supposition, as it has in Germany, that the United States was monitoring not just foreign communications of a friendly government -- Germany -- but a Chancellor’s cell phone.  And I’m just trying to ask you, on the record, at the podium, are you comfortable with that supposition?  Or do you want to say anything that would knock that down?  Because it has become an assumption embedded in your carefully constrained description of what isn’t happening and what won’t happen.

MR. CARNEY:  What I did, Major, was provide a readout of the President’s phone conversation with Chancellor Merkel.  What I can’t do and won’t do is answer every allegation that appears in print about intelligence activities that have been engaged in, or may or may not have been engaged in by the United States, because the path that leads us down is not one that we can travel. 

So what we are --

Q    Even with an ally like Germany?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, the assurances the President offered to the Chancellor and that I reiterated in the readout reflect the importance and strength of the relationship that we have with Germany. 

What I can tell you is that the President has an initiated a review of the way that we gather intelligence, keeping in mind the balance that we need to seek here, and that review is ongoing and it reflects the President’s understanding of the concerns that have been raised by some of these -- by countries because of some of these reports.  And we’re going to keep at that review and keep looking at the ways to achieve that balance. 

When it comes to specific allegations of specific activity, I just can’t answer those questions.  I can simply tell you that we are looking at this issue and that we do have discussions with the nations involved in these reports through normal diplomatic channels.

Q    I don't need to tell you this is not the only disclosure that’s caused diplomatic tension, as you mentioned.  Brazil, France, Mexico have all in their own ways launched protests.  And two questions related to that:  How difficult has it been from the administration’s point of view to sort of be catching this as these disclosures continue, knowing you have no control over it, knowing that you don’t know what the next disclosure might be and what other diplomatic fire you might have to put out?  Point one. Point two, with that history, is there anything the administration is doing now preemptively to let other people know things that they might find disclosed later and might cause a domestic uproar because it’s a revelation?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, excellent questions.  On the second one, in terms of diplomatic communications that we may or may not be having, I don’t have information on that for you.

There is no question that this has caused -- these revelations have caused tensions in some of our relationships, and those relationships are very important to the United States and to the American people, to our economy and to our security.  And that is why we have taken them seriously.  That is why the President has --

Q    Have they so far been manageable, these tensions?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, obviously I can’t speak for other countries, but we have worked very diligently to manage them, to communicate with other governments about the source of their tension, source of their concern, and to assure them and to assure their publics that the President has initiated a review of our intelligence-gathering practices.

Q    One last thing.  There was a very important story in The Washington Post yesterday about documents, memoranda between the United States and Pakistan related to drone activity.  And it indicated that there was a much broader awareness and -- not coming right at the edge of cooperation -- between the two governments with the drone strike policies.  I wondered if you had any comment on that story and, if it, in fact, is something that has been understood but not disclosed, and does it broaden our sense of understanding about how difficult an issue this actually is.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, Major, what I can’t speak to is specific operational issues.  What I can tell you is that on matters of bilateral cooperation, on counterterrorism, we have regular conversations with Pakistan and that is obviously a piece of the kind of conversations that we had during the Prime Minister’s visit. 

It’s critically important that we work closely with our partners, including Pakistan, providing them with the support they need in helping build their capacity to carry out counterterrorism operations in their own countries.  I mean, it is useful to remember that Pakistan has suffered greatly at the hands of terrorists and violent extremists, by some measures perhaps more than any other country.  And we have a common enemy and a common cause.  And we have long said that there needs to be a coordinated and concerted effort to combat violent extremists of all kinds, whoever they threat.

So we had a broader agenda with Prime Minister, and that broader agenda was discussed.  But this is not --

Q    But he still raised it on his own --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I don't have a readout beyond what we have provided on the President's meeting.  But it's important to remember that our relationship with Pakistan goes beyond these issues, and that there are economic and other matters very much a part of the discussion.

Q    Do you find any of that story that was inaccurate?

MR. CARNEY:  I'm not going to comment on operational matters.  But I applaud the effort.

Q    Jay, I want to ask about health care, but first, an important issue that hasn't come up yet -- a couple of U.S. citizens, we understand, have been kidnapped near Nigeria.  I wonder what you can tell us about what you know and what the President has been briefed on.

MR. CARNEY:  What I can tell you is that we are aware of the reports that two U.S. citizens have been kidnapped from a U.S.-flagged vessel off the coast of Nigeria in the Gulf of Guinea.  We are seeking additional information so that we can contribute to the safe resolution of the situation.

More broadly, we are concerned by the disturbing increase in the incidents of maritime crime, including incidents of piracy off the coast of West Africa, specifically in the Gulf of Guinea. And we have and will continue to work with West African governments to build the capacity and political will needed to address piracy and related criminal activity.  So we're monitoring the situation and we're seeking additional details.  Our principal concern now is the safe return of two American citizens.

Q    Thank you.  On health care, you said earlier again this is Monday-morning quarterbacking.  That word "quarterback" came up at the hearing today, because one of the contractors, Cheryl Campbell, said, in her words, HHS is "the quarterback on this project and is the ultimate responsible party."  So my question is, all these allegations going back and forth, who knew what when -- I know you don't want to detail every last one, but to be clear, is Secretary Sebelius the responsible party?  Is she the quarterback for these mistakes?  I understand contractors made mistakes.  But, ultimately, is the HHS Secretary responsible?  Is the President responsible?  Who in this administration is responsible?
MR. CARNEY:  The President spoke very clearly from the Rose Garden about the fact that he is wholly unsatisfied with the --

Q    Unsatisfied, but is he responsible?

MR. CARNEY:  I've said this is on us.  And that goes from the President on down.  This website needs to work effectively for the American people.  And we need to get the product that they so clearly desire to them as efficiently and effectively as possible.  That's why we're working as hard as we can to resolve these issues and improve the consumer experience on healthcare.gov.  And as we do that, we are building capacity through the other avenues by which people can shop and enroll.  That includes by phone, through the call-in centers, in person or by mail.

But we're at this every day because, yes, we want -- this is something the President fought hard for and he believes it is absolutely vital that those millions of Americans who have lived with the uncertainty of not having coverage for so long have these options available to them. 

And as I noted earlier, while there have been problems -- and they have been significant and they have not been, by any means, acceptable -- from October 1st, Americans have been shopping, applying and enrolling in the Affordable Care Act -- in the marketplaces.

Q    Two other quick ones on this.  Specifically, I haven’t heard you asked yet -- I know you attacked Republicans earlier and said that there are folks who want to dismantle the law who are trying to change it and disguise it as a delay.  But there are also, you have to acknowledge now, a significant number of Senate Democrats -- at least five or six -- who want some kind of changes.  And to be absolutely clear, they're not saying they want to defund the law, they're not saying they want to kill the law, they're saying they want to make it better.  They want to -- but they do want to change it. 

And so my question is, you’ve talked about responsible change to the law to make it better.  Is this proposal that various Senate Democrats have said -- extend open enrollment beyond March 31st -- yes or no, does the White House support it?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, here’s what I would say, Ed, we’re three and a half weeks into a six-month process.  The open enrollment period was six months for a reason, which was to give ample time as these marketplaces were launched for Americans to shop for health insurance, evaluate their options, find out what tax subsidies are available to them if they're lower income, and then make their decision about the kind of coverage they can afford and want for them and their family.  And we’re still early in that process. 

And what is important to remember is that, as I said earlier, people are getting through.  They are shopping.  They are applying.  I think we said the other day roughly a half a million people had submitted applications.  I’m sure that number is higher now.  And we’re going to work every day to make the consumer experience better.

And March 31st is still a significant ways away, and we are working to make the system better.  The system was inadequate -- the website anyway -- on October 1st, unquestionably, and it’s still not where we need it to be today by any means.  But it is significantly better today --

Q    Too early to say, but --

MR. CARNEY:  -- significantly better today than it was a week ago and a week before that, and certainly on October 1st.  And that's the progress we’re looking for.  I think I used the go-to sports analogy that this is three yards and a cloud of dust every day.  But that means moving forward, and that means improvements every day that will help Americans get the information they need so they can get the insurance they deserve.

Q    If you get three yards every play, you have to punt after the third one, right?

MR. CARNEY:  No.  In fact, you have four downs, and you get a first down. 

Q    So you’re going for it?  You’re going for it?

MR. CARNEY:  And then you score a touchdown.  (Laughter.)

Q    All right, last one.  You have also said from this podium let’s not just focus on the website, let’s focus on the substance.  So I’m sure you saw the front page of The New York Times saying they did a review, and they found that the law is, in their words, "failing to lower prices in rural areas all around the country."  And they say that poor people are "often paying more" as they sign up, or will be paying more as they sign up.  And so my question is, you've said so many times that the law was intended to help so many people, and The New York Times is suggesting the people you're trying to help actually are going to pay more.  So isn't that --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, let's be clear -- under the Affordable Care Act, nearly all consumers -- about 95 percent -- will have a choice of two or more health insurance issuers, often many more.  And nearly all consumers -- about 95 percent -- live in states with average premiums below earlier estimates.

In the marketplace, new rating and benefit rules, along with bans on preexisting exclusions, allow insurers to compete for customers based on price and quality.  The individual market has long been dominated by one or two carriers, particularly in rural areas.  So this is a problem that significantly preexists the Affordable Care Act. 

The ACA encourages competition and is leading to new carriers and delivery system models, but we know that we can't transform these markets overnight.  Prior to the ACA, many individuals had no access to coverage because they were denied coverage due to a preexisting condition or priced out of the market entirely.  Individuals will have an average of 53 qualified health plan choices in states where HHS will fully or partially run the marketplace.  On average, premiums before tax credits will be more than 16 percent lower than projected.  Six out of ten people could be eligible for coverage that is less than $100 from new options created by the Affordable Care Act.

So I understand the question and I obviously read the story.  This is a challenge that the Affordable Care Act is designed to address, and it is addressing it.  And we're going to keep working on making sure that individuals across the country that have not had access to affordable health insurance have that access. 

And as I've said, 95 percent of all consumers live in states with premiums -- average premiums that are below earlier estimates.  And this is within a broader context, as I've noted, in which we have seen over the three years since the Affordable Care Act was passed into law and Republicans and opponents of it said that it would jack up growth rates and health care prices, we've seen the opposite.  We've seen the slowest rate of growth in health care costs in half a century.

Q    Mr. Collinson.

Q    Is the White House concerned that the European indignation could hurt popular support for the proposed trade pact with Washington and could cause leaders to drive a harder bargain on issues like data protection and stuff like that that’s going to be in the deal?

MR. CARNEY:  We understand that these allegations, Steve, have caused concerns and in some cases have become a source of tension in our relationships, as I noted earlier, and we are working to address these issues through diplomatic channels.

We obviously believe that the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership is vitally important to the United States and to the partners with whom we’re working on it, and we’ll continue to do that. 

And we’re reviewing the way that we gather intelligence to ensure that we properly balance the security concerns of our citizens and allies with the privacy concerns that we all share.  So this is, I think, as I noted earlier, a clear source of tension in some cases with some of our relationships.  These relationships are vitally important, and we are working to communicate on these issues through diplomatic channels.  And we are continuing the important work for the benefit of our economies and our partners’ economies on our trade partnerships.

Jim.

Q    On the call between the President and Chancellor Merkel, who called who?

MR. CARNEY:  You know, they spoke by phone.  I don’t have more information about who initiated the call.  The President speaks with Chancellor Merkel with some regularity, and we gave a readout of it yesterday.

Q    And as for these concerns that leaders from several governments have expressed around the country, has the President called NSA General Alexander to instruct the agency not to spy on heads of states, especially those other heads of states of allies?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I would never get into specific either allegations or operational matters of foreign intelligence gathering, except to say that we gather foreign intelligence much as other countries do, and to say that we are reviewing, as the President made clear, our foreign intelligence operations with in mind the need to strike that balance between our security needs and the security needs of our allies, and the privacy concerns that we all share.  So beyond that, I can’t get into details, beyond the readout, of course, that I made of the Chancellor’s and the President’s phone call.

Q    And on the website, we talked to an insurance industry source who said that administration officials over at HHS were aware of these issues prior to the October 1st launch, and that they failed to tell the White House, or warn the White House of these issues.  Can we just get a straight answer -- was the White House or was the White House not warned about these issues prior to October 1st?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, Jim, we have said -- and I can take you back to I think spring, where we said of course there would be glitches with --

Q    Well, everybody knows if you roll out any kind of website there are going to be glitches.  But there’s a different --

MR. CARNEY:  So what I’ve said -- when you say “these issues” -- if you’re saying --

Q    The present issues that stand now.

MR. CARNEY:  Tell me when you want me to answer.  Tell me when you want me to answer.

Q    Were there warnings, or were there not warnings?

MR. CARNEY:  We were aware of the fact and said to you and the American people that there would be some glitches in the rollout of the Affordable Health Care website.  What we did not expect, absolutely did not expect, was the scale of the problems that we’ve seen.

Q    And you were not warned that there could be any scenario that would take you to the level of problems that you’re experiencing right now?  There were no warnings that this could --

MR. CARNEY:  Jim, I think that I’ve said that many times.  The answer is, yes, we did not anticipate the scale of problems that we have seen.  And that has created --

Q    You don’t believe that the President was kept in the dark?  You don’t believe that this White House was kept in the dark?

MR. CARNEY:  What I can say is we did not know -- we did not anticipate, we did not know of the kind of problems that would take place beginning on October 1st until October 1st came and we saw these challenges.  And I think that -- I’m not an expert on website design and the kind of complexity that’s involved in a site like this, but there are issues here that, as I’ve seen some experts speak to, that have to do with the volume that both caused some and exposed some of the problems that we’ve seen, that until it went live and we had this influx of millions of Americans going to the website, we did not anticipate. 

But again, I think the fundamental point here is we acknowledge entirely that the site is not performing up to the standards that we wanted it to perform up to, and that is why we are working every day to make that experience better for the American people.  And we’re focused on what we can do to improve that so that more and more Americans have access to the information they need via the website, in addition to the other avenues available to them, rather than spending a lot of time pointing fingers of blame about why we saw the kind of problematic rollout that we saw. 

Q    And you said that people are enrolling, but this insurance industry source that we talked to said that some of the enrollee files that are arriving at the insurers are corrupted, that they’re bad applications, that they’re incomplete in some cases, that they come in duplicate form.  Won’t that be a problem in terms of tabulating how many people have enrolled?

MR. CARNEY:  Jim, I appreciate the question, and I talked at length about this yesterday.  I don’t think you need to cite anonymous sources.  I said, and we have said, that there has been a problem at several points in the process, including in the transmission of information to insurers, the so-called 874 area of this.  And that’s fairly technical, and for that reason we’ve set up the regular briefings at CMS where you can go into more depth about these issues.

Q    What we know is that there are specific areas where there’s been problems, some bottlenecks, some other server capacity issues, some code issues, and we have a lot of really smart people who are experts in this field -- working with the smart people who are experts in the field who are already on the team -- to locate, isolate and fix the problems that we’ve found.  And the fixes include patches, they include new code, they include increasing server capacity, and with the goal here of making a system that has not been functioning effectively and smoothly function more effectively and more smoothly every day. 

Because what is not the case is that it has not worked at all, because we know that people have gone on the system and gotten through, and every day that experience gets better.  And our goal is to make it as smooth and efficient as possible for the American people who have demonstrated so clearly that they want this product.

Q    Got you.  And speaking of anonymous quotes, let me go back to that Dick Durbin quote.  How does somebody misinterpret, “I can’t stand looking at you”?

MR. CARNEY:  Jim, I think I’ve said that --

Q    That’s a pretty big miscommunication.

MR. CARNEY:  -- the quote attributed to a Republican lawmaker in a meeting with the President is not accurate, but there was a miscommunication in the readout of that meeting that the White House gave to Senate Democrats, and we regret that. 

We’re focused on making progress with Congress and addressing the very important issues that the American people care about and want us to address here in Washington, including growing the economy, creating jobs, passing comprehensive immigration reform, passing a farm bill which is so vitally important to rural areas of this country, and that’s what we’re working on.

Q    But more broadly, did that meeting ever get testy or unprofessional?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I don’t read out the private meetings of the President.  What I can say is that the meeting was focused on the very real disputes that we had with the decision by House Republican leaders to shut the government down.  But that was true of every meeting the President had with lawmakers of both parties.  And we were focused on getting to a point where the Republicans would agree to reopen the government so that the American people were not harmed any further, and that the economy was not harmed any more, and that the threat of default could be removed so that that damage could be contained.  And that was the focus of the meeting -- that meeting and other meetings -- because those were the most important issues that we were confronting at the time.

Q    So the President didn’t come away from that meeting feeling that he had been insulted in any way or --

MR. CARNEY:  Again, Jim, what the President came away from that meeting feeling is that we need Congress to act right away to open the government and act right away to ensure that the United States retained its full faith and credit in the world.

Thanks, everybody.

Q    German media.  Would you take a question from the German media?

MR. CARNEY:  Yes, I will.

Q    Okay, thank you. 

MR. CARNEY:  I saw you sitting there patiently, but --

Q    Is the President aware that privacy is a very sensitive issue, especially in Germany, because Chancellor Merkel was raised in a system where intelligence agencies monitored people day and night?  And what is he going to do to restore [sic] the harm and the damage that has been caused?  Is he going to speed up the review process?

MR. CARNEY:  The President is obviously aware of this.  This is something that he knows from discussions with the Chancellor, with whom he has a long and strong relationship, and he is certainly aware of her past, and he’s aware of Germany’s past and East Germany’s past. 

As to the second part of your question, we are engaged in this review precisely because the President ordered it and believes it’s important to assess our intelligence-gathering activities while keeping in mind the need to strike this balance. 

We, like other nations, gather foreign intelligence because it is in our national security interest to do so.  There are real threats out there against the American people and against our allies, including Germany, including allies around Europe and around the world.  We also need to balance those security needs against the understandable privacy concerns that we all share. 

And so that’s the process that’s underway.  I know that the President has had discussions with Chancellor Merkel about that, including yesterday in their phone call.  And he’s very understanding of the concerns that have been raised broadly in Germany and elsewhere by these reports, and we’re working through our diplomatic channels to discuss those issues with our counterparts as we conduct this review of our intelligence- gathering activities.

Thanks very much.

END 
1:46 P.M. EDT

President Obama Speaks on Education and the Economy

October 25, 2013 | 23:16 | Public Domain

At the Pathways in Technology Early College High School (P-TECH) in Brooklyn, President Obama says that we must finish building a new foundation for shared and lasting prosperity so that everybody who works hard has a chance to get ahead.

Download mp4 (858MB) | mp3 (56MB)

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on Investing in America's Future

Pathways in Technology Early College High School
Brooklyn, New York

3:55 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Brooklyn!  (Applause.)  How you doing? 

AUDIENCE:  Good!

THE PRESIDENT:  It is good to be back in Brooklyn.  Good to be in New York City.  And it is good to see some friends who stick up for students and teachers and education every day.  We’ve got your Governor -- Andrew Cuomo is in the house.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  We’ve got your Senator, Chuck Schumer.  (Applause.)  Outstanding Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan.  (Applause.)  We’ve got -- your outstanding congressional delegation is here.  Give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  We’ve got your public advocate and my friend -- Bill DeBlasio is here.  (Applause.)  We’ve got the outstanding leader of one of America’s iconic companies, IBM CEO Ginni Rometty.  (Applause.)  And I want to give a special shout-out to a man who’s been an extraordinary mayor for this city; he’s been a leader throughout the country for the past 12 years -- Mr. Michael Bloomberg is here.  (Applause.)

And I want to thank your principal here at P-TECH, Rashid Davis, who I am pretty confident is the coolest-looking principal in America.  (Laughter and applause.)  I mean, there just are not that many principals with dreadlocks and yellow kicks.  (Applause.)  There aren’t that many of them.  I mean, there may be some, but there aren’t that many.  (Laughter.) 

And I had a wonderful time visiting with one of your teachers, Ms. Seifullah -- Seifullah?  Ms. Seifullah.  She was outstanding.  She welcomed me into her classroom.  She showed me around.  I want to thank all of you for letting me spend some time here.  In return, you got out of class a little early on Friday, which I know always gets a little applause -- although, in this school maybe not, because you guys are enjoying learning so much.  That’s worth applauding -- that you’re enjoying learning so much.  (Applause.) 

Now, part of the reason I’m glad to be here is because I used to live in Brooklyn, and I actually landed Marine One in Prospect Park -- I used to live across the street from Prospect Park.  (Applause.)  But mainly I’m here because I wanted to come here ever since I talked about you in my State of the Union address this year -- because what’s going on here at P-TECH is outstanding, and I’m excited to see it for myself.

I know Brooklyn in general is blowing up right now.  When I was living here, Brooklyn was cool, but not this cool.  (Laughter.)  Barclays Center hadn’t been built yet.  I know the Nets just picked up Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett offseason, which is a lesson to all the young people -- old people can still play.  (Laughter.)  We’ve still got some gas in the tank.

But this whole borough is where generations of hopeful, striving immigrants came in search of opportunity -- a chance to build better lives for themselves and for their kids.  And that’s been true for decades.  And I’m here today to talk about what we need to do, as a country, to build the same kind of opportunity for your generation, for the next generation, and for your kids, and for future immigrants.

This country should be doing everything in our power to give more kids the chance to go to schools just like this one.  We should be doing everything we can to put college within the reach of more young people.  We should be doing everything we can to keep your streets safe and protect you from gun violence.  We should be doing everything we can to keep families from falling into poverty, and build more ladders of opportunity to help people who are willing to work hard climb out of poverty.  We should be doing everything we can to welcome new generations of hopeful, striving immigrants. 

I want us to do everything we can to give every single young person the same kind of opportunity that this country gave me and gave Chuck, and gave Governor Cuomo and gave Mayor Bloomberg and gave your principal.  That’s what I’m focused on. 

Yes, by the way, if you have chairs, go ahead and sit down.  (Laughter.)  If you don't have chairs, then don't sit down because you’ll fall.  (Laughter.)  I didn't realize everybody had chairs there.  I would have told you to sit down earlier.  (Laughter.)

So that’s what we can achieve together.  It’s possible.  We know we can do it.  P-TECH is proof of what can be accomplished, but we’ve got to have the courage to do it.  The American people work hard, and they try to do right, day in and day out.  And that resilience and that toughness helped to turn our economy around after one of the hardest periods that we’ve ever faced as a country.  But what we also need is some political courage in Washington.  We don't always see that.

Right now we need to all pull together.  We need to work together to grow the economy, not shrink it; to create good jobs, not eliminate jobs.  We’ve got to finish building a new foundation for shared and lasting prosperity so that everybody who works hard, everybody who studies hard at a school like this one, or schools all across the country have a chance to get ahead.  That’s what we need to do.  That's what I’m focused on.

And that all begins with the education that we give young people.  Because all of you are growing up in changing times, especially for the economy.  The world you’re growing up in is different than the one that previous generations here in Brooklyn knew and all across the country knew.

In the old days, a young person, they might have just followed their parents’ footsteps and gotten a job in their parents’ line of work, keep that job for 30, 40 years.  If you were willing to work hard, you didn't necessarily need a great education.  If you’d just gone to high school, you might get a job at a factory, or in the garment district.  You might be able to just get a job that allowed you to earn your wages, keep pace with people who had a chance to go to college.  But those days are over, and those days are not coming back.

We live in a 21st century global economy.  And in a global economy, jobs can go anywhere.  Companies, they're looking for the best-educated people, wherever they live, and they’ll reward them with good jobs and good pay.  And if you don't have a well- educated workforce, you’re going to be left behind.  If you don't have a good education, then it is going to be hard for you to find a job that pays a living wage.

And, by the way, other countries know this.  In previous generations, America’s standing economically was so much higher than everybody else’s that we didn't have a lot of competition.  Now you’ve got billions of people from Beijing to Bangalore to Moscow, all of whom are competing with you directly.  And they're -- those countries are working every day to out-educate and out-compete us.

And every year brings more research showing them pulling ahead, especially in some of the subject matter that this school specializes in -- math and science and technology.  So we’ve got a choice to make.  We can just kind of shrug our shoulders and settle for something less, or we can do what America has always done, which is adapt.  We pull together, we up our game, we hustle, we fight back, we work hard, and we win.

We have to educate our young people -- every single person here, but also all the young people all across Brooklyn, all across New York City, all across New York State and all across this country -- so that you’re ready for this global economy.  And schools like P-TECH will help us do that. 

Here at P-TECH, you’ve got folks from IBM, City Tech, City University of New York, City Department of Education -- everybody is pulling together to make sure a high school education puts young people on a path to a good job.  So you guys have opportunities here that you don’t find in most high schools yet.  You can take college-level courses in math and science.  You can work with mentors from IBM, so you’re learning specific skills that you know leads to a good job.  And most important, you’ll graduate with a high school diploma and an Associate’s Degree in computer systems or electromechanical engineering.  And that means you’ll be in demand.  Companies will want to hire you.  IBM has even said that P-TECH graduates will be first in line when you apply for jobs once you graduate. 

And at a moment when the cost of higher education keeps going up -- and Arne and I are working hard to make sure that we’re doing everything we can to reduce the burden of student loans on young people -- here’s how much two years of college will cost P-TECH students and their families:  Zero.  Nothing.  Nothing.  (Applause.)  I noticed some of the parents were the first to clap.  They’re like, “Yeah.”  (Laughter.)  They like that. 

But that’s a huge burden.  I mean, that’s thousands of dollars that you’re saving, and that means when you start working, you’re going to have that much less of a burden in terms of debt, which means you can afford to buy a house sooner, you can afford to start your business sooner.  Radcliffe was saying how he’s thinking about starting his own business.  And that kind of attitude is a lot easier when you’re not burdened with a lot of student loans.

So this is a ticket into the middle class, and it’s available to everybody who’s willing to work for it.  And that’s the way it should be.  That’s what public education is supposed to do.  And the great thing is that what started small is now growing.  So Governor Cuomo, he’s opening up P-TECH model schools in districts throughout the state -- throughout the state.  (Applause.)  So all those schools together, they’re going to prepare more than 6,000 high school students for good, high-skilled jobs. 

Back in my hometown of Chicago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel is opening up schools like this one.  He’s opening up a school, for example, called Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy.  And -- you got a little Chicago person here.  Yes, there you go.  (Laughter.)  Across the country, companies like Verizon, and Microsoft, and ConEd, and Cisco, they saw what IBM was doing, and they said, well, this is a good idea; we can do this, too.  So they’re working with educators and states to replicate what you’re already doing here.  And you guys should feel good about that.  You’re starting something all across the country.  (Applause.) 

So as a country, we should all want what all of you are receiving right now, the same chance for a great education.  Here’s what I think we should do as a country to make sure they’ve got the same opportunities you do.  First of all, we’ve got to give every child an earlier start at success by making high-quality pre-school available to every 4-year-old in America.  (Applause.) 

We should give every student access to the world’s information.  When I went into the classroom today, young people were working off computers, and the problem is a lot of places, even if they’ve got computers, they’re not hooked up to wireless.  So what we’re doing is having the federal agencies moving forward on a plan to connect 99 percent of America’s students to high-speed Internet within five years.  We’re already moving on that front.  (Applause.) 

We need to bring down the cost of college and give more young people the chance to go to college.  (Applause.)  So a couple of months ago, I put forward an ambitious new plan to do that, to reduce the cost of college.

We need to redesign more of our high schools so that they teach young people the skills required for a high-tech economy.  So I’ve been meeting with business leaders and innovative educators to spread the best ideas. 

And I also want to congratulate Governor Cuomo and all of you in New York for having the courage to raise your standards for teaching and learning to make sure that more students graduate from high school ready for college and a career.  It’s not easy, but it’s the right thing to do.  It’s going to prepare more young people for today’s economy.  We should stay at it.  (Applause.)

And here's one more thing we should do, and that is just -- remember, none of this works unless we've got outstanding teachers, which means we've got to -- (applause) -- we've got to make sure that we're funding education so that teachers have the support that they need so that they can support their own families, so that they’re not having to dig into their pockets for school supplies.  (Applause.)  And we’ve got to show them the respect, and provide pathways of excellence for teachers so that they’re treated like the professionals that they are.  It is a hard job, and we’ve got to make sure we’re investing in them.  (Applause.) 

Now, some of these ideas I’ve laid out before; some of them I’m just going ahead and doing on my own.  Some of them do require Congress to do something.  (Applause.)  And one way we can start is by Congress passing a budget that reflects our need to invest in our young people.  (Applause.)  I know that budgets aren’t the most interesting topic for a Friday afternoon, even at a school where young people like math.  And, by the way, I just sat in on a lesson called “real-world math,” which got me thinking whether it’s too late to send Congress here -- (laughter) -- for a remedial course. 

But a budget is important, because what a budget does is it sets our priorities.  It tells us what we think is important, what our priorities are.  And the stakes for our middle class could not be higher.  If we don’t set the right priorities now, then many of you will be put at a competitive disadvantage compared to other countries.

If you think education is expensive, wait until you see how much ignorance costs.  (Applause.)  So we’ve got to invest. 

So we need a budget that is responsible, that is fiscally prudent, but a budget that cuts what we don’t need, closes wasteful tax loopholes that don’t create jobs, freeing up resources to invest in the things that actually do help us grow -- things like education and scientific research, and infrastructure, roads, bridges, airports.  This should not be an ideological exercise, we should use some common sense.

What’s going to help us grow; what’s going to create jobs; what is going to expand our middle class; what’s going to give more opportunity to young people -- those are the things we should be putting money into.  (Applause.)  That’s what we need to do.

And we've got enough resources to do it if we stop spending on things that don’t work and don’t make sense, or if we make sure that people aren't wiggling out of their taxes through these corporate loopholes that only a few people at the very top can take advantage of.  If we just do everything in a fair, common-sense way, we've got the resources to be fiscally responsible and invest in our future.

And this obsession with cutting just for the sake of cutting hasn't helped our economy grow, it's held it back.  It won't help us build a better society for your generation.  And, by the way, it’s important to remember, for those who are following the news, our deficits are getting smaller.  They’ve been cut in half since I took office.  (Applause.)  So that gives us room to fix longer-term debt problems without sticking it to your generation.  We don’t have to choose between growth and fiscal responsibility; we’ve got to do both.  And the question can’t just be how much more we can cut, it’s got to be how many more schools like P-TECH we can create.  That should be our priority.  (Applause.)

And after the manufactured crisis that Congress -- actually, a small group in the House of Representatives just put us through, shutting down the government and threatening to potentially default on our debt, I don’t want to hear the same old stuff about how America can’t afford to invest in the things that have always made us strong.  Don’t tell me we can afford to shut down the government, which cost our economy billions of dollars, but we can’t afford to invest in our education system.  Because there’s nothing more important than this.  (Applause.)

In fact, what I’d like to do is have every member of Congress -- maybe Chuck can arrange and the congressional delegation can arrange some tours for some of their colleagues.  Come here.  Come to Brooklyn.  Meet some of these young people.  (Applause.)  They ought to meet some of the young people here.  (Applause.)

Meet somebody like Leslieanne John, the young woman who sang the national anthem this afternoon.  (Applause.)  Leslieanne is in the 11th grade, she’s already taken eight college classes, which is about as many as I took when I was in college.  (Laughter.)  She knows she has a great opportunity here, she’s working hard to make the most of it.  Eventually, she plans to become a lawyer.  

And Leslieanne is clear-eyed about the challenges that the students here face.  She put it in a way that a lot of people can relate to -- she said, “We see a whole bunch of craziness going on in the streets of Crown Heights sometimes.”  That’s what she said.  But she also said that being here at P-TECH taught her something important:  “There’s more for us than just the streets.”  (Applause.)  And she said that, “At the end of the day, we’ve got to make something of ourselves.”  And that’s important -- that’s important.

It’s not just what the government or adults can do for you; it’s also what you can do for yourselves.  And that sense of responsibility, that sense that you set the bar high for yourself, that’s what America is all about -- that’s been the history of New York:  People working hard but also working together to make sure that everybody has got a fair shot; to make sure you don’t have to be born wealthy, you don’t have to be born famous; that if you’ve got some drive and some energy, then you can go to a school that teaches you what you need to know.  You can go to college even if you don’t have a lot of money.  You can start your own business even if you didn’t inherit a business. 

Making something of ourselves, that’s what we do in this country.  That’s a message worth sending to Washington.  No more games, no more gridlock, no more gutting the things that help America grow, and give people the tools to make something of themselves.  That’s what this is about.  That’s what P-TECH represents, that’s what Brooklyn represents. 

And as long as I have the privilege to be your President, I’m going to keep fighting to make sure that no matter who you are, where you come from, what you look like, this country will always be the place where you can make it if you try. 

So thank you, Brooklyn.  God bless you.  God bless America.  (Applause.)

END
4:20 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Gaggle by Principal Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest en route Brooklyn, New York, 10/25/2013

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Brooklyn, New York

1:58 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Welcome aboard Air Force One as we make our way to New York for what promises to be an exciting Friday in the city that never sleeps.

I actually do have a couple of announcements at the top here before we get going.  Let me start with -- earlier today at the White House, the President held a conference call with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Budget Committee Chair Patty Murray, and House Budget Ranking Member Chris Van Hollen on budget matters in advance of the first meeting of the budget conference that’s set for next week. 

The President thanked the leaders for their efforts to find a solution to our budget challenges, and reiterated a shared principle that we should focus, first and foremost, on how we can grow our economy and create new jobs with good wages for middle-class families.  These are the policies that leaders in Washington, D.C. should support so that we can actually make progress when it comes to our economy and not undermine our economic recovery.  So that call took place at the White House earlier today.

The second thing I wanted to note for you:  Yesterday, Dr. Janet Yellen’s paperwork for her nomination as Chair of the Federal Reserve was submitted to Capitol Hill, and next week she will begin visiting with individual senators on the Hill.  As the President said when he nominated Dr. Yellen earlier this month, she is exceptionally well qualified for this role.  She served in leadership positions at the Fed for more than a decade, and as Vice Chair for the last three years she has been exemplary and a driving force in policies to help boost our economic recovery.  We look forward to the Senate confirming her swiftly and in bipartisan fashion for this very important role.  That’s a third thing. 

And then finally, one thing -- I have a full week ahead, but there’s one aspect of the week ahead that I wanted to note for you in advance.  On Thursday afternoon, October 31st, the President will host and deliver remarks at the SelectUSA Investment Summit in Washington, D.C.  The summit will be attended by 1,200 people from 58 different countries across the world.  I’ll remind you that in June of 2011, the President launched the SelectUSA Initiative to support private sector job creation and encourage new business investment in the United States.  In February of 2012, in Milwaukee, the President announced the first SelectUSA Investment Summit.  At the time, the President said we’ll be bringing companies from around the world together with governors and mayors and other leaders in the U.S. to discuss the benefits of investing and creating more jobs right here in the United States. 

The President will discuss the importance of taking measures to grow the economy, encouraging the businesses -- pardon me, encouraging the businesses and investors from around the world in attendance to bring new investment and jobs to the U.S.  On the heels of the self-inflicted crisis in Washington, D.C., it’s time for folks to come together and focus on doing everything we can to spur growth and create new, high-quality jobs.  The summit will provide an opportunity to do just that.  And again, that’s Thursday afternoon next week, on October 31st.

And I’ll do the rest of the week ahead when we’re done with your questions.

Q    Josh, can you tell us a little bit more about the call today?  How long did it last?  And did the President and the leaders discuss the size and the scope of the budget deal that they’d like to see in the next few weeks?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have a lot of details to provide to you.  It was a -- I know it was scheduled to last for about 45 minutes or so.  And it was an opportunity for all the Democratic leaders to confer about the priorities they’re going to pursue in the context of the budget conference. 

You’ll hear the President talk about this a little bit more today at the event in Brooklyn, where the President will make the case that the budget conference proceedings should be a venue for making some important decisions in bipartisan fashion about what we can do to invest in the kinds of policies that actually support middle-class families.

There’s been a lot of talk on the other side of the aisle about the importance of making -- of cutting government spending.  The fact of the matter is we can’t cut our way to prosperity, and we don’t have to.  The President has demonstrated, both in the policies that he’s pursued and in the budget proposal that he’s put forward, that we don’t have to choose between austerity or fiscal responsibility and growth.  We can do both.  We can both pursue growth in a fiscally responsible fashion.  The President’s budget proposal is a good example of that.  It makes important investments in research and development and infrastructure and education, but actually does more to reduce the deficit than the sequester does. 
So we’re on a good path of reducing the deficit.  We’re reducing the deficit at a rate as fast as the deficit has been declining -- as fast as it has at any time in the last 50 years.  We can stay on that path of reducing the deficit while at the same time protecting investments that we know are critical to the nation’s economy.

Q    Josh, on bipartisanship, does he plan to make a similar call to the Republican leaders in this process?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any meetings at this point to read out to you.

Q    Josh, about the budget -- Republicans like Paul Ryan, even Harry Reid, have expressed doubts that any kind of a grand bargain budget deal would be reached.  Would the President be satisfied with sort of a more small- or lower-expectations kind of budget deal?  Or does he still want to go for a grand bargain?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what both sides are pursuing -- and the President is pleased to see this -- both sides are pursuing what Speaker Boehner had often referred to as regular order -- that this is the regular part of the budget process that’s moving through the Congress if the House passes a budget, the Senate passes a budget, and both sides work in bipartisan fashion to try to reconcile the differences in those budgets. 

Now, the President has put forward his own proposal for how he thinks they should do that.  In the budget proposal that the President put forward earlier this year, he laid out some specific ideas about investments we could make in infrastructure and research and development, and other things -- and education -- other things that are critical to the long-term economic success of the country, and specifically will be critical to the success of middle-class families in this country.  The President believes that ensuring the economic success of middle-class families will ensure the success of a broader economy.  So that’s what the President is focused on.

So the President has his own ideas about how he can pursue this.  And as I mentioned earlier, the President’s own proposal would allow us to protect those investments while at the same time actually doing more to reduce the deficit than the sequester did.  So we could repeal the sequester, protect our investments in the kinds of things that will ensure the success of middle-class families in this country, while continuing along the path of reducing our deficit. 

So we’ve put forward our own ideas for how we should do this, but ultimately Congress, and the members who are part of this budget conference, will have to make that decision.

Q    Does the President see a path to replacing the sequester without raising revenues in any way?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not going to be in a position to negotiate that from here.  There will be a very robust discussion of these kinds of questions in the context of that conference committee.  But the President has been very specific about what he thinks would be the best way for us to do it.

Q    And if I could just ask one international question.  Allies in Europe remain very upset about allegations of phone hacking.  The Europeans, I believe the French and the Germans, are now talking about possibly having some kind of a conference about respecting the security of phone conversations.  What’s the White House’s reaction to that level of concern?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we have acknowledged, pretty forthrightly, that some of the reports and revelations has prompted some tension in our relationships with some of our closest allies.  We have worked through our regular diplomatic channels to address some of those tensions.  These are strong relationships; you mentioned a couple of them -- France and Germany. 

These are nations with whom the United States has a very close relationship.  We cooperate with them on a wide range of issues -- everything from the economy to climate change, human rights issues, and of course some important security counterterrorism issues as well.  So the nature of those relationships is both deep and broad.

The programs that are referred to in some of this reporting are national security programs.  And these are programs that, speaking broadly, have played a critical role in protecting citizens of the United States from those who wish to do us harm.  These programs have also played an instrumental role in our coordination with our allies and protecting the interest of our allies, too.  So these are important programs.

The President has, however, ordered an internal review to ensure that the intelligence that's collected is not just all the intelligence that we are able to collect, but rather intelligence that should be collected and intelligence that we need to collect to safeguard the United States and our interests. 

So we’re taking a look at these programs to ensure that it meets that standard that the President has laid out.  And we’re going to continue to confer with our allies through our regular diplomatic channels to address the concerns that they’ve raised.  Ultimately, what we need to do is we need to balance the important role that these programs play in protecting our national security and protecting the security of our allies with the legitimate privacy concerns that others have raised.

Q    Josh, any other policy changes or legislative recommendations to go along with that question in terms of the concerns of our EU allies?

MR. EARNEST:  Nothing that I’m in a position to announce at this point.  But there are a number of reviews that are ongoing.  There’s an internal review that the President has ordered that members of his national security team are working on.  There’s a separate review of outside experts that has a particular focus of communications technology that’s underway.  There also are some issues that the President’s Civil Liberties Oversight Board is reviewing. 

So there are a number of reviews underway that will examine exactly these questions and consider some of the policy changes that you’re recommending -- or at least hinting might be among their recommendations.

Q    -- anything legislative?

MR. EARNEST:  Nothing at this point.

Q    You were talking about the outside review.  Is that new -- this looking at communications technology?

MR. EARNEST:  No, this is something that the President announced earlier this summer.

Q    Josh, how would listening to the conversations of leaders of friendly nations, like Brazil or France, help protect the security of Americans?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not going to talk about any specific programs or operations -- suffice it to say that the United States, like virtually every other country around the world, is involved in collecting intelligence.  And what the President believes is important is that we shouldn’t just collect all the intelligence that we’re able to collect; rather, we should be focused on the intelligence that we should collect and the intelligence that we need to collect to safeguard the United States and our allies.

And part of the review -- part of these reviews, I should say, is examining that question.  So I don't have any new ground to break at this point.  But --

Q    On the ACA -- 10 Senate Democrats sent a letter to the President today asking him to -- sorry, sent a letter to Kathleen Sebelius today asking her to delay the enrollment period for at least two more months.  Does that cause the White House to rethink the timetable?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say a couple of things about that.  The first thing that’s important for people to understand is that, since October 1st, people have been signing up and enrolling in health care.  And since October 1st, we have been working rather aggressively to address some of the challenges that were exposed -- some of the challenges with the website that were exposed by the high traffic and high volume of interest that we saw in the days immediately after October 1st. 

You heard from CMS earlier today that they are announcing some structural changes to try to address some of those problems.  They are putting in place essentially a general contractor to manage the process of addressing these challenges and putting in place some of the performance and functional fixes that need to be added.  And you also heard CMS lay out a timeline for when that would be accomplished -- essentially, they are in a position where they expect that the website will be working smoothly for the vast majority of users by the end of November.

Now, there’s no question that the flaws and the problems with the website that we saw in the aftermath of October 1st is going to have an impact on the enrollment numbers.  I mean, you all wrote stories, or at least read stories, about people who tried to go to the website to enroll in health insurance but weren’t able to because the website didn’t work.  So this is going to have an impact on the number of people who enroll early on. 

But there’s something important for you to remember about people enrolling early on.  If you take a look at the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, when they began their open enrollment period, a grand total of 123 people signed up during the first month of open enrollment in Massachusetts.  Obviously, the pace of enrollments increased dramatically as it got closer to the deadline.  We expect to see a similar trend in those enrollment figures related to the Affordable Care Act.

So what we’re focused on right now is to improve the website.  And, as Mr. Zients noted during his conference call today, they’re making regular progress in improving and upgrading the website, and they’re in fact encouraging people to go onto the website and sign up for an account, and begin the process of submitting an application and applying for health insurance.

So we’re making some progress, and this is -- the one last thing I want to say is that we’re less than four weeks into a six-month enrollment period.  So there are benefits to having a pretty broad window here, but that doesn’t mean that we are resting on our laurels at all; in fact, it’s quite the opposite.  Mr. Zients talked about a war room that’s working around the clock to try to address these problems and making regular upgrades to the website so that it performs more closely to the level that we expect.

Q    Josh, why does the President and why should the American people have confidence that CMS can get this right after they’ve already gotten it wrong once?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think there are a couple of reasons for that.  The first is we have had a tech surge.  We have had some new eyes take a look at this.  And based on the initial assessment that Mr. Zients has led with some other outside experts and some other technology experts from the government, they have assessed that there are a lot of problems to fix but that we can get to a place where the website is functioning pretty smoothly for the vast majority of users by the end of next month.  So that is based on people who have taken a careful look at this.

This is also based on the assessment of people who have been a part of building the website in the first place.  So they have a good sense of where the problems lie and what’s required to fix it.  And so I have no doubt that some of the management changes that Jeff announced earlier today will have an impact on that process.  But, overall, the American people expect a health care -- an Affordable Care Act implementation that works and a healthcare.gov that works.  And the President and his team are committed to living up to those expectations.

Q    How involved is the President going to be?  Because obviously now he is even more on the line for this -- his reputation -- and this has been such a huge, for lack of a better word, disaster for you guys.  Is the President going to be much more personally involved or is he kind of letting Zients take over this whole thing?

MR. EARNEST:  Mr. Zients is responsible for -- was responsible for taking a look at this -- conducting this initial assessment and making sure that the tech surge plays a tangible role in correcting some of the problems that they have seen.  They’ve seen problems related to the performance of the website, how reliable is it.  In some cases, it’s been pretty unreliable.  There have been some problems related to the speed with which it’s processing information that’s submitted, so they’re trying to optimize the speed.  There have also been some clear functional problems, where there are some applications that just aren’t working.  They’re trying to fix those as well.

So Jeff and his team are responsible for sort of the day-to-day monitoring of all this.  But you would not be wrong to assume that the President is a very interested observer in this process, is being regularly updated on it, and is holding that team accountable for results.

Q    Has Jeff briefed the President personally or is somebody else?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t actually know how that process is working.

Q    Josh, does the fact that you’re able to now put a timetable on this mean that the problems have more or less been diagnosed and now we’re in the fixing them stage?

MR. EARNEST:  Jeff’s responsibility, when he took on this task a week or so ago, was to provide an initial assessment of what the challenges were.  And as he alluded to on the conference call today, that assessment has been largely completed.  So they have -- as I pointed out earlier, they’ve walked through some of the problems that were plaguing the site’s ability to perform at the level that the American people and this administration expect, and that there is a -- that they’ve essentially created a punch list, a to-do list, if you will, of all the fixes that need to be implemented, and they’re walking down that list one by one and knocking those things out.  That’s going to take some time.  But we’re hopeful that by the end of next month there will be a website in place that operates smoothly for the vast majority of people who are trying to use it.

Q    Week ahead?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, let’s do the week ahead.

On Monday, the President will attend the installation of FBI Director James Comey at FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C.

On Tuesday, the President will travel to the United States Capitol and attend a memorial service for former Speaker of the House Tom Foley.

On Wednesday, the President will travel to Boston, Massachusetts.  He’ll participate in some political events while he is there 

On Thursday, as I mentioned at the top, the President will host and deliver remarks at the SelectUSA Investment Summit.

And then, on Friday, the President will host Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki at the White House.  The visit will highlight the importance of the U.S.-Iraq relationship under the U.S.-Iraq Strategic Framework Agreement.  The President looks forward to discussing with Prime Minister al-Maliki efforts to enhance cooperation in the fields covered under the SFA and to coordinating on a wide range of regional issues.

Q    Who is the President for in the World Series, Josh?

MR. EARNEST:  I haven’t asked him about that, but since his beloved Chicago White Sox are not in it, I think he is rooting for a seven-game series.

Q    How are you and Jay handling this, by the way?

MR. EARNEST:  The World Series?

Q    Yes.

MR. EARNEST:  Jay is a much more active observer of this process.  My beloved Kansas City Royals are not participating this year, but Jay is obviously an avid fan of the Red Sox and is actively encouraging others to take up their cause.  It was a -- the Red Sox did not win last night but I stayed up late watching it.  It was a really exciting game.

Q    One other thing -- this is the President’s first trip to Brooklyn after 33 trips to New York, per our friend, Mark Knoller.  Is the President finally discovering Brooklyn? 

MR. EARNEST:  (Laughter.)  I don’t know, maybe he’ll have more to say about this in his remarks.  So we’ll tune in to find out.

Thanks, guys.  We’ll see you on the ground in a little bit.

END
2:18 P.M. EDT