The President and First Lady Speak at the Disabled American Veterans National Convention

On Saturday, the President and First Lady spoke at the Disabled American Veterans (DAV) National Convention in Orlando, FL. Founded in September of 1920, the DAV celebrates 92 years of service to disabled veterans and their families with this three-day event.

The forerunner to the Department of Veterans Affairs, the DAV has empowered disabled veterans and their families serving in every conflict from World War I to Iraq and Afghanistan.

Watch the video.

Colonel Rich Morales is the Executive Director of Joining Forces
Related Topics: Veterans, Florida

President Obama and the First Lady address the Disabled American Veterans National Convention

August 10, 2013 | 41:05 | Public Domain

President Obama and the First Lady address injured veterans at the Disabled American Veterans National Convention.

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Remarks by The First Lady and The President at Disabled American Veterans Convention

Hilton
Orlando, Florida

12:00 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thanks so much.  Thank you all.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Good afternoon, everyone.  It’s so good to be here.  (Applause.)  We are so proud of you all.  Thank you all.  Please, I know you’ve been working hard, so rest yourselves.  (Laughter.)

I am beyond thrilled to be here with all of you today, and I want to start by thanking Larry for that very kind introduction, but more importantly for his tremendous leadership of the DAV and for all of his outstanding service to this country.  But most of all, I want to thank all of you here today -- the men and women who have served and sacrificed so greatly on behalf of all Americans.

Truly, one of my greatest joys over these past few years has been spending time with veterans and military families like all of you.  I have laughed with your children at barbeques.  I’ve gone to baby showers with spouses.  I’ve learned so much during my many visits to military bases across this country.  I’ve even smashed a champagne bottle to christen a Coast Guard cutter.  (Laughter.)

And let me tell you, day after day, I have been so inspired by your stories -- so inspired.  And I’m reminded of one of those stories today, the story of a young man I met at Walter Reed.  His name is Sergeant Winder Perez, and he is 24 years old.  Now, a year and a half ago, Sergeant Perez was on a combat mission in Afghanistan, when he was hit by an RPG.  He collapsed, but the grenade stayed lodged in his left thigh and it didn’t go off.  Sergeant Perez’s fellow Marines ran to his aid and together they chose to carry him off the battlefield to safety, even though they knew that any wrong move would mean certain disaster.

Moments later, four pilots and medics chose to load him onto a helicopter with the live explosive still in his leg, transporting him 65 miles to the nearest medical station.  And finally, when they arrived, a nurse and explosive expert chose to rush to his aid, finally dislodging the rocket by hand and giving doctors a chance to save his leg -- which they did.

Now, just that part of Sergeant Perez’s story tells you everything you need to know about the men and women of our armed forces.  But as all of you know very well, stories like these don’t end in the combat zone.  Since his injury, Sergeant Perez has endured 30 or 31 surgeries -- he doesn’t remember the exact number.  He has survived a heart attack and an aneurysm, and he’s fought through hundreds of hours of rigorous physical therapy to strengthen his leg.

And time and again, just when he’s regained the strength to walk, his doctors have told him that it’s time for another surgery, and then Sergeant Perez is back in a wheelchair, starting all over again from square one.

But here is the thing:  You don’t hear about any of that when you talk to Sergeant Perez.  What you do hear about is his mother, who he will tell you has stayed by his side every single day.  You will hear about his gratitude to those who saved his life, to the family and friends who come from New York to visit, and for the life he has in front of him.

Today, Sergeant Perez is walking again.  He’s three months into an internship with the Defense Intelligence Agency, and he plans to spend the rest of his career serving his country.  And when asked about everything he’s been through, Sergeant Perez puts it all in perspective by simply saying, "I just think you’ve got to get back up."  That’s all he said.  "You’ve got to get back up."

And as I look across this room, I see a group of people who know how to get back up.  No matter what you’ve been through -- (applause) -- no matter what the struggles you have faced, you all get back up.  And that is what inspires me.  That’s why, every day, I work to push myself harder to live up to your example.

And that’s why Jill Biden and I are working so hard on Joining Forces, because we want to honor and serve you and your families -- to make sure that you and your families have the educational opportunities you need, the support you’ve earned and the good jobs you deserve.

And if there is one thing that I want all of you to know today, it’s this:  You will never have to get back up all on your own.  Not while we’re here, Never.  (Applause.)  And it’s not just us.  You have got families who support you day and night.  You have countless neighbors and pastors, business owners -- I’ve met them -- even strangers who will snap into action for you.

And one important person you have is a Commander-in-Chief who doesn’t simply understand your service and your sacrifice.  (Applause.)  Let me tell you something about this man, he carries your stories with him every single day.  I have seen it in his eyes when he comes home from a visit to a military hospital.  I’ve noticed the extra energy he gets after a military commencement.  And I’ve heard the emotion in his voice after he talks with the families of our fallen.  That is the well he draws from as Commander-in-Chief.  You are that well. 

And that’s why he has stood up for you again and again and again, and it’s why he’s going to keep fighting for you and your families every single day.  So ladies and gentlemen, please welcome my husband, our President Barack Obama.  (Applause.)

*****

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, DAV.  (Applause.)  Thank you so much.  Thank you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  Do we have an extraordinary First Lady?  (Applause.)  We will be celebrating our 21st anniversary in October.  The first time I saw her, I knew she was something special.  (Laughter.)  She was a little more skeptical about me.  (Laughter.)  But persistence is the key.  You just got to stay on it.  Eventually, you can marry up.  (Laughter.)

To Michelle and Jill Biden and Joining Forces, we are so proud of the work you've done to help rally America around military families and veterans.  I'm inspired by what they are doing.  So thank you, Michelle, for your extraordinary work.

DAV, I was proud to join at your convention three years ago.  (Applause.)  It is wonderful to be back.  I want to thank your national commander, Larry Polzin.  Thank you so much to the entire leadership team -- Joe Johnston, Marc Burgess, Donna Adams, all the incredible spouses and families of the DAV Auxiliary.  I want to thank Barry Jesinoski.  (Laughter.)  I got it.  (Laughter.)  They used to mispronounce Obama too.  (Laughter.)  I want to thank Barry and your great team in Washington.

Disabled American Veterans, like all veterans, you carry in your hearts the story of brave service that took you to every corner of the Earth.  As young men and women, you left home, left everything and everyone you ever knew because storm clouds gathered far across the sea.  You had your whole lives ahead of you, but you were willing to risk all of it for this land that we love.  Because you know, from hard experience, what we must never forget -- our country endures because in every generation there are Americans like you who stand beside her and guide her and protect her.

You fought across the Pacific, island by island.  You fought into the heart of Europe, mile by mile, freeing millions from fascism.  That’s your legacy as veterans of the Second World War.  You held the line at the Pusan Perimeter and survived the bitter cold of the Chosin Reservoir.  And on this 60th anniversary of the end of that war, we salute all of our veterans of the Korean War.  (Applause.)

To our Vietnam veterans -- (applause) -- you served with valor not just in the thick of the jungle, but through intense urban combat.  And let it be remembered that you won every major battle that you fought in.  (Applause.)  And so in the decades since, whenever our country has needed you, you said "send me" -- from the sands of Desert Storm to the mountains of the Balkans to the villages of Afghanistan and Iraq -- and next year, your profound sacrifice will be recognized in the heart of our nation’s capital when our country dedicates the American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial.  (Applause.)

That memorial will honor your courage in war.  But it will also pay tribute to your bravery in the other battle you have fought -- the fight to recover from the wounds of war.  And this may be your greatest triumph of all.  Because rather than being defined by what you lost, by what you can’t do, you’ve inspired America with what you can do.

Maybe you lost your sight, but you can still see the truth that our disabled veterans make extraordinary contributions to our country every single day.  Maybe you lost an arm, but you still have the strength to pick up a friend or neighbor in need.  Maybe you lost a leg, but you still stand tall for the values and freedoms that make America the greatest nation on Earth.  (Applause.)

I think of the wounded warrior who spoke for so many of you when he said, "Your life will never be the same, but that doesn’t mean you can’t go on to do amazing things with the second chance you were given."  I think of wounded warriors across America and how they’ve used that second chance --volunteering in communities, building homes, being a mentor to local kids, showing up after tornadoes, after Hurricane Sandy to help folks rebuild.  I think of the wounded warriors who reached out to the survivors of the Boston Marathon bombing with the example of their own recovery and with a simple message -- "We stand with you."

I think of all the inspiring wounded warriors that Michelle and I have met -- their resilience, their resolve, their determination to push through and to carry on.  That’s the fighting spirit of our wounded warriors.  That’s the spirit of DAV -- (applause) -- dedicated not just to your own recovery, but to taking care of each other.  Every day you work to ensure that America is fulfilling its promises to our men and women who have served.  That’s your mission.  And I want you to know it is my mission, too.

I believe that this work is more important than ever, because this time of war that we've been in is coming to an end.  (Applause.)  For nearly 12 years -- ever since we were attacked on that clear September morning -- our nation has been at war.  Our fight in Afghanistan is now America’s longest war.  At the same time, our troops fought courageously in Iraq for nine long years.  And among us today are proud veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Now, we’ve marked another milestone in Afghanistan.  As of this past June, Afghan forces have taken the lead for security across their entire country.  Instead of leading the fight, our troops now have a different mission -- supporting Afghan forces.  Our war in Afghanistan has entered the final chapter.  More of our troops are coming home.  This winter, we’ll be down to 34,000.  By the end of next year, the transition will be complete -- Afghans will take full responsibility for their security and our war in Afghanistan will be over.  (Applause.)

For this progress, we thank all who have served in Afghanistan, including DAV members here today -- just a few I want to mention.  We salute folks like Timothy Duke.  Where’s Timothy?  Right here -- (applause) -- in the early days of the war, Timothy's helicopter unit served in some of the most remote parts of Afghanistan.  On another tour, in Iraq, his convoy was hit by an IED.  He endured three spinal surgeries.  Then he went to school on the Post-9/11 GI Bill.  Today he is helping at the DAV, helping veterans and their families access their benefits.  That's the kind of spirit the DAV represents.  Thank you, Timothy, for your outstanding service and work.  (Applause.)

We salute Staff Sergeant Jacare Hogan.  (Applause.)  Where’s Jacare?  In Iraq, she was hit by IEDs three times.  She’s endured surgeries, rehab -- which continue to this day -- but she refused to stop serving.  She deployed again to Afghanistan.  As a logistics specialist, she served at forward operating bases -- keeping them running, flying between bases, getting shot at along the way.  At those remote outposts, she was often the only woman on base.  She proudly wears the Combat Action Badge.  (Applause.)  But her service hasn't stopped.  So here at DAV, she counsels others as they recover.  "Helping [the] troops is what I’m about."  That's what she says.  And we are grateful to you, Jacare, for your extraordinary service.  (Applause.)

And we salute Jason Hassinger.  Where is Jason?  (Applause.)  Right here -- when Jason's unit was ambushed and pinned down, he was hit five times in the chest.  But he pushed on, helped lead his men to safety for which he earned the Silver Star.  (Applause.)  After months of care and rehab he returned to his unit -- going out on patrol, gritting his teeth through the pain in his chest.  And today, at DAV, Jason helps his fellow vets access the benefits that they have earned.  It is "my job" to "help people heal."  That's what Jason says.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

So Timothy, Jacare, Jason -- they're just examples of all who've served in these years of war -- the 9/11 Generation.  And now, you’re beginning the next chapter in your lives wearing a proud new title -- veteran of the United States Armed Forces.  So this time of war may be coming to an end, but the job of caring for our veterans goes on and our work caring for our newest veterans has only just begun.

Think about it -- we lost the last veteran of the First World War two years ago, but we still care for the children of our World War I veterans.  To this day, we still help care for children of men who fought in the Spanish-American War, even the daughter of a Civil War veteran.  (Applause.)  So when we talk about fulfilling our promises to all who serve, we’re not just talking about a few years, we’re talking about decades -- for as long as you and your families walk this Earth.

With a new generation joining your ranks, I believe that now is the time to make sure our nation is truly ready -- organized and structured to get this right not just for this year, not just for next year, but for decades to come not just for the veterans of today’s wars, but for all wars.  And I believe we need to focus on five key priorities.

Number one, we need to make sure we’ve got the resources, the budgets our veterans deserve.  (Applause.)  Since I took office, we’ve made historic investments in our veterans.  Even in these tough fiscal times, we’ve boosted the VA budget by more than 40 percent.  We now budget for veterans’ health care a year in advance.  (Applause.)  And I’ve proposed a further increase in veterans funding for next year.  (Applause.)

Now, some of you may be aware right now we've got these reckless, across-the-board budget cuts called the sequester that's hitting a lot of folks hard.  And it’s cost jobs.  It's hurting our military, slashing investments in education and science and medical research.  I made it clear that your veteran’s benefits are exempt from this year’s sequester.  I've made that clear.  (Applause.)  But I want to tell you going forward the best way to protect the VA care you have earned is to get rid of this sequester altogether.  (Applause.)  Congress needs to come together and agree on a responsible plan that reduces our deficit and keeps our promises to our veterans and keeps our promises to future generations.  That’s what I’m fighting for.  That’s what you deserve.  (Applause.)

Number two, we need to make sure you’re getting the veterans’ health care you’ve been promised.  We’re already making record investments -- more outreach, more clinics, more service.  For our Vietnam vets, we made sure that you and your families finally got the disability pay you deserved because of your exposure to Agent Orange.  (Applause.)  For our Desert Storm veterans, we made it easier for you to get the care you need for illnesses connected to your service.  (Applause.)  For our veterans with PTSD, we’ve made it easier for you to get the VA care you need as well, regardless of the war that you served in.  (Applause.)

For our women veterans -- and there are more of you than ever -- we’re offering more tailored care, more clinics just for women, more clinicians trained to treat you with respect and dignity.  (Applause.)  So all told, we’ve made VA health care available to more than 2 million veterans who didn’t have it before.  (Applause.)

I’ve proposed more funding for prosthetics for our disabled vets, to help you work and walk and run again.  And for you -- the caregivers and families -- we’re going to keep empowering you with the skills and support you need as you care for the veterans that you love.  (Applause.)

We also need to keep improving mental health services, because we’ve got to end this epidemic of suicide among our veterans and troops.  (Applause.)  Last year, I said this had to be an all-hands-on-deck approach -- not just at DOD and the VA, but across our government.  I issued an executive order to step up our game, and we have:  hiring more counselors, hiring more mental health providers, new awareness campaigns so that those who are hurting know that asking for help is not a sign of weakness; it’s a part of staying strong.  It’s a part of getting back up.  (Applause.)  Hundreds of medical and nursing schools have committed to improving research and care for our veterans and their families.  And I’ve proposed more funding for mental health.  We can’t just promise better care, we’ve actually got to deliver better care.

So today I’m proud to announce the next step in this fight.  We’re unveiling a new national action plan to guide mental health research across government, industry and academia, so that we’re going to focus on developing more effective ways to prevent, diagnose and treat mental health conditions like TBI and PTSD.  And to get it done, we’re moving ahead with more than $100 million in new research.  (Applause.)  So I’m not going to be satisfied until every veteran and every man and woman in uniform gets the support and the help they need to stay strong.  (Applause.)

Now, on the subject of veteran’s health care, you may have noticed there’s still a lot of misinformation out there about the new health care law -- Affordable Care Act.  Some folks are out there trying to scare people, including veterans.  So let me say this as plainly as I can.  If you already have health insurance, or health care from the VA, you do not have to do a thing; your VA health care does not change, it is safe; there are no new fees.  Don’t let them hoodwink you.  (Applause.)

But the good news is if you’re among one of the more than 1 million veterans who don’t have health insurance, starting October 1st, you’ll have a new option.  Online marketplaces will let you shop and compare and buy private health insurance plans, just like you can go online to compare prices when you buy a TV, or airplane ticket or a car.  And because of the Affordable Care Act, insurance companies will no longer be able to discriminate against you or deny you coverage because of preexisting conditions -- like PTSD.  (Applause.)  So you’ll have more security in being able to get health insurance.  So don’t let them fool you.  No one is taking away your benefits.  Your veterans’ health care is safe.  We’re not reducing veterans’ access to health care, we’re expanding it.  That’s the truth.  (Applause.)

And that leads me to the third priority we’ve got to focus on.  We’ve got to attack this claims backlog.  (Applause.)  Now, the last time I was with you, I pledged to cut the backlog, slash those wait times, deliver your benefits sooner.  And I’m going to be honest with you, it has not moved as fast as I wanted.  Part of it is all these new veterans in the system who came in -- Agent Orange, PTSD.  It means a lot more claims, and despite additional resources, it’s resulted in longer waits.  And that’s been unacceptable -- unacceptable to me, unacceptable to Secretary Shinseki.

So we put more of our VA folks to work as claims processors, we hired more claims processors as well.  We’ve got them working overtime -- completing more than a million claims a year.  We prioritized the oldest claims.  Veterans groups like the DAV have pitched in as well, helping vets with their claims, getting them ready, so when they bring them, they’re in better shape and they can move a little quicker.  And today, I can report that we are not where we need to be, but we’re making progress.  We are making progress.  (Applause.)  So after years when the backlog kept growing, finally the backlog is shrinking.  In the last five months alone, it’s down nearly 20 percent.  We’re turning the tide.

And we’re not going to let up until we eliminate the backlog once and for all.  And we’ll keep moving ahead with paperless systems so the backlog doesn’t come back, and so your claims are processed right -- the first time, on time.  (Applause.)  After years of military service, you shouldn’t have to wait for years for the benefits you have earned.

Fourth, just like you fought to defend our rights and freedoms, we need to uphold the dignity and rights of every veteran.  And that starts by keeping up our campaign to end homelessness among veterans.  (Applause.)  We’re not just bringing our veterans off the streets, we’re doing more to reach at-risk and low-income vets, so they don’t become homeless in the first place.  And we’re not going to rest until every veteran who has fought for America has a home in America.  (Applause.)

Yesterday, I was proud to sign into law the Helping Heroes Fly Act -- to end those intrusive airport screenings so you, our wounded warriors and disabled vets, especially those of you with prosthetics, can travel with dignity.  And I know how disappointing it was last year when the Senate failed to approve the Disabilities Treaty despite the fact that we had a former senator and World War II veteran, Bob Dole, in the Senate chamber.  But we’re going to keep fighting to ratify that Treaty, because the United States has always been a leader for the rights of the disabled.  We believe that disabled Americans like you deserve the same opportunities to work and to study and to travel in other countries as any other American.  It’s the right thing to do.  We need to get it done.  (Applause.)

Which brings me to the final priority we need to stay focused on, and that’s making sure that our veterans have every opportunity to pursue the American Dream, starting with the education and jobs worthy of your extraordinary talents.

With our new transition assistance program we’re doing more to help departing service members and their spouses plan their careers and find that new job.  We’re going to keep helping our newest veterans and their families pursue their education under the Post-9/11 GI Bill.  We’re building on the executive order I issued last year to protect you as you go looking for schools.  I said we’re going to stand up against dishonest recruiting and predatory practices that target our veterans.  So we set new standards.  And so far, more than 6,000 schools across the country have signed on and pledged to do right by you and your families.  We don’t want our veterans cheated.  (Applause.)

I also said that schools need to step up their support so we’re doing more to help our veterans succeed on campus.  So today, we’re announcing what we call "8 Keys to Success" -- specific steps that schools can take to truly welcome and encourage our veterans.  And so far, more than 250 community colleges and universities have signed on, and today I’m calling on schools across America to join us in this effort.  Let’s help our veterans get that degree, get that credential and compete for the high-skilled jobs of tomorrow.  (Applause.)

Now, I’m also going to make sure that the federal government keeps doing its part.  I’m very proud of the fact that, since I took office, federal departments and agencies have hired nearly 300,000 veterans -- including many disabled veterans.  (Applause.)  And I’m going to keep calling on Congress to pass the Veterans Jobs Corps, to put our veterans to work protecting and rebuilding America.

And we’re also doing everything we can to help you get those private sector jobs.  More help with job searches.  More tools like our online jobs bank to connect veterans to jobs that are open right now.  Making it easier for you to transfer your skills to the licenses and credentials you need for civilian jobs.  And because tens of thousands of our veterans have already been helped, Congress needs to make permanent tax credits for companies that hire our veterans and wounded warriors.  It’s the right thing to do.  (Applause.)

And we’re going to keep urging companies across America to do the smart thing -- hire some of the best workers you’ll ever find; hire a vet.  Michelle and Jill have done great work on this.  And responding to our challenge, working with Joining Forces, America's businesses have already hired or trained 290,000 veterans and military spouses and they’ve committed to hiring over 400,000 more.  More companies are signing up all the time.  We are going to get companies to understand that you can’t get a better deal than hiring a veteran.  (Applause.)

Because of all the efforts I’ve described, and because of a growing economy, veterans unemployment is going down, more veterans are finding jobs, and we’re going to keep at this.  Because with your skills and drive, we don’t just want you fighting for America overseas, we want you to be right here, building a stronger America, fighting for a better future for our kids.

So ensuring the resources and budgets you deserve, delivering the health care that you’ve earned, making sure you can count on it -- continuing to reduce the backlog, standing up for your rights and dignity, creating jobs and opportunity so you can realize your dreams -- that’s what I’m focused on.  That’s what I have told my entire administration to be focused on.  That’s what our country needs -- to stay focused for the many years to come.

And nobody knows this better than you, our disabled veterans.  The road of recovery is often such a long haul.  And America needs to be there for you during that long haul.  And that’s the lesson of the extraordinary young man I told you about when I spoke to you three years ago -- an Army Ranger, Sergeant First Class Cory Remsburg.

A massive IED in Afghanistan nearly killed him.  He was in a coma for months, with severe traumatic brain injury.  And I told you then how, when I saw him in the hospital, he had come out of the coma, but he still couldn’t speak.  And when I asked how he was feeling, he slowly brought his hand up and he pulled his fingers together and he gave a thumbs up.  His mom was sitting there with him.

A few days ago, I saw Cory and his family again, this time in Phoenix where they live.  So I wanted to give you an update on how he’s doing.  I suspect it won’t surprise you to know that for Cory, the years since he was injured have been very hard -- brain surgeries, half dozen of them; surgeries to replace part of his skull; eye surgeries; special procedures on his lungs; skin grafts and skin flaps -- all told, dozens of surgeries and procedures.

Rehab has been grueling.  On a typical day, Cory wakes up and spend hours in therapy -- physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy.  Progress has come slowly, but it has come.  He had to learn the simple things all over again -- how to speak, how to write his name, how to throw a ball.  And this past spring, he reached another milestone.  After years in the hospital and rehab facilities, he finally came home greeted by hundreds of neighbors and friends waving American flags.

And so when I saw Cory a few days ago, he is still blind in one eye.  He still struggles to move his left side.  But the young man I had seen in that hospital bed unable to speak, barely able to move, this time he was in a chair sitting up -- alert, smiling, talking.  And then, he wanted to show me something.  And he leaned out of his chair.  And he reached out and grabbed his walker.  And with the help of his parents, he pulled himself forward and he stood up.  And he looked at me, and he gave me a sharp salute.  (Applause.)  He said, "Rangers Lead the Way."  (Applause.)

And his stepmom held one arm for balance and I held the other.  And then, Cory took a step -- then another, and then another one after that all the way across the room.  Little by little, Cory is learning to walk again.  (Applause.)  And he's starting to get good on his recumbent bike.  He hopes to bike in a race this fall -- 42 miles.  He’s scheduled to move into his own home adapted to his needs with the help of a caregiver -- another step towards the greater independence he seeks.  And so Cory says, "My recovery has not been easy.  Nothing in life that’s worth anything is easy."  But he says, I don't "give up."

The war in Afghanistan may be ending, but for Cory and our disabled vets, the work has only just begun.  Cory is 30 years old.  His recovery -- like so many of yours -- will last a lifetime.  But he won’t give up, because you haven't given up.  And when it comes to our work, to making sure that our nation is fulfilling its promises to the men and women who served and sacrificed, America cannot give up either.  I will not give up.  We cannot give up.

So long as I'm the United States' President, I will make it my mission to make sure that America is right there beside you every step of the way, every step with Cory, every step with the DAV.  God bless you.  God bless our veterans.  God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

END 12:42 P.M. EDT

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by The First Lady and The President at Disabled American Veterans Convention

Hilton
Orlando, Florida

12:00 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thanks so much.  Thank you all.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Good afternoon, everyone.  It’s so good to be here.  (Applause.)  We are so proud of you all.  Thank you all.  Please, I know you’ve been working hard, so rest yourselves.  (Laughter.)

I am beyond thrilled to be here with all of you today, and I want to start by thanking Larry for that very kind introduction, but more importantly for his tremendous leadership of the DAV and for all of his outstanding service to this country.  But most of all, I want to thank all of you here today -- the men and women who have served and sacrificed so greatly on behalf of all Americans.

Truly, one of my greatest joys over these past few years has been spending time with veterans and military families like all of you.  I have laughed with your children at barbeques.  I’ve gone to baby showers with spouses.  I’ve learned so much during my many visits to military bases across this country.  I’ve even smashed a champagne bottle to christen a Coast Guard cutter.  (Laughter.)

And let me tell you, day after day, I have been so inspired by your stories -- so inspired.  And I’m reminded of one of those stories today, the story of a young man I met at Walter Reed.  His name is Sergeant Winder Perez, and he is 24 years old.  Now, a year and a half ago, Sergeant Perez was on a combat mission in Afghanistan, when he was hit by an RPG.  He collapsed, but the grenade stayed lodged in his left thigh and it didn’t go off.  Sergeant Perez’s fellow Marines ran to his aid and together they chose to carry him off the battlefield to safety, even though they knew that any wrong move would mean certain disaster.

Moments later, four pilots and medics chose to load him onto a helicopter with the live explosive still in his leg, transporting him 65 miles to the nearest medical station.  And finally, when they arrived, a nurse and explosive expert chose to rush to his aid, finally dislodging the rocket by hand and giving doctors a chance to save his leg -- which they did.

Now, just that part of Sergeant Perez’s story tells you everything you need to know about the men and women of our armed forces.  But as all of you know very well, stories like these don’t end in the combat zone.  Since his injury, Sergeant Perez has endured 30 or 31 surgeries -- he doesn’t remember the exact number.  He has survived a heart attack and an aneurysm, and he’s fought through hundreds of hours of rigorous physical therapy to strengthen his leg.

And time and again, just when he’s regained the strength to walk, his doctors have told him that it’s time for another surgery, and then Sergeant Perez is back in a wheelchair, starting all over again from square one.

But here is the thing:  You don’t hear about any of that when you talk to Sergeant Perez.  What you do hear about is his mother, who he will tell you has stayed by his side every single day.  You will hear about his gratitude to those who saved his life, to the family and friends who come from New York to visit, and for the life he has in front of him.

Today, Sergeant Perez is walking again.  He’s three months into an internship with the Defense Intelligence Agency, and he plans to spend the rest of his career serving his country.  And when asked about everything he’s been through, Sergeant Perez puts it all in perspective by simply saying, "I just think you’ve got to get back up."  That’s all he said.  "You’ve got to get back up."

And as I look across this room, I see a group of people who know how to get back up.  No matter what you’ve been through -- (applause) -- no matter what the struggles you have faced, you all get back up.  And that is what inspires me.  That’s why, every day, I work to push myself harder to live up to your example.

And that’s why Jill Biden and I are working so hard on Joining Forces, because we want to honor and serve you and your families -- to make sure that you and your families have the educational opportunities you need, the support you’ve earned and the good jobs you deserve.

And if there is one thing that I want all of you to know today, it’s this:  You will never have to get back up all on your own.  Not while we’re here, Never.  (Applause.)  And it’s not just us.  You have got families who support you day and night.  You have countless neighbors and pastors, business owners -- I’ve met them -- even strangers who will snap into action for you.

And one important person you have is a Commander-in-Chief who doesn’t simply understand your service and your sacrifice.  (Applause.)  Let me tell you something about this man, he carries your stories with him every single day.  I have seen it in his eyes when he comes home from a visit to a military hospital.  I’ve noticed the extra energy he gets after a military commencement.  And I’ve heard the emotion in his voice after he talks with the families of our fallen.  That is the well he draws from as Commander-in-Chief.  You are that well. 

And that’s why he has stood up for you again and again and again, and it’s why he’s going to keep fighting for you and your families every single day.  So ladies and gentlemen, please welcome my husband, our President Barack Obama.  (Applause.)

*****

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, DAV.  (Applause.)  Thank you so much.  Thank you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  Do we have an extraordinary First Lady?  (Applause.)  We will be celebrating our 21st anniversary in October.  The first time I saw her, I knew she was something special.  (Laughter.)  She was a little more skeptical about me.  (Laughter.)  But persistence is the key.  You just got to stay on it.  Eventually, you can marry up.  (Laughter.)

To Michelle and Jill Biden and Joining Forces, we are so proud of the work you've done to help rally America around military families and veterans.  I'm inspired by what they are doing.  So thank you, Michelle, for your extraordinary work.

DAV, I was proud to join at your convention three years ago.  (Applause.)  It is wonderful to be back.  I want to thank your national commander, Larry Polzin.  Thank you so much to the entire leadership team -- Joe Johnston, Marc Burgess, Donna Adams, all the incredible spouses and families of the DAV Auxiliary.  I want to thank Barry Jesinoski.  (Laughter.)  I got it.  (Laughter.)  They used to mispronounce Obama too.  (Laughter.)  I want to thank Barry and your great team in Washington.

Disabled American Veterans, like all veterans, you carry in your hearts the story of brave service that took you to every corner of the Earth.  As young men and women, you left home, left everything and everyone you ever knew because storm clouds gathered far across the sea.  You had your whole lives ahead of you, but you were willing to risk all of it for this land that we love.  Because you know, from hard experience, what we must never forget -- our country endures because in every generation there are Americans like you who stand beside her and guide her and protect her.

You fought across the Pacific, island by island.  You fought into the heart of Europe, mile by mile, freeing millions from fascism.  That’s your legacy as veterans of the Second World War.  You held the line at the Pusan Perimeter and survived the bitter cold of the Chosin Reservoir.  And on this 60th anniversary of the end of that war, we salute all of our veterans of the Korean War.  (Applause.)

To our Vietnam veterans -- (applause) -- you served with valor not just in the thick of the jungle, but through intense urban combat.  And let it be remembered that you won every major battle that you fought in.  (Applause.)  And so in the decades since, whenever our country has needed you, you said "send me" -- from the sands of Desert Storm to the mountains of the Balkans to the villages of Afghanistan and Iraq -- and next year, your profound sacrifice will be recognized in the heart of our nation’s capital when our country dedicates the American Veterans Disabled for Life Memorial.  (Applause.)

That memorial will honor your courage in war.  But it will also pay tribute to your bravery in the other battle you have fought -- the fight to recover from the wounds of war.  And this may be your greatest triumph of all.  Because rather than being defined by what you lost, by what you can’t do, you’ve inspired America with what you can do.

Maybe you lost your sight, but you can still see the truth that our disabled veterans make extraordinary contributions to our country every single day.  Maybe you lost an arm, but you still have the strength to pick up a friend or neighbor in need.  Maybe you lost a leg, but you still stand tall for the values and freedoms that make America the greatest nation on Earth.  (Applause.)

I think of the wounded warrior who spoke for so many of you when he said, "Your life will never be the same, but that doesn’t mean you can’t go on to do amazing things with the second chance you were given."  I think of wounded warriors across America and how they’ve used that second chance --volunteering in communities, building homes, being a mentor to local kids, showing up after tornadoes, after Hurricane Sandy to help folks rebuild.  I think of the wounded warriors who reached out to the survivors of the Boston Marathon bombing with the example of their own recovery and with a simple message -- "We stand with you."

I think of all the inspiring wounded warriors that Michelle and I have met -- their resilience, their resolve, their determination to push through and to carry on.  That’s the fighting spirit of our wounded warriors.  That’s the spirit of DAV -- (applause) -- dedicated not just to your own recovery, but to taking care of each other.  Every day you work to ensure that America is fulfilling its promises to our men and women who have served.  That’s your mission.  And I want you to know it is my mission, too.

I believe that this work is more important than ever, because this time of war that we've been in is coming to an end.  (Applause.)  For nearly 12 years -- ever since we were attacked on that clear September morning -- our nation has been at war.  Our fight in Afghanistan is now America’s longest war.  At the same time, our troops fought courageously in Iraq for nine long years.  And among us today are proud veterans of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Now, we’ve marked another milestone in Afghanistan.  As of this past June, Afghan forces have taken the lead for security across their entire country.  Instead of leading the fight, our troops now have a different mission -- supporting Afghan forces.  Our war in Afghanistan has entered the final chapter.  More of our troops are coming home.  This winter, we’ll be down to 34,000.  By the end of next year, the transition will be complete -- Afghans will take full responsibility for their security and our war in Afghanistan will be over.  (Applause.)

For this progress, we thank all who have served in Afghanistan, including DAV members here today -- just a few I want to mention.  We salute folks like Timothy Duke.  Where’s Timothy?  Right here -- (applause) -- in the early days of the war, Timothy's helicopter unit served in some of the most remote parts of Afghanistan.  On another tour, in Iraq, his convoy was hit by an IED.  He endured three spinal surgeries.  Then he went to school on the Post-9/11 GI Bill.  Today he is helping at the DAV, helping veterans and their families access their benefits.  That's the kind of spirit the DAV represents.  Thank you, Timothy, for your outstanding service and work.  (Applause.)

We salute Staff Sergeant Jacare Hogan.  (Applause.)  Where’s Jacare?  In Iraq, she was hit by IEDs three times.  She’s endured surgeries, rehab -- which continue to this day -- but she refused to stop serving.  She deployed again to Afghanistan.  As a logistics specialist, she served at forward operating bases -- keeping them running, flying between bases, getting shot at along the way.  At those remote outposts, she was often the only woman on base.  She proudly wears the Combat Action Badge.  (Applause.)  But her service hasn't stopped.  So here at DAV, she counsels others as they recover.  "Helping [the] troops is what I’m about."  That's what she says.  And we are grateful to you, Jacare, for your extraordinary service.  (Applause.)

And we salute Jason Hassinger.  Where is Jason?  (Applause.)  Right here -- when Jason's unit was ambushed and pinned down, he was hit five times in the chest.  But he pushed on, helped lead his men to safety for which he earned the Silver Star.  (Applause.)  After months of care and rehab he returned to his unit -- going out on patrol, gritting his teeth through the pain in his chest.  And today, at DAV, Jason helps his fellow vets access the benefits that they have earned.  It is "my job" to "help people heal."  That's what Jason says.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

So Timothy, Jacare, Jason -- they're just examples of all who've served in these years of war -- the 9/11 Generation.  And now, you’re beginning the next chapter in your lives wearing a proud new title -- veteran of the United States Armed Forces.  So this time of war may be coming to an end, but the job of caring for our veterans goes on and our work caring for our newest veterans has only just begun.

Think about it -- we lost the last veteran of the First World War two years ago, but we still care for the children of our World War I veterans.  To this day, we still help care for children of men who fought in the Spanish-American War, even the daughter of a Civil War veteran.  (Applause.)  So when we talk about fulfilling our promises to all who serve, we’re not just talking about a few years, we’re talking about decades -- for as long as you and your families walk this Earth.

With a new generation joining your ranks, I believe that now is the time to make sure our nation is truly ready -- organized and structured to get this right not just for this year, not just for next year, but for decades to come not just for the veterans of today’s wars, but for all wars.  And I believe we need to focus on five key priorities.

Number one, we need to make sure we’ve got the resources, the budgets our veterans deserve.  (Applause.)  Since I took office, we’ve made historic investments in our veterans.  Even in these tough fiscal times, we’ve boosted the VA budget by more than 40 percent.  We now budget for veterans’ health care a year in advance.  (Applause.)  And I’ve proposed a further increase in veterans funding for next year.  (Applause.)

Now, some of you may be aware right now we've got these reckless, across-the-board budget cuts called the sequester that's hitting a lot of folks hard.  And it’s cost jobs.  It's hurting our military, slashing investments in education and science and medical research.  I made it clear that your veteran’s benefits are exempt from this year’s sequester.  I've made that clear.  (Applause.)  But I want to tell you going forward the best way to protect the VA care you have earned is to get rid of this sequester altogether.  (Applause.)  Congress needs to come together and agree on a responsible plan that reduces our deficit and keeps our promises to our veterans and keeps our promises to future generations.  That’s what I’m fighting for.  That’s what you deserve.  (Applause.)

Number two, we need to make sure you’re getting the veterans’ health care you’ve been promised.  We’re already making record investments -- more outreach, more clinics, more service.  For our Vietnam vets, we made sure that you and your families finally got the disability pay you deserved because of your exposure to Agent Orange.  (Applause.)  For our Desert Storm veterans, we made it easier for you to get the care you need for illnesses connected to your service.  (Applause.)  For our veterans with PTSD, we’ve made it easier for you to get the VA care you need as well, regardless of the war that you served in.  (Applause.)

For our women veterans -- and there are more of you than ever -- we’re offering more tailored care, more clinics just for women, more clinicians trained to treat you with respect and dignity.  (Applause.)  So all told, we’ve made VA health care available to more than 2 million veterans who didn’t have it before.  (Applause.)

I’ve proposed more funding for prosthetics for our disabled vets, to help you work and walk and run again.  And for you -- the caregivers and families -- we’re going to keep empowering you with the skills and support you need as you care for the veterans that you love.  (Applause.)

We also need to keep improving mental health services, because we’ve got to end this epidemic of suicide among our veterans and troops.  (Applause.)  Last year, I said this had to be an all-hands-on-deck approach -- not just at DOD and the VA, but across our government.  I issued an executive order to step up our game, and we have:  hiring more counselors, hiring more mental health providers, new awareness campaigns so that those who are hurting know that asking for help is not a sign of weakness; it’s a part of staying strong.  It’s a part of getting back up.  (Applause.)  Hundreds of medical and nursing schools have committed to improving research and care for our veterans and their families.  And I’ve proposed more funding for mental health.  We can’t just promise better care, we’ve actually got to deliver better care.

So today I’m proud to announce the next step in this fight.  We’re unveiling a new national action plan to guide mental health research across government, industry and academia, so that we’re going to focus on developing more effective ways to prevent, diagnose and treat mental health conditions like TBI and PTSD.  And to get it done, we’re moving ahead with more than $100 million in new research.  (Applause.)  So I’m not going to be satisfied until every veteran and every man and woman in uniform gets the support and the help they need to stay strong.  (Applause.)

Now, on the subject of veteran’s health care, you may have noticed there’s still a lot of misinformation out there about the new health care law -- Affordable Care Act.  Some folks are out there trying to scare people, including veterans.  So let me say this as plainly as I can.  If you already have health insurance, or health care from the VA, you do not have to do a thing; your VA health care does not change, it is safe; there are no new fees.  Don’t let them hoodwink you.  (Applause.)

But the good news is if you’re among one of the more than 1 million veterans who don’t have health insurance, starting October 1st, you’ll have a new option.  Online marketplaces will let you shop and compare and buy private health insurance plans, just like you can go online to compare prices when you buy a TV, or airplane ticket or a car.  And because of the Affordable Care Act, insurance companies will no longer be able to discriminate against you or deny you coverage because of preexisting conditions -- like PTSD.  (Applause.)  So you’ll have more security in being able to get health insurance.  So don’t let them fool you.  No one is taking away your benefits.  Your veterans’ health care is safe.  We’re not reducing veterans’ access to health care, we’re expanding it.  That’s the truth.  (Applause.)

And that leads me to the third priority we’ve got to focus on.  We’ve got to attack this claims backlog.  (Applause.)  Now, the last time I was with you, I pledged to cut the backlog, slash those wait times, deliver your benefits sooner.  And I’m going to be honest with you, it has not moved as fast as I wanted.  Part of it is all these new veterans in the system who came in -- Agent Orange, PTSD.  It means a lot more claims, and despite additional resources, it’s resulted in longer waits.  And that’s been unacceptable -- unacceptable to me, unacceptable to Secretary Shinseki.

So we put more of our VA folks to work as claims processors, we hired more claims processors as well.  We’ve got them working overtime -- completing more than a million claims a year.  We prioritized the oldest claims.  Veterans groups like the DAV have pitched in as well, helping vets with their claims, getting them ready, so when they bring them, they’re in better shape and they can move a little quicker.  And today, I can report that we are not where we need to be, but we’re making progress.  We are making progress.  (Applause.)  So after years when the backlog kept growing, finally the backlog is shrinking.  In the last five months alone, it’s down nearly 20 percent.  We’re turning the tide.

And we’re not going to let up until we eliminate the backlog once and for all.  And we’ll keep moving ahead with paperless systems so the backlog doesn’t come back, and so your claims are processed right -- the first time, on time.  (Applause.)  After years of military service, you shouldn’t have to wait for years for the benefits you have earned.

Fourth, just like you fought to defend our rights and freedoms, we need to uphold the dignity and rights of every veteran.  And that starts by keeping up our campaign to end homelessness among veterans.  (Applause.)  We’re not just bringing our veterans off the streets, we’re doing more to reach at-risk and low-income vets, so they don’t become homeless in the first place.  And we’re not going to rest until every veteran who has fought for America has a home in America.  (Applause.)

Yesterday, I was proud to sign into law the Helping Heroes Fly Act -- to end those intrusive airport screenings so you, our wounded warriors and disabled vets, especially those of you with prosthetics, can travel with dignity.  And I know how disappointing it was last year when the Senate failed to approve the Disabilities Treaty despite the fact that we had a former senator and World War II veteran, Bob Dole, in the Senate chamber.  But we’re going to keep fighting to ratify that Treaty, because the United States has always been a leader for the rights of the disabled.  We believe that disabled Americans like you deserve the same opportunities to work and to study and to travel in other countries as any other American.  It’s the right thing to do.  We need to get it done.  (Applause.)

Which brings me to the final priority we need to stay focused on, and that’s making sure that our veterans have every opportunity to pursue the American Dream, starting with the education and jobs worthy of your extraordinary talents.

With our new transition assistance program we’re doing more to help departing service members and their spouses plan their careers and find that new job.  We’re going to keep helping our newest veterans and their families pursue their education under the Post-9/11 GI Bill.  We’re building on the executive order I issued last year to protect you as you go looking for schools.  I said we’re going to stand up against dishonest recruiting and predatory practices that target our veterans.  So we set new standards.  And so far, more than 6,000 schools across the country have signed on and pledged to do right by you and your families.  We don’t want our veterans cheated.  (Applause.)

I also said that schools need to step up their support so we’re doing more to help our veterans succeed on campus.  So today, we’re announcing what we call "8 Keys to Success" -- specific steps that schools can take to truly welcome and encourage our veterans.  And so far, more than 250 community colleges and universities have signed on, and today I’m calling on schools across America to join us in this effort.  Let’s help our veterans get that degree, get that credential and compete for the high-skilled jobs of tomorrow.  (Applause.)

Now, I’m also going to make sure that the federal government keeps doing its part.  I’m very proud of the fact that, since I took office, federal departments and agencies have hired nearly 300,000 veterans -- including many disabled veterans.  (Applause.)  And I’m going to keep calling on Congress to pass the Veterans Jobs Corps, to put our veterans to work protecting and rebuilding America.

And we’re also doing everything we can to help you get those private sector jobs.  More help with job searches.  More tools like our online jobs bank to connect veterans to jobs that are open right now.  Making it easier for you to transfer your skills to the licenses and credentials you need for civilian jobs.  And because tens of thousands of our veterans have already been helped, Congress needs to make permanent tax credits for companies that hire our veterans and wounded warriors.  It’s the right thing to do.  (Applause.)

And we’re going to keep urging companies across America to do the smart thing -- hire some of the best workers you’ll ever find; hire a vet.  Michelle and Jill have done great work on this.  And responding to our challenge, working with Joining Forces, America's businesses have already hired or trained 290,000 veterans and military spouses and they’ve committed to hiring over 400,000 more.  More companies are signing up all the time.  We are going to get companies to understand that you can’t get a better deal than hiring a veteran.  (Applause.)

Because of all the efforts I’ve described, and because of a growing economy, veterans unemployment is going down, more veterans are finding jobs, and we’re going to keep at this.  Because with your skills and drive, we don’t just want you fighting for America overseas, we want you to be right here, building a stronger America, fighting for a better future for our kids.

So ensuring the resources and budgets you deserve, delivering the health care that you’ve earned, making sure you can count on it -- continuing to reduce the backlog, standing up for your rights and dignity, creating jobs and opportunity so you can realize your dreams -- that’s what I’m focused on.  That’s what I have told my entire administration to be focused on.  That’s what our country needs -- to stay focused for the many years to come.

And nobody knows this better than you, our disabled veterans.  The road of recovery is often such a long haul.  And America needs to be there for you during that long haul.  And that’s the lesson of the extraordinary young man I told you about when I spoke to you three years ago -- an Army Ranger, Sergeant First Class Cory Remsburg.

A massive IED in Afghanistan nearly killed him.  He was in a coma for months, with severe traumatic brain injury.  And I told you then how, when I saw him in the hospital, he had come out of the coma, but he still couldn’t speak.  And when I asked how he was feeling, he slowly brought his hand up and he pulled his fingers together and he gave a thumbs up.  His mom was sitting there with him.

A few days ago, I saw Cory and his family again, this time in Phoenix where they live.  So I wanted to give you an update on how he’s doing.  I suspect it won’t surprise you to know that for Cory, the years since he was injured have been very hard -- brain surgeries, half dozen of them; surgeries to replace part of his skull; eye surgeries; special procedures on his lungs; skin grafts and skin flaps -- all told, dozens of surgeries and procedures.

Rehab has been grueling.  On a typical day, Cory wakes up and spend hours in therapy -- physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy.  Progress has come slowly, but it has come.  He had to learn the simple things all over again -- how to speak, how to write his name, how to throw a ball.  And this past spring, he reached another milestone.  After years in the hospital and rehab facilities, he finally came home greeted by hundreds of neighbors and friends waving American flags.

And so when I saw Cory a few days ago, he is still blind in one eye.  He still struggles to move his left side.  But the young man I had seen in that hospital bed unable to speak, barely able to move, this time he was in a chair sitting up -- alert, smiling, talking.  And then, he wanted to show me something.  And he leaned out of his chair.  And he reached out and grabbed his walker.  And with the help of his parents, he pulled himself forward and he stood up.  And he looked at me, and he gave me a sharp salute.  (Applause.)  He said, "Rangers Lead the Way."  (Applause.)

And his stepmom held one arm for balance and I held the other.  And then, Cory took a step -- then another, and then another one after that all the way across the room.  Little by little, Cory is learning to walk again.  (Applause.)  And he's starting to get good on his recumbent bike.  He hopes to bike in a race this fall -- 42 miles.  He’s scheduled to move into his own home adapted to his needs with the help of a caregiver -- another step towards the greater independence he seeks.  And so Cory says, "My recovery has not been easy.  Nothing in life that’s worth anything is easy."  But he says, I don't "give up."

The war in Afghanistan may be ending, but for Cory and our disabled vets, the work has only just begun.  Cory is 30 years old.  His recovery -- like so many of yours -- will last a lifetime.  But he won’t give up, because you haven't given up.  And when it comes to our work, to making sure that our nation is fulfilling its promises to the men and women who served and sacrificed, America cannot give up either.  I will not give up.  We cannot give up.

So long as I'm the United States' President, I will make it my mission to make sure that America is right there beside you every step of the way, every step with Cory, every step with the DAV.  God bless you.  God bless our veterans.  God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

END 12:42 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Gaggle By Press Secretary Jay Carney Aboard Air Force One En Route Orlando, Florida

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Orlando, Florida

10:39 A.M. EDT

MR. CARNEY:  Everyone ready?  Okay.  As you know, today the President will address the Disabled American Veterans National Conference in Orlando.  The First Lady will introduce him.  Secretary Shinseki is speaking this morning.  The President will discuss the five priorities the administration is focused on to ensure that we will fulfill our promise to all who have served -- first, ensuring that the resources our veterans deserve are available; second, delivering the health care they count on; third, ending the claims backlog; fourth, protecting veterans’ rights and dignity; and five, ensuring that all veterans, when they transition from service to civilian life, have a chance at the American Dream.

Specifically, he will note progress made on the VA’s claims backlog, a personal priority of the President, and that progress represents a nearly 20 percent reduction in the past five months. He will also announce a new national research plan to address Traumatic Brain Injury and PTSD and veterans suicide.

With that -- I’m sure there will be more details and I know we gave you a fact sheet -- I will take your questions.

Q    Can you talk more about the PTSD thing, what exactly that is?

MR. CARNEY:  I’ll have to -- I think we gave you information about it.  I’ll have to refer you to the VA.  Maybe we can get you more information on the ground.  I’m not steeped in the details.

Q    Jay, the 20 percent reduction that you said the President is going to talk about in the backlog claims, is there a hard number, like from what to what?

MR. CARNEY:  On March 25th there were 611,000; on August 9th, it was down to 496,000.

Q    Four-nine-six?

MR. CARNEY:  Four-nine-six.  And I can just say, I know, because I see it all the time, the President’s focus on this is intense, as is the Chief of Staff’s.  Denis McDonough has taken a personal interest in making sure that this issue is getting high-level and constant attention, and that’s exactly what Secretary Shinseki is giving it.

Q    Jay, after Florida the President and his wife are heading to Martha’s Vineyard for the next week’s worth of a vacation.  Can you talk us through what you expect on his schedule tonight or the rest of the week?  Who will he see at the Vineyard?  We saw Susan Rice and Rob Nabors aboard.  Who else is he traveling with?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m here.  (Laughter.)  Susan Rice is the national security representative for the trip.  As you know, there’s always someone from the NSS on the trip, and she’ll be here and briefing the President as necessary, as is the case whenever he takes a trip like this.  Rob Nabors is the senior representative from the Chief of Staff’s office.  As you know, there’s always one of those.  And I’m your press rep.  There’ll be some staff shuffling through the week as some of us depart and others come in.  But that’s essentially the complement at senior staff level.

In terms of the President’s schedule, I know he’s looking forward very much to some downtime with his family, with the First Lady, and I’m sure he’ll see some friends, but I don’t have a social schedule to offer you.

Q    And can you talk to us about how he balances the need for daily briefings with his right to chill out for a couple days at the end of the summer?  Is he going to get daily briefings?  Do you have a video link to the White House?  Are you expecting any major news this week?

MR. CARNEY:  We’re not expecting to make any major news this week.  I just want to repeat that my comment about a Fed chairman announcement was a joke the other day.

Q    I didn’t even hear that.

MR. CARNEY:  Yes, sorry.  I think I just gave Mason some heartburn.  (Laughter.)  But, of course, news happens and it’s hard to predict.

The President receives briefings daily on both national security and domestic matters, and that will be the case.  I don’t have a schedule for that and I can’t brief you on technological capabilities, but as is the case on this plane and as is the case everywhere Presidents go -- this President and any President goes, he will be able to communicate as necessary with all the capacity that’s needed to do that.

Q    Jay, do you know what the impact is of sequestration on the spending for disabled veterans?

MR. CARNEY:  I’m afraid I don’t.  The VA might have that information.

Q    Do you have a vacation reading list for us?

MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have that, I’m afraid.

Q    Is the President reading any books on his vacation?

MR. CARNEY:  I expect he will and I will see what I can find out.  Most of the many hours I spent with him in the last couple of weeks, when he’s been reading, he’s been reading briefing materials.

Q    Where are the girls?

MR. CARNEY:  You have to ask the East Wing.  I’m not sure.  But they’ll be joining him at --

Q    They’re not on the plane, right?

Q    And Bo?

MR. CARNEY:  I didn’t see Bo yet, but if he is, I look forward to saying hello.

Q    Send him back.

MR. CARNEY:  He’s a great dog.

Q    Are there any lawmakers or guests for the leg to Florida who are also aboard the plane?  Anyone --

MR. CARNEY:  I’ll check.

Q    Is Shinseki on Air Force One?  No?  He’s already there.

MR. CARNEY:  He is already there.  He is speaking this morning.  I'll check on the manifest.  I don't believe we have any lawmakers or other guests.

Q    And with regard to the President, what he is going to read and everything, do you have any reaction to the American Booksellers Association calling the President highlighting Amazon "misguided?"  Independent booksellers are a little upset.  There was an open letter to the President.

MR. CARNEY:  I got that question at the time, and I can just tell you the President visited the fulfillment center of Amazon in Tennessee because it represents a businesses and an enterprise that is creating jobs in the United States.  And he used that location to give one of his jobs-focused speeches on his economic agenda.

  

The President is also a huge supporter of independent booksellers and makes a point of buying books at independent booksellers whenever he is able, given the constraints of being able to walk around as President.  But I know he has on his vacations in the past purchased books at independent booksellers. I wouldn't be surprised if in search of fulfilling the book reading list that Carol mentioned, he might visit one on this trip.

Q    Why is he only taking a week's vacation in a non-election year?

MR. CARNEY:  I think he is obviously looking forward to the time that he is able to take, but also will return to continue to work on the agenda that he has laid out to focus our attention on the middle class, what we can do to keep the economy growing, help it grow faster, and invest in those areas of the economy that will create solid, good-paying jobs for the middle class and give them greater security.

Q    Is he going to take any down time or anything else after this trip even back at the White House?  I feel like one year he did Martha's Vineyard, then he came back and then that next week wasn't a full working week.  I guess, Labor Day.

MR. CARNEY:  The week he is back will be a full working week.  But I don't have any schedule beyond that.

Q    Yesterday in the President's press conference, he mentioned that he had recently spoken with Speaker Boehner.  Can you give us a timing on when that was?

MR. CARNEY:  It was shortly before they went on recess.  I think it was within the last week.

Q    What was the topic and who called who?

MR. CARNEY:  As I think I've tried to convey from the podium, the President speaks with members and leaders of Congress with some regularity.  We don't read out every one of those conversations.  My sense is they spoke about a variety of the issues that are coming up for action by Congress.  And I'm sure that would include immigration reform, as well as some of the economic initiatives the President would like Congress to take up, those that require legislative action, and obviously, the budget issues that we have to deal with in the fall.

I don't have a specific readout.  I'm just making some assumptions here.  But as you know, the President put forward a proposition, a bargain for the middle class in which he asks Republicans and Democrats as well to consider coupling business tax reform with significant investments in areas that help create middle-class jobs.  And I'm sure that was probably one subject of the conversation.

But I can see if there's more of a read out.  But I think the point was -- well, the President answered the question because it was asked, had he spoken with the Speaker recently, and the answer was yes.

Q    Can you give us an update on whether there have been any foreign leader calls, including with President Putin, and whether there are any calls or briefings that you can elaborate on related to the AQ-AQAP revelations?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, there have been no foreign calls that I have to read out to you.  The President has not spoken to President Putin since his press conference.  But as you I'm sure know, the Russian foreign and defense ministers met with Secretaries Hagel and Kerry yesterday and that was a constructive meeting in which the two Secretaries and their counterparts discussed ways to continue to engage in areas of importance, both on security matters and economic matters.

Q    -- condone his description of President Putin as a schoolboy in the back of the room?

MR. CARNEY:  I would refer you to the State Department or Defense Department for more details on that meeting, but the President's press conference was public.  The point the President was making -- I think this is important to emphasize -- was that, understandably, in part because visuals are what they are, the press tends to focus on body language in photographs, and sometimes that body language doesn’t reflect completely the nature of the conversations and meetings that the President has had with his Russian counterpart.

Q    To go back to the vacation for a second, can you give us any sort of sense of what kinds of official business the President will work on during the vacation besides getting these daily briefings from Susan Rice or Nabors or whoever else will come in the briefing?

MR. CARNEY:  Look, the President is working on a full agenda, so in addition to the briefings that he'll get, he'll, I'm sure, do some thinking about and reading about how to move forward on the better bargain for the middle class, which he's been talking about a lot recently and you can expect he'll be talking about a great deal in the days and weeks following this vacation.  He'll also continue to, I'm sure, consider some of the issues that he talked about yesterday.  But there's nothing specific beyond the broader agenda that he'll be working on.  He does, obviously, look forward to some down time with his family.

Q    (Inaudible.)

MR. CARNEY:  I don't have a scheduling update.

Q    Just to follow on Boehner, should we read this as a meeting that the two of them are going to be negotiating on these budget issues going forward, or is this just a customary conversation?

MR. CARNEY:  I think the latter, though I don't have any updates for you on where we need to -- what meetings might take place.  I mean, you've heard me sort of have this discussion before, Carol, even before you were away, but the President has put forward, when it comes to a comprehensive budget proposal, a very detailed plan that represents by any measure compromise and an attempt to meet Republicans halfway.  And he has engaged with Republican lawmakers for much of this year, as has his senior staff, in conversations about how we can find that common ground, and they've been useful conversations.  But what we haven’t yet seen from Republicans is a similar proposal representing compromise from them.  And we look forward to that happening and hope it does.  But as of this time we haven’t seen that.

Q    Thank you.

MR. CARNEY:  Thank you.

END          10:53 A.M. EDT  

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Weekly Address: A Better Bargain for Responsible, Middle Class Homeowners

WASHINGTON, DC— In this week’s address, President Obama said that the housing market is starting to heal, and now it’s time to build on that progress by creating a better bargain for responsible, middle class homeowners. The President announced steps he will take to strengthen the housing market, and now Congress must act to help make homeownership a source of pride and middle class security for generations to come.

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, August 10, 2013.

Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
August 10, 2013

 

Hi, everybody.  For the past few weeks, I’ve been visiting folks across America to talk about what we need to do as a country to secure a better bargain for the middle class. 

I’ve been laying out my ideas for how we can build on the cornerstones of what it means to be middle class in America.  A good job.  A good education.  Affordable health care when you get sick.  A secure retirement even if you’re not rich.  And the chance to own your own home. 

This week, I went to Arizona and California, two of the states hit hardest when the housing bubble burst, triggering the recession.  All across the country, millions of responsible Americans were hurt badly by the reckless actions of others.  Home values plummeted. Construction workers were laid off.  And many families lost their homes. 

Over the past four years, we’ve worked to help millions of responsible homeowners get back on their feet.  And while we’re not where we need to be yet, our housing market is beginning to heal.  Home prices and sales are rising. Construction is up.  Foreclosures are down.  Millions of families have come up for air because they’re no longer underwater on their mortgages. 

Now we have to build on this progress.  Congress should give every American the chance to refinance at today’s low rates.  We should help more qualified families get a mortgage and buy their first home.  We should get construction workers back on the job rebuilding communities hit hardest by the crisis.  And we should make sure that folks who don’t want to buy a home have  decent, affordable places to rent. 

As home prices rise, we have to turn the page on the bubble-and-bust mentality that created this mess, and build a housing system that’s rock-solid and rewards responsibility for generations to come.  We need to wind down the companies known as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, make sure private capital plays a bigger role in the mortgage market, and end the era of expecting a bailout after your pursuit of profit puts the whole country at risk. We need to preserve access to safe and simple mortgages like the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage.  We need to keep laying down rules of the road that protect homeowners when they’re making the biggest purchase of their lives.  And finally, Congress needs to confirm Mel Watt to be our nation’s top housing regulator, so that he can protect consumers and help responsible lenders provide credit. 

No program or policy will solve all the problems in a multi-trillion dollar housing market, and it will take time to fully recover.  But if we work together, we can make a home a source of pride and middle-class security again.  And if Washington is willing to set aside politics and focus on what really matters, we can rebuild an economy where if you work hard, you can get ahead.

Thanks, and have a great weekend.

###

 

Weekly Address: A Better Bargain for Responsible, Middle Class Homeowners

In this week’s address, President Obama says that the housing market is starting to heal, and now it’s time to build on that progress by creating a better bargain for responsible, middle class homeowners. The President announced steps he will take to strengthen the housing market, and now Congress must act to help make homeownership a source of pride and middle class security for generations to come.

Transcript | Download mp4 | Download mp3

Related Topics: Economy, Housing

Weekly Address: A Better Bargain for Responsible, Middle Class Homeowners

August 10, 2013 | 3:00 | Public Domain

In this week's address, President Obama says that the housing market is starting to heal -- and that it’s time to build on that progress by creating a better bargain for responsible, middle class homeowners.

Download mp4 (108MB) | mp3 (7MB)

Read the Transcript

Weekly Address: A Better Bargain for Responsible, Middle Class Homeowners

WASHINGTON, DC— In this week’s address, President Obama said that the housing market is starting to heal, and now it’s time to build on that progress by creating a better bargain for responsible, middle class homeowners. The President announced steps he will take to strengthen the housing market, and now Congress must act to help make homeownership a source of pride and middle class security for generations to come.

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, August 10, 2013.

Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
August 10, 2013

 

Hi, everybody.  For the past few weeks, I’ve been visiting folks across America to talk about what we need to do as a country to secure a better bargain for the middle class. 

I’ve been laying out my ideas for how we can build on the cornerstones of what it means to be middle class in America.  A good job.  A good education.  Affordable health care when you get sick.  A secure retirement even if you’re not rich.  And the chance to own your own home. 

This week, I went to Arizona and California, two of the states hit hardest when the housing bubble burst, triggering the recession.  All across the country, millions of responsible Americans were hurt badly by the reckless actions of others.  Home values plummeted. Construction workers were laid off.  And many families lost their homes. 

Over the past four years, we’ve worked to help millions of responsible homeowners get back on their feet.  And while we’re not where we need to be yet, our housing market is beginning to heal.  Home prices and sales are rising. Construction is up.  Foreclosures are down.  Millions of families have come up for air because they’re no longer underwater on their mortgages. 

Now we have to build on this progress.  Congress should give every American the chance to refinance at today’s low rates.  We should help more qualified families get a mortgage and buy their first home.  We should get construction workers back on the job rebuilding communities hit hardest by the crisis.  And we should make sure that folks who don’t want to buy a home have  decent, affordable places to rent. 

As home prices rise, we have to turn the page on the bubble-and-bust mentality that created this mess, and build a housing system that’s rock-solid and rewards responsibility for generations to come.  We need to wind down the companies known as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, make sure private capital plays a bigger role in the mortgage market, and end the era of expecting a bailout after your pursuit of profit puts the whole country at risk. We need to preserve access to safe and simple mortgages like the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage.  We need to keep laying down rules of the road that protect homeowners when they’re making the biggest purchase of their lives.  And finally, Congress needs to confirm Mel Watt to be our nation’s top housing regulator, so that he can protect consumers and help responsible lenders provide credit. 

No program or policy will solve all the problems in a multi-trillion dollar housing market, and it will take time to fully recover.  But if we work together, we can make a home a source of pride and middle-class security again.  And if Washington is willing to set aside politics and focus on what really matters, we can rebuild an economy where if you work hard, you can get ahead.

Thanks, and have a great weekend.

###

 

Close Transcript

President Obama Holds a Press Conference

August 09, 2013 | 52:43 | Public Domain

President Obama answers question from the press in the East Room.

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Read the Transcript

Remarks by the President in a Press Conference

East Room

3:09 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, everybody. Please have a seat.

Over the past few weeks, I’ve been talking about what I believe should be our number-one priority as a country -- building a better bargain for the middle class and for Americans who want to work their way into the middle class. At the same time, I’m focused on my number-one responsibility as Commander-in-Chief, and that's keeping the American people safe. And in recent days, we’ve been reminded once again about the threats to our nation.

As I said at the National Defense University back in May, in meeting those threats we have to strike the right balance between protecting our security and preserving our freedoms. And as part of this rebalancing, I called for a review of our surveillance programs. Unfortunately, rather than an orderly and lawful process to debate these issues and come up with appropriate reforms, repeated leaks of classified information have initiated the debate in a very passionate, but not always fully informed way.

Now, keep in mind that as a senator, I expressed a healthy skepticism about these programs, and as President, I’ve taken steps to make sure they have strong oversight by all three branches of government and clear safeguards to prevent abuse and protect the rights of the American people. But given the history of abuse by governments, it’s right to ask questions about surveillance -- particularly as technology is reshaping every aspect of our lives.

I’m also mindful of how these issues are viewed overseas, because American leadership around the world depends upon the example of American democracy and American openness -- because what makes us different from other countries is not simply our ability to secure our nation, it’s the way we do it -- with open debate and democratic process.

In other words, it’s not enough for me, as President, to have confidence in these programs. The American people need to have confidence in them as well. And that's why, over the last few weeks, I’ve consulted members of Congress who come at this issue from many different perspectives. I’ve asked the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board to review where our counterterrorism efforts and our values come into tension, and I directed my national security team to be more transparent and to pursue reforms of our laws and practices.

And so, today, I’d like to discuss four specific steps -- not all inclusive, but some specific steps that we’re going to be taking very shortly to move the debate forward.

First, I will work with Congress to pursue appropriate reforms to Section 215 of the Patriot Act -- the program that collects telephone records. As I’ve said, this program is an important tool in our effort to disrupt terrorist plots. And it does not allow the government to listen to any phone calls without a warrant. But given the scale of this program, I understand the concerns of those who would worry that it could be subject to abuse. So after having a dialogue with members of Congress and civil libertarians, I believe that there are steps we can take to give the American people additional confidence that there are additional safeguards against abuse.

For instance, we can take steps to put in place greater oversight, greater transparency, and constraints on the use of this authority. So I look forward to working with Congress to meet those objectives.

Second, I’ll work with Congress to improve the public’s confidence in the oversight conducted by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, known as the FISC. The FISC was created by Congress to provide judicial review of certain intelligence activities so that a federal judge must find that our actions are consistent with the Constitution. However, to build greater confidence, I think we should consider some additional changes to the FISC.

One of the concerns that people raise is that a judge reviewing a request from the government to conduct programmatic surveillance only hears one side of the story -- may tilt it too far in favor of security, may not pay enough attention to liberty. And while I’ve got confidence in the court and I think they’ve done a fine job, I think we can provide greater assurances that the court is looking at these issues from both perspectives -- security and privacy.

So, specifically, we can take steps to make sure civil liberties concerns have an independent voice in appropriate cases by ensuring that the government’s position is challenged by an adversary.

Number three, we can, and must, be more transparent. So I’ve directed the intelligence community to make public as much information about these programs as possible. We’ve already declassified unprecedented information about the NSA, but we can go further. So at my direction, the Department of Justice will make public the legal rationale for the government’s collection activities under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. The NSA is taking steps to put in place a full-time civil liberties and privacy officer, and released information that details its mission, authorities, and oversight. And finally, the intelligence community is creating a website that will serve as a hub for further transparency, and this will give Americans and the world the ability to learn more about what our intelligence community does and what it doesn’t do, how it carries out its mission, and why it does so.

Fourth, we’re forming a high-level group of outside experts to review our entire intelligence and communications technologies. We need new thinking for a new era. We now have to unravel terrorist plots by finding a needle in the haystack of global telecommunications. And meanwhile, technology has given governments -- including our own -- unprecedented capability to monitor communications.

So I am tasking this independent group to step back and review our capabilities -- particularly our surveillance technologies. And they’ll consider how we can maintain the trust of the people, how we can make sure that there absolutely is no abuse in terms of how these surveillance technologies are used, ask how surveillance impacts our foreign policy -- particularly in an age when more and more information is becoming public. And they will provide an interim report in 60 days and a final report by the end of this year, so that we can move forward with a better understanding of how these programs impact our security, our privacy, and our foreign policy.

So all these steps are designed to ensure that the American people can trust that our efforts are in line with our interests and our values. And to others around the world, I want to make clear once again that America is not interested in spying on ordinary people. Our intelligence is focused, above all, on finding the information that’s necessary to protect our people, and -- in many cases -- protect our allies.

It’s true we have significant capabilities. What’s also true is we show a restraint that many governments around the world don't even think to do, refuse to show -- and that includes, by the way, some of America’s most vocal critics. We shouldn’t forget the difference between the ability of our government to collect information online under strict guidelines and for narrow purposes, and the willingness of some other governments to throw their own citizens in prison for what they say online.

And let me close with one additional thought. The men and women of our intelligence community work every single day to keep us safe because they love this country and believe in our values. They're patriots. And I believe that those who have lawfully raised their voices on behalf of privacy and civil liberties are also patriots who love our country and want it to live up to our highest ideals. So this is how we’re going to resolve our differences in the United States -- through vigorous public debate, guided by our Constitution, with reverence for our history as a nation of laws, and with respect for the facts.

So, with that, I’m going to take some questions. And let’s see who we’ve got here. We’re going to start with Julie Pace of AP.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. I wanted to ask about some of the foreign policy fallout from the disclosure of the NSA programs that you discussed. Your spokesman said yesterday that there’s no question that the U.S. relationship with Russia has gotten worse since Vladimir Putin took office. How much of that decline do you attribute directly to Mr. Putin, given that you seem to have had a good working relationship with his predecessor? Also will there be any additional punitive measures taken against Russia for granting asylum to Edward Snowden? Or is canceling the September summit really all you can do given the host of issues the U.S. needs Russian cooperation for? Thank you.

THE PRESIDENT: Good. I think there’s always been some tension in the U.S.-Russian relationship after the fall of the Soviet Union. There’s been cooperation in some areas; there’s been competition in others.

It is true that in my first four years, in working with President Medvedev, we made a lot of progress. We got START done -- or START II done. We were able to cooperate together on Iran sanctions. They provided us help in terms of supplying our troops in Afghanistan. We were able to get Russia into the WTO -- which is not just good for Russia, it’s good for our companies and businesses because they're more likely then to follow international norms and rules. So there's been a lot of good work that has been done and that is going to continue to be done. What's also true is, is that when President Putin -- who was prime minister when Medvedev was president -- came back into power I think we saw more rhetoric on the Russian side that was anti-American, that played into some of the old stereotypes about the Cold War contests between the United States and Russia. And I've encouraged Mr. Putin to think forward as opposed to backwards on those issues -- with mixed success.

And I think the latest episode is just one more in a number of emerging differences that we've seen over the last several months around Syria, around human rights issues, where it is probably appropriate for us to take a pause, reassess where it is that Russia is going, what our core interests are, and calibrate the relationship so that we're doing things that are good for the United States and hopefully good for Russia as well, but recognizing that there just are going to be some differences and we're not going to be able to completely disguise them.

And that's okay. Keep in mind that although I'm not attending the summit, I'll still be going to St. Petersburg because Russia is hosting the G20. That's important business in terms of our economy and our jobs and all the issues that are of concern to Americans.

I know that one question that's been raised is how do we approach the Olympics. I want to just make very clear right now I do not think it's appropriate to boycott the Olympics. We've got a bunch of Americans out there who are training hard, who are doing everything they can to succeed. Nobody is more offended than me by some of the anti-gay and lesbian legislation that you've been seeing in Russia. But as I said just this week, I've spoken out against that not just with respect to Russia but a number of other countries where we continue to do work with them, but we have a strong disagreement on this issue.

And one of the things I'm really looking forward to is maybe some gay and lesbian athletes bringing home the gold or silver or bronze, which I think would go a long way in rejecting the kind of attitudes that we're seeing there. And if Russia doesn't have gay or lesbian athletes, then it probably makes their team weaker.

Q Are there going to be any additional punitive measures for Russia, beyond canceling the summit?

THE PRESIDENT: Keep in mind that our decision to not participate in the summit was not simply around Mr. Snowden. It had to do with the fact that, frankly, on a whole range of issues where we think we can make some progress, Russia has not moved. And so we don't consider that strictly punitive.

We're going to assess where the relationship can advance U.S. interests and increase peace and stability and prosperity around the world. Where it can, we’re going to keep on working with them. Where we have differences, we’re going to say so clearly. And my hope is, is that over time, Mr. Putin and Russia recognize that rather than a zero-sum competition, in fact, if the two countries are working together we can probably advance the betterment of both peoples.

Chuck Todd.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. Given that you just announced a whole bunch of reforms based on essentially the leaks that Edward Snowden made on all of these surveillance programs, is that change -- is your mindset changed about him? Is he now more a whistle-blower than he is a hacker, as you called him at one point, or somebody that shouldn’t be filed charges? And should he be provided more protection? Is he a patriot? You just used those words. And then just to follow up on the personal -- I want to follow up on a personal --

THE PRESIDENT: Okay, I want to make sure -- everybody is asking one question it would be helpful.

Q No, I understand. It was a part of a question that you didn’t answer. Can you get stuff done with Russia, big stuff done, without having a good personal relationship with Putin?

THE PRESIDENT: I don’t have a bad personal relationship with Putin. When we have conversations, they’re candid, they’re blunt; oftentimes, they’re constructive. I know the press likes to focus on body language and he’s got that kind of slouch, looking like the bored kid in the back of the classroom. But the truth is, is that when we’re in conversations together, oftentimes it’s very productive.

So the issue here really has to do with where do they want to take Russia -- it’s substantive on a policy front. And --

Q (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT: No. Right now, this is just a matter of where Mr. Putin and the Russian people want to go. I think if they are looking forward into the 21st century and how they can advance their economy, and make sure that some of our joint concerns around counterterrorism are managed effectively, then I think we can work together. If issues are framed as if the U.S. is for it then Russia should be against it, or we’re going to be finding ways where we can poke each other at every opportunity, then probably we don’t get as much stuff done.

See, now I’ve forgotten your first question, which presumably was the more important one. No, I don’t think Mr. Snowden was a patriot. As I said in my opening remarks, I called for a thorough review of our surveillance operations before Mr. Snowden made these leaks.

My preference -- and I think the American people’s preference -- would have been for a lawful, orderly examination of these laws, a thoughtful fact-based debate that would then lead us to a better place. Because I never made claims that all the surveillance technologies that have developed since the time some of these laws had been put in place somehow didn't require potentially some additional reforms. That's exactly what I called for.

So the fact is, is that Mr. Snowden has been charged with three felonies. If, in fact, he believes that what he did was right, then, like every American citizen, he can come here, appear before the court with a lawyer and make his case. If the concern was that somehow this was the only way to get this information out to the public, I signed an executive order well before Mr. Snowden leaked this information that provided whistleblower protection to the intelligence community -- for the first time. So there were other avenues available for somebody whose conscience was stirred and thought that they needed to question government actions.

But having said that, once the leaks have happened, what we’ve seen is information come out in dribs and in drabs, sometimes coming out sideways. Once the information is out, the administration comes in, tries to correct the record. But by that time, it’s too late or we’ve moved on, and a general impression has, I think, taken hold not only among the American public but also around the world that somehow we’re out there willy-nilly just sucking in information on everybody and doing what we please with it.

That's not the case. Our laws specifically prohibit us from surveilling U.S. persons without a warrant. And there are a whole range of safeguards that have been put in place to make sure that that basic principle is abided by.

But what is clear is that whether, because of the instinctive bias of the intelligence community to keep everything very close -- and probably what’s a fair criticism is my assumption that if we had checks and balances from the courts and Congress, that that traditional system of checks and balances would be enough to give people assurance that these programs were run probably -- that assumption I think proved to be undermined by what happened after the leaks. I think people have questions about this program.

And so, as a consequence, I think it is important for us to go ahead and answer these questions. What I’m going to be pushing the IC to do is rather than have a trunk come out here and leg come out there and a tail come out there, let’s just put the whole elephant out there so people know exactly what they're looking at. Let’s examine what is working, what’s not, are there additional protections that can be put in place, and let’s move forward.

And there’s no doubt that Mr. Snowden’s leaks triggered a much more rapid and passionate response than would have been the case if I had simply appointed this review board to go through, and I had sat down with Congress and we had worked this thing through. It would have been less exciting. It would not have generated as much press. I actually think we would have gotten to the same place, and we would have done so without putting at risk our national security and some very vital ways that we are able to get intelligence that we need to secure the country.

Major Garrett.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. I’d like to ask you about this debate that's playing itself out in editorial pages, in the blogosphere, even in the Senate Democratic caucus, about the choice you eventually will make for the next Federal Reserve chairman. There is a perception among Democrats that Larry Summers has the inside track, and perhaps you’ve made some assurances to him about that. Janet Yellen is the vice chair of the Federal Reserve. There are many women in the Senate who are Democrats who believe that breaking the glass ceiling there would be historic and important.

THE PRESIDENT: Right.

Q Are you annoyed by this sort of roiling debate? Do you find it any way unseemly? And do you believe this will be one of the most important -- if not the most important -- economic decisions you’ll make in the remainder of your presidency?

THE PRESIDENT: It is definitely one of the most important economic decisions that I’ll make in the remainder of my presidency. The Federal Reserve chairman is not just one of the most important economic policymakers in America, he or she is one of the most important policymakers in the world. And that person presumably will stay on after I’m President. So this, along with Supreme Court appointments, is probably as important a decision as I make as President.

I have a range of outstanding candidates. You’ve mentioned two of them -- Mr. Summers and Mr. Yellen -- Ms. Yellen. And they're both terrific people.

I think the perception that Mr. Summers might have an inside track simply had to do with a bunch of attacks that I was hearing on Mr. Summers preemptively, which is sort of a standard Washington exercise, that I don't like. Because when somebody has worked hard for me and worked hard on behalf of the American people, and I know the quality of those people, and I see them getting slapped around in the press for no reason -- before they’ve even been nominated for anything -- then I want to make sure that somebody is standing up for them. I felt the same way when people were attacking Susan Rice before she was nominated for anything. So I tend to defend folks who I think have done a good job and don't deserve attacks.

But I consider them both outstanding candidates. My main criteria -- I’ve stated this before, but I want to repeat it -- my main criteria for the Fed Reserve chairman is somebody who understands they’ve got a dual mandate. A critical part of the job is making sure that we keep inflation in check, that our monetary policy is sound, that the dollar is sound. Those are all critical components of the job. And we’ve seen what happens when the Fed is not paying attention. We saw, prior to Paul Volcker coming into place, inflation shooting up in ways that really damaged the real economy.

But the other mandate is full employment. And right now, if you look at the biggest challenges we have, the challenge is not inflation; the challenge is we’ve still got too many people out of work, too many long-term unemployed, too much slack in the economy, and we’re not growing as fast as we should. And so I want a Fed chairman who’s able to look at those issues and have a perspective that keeps an eye on inflation, makes sure that we’re not seeing artificial bubbles in place, but also recognizing, you know what, a big part of my job right now is to make sure the economy is growing quickly and robustly, and is sustained and durable, so that people who work hard in this country are able to find a job.

And, frankly, I think both Larry Summers and Janet Yellen are highly qualified candidates. There are a couple of other candidates who are highly qualified as well. I’ll make the decision in the fall.

Q Can you see how the perception of you defending Larry Summers as vigorously as you just did and in other quarters lead some to believe you’ve already made up your mind?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, except I just told you I haven’t. Major, I’d defend you if somebody was saying something that wasn’t true about you. (Laughter.) I really would. In fact, I’ve done that in the White House some times. (Laughter.)

Carol Lee. And, Carol, congratulations on Hudson.

Q Thank you, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT: Do you have pictures?

Q I do. I’ll have to show you --

THE PRESIDENT: Okay, I’m going to have to see them.

Q I appreciate you making it a slow news week.

I wanted to ask you about your evolution on the surveillance issues. I mean, part of what you’re talking about today is restoring the public trust. And the public has seen you evolve from when you were in the U.S. Senate to now. And even as recently as June, you said that the process was such that people should be comfortable with it, and now you’re saying you’re making these reforms and people should be comfortable with those. So why should the public trust you on this issue, and why did you change your position multiple times?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think it’s important to say, Carol, first of all, I haven’t evolved in my assessment of the actual programs. I consistently have said that when I came into office I evaluated them. Some of these programs I had been critical of when I was in the Senate. When I looked through specifically what was being done, my determination was that the two programs in particular that had been at issue, 215 and 702, offered valuable intelligence that helps us protect the American people and they're worth preserving. What we also saw was that some bolts needed to be tightened up on some of the programs, so we initiated some additional oversight, reforms, compliance officers, audits and so forth.

And if you look at the reports -- even the disclosures that Mr. Snowden has put forward -- all the stories that have been written, what you're not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs and listening in on people's phone calls or inappropriately reading people's emails. What you're hearing about is the prospect that these could be abused. Now, part of the reason they're not abused is because these checks are in place, and those abuses would be against the law and would be against the orders of the FISC.

Having said that, though, if you are outside of the intelligence community, if you are the ordinary person and you start seeing a bunch of headlines saying, U.S.-Big Brother looking down on you, collecting telephone records, et cetera, well, understandably, people would be concerned. I would be, too, if I wasn't inside the government.

And so in light of the changed environment where a whole set of questions have been raised, some in the most sensationalized manner possible, where these leaks are released drip by drip, one a week, to kind of maximize attention and see if they can catch us at some imprecision on something -- in light of that, it makes sense for us to go ahead, lay out what exactly we're doing, have a discussion with Congress, have a discussion with industry -- which is also impacted by this -- have a discussion with civil libertarians, and see can we do this better.

I think the main thing I want to emphasize is I don't have an interest and the people at the NSA don't have an interest in doing anything other than making sure that where we can prevent a terrorist attack, where we can get information ahead of time, that we're able to carry out that critical task. We do not have an interest in doing anything other than that. And we've tried to set up a system that is as failsafe as so far at least we've been able to think of to make sure that these programs are not abused.

But people may have better ideas and people may want to jigger slightly sort of the balance between the information that we can get versus the incremental encroachments on privacy that if haven't already taken place might take place in a future administration, or as technologies develop further.

And the other thing that’s happening is, is that as technology develops further, technology itself may provide us some additional safeguards. So, for example, if people don’t have confidence that the law, the checks and balances of the court and Congress are sufficient to give us confidence that government is not snooping, well, maybe we can embed technologies in there that prevent the snooping regardless of what government wants to do. I mean, there may be some technological fixes that provide another layer of assurance.

And so those are the kinds of things that I’m looking forward to having a conversation about.

Q Can you understand, though, why some people might not trust what you're saying right now about wanting to --

THE PRESIDENT: No, I can’t.

Q -- that they should be comfortable with the process?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, the fact that I said that the programs are operating in a way that prevents abuse, that continues to be true, without the reforms. The question is how do I make the American people more comfortable.

If I tell Michelle that I did the dishes -- now, granted, in the White House I don’t do the dishes that much -- (laughter) -- but back in the day -- and she’s a little skeptical, well, I’d like her to trust me, but maybe I need to bring her back and show her the dishes and not just have her take my word for it.

And so the program is -- I am comfortable that the program currently is not being abused. I’m comfortable that if the American people examined exactly what was taking place, how it was being used, what the safeguards were, that they would say, you know what, these folks are following the law and doing what they say they’re doing.

But it is absolutely true that with the expansion of technology -- this is an area that’s moving very quickly -- with the revelations that have depleted public trust, that if there are some additional things that we can do to build that trust back up, then we should do them.

Jonathan Karl.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. You have said that core al Qaeda has been decimated, that its leaders are on the run. Now that we’ve seen this terror threat that has resulted in embassies closed throughout the Arab world, much of Africa, do you still believe that al Qaeda has been decimated? And if I can ask in the interest of transparency, can you tell us about these drone strikes that we’ve seen over the last couple of weeks in Yemen?

THE PRESIDENT: What I said in the same National Defense University speech back in May that I referred to earlier is that core al Qaeda is on its heels, has been decimated. But what I also said was that al Qaeda and other extremists have metastasized into regional groups that can pose significant dangers.

And I’d refer you back to that speech just back in May where I said specifically that although they are less likely to be able to carry out spectacular homeland attacks like 9/11, they have the capacity to go after our embassies. They have the capacity, potentially, to go after our businesses. They have the capacity to be destabilizing and disruptive in countries where the security apparatus is weak. And that’s exactly what we are seeing right now.

So it’s entirely consistent to say that this tightly organized and relatively centralized al Qaeda that attacked us on 9/11 has been broken apart and is very weak and does not have a lot of operational capacity, and to say we still have these regional organizations like AQAP that can pose a threat, that can drive potentially a truck bomb into an embassy wall and can kill some people.

And so that requires us, then, to make sure that we have a strategy that is strengthening those partners so that they’ve got their own capacity to deal with what are potentially manageable regional threats if these countries are a little bit stronger and have more effective CT and so forth. It means that we’ve got to continue to be vigilant and go after known terrorists who are potentially carrying out plots or are going to strengthen their capacity over time -- because they’re always testing the boundaries of, well, maybe we can try this, maybe we can do that. So this is a ongoing process. We are not going to completely eliminate terrorism. What we can do is to weaken it and to strengthen our partnerships in such a way that it does not pose the kind of horrible threat that we saw on 9/11.

And I’m not going to discuss specific operations that have taken place. Again, in my speech in May, I was very specific about how we make these determinations about potential lethal strikes, so I would refer you to that speech.

Q So you won’t even confirm that we carried out drone strikes in Yemen?

THE PRESIDENT: I will not have a discussion about operational issues.

Ed Henry.

Q I hope you would defend me as well.

THE PRESIDENT: I would.

Q Okay, thank you. I want to ask you about two important dates that are coming up. October 1st you’ve got to implement your signature health care law. You recently decided on your own to delay a key part of that. And I wonder, if you pick and choose what parts of the law to implement, couldn’t your successor down the road pick and choose whether they’ll implement your law and keep it in place?

And on September 11th we’ll have the first anniversary of Benghazi. And you said on September 12th, “Make no mistake, we’ll bring to justice the killers who attacked our people.” Eleven months later, where are they, sir?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I also said that we’d get bin Laden, and I didn’t get him in 11 months. So we have informed, I think, the public that there’s a sealed indictment. It’s sealed for a reason. But we are intent on capturing those who carried out this attack, and we’re going to stay on it until we get them.

Q And you’re close to having suspects in custody?

THE PRESIDENT: I will leave it at that. But this remains a top priority for us. Anybody who attacks Americans, anybody who kills, tragically, four Americans who were serving us in a very dangerous place, we’re going to do everything we can to get those who carried out those attacks.

With respect to health care, I didn’t simply choose to delay this on my own. This was in consultation with businesses all across the country, many of whom are supportive of the Affordable Care Act, but -- and many of whom, by the way, are already providing health insurance to their employees but were concerned about the operational details of changing their HR operations, if they’ve got a lot of employees, which could be costly for them, and them suggesting that there may be easier ways to do this.

Now, what’s true, Ed, is, is that in a normal political environment, it would have been easier for me to simply call up the Speaker and say, you know what, this is a tweak that doesn’t go to the essence of the law -- it has to do with, for example, are we able to simplify the attestation of employers as to whether they’re already providing health insurance or not -- it looks like there may be some better ways to do this; let's make a technical change to the law. That would be the normal thing that I would prefer to do.

But we're not in a normal atmosphere around here when it comes to "Obamacare." We did have the executive authority to do so, and we did so. But this doesn't go to the core of implementation. Let me tell you what is the core of implementation that's already taken place. As we speak, right now, for the 85 percent of Americans who already have health insurance, they are benefiting from being able to keep their kid on their plan if their kid is 26 or younger. That's benefiting millions of young people around the country, which is why lack of insurance among young people has actually gone down. That's in large part attributable to the steps that we've taken.

You've got millions of people who have received rebates, because part of the Affordable Care Act was to say that if an insurance company isn't spending 80 percent of your premium on your health care, you get some money back. And, lo and behold, people have been getting their money back. It means that folks who have been bumping up with lifetime limits on their insurance, that it leaves them vulnerable. That doesn't exist.

Seniors have been getting discounts on their prescription drugs. That's happening right now. Free preventive care -- mammograms, contraception. That's happening right now. I met a young man today on a bill signing I was doing with the student loan bill who came up to me and said thank you -- he couldn't have been more than 25, 26 years old -- thank you; I have cancer, thanks to the Affordable Care Act working with the California program, I was able to get health care and I'm now in remission. And so right now people are already benefiting.

Now, what happens on October 1st, in 53 days, is for the remaining 15 percent of the population that doesn’t have health insurance, they're going to be able to go on a website or call up a call center and sign up for affordable quality health insurance at a significantly cheaper rate than what they can get right now on the individual market. And if even with lower premiums they still can't afford it, we're going to be able to provide them with a tax credit to help them buy it. And between October 1st into March there will be an open enrollment period in which millions of Americans for the first time are going to be able to get affordable health care.

Now, I think the really interesting question is why it is that my friends in the other party have made the idea of preventing these people from getting health care their holy grail, their number-one priority. The one unifying principle in the Republican Party at the moment is making sure that 30 million people don't have health care and, presumably, repealing all those benefits I just mentioned -- kids staying on their parents' plan; seniors getting discounts on their prescription drugs; I guess a return to lifetime limits on insurance; people with preexisting conditions continuing to be blocked from being able to get health insurance.

That's hard to understand as an agenda that is going to strengthen our middle class. At least they used to say, well, we're going to replace it with something better. There’s not even a pretense now that they're going to replace it with something better.

The notion is simply that those 30 million people, or the 150 million who are benefiting from the other aspects of Affordable Care, will be better off without it. That's their assertion -- not backed by fact, not backed by any evidence. It’s just become an ideological fixation.

Well, I tell you what, they're wrong about that. There is no doubt that in implementing the Affordable Care Act, a program of this significance, there are going to be some glitches. No doubt about it. There are going to be things where we say, you know what, we should have thought of that earlier. Or this would work a little bit better. Or this needs an adjustment. That was true of Social Security. That was true of Medicare. That was true of the Children’s Health Insurance Program. That was true of the prescription drug program, Part D, that was rolled out by a Republican President and supported by Republicans who are still in the House of Representatives. That's true, by the way, of a car company rolling out a new car. It’s true of Apple rolling out the new iPad.

So you will be able to, whenever you want during the course of the next six months and probably the next year, find occasions where you say, ah-ha, you know what, that could have been done a little bit better. Or that thing, they're kind of making an administrative change; that's now how it was originally thought this thing was going to work. Yes, exactly. Because our goal is to actually deliver high-quality, affordable health care for people and to reform the system so costs start going down and people start getting a better bang for the buck. And I make no apologies for that.

And let me just make one last point about this. The idea that you would shut down the government unless you prevent 30 million people from getting health care is a bad idea. What you should be thinking about is how can we advance and improve ways for middle-class families to have some security so that if they work hard, they can get ahead and their kids can get ahead.

Jessica Yellin.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. And following on what you just said, Republicans in the House might give you that choice soon to either allow the government to shut down or see Obamacare defunded. Would you choose to let the government shut down to ensure that Obamacare remains funded?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I’m not going to engage in hypotheticals. I can tell you that the American people would have difficulty understanding why we would weaken our economy, shut down our government, shut down vital services, have people who are not getting paid who then can't go to restaurants or shop for clothes, or all the other things that we’re doing here because Republicans have determined that they don't want to see these folks get health care.

Again, they used to say they had a replacement. That never actually arrived, right? I mean, I’ve been hearing about this whole replacement thing for two years -- now I just don’t hear about it, because basically they don’t have an agenda to provide health insurance to people at affordable rates. And the idea that you would shut down the government at a time when the recovery is getting some traction; where we’re growing, although not as fast as we need to; where the housing market is recovering, although not as fast as we would like; that we would precipitate another crisis here in Washington that no economist thinks is a good idea -- I’m assuming that they will not take that path. I have confidence that common sense, in the end, will prevail.

Q And if they do, sir, you will have to make that choice?

THE PRESIDENT: We’ll see what happens. We’ve got a couple of months.

Q When’s the last time you spoke to Speaker Boehner about the budget?

THE PRESIDENT: Fairly recently, yes. Probably right before they left.

Okay. Scott Horseley.

Q Thank you, Mr. President. Part of the political logic behind immigration reform was the strong showing by Latino voters last November. That doesn’t seem to resonate with a lot of House Republicans who represent overwhelmingly white districts. What other political leverage can you bring to bear to help move a bill in the House?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, we’ve got an economic report that shows that our economy would be a trillion dollars stronger if we get immigration reform done. We’ve got evidence that our housing market would be stronger if immigrants are in a situation in which, having paid a fine, having paid back taxes, that they now have the ability to actually enter into the housing market. We’ve got strong evidence that our technological and research edge would be better if we get immigration reform done.

We know that the Senate bill strengthens border security, puts unprecedented resources on top of the unprecedented resources I’ve already put into border security. So if your main priority is border security, I’d think you’d want to vote for this bill. We know that the Senate bill creates a system in which employers are held accountable for when they hire undocumented workers. This is something that people say is a bad thing. I agree. Let’s make sure that that system for holding employers accountable is in place.

So when I hear the opposition to immigration reform, I just run through the list of things they’re concerned about, I look at what the Senate bill does, and I say to myself, you know what, the Senate bill actually improves the situation on every issue that they say they’re concerned about.

Now, what they may argue is it doesn’t solve the problem 100 percent. I don’t know a law that solves a problem 100 percent. Social Security lifted millions of seniors out of poverty, but there are still some poor seniors. The Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act drastically reduced discrimination in America, but there’s still discrimination. That doesn’t make them bad laws, it just means that there are very few human problems that are 100 percent solvable.

So what I see right now is a strong bipartisan vote coming out of the Senate. I think that the Speaker and others have said they need to do something, and I’d urge, when they get back, to do something -- put forward a bill that has an opportunity to actually pass. It may not be precisely what’s in the Senate bill. My preference would be for them to go ahead and call the Senate bill. But if they’ve got some additional ideas, I think the Senate is happy to consider them. And get that bill on the floor, put it up for a vote.

I am absolutely certain that the votes for the Senate bill -- which strengthens border security; demands responsibility from undocumented workers to pay a fine, pay a penalty and get to the back of the line; reforms our legal immigration system; holds employers accountable -- I am absolutely confident that if that bill was on the floor of the House, it would pass.

So the challenge right now is not that there aren’t a majority of House members, just like a majority of Senate members, who aren’t prepared to support this bill. The problem is internal Republican caucus politics. And that’s what the American people don’t want us to be worrying about. Don’t worry about your Washington politics. Solve problems.

And this is one where you’ve actually got some pretty broad consensus. I don’t know an issue where you’ve got labor, the Chamber of Commerce, evangelicals, student groups -- you name it -- supportive of a bill. Let’s get it done.

Thank you very much, everybody.

END 4:00 P.M. EDT

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President Obama Holds a Press Conference

President Obama took questions from the White House Press Corps today in the East Room of the White House, addressing a range of topics including the National Security Agency's role and reforms to intelligence gathering programs.

President Obama signs the "Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act of 2013

August 09, 2013 | 2:52 | Public Domain

President Obama signs H.R. 1911, the "Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act of 2013," during a ceremony in the Oval Office.

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Remarks by the President at Student Loans Bill Signing

Oval Office 
 
2:21 P.M. EDT
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, before I sign this, I just want to say thank you to this extraordinary coalition that helped make this signing possible.  I want to thank Chairman Kline, all the members of both House and Senate from both parties that came together to design a sensible, common-sense approach to keeping student interest rates at a reasonable level so that young people have a better opportunity to go to college, get the education that they need not only to better their own lives but also to strengthen the country’s economy.
 
And I want to thank the advocates, including some of the young people I suspect will be benefiting from lower student loans -- or lower student loan interest rates -- because without their voice, without their participation, we probably would not have gotten this bill done.
 
Last point I'll make, and I suspect the Senators and Congressmen behind me will agree with this, even though we've been able to stabilize the interest rates on student loans, our job is not done, because the cost of college remains extraordinarily high.  It’s out of reach for a lot of folks, and for those who do end up attending college, the amount of debt that young people are coming out of school with is a huge burden on them; it’s a burden on their families.  It makes it more difficult for them to buy a home.  It makes it more difficult for them if they want to start a business.  It has a depressive effect on the economy overall.  And we've got to do something about it.
 
So I'm going to be looking forward to engaging this same coalition to see if we can continue to take additional steps to reform our higher education system, and I'll have some more things to say about that in the weeks to come.
 
But for now, I want to celebrate what we accomplished here, and again, thank everybody here for their leadership in getting it done.  
 
(The bill is signed.)
 
Those of you who haven't seen me do this before -- (laughter) -- it is a real art form.  (Laughter.)  
 
SENATOR DURBIN:  Thank you, Mr. President -- I remember the 90-minute seminar in this office.  (Laughter.)  
 
THE PRESIDENT:  It was very interesting.  (Laughter.)  
 
It feels good signing bills -- I haven't done this in a while.  (Laughter.)  Hint, hint.  Hint, hint.  (Laughter.)  
 
SENATOR DURBIN:  How about a budget, Mr. President? 
 
THE PRESIDENT:  There you go.  That's what I'm talking about.  (Laughter.)  
 
All right, thank you, everybody.
 
END
2:25 P.M. EDT 
 

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