The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama to Award Medal of Honor

On April 11, President Barack Obama will award Chaplain (Captain) Emil J. Kapaun, U.S. Army, the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry.

Chaplain Kapaun will receive the Medal of Honor posthumously for his extraordinary heroism while serving with the 3d Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division during combat operations against an armed enemy at Unsan, Korea and as a prisoner of war from November 1-2, 1950.

When Chinese Communist Forces viciously attacked friendly elements, Chaplain Kapaun calmly walked through withering enemy fire in order to provide comfort and medical aid to his comrades.  When they found themselves surrounded by the enemy, the able-bodied men were ordered to evacuate.  Chaplain Kapaun, fully aware of his certain capture, elected to stay behind with the wounded.  As hand-to-hand combat ensued, he continued to make rounds.  As enemy forces approached the American position, Chaplain Kapaun noticed an injured Chinese officer amongst the wounded and convinced him to negotiate the safe surrender of the American forces.  Shortly after his capture, Chaplain Kapaun bravely pushed aside an enemy soldier preparing to execute a comrade, thus saving a life and inspiring all those present to remain and fight the enemy until captured. 

Chaplain Kapaun’s nephew, Ray Kapaun, and family will join the President at the White House to commemorate his example of selfless service and sacrifice.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

THE MEDAL OF HONOR:

The Medal of Honor is awarded to a member of the Armed Forces who distinguishes themselves conspicuously by gallantry above and beyond the call of duty while:

  • engaged in an action against an enemy of the United States;
  • engaged in military operations involving conflict with an opposing foreign force; or
  • serving with friendly foreign forces engaged in an armed conflict against an opposing armed force in which the United States is not a belligerent party.

The meritorious conduct must involve great personal bravery or self-sacrifice so conspicuous as to clearly distinguish the individual above his or her comrades and must have involved risk of life. There must be incontestable proof of the performance of the meritorious conduct, and each recommendation for the award must be considered on the standard of extraordinary merit.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks By Tom Donilon, National Security Advisor to the President: "The United States and the Asia-Pacific in 2013"

The Asia Society
New York, New York
Monday, March 11, 2013

“The United States and the Asia-Pacific in 2013”

As Prepared for Delivery – 

Thank you, Henrietta, for that kind introduction and for your service, both in government and here at the Asia Society.  And thank you, Suzanne, for bringing us together today.  I am honored to be with you, especially in these beautiful surroundings.  For almost sixty years, this organization has connected cultures— Asian and American—our ideas, leaders and people. 

Of course, one of those people, a real presence here at the Asia Society, was your chairman and my friend of thirty years, Richard Holbrooke.  Richard was famous for his work from the Balkans to South Asia.  But he was also a real Asia hand as the youngest-ever Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia.   Richard dedicated himself to the idea that progress and peace was possible—a lesson we carry forward, not only in Southwest Asia, where he worked so hard, but across the Asia-Pacific.  I’ve come here today because this project has never been more consequential—the future of the United States has never been more closely linked to the economic, strategic and political order emerging in the Asia-Pacific.

Last November, I gave a speech in Washington outlining how the United States is rebalancing our global posture to reflect the growing importance of Asia.  As President Obama’s second term begins, I want to focus on some of the specific challenges that lay ahead. 

This is especially timely because this is a period of transition in Asia.  New leaders have taken office in Tokyo and Seoul.  In Beijing, China’s leadership transition will be completed this week. President Obama and those of us on his national security team have already had constructive conversations with each incoming leader.  We’ll be seeing elections in Malaysia, Australia and elsewhere.  These changes remind us of the importance of constant, persistent U.S. engagement in this dynamic region.

Why Rebalance Toward Asia

Let me begin by putting our rebalance to the Asia-Pacific in context.  Every Administration faces the challenge of ensuring that cascading crises do not crowd out the development of long-term strategies to deal with transcendent challenges and opportunities. 

After a decade defined by 9/11, two wars, and a financial crisis, President Obama took office determined to restore the foundation of the United States’ global leadership—our economic strength at home.  Since then the United States has put in place a set of policies that have put our economy on the path to recovery, and helped create six million U.S. jobs in the last thirty-five months. 

At the same time, renewing U.S. leadership has also meant focusing our efforts and resources not just on the challenges that make today’s headlines, but on the regions that will shape the global order in the decades ahead.  That’s why, from the outset—even before the President took office—he directed those of us on his national security team to engage in a strategic assessment, a truly global examination of our presence and priorities.  We asked what the U.S. footprint and face to the world was and what it ought to be.  We set out to identify the key national security interests that we needed to pursue.  We looked around the world and asked: where are we over-weighted?  Where are we underweighted?

That assessment resulted in a set of key determinations.  It was clear that there was an imbalance in the projection and focus of U.S. power.  It was the President’s judgment that we were over-weighted in some areas and regions, including our military actions in the Middle East.  At the same time, we were underweighted in other regions, such as the Asia-Pacific. Indeed, we believed this was our key geographic imbalance. 

On one level, this reflected a recognition of the critical role that the United States has played in Asia for decades, providing the stabilizing foundation for the region’s unprecedented social and economic development.  Beyond this, our guiding insight was that Asia’s future and the future of the United States are deeply and increasingly linked.  Economically, Asia already accounts for more than one-quarter of global GDP.  Over the next five years, nearly half of all growth outside the United States is expected to come from Asia.  This growth is fueling powerful geopolitical forces that are reshaping the region: China’s ascent, Japan’s resilience, and the rise of a “Global Korea,” an eastward-looking India and Southeast Asian nations more interconnected and prosperous than ever before. 

These changes are unfolding at a time when Asia’s economic, diplomatic and political rules of the road are still taking shape.  The stakes for people on both sides of the Pacific are profound.  And the U.S. rebalance toward the Asia-Pacific is also a response to the strong demand signal from leaders and publics across the region for U.S. leadership, economic engagement, sustained attention to regional institutions and defense of international rules and norms. 

What Rebalancing Is, and What It Isn’t

Against this backdrop, President Obama has been clear about the future that the United States seeks. And I would encourage anyone who has not already done so to read the President’s address to the Australian parliament in Canberra in 2011.  It is a definitive statement of U.S. policy in the region; a clarion call for freedom; and yet another example of how, when it comes to the Asia-Pacific, the United States is “all in.” 

As the President explained in Canberra, the overarching objective of the United States in the region is to sustain a stable security environment and a regional order rooted in economic openness, peaceful resolution of disputes, and respect for universal rights and freedoms. 

To pursue this vision, the United States is implementing a comprehensive, multidimensional strategy: strengthening alliances; deepening partnerships with emerging powers; building a stable, productive, and constructive relationship with China; empowering regional institutions; and helping to build a regional economic architecture that can sustain shared prosperity. 

These are the pillars of the U.S. strategy, and rebalancing means devoting the time, effort and resources necessary to get each one right.  Here’s what rebalancing does not mean.  It doesn’t mean diminishing ties to important partners in any other region.  It does not mean containing China or seeking to dictate terms to Asia.  And it isn’t just a matter of our military presence.  It is an effort that harnesses all elements of U.S. power—military, political, trade and investment, development and our values.

Perhaps most telling, this rebalance is reflected in the most valuable commodity in Washington: the President’s time.  It says a great deal, for instance, that President Obama made the determination that the United States would participate every year in the East Asia Summit at the Head of State level and hold U.S.-ASEAN summits; that he has met bilaterally with nearly every leader in Southeast Asia, either in the region or in Washington; and that he has engaged with China at an unprecedented pace, including twelve face-to-face meetings with Hu Jintao. 

Let me turn to each pillar of our strategy and several of the challenges we face in 2013. 

Alliances

First, we will continue to strengthen our alliances.  For all of the changes in Asia, this much is settled: our alliances in the region have been and will remain the foundation of our strategy.  I feel confident is saying that our alliances are stronger today than ever before. 

Our alliance with Japan remains a cornerstone of regional security and prosperity.  I am not sure American-Japanese friendship has ever been more powerfully manifest than it was two years ago today, on 3/11, after the tsunami and Fukishima nuclear crisis.  As allies and friends, Americans inside and outside government rushed to lend a hand to Japan’s disaster response and recovery. 

That same spirit of solidarity was evident when Japan’s new Prime Minister, Shinzo Abe, became one of the first foreign leaders President Obama hosted in his second term.  They had excellent discussions on trade, expanding security cooperation, and the next steps toward realigning U.S. forces in Japan. Looking ahead, there is scarcely a regional or global challenge in the President’s second-term agenda where the United States does not look to Japan to play an important role.

With the Republic of Korea, the United States is building on our joint vision for a global alliance and deeper trading partnership.  I just returned from Seoul, where I attended the inauguration of President Park, Korea’s first woman president.  I was struck by how much our leaders have in common in terms of their priorities and vision.  When we met, I conveyed to President Park President Obama’s unwavering commitment to the defense of the Republic of Korea, and President Park gave her full support to modernizing our alliance and continuing the effort to partner on a wide range of regional and global issues.  During my visit, President Park accepted President Obama’s invitation to visit Washington, and I can announce today that we look forward to welcoming her to the White House in May.

In Japan and South Korea, the United States can look to new leaders who are firmly committed to close security cooperation with the United States.  This is no accident and no surprise, because polls in both countries show public support for their alliance with the United States in the range of 80 percent.  At the same time, it is clear that, as we look forward, maintaining security in a dynamic region will demand greater trilateral coordination from Japan, Korea and the United States. 

With Australia—following the President’s visit and joint announcement with Prime Minister Gillard of the rotational deployment of U.S. Marines—we are bringing our militaries even closer.  Prime Minister Gillard has been an outstanding partner in our efforts to advance prosperity and security to the Asia-Pacific region.  The United States has reinvigorated longstanding alliances with Thailand and the Philippines to address counterterrorism, humanitarian assistance and disaster relief.  Philippine President Aquino’s visit to Washington and President Obama’s visit to Thailand and meeting with Prime Minister Yingluck both speak to another key facet of our strategy—the United States is not only rebalancing to the Asia-Pacific, we are rebalancing within Asia to recognize the growing importance of Southeast Asia.  Just as we found that the United States was underweighted in East Asia, we found that the United States was especially underweighted in Southeast Asia.  And we are correcting that. 

In these difficult fiscal times, I know that some have questioned whether this rebalance is sustainable.  After a decade of war, it is only natural that the U.S. defense budget is being reduced.  But make no mistake:  President Obama has clearly stated that we will maintain our security presence and engagement in the Asia-Pacific.  Specifically, our defense spending and programs will continue to support our key priorities – from our enduring presence on the Korean Peninsula to our strategic presence in the western Pacific.

This means that in the coming years a higher proportion of our military assets will be in the Pacific. Sixty percent of our naval fleet will be based in the Pacific by 2020. Our Air Force is also shifting its weight to the Pacific over the next five years. We are adding capacity from both the Army and the Marines.  The Pentagon is working to prioritize the Pacific Command for our most modern capabilities – including submarines, Fifth-Generation Fighters such as F-22s and F-35s, and reconnaissance platforms.  And we are working with allies to make rapid progress in expanding radar and missile defense systems to protect against the most immediate threat facing our allies and the entire region: the dangerous, destabilizing behavior of North Korea.   

North Korea

Let me spend a few moments on North Korea. 

For sixty years, the United States has been committed to ensuring peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula. This means deterring North Korean aggression and protecting our allies.  And it means the complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.  The United States will not accept North Korea as a nuclear state; nor will we stand by while it seeks to develop a nuclear-armed missile that can target the United States.  The international community has made clear that there will be consequences for North Korea’s flagrant violation of its international obligations, as the UN Security Council did again unanimously just last week in approving new sanctions in response to the North’s recent provocative nuclear test.

U.S. policy toward North Korea rests on four key principles:

First, close and expanded cooperation with Japan and South Korea.  The unity that our three countries have forged in the face of North Korea’s provocations—unity reaffirmed by President Park and Prime Minister Abe —is as crucial to the search for a diplomatic solution as it is to deterrence.  The days when North Korea could exploit any seams between our three governments are over.

And let me add that the prospects for a peaceful resolution also will require close U.S. coordination with China’s new government.  We believe that no country, including China, should conduct “business as usual” with a North Korea that threatens its neighbors.  China’s interest in stability on the Korean Peninsula argues for a clear path to ending North Korea’s nuclear program.  We welcome China’s support at the UN Security Council and its continued insistence that North Korea completely, verifiably and irreversibly abandon its WMD and ballistic missile programs.

Second, the United States refuses to reward bad North Korean behavior.  The United States will not play the game of accepting empty promises or yielding to threats.  As former Secretary of Defense Bob Gates has said, we won’t buy the same horse twice.  We have made clear our openness to authentic negotiations with North Korea.  In return, however, we’ve only seen provocations and extreme rhetoric.  To get the assistance it desperately needs and the respect it claims it wants, North Korea will have to change course. Otherwise, the United States will continue to work with allies and partners to tighten national and international sanctions to impede North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs.  Today, the Treasury Department is announcing the imposition of U.S. sanctions against the Foreign Trade Bank of North Korea, the country’s primary foreign exchange bank, for its role in supporting North Korea’s WMD program. 

By now it is clear that the provocations, escalations and poor choices of North Korea’s leaders are not only making their country less secure – they are condemning their people to a level of poverty that stands in stark contrast not only to South Korea, but every other country in East Asia. 

Third, we unequivocally reaffirm that the United States is committed to the defense of our homeland and our allies.  Recently, North Korean officials have made some highly provocative statements.  North Korea’s claims may be hyperbolic – but as to the policy of the United States, there should be no doubt: we will draw upon the full range of our capabilities to protect against, and to respond to, the threat posed to us and to our allies by North Korea.  This includes not only any North Korean use of weapons of mass destruction—but also, as the President made clear, their transfer of nuclear weapons or nuclear materials to other states or non-state entities.  Such actions would be considered a grave threat to the United States and our allies and we will hold North Korea fully accountable for the consequences.

Finally, the United States will continue to encourage North Korea to choose a better path.  As he has said many times, President Obama came to office willing to offer his hand to those who would unclench their fists.  The United States is prepared to help North Korea develop its economy and feed its people—but it must change its current course.  The United States is prepared to sit down with North Korea to negotiate and to implement the commitments that they and the United States have made.  We ask only that Pyongyang prove its seriousness by taking meaningful steps to show it will abide by its commitments, honor its words, and respect international law. 

Anyone who doubts the President’s commitment needs look no further than Burma, where new leaders have begun a process of reform.  President Obama’s historic visit to Rangoon is proof of our readiness to start transforming a relationship marked by hostility into one of greater cooperation.  Burma has already received billions in debt forgiveness, large-scale development assistance, and an influx of new investment.  While the work of reform is ongoing, Burma has already broken out of isolation and opened the door to a far better future for its people in partnership with its neighbors and with the United States.  And, as President Obama said in his speech to the people of Burma, we will continue to stand with those who continue to support rights, democracy and reform.  So I urge North Korea’s leaders to reflect on Burma’s experience.  

Emerging Powers

Even as we keep our alliances strong to deal with challenges like North Korea, we continue to carry out a second pillar of our strategy for the Asia-Pacific:  forging deeper partnerships with emerging powers. 

To that end, the President considers U.S. relations with India—the world’s largest democracy—to be “one of the defining partnerships of the twenty-first century.”  From Prime Minister Singh’s visit in 2009 to the President’s trip to India in 2010, the United States has made clear at every turn that we don’t just accept India’s rise, we fervently support it. 

U.S. and Indian interests powerfully converge in the Asia-Pacific, where India has much to give and much to gain. Southeast Asia begins in Northeast India, and we welcome India’s efforts to “look East,” from supporting reforms in Burma to trilateral cooperation with Japan to promoting maritime security.  In the past year, for example, India-ASEAN trade increased by 37 percent to $80 billion. 

The United States has also worked hard to realize Indonesia’s potential as a global partner.  We have put in place a wide-ranging Comprehensive Partnership.  We have welcomed Indonesia’s vigorous participation in the region’s multilateral forums, including hosting APEC and promoting ASEAN unity.  We are also working with Indonesia and Brunei on a major new initiative to mobilize capital to help bring clean and sustainable energy to the Asia-Pacific. And, of course, no U.S. President has ever had closer personal ties to an Asia-Pacific nation than President Obama does with Indonesia—a warm relationship that was on full display in November 2010 when the President visited Jakarta.

China

The third pillar of our strategy is building a constructive relationship with China. The President places great importance on this relationship because there are few diplomatic, economic or security challenges in the world that can be addressed without China at the table and without a broad, productive, and constructive relationship between our countries.  And we have made substantial progress in building such a relationship over the past four years.

As China completes its leadership transition, the Administration is well positioned to build on our existing relationships with Xi Jinping, Li Keqiang and other top Chinese leaders. Taken together, China’s leadership transition and the President’s re-election mark a new phase in U.S.-China relations – with new opportunities.  

Of course, the U.S.-China relationship has and will continue to have elements of both cooperation and competition. Our consistent policy has been to improve the quality and quantity of our cooperation; promote healthy economic competition; and manage disagreements to ensure that U.S. interests are protected and that universal rights and values are respected.  As President Obama has made clear, the United States speaks up for universal values because history shows that nations that uphold the rights of their people are ultimately more successful, more prosperous and more stable.

As President Obama has said many times, the United States welcomes the rise of a peaceful, prosperous China.  We do not want our relationship to become defined by rivalry and confrontation.  And I disagree with the premise put forward by some historians and theorists that a rising power and an established power are somehow destined for conflict.  There is nothing preordained about such an outcome.  It is not a law of physics, but a series of choices by leaders that lead to great power confrontation.  Others have called for containment.  We reject that, too.  A better outcome is possible.  But it falls to both sides—the United States and China—to build a new model of relations between an existing power and an emerging one.  Xi Jinping and President Obama have both endorsed this goal. 

To build this new model, we must keep improving our channels of communication and demonstrate practical cooperation on issues that matter to both sides.

To that end, a deeper U.S.-China military-to-military dialogue is central to addressing many of the sources of insecurity and potential competition between us. This remains a necessary component of the new model we seek, and it is a critical deficiency in our current relationship. The Chinese military is modernizing its capabilities and expanding its presence in Asia, drawing our forces into closer contact and raising the risk that an accident or miscalculation could destabilize the broader relationship. We need open and reliable channels to address perceptions and tensions about our respective activities in the short-term and about our long-term presence and posture in the Western Pacific.

It is also critical that we strengthen the underpinnings of our extensive economic relationship, which is marked by increasing interdependence. We have been clear with Beijing that as China takes a seat at a growing number of international tables, it needs to assume responsibilities commensurate with its economic clout and national capabilities. As we engage with China’s new leaders, the United States will encourage them to move forward with the reforms outlined in the country’s twelfth Five Year Plan, including efforts to shift the country away from its dependence on exports toward a more balanced and sustainable consumer-oriented growth model.  The United States will urge a further opening of the Chinese market and a leveling of the playing field.  And the United States will seek to work together with China to promote international financial stability through the G-20 and to address global challenges such as climate change and energy security.

Another such issue is cyber-security, which has become a growing challenge to our economic relationship as well. Economies as large as the United States and China have a tremendous shared stake in ensuring that the Internet remains open, interoperable, secure, reliable, and stable.  Both countries face risks when it comes to protecting personal data and communications, financial transactions, critical infrastructure, or the intellectual property and trade secrets that are so vital to innovation and economic growth. 

It is in this last category that our concerns have moved to the forefront of our agenda. I am not talking about ordinary cybercrime or hacking.  And, this is not solely a national security concern or a concern of the U.S. government.  Increasingly, U.S. businesses are speaking out about their serious concerns about sophisticated, targeted theft of confidential business information and proprietary technologies through cyber intrusions emanating from China on an unprecedented scale.  The international community cannot afford to tolerate such activity from any country.  As the President said in the State of the Union, we will take action to protect our economy against cyber-threats.

From the President on down, this has become a key point of concern and discussion with China at all levels of our governments.  And it will continue to be.  The United States will do all it must to protect our national networks, critical infrastructure, and our valuable public and private sector property.  But, specifically with respect to the issue of cyber-enabled theft, we seek three things from the Chinese side.  First, we need a recognition of the urgency and scope of this problem and the risk it poses—to international trade, to the reputation of Chinese industry and to our overall relations.  Second, Beijing should take serious steps to investigate and put a stop to these activities.  Finally, we need China to engage with us in a constructive direct dialogue to establish acceptable norms of behavior in cyberspace.

We have worked hard to build a constructive bilateral relationship that allows us to engage forthrightly on priority issues of concern.  And the United States and China, the world’s two largest economies, both dependent on the Internet, must lead the way in addressing this problem. 

Regional Architecture

This leads to the fourth pillar of our strategy—strengthening regional institutions— which also reflects Asia’s urgent need for economic, diplomatic and security-related rules and understandings.

From the outset, the Obama Administration embarked on a concerted effort to develop and strengthen regional institutions—in other words, building out the architecture of Asia.  And the reasons are clear: an effective regional architecture lowers the barriers to collective action on shared challenges.  It creates dialogues and structures that encourage cooperation, maintain stability, resolve disputes through diplomacy and help ensure that countries can rise peacefully. 

There is no underestimating the strategic significance of this region.  The ten ASEAN countries, stretching across the Indian and Pacific Oceans, have a population of well over 600 million.  Impressive growth rates in countries like Thailand – and a 25-percent increase in international investment in 2011—suggest that ASEAN nations are only going to become more important, politically and economically.

Since taking office, the Obama Administration has signed ASEAN’s Treaty of Amity and Cooperation and appointed the first resident U.S. Ambassador to ASEAN.  As I said, the President has traveled every year to meet with ASEAN’s leaders– and will continue to do so going forward.  The President also has made a decision to participate at the Head of State level every year at the East Asia Summit, consistent with the United States’ goal to elevate the EAS as the premier forum for dealing with political and security issues in Asia. 

Looking ahead, it is clear that territorial disputes in the resource-rich South and East China Seas will test the region’s political and security architecture.  These tensions challenge the peaceful underpinnings of Asia’s prosperity and they have already done damage to the global economy.  While the United States has no territorial claims there, and does not take a position on the claims of others, the United States is firmly opposed to coercion or the use of force to advance territorial claims.  Only peaceful, collaborative and diplomatic efforts, consistent with international law, can bring about lasting solutions that will serve the interests of all claimants and all countries in this vital region.  That includes China, whose growing place in the global economy comes with an increasing need for the public goods of maritime security and unimpeded lawful commerce, just as Chinese businessmen and women will depend on the public good of an open, secure Internet. 

Economic Architecture

Finally, the United States will continue to pursue the fifth element of our strategy: building an economic architecture that allows the people of the Asia-Pacific –including the American people--to reap the rewards of greater trade and growth.  It is our view –and I believe history demonstrates – that the economic order that will deliver the next phase of broad-based growth that the region needs is one that rests on economies that are open and transparent, and trade and investment that are free, fair and environmentally sustainable. U.S. economic vitality also depends on tapping into new markets and customers beyond our borders, especially in the fastest-growing regions. 

And so President Obama has worked with the region’s leaders to support growth-oriented, job-creating policies such as the U.S.- Korea Free Trade Agreement.  The Administration has also worked through APEC and bilaterally to lower economic barriers at and within borders, increase and protect investment, expand trade in key areas, and protect intellectual property. 

The centerpiece of our economic rebalancing is the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)—a high-standard agreement the United States is crafting with Asia-Pacific economies from Chile and Peru to New Zealand and Singapore.  The TPP is built on its members’ shared commitment to high standards, eliminating market access barriers to goods and services, addressing new, 21st century trade issues and respect for a rules-based economic framework.  We always envisioned the TPP as a growing platform for regional economic integration.  Now, we are realizing that vision—growing the number of TPP partners from seven when President Obama took office to four more: Vietnam, Malaysia, Canada and Mexico.  Together, these eleven countries represent an annual trading relationship of $1.4 trillion.  The growing TPP is already a major step toward APEC’s vision of a region-wide Free Trade Area of the Asia-Pacific. 

The TPP is also attractive because it is ambitious but achievable.  We can get this done.  In fact, the United States is working hard with the other parties to complete negotiations by the end of 2013.  Let me add that the TPP is intended to be an open platform for additional countries to join – provided they are willing and able to meet the TPP’s high standards

The TPP is part of a global economic agenda that includes the new agreement we are pursuing with Europe—the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.  Transatlantic trade is nearly one trillion dollars each year, with $3.7 trillion in investments.  Even small improvements can yield substantial benefits for our people.  Taken together, these two agreements—from the Atlantic to the Pacific—and our existing Free Trade Agreements, around the world could account for over sixty percent of world trade.  But our goals are strategic as well as economic.  Many have argued that economic strength is the currency of power in the twenty-first century.  And across the Atlantic and Pacific, the United States will aim to build a network of economic partnerships as strong as our diplomatic and security alliances—all while strengthening the multilateral trading system.  The TPP is also an absolute statement of U.S. strategic commitment to be in the Asia-Pacific for the long haul.  And the growth arising from a U.S.-Europe agreement will help underwrite NATO, the most powerful alliance in history. 

Conclusion

In conclusion, I believe President Obama’s strategic focus on the Asia-Pacific is already a signature achievement.  But its full impact will require sustained commitment over the coming years.

I would leave you with a simple thought experiment that says a great deal about the role of the United States in shaping the way forward.  I think it’s fair to ask: without the stabilizing presence of U.S. engagement over the past seventy years, where would the Asia-Pacific be today? 

Without the U.S. guarantee of security and stability, would militarism have given way to peace in Northeast Asia?  Would safe sea lanes have fueled Pacific commerce?  Would South Korea have risen from aid recipient to trading powerhouse?  And would small nations be protected from domination by bigger neighbors?  I think the answer is obvious. 

Credit for the Asia-Pacific’s extraordinary progress in recent decades rightly belongs to the region’s hardworking and talented people.  At the same time, it is fair to say – and many leaders and people across the region would agree—the United States provided a critical foundation for Asia’s rise.

As such, the United States will continue to work to ensure that the Asia-Pacific grows into a place where the rise of new powers occurs peacefully; where the freedom to access the sea, air, space, and cyberspace empowers vibrant commerce; where multinational forums help promote shared interests; and where the universal rights of citizens, no matter where they live, are upheld. 

The Obama Administration has worked to make our rebalance to the Asia-Pacific a reality because the region’s success in the century ahead –and the United States’ security and prosperity in the 21st century—still depend on the presence and engagement of the United States in Asia.  We are a resident Pacific power, resilient and indispensable.  And in President Obama’s second term, this vital, dynamic region will continue to be a strategic priority. Thank you.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at the Gridiron Dinner

Washington Renaissance Hotel
Washington, DC

10:03 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Before I begin, I know some of you have noticed that I'm dressed a little differently from the other gentlemen.  Because of sequester, they cut my tails.  (Laughter.)  My joke writers have been placed on furlough.  (Laughter.)  I know a lot of you reported that no one will feel any immediate impact because of the sequester.  Well, you're about to find out how wrong you are.  (Laughter.) 

Of course, there's one thing in Washington that didn't get cut -- the length of this dinner.  (Laughter.)  Yet more proof that the sequester makes no sense.  (Laughter.)  

As you know, I last attended the Gridiron dinner two years ago.  Back then, I addressed a number of topics -- a dysfunctional Congress, a looming budget crisis, complaints that I don't spend enough time with the press.  It's funny, it seems like it was just yesterday.  (Laughter.)  

We noticed that some folks couldn't make it this evening.  It's been noted that Bob Woodward sends his regrets, which Gene Sperling predicted.  (Laughter.)  I have to admit this whole brouhaha had me a little surprised.  Who knew Gene could be so intimidating?  (Laughter.)  Or let me phrase it differently -- who knew anybody named Gene could be this intimidating?  (Laughter.) 

Now I know that some folks think we responded to Woodward too aggressively.  But hey, when has -- can anybody tell me when an administration has ever regretted picking a fight with Bob Woodward?  (Laughter.)  What's the worst that could happen?  (Laughter and applause.)

But don't worry.  We're all friends again in the spirit of that wonderful song.  As you may have heard, Bob invited Gene over to his place.  And Bob says he actually thinks that I should make it too.  And I might take him up on the offer.  I mean, nothing says "not a threat" like showing up at somebody's house with guys with machine guns.  (Laughter.)  

Now, since I don't often speak to a room full of journalists -- (laughter) -- I thought I should address a few concerns tonight.  Some of you have said that I'm ignoring the Washington press corps -- that we're too controlling.  You know what, you were right.  I was wrong and I want to apologize in a video you can watch exclusively at whitehouse.gov.  (Laughter.) 

While we're on this subject, I want to acknowledge Ed Henry, who is here -- who is the fearless leader of the Washington press corps now.  (Applause.)  And at Ed's request, tonight I will take one question from the press.  Jay, do we have a question?  (Laughter.)  Surprisingly, it's a question from Ed Henry.  (Laughter.)  “Mr. President, will you be taking any questions tonight?”  (Laughter.)  I'm happy to answer that.  No, Ed, I will not.  (Laughter.) 

I also want to recognize David Corn.  He's here from Mother Jones magazine.  He brought his iPhone.  So Bobby Jindal, if you thought your remarks were off the record, ask Mitt Romney about that.  (Applause.) 

I have to say, I thought Bobby was incredibly funny this evening.  (Applause.)  I thought he was terrific.  Amy Klobuchar was sparkling and fantastic and fabulous.  (Applause.)  I am worried about Al Franken though.  (Laughter.)  How do you start off being one of the original writers for Saturday Night Live and end up being the second-funniest Senator in Minnesota?  (Laughter and applause.)  How the mighty have fallen.  (Laughter.)

Now I'm sure that you've noticed that there's somebody very special in my life who is missing tonight, somebody who has always got my back, stands with me no matter what and gives me hope no matter how dark things seem.  So tonight, I want to publicly thank my rock, my foundation -- thank you, Nate Silver.  (Laughter.)  

Of course as I begin my second term, our country is still facing enormous challenges.  We have a lot of work to do -- that, Marco Rubio, is how you take a sip of water.  (Laughter and applause.)

As I was saying, we face major challenges.  March in particular is going to be full of tough decisions.  But I want to assure you, I have my top advisors working around the clock. After all, my March Madness bracket isn't going to fill itself out.  (Laughter.)  And don't worry -- there is an entire team in the situation room as we speak, planning my next golf outing, right now at this moment.  (Laughter.) 

But those aren't the only issues on my mind.  As you are aware -- as has been noted this evening -- we've had to make some very tough, huge budget cuts apparently with no regard to long-term consequences, which means I know how you feel in journalism.  (Laughter.)  I've been trying to explain this situation to the American people, but clearly I am not perfect. After a very public mix-up last week, my communications team has provided me with an easy way to distinguish between Star Trek and Star Wars.  (Laughter.)  Spock is what Maureen Dowd calls me.  Darth Vader is what John Boehner calls me.  (Laughter.)  

Of course, maintaining credibility in this cynical atmosphere is harder than ever -- incredibly challenging.  My administration recently put out a photo of me skeet shooting and even that wasn't enough for some people.  Next week, we're releasing a photo of me clinging to religion.  (Laughter and applause.)  

I'm also doing what I can to smooth things over with Republicans in Congress.  In fact, these days John McCain and I are spending so much time together that he told me we were becoming friends.  I said, “John, stop.  Chuck Hagel warned me how this ends up.”  (Laughter.)  

It took a while, but I'm glad that the Senate finally confirmed my Secretary of Defense.  And I have to say, I don't know what happened to Chuck in those hearings.  I know he worked hard, he studied his brief.  And I even lent him my presidential debate team to work with him.  (Laughter.)  It's confusing what happened.  (Laughter.) 

But all these changes to my team are tough to handle, I've got to admit.  After nine years, I finally said goodbye to my chief speechwriter, Jon Favreau.  I watched him grow up.  He's almost like a son to me, he's been with me so long.  And I said to him when he first informed me of his decision, I said, “Favs, you can't leave.”  And he answered with three simple words -- "yes, I can."  (Laughter.)  Fortunately, he did not take the prompter on his way out.  (Laughter.)  That would have been a problem.  (Laughter.) 

With all these new faces, it's hard to keep track of who is in, who is out.  And I know it's difficult for you guys as reporters.  But I can offer you an easy way of remembering the new team.  If Ted Cruz calls somebody a communist, then you know they're in my cabinet.  (Laughter.)  

Jack Lew is getting started on his new role as Treasury Secretary.  Jack is so low key, he makes Tim Geithner look like Tom Cruise.  (Laughter.)  Don't worry, everybody, Jack signed off on that joke or a five year old drew a slinky.  (Laughter.)  I don't know which.  (Applause.) 

Another big change has been at the State Department.  Everybody has noticed that obviously.  And let's face it -- Hillary is a tough act to follow.  But John Kerry is doing great so far.  He is doing everything he can to ensure continuity.  Frankly, though, I think it's time for him to stop showing up at work in pantsuits.  (Laughter.)  It's a disturbing image.  (Laughter.)  It really is.  (Laughter.)  I don't know where he buys them.  He is a tall guy.  (Laughter.) 

And even though I'm just beginning my second term, I know that some folks are looking ahead to bigger things.  Look, it's no secret that my Vice President is still ambitious.  But let's face it, his age is an issue.  Just the other day, I had to take Joe aside and say, “Joe, you are way too young to be the pope."  (Laughter.)  "You can't do it.  You got to mature a little bit."  (Laughter.) 

Now, I do want to end on a serious note.  I know that there are people who get frustrated with the way journalism is practiced these days.  And sometimes those people are me.  (Laughter.)  But the truth is our country needs you and our democracy needs you.

In an age when all it takes to attract attention is a Twitter handle and some followers, it's easier than ever to get it wrong.  But it's more important than ever to get it right.  And I am grateful for all the journalists who do one of the toughest jobs there is with integrity and insight and dedication -- and a sense of purpose -- that goes beyond a business model or a news cycle.

This year alone, reporters have exposed corruption here at home and around the world.  They've risked everything to bring us stories from places like Syria and Kenya, stories that need to be told.  And they've helped people understand the ways in which we're all connected -- how something that happens or doesn't happen halfway around the world or here in Washington can have consequences for American families.

These are extraordinary times.  The stakes are high and the tensions can sometimes be high as well.  But while we'll always have disagreements, I believe that we share the belief that a free press -- a press that questions us, that holds us accountable, that sometimes gets under our skin -- is absolutely an essential part of our democracy.

So I want to thank everybody for not just a wonderful evening -- and, Chuck, I want to thank you for your outstanding presidency -- but I also just want to thank you for the work that you do each and every day.  And in the words of one of my favorite Star Trek characters -- Captain James T. Kirk of the USS Enterprise -- “May the force be with you."  (Laughter and applause.)

END 10:19 P.M. EST

Weekly Address: End the Sequester to Keep Growing the Economy

In his weekly address, President Obama says that businesses have created jobs every month for three years straight – nearly 6.4 million altogether, and have added 246,000 new jobs in February. We must keep this momentum going, and that’s why the President recently met with Republican leaders to discuss how we can replace the harmful, arbitrary budget cuts, called the “sequester,” with balanced deficit reduction. 

Transcript | Download mp4 | Download mp3

Related Topics: Economy

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Weekly Address: End the Sequester to Keep Growing the Economy

WASHINGTON, DC— In his weekly address, President Obama said that businesses have created jobs every month for three years straight – nearly 6.4 million altogether, and have added 246,000 new jobs in February.  We must keep this momentum going, and that’s why the President recently met with Republican leaders to discuss how we can replace the harmful, arbitrary budget cuts, called the “sequester,” with balanced deficit reduction.  By working together, the President is confident we can reduce the budget by investing in areas that help us grow, and cutting what we don’t need.

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, Saturday, March 9, 2013.

Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
March 9, 2013

Hi, everybody.  My top priority as President is making sure we do everything we can to reignite the true engine of America’s economic growth – a rising, thriving middle class.  

Yesterday, we received some welcome news on that front.  We learned that our businesses added nearly 250,000 new jobs last month.  The unemployment rate fell to 7.7% – still too high, but now lower than it was when I took office. 

Our businesses have created jobs every month for three years straight – nearly 6.4 million new jobs in all.  Our manufacturers are bringing jobs back to America.  Our stock market has rebounded.  New homes are being built and sold at a faster pace.  And we need to do everything we can to keep that momentum going. 

That means asking ourselves three questions every day: How do we make America a magnet for new jobs?  How do we equip more of our people with the skills those jobs require?  And how do we make sure that your hard work leads to a decent living?

That has to be our driving focus – our North Star.  And at a time when our businesses are gaining a little more traction, the last thing we should do is allow Washington politics to get in the way.  You deserve better than the same political gridlock and refusal to compromise that has too often passed for serious debate over the last few years.

That’s why I’ve been reaching out to Republicans and Democrats to see if we can untangle some of the gridlock.  Earlier this week, I met with some Republican Senators to see if there were smarter ways to grow our economy and reduce our deficits than the arbitrary cuts and the so-called “sequester” that recently went into place.  We had an open and honest conversation about critical issues like immigration reform and gun violence, and other areas where we can work together to move this country forward.  And next week, I’ll attend both the Democratic and Republican party meetings in the Capitol to continue those discussions.

The fact is, America is a nation of different beliefs and different points of view.  That’s what makes us strong, and frankly, makes our democratic debates messy and often frustrating.  But ultimately what makes us special is when we summon the ability to see past those differences, and come together around the belief that what binds us together will always be more powerful than what drives us apart. 

As Democrats and Republicans, we may disagree on the best way to achieve our goals, but I’m confident we can agree on what those goals should be.  A strong and vibrant middle class.  An economy that allows businesses to grow and thrive.  An education system that gives more Americans the skills they need to compete for the jobs of the future.  An immigration system that actually works for families and businesses.  Stronger communities and safer streets for our children.

Making progress on these issues won’t be easy.  In the months ahead, there will be more contentious debate and honest disagreement between principled people who want what’s best for this country.  But I still believe that compromise is possible.  I still believe we can come together to do big things.  And I know there are leaders on the other side who share that belief. 

So I’ll keep fighting to solve the real challenges facing middle-class families.  And I’ll enlist anyone who is willing to help.  That’s what this country needs now – and that’s what you deserve.

Thanks.

Weekly Address: End the Sequester to Keep Growing the Economy

March 09, 2013 | 3:40 | Public Domain

In his weekly address, President Obama said that businesses have created jobs every month for three years straight – nearly 6.4 million altogether, and have added 246,000 new jobs in February. We must keep this momentum going, and that’s why the President recently met with Republican leaders to discuss how we can replace the harmful, arbitrary budget cuts, called the “sequester,” with balanced deficit reduction.

Download mp4 (292MB) | mp3 (9MB)

Read the Transcript

Weekly Address: End the Sequester to Keep Growing the Economy

WASHINGTON, DC— In his weekly address, President Obama said that businesses have created jobs every month for three years straight – nearly 6.4 million altogether, and have added 246,000 new jobs in February.  We must keep this momentum going, and that’s why the President recently met with Republican leaders to discuss how we can replace the harmful, arbitrary budget cuts, called the “sequester,” with balanced deficit reduction.  By working together, the President is confident we can reduce the budget by investing in areas that help us grow, and cutting what we don’t need.

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, Saturday, March 9, 2013.

Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
March 9, 2013

Hi, everybody.  My top priority as President is making sure we do everything we can to reignite the true engine of America’s economic growth – a rising, thriving middle class.  

Yesterday, we received some welcome news on that front.  We learned that our businesses added nearly 250,000 new jobs last month.  The unemployment rate fell to 7.7% – still too high, but now lower than it was when I took office. 

Our businesses have created jobs every month for three years straight – nearly 6.4 million new jobs in all.  Our manufacturers are bringing jobs back to America.  Our stock market has rebounded.  New homes are being built and sold at a faster pace.  And we need to do everything we can to keep that momentum going. 

That means asking ourselves three questions every day: How do we make America a magnet for new jobs?  How do we equip more of our people with the skills those jobs require?  And how do we make sure that your hard work leads to a decent living?

That has to be our driving focus – our North Star.  And at a time when our businesses are gaining a little more traction, the last thing we should do is allow Washington politics to get in the way.  You deserve better than the same political gridlock and refusal to compromise that has too often passed for serious debate over the last few years.

That’s why I’ve been reaching out to Republicans and Democrats to see if we can untangle some of the gridlock.  Earlier this week, I met with some Republican Senators to see if there were smarter ways to grow our economy and reduce our deficits than the arbitrary cuts and the so-called “sequester” that recently went into place.  We had an open and honest conversation about critical issues like immigration reform and gun violence, and other areas where we can work together to move this country forward.  And next week, I’ll attend both the Democratic and Republican party meetings in the Capitol to continue those discussions.

The fact is, America is a nation of different beliefs and different points of view.  That’s what makes us strong, and frankly, makes our democratic debates messy and often frustrating.  But ultimately what makes us special is when we summon the ability to see past those differences, and come together around the belief that what binds us together will always be more powerful than what drives us apart. 

As Democrats and Republicans, we may disagree on the best way to achieve our goals, but I’m confident we can agree on what those goals should be.  A strong and vibrant middle class.  An economy that allows businesses to grow and thrive.  An education system that gives more Americans the skills they need to compete for the jobs of the future.  An immigration system that actually works for families and businesses.  Stronger communities and safer streets for our children.

Making progress on these issues won’t be easy.  In the months ahead, there will be more contentious debate and honest disagreement between principled people who want what’s best for this country.  But I still believe that compromise is possible.  I still believe we can come together to do big things.  And I know there are leaders on the other side who share that belief. 

So I’ll keep fighting to solve the real challenges facing middle-class families.  And I’ll enlist anyone who is willing to help.  That’s what this country needs now – and that’s what you deserve.

Thanks.

Close Transcript

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the Press Secretary on Robert Levinson

Six years ago tomorrow, retired FBI agent Robert Levinson went missing during a business trip in Iran. Finding him remains a high priority for the United States, and we will continue to do all that we can to bring him home safely to his friends and family, so they may begin to heal after so many years of extraordinary grief and uncertainty.

The Iranian Government previously offered assistance in locating Mr. Levinson and we look forward to receiving this assistance, even as we disagree on other key issues. The FBI has also announced a $1 million reward for information leading to Mr. Levinson’s safe return. This year, we again reaffirm our commitment to bringing him home to those who love him.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the First Lady at the International Women of Courage Awards

State Department
Washington D.C.

2:57 P.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you all.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Well, let me begin by thanking Under Secretary Sherman for that very kind and gracious introduction, but also for your leadership on behalf of our country. 

I also want to thank Secretary Kerry for hosting us here today.  Needless to say, we are all thrilled to have you as our new Secretary of State, for no other reason than I love your wife.  You do know that.  (Applause.)  I love our Secretary, but Teresa Heinz Kerry is another woman of courage who has been just a dear friend and supporter to me for a very long time, and it is just a thrill to have you both in this role.  Congratulations, and thank you.  (Applause.) 

I also want to recognize Secretary Sebelius, who can also do the dougie -- (laughter) -- I’ve seen it -- and all of the administration officials, members of Congress and members of the diplomatic community who have joined us today.

And of course, I want to thank all of you for joining us this afternoon as we celebrate International Women’s Day.  This is the fifth time I’ve had the privilege to take part in this event, and every year, I look forward to it because it shows us what our most basic values look like when they’re put to the test.

When these women witnessed horrific crimes or the disregard for basic human rights they spoke up, risking everything they had to see that justice was done.  When they saw their communities or their countries were ignoring issues like sexual violence or women’s rights, they gave those issues a face and a voice.  And with every act of strength and defiance, with every blog post, with every community meeting, these women have inspired millions to stand with them, and find their own voices, and work together to achieve real and lasting change. 

And that is truly the power of the International Women of Courage Award -- that this is not simply an honor bestowed upon a few, but a call for all of us to open our eyes to the injustices around us, and to ask ourselves just what kind of courage we’ve got inside our own hearts. 

And that is the lesson we can learn from the journalist who speaks out against torture and racism; from the poet who takes to Twitter to make a stand against oppression; from the mother whose son was murdered, but channeled her grief into a nationwide movement for change.  That is the spirit that we celebrate today.  And that is the potential that lies within every woman and every girl -- the potential to stand up, to demand action, and to build a better world for our next generation.

And that is why we have once again invited young women from our White House Leadership and Mentoring Initiative to join us here today.  I’m going to ask them to stand, because I do like to embarrass you, yes.  (Applause.)  They are high school students from right here in the D.C. area.  And to my mentees, I just -- the one message to you is to truly listen and to let these women be your guide.  Because in them, you can see that no matter who you are -- and we always say this -- or where you come from, if you’re willing to dig deep enough, and fight hard enough, and believe strongly enough in yourself, then you can truly change the world.  That’s why we want you to be here every year.  And the potential -- absolutely.  (Applause.) 

And the potential that I see in not just all of you, but all of our young women all across this world, that reminds me that the rest of us must work to lift up the women and girls in our own communities -- because we know that when women and girls rise, their communities and their countries rise with them. 

That is as true in Nigeria and Vietnam as it is in Honduras and Syria and right here in the United States.  We saw that just yesterday, when my husband signed the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act.  (Applause.) 

So I want to thank everyone who worked so hard to ensure that victims of domestic abuse will always know that they have somewhere to turn and someone on their side.  And in the months ahead and the years ahead, we must all do our part to build upon efforts like that one and learn from the example of the women we honor today.  Because if we tackle the injustices and challenges in our own lives with even a fraction of their strength and dedication, then I know that we can meet any challenge that comes our way. 

If we encourage the young people around us to fight every single day for what they know is right, if we break down any barrier that stands in the way of a young woman getting her education or believing she can achieve her dreams, then I am confident that we will finally unlock the promise of our next generation.  And then, no matter what part of the world we call home, we will all be better off.  We will all be stronger and freer.  And we will all be more prepared not only to solve the problems we face today, but to overcome any obstacle we can imagine in the years and decades ahead. 

So thank you.  Thank you all for your tremendous contributions to our world.  We are so honored and privileged and grateful.  God bless you all.  (Applause.)

And now it is my honor to turn this program over to Secretary Kerry.  (Applause.)

END               
3:02 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Principal Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 3/8/2013

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:48 P.M. EST
 
MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody. 
 
Q    Good afternoon.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Thank you.  I appreciate the response.  Fired-up crowd for Friday afternoon.
 
Let me do a couple of announcements before we get to the -- let me tee these up here and make sure we’ve got them.  I just want to give you a readout of a couple of meetings that the President has had the last 18 hours or so on a couple of different topics. 
 
Building on the President’s commitment to enhance safe American energy production and respond to the threat of climate change, the President yesterday -- last evening -- convened a meeting with business and thought leaders from the clean energy sector to discuss ongoing priorities. 
 
During the meeting, the President reiterated his commitment to a cleaner and more secure energy future.  The discussion covered a variety of topics, including the important role of natural gas in our domestic energy portfolio; new opportunities for renewables like wind, solar, and advanced biofuels; the importance of clean energy research and development; as well as the promise and potential of increased energy efficiency in our homes and businesses.
 
Since the President took office, responsible domestic oil and gas production has increased each year.  Energy production from renewable resources like wind and solar has more than doubled.  Emissions of carbon pollution have decreased.  And our nation has dramatically reduced its imports of foreign oil.
 
The President made clear that his administration will build on this historic progress using tools, including existing authorities across the federal government and leveraging public-private partnerships to achieve key energy and climate objectives in his second term.  The President looks forward to working with these clean energy leaders and others toward that shared goal.
 
Now, to that end, on Friday, March 15th -- one week from today -- the President will travel to Argonne National Laboratory in Argonne, Illinois for an event focused on American energy.  We’ll have more details on the President’s travel early next week.
 
Q    Josh, can you just say -- is the President planning to talk about sequester cuts while he’s there, or is this totally focused on energy?
 
MR. EARNEST:  This will be focused primarily on energy.
 
Now, a couple of -- you have also asked about the President’s meeting on immigration reform today.  Let me give you a brief readout of that meeting.
 
Also earlier today, the President, joined by members of his senior staff, met with leaders from the faith community to discuss the need for Congress to swiftly act and pass common-sense immigration reform in a bipartisan manner.  The President reiterated his strong commitment to a pathway to earned citizenship for undocumented immigrants, as well as his administration’s emphasis on cracking down on employers who exploit vulnerable immigrant workers and undermine -- let me say that again -- who exploit vulnerable immigrant workers and undermine American workers, and continuing to strengthen our border security.
 
The President thanked the leaders for their work on the issue, and he looks forward to working with them to move the immigration debate forward in Congress.
 
One last thing that I learned about this morning that I thought you all might be interested in.  As you now know, Vice President Biden swore in the new Director of the Central Intelligence Agency today, John Brennan.  And there’s one piece of this that I wanted to note for you. 
 
     Director Brennan was sworn in with his hand on an original draft of the Constitution that had George Washington’s personal handwriting and annotations on it, dating from 1787.  Brennan had requested a document from the National Archives that would symbolize that the United States is a nation of laws.  And before he was sworn in, Director Brennan told the President that he made the request to the Archives because he wanted to reaffirm his commitment to the rule of law as he took the oath of office as Director of the CIA.  So I thought that was an interesting piece of color that might interest all of you.
 
     So with that long windup, Julie, I’ve taken all the pressure off your first question.  You can begin. 
 
     Q    Yes, great.  Well, I guess my first thing would be just to request that the meetings, like the energy meeting, be put on the President’s schedule, as well as his meeting with the Jewish leaders.  That was left off yesterday.  Since the immigration meeting today was put on, if we could have some consistency with that it would be appreciated.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, we make those decisions on a case-by-case basis, but your interest in that is duly noted.
 
     Q    Thank you.  I wanted to ask a couple questions about Abu Ghaith, bin Laden’s spokesman.  Why is he being tried in a civilian court?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, the simple answer to that question is that there is broad consensus across the United States government.  At the Department of Defense, the Department of Justice, the Department of Homeland Security, the intelligence community agrees that the best way to protect our national security interests is to prosecute Abu Ghaith in an Article 3 court.
 
     There is a pretty strong track record of the success of Article 3 courts in handling these kinds of trials.  Faisal Shahzad, the Times Square bomber, was tried in an Article 3 court.  He’s currently serving a life sentence.  Abdulmutallab, also known as the “underwear bomber,” faces similar fate.
 
     Article 3 courts have shown that they are, in many ways, a more efficient way for us to deliver justice to those who seek to harm the United States of America.  And that is the consensus view of the President’s national security team and of agencies all across the federal government that this is the best way to handle bringing Abu Ghaith to justice.
 
     Q    So going forward, when we have similar circumstances, is this going to be the track that the President will take?  Or is this still going to be specific to depending on the conditions around how these people are captured, what types of activity they may have been involved in?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, certainly, these kinds of cases will be handled on a case-by-case basis.  But as the President has articulated himself many times, it’s his view that whenever we can use Article 3 courts to get justice, we’ll do so.  As I mentioned, they’ve proved to be a very useful tool in getting that justice, and that’s what -- that’s why and how the decision was made in this case.
 
     Q    And do you know if the President reached out, or anyone from the administration reached out to Mayor Bloomberg before making this decision?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I’m not aware of any conversations with Mayor Bloomberg in advance of this decision having been made.
 
     Matt.
 
     Q    Just to follow up on that quickly, Mitch McConnell suggested that the decision to try bin Laden’s son-in-law would actually impede intelligence collection, and that it would be better for him to have been taken to Guantanamo and safer for all involved.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  With all due respect to Senator McConnell, that's not the assessment of the intelligence community.  It’s not the assessment of the Department of Justice.  It’s not the assessment of the Department of Defense.  So he’s certainly welcome to his opinion, but that's not the assessment of the people who are responsible for protecting the national security of the United States of America.
 
     Q    Is that to say that they feel like they already exhausted whatever intelligence leads they might get from him?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, for additional details, if they are available, they can be provided by the Department of Justice.  I can tell you that it is customary in these circumstances for questioning of the detained individual to take place, and that happened in this case.  But in terms of -- well, I guess I should also point out that there have been previous detainees who have been subject to similar questioning in similar circumstances that has yielded valuable intelligence.  And that's something that we’ve talked about in the past. 
 
So again, I’d refer you to the Department of Justice for details about this circumstance.  But this is something that has been -- this is a process that has been tried before and has a very strong track record of success.  And it was the unanimous view of the national security community and the intelligence community that it should be pursued in this case as well.
 
     Q    Okay, and one last question on the budget.  Pentagon officials have told the House Armed Services Committee that the President’s budget is coming on April 8th.  Can you confirm that?  And what, if any, concern does the administration have that the Senate and House versions are going to be rolled out before the administration’s budget?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I don't have a budget date to announce to you.  As we’ve talked about for some time, the budget has been delayed because of some of the impediments, frankly, to formulating a budget that have been thrown in the path of those who are working on it.  We had a fiscal cliff debate that lasted through the end of last year.  Certainly, the implementation of the sequester has affected the ability of the administration to put together our budget proposal.  But that's something that people are hard at work on, and I think in the coming weeks we’ll have some more details about the budget. 
 
And what that budget will show is that the President’s top policy priority is strengthening our economy for the middle class; that we want to make sure we’re putting the policies in place that will strengthen the middle class, because it’s the President’s view that we only have a strong country when we have a strong and growing middle class.  So those will be some of the policies that will be included in that budget that will be rolled out in the weeks ahead.
 
     Jim.
 
     Q    Yes.  There are reports that the Obamas had dinner with the Clintons one week ago today.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  A lot of interesting dinners this week, I guess.
 
     Q    Yes, lots of interesting dinners.  Curious if you can confirm that?  I suppose you just did confirm that.  (Laughter.)
 
     And this dinner apparently happened one day before the President began his outreach, making these phone calls to Republicans last weekend.  Did former President Clinton mention that as his advice to the current President that perhaps some outreach might be a good thing?
 
     Q    Well, I can confirm the dinner for you.  It was a private dinner that the President and First Lady enjoyed with President Clinton and former Secretary of State Clinton.  They enjoyed the meal and they enjoyed the conversation, but I don't have any more details to read out to you.
 
     In terms of the President’s bipartisan outreach to rank-and-file members of Congress, that was actually something that started before that dinner.  The President had made some calls to members of the Gang of Eight a week prior to the dinner and had hosted Senator Graham and Senator McCain in the Oval Office the day before.  So this is an ongoing effort.  I haven’t spoken to President Clinton about what he thinks about that effort, but maybe you could --
 
     Q    He would certainly have some insights when it comes to government shutdowns and brinksmanship and dealing with the other side.  You can't say whether or not this came up at all?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  He certainly does have that experience, but I’m not going to read out the private dinner that they enjoyed.
 
     Q    One thing that we heard from Jay and I guess from yourself here is there seems to be this reluctance to acknowledge that the President’s I guess past strategy in terms of getting some kind of agreement from Republicans to go along with his proposals in bringing down the deficit.  The President used some campaign-style tactics -- holding events and so forth -- to get to that point, and that was not successful.  But Jay said, and has been saying all week, and the White House has been saying all week, well, it’s only because there’s no looming deadline that you tried this new approach.  I mean, isn’t that just sort of spin?  (Laughter.)
 
     MR. EARNEST:  No.  Well, let’s --
 
     Q    Nothing more than that?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, let’s talk about why the President spent so much time engaging the American public in the public debates that are happening in Washington, D.C.  This was -- essentially, you could describe it as one of the core principles of his presidential campaign, that the President believed that we need to engage the American people in bringing change to Washington, D.C.  And I know that this was the subject of some debate in the last election about the consequences of including the American public in that debate and whether or not change in Washington, D.C. was possible without including the American people in that debate. 
 
It’s the view of the President of the United States that if we’re going to bring change to Washington, if we’re going to put in place the kinds of policies that are in the best interest of the country, that are in the best interest of our economy, that are in the best interest of the middle class -- all policies that the President supports -- that we need to engage the American public in that debate.  And the President will continue to do that. 
 
And it’s not something that we’ve just tried and aren’t going to try anymore.  The President believes that this is a sustained part of the job description, and as long as he’s President, he’s going to be interested in engaging the American public in a robust debate about the direction that we should take our country.
 
     Now, it’s also no coincidence that many of the policies that the President is advocating here in Washington, D.C. have the strong support of the American public.  Pursuing a balanced approach to deficit reduction is a classic example of this.  This is something that is strongly supported by the American public, and there are some polls that have indicated it’s actually strongly supported by a majority of Republicans across the country.  The same dynamic exists when it comes to efforts to reduce gun violence in our communities.  There are many things that the President proposes, including closing loopholes in background checks, for example, and is strongly supported.  Some polls indicate that up to 90 percent of Americans actually support taking that kind of policy approach.
 
     So the President believes that it’s very important to include the American public in these debates.  In fact, he thinks it’s part of his job description to include them in these debates, and he’s been -- he’s long made the case that these debates will never be successful, or won’t be successful without the strong support of the American public.
 
     Kristen.
 
     Q    Josh, thanks.  Unemployment report came out today --
 
     MR. EARNEST:  It did.
 
     Q    -- and showed that the economy is showing fresh signs of strength.  What does the President think the impact of the sequester will be on this latest economic picture that we got today?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I suspect if the jobs numbers had been different it wouldn’t have taken less than four people to ask me about them.  But that’s the nature of our work, I think, here. 
 
We did see the jobs numbers today.  The jobs numbers that came out today are the latest data point to indicate that our economy is gaining traction as we recover from the worst recession since the Great Depression.  And there are a couple of different ways to look at these numbers.  Most importantly, over the course of the last 36 months, the American economy has created private sector jobs in each one of those months, for 36 consecutive months, for a total of almost 6.4 million private sector jobs.  That is a pretty good indication of the trajectory that we’re on. 
 
     If you just look at the last five months, the American economy has created 200,000 private sector jobs in four of those five months.  So we really are starting to gain some traction.
 
     Now, the question facing lawmakers in Washington, D.C. is:  Is Congress going to be engaged in an effort of putting in place the kinds of policies that will support that recovery, that will ensure that the economic recovery that we’re starting to see, that’s starting to gain traction, will benefit the middle class, and how will the policies in Washington help that along?
 
     Unfortunately, what we’ve seen is we’ve seen policies put in place, or policies blocked by Congress -- Republicans in Congress -- that are actually plaguing our economy, not helping it.  And the manufactured obstacle that is the sequester is posing a challenge to our economy in much the same way that the fiscal cliff was; in much the same way that uncertainty around the payroll tax cut was; in much the same way, to a different degree, that the debt ceiling debate was.
 
     Q    Does the President think that the sequester could weaken the economic outlook next month, could weaken the jobs report next month?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not an economic forecaster, and I’m not going to get in that business now.  Even weather forecasters have had a pretty tough week, so I don’t want to be an economic forecaster.  But I would say that Democrats and Republicans both agree that the sequester is going to have a negative impact on our economy.  Democrats and Republicans agree that the sequester is going to have a negative impact on job creation.  And most economic analysts out there would tell you -- who have looked at this -- would tell you that the sequester itself actually does very little to reduce our deficit over the long term. 
 
     So the President -- that’s why the President is such a strong advocate of a proposal of a balanced approach to our deficit reduction, where we can make some smart, strategic, targeted cuts in government spending, we can get some savings from entitlement programs, and we can close loopholes that only benefit the wealthy and the well-connected.  That kind of balanced approach would replace the sequester, would actually yield greater deficit reduction, and most importantly, would actually put in place a set of policies that are in the best interest of our economy and would strengthen the chances of success for middle-class families out there.
 
     Q    Josh, today is the last day of White House tours.  What is the President’s message to all of the people who are going to be disappointed, frustrated, and upset this weekend that they are not going to be able to have a tour of the White House -- the people’s house?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  This is an issue that the President and First Lady care strongly about.  You’ve heard both the President and First Lady talk about the value of the White House as the people’s house.  There are hundreds of thousands of people who come to the White House on a daily basis -- on a yearly basis, to tour the White House.  And the White House has a unique place as both the seat of government, the residence of the leader of the country, but also a museum.  And it is a shame that because of the sequester, those tours will no longer take place.
 
     I’ll tell you that the people that the President is most concerned about, though, are the 750,000 Americans who stand to lose their job according to the CBO as a result of the sequester.  What we need is we need a long-term solution to dealing with our deficits that would turn off the sequester.
 
     There is a proposal that the President has put forward that has -- it's an approach that is strongly supported by the American public.  And you can see from the President's conversations and efforts over the last not just several days, but several weeks, that he’s committed to finding a solution to this problem.
 
     Q    Some of his critics have argued that he should cancel his golf outings and possibly even his vacation because there are these furloughs and potential layoffs that federal employees are facing.  What is his response to that?  And is that under consideration at all?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don't know if -- I haven't heard anybody say that, so I'm not sure who exactly is saying that.  What I will tell you is -- 
 
     Q    Gohmert.  People on Twitter.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I assume he is one of the tea party Republicans who actually called the sequester a victory for the tea party.  The sequester is not a victory for the American people, I can tell you that.
 
     Q    But what is his reaction to that type of criticism?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, look, what the President has said is it's time for Democrats and Republicans to work together to solve this problem.  So I recognize that there may be some Republicans out there who think that this is great news, that think this is a victory and are cheering it on.  So the President is trying to find some Republicans who don’t share that view who actually agree with the President that we need to find a way to reduce our deficits in a responsible way.
 
     As I mentioned, the people who are cheering this as a big victory have left me a little mystified.  These are people who ostensibly campaigned because they wanted to reduce deficits.  The sequester actually does very little to reduce the deficit over the long term.  They campaigned on tax reform.  The sequester does nothing to reform the tax code.  They campaigned on reforming entitlements.  The sequester does nothing to reform the entitlement system or get savings from the entitlement system.  So it's not actually clear to me what they're cheering.  And truly, they're not cheering the 750,000 Americans who would lose their jobs, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
 
     So we have a difference of opinion with the Republicans who espouse the point of view that you’ve mentioned.  But the President is looking for Republicans and Democrats who are going to work with him to solve this problem.
 
     Q    As you know, there's a movement put by some of the President's critics to collect private donations to keep the White House tours from being canceled because of the sequester.  Is that technically possible?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I don't know if it's technically possible.  My guess is that it's not.  And the reason for that is the sequester mandates across-the-board, non-strategic, indiscriminate cuts to the budget.  It allows very little, if any, flexibility for those who are administering the budget.  And it means agency heads are put in a very difficult position of choosing between two bad options. 
 
     Secretary Duncan talked about this a little bit.  He said that a significant portion of his budget was dedicated to providing educational opportunities for disabled children, and another significant portion of the budget was dedicated to providing economic -- or education opportunities for poor children.  And as he posed the question, are you asking me to cut programs for disabled children so that we can protect programs for poor children or the other way around?  These are bad choices and bad options.  This is bad policy.  That's the reason it was -- that Democrats and Republicans put it in place to try to force a smart option.
 
     So it's disappointing that there are some who are cheering this as a big political victory, because the American people certainly don't see it as a victory for them.
 
     Q    On today's jobs numbers, does that indicate that the sequester -- the fear of it -- is having less of an impact than you all expected, or is the bad news still to come?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  You don't have to just take my word for it.  There are a lot of economic analysts who looked at the fourth quarter GDP numbers who concluded that the looming sequester did have an impact on economic growth, a pretty significant one.  The CBO has calculated that there are up to three-quarters of a million Americans who could lose their job as a result of the sequester, that it could have an impact as large as taking six-tenths of a percentage point off of GDP. 
 
     So there are clear consequences, bad consequences for the sequester, and that's why the President is dedicated to trying to solve that problem.  Washington for too long has careened from one financial and fiscal crisis to another in a way that has impeded economic growth.  The data points are in place to indicate that we have a remarkably resilient economy.  We’re starting to gain traction, and it’s time for politicians in Washington to work across the aisle to put in place policies that will support -- not inhibit -- that recovery.
 
     Q    Why should we not conclude -- since the White House tours came up and they end tomorrow, why should we not conclude that the choice of ending the tours by the White House was made to inflict maximum pain on Congress and be very publicly noticeable since you could have trimmed the Secret Service budget in other ways?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not sure the Secret Service would acknowledge that.  I think that they --
 
     Q    But it wasn’t their choice to close the tours. 
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I --
 
     Q    And they presented options to you. 
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I’m not sure that that's what they would say if you asked them.  So you can ask them that.  But there are very strict limits to how much flexibility is included here.  We are presented with a range of bad options, and it’s not hard to imagine me standing up here being questioned by you, being asked the same question about why we didn't choose some other bad option.
 
     So, look, the point here is that the cancellation of White House tours is something we’re not very happy about.  But what we’re also not very happy about is the potential economic impact of the sequester, including people who stand to lose their jobs as a result of it.  So this is a problem that we have to get solved regardless of -- even if it didn't impact White House tours, this is something that the President would be very focused on and interested in solving.
 
     Q    While I would never dream of suggesting that politics plays any role in this, it does seem to me that there were other choices.  The Secret Service has to make trims. 
 
     MR. EARNEST:  It did.  
 
     Q    But you chose to make those trims by saying there’s no tours so that you don't have to have overtime for the Secret Service people who are involved in the tours.  There must be other ways.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think there are a couple of options, but as I pointed out, there’s no magic wand here that we can wave to comply with the sequester.  The reason that the sequester was put in place, just to remind you, was to put in place a policy that was so onerous and terrible that it would actually force Democrats and Republicans to come together to find an alternative solution.  They didn't do that.
 
     So if you’re sitting here telling me it seems ridiculous that this terrible policy is in place and it’s having an impact on White House tours, I would agree with you.  But that's the way that it was designed.
 
     Q    I was talking about your choice of White House tours as the avenue to implement the policy.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, look, if you want to talk to the Secret Service about the range of options that they considered, you’re welcome to do that.  I think they’d be -- my guess is they're going to tell you the same thing I am, which is that there are no good options here.
 
     Q    But it wasn’t their choice.  It was the White House’s.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, it actually -- they did present a range of choices.  You're asking about the range of choices that we had, and I think they would be -- I think they will tell you that that range of choices went from bad to worse.
 
     Jon.
 
     Q    Back to Abu Ghaith -- not only is this bin Laden’s son-in-law, he’s somebody who has spent theoretically more than a decade in Iran with other al Qaeda figures.  What was the top priority here?  Bringing him to justice or getting intelligence out of him?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, the benefit of the system that I’ve described to you is that we’re able to do both -- that we’re able to question him as a part of the regular process of detaining individuals like this, but we’re also able to put him through Article 3 courts to ensure that he’s held accountable for his crimes.
 
     The crimes that he’s committed are terrible.  From at least May 2001 up to and around 2002, Abu Ghaith served alongside Osama bin Laden, appearing with bin Laden and his then deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, speaking on behalf of the terrorist organization in support of its mission and warning that attacks similar to 9/11 would continue.  So this is somebody who is going to be held accountable for his crimes and will be done -- and that will be done in accordance with the laws and values of this country, and it will be done so in a pretty efficient way.
 
     And so, I guess my proposal to you, unlike in Bill’s choice, we don't have to choose.  We’re able to do both, and that's exactly what we did.
 
     Q    Was he read his Miranda rights?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  You have to talk to the Department of Justice about the specifics of his handling.
 
     Q    What kind of questioning, what kind of -- are we getting any useful intelligence out of him?  Do you know if he  -- what was the process here?  Because it seems like he was very quickly moved to this criminal process.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Your interest in this is certainly understandable, but I’m not going to be in a position to read out specific intelligence that may or may not have been gleaned from him.  And if you have questions about how that questioning process worked, then I would encourage you to talk to the Department of Justice.
 
     Q    And you were asked about Bloomberg.  Was Congress informed of this decision to bring him to the United States?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I know that we are in regular communication with members of Congress, but in terms of this specific piece of news, I’m going to have to take that question.  We’ll see if I can get you some more information about what the communications were like between the administration and Congress on this.*
 
     Roger.
 
     Q    Back to the economy for a moment.  Mr. Krueger said this morning that the sequester is going to be plaguing the economy, and you repeated that here again today.  How do you explain the records on Wall Street this week?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t want to be in a position of trying to analyze the markets.  There are people who are paid lots of money every year --
 
     Q    But clearly, the market is ignoring it. 
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I’m not going to interpret the markets from up here.  There are people who are paid millions of dollars, and probably lose millions of dollars, trying to interpret the vagaries of the stock market.  And I’m not going to do it for free.  (Laughter.)
 
     April.
 
     Q    Josh, back on the economy and the jobs numbers.  It went from 7.9 to 7.7 percent.  That’s good, I guess.
 
     MR. EARNEST:  That’s actually the lowest figure since December 2008, before this President took office.
 
     Q    Right.  But is this White House bracing for the worst as it relates to sequestration?  I talked to the acting Labor Secretary and he said sequestration will definitely put the brakes on job growth in this country.  Are you bracing for the worst with reports down the road in the next couple of months?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  We are certainly concerned -- I think you could even say very concerned -- about the habit in Washington, D.C., particularly Republicans in Congress, who repeatedly are throwing up obstacles to a recovery that’s starting to gain traction.  So whether it’s the debt limit fight of August of 2011 or the fiscal cliff of earlier this year -- we had the payroll tax fight a couple of times -- and even the sequester are all policies that are supported by Republicans that do not have a positive impact on our economy.  There’s no two ways around it.  Every economist will tell you that.  And even Republicans talk about the terrible toll that uncertainty has on our economy. 
 
So the President is ready to sit down with Republicans who share his concern to do something serious about our deficit, but to do it in a way that’s actually going to be constructive for the economy, that’s going to expand the economic opportunity for the middle class.  Those are the President's core goals, and those are goals that we can accomplish through the process of turning off the sequester.  So it's time to get that done.
 
     Q    Touching on something you just said -- the President is ready to sit down and talk with Republicans -- I talked to Marcia Fudge, head of the Congressional Black Caucus, and she said Democrats as a whole want to be on the front end to know what the President is talking about.  She is saying the President can come to the Hill, but they just don't know what he is doing or what he is offering to Republicans.  What say you about that?  Democrats want to know what the President is offering to Republicans, and they're not involved in the negotiations. 
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, the President is certainly interested in talking to rank-and-file members in both parties.  So the President had lunch with Congressman Van Hollen yesterday.  He was included in the lunch that the President had with Congressman Ryan.  The three of them dined together. 
 
     Next week -- and I'll get to the week ahead here in a little bit -- but next week, the President will be traveling up to Capitol Hill, where he will be speaking at both the Senate Democratic Caucus meeting and the House Democratic Caucus meeting.  And those will be opportunities for the President to talk to those Democrats about his legislative priorities.  Certainly, that includes some of these budget issues that we've spent a lot of time talking about today.  But it also includes some of the things that I talked about at the beginning of this briefing about how the President wants to pursue comprehensive immigration reform, about how the President believes that we can pursue policies that would reduce gun violence in communities all across the country.
 
     The President put forward some specific proposals in the State of the Union that would strengthen the middle class -- proposals like increasing the minimum wage and indexing it to inflation; proposals like expanding access to early childhood education programs that are so critical to the success of children in this country.  So there are a number of things at the top the President's legislative agenda, and he looks forward to talking to Democrats about them next week.
 
     Christi.
 
     Q    Thanks, Josh.  The White House hasn't ruled out the possibility that the President might cancel his trip to Israel, because the Israeli government is not formed.  I just wondered if that's something --
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me do that for you now.  We're going.  (Laughter.)
 
     Q    You're going?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Yes.  (Laughter.) 
 
     Q    Okay, so you're ruling out the possibility of canceling the trip.  Okay, thank you.   
 
     Does the President think he has an opportunity to influence the way the government is put together, perhaps with more centrist elements in it?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  The formation of the Israeli government is the responsibility of Prime Minister Netanyahu and others who have -- other senior officials in the Israeli government who will be responsible for that task.  So that's not something that the President would interfere with. 
 
     The President is primarily going on this trip to accomplish a couple of things.  One is he is very interested in talking to the Israeli public while he is there -- that there is an opportunity for him to demonstrate his support for Israel and his commitment to their security, something that we spent a lot of time talking about last year.  We're also operating at a time when the region -- Israel's neighborhood, if you will -- is undergoing a pretty severe transition.  There's crisis and it’s important for the people of Israel to understand that the American people stand with them in the time of crisis, and that we're going to be there to protect them and to work with them to ensure their security.
 
     Q    Might he be trying to persuade the Israeli public on any particular point -- about peace talks maybe, for example?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, the President is traveling -- I guess we should point out the President is traveling to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan.  And while the President is not going with any specific peace plan in hand, the President's views about the interest that the Israeli people have in pursuing a peace process that he thinks it’s in the best interest of both parties, both Palestinians and the Israelis, to pursue a peace agreement.  And that's something that he will certainly be talking about with the leaders of the newly formed government when it's formed.  It's something that he will be talking about with President Abbas. 
 
And this is an opportunity for him to have that discussion and make sure that it remains clear to them that Middle East peace, that peace between the Israelis and Palestinians remains a priority of the President, that that's something that he is -- that the United States is ready to strongly support if that dialogue is ready to take off.  And that will be the subject of a lot of conversation while we're there, but it won't be because the President is presenting a specific plan. 
 
Q    Can I ask you a question about that also?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sure.  
 
Q    There's concern among Israelis that they're going to take a defense hit, a defense funding hit from the U.S. because of sequester -- the $155 million is going to be erased from their allocation.  What's the administration saying about that?  Is there any effort to close that gap?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, as you know, the sequester grants very little flexibility in terms of shifting money between these categories.  And in some cases, that lack of flexibility requires difficult and painful decisions.  I don't know what impact this would have on military aid to Israel, so I would encourage you to check with the Department of Defense who would have some more knowledge of this at a granular level.  I’d check with them.
 
     Q    All right.
 
     Q    Thank you, Josh.  What is the way forward on the sequester at this point?  What is the most practical way to turn it off?  Would that happen in the context of the grand bargain?  Or is there a discrete piece of legislation that the President is interested in negotiating to turn off the sequester as soon as possible?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  That's a good question.  I don't think the answer to that is really clear right now.  I think that is the subject of a lot of these discussions that the President has been having the last couple of days, and I think it will be the subject of discussions that the President has moving forward.  I think it’s the President’s preference to -- again, I think this is another case where we actually don't have to choose, that the fault lines here of an agreement are pretty clear where our common ground lies.
 
     There is bipartisan agreement that we can make some smart cuts to government spending.  There’s bipartisan agreement that we can get some savings from entitlement programs.  And there at least used to be bipartisan agreement -- two months ago there was bipartisan agreement -- that there was plenty of revenue that could be gained by closing tax loopholes that only benefit the wealthy and the well-connected. 
 
So the outlines of a deal here are pretty quick.  So ostensibly, you could imagine a scenario where we could act quickly to consummate a deal like that that would actually reduce our deficit significantly over the long term and turn off the sequester.  There’s no reason that can't happen pretty quick.
 
     Q    And also, as a follow-up, do you anticipate this outreach we’ve seen from the President -- going to the Hill next week -- this will continue?  Will there be more lunches?  More dinners?  More trips to the Hill in the coming weeks and months?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I don't have anything additional on the schedule to inform you about, but the President certainly remains committed to preserving an open line of communication with rank-and-file Democrats and Republicans who are interested in working with him.
 
     Now, we’re also not naïve about this process.  The President is going to continue to talk to the Speaker of the House and the Democratic leader in the House.  He’s going to continue to talk to the Democratic leader and Republican leaders in the Senate.  But this is -- I think you could view this as an opportunity for the President to engage in a new line of communication and an open and constructive dialogue that could contribute to a solution.
 
     Olivier.
 
     Q    Josh, a couple for you.  First, does the President want to see the authorization for the use of military force to be updated and expanded to keep up with his updated and expanded war on terrorism?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  Well, Olivier, I think the way that I’d answer your question is to say this:  The authorization to use military force is something that grants the necessary legal authorities for the President to pursue elements of al Qaeda.  And that is something that we’ve done very aggressively.  We’ve gone after the core elements and actually decimated the core elements of al Qaeda in Afghanistan and in that region.
 
     But we’ve also been pretty aggressive in our pursuit of elements of al Qaeda that are tied to AQAP -- al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula; and AQIM -- al Qaeda in the Maghreb.  And this is something that we are dedicated to.  It is something that is critical to ensuring the national security of our country.  And that's something that is ongoing, and that is something that -- that is an authority that is granted to the President under the current authorization to use military force.
 
     Q    But as you expand to groups that are, as one official said, “associates of associates” of al Qaeda, you don't feel that you need to update this piece of legislation at all?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  At this point, we feel like we have the authorities we need to go after elements of al Qaeda and those self-identified enemies of the United States and our allies and our interests, and we’re doing that very aggressively in order to protect the American people and our interests.
 
     Q    And on Abu Ghaith, what role did the government of Iran play, if any, in the sequence of events that led ultimately to his capture?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  For details about the sequence of events, I’d refer you to the Department of Justice.  I just don't have anything on that for you.
 
     Mike.
 
     Q    You just told April about what the President wants to talk to the Democratic caucuses next week.  Can you tell us what he wants to talk to the Republicans about?  And will he nuance his message between the House and the Senate?
 
     MR. EARNEST:  I unnecessarily limited the scope of my answer to April’s narrowly tailored question.  That's not a critique of your question.  It’s more a critique of my answer, to be honest with you.  (Laughter.)  I don't know if that makes you feel better or not.  I’m not sure it makes me feel better.  (Laughter.)
 
     Suffice it to say the President is interested in talking about the range of his priorities to both Democrats and Republicans on Capitol Hill.  That includes, first and foremost, strengthening our economy and putting in place policies that will expand economic opportunity for the middle class in this country.  That's the President’s focal point.  That's his North Star, as he described in the State of the Union.  And he’s going to spend some time talking about that to both Democrats and Republicans.  I think there are a lot of members of both caucuses, Democrats and Republicans, who share that policy priority. 
 
The President will also talk to them about some of the other things that we’ve talked about today:  a balanced approach to deficit reduction; finally reforming our broken immigration system; reducing gun violence in communities all across the country.  So there are -- I would also anticipate, actually, that the President will talk about his upcoming trip to Israel.  I know that there are a number of members of Congress, again, in both parties, that are very interested in the President’s trip.
 
So he’ll have a pretty long list when he goes up there to visit with them, and I think it will be a constructive opportunity for dialogue.
 
Q    Any nuance between the House and the Senate?
 
MR. EARNEST:  No.
 
Q    And then just very quickly, anything you can tell us about Labor?  We’re hearing that you might be close to announcing something there?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I don’t.  I didn’t walk out with any personnel announcements today, so I’m afraid I can’t offer you any guidance on that.
 
Q    Thanks, Josh.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Victoria.
 
Q    Has the President spoken to the President of South Korea about North Korea’s threats?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any specific calls to read out to you, but I can read you something about North Korea’s threats, if you’d like.
 
Q    Okay.  Is he going to?  Could you also let us know that?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any trips to tell you about right now.
 
Q    No, is he going to talk with her?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Oh, is he going to make any phone calls?  I don’t know.
 
Q    Okay.
 
MR. EARNEST:  If he does, I would anticipate that would be the kind of thing we might read out.
 
Q    I understand.
 
Q    Or not.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Or not.  (Laughter.) 
 
Onto a more serious subject:  North Korea’s threats are not helpful.  We have consistently called on North Korea to improve relations with its neighbors, including South Korea.  This is a moment for the North to seize the opportunity presented by a new government in Seoul, not to threaten it.  Further provocative actions would only increase Pyongyang’s isolation, and its continued focus on its nuclear and missile program is doing nothing to help the North Korean people.
 
Dan.
 
Q    On the meeting with Jewish leaders last night, I’m not going to ask you to confirm quotes coming out of that, but one of them in the Post said -- quoted the President as saying, “I’m not going to beat my chest” to prove his toughness on the issue of the Iran nuclear -- on the Iran nuclear issue.  It seemed to indicate to some that there was a quite sharp questioning of him about his commitment.  Is he frustrated at this point that maybe some people haven’t gotten that message?
 
MR. EARNEST:  No, I don’t think so.  I think the President has been pretty clear about this.  I think it’s one of the reasons that we have such a strong relationship with Israel, is because we have demonstrated our unity with them.  We stand shoulder to shoulder with them as we demonstrate to the Iranians that it’s important for them to live up to their international obligations, to their obligations to the United Nations, to their obligations to the IAEA.  And it remains a pretty bright red line for the President that Iran should not attain a nuclear weapon.
 
So we’ve been very clear about this, and I don’t think there’s really any misunderstanding about that. 
 
Q    Is the red line as bright as it is for Netanyahu? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I guess I’m having trouble deciphering the different shades of brightness there. 
 
So, Cheryl, I’m going to give you the last one.
 
Q    Thanks.  Just any update on what date the President’s budget will be out?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any updates on that, but weeks ahead. 
 
Let me read to you the --
 
Q    Josh, we never heard back as to what cuts the White House is making here in its own personnel, in its own budget here as it relates to sequestration.  We’ve heard a couple of times this week that we’re going to get those details; we haven’t gotten those details.  When are we going to hear anything besides the White House tours being --
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I can tell you that there are a number of ways that the White House also has to deal with the consequences of the sequester.  The White House and the components of the White House are affected by the sequester in a way that’s similar to other government agencies.  I can tell you that we’re making significant -- that we’re also faced with making some tough decisions when it comes to ongoing projects, when it comes to purchasing equipment and supplies.  But we’re also a pretty personnel-heavy agency, if you will.  So that means that there will be agencies -- that there will be employees of components who work here at the White House that will be facing pay cuts, that will be facing furloughs. 
 
And again, this is the result of a policy that Democrats and Republicans agree is really bad.  It’s bad for our economy.  It’s a bad way to run a government.  It doesn’t create jobs and it doesn’t do that much to reduce the deficit over the long term.  So there’s got to be a good alternative.
 
Q    But those will be made public?  Those details will be made public?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I know that the Office of Management and Budget has put forward a variety of charts that indicate the impact of the budget -- of the sequester on the budget, including the budget of the White House.  And what I have described to you is the practical impact of that to help you get a sense of what behind the numbers is the tangible impact here.  And that means that there will be some projects that are suspended.  It means that there will be some supply purchases that are put off.  And it’s going to have an impact on the personnel here at the White House -- pay cuts, furloughs and other things.
 
Q    In the West Wing?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?
 
Q    In the West Wing as well?
 
MR. EARNEST:  In the West Wing as well.  Everybody who works at the White House.
 
Okay.  On that happy note, I’m going to read the week ahead.
 
Q    Is that where Jay is today?  (Laughter.)
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?  (Laughter.)  He’s hard at work today. 
 
On Saturday, the President will deliver remarks at the Gridiron dinner, at the Renaissance Hotel in Washington, D.C.  I suspect many of you will be there to see him. 
 
On Monday, the President will attend meetings at the White House. 
 
This is an interesting one:  The President, on Tuesday, will welcome His Majesty the Sultan of Brunei to the White House.  The United States and Brunei have strong bilateral relations and have a shared interest in working together to ensure the continued peace, stability, and prosperity of the Asia Pacific region.  The President looks forward to discussing preparations for the East Asia Summit and the U.S.-ASEAN Summit, which will be held in Brunei in October.  The President will also consult with His Majesty on a broad range of strategic and economic issues of mutual concern.
 
Later on Tuesday, the President will travel to Capitol Hill to meet with the Senate Democratic Caucus. 
 
On Wednesday, the President will travel back to Capitol Hill to meet with the House Republican Conference. 
 
And then, on Thursday, the President will travel to Capitol Hill to meet separately with the Senate Republican Conference and then back over to meet with the House Democratic Caucus.  The timing of all those meetings I believe is still up in the air, so we’ll have more details on that exact timing when those meetings are closer.
 
And then, as I mentioned, on Friday, the President will travel to Argonne National Laboratory in Argonne, Illinois, for an event focused on American energy.  More details on that trip will be released early next week.
 
And with that, I hope you all have a great weekend.
 
Q    Thanks, Josh.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Thank you.

END               
1:33 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the First Lady to the Partnership for a Healthier America Summit

George Washington University
Washington, D.C.

1:45 P.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  (Applause.)  Thank you all so much.  (Applause.)  Oh, my goodness.  Yes!  (Applause.)  Thank you all so much.  It’s great to see you.  It is truly a pleasure to be with all of you today.

And of course, I want to start by thanking Eli Manning -- (applause) -- oh, my gosh! -- for that very kind introduction.  I’m probably as excited to see him as I am to see all of you.  (Laughter.)  But I’m thrilled that he could join us today, and I’m just grateful for all of his work and leadership.

I also want to thank Dr. Steven Knapp, not just for hosting us here at GW, but for all the wonderful work this university is doing to forward the agenda of nutrition and fitness.  We are so grateful that they are our partners and our neighbors as well.

And I also want to recognize Larry Soler -- Larry for -- and everybody else at the partnership for all of their wonderful work, as well as Kathleen Tullie and the team at Reebok for all of their leadership.  And it’s just a thrill to be working with both of these wonderful organizations and companies that are doing all of these terrific things.

But most of all, I want to thank all of you -- the advocates, experts, and executives who have been leading the way to give all of our children a healthy start to their lives.  Because of your tremendous efforts, more than half a million people in underserved communities now have access to fresh, healthy food.  Because of you, major American businesses like Disney and Walmart and Darden Restaurants are now offering healthier menus and products.  Military leaders are serving healthier food on their bases.  Faith leaders are educating their congregations about eating healthy.  Nearly two and a half million kids have enrolled in recreational sports classes.  Democrats and Republicans right here in Washington -- (laughter) -- came together to pass groundbreaking legislation that is transforming our school lunch program. 

And just last week, we had the sheer delight to launch Let’s Move Active Schools, an unprecedented effort to invest more than $70 million to promote physical activity and bring physical education back to our schools.  Yes.  (Applause.) 

And today, we are beyond thrilled to announce that Reebok is joining this effort with an additional investment of $30 million over the next three years.  Absolutely.  (Applause.)  This investment -- oh -- as you’ve seen, it comes after years of leadership through their BOKS Kids program which supports innovative programs to get kids active in our schools.

So again, I just want to take a moment today to say how grateful I am for Reebok’s longstanding commitment to this issue, and for their groundbreaking investment to take that work to the next level.  Thanks to efforts like these, today, we are finally starting to see some results.  In Mississippi, obesity rates among elementary school children have dropped 13 percent.  Rates are also falling in cities -- yes -- (applause) -- like Philadelphia and New York, and in California as well. 

So together, slowly but surely, we are beginning to turn the tide on childhood obesity in America.  Together, we are inspiring leaders from every sector to take ownership of this issue.  And with this type of broad and inclusive engagement, I am confident that we will continue to make steady progress.

But we also know that at the end of the day, when it comes to the health of our kids, no one has a greater impact than each of us do as parents.  We know that families play a uniquely important role in the work that we’re all doing.  And that’s one of the things I want to focus on today -– what all of us can do to better empower families who want to make healthy choices for their kids. 

Now, on one level, this seems pretty obvious.  I mean, after all, our kids aren’t the ones going to the supermarket or waking up early to make breakfast -- at least not in my household.  (Laughter.)  And they certainly don’t sign themselves up for ballet and basketball clinics at the Y.  That’s our job.  More than anyone else, we as parents decide what our kids eat, and how active they are every single day.  

But, unfortunately, over the past 50 years, it’s gotten a whole lot harder for many families to make healthy choices.  For starters, people have a lot less time.  Back in 1980, way back then -- (laughter) -- just 39 percent of married families had two working parents.  But today, it’s nearly 60 percent.  Just three decades ago, the average employee worked 180 hours less each year than today’s average employee. 

So for many parents, every day feels like a cross between a high wire act and an obstacle course, and there simply aren’t enough hours in the day to get everything done.  And I know a little bit about what that’s like.  While I have plenty of help and support today, I didn’t always live in the White House.  (Laughter.)  And it wasn’t that long ago that I was a working mom, juggling a demanding job with two small children and a husband who traveled. 

Back then, something as simple as a grocery shopping trip required a finely-honed plan of attack.  (Laughter.)  I mean, that trip to the supermarket was just one of a dozen items I had to check off my to-do list within my few precious hours of errand time.  So each week, armed with my budget and my list, I was on a mission to get in and out of that store in less than 30 minutes.  Thirty minutes -- that’s all I had.  (Laughter.)

So if the fruit wasn’t already pre-packaged, you could forget about it.  I did not have time for bagging and weighing and calculating costs in my head.  I was all about grab and go, you hear me?  (Laughter.)  And if I had my daughters with me, then the clock was really ticking before somebody needed to be fed or diapered or put down for a nap.  Oh, and heaven help me if I got all the way to the produce aisle at the end and realized that I’d made a rookie error and forgot the cereal or the pasta in one of the previous aisles.  Oh, no, then I had to maneuver that big, heavy cart full of groceries and those two little kids all the way around the store -- and trust me, no one was happy about that.  (Laughter.)

So I didn’t exactly have time to peruse the aisles, thoughtfully reading labels.  And I know my experiences are not unique.  I mean, every day, parents across this country are doing that same frantic grocery store sprint.  So it’s not particularly helpful to bombard them with complex labels or vague messages to “eat healthy” and “make better choices” without clearly defining what that means.

What is helpful is to provide families with the information they need when they need it.  And this is the first point I want to make.  The fact is that we can give parents the most comprehensive pamphlets and the most up-to-date websites.  But we cannot expect folks to remember everything they’ve read days or weeks later when they’re in that grocery store aisle, or opening that menu, or standing in front of the freezer pondering what to make for dinner.  Instead, we need to offer parents clear information at the moment when they’re actually deciding what to buy, cook and order for their kids.   

And I’m talking about things that folks like the folks at Darden Restaurants are doing to revamp their kid's menus with healthier options.  I’m talking about our new MyPlate Pinterest recipe initiative that provides more than 1,500 healthy recipes so that with the push of an icon on an iPhone, parents have access to easy, tasty meals that they know will actually be good for their kids.  I’m talking about Walmart’s new “Great for You” seal which they’re putting on healthy food items in their stores, making it much easier to identify healthy products.

And remember, when we talk about giving parents better information, we’re not just talking about obvious things like food labels.  We’re also talking about the more subtle messages that shape our decisions every day.  Whether, for example, restaurant menus feature mouthwatering pictures of healthy or unhealthy items.  Whether a product is shelved right at eye level or lower to the ground, where you have to bend over and reach it, and if you’re bending over, you’re not going to get it.  (Laughter.)  Whether the produce aisle is the first aisle to greet you when you enter the store, or the last aisle you pass on your way out when you’re already running late to get home for the babysitter.

I mean, that is all a part of the information landscape that shapes our choices every day.  And going forward, we all need to make sure that these strategies are part of our efforts to improve the health of families in this country.  We all need to focus on that. 

But while we know we must make it easier for parents to access healthier foods, we also know that, at the end of the day, our kids actually need to eat that food.  And that’s the second point I want to discuss.

Now, we know that as parents, it’s not always easy to get our kids to eat what we serve them, but that doesn’t mean we ignore our responsibilities.  I mean, we would never dream of letting our kids skip going to the doctor or learning how to add and subtract just because they don’t like it.  And the same thing is true about eating healthy. 

We know we have to be firm.  But unfortunately, we also know that, as parents, we certainly are not the only influence on our kids’ food preferences.  Every day, our kids are surrounded by food advertisements on TV and the Internet, on billboards and in stores, and even in their schools.  And it’s not just commercials; it’s in product placements in the shows themselves, in what the characters they worship are eating and drinking.  And research shows that kids who see foods advertised on TV are significantly more likely to ask for them at the store. 

Fortunately, a number of companies have stepped up to set new standards for responsible marketing.  Disney is cutting all advertisements for unhealthy foods from their children’s programming.  Absolutely.  (Applause.)  Mars, Hershey and Pepsi have stopped targeting certain products to children under the age of 12. 

But while we’re seeing some progress, we know that we still have a lot of work to do.  Because whatever we believe about personal responsibility and self-determination, I think we can all agree that that doesn’t always apply to kids.  I think we can all agree that parents need more control over the products and messages their kids are exposed to. 

And let’s be clear, this isn’t just about companies stepping up to limit the marketing of unhealthy foods to kids.  It’s also about companies realizing that marketing healthy foods can be responsible and the profitable thing to do as well. 

And American companies can play a vital role to help make eating fruits and veggies fun and, yes, even cool.  Study after study proves this point.  For example, in one study, researchers gave kids a choice between eating a chocolate bar or some broccoli.  Unsurprisingly, 78 percent of the kids chose the chocolate, and just 22 percent chose the broccoli.  But when they put an Elmo sticker on the broccoli -- (laughter) -- and a sticker of an unknown cartoon character on the chocolate, 50 percent of the kids chose the broccoli and 50 percent chose the chocolate.  So that little Elmo sticker added 28 percentage points to broccoli.  (Laughter.)  The power of Elmo!  (Laughter.) 

As for profitability, just ask the folks at Birds Eye Vegetables.  They launched a major marketing campaign featuring characters from the popular kids' TV show iCarly -- one of my favorites -- and their sales jumped 37 percent.  Vidalia Onion did a campaign with Shrek, and their sales went up 50 percent.  It turned out that after kids saw these ads for healthy foods, they went and begged their parents to buy them.

So the good news here is that there is real, meaningful evidence that we can actually get our kids excited about eating healthy.  Yes.  Yes, we can.  (Applause.)

But in the end, we also know that it’s not enough simply to change the way our children eat.  We have to change our own habits and behaviors as well.  And this is the final point I want to make today.

We as parents are our children’s first and best role models, and this is particularly true when it comes to their health.  Research shows that kids who have at least one obese parent are more than twice as likely to be obese as adults.  So as much as we might plead with our kids to “do as I say, and not as I do,” we know that we can’t lie around on the couch eating French fries and candy bars and expect our kids to eat carrots and run around the block.  (Laughter.)

But too often, that’s exactly what we’re doing.  We’re skipping the gym so that we can drive the kids to school in the morning.  We’re eating fast food at lunch so that we have time afterwards to go to the store and pick up something decent for dinner.  We are working so hard to keep our kids healthy that we’re neglecting ourselves. 

Now, in some ways, that’s what it means to be a parent, right?  It means that there are plenty of things that we won’t do for ourselves, but there is nothing that we won’t do for our children.  But as it turns out, one of the most important things we can do for our children’s health is to take care of our own health -– and to make being healthy truly a family affair.  (Applause.)  And giving parents the information and options they need is an important component to helping the entire household become healthier.

I mean, just think for a minute what this country could look like.  Imagine walking into any grocery store in America and finding the healthiest options clearly marked and centrally placed so that you know within seconds what’s good for your family when you walk in that store.  Imagine opening up a menu in any restaurant and knowing exactly what items will give your family the most nutrition for your hard-earned dollar.  Imagine our kids begging and pleading, throwing tantrums to get you to buy more fruits, vegetables and whole grains.  Yes, this is possible.  (Laughter.)  It is possible to create this world!  (Applause.) 

With more information, responsible marketing, with better labels and product placement, with greater access and affordability -- yes, that’s what’s possible. 

And the truth is, it isn’t rocket science.  We have everything we need right here and right now to make this happen.  We just have to summon the focus and the will.  And everyone has to make supporting healthy families their top priority going forward. 

And that’s what I plan to do this coming year, and I hope that all of you will join this effort, particularly leaders from our business community.  And when businesses step up, yes, it’s important for us to applaud those efforts, but also to encourage them to do even more.  We all know -- we know that we won’t solve this problem with any one announcement or commitment.  But we will solve this problem with a constant stream of efforts that continuously make real and meaningful change. 

And that is our professional obligation as leaders on this issue.  It’s also our moral obligation to our children.  It’s how we will ensure that our kids can fulfill every last bit of their God-given potential.  And finally, it is also our patriotic obligation to our country.  It’s how we will raise the next generation of workers and innovators and leaders who will continue to make America the greatest nation on Earth. 

So let’s get to work.  We can make this happen.  I am so excited for all of the accomplishments over the past few years, and I want to once again thank all of you for everything that you’ve done, everything that you will continue to do.  And I look so forward to working with you all in the months and years ahead.

Thank you all.  God bless.

END
2:03 P.M. EST