The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 3/12/2013

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:47 P.M. EDT
 
MR. CARNEY:  Good afternoon, everyone.  Thanks for being here.  Just a quick thing I want to mention at the top, if I may. Today, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to send the full Senate two more important pieces of the President's plan to reduce gun violence.  Providing districts with resources to make their schools safer and closing loopholes that allow felons, the mentally ill and others who should not have guns to avoid background checks are important measures that will help save lives.  We look forward to continuing to work with Congress on this and on the other important pieces of legislation that are part of the President's comprehensive plan to reduce gun violence.
 
And with that, I'll go to your questions.  Darlene.
 
Q    Thank you, Jay.  I wanted to start off by objecting to the decision this morning to limit the President's remarks to just the print pooler and not a broader pool.
 
MR. CARNEY:  I take your objection.  I think it was live-streamed, so everyone in America with electricity and a computer could see it today. 
 
Q    That's true, but -- 
 
Q    If it's live-streamed on whitehouse.gov, we should allow the TV cameras in as well.
 
MR. CARNEY:  I take your objection.
 
Q    And we also don't want to see a situation where live-streaming sort of takes the place of us actually being in where the President is --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, you know that's certainly not the case.  But I appreciate the point.
 
Q    Jay, what was the reason for it today?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, we made a decision based on the fact that it was live-streamed.  There's a print pooler there -- or was there -- and it was available for everyone to see.
 
Q    But many events have been live-streamed and you've let the pool in and any other reporters with hard passes in.  Why the change this time?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think it was just because of the logistics of this, and the fact that it was live-streamed and the print pooler was sent.  I would not read anything bigger than the decision today into today's decision. 
 
Q    On the gun vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee, how will -- will that factor into the President's discussions today with the Senate Democrats?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think it's safe to say that when the President meets with Senate Democrats, as he will in a little bit, he will discuss an array of topics.  I think he will commend the Senate Democrats for their focus and persistence in making sure that the Violence Against Women Act was reauthorized, and the President was very glad to be able to sign that. 
 
He will focus on the work that Senate Democrats have done with Senate Republicans to advance bipartisan, comprehensive immigration reform.  He will, I'm sure, as you note, Darlene, talk about the progress that Senate Democrats have made towards the goal of bipartisan measures to reduce gun violence in America.  And he will certainly discuss -- well, as I mentioned yesterday, he may bring up concerns he has about the unnecessary delays that have confronted our nominations, the historic delays.
 
Just yesterday, I believe, the Senate finally confirmed someone to the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals who was filibustered for something like 464 days.  So you would think there must have been something disturbing about his nomination, that there must have been great opposition to it.  Instead, he was voted and confirmed 91-0.  That I think is emblematic of a problem that we have in the confirmation process. 
 
He will also, of course, talk about budget and fiscal issues, the work that Senator Murray is doing on a budget for the Senate and the work that he is engaged in, discussing with lawmakers of both parties to try to find common ground on these issues -- on the need to reduce our deficit in a balanced way, the need to move forward with comprehensive immigration reform, to move forward with measures to reduce gun violence, to take action to ensure that we're investing in education and infrastructure and innovation -- the areas that will allow our economy to grow and create jobs in the future. 
 
There's a big agenda here and the American people want action on all of that.  So those will likely be the subjects. 
 
Q    So the Ryan budget, is there anything in there that you can provide that you would find positive about it, that might prompt some breakthrough on a major deficit reduction deal?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, as you know, the President had lunch with Chairman Ryan last week, as well as Congressman Van Hollen.  He is engaging with lawmakers of both parties and has, notably, had the dinner with Senate Republicans.  But the engagement is broader and deeper and continues.
 
We put out a statement today -- I put out a statement about our view of the Ryan budget.  And the President certainly believes that Congressman Ryan is sincere in what he believes his budget represents in terms of policy priorities, and he commends Congressman Ryan for the effort, but there is no question that the Ryan budget, again, represents a series of policy choices that this President profoundly disagrees with. 
 
As I noted in my statement, it aims to reduce the deficit, but the math doesn’t add up.  And you have a situation where you either have to -- as we saw last year when there was a proposal put forward by Congressman Ryan’s running mate, in order to lower the rates the way that he proposes, there is no way to do that in a revenue-neutral way without raising taxes substantially on middle-class families.  There is simply no way.  Outside economists made that clear last year.
 
The problem is more severe with this budget, because the fact is that Chairman Ryan takes as his baseline the increase in rates for the wealthiest Americans that was achieved through the fiscal cliff compromise and instead of going from -- therefore going from 35 percent down to 28 percent, which is what Governor Romney proposed in his tax reform plan that was untenable and would have resulted in massive tax hikes for the middle class, Chairman Ryan would make that cut from 39.6 to 25 percent and the result would be even more punishing for middle-class Americans.
 
On the other side, again, I guess it’s -- we look at the Ryan budget as a perfect example of why balance is so necessary, because this is the alternative to balance.  It results in unfair tax hikes on middle-class Americans and it results in an undue burden on middle-class Americans through the cuts envisioned either on education, or investments in infrastructure, and elsewhere -- and innovation -- and those cuts, of course, harm our future long term, our future growth.
 
But then on the entitlement side, voucherizing Medicare is an option the public I think overwhelmingly rejects -- rejected last year, rejected the year before, does not believe is good policy.  But beyond public disapproval, it does nothing to deal with the fundamental problem here, which is rising health care costs.  It actually exacerbates that problem, but shifts the burden from the Medicare program to seniors, asks them to pay the difference.  And that doesn't, obviously, keep true to the promise of the guarantee that the Medicare program represents. 
 
So we see a lot of differences.  There is no question.  But the President does believe that there is a consensus in America about the need for a balanced approach.  There is a consensus, a majority -- certainly a consensus in the Senate about the need for a balanced approach.  So Senate Democrats, House Democrats, the President, the public, and a lot of Senate Republicans have expressed interest in a balanced approach.  So for that reason, the President believes there is cause to continue the effort to try to find common ground and compromise.
 
Q    You’ve cited a number of things that the President will say today up on the Hill.  Is he going up there to give a speech, or is it a conversation?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think it’s a conversation, but he’ll certainly have some things to say at the top.  And he’ll interact with members, as he will, I believe, in his other meetings with both Democrats in the House and Republicans in the Senate and the House.
 
Yes, Jim.
 
Q    Jay, this morning the National Journal quoted a senior administration official who spoke anonymously and said about the President’s trips to the Hill and this outreach to Republicans, “This is a joke.  We’re wasting the President’s time and hours.  I hope you all (in the media) are happy because we’re doing it for you.”  Is this a show?  Does the President feel this is a joke?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I saw that story, Jim, and I appreciate the question because I have no idea who said that, but I can tell you that opinion has never been voiced in my presence, in the President’s presence, in the West Wing.  It does not represent the President’s view.  It does not represent the White House’s view, and it does not represent the administration’s view.
 
Q    And did you talk to the President personally about this to make sure that this was not his view?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I talk to the President every day about this very issue, and the answer is he believes strongly that it is important to engage with lawmakers of both parties in order to find common ground so that we can move forward not just on our budget issues, but on the other issues that confront us.  And there is great opportunity to do that.
 
We have seen progress on immigration reform.  We have seen progress, as I mentioned at the top, in the Congress, in the Senate on efforts to reduce gun violence.  We need to make progress on enhancing our energy independence.  We need to make progress on rebuilding our infrastructure, because it puts people to work now and it makes us more competitive economically in the future.  And there is reason to believe that we can do that. 
 
We’re not naïve.  There are disagreements and obstacles.  But the President is at the head of this effort because he believes deeply in it.  And that comment again, I’m not sure who said it, I have no idea, but it does not represent in any way the President’s view or the views of this White House.
 
Q    And about the Ryan budget, it does away with the President’s signature legislative achievement, health care reform.  And I was just curious -- does the President view or does the White House view that as bargaining in good faith?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I think the President believes that Chairman Ryan is sincere in his views.  I think many --
 
Q    Some people are calling it delusional.  Is that a word you’d use?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think it has been -- the House Republicans have voted more than 30 times to repeal Obamacare.  That seems at some point to be time not well spent. 
 
And the President believes it’s important to expand health insurance coverage to the millions of Americans who will be covered because of the Affordable Care Act.  And we have been moving forward with implementation of the Affordable Care Act, working with states around the country on establishment of exchanges, working with states around the country on the expansion of Medicaid coverage, and working with governors of both parties.  As you know, there has been some news in that regard just recently.
 
So again, we have profound differences at a substantive level with the budget proposed by Chairman Ryan.  It is in many ways a reiteration of his proposals of the past.  The biggest difference is that he’s able to take advantage of -- for baseline purposes and at least deficit reduction on paper -- the revenue increases that he opposed and the President put forward and the Medicare savings that he opposed and the President put forward. 
 
But what it doesn’t do is plausibly deal with deficit reduction in a way -- I mean, there’s a choice here.  Either you reduce the deficit or balance the budget, as he says, by having to raise taxes on the middle class and voucherizing Medicare and all the other deep cuts and unnecessary programmatic changes that are included in there, or you don’t actually reach deficit reduction, and there’s no -- or both, you do both -- and you still stick it to the middle class.
 
So on the issue of the tax reform, we did go through this last year.  And it was widely viewed when it was proposed by Governor Romney as untenable because you simply can’t find $5 trillion in loopholes and deductions only from the wealthy and well-connected through tax reform to make it revenue neutral, to achieve the kind of tax rate reduction that Chairman Ryan and Governor Romney envisioned last year with Chairman Ryan, and Chairman Ryan envisions this year.  It’s just not mathematically possible.
 
So the result is that the middle class ends up paying, and the middle class ends up paying for tax cuts that disproportionately benefit the wealthy.  I mean, after all, those in the top bracket would see something like a 37 percent pay cut -- I mean tax cut, a 37 percent tax cut, from 39.6 to 25 percent. That’s pretty hefty.  And it doesn’t reflect the principle that the President has put forward that we need to ask the wealthy to contribute to deficit reduction.  And that’s a position that the public widely supports.
 
Jon.
 
Q    You’ve talked about the need for balance many times, and pointed out the President has put out some entitlement reforms and that’s a critical part of balance.  Do you expect -- do you hope that when the Senate Democrats release their budget tomorrow, that it has entitlement reforms along the lines of what the President has proposed?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I will wait for the budget to be put forward and Senator Murray to do that.  We do expect it to be balanced, to have the principle of balance inherent in its proposals.  If it’s not -- and I don’t expect it will be -- in agreement on every item of the President’s proposal, but it will be consistent with the President’s balanced approach, we expect.
 
Q    But will it fall short if it doesn’t have entitlement reforms, if it doesn’t have the kind of things the President has put out there?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, I haven’t seen it yet and I would wait until it’s put forward.  But I would simply say that it will be consistent in terms of balance, we expect.  That is where it would strongly differentiate -- be differentiated from the House Republican budget.  And the President commends Senate Democrats for pursuing a budget that includes the balance that he believes is necessary, the public believes is necessary, the Bowles-Simpson commission has long since made clear is necessary. 
 
And so we look forward to working with Senate Democrats and Senate Republicans and everyone on Capitol Hill, including House Republicans and House Democrats, in hopes of achieving a compromise that achieves -- that has within it the balance that is essential.  Because that’s what’s so instructive about the budget proposal from Chairman Ryan, is that it really does make the case for balance, because if you don’t have balance, if instead of asking the wealthiest to contribute to deficit reduction, you say we’d like to give the wealthiest a huge tax cut, the result is that everybody else -- the burden is doubled or tripled on everyone else.  And that just doesn’t seem fair.  And it’s also not good economics.
 
Q    Now, when you say balance, you don’t mean balanced.  I mean, they’re not going to --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I mean a balanced approach to deficit reduction that includes asking everyone to pay their share.
 
Q    But it won’t be a balanced budget, right?
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, what the President’s budget proposal will do, as his previous proposals have done, is achieve the economically important goal of bringing our debt-to-GDP down below 3 percent.  That was the target set under the Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson commission, the President’s fiscal commission.  It is the target widely recognized by economists as a necessary goal when we talk about getting our fiscal house in order.  And it is a goal that’s achievable in a way that also allows other goals to be achieved -- like investing in our economy so that it grows; like building roads and bridges so that we’re competitive with Europe and China and India; and investing in education so your children and mine are getting the jobs that pay the best and they’re getting those jobs here in the United States in 25 and 30 years. 
 
That’s why the President has never viewed budget proposals as -- or proposals in negotiations for deficit reduction as having as their only goal deficit reduction.  Deficit reduction is an absolutely important goal, and it is important to bring our deficits down and to reduce our debt-to-GDP.  But they are part of -- those goals are part of the broader purpose here, which is to grow the economy and strengthen the middle class.  And if you achieve one without the other two, you have not done right by the middle class of the country, and you probably have undermined the future economy of the United States.
 
So that’s why the President’s focus has been on balance.  On the important goal of deficit reduction, he has signed into law, as you know, Jon, $2.5 trillion in deficit reduction thus far, and he looks forward to working with Congress to bring that total to beyond $4 trillion, which, in turn, if done in a balanced way, will achieve the goals that I just laid out.
 
Major.
 
Q    Let me follow up on Jonathan.  Would the President be disappointed if Senate Democrats did not include one of the reforms that you often talk about from this very podium, on entitlements?  Superlative CPI or chained CPI?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President has a proposal that he made to the Speaker of the House --
 
Q    If no one endorses it in your party does it also suggest it has a political -- a radioactivity to it that people are afraid to touch?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think that the question supports what I’ve been saying all along, which is that the President’s proposal includes items in it that are very tough choices for Democrats to go along with, A; B, that stands in stark contrast to proposals in a Republican budget that makes a tough choice of voucherizing Medicare while giving tax cuts to the wealthy.
 
Q    But if nobody is willing to vote for that, what’s the point of it?
 
MR. CARNEY:  First of all, I think you’re talking about a process that has the Senate putting forward a budget and the House putting forward a budget, and the President putting forward a budget.  And hopefully through regular order, which leaders of both parties have said they would like to see, and which the President would like to see, we will see a compromise that results in a balanced package of deficit reduction that allows the economy to grow and to continue to create jobs. 
 
And that will include tough choices for Democrats on the entitlement side, and tough choices for Republicans on the revenue side.
 
Q    So you recruit a Democrat to come up with an amendment on the CPI?
 
MR. CARNEY:  You’re getting down into the weeds of process. You and I both covered the Hill and that’s fun stuff, but the President is looking at a higher objective here, which is to work together with lawmakers of both parties to find that common ground and compromise that is essential if we’re going to move forward in a way that helps our economy, reduces our deficit, protects seniors, strengthens the middle class.
 
Q    In the preamble to his budget, Paul Ryan says it is economically essential to get to balance.  Does the White House believe that balance, meaning zero, no deficit, is economically irrelevant?
 
MR. CARNEY:  No.  We believe that the economically important goal, as economists have said repeatedly -- outside independent economists, as well as the much venerated Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson commission -- is achieving the goal of reducing our debt-to-GDP ratio to below 3 percent.  And the President’s proposals do that.  The President’s budget will do that.
 
The goal of balance is worthy and it should be pursued, but it should not be pursued if it is done in a way that does harm to the economy, does harm to senior citizens, does harm to the middle class, and gives short-term benefits to the wealthy -- because, in the end, everybody suffers if the American economy is weaker because of an implementation of a budget proposal that's so profoundly unbalanced that it does not allow for the growth and expansion of the middle class.
 
Q    You made reference a moment ago to Ryan's budget.  Are you saying he is tacitly admitting in that budget without saying so publicly that the tax increase and the revenue from the health care law make his job easier?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I wouldn't put words into his mouth.  But it's my understanding that he includes as part of his baseline the revenue achieved through the fiscal cliff deal, the ATRA, and that means the revenue achieved from raising the rates on the wealthiest individuals that the President fought for.  And it achieves the savings in the Affordable Care Act that the President put forward, the Medicare savings -- getting rid of waste fraud and abuse and reducing payments to insurance companies, subsidies to insurance companies and the like.  Those are savings that of course were highlighted in the Republican campaign against the President last year and criticized greatly, but they are included in the budget. 
 
Q    On balance, the President talks a lot about everyone paying their fair share.  The IRS has a report out claiming that 312,000 federal employees owe over $3 billion in federal taxes.  And that includes, I believe, 40 employees of the Executive Office of the President.  Is the President going to make sure everybody here, everybody in the federal government, is paying their fair share of taxes?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, the President believes that everybody ought to pay their taxes.  And for details on the report, I would refer you to the IRS.  But absolutely the President believes everybody ought to pay their taxes.  And I believe the IRS is the place to go for more specifics. 
 
Q    In terms of the Ryan budget, how can you attack the Ryan budget when you are standing here without an Obama budget?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, Ed, I appreciate the question.  The President will be putting forward a budget --
 
Q    When?
 
MR. CARNEY:  -- in the next several weeks, probably the week of April 8th, I would expect.
 
Q    Let me write that down.
 
Q    Is that new?  Did you make news?  I think you did.
 
MR. CARNEY:  But as you know, Ed, the President has put forward a proposal that will be reflected in his budget and the principles will be reflected in his budget.  And that proposal, as you know, because you covered it, that he made to the Speaker of the House demonstrated his willingness to find common ground with the Republicans on both revenue and entitlement cuts, demonstrated his seriousness of purpose, demonstrated his belief that balances is essential in our pursuit of deficit reduction.  And that offer has been on the table ever since he made it to the Speaker.  And sadly, the Speaker has not taken it up.  In fact, he declared he would never negotiate with the President again, which was a rather stark proclamation.
 
Q    I'm glad you mentioned the President's proposal.  It is on the White House website, as you said many times.  I printed it out to make sure I have it.  Last question on this -- it says, for example, this is the President's proposal to Speaker Boehner, $100 billion in cuts to defense discretionary spending.  As you understand, that's not really a budget, though, because we don't know where the $100 billion in cuts will be.  Which programs of the Defense Department does he want to cut specifically?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I appreciate the opportunity to provide the budget in advance, but we have provided --
 
Q    The other budgets are being put on the table this week.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Have you looked at the Ryan budget?  Can you find a single item in tax reform, a single loophole closed to achieve $5 trillion -- $5 trillion!  That's a lot of money.  Not one.  I would challenge you to find any entitlement reform in the Ryan budget beyond the adoption of the President's --
 
Q    We will invite Paul Ryan to come here and defend his plan.  However, the President's plan is --
 
MR. CARNEY:  There is ample detail in the President's previous budget, which goes into his defense -- the levels he calls for, for defense spending that are consistent with the national security plan laid out by his national security plan laid out by his national security team.  And the budget the President puts forward will have the detail that presidential budgets tend to have, which are, unfortunately, lacking in the House Republican budget.
 
Yes, Kristen.
 
Q    Jay, thanks.  The Ryan budget also calls for moving forward with construction of the Keystone XL pipeline.  Given that the State Department has said that the pipeline won’t have a serious impact on the environment, will the President now give that project the green light?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I have no updates for you on that.  That's obviously an assessment that is housed at the State Department.  There are a series of steps that are taken, as I understand it, by the State Department.  The assessment that you’ve mentioned is one of those.  But that process is ongoing, in keeping with years of tradition, when we talk about trans-border pipelines, as this one is.  And when there is an announcement to make we’ll be ready to announce it.
 
Q    Well, taking it another way, is this a potential area of common ground, given the State Department’s assessment?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I would set aside -- I have nothing to say to project about an announcement that is not ready to be made and that is part of a process that is undertaken at the State Department. 
 
I will make the point that since this President came into office, we have dramatically increased our domestic energy production, we have dramatically reduced our imports of foreign oil, and we have dramatically expanded the production of renewable energy and investments in clean energy technology, all of which represent the President’s all-of-the-above energy approach -- an approach that will allow us to become increasingly energy independent, will assist in the effort to create high-paying, quality jobs in cutting-edge industries of the future in the United States, and that will allow us to in the future withstand the shocks caused by fluctuations in global energy prices, global oil prices. 
 
We are experiencing elevated prices right now, and this is another reminder of why we need to pursue the kind of comprehensive, all-of-the-above approach that the President has pursued and which has yielded results.  He will continue to pursue that in his second term.
 
Q    And just to go back to the timing of the budget, which you’ve now confirmed will come out in April.  Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said today that the President’s plan to submit his budget in April would be like dropping a bomb on the legislative process.  What’s your reaction and how does the President not in some way negatively impact the legislative process?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I have no doubt that anytime the President introduces his budget that perhaps Senator McConnell or some other Republican will say it was wildly inappropriate or inconvenient to do it that day or that week or that month.  Let’s just stipulate that.
 
When the President introduces his budget, it will be an important contribution to what we hope will be a process of regular order where a compromise is reached that embodies the principles of balance when it comes to deficit reduction that the President supports, that Senate Democrats support, House Democrats support, a lot of Senate Republicans support, the vast majority of the American people support, and that enables us to deal with these important issues even as we’re dealing with other challenges like comprehensive immigration reform, like reducing gun violence, like investing in education and innovation and infrastructure.  Because our fiscal challenges are important and our budget priorities are very important, but we have other priorities, too, and the American people expect us to be working on all of them.
 
Peter.
 
Q    Thank you, Jay.  You mentioned the White House doesn’t believe that this sort of outreach is a waste of time.  But we’ve heard the President talk about the limitations of personal diplomacy.  He mentioned his golf game with Speaker Boehner and noting that a deal didn’t really come of that.  So what is the White House view -- that personal diplomacy and engagement can be helpful in the legislative process, or is it that partisanship in Washington is just so deep-rooted that it’s really unrealistic to think that that kind of outreach can break through those barriers?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President believes that personal engagement is important, that relationships are important, that conversation and discussion are important.  And he is engaged in that process, as he was in a series of negotiations with Speaker Boehner and Senator McConnell and others, and as he was throughout his first term on different issues.  But he is engaged, as we’ve noted, in a sort of more intensified process of consultations with lawmakers -- Republican lawmakers as well as Democratic lawmakers -- because he believes that there are circumstances now, partly born of misfortune -- the decision to embrace the sequester by Republicans -- but circumstances that allow for the time and space, if you will, for serious conversation and debate within the regular order process to try to move forward on these budget issues, and to hopefully create an environment -- or improve the environment when it comes to bipartisan cooperation on these other issues.
 
I think I noted yesterday that it is worth standing back and assessing the landscape here and acknowledging that despite our partisan differences there is important quality work being done by Republicans and Democrats together on some very important issues.  And that extends beyond deficit reduction and budget issues into immigration reform and gun violence and other areas.
 
So the President believes this is an important process and he has enjoyed his consultations thus far.  He’s looking forward to his meetings with the conferences and caucuses this week on Capitol Hill, and that process will continue.
 
Q    We’ve been hearing from various sources, Jay, what the President has intended to be delivering in terms of his message to the leaders in the Middle East next week.  On the flip side, what is the President looking forward to hearing from the leaders in Ramallah and in Amman and in Jerusalem in terms of their insight and their message to him?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, the President looks forward to all of his meetings on his trip.  And I don't want to get ahead of it.  I’m sure we will be doing, as we have traditionally, a background briefing prior to the trip to fill you in on more details of both the program and what we expect from the trip.  But the President will hope to hear from the leaders he meets with assessments of all the issues that are top of the agenda when you consider Israel, the West Bank, Jordan and the leaders that he’ll be meeting with.  But I don't have anything more specific for you than that.
 
Q    How will the President measure the success of his trip?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think we’ve made clear that the President greatly looks forward to this visit, that he will be engaging with leaders on the range of issues of importance in the region and with the leaders specifically, but that we’re not laying out markers for success on the peace process or otherwise.  These will all be part of important conversations that the President will be having.
 
Mara and then Scott.
 
Q    You said earlier that the Ryan budget will result in tax hikes for middle-class Americans.  He envisions a 25-percent top rate and a 10-percent rate.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Correct.
 
Q    So why -- where are the tax hikes?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, as you remember, I thank you for the question, I was probably using shorthand, and I shouldn’t have.  Last year when Governor Romney put forward a proposal to reduce -- a tax reform proposal that would have cut rates not quite as far, but I believe the top rate to 28 percent and the other rate -- I forget, what -- Jon, do you remember?  Anyway, two rates, but not quite as low as Chairman Ryan, and 28 was the top rate.  There were assessments done by outside economists that made clear that the only way you could achieve the goal of that tax reform being revenue neutral -- lowering those rates so dramatically and somehow making it revenue neutral when you're making these massive tax cuts would be to, through tax reform, stick it to the middle class to the tune of more than $2,000, eliminating deductions and the like that middle-class Americans depend on, whether it’s deductions for health insurance or education or home ownership or --
 
Q    So you’re saying their net taxes will be higher in the end?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Absolutely.  There is no question about it.  Absolutely.  By a significant amount.  When it was the Romney plan, it was $2,000 on estimate -- the Tax Policy Center, I believe, assessment.  And since the gap is larger here, the reduction in the Ryan plan is from 39.6 percent to 25 percent, as opposed to 35 percent to 28 percent, that the hole that needs to be filled through middle-class tax hikes is even larger.
 
Scott.
 
Q    I’m just curious about what specifically the President talks about when you say he talks to the Hill about energy independence.  Is it spending more money on developing an American green economy?  Is it other -- increasing natural gas exports?  Can you be a little bit -- is it climate change-related?  What exactly is he saying specifically?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, to torture you with a phrase, it’s all of the above.  It’s that the President has embraced increased development of our traditional forms of energy.  That includes our remarkable strides in development of natural gas, as well as increased development of oil.  It includes investment in and development of renewable energy sources.  It includes measures taken when it comes to the environmental side of it, the climate side of it.  Important actions taken, most specifically the car rule, which will dramatically reduce -- or increase fuel efficiency and reduce consumption thereby.  And that contributes in two ways.  Obviously it contributes to our environmental health, but also reduces, again, our demand for fossil fuels, which reduces -- continues the reduction in our demand for foreign sources of oil. 
 
So this is an approach that the President really sees as comprehensive, and only through that comprehensive approach can we achieve the kind of independence from outside energy sources that we all believe, I believe, would be beneficial to our national and economic security.
 
Q    He’s talking to legislators.  Is he talking about legislation to them as well as --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have any proposals, legislative proposals to preview for you.  The President believes that we can take steps to increase development of energy resources in the United States, both traditional and renewable, as well as take steps to enhance efficiency and improve the quality of our air.  And that’s what he did in the first term, and he’ll continue to do that.
 
Donovan.
 
Q    Thanks, Jay.  At the risk of getting a little bit in the weeds, I want to ask a little bit more about the budget.  How does the White House envision the process for reaching a fiscal deal?  Leave it up to the committees in Congress and provide technical assistance?  Or maybe have the President get directly involved?  Like, how does this look?  What does this look like?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, as I was saying earlier, leaders of both parties in both houses have expressed interest in returning to regular order.  I know that’s shorthand, but for those who don’t understand the picture that I’m trying to paint here, we have been, as the President often notes, living in -- governing by  crisis, lurching from crisis to crisis to crisis, often crises determined by fabricated deadlines around debt ceilings or fiscal cliffs or sequesters that have taken us out of the regular process, which is a budgetary process that has been the one that is traditionally pursued to set our budget priorities and allocate spending and decide what our revenue streams look like.
 
And I think everybody in Washington -- there is a consensus -- and this was a topic of conversation at the dinner, as participants noted -- there is a growing consensus about the desire and need to return to normalcy, to regular order.  And through that process, through a budget produced in the Senate and a budget produced and passed in the House, and the President’s budget, that we can come together and find some -- find agreement on a budget that, in the President’s view, hopefully will represent the will of the American people as reflected in data that we see every day, as reflected in the election.  And that is for a balanced approach to deficit reduction that doesn’t, in the name of deficit reduction, slash our investments in education or in innovation or research.  Because these are things -- this is eating your seed corn.  Doing that makes the future less bright economically for the whole country.
 
So we need to make wise choices when it comes to deficit reduction, and wise choices when it comes to spending cuts and spending investments.
 
Q    So just the shorthand, regular order, a return to normalcy -- that means basically --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I thought I explained it with great detail.  (Laughter.)  But the President will be engaged in this process.  The White House will be.  The administration will be.  But obviously, this is something that legislatively moves through Congress.  And I want to say all this and make clear that I am not being naïve about the challenges that clearly remain. 
 
The President’s position is clear.  The President has put forward proposals and will continue to put forward proposals that represent balance, that represent tough choices for him and for Democrats, that compromise on the issue of revenues, as he has done in the past, but achieve that balance because it’s necessary. 
 
He is engaging with Republican lawmakers, trying to find common ground around the idea that we can do entitlement reform and tax reform together in a balanced way, the way that the American people want.  But it remains to be seen if the result of this embrace of regular order and embrace of common ground is an achievement that fits the bill here, which is a resolution, a budget that reduces the deficit in a balanced way, hits the target of $4 trillion-plus over 10 years in deficit reduction, allows for the investments that are necessary to keep our economy growing, protects middle-class Americans and seniors.  We’ll see.
 
We are mindful of the challenges, but we believe there can be and should be common ground and compromise.
 
Yes.
 
Q    In the run-up to the President’s Middle East trip, he’s been meeting with American Jewish leaders and now Arab American leaders.  But one of the participants in the Arab American group’s meeting said this is the first meeting of its kind that they’ve had with the President.  Why has there not been one before this?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not sure that’s the case, but I will take your question.  The President has been engaged with leaders of different communities throughout his presidency, both in the first term and now in his second term.  It’s entirely appropriate in advance of this trip to have these meetings, and they were both very productive meetings and helpful to the President, and hopefully helpful to those who participated in hearing the President’s views about the various issues that will be discussed on his trip.
 
Q    What did he hear that will help him on this trip?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I don’t want to read out a private meeting, but the President values greatly the insights provided by, in this case, both Jewish American leaders and Arab American leaders in these meetings, as he does appreciate the outside advice and observations that he receives on a variety of issues.
 
April.
 
Q    Jay, has the President received a letter from CBC Chairwoman Marcia Fudge about the President’s lack of nominations of African Americans to Cabinet posts in his second term?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I believe we have received that letter, and I can tell you that the President is deeply committed to diversity in his Cabinet and to ensuring his administration reflects the breadth of our country.  He believes that the best decisions are made when he is surrounded by people who share different perspectives, as we work toward improving our economy and building a strong middle class together.
 
Q    So does that mean that the President will in the next couple of weeks nominate an African American to a --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I don't have any personnel announcements to make today.  When the President is ready to make announcements, he will make them.
 
Q    Well, what has the President said about this?  Because she has made it clear in her letter that many African Americans around the country are calling into the CBC offices very upset because they supported him overwhelmingly, and they have yet to see an African American nominated to a Cabinet post right now.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I don't have any personnel announcements to make.  There are obviously still appointments the President will be making.  And I can tell you, as I made clear at the top, the President is committed to diversity.  He believes that having a diverse Cabinet and a diverse set of advisors enhances the decision-making and deliberation process for him and for any President.  And so he values it greatly and that's why he has pursued it both in his first term and continues to pursue it in his second term.
 
Ann.
 
Q    Does the White House believe that the information that hackers claim they have put on the Internet is legitimate -- Mrs. Obama's social security number, some of her financial information, along with other officials including the FBI Director?
 
MR. CARNEY:  On this I have to refer you to the Secret Service.  I just don't have anything for that on you -- I have no assessments to offer, just a reference to the Secret Service.
 
Yes, Chris. 
 
Q    I just want to follow up on April’s questioning there.  There are new reports that the President is close to making his nominees for the Labor and Commerce Secretary.  There was a lot of hope within the LGBT community that the President would take the opportunity with those vacancies to appoint the first-ever LGBT Cabinet member.  But it looks like it's not going to happen now.  And you just mentioned how the President values diversity, and I'm just wondering if that excludes LGBT people.  Does the President not believe that sexual orientation and gender identity are elements of diversity that you want to see at the highest levels of the administration?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, Chris, I have no personnel announcements to make.  I certainly am not confirming any speculation in the press about possible announcements the President might make.  I would refer you, again, to what I said and what the President has said about the value he places on diversity, and encourage you to assess the diversity of his appointments once they've all been made.
 
Q    But is sexual orientation --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think -- I don't have any -- you're asking me to make a statement about appointments that haven't been made and I'm not going to do that.  I'm not going to get ahead of the President.
 
Q    But I’m asking you to make a statement on value -- does the President believe that --
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President values diversity.
 
Q    And is sexual orientation and gender identity part of that diversity?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Absolutely.  And the President values diversity. 
 
Roger.
 
Q    Back to the Export Council this morning.  The Council has long favored a territorial tax system, and I know the President has disagreed with them in the past.  Is there any reevaluation going on within the administration on a territorial tax system?

MR. CARNEY:  I certainly don't have anything new for you on that.  I think what the President has said about this represents his views.  But I don't have anything new for you.  The President believes we need to reform our corporate tax code.  But I don't have anything new from what we've said in the past about it. 
 
Q    Two questions -- one foreign and one domestic.  First, the foreign.  The U.S. and South Korea are engaged in joint military exercises right now.  When those conclude, is the President seriously considering leaving behind any assets like a nuclear-armed sub or anything to assist with any deterrents against North Korean provocation?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, that's a speculative question, A; B, it's not a question that I think I can answer from here.  I would just tell you that these are military exercises that like all combined forces command exercises are defense oriented and designed to enhance readiness and the ability to respond to any potential contingency that could arise.  You heard me talk yesterday about our view of the provocative rhetoric emanating from the DPRK.  You heard me talk about the actions taken at the United Nations Security Council in response to North Korean behavior and decisions.
 
And we continue to work with our allies on this issue, but I don't have any defense posture announcements to make from here.
 
Q    And then on the budget, on its face, it looks like the President is waiting for the Democrats to come out -- the Senate Democrats to come out with their plan that’s unpalatable, the Republicans in the House come out with their plan that’s unpalatable, and then come out in April with his own compromised plan that will be more palatable.
 
MR. CARNEY:  It will be entirely palatable.
 
Q    But that’s out of regular order when the law requires the President put a budget out in February.  So is it worth ignoring the law in order to own the compromise?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think it is worth getting to yes if there are Republicans willing to get to yes, if that’s your question.  I don’t think that the timing of the budget is reflective of that goal, but I think the goal here is to find willing partners who embrace the idea of a balanced approach to deficit reduction as well as who embrace the idea of bipartisan cooperation in tackling some of the other challenges that won’t be solved if we don’t do it in a bipartisan way.
 
Q    But would you admit that regular order involves the President presenting a budget in the first week of February?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think that the President’s budget will be a useful and valuable contribution to a process that, at least potentially, could result in a bipartisan compromise that achieves balanced deficit reduction, that includes the essential investments in our economy that allow it to grow and protect the middle class, and that would be part of a process -- again, this is in an ideal world -- that will see bipartisan cooperation on not just these issues, but other issues, because the American people really expect that and want that.  And the President is focused not just on deficit reduction and budget matters, but on the other things that we can do together in Washington that will help the country help the economy and help the middle class.
 
Q    Thank you, Jay.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Thanks, all.
 
END
1:36 P.M. EDT

President Obama Talks Trade with His Export Council

Today, President Obama stopped by a meeting of his Export Council, a group of business executives and government leaders who advise him on trade and export issues.

“The good news is we are well on our way to meeting a very ambitious goal that we set several years ago to double U.S. exports,” President Obama said. “The question now becomes how do we sustain this momentum?”

Part of that means building on progress that put strong trade deals in place, including the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which “sets a high bar that ensures that trade is fair and free,” the President said.

“And for those of us who abide by high labor standards and high environmental standards, obviously being able to lock in those kinds of high standards in the fastest-growing region of the world and the most populous region of the world can yield enormous benefits and help to generate billions of dollars in trade and millions of jobs.”

President Obama also discussed expanding trade with Europe through efforts to lock in the EU-U.S trade deal he announced in his State of the Union Address.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by President Obama and His Majesty Sultan of Brunei Darussalam After a Bilateral Meeting

Oval Office

11:54 A.M. EDT

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, it is a great pleasure to welcome my good friend, His Majesty the Sultan of Brunei.  The Sultan and I had the opportunity to get to know each other from a series of multilateral meetings, particularly the ASEAN East Asia Summit meeting.  He is a key leader in the Southeast Asia region but also widely respected around the world. 

And part of the reason that we thought now was a good time for a meeting here in the Oval Office is because His Majesty will be hosting the next ASEAN East Asia Summit meeting in Brunei this October.  There are a range of issues that we’ve worked on together, and that should be no surprise because the friendship between the United States and Brunei actually dates back 160 years.

His Majesty himself has led his country for 40 years now and he’s gone through nine U.S. Presidents.  I won’t ask him which one was his favorite -- (laughter) -- but our interest in having a strong, peaceful, prosperous Asia Pacific region is something that we share. 

And so at the ASEAN East Asia Summit, we will be discussing a wide range of issues -- everything from how we deal with issues of energy and climate change to how we expand commerce, potentially through the Trans-Pacific Partnership that has the opportunity of creating jobs and prosperity here in the United States but also throughout the region. 

We’ll be discussing maritime issues.  Obviously there have been a lot of tensions in the region around maritime issues and His Majesty has shown great leadership in trying to bring the countries together to make sure that everybody is abiding by the basic precepts of rule of law and international standards so that conflicts can be resolved peacefully and effectively, and that everybody is brought into that kind of structure.

We’ve also had a chance to work together on educational issues.  His Majesty himself and Brunei have helped to finance a number of English language instructors so that more youth in the Southeast Asia region are learning English, which obviously can help to expand commerce, but also strengthen the ties between the United States and the region. 

And we’re also going to be doing, for the first time, a joint ASEAN-U.S.-Chinese joint exercises around disaster and humanitarian relief, which points to the fact that our militaries, that are extraordinarily capable, and the bilateral military relationship between the United States and Brunei has the capacity to help people in times of need and to try to help avoid conflict rather than start conflict. 

So, overall, I’m very grateful for His Majesty’s outstanding leadership and his friendship.  I’m glad that he’s had a chance to visit.  He got here yesterday and flew in his own 747, meaning he actually piloted it himself.  I think he’s probably the only head of state in the world who flies a 747 himself.  And so in case Air Force One pilots have problems, we know who to consult.  (Laughter.) 

And my understanding is tomorrow he’s going to have an opportunity to take his family up to New York, where we’re going to encourage him to do some shopping because we want to continue to strengthen the U.S. economy.  (Laughter.)  

So, Your Majesty, it’s wonderful to see you.  Thank you so much.

HIS MAJESTY SULTAN HASSANAL:  Ladies and gentlemen of the press.  Mr. President, firstly, thank you for inviting me to visit the United States.  I know you have a very busy schedule.  It’s very kind of you to receive me. 

This visit gives me a good opportunity to renew the longstanding and warm friendship between Brunei Darussalam and the United States -- the relations, which dated back to 1850, with the signing of the Treaty of Peace, Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation, soon after the USS Constitution called at our port. 

President Barack Obama and I have had an excellent meeting this morning.  I am indeed very happy with the progress of our bilateral cooperation, especially in energy, education, defense interests.  The Brunei-U.S. joint five-year English language program, which was launched last year, is progressing well.  It is meant for the people in ASEAN in order to improve and strengthen the English language skills. 

On energy cooperation, there are already a number of American companies providing a range of upstream and downstream services in our oil and gas sector.  In the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, we are negotiating with further build-up of this economic condition. 

I also had the pleasure to share with President Obama some of our plans as ASEAN chair this year.  As ASEAN chair, we have extended an invitation to President Obama to the East Asia Summit and the first ASEAN-U.S. Leaders Summit in October this year.

The United States has been a good friend to ASEAN and is actively involved in many of our projects, such as the Comprehensive Energy Partnership and the Expanded Economic Engagement of E3 Initiative.  And we are confident that these initiatives will strengthen the economic linkages between ASEAN and the United States.

In closing, I thank President Obama again for today’s meeting.  We look forward to welcoming you to Brunei Darussalam later this year, Mr. President, and to working together to strengthen the important relationship between ASEAN and the United States.

Thank you.

    END 12:02 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Message -- Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to Iran

TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:

Section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)) provides for the automatic termination of a national emergency unless, within 90 days prior to the anniversary date of its declaration, the President publishes in the Federal Register and transmits to the Congress a notice stating that the emergency is to continue in effect beyond the anniversary date. In accordance with this provision, I have sent to the Federal Register for publication the enclosed notice stating that the national emergency with respect to Iran that was declared on March 15, 1995, is to continue in effect beyond March 15, 2013.

The crisis between the United States and Iran resulting from the actions and policies of the Government of Iran has not been resolved. The actions and policies of the Government of Iran are contrary to the interests of the United States in the region and continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States. For these reasons, I have determined that it is necessary to continue the national emergency declared with respect to Iran and to maintain in force comprehensive sanctions against Iran to deal with this threat.

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Notice -- Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to Iran

NOTICE

- - - - - - -

CONTINUATION OF THE NATIONAL EMERGENCY WITH RESPECT TO IRAN

On March 15, 1995, the President issued Executive Order 12957, which declared a national emergency with respect to Iran and, pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701-1706), took related steps to deal with the unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States constituted by the actions and policies of the Government of Iran. On May 6, 1995, the President issued Executive Order 12959, imposing more comprehensive sanctions on Iran to further respond to this threat. On August 19, 1997, the President issued Executive Order 13059, consolidating and clarifying the previous orders. I took additional steps pursuant to this national emergency in Executive Order 13553 of September 28, 2010, Executive Order 13574 of May 23, 2011, Executive Order 13590 of November 20, 2011, Executive Order 13599 of February 5, 2012, Executive Order 13606 of April 22, 2012, Executive Order 13608 of May 1, 2012, Executive Order 13622 of July 30, 2012, and Executive Order 13628 of October 9, 2012.

The actions and policies of the Government of Iran continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States. For this reason, the national emergency declared in Executive Order 12957 must continue in effect beyond March 15, 2013. Therefore, in accordance with section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)), I am continuing for 1 year the national emergency with respect to Iran declared in Executive Order 12957. The emergency declared by Executive Order 12957 constitutes an emergency separate from that declared on November 14, 1979, by Executive Order 12170. This renewal, therefore, is distinct from the emergency renewal of November 2012.

This notice shall be published in the Federal Register and transmitted to the Congress.

BARACK OBAMA

President Obama's Bilateral Meeting with His Majesty Sultan of Brunei

March 12, 2013 | 7:42 | Public Domain

President Obama and His Majesty Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei Darussalam speak to the press after a bilateral meeting in the Oval Office.

Download mp4 (281MB) | mp3 (19MB)

Read the Transcript

Remarks by President Obama and His Majesty Sultan of Brunei Darussalam After a Bilateral Meeting

Oval Office

11:54 A.M. EDT

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, it is a great pleasure to welcome my good friend, His Majesty the Sultan of Brunei.  The Sultan and I had the opportunity to get to know each other from a series of multilateral meetings, particularly the ASEAN East Asia Summit meeting.  He is a key leader in the Southeast Asia region but also widely respected around the world. 

And part of the reason that we thought now was a good time for a meeting here in the Oval Office is because His Majesty will be hosting the next ASEAN East Asia Summit meeting in Brunei this October.  There are a range of issues that we’ve worked on together, and that should be no surprise because the friendship between the United States and Brunei actually dates back 160 years.

His Majesty himself has led his country for 40 years now and he’s gone through nine U.S. Presidents.  I won’t ask him which one was his favorite -- (laughter) -- but our interest in having a strong, peaceful, prosperous Asia Pacific region is something that we share. 

And so at the ASEAN East Asia Summit, we will be discussing a wide range of issues -- everything from how we deal with issues of energy and climate change to how we expand commerce, potentially through the Trans-Pacific Partnership that has the opportunity of creating jobs and prosperity here in the United States but also throughout the region. 

We’ll be discussing maritime issues.  Obviously there have been a lot of tensions in the region around maritime issues and His Majesty has shown great leadership in trying to bring the countries together to make sure that everybody is abiding by the basic precepts of rule of law and international standards so that conflicts can be resolved peacefully and effectively, and that everybody is brought into that kind of structure.

We’ve also had a chance to work together on educational issues.  His Majesty himself and Brunei have helped to finance a number of English language instructors so that more youth in the Southeast Asia region are learning English, which obviously can help to expand commerce, but also strengthen the ties between the United States and the region. 

And we’re also going to be doing, for the first time, a joint ASEAN-U.S.-Chinese joint exercises around disaster and humanitarian relief, which points to the fact that our militaries, that are extraordinarily capable, and the bilateral military relationship between the United States and Brunei has the capacity to help people in times of need and to try to help avoid conflict rather than start conflict. 

So, overall, I’m very grateful for His Majesty’s outstanding leadership and his friendship.  I’m glad that he’s had a chance to visit.  He got here yesterday and flew in his own 747, meaning he actually piloted it himself.  I think he’s probably the only head of state in the world who flies a 747 himself.  And so in case Air Force One pilots have problems, we know who to consult.  (Laughter.) 

And my understanding is tomorrow he’s going to have an opportunity to take his family up to New York, where we’re going to encourage him to do some shopping because we want to continue to strengthen the U.S. economy.  (Laughter.)  

So, Your Majesty, it’s wonderful to see you.  Thank you so much.

HIS MAJESTY SULTAN HASSANAL:  Ladies and gentlemen of the press.  Mr. President, firstly, thank you for inviting me to visit the United States.  I know you have a very busy schedule.  It’s very kind of you to receive me. 

This visit gives me a good opportunity to renew the longstanding and warm friendship between Brunei Darussalam and the United States -- the relations, which dated back to 1850, with the signing of the Treaty of Peace, Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation, soon after the USS Constitution called at our port. 

President Barack Obama and I have had an excellent meeting this morning.  I am indeed very happy with the progress of our bilateral cooperation, especially in energy, education, defense interests.  The Brunei-U.S. joint five-year English language program, which was launched last year, is progressing well.  It is meant for the people in ASEAN in order to improve and strengthen the English language skills. 

On energy cooperation, there are already a number of American companies providing a range of upstream and downstream services in our oil and gas sector.  In the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, we are negotiating with further build-up of this economic condition. 

I also had the pleasure to share with President Obama some of our plans as ASEAN chair this year.  As ASEAN chair, we have extended an invitation to President Obama to the East Asia Summit and the first ASEAN-U.S. Leaders Summit in October this year.

The United States has been a good friend to ASEAN and is actively involved in many of our projects, such as the Comprehensive Energy Partnership and the Expanded Economic Engagement of E3 Initiative.  And we are confident that these initiatives will strengthen the economic linkages between ASEAN and the United States.

In closing, I thank President Obama again for today’s meeting.  We look forward to welcoming you to Brunei Darussalam later this year, Mr. President, and to working together to strengthen the important relationship between ASEAN and the United States.

Thank you.

    END 12:02 P.M. EDT

Close Transcript

President Obama Speaks at President's Export Council Meeting

March 12, 2013 | 19:40 | Public Domain

President Obama discusses progress toward the goal to double U.S. exports and how to sustain this momentum.

Download mp4 (724MB) | mp3 (48MB)

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Remarks by the President at Meeting with the President's Export Council

Room 350
Eisenhower Executive Office Building

10:22 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  I want to get back to the official business at hand.  But I did want to stop by.  First of all, I just want to say thanks to the PEC for the unbelievable work that you guys have done and the extraordinary leadership that you’ve provided to our team and the administration as we've tried to promote exports all around the world.  And I'm glad to see that we've got a couple of our outstanding senators here as well who I know care deeply about exports because their states benefit from exports. We all do.

And I assume that part of these charts was Becky going over the progress that we've made over the last several years, so I won't reiterate it.  The good news is we are well on our way to meeting a very ambitious goal that we set several years ago to double U.S. exports.  And what we know is, is that a lot of the growth, a lot of the new jobs that we've seen during the course of this recovery, have been export-driven. 

What's also encouraging is it's been coming from a whole variety of sectors.  Obviously, our agricultural sector has always been strong and it's gotten even stronger.  But what we've also seen is, is that our manufacturing base, our high-tech, our services across the board we're seeing significant increases.  And the question now becomes how do we sustain this momentum? 

Part of it is making sure that we get in place strong trade deals.  And having ratified with the help of a number of our legislators the Panama, Colombia and, most significantly, South Korean trade deals, we've now been moving aggressively on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a high standards trade regime that we think can advantage U.S. companies and U.S. workers because it sets a bar that ensures that trade is fair and free.  And for those of us who abide by high labor standards and high environmental standards, obviously being able to lock in those kinds of high standards in the fastest-growing region of the world and the most populous region of the world can yield enormous benefits and help to generate billions of dollars in trade and millions of jobs.

As I announced at the State of the Union address, we're also going to be launching an effort to lock in a EU-U.S. trade deal as well.  And already, Europe is our largest trading partner -- the EU as a whole -- and we think that we can expand that even further.  And some of this has to do with us being able to break down some existing barriers across the Atlantic to U.S. products and services, but some of it also has to do with smoothing out differences in regulatory approaches, just trade frictions that arise that are unnecessary that carries over from earlier periods.  And we think just as the TPP can be an enormous boost to U.S. trade and growth that our trade with Europe can expand substantially, and that will advantage U.S. companies and U.S. businesses.

But in order for us to do this, we're going to need the help of industry and labor and all the parties that are represented here.  One of the things that we've also been trying to do during the course of this process is to make sure that it's not just the Xeroxes and the Dow Chemicals that are benefiting from this -- although we want our Fortune 100 companies to be selling as much as possible.  They also have a whole lot of suppliers, so small businesses stand to benefit immensely from this process.  We actually think that there’s room for small and medium-size businesses to export directly -- not just supplying large businesses, but also to break open and enter into these markets. And that can make a huge difference in terms of our long-term prospects. 

So overall this is a good story; this is an optimistic story; but it’s one that we’re going to have to continue to sustain. 

One last point, just because I had a chance to see Bob -- I think many of you are aware of the fact that when tourists come here and spend money, that’s an export.  That goes on the export side of the ledger.  And thanks to some of the great work that we’ve done in a public-private partnership, we’ve been able to accelerate visas.  We’ve been able to make sure that we are out there actively seeking visitors to come here and promoting the U.S. as a tourist destination. 

Just to give you a small example, something that I didn’t realize until I went to Disneyworld -- it turns out that in Florida, for example, Brazilians are the fastest-growing -- one of the largest sources of tourism in Florida.  And, by the way, when they come, they stay a lot longer and they spend a lot more money. 

The problem we had was we had I think three places to get visas in all of Brazil, which is a pretty big country.  And so we’ve been able to cut down visa times drastically.  We’ve seen as a consequence some significant expansion in tourism out of South America because of some of the steps that we’ve taken.  That’s the kind of smart, very cost-effective set of steps that we can take that can make a big difference. 

And a lot of those ideas have been generated from this group.  So I just want to say thank you to all of the terrific people who have been involved, and I’m looking forward to us just staying on this thing until we get it right. 

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  Great to have you here.

THE PRESIDENT:  Good to be here.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  We discussed a lot of the FTA momentum that was started during your first term and now you’re doubling down in the second term, and many of us around the room are very supportive and delighted to be part of the effort. 

I think maybe just another word or two on the European effort from your point of view.  TPP, I think we all get, we’re working on, we’re in the flow.  The European thing, because it is a stalled, back-and-forth situation right now because of their economy, just wondered what the theory of the case was from your --

THE PRESIDENT:  Here’s why we’re modestly optimistic that we can get this done.  I think in the past, the EU, because they’ve got to coordinate among so many countries, consistently had to pursue the lowest common denominator.  And there are certain countries whose agricultural sector is very strong, who tended to block at critical junctures the kinds of broad-based trade agreements that would make it a good deal for us.  If one of the areas where we’ve got the greatest comparative advantage is cordoned off from an overall trade deal, it’s very hard to get something going. 

What I think has changed is the recognition throughout Europe that it is hard for them to figure out a recipe for growth at this point, in part because of the austerity measures that have been put in place throughout the eurozone, in the absence of a more aggressive trade component.  So I think they are hungrier for a deal than they have been in the past.

I think, thanks to the work of good people like Mike Froman, we’ve been able to narrow some of the differences.  We’ve identified on the regulatory side, customs side, areas where we can synchronize without hurting either side, but simply lubricating more effective trade between the two countries. 

So we’ve narrowed down the issues.  I think it will still be a heavy slog.  There’s no guarantee that in the end some of the countries that have been hard cases in the past won’t block it again, but I think that you’re going to see more pressure from more countries on the other side of the Atlantic to get this done than we’ve seen in the past.

Lael, Mike, is that a fair assessment?  These guys spend more time in Europe than I do.

Q    Yes.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  Do you have time to take a couple questions --

THE PRESIDENT:  Sure.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  -- from the group? 

Anybody care to weigh in?

THE PRESIDENT:  Or comments.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  Or comments, sure.

THE PRESIDENT:  Everybody is just dying to get back to Becky’s charts.  (Laughter.)  They’re nice-looking charts.

SENATOR KLOBUCHAR:  They’re very good.  Mr. President, thank you for your leadership on this issue.  And I just think setting that goal of doubling the exports was one that many of us have used over and over again.  And many of us were talking about the need for more kids to go into science, engineering, technology.  We literally have so many jobs that are unfilled right now, particularly in western Minnesota, and I think finding some simple goal like that of getting the increase in the number of kids going into these areas and selling it as something that they want to do would be a good idea. 

And I wanted to commend the State Department -- I did earlier -- for the work on the visas.  I still think there’s so much more that can be done.  We’ve doubled -- doubled -- the tourism.  It’s up 50 percent from China.  And I think that there’s even, obviously, more that we can do with videoconferencing on visa interviews, other things that we should try to use the technology that we have. 

As you’ve noted, people are spending tons of money going to Disneyland -- I would also add going to the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota -- (laughter ) -- a hot spot for Asia tourists, especially.  Not as much Brazilians -- it’s too cold in our state for them.  (Laughter.)  But I see so much promise here with the tourism. 

And the last is what you mentioned -- this growing political support for fair trade agreements is huge.  And it’s about the big companies, but when people see in their own towns these small and medium-sized companies where their brothers and sisters work, it creates a kind of support for trade that is much more organic and really goes in a grassroots way across the country.  And I think we have to remember that as a piece of what’s good for the economy, but also it will grow support for this new global economy. 

So I just want to thank you for your efforts and hope that we can look at this -- the workforce training issue  in a different way in terms of setting some goals for these kids so they see it as a career opportunity.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, what’s absolutely true is that exports, trade are one brick in this broader economic foundation that we’re trying to build.  But we’re not going to succeed in meeting our export goals if we’re not making great products and delivering great services.  And we’re not going to be able to do that unless we’ve got a great workforce. 

You may want to come with me, because after this I’m about to go these Intel National Science Award winners, where you meet 15- and 16-year-olds who invents plasmas -- (laughter) -- and cure cancer and -- most of the time I have no idea what they’re talking about -- (laughter) -- but they’re very impressive and inspiring.

We are setting a set of goals for STEM education, number of engineers that we need to produce.  All that stuff is going to be important.  But one of the things that I’ve also been pointing out, when you look at a lot of those jobs that go unfilled, they're not necessarily Ph.D. jobs.  The issue here is can we reintroduce an effective model for vocational training where -- and part of the goal that we’ve set for ourselves with respect to high schools is duplicating some of the things that are being done, for example, by IBM where they go into a high school in New York and they say, we’ll train you and during high school you will get the equivalent of an associate’s degree, so that by the time you graduate, maybe you take two years of community college, you are now fully trained for jobs that we know are out there and that people are hiring for -- which makes the kids more engaged in high school, saves them money, reduces the number of Pell grants they're taking out.  It’s a win-win situation for everybody.  And the employers then have great quality control in terms of knowing who it is that they're getting.

We want to see if we can duplicate that across the board.

Yes, Kirsten.

SENATOR GILLIBRAND:  Well, I want to thank you, Mr. President, for your vision because I am telling you it’s making an absolute difference in my own state in high-tech manufacturing and increasing our exports.

We also had an easy win -- I appreciate the leadership you took with regard to Canada, something so parochial, so easy -- but increasing our exports to Canada.  For New York State to have Montreal and Toronto a stone’s throw away is such a huge market for our entrepreneurs. 

And some work still can be done.  There’s no streamlining of what governmental requirements are required on both sides of the border, and that's something that we can actually fix -- making a one-stop shop for a young entrepreneur who’s starting a business who wants to know what forms do I have to fill out to export my product abroad.  That's a place where we have enormous export potential. 

And even just in agricultural products -- for apples that are going from New York to Canada, they have to be inspected on both sides of the border.  Unnecessary.  So there’s some real streamlining I think we could do to increase exports just between those two areas of the country.

But I just want to thank you because, as Amy said, in terms of filling these jobs, what’s really worked is part of your initiatives of allowing the community colleges to work directly with the  manufacturers to build the course work for the job the manufacturer needs. 

And we had a fantastic example where Bombardier, who builds a lot of things, including subways, needed advanced welders.  Well, they want to Adirondack Community College, built the course work, and those employees got their training, got a higher wage and filled the spots.  And so it’s really exciting what you’re doing in education innovation, which is training the people for the jobs that are available with the collaboration of the employers building the course work.  It’s a win-win for everybody.  And I just want to congratulate you for your vision on that issue.

THE PRESIDENT:  Great. 

A couple more? 

MAYOR BROWN:  Mr. President, I want to thank you for supporting the U.S. Conference of Mayors for the ports.  Ports are a big economic engine in our cities, and they really focus on small business and entrepreneurs, helping them to export.  So I want to thank you for that. 

I know the policy you pushed to allow the study to be released early from the Army Corps of Engineers, which helped Jacksonville, Florida, by the way.  Really appreciate that.  Florida is very important.  And like you said with Brazil, which is Florida’s number-one trading partner, so we really appreciate your support on the ports, and modernizing the port so that we can compete and position cities to really be competitive in the marketplace.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, one of the things that we talked about is if we’re going to export effectively, we’ve got to have effective infrastructure.  The ports issue all around the Gulf is going to be critical.  The Panama Canal is being modified.  You’re going to have bigger ships coming in.  And if you want to unload those ships, you got to have high-quality ports.  That obviously is a gateway for everything that's happening in Central and South America. 

Recently, we had the challenge of -- I know I talked to Pat about this -- getting goods from the Midwest down the Mississippi when the water started going down.  And if, in fact, temperatures are warming -- I know this is not our climate change meeting -- (laughter) -- but I think we can anticipate that we may end up having some challenges in terms of managing our waterways.  Well, whether or not we can continue to use barges to move a lot of product out of the American heartland to ports around the world, that's going to depend on our infrastructure. 

So we are going to, in our budget, continue to push Congress to see if we can essentially deal with deferred maintenance.  Sometimes, when it comes to government spending, everybody thinks it's all the same.  I think everybody around this table knows in your businesses you think very differently about capital investments, long-term investments that are going to make your company more competitive, versus wasting money.  And here's an example of where we should be doing less of some things that are not helping us grow.  Building infrastructure is something that does help us grow.

All right, guys, I think you've got smarter people around the table than me to deal with some of these issues.  Again, I just want to thank all of you who’ve been involved.  We are going to continue to push this agenda. 

One of the things I hope that you've seen during the course of these last four years is that if we hear good ideas, we'll implement them, we'll move them.  So the great thing about a council like this is that it gives us insight into how things are actually operating or not operating, and we can start cutting through some of the red tape and get things done. 

So continue to provide us with recommendations.  We'll work them through.  There's an interagency process -- it's a good way for us to break down some of the silos that develop between various agencies.  And I think we can make significant improvement and continue to build on the goals that we've set. 

Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)

END
10:42 A.M. EDT

Close Transcript

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Meeting with the President's Export Council

Room 350
Eisenhower Executive Office Building

10:22 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  I want to get back to the official business at hand.  But I did want to stop by.  First of all, I just want to say thanks to the PEC for the unbelievable work that you guys have done and the extraordinary leadership that you’ve provided to our team and the administration as we've tried to promote exports all around the world.  And I'm glad to see that we've got a couple of our outstanding senators here as well who I know care deeply about exports because their states benefit from exports. We all do.

And I assume that part of these charts was Becky going over the progress that we've made over the last several years, so I won't reiterate it.  The good news is we are well on our way to meeting a very ambitious goal that we set several years ago to double U.S. exports.  And what we know is, is that a lot of the growth, a lot of the new jobs that we've seen during the course of this recovery, have been export-driven. 

What's also encouraging is it's been coming from a whole variety of sectors.  Obviously, our agricultural sector has always been strong and it's gotten even stronger.  But what we've also seen is, is that our manufacturing base, our high-tech, our services across the board we're seeing significant increases.  And the question now becomes how do we sustain this momentum? 

Part of it is making sure that we get in place strong trade deals.  And having ratified with the help of a number of our legislators the Panama, Colombia and, most significantly, South Korean trade deals, we've now been moving aggressively on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a high standards trade regime that we think can advantage U.S. companies and U.S. workers because it sets a bar that ensures that trade is fair and free.  And for those of us who abide by high labor standards and high environmental standards, obviously being able to lock in those kinds of high standards in the fastest-growing region of the world and the most populous region of the world can yield enormous benefits and help to generate billions of dollars in trade and millions of jobs.

As I announced at the State of the Union address, we're also going to be launching an effort to lock in a EU-U.S. trade deal as well.  And already, Europe is our largest trading partner -- the EU as a whole -- and we think that we can expand that even further.  And some of this has to do with us being able to break down some existing barriers across the Atlantic to U.S. products and services, but some of it also has to do with smoothing out differences in regulatory approaches, just trade frictions that arise that are unnecessary that carries over from earlier periods.  And we think just as the TPP can be an enormous boost to U.S. trade and growth that our trade with Europe can expand substantially, and that will advantage U.S. companies and U.S. businesses.

But in order for us to do this, we're going to need the help of industry and labor and all the parties that are represented here.  One of the things that we've also been trying to do during the course of this process is to make sure that it's not just the Xeroxes and the Dow Chemicals that are benefiting from this -- although we want our Fortune 100 companies to be selling as much as possible.  They also have a whole lot of suppliers, so small businesses stand to benefit immensely from this process.  We actually think that there’s room for small and medium-size businesses to export directly -- not just supplying large businesses, but also to break open and enter into these markets. And that can make a huge difference in terms of our long-term prospects. 

So overall this is a good story; this is an optimistic story; but it’s one that we’re going to have to continue to sustain. 

One last point, just because I had a chance to see Bob -- I think many of you are aware of the fact that when tourists come here and spend money, that’s an export.  That goes on the export side of the ledger.  And thanks to some of the great work that we’ve done in a public-private partnership, we’ve been able to accelerate visas.  We’ve been able to make sure that we are out there actively seeking visitors to come here and promoting the U.S. as a tourist destination. 

Just to give you a small example, something that I didn’t realize until I went to Disneyworld -- it turns out that in Florida, for example, Brazilians are the fastest-growing -- one of the largest sources of tourism in Florida.  And, by the way, when they come, they stay a lot longer and they spend a lot more money. 

The problem we had was we had I think three places to get visas in all of Brazil, which is a pretty big country.  And so we’ve been able to cut down visa times drastically.  We’ve seen as a consequence some significant expansion in tourism out of South America because of some of the steps that we’ve taken.  That’s the kind of smart, very cost-effective set of steps that we can take that can make a big difference. 

And a lot of those ideas have been generated from this group.  So I just want to say thank you to all of the terrific people who have been involved, and I’m looking forward to us just staying on this thing until we get it right. 

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  Great to have you here.

THE PRESIDENT:  Good to be here.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  We discussed a lot of the FTA momentum that was started during your first term and now you’re doubling down in the second term, and many of us around the room are very supportive and delighted to be part of the effort. 

I think maybe just another word or two on the European effort from your point of view.  TPP, I think we all get, we’re working on, we’re in the flow.  The European thing, because it is a stalled, back-and-forth situation right now because of their economy, just wondered what the theory of the case was from your --

THE PRESIDENT:  Here’s why we’re modestly optimistic that we can get this done.  I think in the past, the EU, because they’ve got to coordinate among so many countries, consistently had to pursue the lowest common denominator.  And there are certain countries whose agricultural sector is very strong, who tended to block at critical junctures the kinds of broad-based trade agreements that would make it a good deal for us.  If one of the areas where we’ve got the greatest comparative advantage is cordoned off from an overall trade deal, it’s very hard to get something going. 

What I think has changed is the recognition throughout Europe that it is hard for them to figure out a recipe for growth at this point, in part because of the austerity measures that have been put in place throughout the eurozone, in the absence of a more aggressive trade component.  So I think they are hungrier for a deal than they have been in the past.

I think, thanks to the work of good people like Mike Froman, we’ve been able to narrow some of the differences.  We’ve identified on the regulatory side, customs side, areas where we can synchronize without hurting either side, but simply lubricating more effective trade between the two countries. 

So we’ve narrowed down the issues.  I think it will still be a heavy slog.  There’s no guarantee that in the end some of the countries that have been hard cases in the past won’t block it again, but I think that you’re going to see more pressure from more countries on the other side of the Atlantic to get this done than we’ve seen in the past.

Lael, Mike, is that a fair assessment?  These guys spend more time in Europe than I do.

Q    Yes.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  Do you have time to take a couple questions --

THE PRESIDENT:  Sure.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  -- from the group? 

Anybody care to weigh in?

THE PRESIDENT:  Or comments.

CHAIRMAN McNERNEY:  Or comments, sure.

THE PRESIDENT:  Everybody is just dying to get back to Becky’s charts.  (Laughter.)  They’re nice-looking charts.

SENATOR KLOBUCHAR:  They’re very good.  Mr. President, thank you for your leadership on this issue.  And I just think setting that goal of doubling the exports was one that many of us have used over and over again.  And many of us were talking about the need for more kids to go into science, engineering, technology.  We literally have so many jobs that are unfilled right now, particularly in western Minnesota, and I think finding some simple goal like that of getting the increase in the number of kids going into these areas and selling it as something that they want to do would be a good idea. 

And I wanted to commend the State Department -- I did earlier -- for the work on the visas.  I still think there’s so much more that can be done.  We’ve doubled -- doubled -- the tourism.  It’s up 50 percent from China.  And I think that there’s even, obviously, more that we can do with videoconferencing on visa interviews, other things that we should try to use the technology that we have. 

As you’ve noted, people are spending tons of money going to Disneyland -- I would also add going to the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota -- (laughter ) -- a hot spot for Asia tourists, especially.  Not as much Brazilians -- it’s too cold in our state for them.  (Laughter.)  But I see so much promise here with the tourism. 

And the last is what you mentioned -- this growing political support for fair trade agreements is huge.  And it’s about the big companies, but when people see in their own towns these small and medium-sized companies where their brothers and sisters work, it creates a kind of support for trade that is much more organic and really goes in a grassroots way across the country.  And I think we have to remember that as a piece of what’s good for the economy, but also it will grow support for this new global economy. 

So I just want to thank you for your efforts and hope that we can look at this -- the workforce training issue  in a different way in terms of setting some goals for these kids so they see it as a career opportunity.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, what’s absolutely true is that exports, trade are one brick in this broader economic foundation that we’re trying to build.  But we’re not going to succeed in meeting our export goals if we’re not making great products and delivering great services.  And we’re not going to be able to do that unless we’ve got a great workforce. 

You may want to come with me, because after this I’m about to go these Intel National Science Award winners, where you meet 15- and 16-year-olds who invents plasmas -- (laughter) -- and cure cancer and -- most of the time I have no idea what they’re talking about -- (laughter) -- but they’re very impressive and inspiring.

We are setting a set of goals for STEM education, number of engineers that we need to produce.  All that stuff is going to be important.  But one of the things that I’ve also been pointing out, when you look at a lot of those jobs that go unfilled, they're not necessarily Ph.D. jobs.  The issue here is can we reintroduce an effective model for vocational training where -- and part of the goal that we’ve set for ourselves with respect to high schools is duplicating some of the things that are being done, for example, by IBM where they go into a high school in New York and they say, we’ll train you and during high school you will get the equivalent of an associate’s degree, so that by the time you graduate, maybe you take two years of community college, you are now fully trained for jobs that we know are out there and that people are hiring for -- which makes the kids more engaged in high school, saves them money, reduces the number of Pell grants they're taking out.  It’s a win-win situation for everybody.  And the employers then have great quality control in terms of knowing who it is that they're getting.

We want to see if we can duplicate that across the board.

Yes, Kirsten.

SENATOR GILLIBRAND:  Well, I want to thank you, Mr. President, for your vision because I am telling you it’s making an absolute difference in my own state in high-tech manufacturing and increasing our exports.

We also had an easy win -- I appreciate the leadership you took with regard to Canada, something so parochial, so easy -- but increasing our exports to Canada.  For New York State to have Montreal and Toronto a stone’s throw away is such a huge market for our entrepreneurs. 

And some work still can be done.  There’s no streamlining of what governmental requirements are required on both sides of the border, and that's something that we can actually fix -- making a one-stop shop for a young entrepreneur who’s starting a business who wants to know what forms do I have to fill out to export my product abroad.  That's a place where we have enormous export potential. 

And even just in agricultural products -- for apples that are going from New York to Canada, they have to be inspected on both sides of the border.  Unnecessary.  So there’s some real streamlining I think we could do to increase exports just between those two areas of the country.

But I just want to thank you because, as Amy said, in terms of filling these jobs, what’s really worked is part of your initiatives of allowing the community colleges to work directly with the  manufacturers to build the course work for the job the manufacturer needs. 

And we had a fantastic example where Bombardier, who builds a lot of things, including subways, needed advanced welders.  Well, they want to Adirondack Community College, built the course work, and those employees got their training, got a higher wage and filled the spots.  And so it’s really exciting what you’re doing in education innovation, which is training the people for the jobs that are available with the collaboration of the employers building the course work.  It’s a win-win for everybody.  And I just want to congratulate you for your vision on that issue.

THE PRESIDENT:  Great. 

A couple more? 

MAYOR BROWN:  Mr. President, I want to thank you for supporting the U.S. Conference of Mayors for the ports.  Ports are a big economic engine in our cities, and they really focus on small business and entrepreneurs, helping them to export.  So I want to thank you for that. 

I know the policy you pushed to allow the study to be released early from the Army Corps of Engineers, which helped Jacksonville, Florida, by the way.  Really appreciate that.  Florida is very important.  And like you said with Brazil, which is Florida’s number-one trading partner, so we really appreciate your support on the ports, and modernizing the port so that we can compete and position cities to really be competitive in the marketplace.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, one of the things that we talked about is if we’re going to export effectively, we’ve got to have effective infrastructure.  The ports issue all around the Gulf is going to be critical.  The Panama Canal is being modified.  You’re going to have bigger ships coming in.  And if you want to unload those ships, you got to have high-quality ports.  That obviously is a gateway for everything that's happening in Central and South America. 

Recently, we had the challenge of -- I know I talked to Pat about this -- getting goods from the Midwest down the Mississippi when the water started going down.  And if, in fact, temperatures are warming -- I know this is not our climate change meeting -- (laughter) -- but I think we can anticipate that we may end up having some challenges in terms of managing our waterways.  Well, whether or not we can continue to use barges to move a lot of product out of the American heartland to ports around the world, that's going to depend on our infrastructure. 

So we are going to, in our budget, continue to push Congress to see if we can essentially deal with deferred maintenance.  Sometimes, when it comes to government spending, everybody thinks it's all the same.  I think everybody around this table knows in your businesses you think very differently about capital investments, long-term investments that are going to make your company more competitive, versus wasting money.  And here's an example of where we should be doing less of some things that are not helping us grow.  Building infrastructure is something that does help us grow.

All right, guys, I think you've got smarter people around the table than me to deal with some of these issues.  Again, I just want to thank all of you who’ve been involved.  We are going to continue to push this agenda. 

One of the things I hope that you've seen during the course of these last four years is that if we hear good ideas, we'll implement them, we'll move them.  So the great thing about a council like this is that it gives us insight into how things are actually operating or not operating, and we can start cutting through some of the red tape and get things done. 

So continue to provide us with recommendations.  We'll work them through.  There's an interagency process -- it's a good way for us to break down some of the silos that develop between various agencies.  And I think we can make significant improvement and continue to build on the goals that we've set. 

Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)

END
10:42 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the Press Secretary on the House Republican Budget

The President believes that there is an opportunity for Democrats and Republicans to come together around a balanced plan to grow the economy and shrink the deficit by investing to create jobs, cutting wasteful spending, and strengthening programs like Medicare and Medicaid.  This approach will require both parties to compromise and make tough choices.

While the House Republican budget aims to reduce the deficit, the math just doesn't add up.  Deficit reduction that asks nothing from the wealthiest Americans has serious consequences for the middle class.  By choosing to give the wealthiest Americans a new tax cut, this budget as written will either fail to achieve any meaningful deficit reduction, raise taxes on middle class families by more than $2,000 – or both.  By choosing not to ask for a single dime of deficit reduction from closing tax loopholes for the wealthy and well-connected, this budget identifies deep cuts to investments like education and research – investments critical to creating jobs and growing the middle class.  And to save money, this budget would turn Medicare into a voucher program--undercutting the guaranteed benefits that seniors have earned and forcing them to pay thousands more out of their own pockets.  We've tried this top-down approach before.  The President still believes it is the wrong course for America.

That’s why the President has put forward a balanced approach to deficit reduction with no sacred cows.  It includes more Medicare savings over the next decade than the House Republican budget, but it does so by cracking down on waste and fraud, not by asking middle class seniors to bear the burden.  It closes tax loopholes for the wealthiest and biggest corporations so we can still afford to create jobs by investing in education, manufacturing, infrastructure, and small businesses.  The President’s plan puts our nation on a fiscally sustainable path and grows our economy from the middle class out.

While the President disagrees with the House Republican approach, we all agree we need to leave a better future for our children.  The President will continue to work with Republicans and Democrats in Congress to grow the economy and cut the deficit in a balanced way. This is the approach the American people overwhelmingly support, and that is what the President will continue to fight for each day.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 3/11/2013

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:25 P.M. EDT
 
MR. CARNEY:  Happy Monday.  Good afternoon.  Thanks for being here for your White House briefing.  Spring is here early. 
 
Q    Can we do a briefing outside?
 
MR. CARNEY:  We'll see.  I like the idea in theory, anyway.
 
I have no announcements to make.  You obviously know much of what’s on the President’s schedule this week, including his visits to Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday to meet with Senate Democrats on Tuesday, House Republicans on Wednesday, Senate Republicans on Thursday and House Democrats also on Thursday.
 
While he’s there he will want to discuss a range of priorities including, of course, conversations he’s been having on budget-related issues, the need to reduce our deficit in a balanced way, but also immigration reform and the progress that's being made on that subject in a bipartisan way, efforts to move forward on actions to reduce gun violence -- also efforts that involve both Democrats and Republicans.  Other items that are on his list of priorities include increasing our energy independence, the need to do something about the pace of nominations being confirmed and considered in the Senate -- judicial nominations, in particular -- as well as the need for Congress to take action on cybersecurity.
 
With that, I'll go to Jim. 
 
Q    Thanks, Jay.  So since we are on week two of the charm blitz -- (laughter) -- on Wednesday, as you mentioned, the President is going to the Hill, but he’s also speaking to Organizing for Action, which is the group that grew out of his campaign reelection.  And I'm wondering whether there’s potentially a mixed message there.  Because last week OFA sent out an email saying that -- calling Republicans obstructionists, blaming them for the sequester, saying if only they had voted for closing tax loopholes the public wouldn't be in this jam.  So is there a mixed message there from the President, on the one hand appealing to and speaking to Republicans on the issues you just mentioned, and then going to OFA, potentially a partisan -- a more partisan address?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Organizing for Action, as you know, Jim, was established to promote the President’s public policy agenda.  It is certainly the President’s position that sequester has been implemented because Republicans made a choice.  Rather than go along with a balanced approach to deficit reduction, rather than go along with either a buy-down or the deal that has been on the table since the President tried to negotiate it with Speaker Boehner last year, they said, no way, no how, and the choice they made was to allow sequester to be implemented.  Let’s be clear about that.  And that is not a position that we’ll take a different view on. 
 
It is also the case that sequester is here; it’s being implemented as a result of the choice made on Capitol Hill by Republicans.  And it is another reason why we should engage with and move forward -- engage with Republicans and Democrats on the Hill and move forward with at least the potential for bipartisan, balanced deficit reduction that deals with the sequester and the larger goal of more than $4 trillion in deficit reduction over a decade.
 
That's the nature of the conversations the President has been having with Republican lawmakers, including in his dinner with Senate Republicans last week, including in his lunch with Chairman Ryan and Congressman Van Hollen.  And I'm sure it will be one of the topics that he raises in his meetings on the Hill this week. 
 
So I think that as the President said in his inaugural address, we should not believe that we need to resolve all of our differences before we can move forward on common -- working together, taking action together to achieve results for the American people; meeting on common ground, putting forward solutions that represent compromise, much as the President has put forward solutions that represent compromise, whether it’s on immigration reform or legislation that deals with gun violence or balancing -- getting our fiscal house in order in a way that's balanced so that the burden is not borne solely by seniors and middle-class families.
 
I think there’s a great deal of consistency in what the President has proposed and what he’s been saying for many, many months now.
 
Q    Washington is a place of optics, too, and is it diplomatic to be thinking of -- be speaking to a partisan group on the same day that he’s speaking to --
 
MR. CARNEY:  First of all, I think you're misrepresenting the group.  As I understand it, as I've read about it, it will not take a position in elections; it’s focused on policy issues. And the President’s policy agenda, which Organizing for Action has been designed to promote, consists of item after item that have had bipartisan support in the past, that should have bipartisan support in the future. 
 
I mean, there’s nothing partisan about deficit reduction.  In fact, you might even say it’s more of a priority for Republicans than Democrats.  And yet the President is pushing for a balanced package that would achieve the goal of over $4 trillion in deficit reduction over a decade.  And that includes a proposal that produces significant savings from entitlement reform as well as savings from tax reform.
 
There’s nothing partisan about comprehensive immigration reform.  There’s a bipartisan effort underway in the Senate right now -- Democrats and Republicans pushing forward an effort to produce legislation that would achieve that bipartisan goal.
 
In the wake of Newtown, I would argue that there’s nothing partisan about common-sense solutions to reduce gun violence in America.  The victims of gun violence aren’t Democrats or Republicans, especially when they’re children.  And there ought to be -- and there is -- a path forward to reduce gun violence in America, much as the President laid out, that respects our Second Amendment rights.  As you know, nothing the President has proposed, whether it’s executive action or legislative action, would take a single firearm away from a single law-abiding citizen.
 
Q    North Korean state media says today that Pyongyang has carried through with its threat to cancel the 60-year-old armistice.  This seems to go beyond the typical saber-rattling from North Korea.  Is the President alarmed by this development?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, we are certainly concerned by North Korea’s bellicose rhetoric.  And the threats that they have been making follow a pattern designed to raise tension and intimidate others.  The DPRK will achieve nothing by threats or provocations, which will only further isolate North Korea and undermine international efforts to ensure peace and stability in Northeast Asia.  We continue to urge the North Korean leadership to heed President Obama’s call to choose the path of peace and come into compliance with its international obligations.
 
We have worked in a concerted way with our international partners to put pressure on and isolate North Korea because of its failure to live up to its obligations.  As you know, the Security Council passed a resolution with unanimous support just last week in reaction to actions by North Korea.  And we will continue that effort.
 
Q    Jay, as you pointed out, it’s a big week.  The President is going to the Hill.  The Senate and the House are also expected to produce their own budgets.  Is there some sense that the sequester ship has left the station, left the harbor --
 
MR. CARNEY:  The sequester ship?  Okay.
 
Q    Yes -- and that these cuts will go into effect no matter what?  Or is there still an effort to mitigate the effect of the cuts somehow?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, it’s still the President’s position, and I believe the position of Democrats on Capitol Hill, that a better alternative would have been and continues to be a piece of legislation that would postpone or push back implementation of the sequester.  But that choice was made by Republicans not to embrace that alternative, an alternative that they had embraced at the end of 2012. 
 
So our focus now, as the President has said, is on working with Congress in regular order on the budget process, and through that process hopefully produce a bipartisan agreement on deficit reduction -- balanced deficit reduction that couples entitlement reform with tax reform, that achieves the deficit reduction in both ways -- which I would argue, when we talk about using proceeds from tax reform, closing loopholes and ending exemptions for the well-off and well-connected, we should use those proceeds towards the goal of reducing our deficit, not towards funneling them into tax breaks that disproportionately benefit the wealthy.
 
That's the President’s position.  That's embodied in his proposal, and that's the approach that he’ll take as we move forward in these conversations.  And hopefully we can do that.
And the broader deficit reduction achieved -- if it’s achieved -- would eliminate the sequester and then some, and that would be obviously good for the entire country.
 
Q    When does the President plan to propose his own budget? And how does he see that fitting in with the budgets that are being proposed by the Senate and the House?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I don't have a date certain for you on the President’s budget.  It’s being worked on.  We are obviously watching Congress for budget proposals that will be put forward in both houses, and we will work with Congress in these conversations, as well as through our budget proposal to try to achieve the very kind of common-sense, mainstream, bipartisan, balanced package of deficit reduction that could do a lot of good for our economy and for the middle class at a time when, as we’ve seen, there’s every reason to believe that the economy is poised to do well in 2013, to grow and to create more jobs, to build on the 6.35 million jobs that have been created in the private sector over the past three years.  And it is incumbent upon leaders in Washington to pursue that path of bipartisan, balanced deficit reduction, rather than sort of a partisan path that results in Washington inflicting wounds on the economy, instead of taking action to help the economy and help the middle class.
 
Jim.
 
Q    Over the weekend, the Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said that raising the eligibility age for Medicare does not save money and it’s not a solution.  We know that there’s been a charm offensive aimed at Republicans in recent weeks.  Is there one needed for fellow Democrats?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President’s position is one that raising the eligibility age on Medicare is not good policy.  It does not save money significantly, especially in the first 10 years, and it would result primarily in cost-shifting to seniors who are very vulnerable at age 65 and 66.  That’s the President’s position.  We’ve talked about that in recent weeks and months. 
 
But it is also his position that we can take other measures within the framework of entitlement reform, measures that are represented in his proposal to the Speaker of the House, measures that are tough choices for Democrats to go along with, tough choices for the President, but he believes they are better policy.  They are more effective in the stated goal, which is to reduce the cost of health care, and by reducing the cost of health care, reducing the burden on our long-term fiscal situation.
 
So I don’t think there’s anything inconsistent with what Leader Pelosi said and what the President’s position is.
 
Q    So no wooing of Democrats will be necessary?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not sure what that means.  The President has worked with Democrats, and I think I just made the point that his proposal consists of very tough choices for Democrats.  If we take as both fact and conventional wisdom that in Washington it’s a more difficult choice for Republicans to go along with revenue, and Democrats to go along with entitlement savings, the President has put forward proposals with Democratic support that include significant entitlement savings -- building on the entitlement savings he’s already signed into law. 
 
Republicans, we’re hoping, will also make tough choices on their parts, and that would include allowing tax reform to produce revenue towards deficit reduction.  If we do that, together, we can really do something good for the economy and something good for the American middle class.
 
Q    And getting back to OFA, why not do more to decouple the President from this new organization?  Some of the people who represent that organization still have email addresses that end with barackobama.com.  And what about the appearance that the President will be, at times, meeting behind closed doors with donors?  They may not get individual meetings with the President, but they will be getting --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not sure about that.  The organization was established specifically to promote President Obama’s policy agenda, so I don’t think there’s any question about the link between the President’s policy proposals on the economy and the middle class and education, on climate change and immigration reform, and this organization.  But it is a separate organization.  It is voluntarily -- as I understand it, reading the news reports -- disclosing its donors in an effort to be transparent.  And as the President does with numerous organizations that support his policy agenda or the political agenda of the Democratic Party, which is not the goal of this specific organization, he will meet periodically with OFA. 
 
Q    But isn’t that kind of squishy?  The organization is him.
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, the organization -- look, there are organizations all over Washington and around the country that support policy agendas and policy areas.  That’s what this organization does.  And I would refer you to them for more details on their efforts.  They are not, as I understand it, again, based on news reports, engaged in political campaigning -- winning elections or helping candidates win elections.  They’re focused on the policy proposals. 
 
The President speaks to the DCCC and the DNC and the DSCC.  He’ll speak to other outside organizations that have policy agendas.  And that’s entirely appropriate.  And the President is pursuing a policy agenda, as I noted earlier, that is inherently bipartisan, that is embraced by a majority of the American people both in general, as we saw in the election, and in the specifics. And the President obviously believes that engaging the American people in our policy debates is very important.  That’s what the election was all about.  And he believes that when the American people are engaged in these debates, the outcomes of the debates are better for the American economy and for the middle class.
 
Mary.
 
Q    Jay, over the weekend, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said the U.S. is encouraging violence in conjunction with the Taliban to prolong the U.S. presence in Afghanistan.  He said the Taliban were killing Afghan civilians “in service to America.”  What was the President’s reaction to hearing this?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think Secretary Hagel and General Dunford spoke to this yesterday and made clear that any suggestion the United States is colluding with the Taliban is categorically false.  Secretary Hagel addressed these questions directly with President Karzai in their meeting.  The United States has spent enormous blood and treasure for the past 12 years supporting the Afghan people and ensuring -- in the effort to ensure stability and security in that country.  The last thing we would do is support any kind of violence, particularly involving innocent civilians.
 
Q    Do Karzai’s comments and this kind of mounting tension harm or impact U.S. plans to withdraw?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President has a policy that has been embraced by NATO, by our allies in the coalition, and we are pursuing that policy.  That includes we’ve drawn down the surge forces and we’re winding down our troop presence in Afghanistan as we build up Afghan security forces and turn over security lead to Afghan security forces.  And that progress continues.
 
There is no question that there have been a number of difficult security incidents, and there have been comments by President Karzai with which we’ve disagreed.  But our policy has not changed. 
 
And what’s important to remember is we went into Afghanistan because we were attacked from Afghanistan.  We went into Afghanistan -- and the President made sure that we refocused on this goal when he reviewed Afghan policy upon becoming President -- in order to go after those who attacked the United States, go after those who killed Americans, to go after al Qaeda central, which had taken haven in Afghanistan.  And that remains the principal objective of our mission in Afghanistan:  to defeat -- to disrupt, dismantle and ultimately defeat al Qaeda in the Afghanistan region; to, in service of that goal, build up -- train and build up Afghan security forces so they can take over security for their country; and to provide the space necessary for the Afghan government to increase stability in that country and to allow us to continue to go after al Qaeda, which is, again, our primary objective.
 
Q    Can we follow up on that?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Let me get through the first row here. 
 
John.
 
Q    A couple of things.  I was just taken aback by your answer to the question about Organizing for Action.  You’re saying --
 
MR. CARNEY:  You were taken aback?
 
Q    -- it’s no different than -- that the President sees this group as no different than the DSCC or any other group you speak to?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I said it’s --
 
Q    I mean, this is a group --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I didn’t say that.  I said it’s similar.
 
Q    -- that’s planning on coordinating with the White House, is it not?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, OFA, again --

Q    Was legally set up so it could do that, right?
 
MR. CARNEY:  -- was set up to promote the President’s public policy agenda.  And therefore, as anyone would expect, the President would likely meet with their representatives to discuss his agenda.  Any notion, as we’ve talked about, that there’s a price set for a meeting with the President is absurd and wrong.  I mean, the comparison here is that the President goes and speaks about his policy agenda to a variety of groups that support that agenda, including the DNC or the DSCC or the DCCC, including other organizations that have policy ideas that are --
 
Q    This group is going to spend money on his behalf to promote his agenda.
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, this group is promoting a policy agenda.  It is not trying to elect him, obviously, since he’s --
 
Q    No, no, no, but they’re spending money to promote the agenda.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Sure.  As organizations do all over town and all over the country.  They spend money to promote policy ideas.
 
Q    But on his behalf, coordinating with the White House.
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, on the American people’s behalf.  The President believes that the agenda that he’s putting forward obviously is one that would benefit the middle class and benefit the country.  The idea that an organization is out there promoting immigration reform -- we heard from a lot of Republicans this weekend about their support for comprehensive immigration reform, much as the President supports comprehensive immigration reform.  Would you argue then that this organization is inappropriately somehow supporting their agenda? 
 
I think that there really is an issue here that's about the President’s agenda, the President’s policy proposals.  The President is out there pushing for his agenda.  And he obviously believes that an organization like this is both helpful and appropriate in engaging the American people, engaging those Americans who support this agenda in a way that helps move the process forward.
 
Q    And he isn’t concerned that it’s basically increasing the amount of money that is spent on the politics of Washington? I mean, it does increase the amount of money that gets poured into this.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Ordinary Americans who contribute to these organizations to help push policy proposals that benefit ordinary Americans should have and need a voice in Washington.  There’s no question that there are corporate and other interests that are amply represented in the policy debate in Washington.  So a grassroots organization like this is appropriately engaged in this and should have a voice.
 
Q    Has the President given up on campaign finance reform?
 
MR. CARNEY:  No.  I mean, one thing that he’s adamant about, because of -- in the wake of the unfortunate Citizens United decision, is that at the very least, Republicans ought to go along with disclosure.  At the very least, let’s pass legislation, the Disclose Act, that would create the kind of transparency that Americans deserve when it comes to financial contributions to political campaigns.
 
Q    Is this high on his priority list?
 
MR. CARNEY:  It remains a priority.
 
Q    Let me ask you a question on the budget.  This is sort of a weird time in the Senate -- Democrats are going to put out their budget before you guys put out yours.  Are you coordinating with the Senate Democrats?  Did they ask for White House input on that budget, one?  And two, is a balanced budget the goal of the President?
 
MR. CARNEY:  We are engaging with Senate Democrats, with House Democrats, with Senate Republicans and House Republicans, as you know, on budget issues as well as on the broader agenda that we've been talking about --
 
Q    But now that they’re drawing up their budget --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'm sure there are conversations going on, on that process.  We are engaged in our own process.  And the President had lunch with Chairman Ryan last week, and I know they talked about his budget, which I believe is going to be released very soon.
 
The broader effort underway here is to try to, through the budget process, achieve a compromise that allows for both entitlement reform and tax reform that produce the savings necessary to achieve that $4 trillion-plus target over 10 years of deficit reduction, to put our economy on a fiscally sustainable path. 
 
And that is the President’s goal:  deficit reduction large enough to put our economy on a fiscally sustainable path so that the ratio of debt to GDP is below 3 percent for a period of time that would allow, concurrently, through investments and other policy decisions, allow the economy to grow, to become more energy independent, for the middle class to strengthen and grow.
 
I think this is one of the things that -- because I suppose that your question gets at this -- is that the President has always believed that deficit reduction is not a goal unto itself. The whole purpose of deficit reduction should be part of an overall policy objective of strengthening the economy, having it grow faster, having it create more and better jobs for the middle class. 
 
And that's the President’s objective.  And that's why he has always, throughout these budget debates and going back to when he first took office, made sure that the proposals he’s put forward keep the number-one objective in mind, which is economic growth and job creation, not deficit reduction solely for the purpose of reducing the deficit.
 
Q    Is there going to be a goal -- obviously Paul Ryan has got a 10-year target.  Is the President going to have a target, whether it’s 10 years, 15, 20, whatever --
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President will have a target for deficit reduction over 10 years, as he has consistently in his budget --
 
Q    But not a target for a balanced budget by x?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, the President has put forward a budget, but I think that we tend to talk in 10-year windows here when we do budget proposals, both in Congress and with the administration.  And it will do -- the President’s budget will achieve what it has in the past, which is through sensible, balanced deficit reduction, bring our deficit and debt into a place where we are on a fiscally sustainable path, where the ratio of debt to GDP is below 3 percent; and to do that in a way that also allows us to invest in our economy so that we’re building infrastructure for the future and we’re increasing our energy independence, and making sure that our kids are being educated so we can compete 25 years from now and not just today.
 
Q    Just a quick -- 10-year window means you guys are not  -- you won’t have a balanced budget target in a 10-year window?  Fair enough?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, I’m not going to tell you what his budget says.
 
Q    You brought up the window, so that’s why --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Right, but I would look to the President’s past budget proposals, the President’s offer to John Boehner, the Speaker of the House, for what his target has been, which is consistent with bipartisan panels that have looked at these issues.  Because, again, it should not be deficit reduction for deficit reduction’s sake; the goal here should be economic growth and job creation.
 
Q    So, again, what’s the point of the President’s budget other than the fact that he’s required by law to submit it in early February?  If he’s not leading, what’s the point of the budget except perhaps to negotiate the differences between the House and Senate?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I challenge virtually every premise of your question, Bill.  First of all, the President is the only one, right now, with an offer on the table and available online that has been there for months, much to the surprise of --
 
Q    He was supposed to have a budget in February.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, Bill, he has had a budget that represents the same goals that were represented in his offer to Speaker Boehner, the same kind of balanced deficit reduction that also has within it investments in our economy that allow our economy to grow and create jobs and to expand the middle class.
 
Q    Yeah, but it’s not the budget he was supposed to present in February.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Bill, I don’t know what your question is here. The President’s --
 
Q    What’s the point of the budget?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The point of the budget is the President will outline, again, through the budget process, his priorities, economic priorities and policy priorities, both in deficit reduction and in economic growth and job creation.  And his budget will contribute to the process of regular order that we hope will produce bipartisan, balanced deficit reduction, the kind that the American people overwhelmingly support -- deficit reduction that all the data available shows would include both savings from entitlement reform and savings from tax reform, so that senior citizens aren’t asked to bear this deficit reduction on their own, and middle-class families and families who have kids with disabilities, that they’re not stuck with the bill alone; that it asks the well-off and well-connected, through the tax reform process, to give up special loopholes, to give up deductions that only they enjoy in the name of both deficit reduction and economic growth.
 
Q    So with House and Senate budgets out there before the White House budget comes out, it’s like a benchmark for negotiations, mainly?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Bill, how long have you been covering Washington?
 
Q    A long time.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Has there ever been a presidential budget that was enacted word for word into law?
 
Q    No.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Okay, there is a process in Washington of negotiation where the President’s ideas --
 
Q    But they had them in time --
 
Q    Never had anything like this --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I disagree with that.  But the President’s ideas are introduced and ideas of Democrats and Republicans are introduced, and hopefully there is an approach taken by leaders and rank-and-file members on Capitol Hill that embraces the idea of cooperation and compromise, that rejects the idea of absolutist positions that only serve the ideological and partisan interests of a small minority of people in the country, as well as on Capitol Hill, and that the result is a product that both reduces the deficit, invests in our economy, helps it grow and create jobs, that doesn't ask any segment of society to bear the burden alone for deficit reduction.  I mean, that's the process here and that's the goal.  That's why the President has been having these conversations.
 
Q    Only time will tell.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Ed.
 
Q    On OFA, do you plan on letting the press pool in and let cameras show what the President says in this speech on Wednesday?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I’m sure there will be press access.  We’re working that out now.
 
Q    Okay.  And in terms of the Taliban, before I believe you said that the comments by President Karzai are “categorically false.”
 
MR. CARNEY:  Correct.
 
Q    Isn’t there something even stronger you can say beyond that just they're false?  I mean, just in terms of after 12 years of U.S. sacrifice, the man is now saying that within the Taliban they are abusing our people.  Aren’t the Americans actually --
 
MR. CARNEY:  And that's categorically false, and nobody believes it.  And our men and women, for going on 12 years, have sacrificed enormously on behalf of Afghanistan, and they’ve sacrificed enormously in the effort to achieve our goals, which have been to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda; and in service of that goal to build up Afghan security forces so that they can be responsible for that country’s security, and to help stabilize the situation for the Afghan government so that they can be responsible for their own governance.  And that has come at enormous sacrifice.
 
And as you know, Ed, when this President came into office, our policy in Afghanistan was adrift.  And this President made clear in that campaign in 2008 and after he took office that he would fix that problem, that he would refocus our efforts in Afghanistan and make clear what our objectives were and what they were not.  And that has resulted in both the surge in forces, the withdrawal of those surge forces, and the now paced withdrawal of our forces as we turn over security to Afghan security forces.
 
Q    And finally on that, on the substance of the paced withdrawal -- I think Mary tried to get at this.  General Mattis last week testified on Capitol Hill that his recommendation for the President is 13,600 U.S. forces beyond 2014 when that ends.  Where is the President in deciding all of this?  And how does it impact it when your so-called partner on the ground, Karzai, is saying these awful things?  That's got to impact these negotiations, doesn't it?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, we deal with, in these negotiations, with the Afghan government, and the President will review the options for post-2014.  What is a fact is that we will draw down our forces and end this war as the President promised.  Future security agreements are subject to negotiation, and the President will work on that.
 
Mara and then April.
 
Q    I have an OFA question and a budget question.  On OFA, how does the President or you judge their success so far in advocating for his agenda?  They failed to head off the sequester, and I know that gun background checks, which is another thing they’ve focused on, is encountering a lot of obstacles in the Senate. 
 
MR. CARNEY:  Nobody said that any of the issues that the President has taken up are easy.  If they were -- if comprehensive immigration reform or reducing gun violence in America were easy, they would have been done.  And there’s no question that Republicans made a definitive choice, basically reversing a position from last year when the worst possible thing in the world would be the implementation of the sequester to a position where various members were calling it a “home run” or a “victory for the tea party” to have the sequester take effect.  But the President is not deterred in the pursuit of the broader agenda.
 
Q    No, I don't think he is.  I’m just asking you how can you -- do you see any signs that what OFA is trying to do for him is working?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, first of all, I would point your questions about OFA’s success to OFA.  The President is focused on his agenda, and there is progress on comprehensive immigration reform, bipartisan progress.  There is progress on legislation to help reduce gun violence, and we are moving on the executive actions that were part of the President’s comprehensive proposal to reduce gun violence.
 
We are working and having conversations with members of both parties on Capitol Hill in the effort to see if we can find common ground on balanced deficit reduction to deal not just with the sequester, but the broader goal.  We are moving forward on a whole host of areas.  The President will be talking about cybersecurity.  He will talk about the need to do something about the broken process on Capitol Hill in the Senate with confirmation of judges.  And it’s a broad agenda, and the President is focused on all of it.
 
Q    On the budget, can we assume that the entitlement reform ideas that are in the offer that you always say is still on the table will be in his budget -- superlative CPI and the means testing of Medicare?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Mara, the way you phrase that question makes me think that you’re still working on a typewriter or something.  It’s available online.  The proposal is there.  It’s not just that I say they're on the table.  They're on the table, all right?
 
Q    Okay.  But they’ll be in the budget?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I’m not going to predict the budget, but that is the offer, okay?
 
Q    Right, but I’m asking will that be in the budget.  That’s a fair question.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, you’re asking me to tell you what’s in the budget.  I would be -- I would wait for you for the -- I would wait for the budget to come out.  But it is the President’s position, it is the President’s offer -- if John Boehner, the Speaker of the House, wanted to take that offer today, the President would take him up on it.
 
Q    Well, it seems like it would be -- obviously then it would be in the budget.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, Mara, I will allow the budget to be presented. 
 
Q    Okay.
 
MR. CARNEY:  It is the President’s position that in pursuit of balanced deficit reduction that includes both entitlement reforms and revenues from tax reform, that the offer he made to Speaker Boehner remains on the table, and that if the Speaker of the House were to change his position and go back to the position he held just a few months ago, which is that tax reform could generate significant revenues towards deficit reduction -- at the time, he claimed he could produce a trillion dollars in revenues in deficit reduction through tax reform -- then we would be well on our way, potentially, to reaching a bipartisan agreement.  And that offer is on the table.
 
Q    White House officials often say that Republicans never come forward and say what they want to do with Medicare.  Now that we understand the Ryan budget is going to include the same premium support plan that he’s had in the past, do you feel that -- do you take that as the Republican position, proposal for Medicare?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’d say two things.  One, this debate was had over the previous year and a half, and I think the American people were categorically opposed to the approach that says that we should voucherize Medicare, shift costs over to senior citizens to the tune of $5,000 or $6,000 a year extra per senior.  That’s just not an approach that the American people support.  It’s certainly not an approach the President supports.
 
However, there are measures we can take in entitlement reform, including dealing with Medicare, that are sensible policy that don’t unduly burden seniors, that strengthen the program and produce savings.  And the President includes those in his proposal that is on the table with Speaker of the House Boehner.
 
The fact of the matter is, let’s wait and see what the budget proposals are from Capitol Hill.  But there is -- if you look at the broad picture here when it comes to this, both sides -- the President certainly, and Democrats -- say that we need to do some entitlement reform, produce some savings.  I mean, that is in the President’s proposal.  Both sides say that we should reform our tax code and close loopholes, and cap deductions and simplify. 
 
The fact is, as has been noted, the President has put forward a proposal that includes some tough choices when it comes to entitlement reforms.  Some Republicans have recognized that.  And the Speaker, just a few months ago, said that we could cap deductions and close loopholes for the well-off and well-connected and produce a trillion dollars over 10 years in deficit reduction.  The President’s proposal asks for less than that, as a matter of fact. 
 
And so there is a potential here, it seems to me, when you look at these broad areas of entitlement reform and tax reform, for discussion, debate, and hopefully compromise.  Now, we’re not overly -- well, let me just say this:  We’re not naïve about the obstacles that remain, and I think lawmakers of both parties have said so and I’ve said so and the President.  This is challenging stuff.  There are real disagreements.  But there is ground here for discussion and negotiation.
 
Connie.
 
Q    Jay, you called on me next.
 
MR. CARNEY:  April, then Connie.  Sorry.
 
Q    On guns and Medicare cuts.  Two Fridays ago, in Massachusetts, Attorney General Eric Holder told a crowd that he and the President share similarly one of the worst days in office.  He said -- speaking of the aftermath that he viewed at Sandy Hook, Holder said there was blood on the floor and some on the walls when he visited.  He said the carpet was picked up in certain places, and he said he realized that was where the bullets had gone.  Does the President share that view that it was one of the worst days in his office?  And will the President take that message on the Hill when he’s talking about gun control this week?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President has said that the day of Newtown was perhaps the worst day of his presidency.  And I think those of you who saw him that day, when he came out here, those of you who saw him speak in Newtown, felt that.  And I think he felt that as a father as well as as President. 
 
I know that he places great importance on the need to move forward with common-sense actions that can help reduce gun violence, and I’m sure he will address that.  I know he will address that when he’s on Capitol Hill. 
 
Q    Did the President see what Eric Holder described?
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, we did not visit the school.
 
Q    Okay.  Now, on Medicare cuts, is there any way to put a safety net in place?  Is the White House talking about a safety net so that doctors can receive their Medicare payments and efforts to maintain a certain level, a certain standard of quality care for those Medicare recipients?  Because there’s this concern out there --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Are you talking about the SGR fix thing?  The doctors fix?
 
Q    Yes.
 
MR. CARNEY:  I mean, that’s something that’s addressed annually.  Whether that -- how they deal with that in the -- everybody deals with that in the budget process -- 
 
Q    But there’s a concern --
 
MR. CARNEY:  -- I think we’ll have to leave that to the budget process. 
 
Q    You do?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I mean, yes, I think.  But the so-called doc fix is something that’s addressed almost annually of late.
 
Q    But there is concern out there right now that doctors are not going to get their payments because of these cuts in these entitlement programs.  And if they don’t --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not sure.  You have to be specific about which cuts you’re talking about.  The President --
 
Q    Medicare.  The doctors -- the payments to the doctors.  And there is a concern amongst doctors and those analysts who are looking at this process --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think I’ll have to take your question, because I think it depends on whether you’re talking about the annual thing known as the doc fix, or the cuts proposed by Republicans, or the reforms proposed by the President.  It just depends on what you’re talking about.
 
Q    Well, this time that you’re allowing those entitlements to be on the table -- this is what we’re hearing, that the White House is allowing these possibilities for these cuts to --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’ll have to -- again, I need more specifics.
 
Connie.
 
Q    Thank you.  On Afghanistan -- where’s the passion, where’s the anger?  Two more Americans were killed.  Karzai’s comments are more strident.  Is there any evidence that the Afghans really want us there to continue training?  Is there any possibility the U.S. will pull out --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Connie, you know the President’s policy.  He is winding down this war and he is withdrawing American troops.  Our objective was refined to make it very clear under the President’s policies that we are in Afghanistan -- we went to Afghanistan and we are there now because of al Qaeda, because al Qaeda took up safe haven in Afghanistan and attacked the United States from Afghanistan.  And that effort continues, and there has been significant progress in decimating al Qaeda central in Afghanistan. 
 
We are winding down that war, as the President promised.  We are withdrawing U.S. forces, as the President promised.  We are training Afghan security forces precisely because that enables Afghan security forces to take security lead over from U.S. forces.  And we have made significant progress towards that goal.
 
The purpose of the policy, in addition to disrupting, dismantling, and ultimately defeating al Qaeda, is to allow for the stability of Afghanistan and enough strength in Afghan security forces to prevent Afghanistan from again becoming a safe haven for al Qaeda in the way that it was prior to the 9/11 attacks.
 
Q    Do the Afghans still want us there?  And what sort of talks has the U.S. had with the Taliban leadership?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Look, we support Afghan-led reconciliation discussions.  There are no current -- I’m not going to get into details, but the focus right now is on Afghan-led reconciliation negotiations.
 
Victoria.
 
Q    The transfer of Bagram prison to the Afghans fell apart over the weekend when apparently President Karzai balked at some of the details of the transfer.  Do you believe that those details can be worked out for the transfer to take place this week?
 
MR. CARNEY:  We continue to work out the details on the transfer of the detention facility in Parwan, which is the facility you’re referencing, and making that transfer to the Afghan government.  We remain committed to the full transfer of the facility and to all Afghan detainees to the government of Afghanistan.  We respect Afghan sovereignty and intend to proceed with the transfer once we have reached full agreement.
 
Q    Are you concerned that the Afghan government is going to release Afghan prisoners who might harm Americans?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, we are working on this issue with the Afghan government, and we will work out those details and make the transfer of the facility to the Afghans.
 
George.
 
Q    In your answer to Jim, you outlined the agenda for the meetings coming up with the members of Congress.  What does the President get out of meetings like this?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think he hopes to make clear to members of the Republican conferences and the Democratic caucuses what his policy positions are, his priorities, and his willingness to work with lawmakers of both parties to achieve these, essentially, bipartisan or nonpartisan objectives:  balanced deficit reduction that strengthens our economy and helps it create jobs; comprehensive immigration reform that strengthens our economy and that has had traditionally the support of Republicans and Democrats; sensible action to reduce gun violence -- action that respects our Second Amendment rights but deals with a scourge that is taking too many lives in our country; action to enhance our energy independence; action that he has in the past and he will in the future, that the President has called on Congress to take with regards to our cybersecurity.  And he will also, I’m sure, talk about the need to do something about the problems that we’ve been seeing in the Senate with Republicans when it comes to confirming the President’s judicial nominations. 
 
Q    But if you have a meeting like the one with Chairman Ryan where they just repeat their disagreements, does that move the process along at all?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think both what we said about that lunch and what Chairman Ryan said was more than that, George.  I think that it was a constructive meeting and that certainly the President, and I don’t want to put words in his mouth, but I believe over the weekend the Chairman said that he thought there was room for further discussion and possible compromise on these issues. 
 
So that’s what the President believes.  He thinks it’s important to have these conversations because the American people have made pretty clear what they want Washington to do and what they think is the right approach.  So the President has been engaged in conversations with lawmakers of both parties, seeking out lawmakers who support balanced deficit reduction, who support the idea of compromise and moving forward on fiscal and budget issues as well as on all these other issues, which remain high priorities.
 
Q    There are reports circulating that the United States is training Syrian rebels in Jordan.  Any truth to that?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I haven’t seen those reports.  They’re news to me.
 
Cheryl.
 
Q    Any update on when either Commerce Secretary or Labor Secretary might be announced?  Will that be this week?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I have no personnel announcements to make.
 
Chris.
 
Q    Jay, in recent weeks, the administration has taken executive action on behalf of the LGBT community.  Last month the Pentagon started the process for recommending certain partner benefits for gay troops.  And a couple weeks ago the Justice Department filed a brief in the Prop 8 case.  One action that remains outstanding is that executive order for federal contractors prohibiting anti-LGBT workplace discrimination.  If you’re going to do these other two executive actions, why not do the executive order as well?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I mean, I think filing a brief is an entirely different piece of business, Chris.  But I think, as you know, the President has long supported an inclusive Employment Non-Discrimination Act, and his administration will continue to work to build support for it.  We welcome Chairman Harkin’s announcement that he will hold a vote on ENDA this year.  I have no updates for you on an executive order.
 
Q    Well, speaking about the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, when the President goes to Capitol Hill this week to talk to lawmakers about his priorities, will he enumerate the -- will he mention the Employment Non-Discrimination Act as one of the things he wants passed?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I know that he’ll talk about some of the issues that I laid out, maybe not all of them, and I’m sure there will be other topics that he’ll raise.  But I don't have a specific agenda for him.
 
Q    Thanks, Jay.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Ann, last one.
 
Q    Thank you.  To put a fine point on what George asked, when the President goes to talk with both the Republicans in the Senate and the House, he doesn't have the new budget to present yet.  Will he be presenting new aspects of the programs and the policies he’s already got out there, new areas where he thinks there can be common ground?  Or is this a chance to repeat what they know is already on the record?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I think you’re mistaking the meetings for a budget negotiation.  He’s meeting with I guess potentially 535 lawmakers, so I wouldn’t expect that they're going to trade paper on numbers.  First of all, the President is the only one with a proposal out there right now that is balanced and achieves the kind of deficit reduction that gets our fiscal house in order over 10 years.  And he, I think, as I’ve said -- he looks forward to making clear what his policy positions are, to making clear his sincerity when it comes to his belief that we need to take action on our deficit, but to do it in a balanced way that enhances rather than harms economic growth, that strengthens rather than weakens the middle class. 
 
But he also wants to talk about these other issues.  I mean, amidst all the talk about partisan stalemating, gridlock, it is a simple fact that there is activity right now in Washington that represents bipartisan compromise -- efforts towards immigration reform, discussions on reducing gun violence.  This is important, and they reflect areas that the President believes should be priorities.  They're priorities for his agenda, and he will discuss a number of issues, not just the budget and fiscal issues.
 
Thanks very much.

END   
1:14 P.M. EDT