West Wing Week: 11/30/12 or "#My2k, Tweet it!"

November 29, 2012 | 4:58 | Public Domain

This week, the National Christmas Tree arrived at the White House and holiday decorating got underway, while the President marked Small Business Saturday, and met with leaders of businesses large and small to discuss the importance of avoiding a middle class tax hike next year. He also welcomed the President-Elect of Mexico, his Cabinet, his science and technology council, and the 2012 American Nobel Laureates.

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 11/29/2012

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:15 P.M. EST
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'm sorry, Mr. Knoller, did you have a request?
 
Q    You bet.  (Laughter.)  Any chance your briefing might be interrupted by a joint appearance?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Uhh -- no.  (Laughter.)
 
Q    Why not the historical record, seriously -- I mean, to view them together?  We've seen other Presidents and those that they defeated in presidential contests together.  Why not something for the historical record -- visually or --
 
MR. CARNEY:  There's at least some chance we'll release a photograph, which will go into the historical record.  It's a private lunch, and we're going to leave it at that.
 
Q    What's for lunch?
 
Q    Yes, lunch.
 
MR. CARNEY:  I haven’t looked at the menu, but I bet it was -- and is -- quite tasty, because they know how to prepare very find meals.
 
Q    Is that a definite on stills?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Let me look into that.  I don't know yet.  I'm pretty sure we'll release something.
 
Q    Any plans for him to come to the stakeout at all?
 
MR. CARNEY:  You'd have to ask his assistants or whoever might have an answer for you on that because that's not our decision. 
 
And since we actually never said it, we're referring to the fact that the President of the United States is having lunch as we speak with Governor Romney.  And I have, and will have, no readout of that lunch, since it's ongoing, from here today.
 
I have no other announcements to make.  So I will go straight to your questions.
 
Q    One more on this, Jay -- did the White House send a car for Mitt Romney?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'm not aware that we did, but I don't know the answer to that question.
 
Q    Speaker Boehner said today that there's been no substantive progress made between Republicans and the White House over the past two weeks on fiscal cliff negotiations.  Is that an assessment that the White House agrees with, that there's been no progress?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'll say a couple things on that.  In the summer of 2011, there was the possibility of reaching what was then called a grand bargain, and the obstacle that prevented that was, in the end, the refusal of Republicans to go along with the fundamental principle that a deficit reduction needed balance and it needed to include real, tangible revenues; that the wealthy ought to pay a little bit more.  Since that time, and I think in an accelerated sense, in the last several weeks, we have seen progress.  We have seen that obstacle partly overcome because Republicans have acknowledged that revenue must be part of a balanced approach to deficit reduction, and that that revenue must come from those who can afford it most.
 
We're not there yet because the remaining obstacle here is
-- on the revenue side, is that Republicans -- at least Republican leaders -- have yet to accept the essential fact that in order to achieve the kinds of revenue that are necessary for a balanced proposal, balanced plan, rates on the top 2 percent, the wealthiest earners in this country, are going up.  They have to go up.  The President will not sign any legislation that extends the Bush-era tax cuts for top earners in this country.
 
This should not be news to anyone on Capitol Hill.  It is certainly not news to anyone in America who was not in a coma during the campaign season, because this was an explicit, repeated, and high-profile debate throughout the campaign. 
 
And then on the spending side, the President has put forward, in September of 2011 with his proposal to the so-called super committee, in his budget in February of 2012, very specific spending cuts, including savings from health care entitlement programs. 
 
So what we haven’t seen yet from Republicans is any movement, at least from Republican leaders, on the fundamental second stage of the obstacle that they need to clear, which is an acknowledgement that you cannot achieve the revenues unless rates go up.  Rates have to go up for wage earners, even as we absolutely, essentially, must sign into law tax cuts for 98 percent of the American people.
 
Q    So are you saying that there is progress being made in the rhetoric or in perhaps the attitude of Republicans, but not actually in the negotiations themselves?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think that we have seen some important signs of recognition of what needs to be done, but we aren't there yet.  Once the acknowledgement is made that rates need to be part of this, I don't think it's very difficult to -- or all that difficult to achieve the kind of balanced compromise that the President seeks and that the American people seek, because there are specific cuts already on the table that would make up
-- that would be the foundation of a discussion about the spending side of this equation.
 
So we remain optimistic that this can get done.  But the President's principles are clear.  And it's not like we didn’t have this discussion and debate for the past year; we did -- in fact, beyond that.  And I understand that the position that some held that rates would never go up, that it was more important that millionaires and billionaires get a tax cut than we get a comprehensive deal for the sake and health of our economy -- that that was a position that was held.  But it's not plausible anymore.  And the American people have spoken and the President has been very clear.
 
Q    One last thing on this.  You say that the President has put forward specific spending cuts.  Boehner said again this morning that they haven’t seen any plan.  Where do they fall on this when they actually talk in person, what they did last night or what they did on Saturday?  Has the President said that he's put forward spending cuts and he doesn’t plan to put forth any more?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'm glad you asked.  This is available not just here but to everyone in the world who has an Internet connection. And I know things are done the old-fashioned way sometimes on Capitol Hill, but I believe they have electricity and Internet connections and they can get this.  This is an 85-page plan that is very detailed -- sorry, maybe 65, going on 70 -- that's very detailed and it outlines -- it's the President's Plan for Economic Growth and Deficit Reduction that was submitted in September of 2011.  It is of a piece with his budget that he put forward in February 2012. 
 
And in terms of where we are missing specifics is anything specific, politically feasible, or substantial from the Republican side on revenues.  And while there has been progress of sorts on that subject, more needs to be done.
 
But let me just say that we remain optimistic that we can get there.  It's important for the American people to know that we can get there.  The President has made clear from the start that he understands that he will not get every item in this proposal or in his budget proposal, that compromise requires tough choices from all sides.  He's acknowledged that up front.  And in this proposal and others, he has made clear in great specificity the kinds of tough choices he's willing to make.  And he is willing to make more.  But a fundamental principle here that was much discussed and debated during the campaign is that broad deficit reduction on the scale that is essential requires asking the wealthiest to pay more, and it requires -- the only way to get the kind of revenue that we need in order to achieve that balance is for rates to go up for the wealthiest earners in America even as we ensure that tax cuts are extended for 98 percent of the American people.
 
Q    Jay, does the President have plans to meet or speak with Speaker Boehner?  If not, at what point would that direct contact be appropriate?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think you saw reported that they spoke last night.  So I haven't got a new engagement to announce today. They spoke last night, they spoke over the weekend, they met prior to the President's trip to Asia, and I'm sure they will speak again.  But I don't have a specific timeframe for that. 
 
As you know, Secretary Geithner and Rob Nabors from the White House are up on Capitol Hill right now having meetings on this subject, and that process will continue. 
 
And the process that the President has been engaged in all week, in addition to the phone calls he's had, of engaging the broader American community beyond the halls of the Capitol is ongoing.  He's traveling to Pennsylvania tomorrow, as you know, to visit a company that would be affected adversely if Congress
the House were to decide not to extend tax cuts for the middle class -- because that is a very important part of this debate.  And it's very important -- contrary to suggestions that we heard a few days ago in this room -- that the President of the United States engage with the American people about these critical debates that affect their future.  And it’s entirely appropriate that leaders on Capitol Hill do the same thing.  It’s really, really important.
 
It’s amazing if you look at some of the data out there about what the American people know about this debate.  It’s quite substantial.  And they made clear -- at least a majority of them -- what path they prefer their leaders in Washington take, and that's a path of both compromise but a path of balance.  And that's the path the President has proposed, and that's the path he’s traveling in these days and weeks.
 
Q    One of the things Speaker Boehner said this morning was that any increase in the debt limit would have to be matched by
or exceeded by further spending cuts.  That's the same kind of rhetoric that we heard in 2011.  Are you concerned that that is being used as leverage again in a way that could be damaging to the United States?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, that's a good question.  I was struck by that myself.  I’d say two things about that.  Asking that a political price be paid in order for Congress to do its job to ensure that the United States of America pays its bills and does not default for the first time in its history is deeply irresponsible.  It was deeply irresponsible in the summer of 2011, and it would be deeply irresponsible if we were to see that kind of approach taken again.
 
The President absolutely expects Congress to do its job.  And one of the jobs that Congress has is to make sure that the United States government pays its bills.  As the greatest economy and greatest country on Earth, we pay our bills.
 
The President believes that it is entirely appropriate that Congress take action on this as part of an end-of-the-year deal, if you will, on the issues that confront us -- the fiscal cliff and broader deficit reduction.  It would be a terrible mistake and I think would earn deserved approbation from the American public if Congress were to try to travel that path again.  The harm done was done mostly to the American middle class.  We had our economy downgraded; we had consumer confidence plunge all because of this brinksmanship that is entirely inappropriate, and we hope we won’t see that again.
 
Q    So you're looking for an agreement to raise the debt ceiling as part of the negotiations before the end of the year?
 
MR. CARNEY:  In whatever manner it comes, it should be done soon and without drama.  But we cannot have the kind of situation where there was harm done even with the threat of default.  There was significant damage done to our economy, significant damage done to consumer confidence simply when the prospect of default was in the air in 2011, and we shouldn’t allow that to happen again.
 
Let me move around a little bit.  Yes, sir.
 
Q    Thank you, Jay.  South Korean newspapers yesterday were reporting that back in August there were senior members of the NSC that flew into Pyongyang and were meeting with the North Koreans to prevent them from doing any provocative actions before the elections in the U.S.  What can you --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I haven’t seen those reports, and they don't ring true to me, but I’ll have to take your question.
 
Q    Back in October, there were similar reports out of North Korea that they met with members of the NSC and the CIA.  I mean North Koreans and South Koreans --
 
MR. CARNEY:  You’re citing reports I haven’t seen sourced to places I am not familiar with, so -- I’m not sure what the sourcing is on that.  I would have to take your question.  That's not a question I can answer because it is news to me.
 
Q    The only place this meeting seems to be a secret is here in the U.S., which gives the impression that the President has some sort of domestic political consideration or fear --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think you’re making an editorial comment based on an article I haven’t seen, so I’m happy to take the question.
 
Q    Would you take the question and include it in the transcript?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I will take the question and see what we find out. 
 
Yes.
 
Q    Jay, thanks.  Politico has characterized the conversation between President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner last night as “curt.”  How would you characterize the conversation?  Is that accurate?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Twenty-eight minutes long is my understanding. It was -- I would actually echo what Speaker Boehner said in his remarks earlier today, which is that it was frank and direct and a good conversation.  I think the President would agree with that characterization -- and it was also 28 minutes long.
 
Q    During the debt ceiling fight, President Obama was criticized for not reaching out directly enough to congressional leaders.  Is his strategy --
 
MR. CARNEY:  During which fight?
 
Q    During the debt ceiling debate.
 
MR. CARNEY:  My God, they practically lived together down the hall here.  I don't think that's the case, not during the debt ceiling crisis. 
 
Q    People said that there were not enough meetings between the President and --
 
MR. CARNEY:  As I recall, there was -- that doesn't ring true from the debt ceiling fight.  I think there were a lot of meetings, a lot of conversations, a lot of later reported on meetings that weren't even public at the time.
 
Q    But I'm talking about one-on-one conversations.  Is his strategy any different?
 
MR. CARNEY:  So am I.  And they were numerous during the debt ceiling.  What I often get asked about and have been asked about subsequent to that was during the payroll tax cut discussion debate at the end of last year, and during the debate over whether or not we should allow rates for student loans to rise dramatically -- there were calls mostly from colleagues of yours here in this room for more and more meetings between the President and the Speaker to resolve these issues.  And of course, there were conversations between the White House and the Capitol in resolving these issues.
 
But the President also, very appropriately, went out into the country to make sure that the American people were engaged in this and that their voices were heard in this kind of debate.  And that's what he's doing again -- because that's how it should be.
 
Q    In addition to going out -- going to Pennsylvania tomorrow, is part of his strategy to be in regular contact with Speaker Boehner, as he was last night?
 
MR. CARNEY:  It has been less than 24 hours since they spoke.  Prior to that it was five days, four days, since Saturday I think they spoke.  In between that conversation and the meeting they had, the President traveled to three countries in Asia and there was a major American holiday.  So I'd say that's pretty regular contact. 
 
Q    So that is my question -- is that a part of his strategy?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I don't have a -- it's not a strategy.  The President's strategy is to reach a deal with Congress that embodies the principles that he has long espoused, which is to reduce our deficit in a responsible way that allows the economy to continue to grow and create jobs; that achieves that deficit reduction through broad balance that includes spending cuts, entitlement reform savings and revenues that come from those who can afford it most, the top 2 percent of earners in this country.
 
And he has put forward this proposal.  He has put forward his budget.  And so what his specific ideas are on these issues are well known and documented.  But he has also said, as he did in the aftermath of the election to you, that he understands that tough choices need to be made and he's, as he has demonstrated, willing to make them.  But there are principles here that he will not alter, and one of them is that revenues from top earners have to be part of this deal. 
 
That's what the American people believe.  It is what he believes.  It is what we have seen increasingly Republicans acknowledge, including -- increasingly, we've seen Republicans acknowledge that.  We've seen business leaders acknowledge that, because it's mathematically self-evident.  So we know where we need to go.  And the President looks forward to continuing the discussion and reaching a deal, a deal that's good for the American people and good for the economy.
 
Q    And one more on the lunch that President Obama is having with Mitt Romney.  One of Romney's former chief strategists, Stuart Stevens, wrote an op-ed in which he essentially suggests that Romney lost because minorities overwhelmingly voted for President Obama.  Does that op-ed -- do the comments that Romney made in any way cloud or set a certain backdrop to this lunch?
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, first of all.  I think campaigns are a tough business.  Debates are sharp, and in this case they were very substantive and important.  There is I think an event up in "Haavad," in Cambridge, tonight where a lot of these issues will be discussed by the two campaigns --
 
Q    Where is that?  (Laughter.)
 
MR. CARNEY:  I was just trying it out. 
 
Q    Try "park" and "quarter" and "water."
 
MR. CARNEY:  Paak the car, Haavad Yard.  But seriously, I think you know about this -- the top campaign officials from both sides have traditionally gotten together and had a discussion about what transpired at the campaign strategy level, so that -- I'm sure we'll all take an interest in seeing that.  I think there's been a lot of people who have effectively refuted the assertion you made about this race.  I mean, I think I don’t need to do that from here.
 
Ed.
 
Q    Jay, you mentioned the budget.  Republicans point out it was voted down unanimously and hasn't moved forward, but you quite correctly note there are spending cuts in there.  I guess my question would be, can you also hold up that budget, look in the camera and say, dear fellow Democrats on Capitol Hill, vote for, include some of these spending cuts in this deal to avoid the fiscal cliff?  Because that’s not what they're doing right now.  Should they include those?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Yes.  And I think that -- and I know that Democrats accept that there have -- that this has to be a balanced package that includes revenues and cuts -- and spending cuts, and --
 
Q    But Senator Durbin said entitlement cuts should not be part of this.  So I just want to --
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, "this" is a loose, even though short, word, which is --
 
Q    He said even as the fiscal cliff --
 
MR. CARNEY:  And I think everybody understands that there are two parts, two pieces of this.  We have the deadlines bearing down on us related to automatic tax hikes that would occur and automatic across-the-board spending cuts that would occur if some sort of agreement isn't reached on that issue.  There is the broader issue, which reflects the President's longstanding interest and oft-expressed interest in a big deal that achieves broadly $4 trillion in cuts and reduction that he believes ought to be part of this. 
 
In that broader context, absolutely, savings from health care entitlements need to be and will be part of it; other savings need to and will be part of it.  The President has already signed into law over a trillion dollars in non-defense discretionary spending cuts. 
 
Q    But when he said yesterday, "next year," you're saying clearly that this year --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I heard Speaker Boehner talk today about the framework that they -- I'm just using his words, I'm not reading out paper that they give us or meetings that we had with them, but just citing him -- he talked about a framework and a two-stage process.  And that may be how it works out.  I'm not going to prejudge that because that’s why they're negotiating.
 
But the broader point is there are two elements to this that are linked:  One is the fiscal cliff and one is the broader deficit reduction package that the President seeks.
 
Q    Okay.  Finally, I would note there are colleagues in the back of the room who have been complaining about not getting enough questions.  I appreciate you moving around.  Some of them asked me, as president of the association, to set rules on how many questions everyone gets.  We don’t police people, but in the spirit of sharing the ball, I yield back the balance of my time and encourage my colleagues to do the same.  (Laughter.) 
 
MR. CARNEY:  I want to commend Ed for that.  And I'll -- with that, I'll go to the back of the room.
 
Cheryl.
 
Q    Thank you.  Thanks, Ed.  I was going to ask about some Northeast lawmakers in particular are very anxious about getting a spending supplemental for the Hurricane Sandy disaster.  And when is the White House going to send that up, and do you know how much that’s going to be? 
 
MR. CARNEY:  I do not have any detail for you.  We're obviously looking at the requests that have come in, studying them very closely.  The President's been enormously focused, as you know -- I was in a meeting with him earlier today where the discussion -- we spent some time talking about Hurricane Sandy and the lasting impact that that terrible storm has had on the residents of New Jersey and New York and some parts of Connecticut.  And so he remains focused on this.  He remains focused on ensuring that the federal team is doing everything it can to help with this effort in the Cabinet meeting. 
 
As you know -- or maybe as you don’t know, but this was discussed -- also Shaun Donovan is leading a task force, at the President's request, for the continued efforts at the federal level to assist states and localities in response to this storm. So this is very much on the President's mind.  But I don’t have a specific number for you or anything about a supplemental at this time.
 
Yes, sir.
 
Q    I would love to see quotes from the meeting -- or the phone call with Speaker Boehner.  If not, can you characterize -- did the President say what you just said to the American people to the Speaker, that there will be tax rate increases on --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think you'll find that I won't read out the contents of conversations that the President has.  But I will say what the President's positions are, and I think it's fair to say that the President's positions are consistent in public and in private.  So in terms of the nature of and character of the phone call, I would echo what Speaker Boehner said, and he said that it was frank and direct and good.
 
Q    With Mr. Romney here, one of his proposals that some Democrats seem to think makes a little bit of sense is capping deductions.  Where does the President stand on that specific issue?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, if you look at his plan and go to the revenue section in it, you'll notice that we talk a lot about rates.  And one of the points that I've been making and others have been making is that you cannot get the kind of revenue that you need simply from capping deductions or closing loopholes without taxing the heck out of the middle class -- and that’s unacceptable for the President -- or without basically ending the charitable deduction or doing other things that would never fly on Capitol Hill, for good economic as well as political reasons.
 
So there's that.  But the President has put forward as part of his revenue proposals caps on some deductions for top earners and closing of some loopholes.
 
Our point has always been that you need to do both, that rates need to go up for the wealthiest Americans -- and when we say go up, like this is not -- let’s remember what we’re talking about here.  The top rates for earners that will happen when the Bush-era tax cuts expire for them are the rates that were in place in the 1990s when President Clinton was in office, rates that were decried by some of the leaders in the Republican Party on Capitol Hill at the time -- I mean, today’s leaders who were members back then -- and yet, the result of the economic policies that were adopted in that period was the longest sustained economic expansion, peacetime, in our history; the creation of over 23 million jobs; the transformation of budget deficits into budget surpluses -- basically a record that I think most Americans would want to see happen again.
 
So these are not -- there’s nothing extreme about asking millionaires and billionaires, wealthy Americans to pay at rates that were in place during the strongest economy of our lifetime.
 
Q    But if you got the rate hikes you're looking for, would the President agree to an overall cap of deductions for all Americans?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I don't think that we’d have to do an -- I think I would point to -- there are ways to address caps on deductions and I think we proposed 28 percent for top earners, closing loopholes, some of them, like corporate jets and things like that, but closing loopholes.  One of the problems with the suggestion that you can achieve substantial revenues out of -- without touching rates is that you have to do Draconian things when it comes to deductions and loopholes that aren’t economically wise or politically feasible.
 
So that's why, when I talk about we need something that's realistic and mathematically sound, not just something that adds up on paper -- that's why the President is taking the approach he has had, which includes allowing the rates to rise for top earners, but also includes changes to our tax code -- deductions and loopholes -- that are plausible as well as revenue-producing.
 
Yes.
 
Q    I’ve been told that on that phone call, the President did say to Speaker Boehner, there will be no deal without an increase on the tax rates for the wealthiest.  So you’re not going to read out the call.  My question is, is the President sticking to the Clinton rates?  You said it worked in that time. Does it have to be the Clinton rates?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Again, without reading out the phone call, quoting any member of that -- participant in that phone call, I would say that there can be no deal without rates on top earners going up.  The President has been very clear about his proposal and the revenues that would be part of that proposal that would result from and flow from extending tax cuts to the middle class and allowing rates to go back up to the Clinton levels for top earners, and then going to my earlier point, and that would then be coupled with other changes that would produce additional revenue -- changes to the tax code on capping deductions and closing loopholes for top earners. 
 
Going back to my first point with Julie, we haven’t seen any kind of proposal from the Republicans on rates -- there has not even been an acknowledgement from Republican leaders of the fundamental fact that rates have to go up.
 
Q    But just to figure out where you guys are coming from, the offer here is Clinton rates for the top 2 percent, for the top two marginal rates?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I’m not going to negotiate the deal.  I don't have an offer to make from the podium.  What is in the President’s proposal, in this proposal and his budget, what he talked about repeatedly throughout the year, is that he will sign tomorrow a bill that would extend tax cuts for the middle class, and that he will not sign under any circumstances legislation that would keep rates where they are for the wealthiest Americans.
 
Q    (Inaudible.) 
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, but my point is -- you can speak hypothetically about 39.5 versus 39.6.  Let’s be realistic.  The realistic proposals that are on the table involve -- that create the kind of revenues absolutely essential for real balance in this proposal involve raising the rates -- letting the rates return to where they were. 
 
Because remember this whole thing about -- that we sort of got into the other day, maybe it was yesterday -- about whether we’re asking people to vote for a tax hike -- no, we’re just asking people not to vote for a tax cut for rich people.  We’re saying that we can't afford it economically, that the American people overwhelmingly don't support and that many -- increasing numbers of business leaders don't think it’s the right thing to do.
 
Q    Can you just clarify one thing on a different topic so we can --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Sure.
 
Q    For people who are still curious about whether the President has an offer for Mitt Romney when they're meeting today, has something changed overnight?  Is the President offering Governor Romney a job?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I really just don't have a readout on that.  I think this is -- but without giving any specifics, this was a conversation the President wanted to have with Governor Romney, as he mentioned I think the night of the election.  And there was not an agenda that involves that kind of proposal that I'm aware of.  I think that he's very interested in some of Governor Romney's ideas.  And I'm sure they will or have already compared experiences on the campaign trail. 
 
I mean, it is -- there have only been 28 press secretaries, so it's a pretty -- but think about it, there aren't that many people who have been nominees for their party, right, there aren't that many people you can talk to who know what it's like to do what these two gentlemen did for the past year.  And I think that they'll probably talk a lot about that, which is I think will be very interesting for them.
 
Q    But to follow, Jay, you said yesterday specifically there was no --
 
MR. CARNEY:  You're not going to follow on the fact that there have only been 29 press secretaries?
 
Q    No, no, no.  You said yesterday --
 
Q    You said 28.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Twenty-eight prior to me.
 
Q    You said yesterday there would be no ask.  You're not saying that as clearly today. 
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'll say it clearly.
 
Q    Okay, there is no ask?
 
MR. CARNEY:  That I'm aware of.  Now, I don't -- I can't dictate what the President says, let alone what Governor Romney says, but I don't think that's what this conversation is about.  The President is very interested in his ideas and very appreciative that Governor Romney is here to have lunch with him. But beyond that, I think it's --
 
Q    What ideas does he like?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think we talked -- the President mentioned that Governor Romney very successfully resuscitated and ran the Olympics in Salt Lake City.
 
Q    That's not an idea --
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, but I think Governor Romney certainly knows how to manage an operation like that.  And the President is -- as I know, because I've sat in the room and heard him go into detail on this and get very passionate about it -- is very interested in creating greater efficiencies in this government, making it run better, making it more effective in the 21st century, because we have a lot of agencies and institutions that were created long ago and they can be improved upon.  And that's reflected in the proposal for government reorganization that the President put forward. 
 
And he can be pretty wonky about this stuff.  And somebody with Governor Romney's experience clearly would have insight into how to maximize efficiency in an operation like the federal government.  Again, I just know that's what interests the President.  I can't guarantee you at this stage that that's what they're talking about, but I know that is a subject that interests the President.
 
Q    -- ideas he advanced during the campaign the President has come around to think maybe that was not such a bad idea after all -- economic idea, social ideas, policy ideas?  
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I mean, there were certainly things that the two men agreed on.  I mean, if you watch the debates there were certain like "I agree with the President" on this or "I agree with Governor Romney on this."  I wouldn't say it was the majority of things.  It wasn't.  And they clearly had very starkly different ideas about how to move the economy forward and the like.  I haven't heard the President reference specific things put forward during the campaign, but I'm confident that there are ideas that the two men agree on. 
 
Q    -- that he could play a role in solving this fiscal cliff impact --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I'm just not going to speculate.  Again, I think that the fiscal cliff is upon us at the moment.  We're dealing with that with Congress.  This is I think an initial conversation in the wake of the election that the President and Governor are having. 
 
Q    Jay, a couple of questions to follow up on the Sandy supplemental.  Will the administration put that proposal forward before year-end?  And does he want it wrapped up as part of whatever needs to be done to avoid the fiscal cliff?  And does he believe as a matter of policy it should not be offset with any spending cuts, it should be added to the deficit?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Major, I just confess that I haven't -- I've been so focused on these other issues, the fiscal cliff and others, that I haven’t had a real discussion with folks here about that.  So I just don't know the framework within which we want to proceed on that.  We're definitely looking at the proposals put forward by the states and the requests put forward by the states.  But I just don't have more detail on it.  I wouldn't want to guess.
 
Q    How close is the administration --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I haven't had it described in my presence as something that would be part of the fiscal cliff deal. 
 
Q    It would not?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I haven't heard that discussed.  But, again, I just haven't --
 
Q    But you don't rule it out?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, no.
 
Q    Okay.  How close is the administration to recognizing and arming the Syrian opposition?  And what has changed to lead those discussions to what appears to be a culmination in the affirmative?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, look, we've had discussions in the past. I mean, I've been asked about this in the past when stories have been written that this is an issue.  Our position on assistance to the Syrian opposition has not changed.  And the United States remains committed to providing humanitarian assistance to the Syrian people and providing non-lethal equipment and training to unarmed, civilian-led opposition groups.  We have not provided any support to the armed opposition.
 
It is also the case, as I've said periodically when asked that we're always reviewing the kinds of assistance that we're providing to the Syrian people and the Syrian opposition.  And we'll continue to do that.  But we have not changed our position on the --
 
Q    You categorically deny the reports today that suggest the administration is on the cusp of recognizing and beginning to arm the Syrian opposition?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I just said that we're always look at and reviewing our assistance programs to the Syrian opposition, the Syrian people.  I can categorically state that today our position is what it has been, which is we are not providing lethal assistance to the Syrian opposition.
 
Yes, sir.
 
Q    Jay, can I come back to the budget talks, and specifically the spending side?  Because I think that’s what Speaker Boehner's main complaint is -- that there are these talks going on, they wanted to be flexible on the revenue side, but they want to see a specific proposal for additional cuts on the spending entitlement side.  And you were just holding up the President's budget.  Are you saying that’s it, that’s all you get, what's in here is our proposal and nothing more?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I didn’t say that.  I said, in fact, that the President made clear and continues to make clear that he knows he will not -- he is not wedded to every detail in his proposals, and will not get every detail in his proposals.  But we have, in answer to the question of where are your spending cut proposals, it must be a rhetorical question because those who ask it know that we have put forward very specific spending cut proposals.
 
As I noted the other day, in this proposal are $340 billion of savings from our health care entitlement programs over 10 years -- $340 billion.  That number exceeds what was contained in the Simpson-Bowles proposals -- exceeds -- in the first 10 years. So this is real.  The President has always engaged in this with real numbers. 
 
When you talk about flexibility on revenue, all we've heard so far -- and it's welcome, don’t get me wrong -- but we've heard that, yes, revenue is on the table, but we need more than that.  We need concrete proposals and acknowledgement that the only way we can achieve the kind of target that’s necessary for balance in revenues and be realistic about it in terms of what can pass Congress, and hold true to the President's absolute insistence that the middle class doesn’t get stuck with the bill, is to have rates go up on top earners. 
 
And this is not -- remember when the President talked about he's familiar with the literature of second-term Presidents who overreach, you know what he's talking about?  Absolutely what he talked about during the campaign.  None of this is news to anybody who has followed this debate.
 
Q    I understand.  My question, though, was on the spending cut side.  Are you saying to them, look, if you guys want more than what was in this budget that the President has been very specific about, you need to ask for it?  Is that your position?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, look, we want to have a discussion about what the overall compromise would look like.  But what is non-negotiable, if you will, is that revenues from the wealthiest Americans have to be a part of this, and the only way to get to that revenue target, as I said, is -- so that has to happen. 
 
Q    But revenue has to come first?
 
MR. CARNEY:  It's not a first -- it all goes together.  But the President has already put forward substantial savings in health care entitlements, as well as non-defense discretionary savings.
 
Q    Because the only thing -- the reason I'm asking is the political ownership of this.  They're saying, well, you guys want us to take the political heat for cutting granny's Medicare, and that sort of thing. 
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President -- look, as I noted during the last two election cycles, Republicans pummeled Democrats, including my boss, because he had the temerity to include in the Affordable Care Act $716 billion in savings from our health care entitlements.  Just pummeled them, right?  He did that because it was the right thing to do; it was important to achieve the Affordable Care Act.  These savings were achievable without harming beneficiaries.  And now he has put forward additional savings from those health care entitlement programs -- again, savings that are reasonable and don’t ask, as Republicans did earlier this year with their budget proposals, seniors to accept a plan that ends Medicare as we know it, turns Medicare into a voucher -- all so that we didn’t have to ask the wealthiest to pay more.
 
So a lot -- this debate has been engaged.  The President's seriousness has been demonstrated, and he is going to continue to be very serious about it.  And he owns his proposals, and he will -- he looks forward to working on a package proposal that includes the elements that we've talked about and includes tough choices for everyone.
 
April and then Roger and then Peter.
 
Q    Jay, we understand that Governor Romney has left the building.  (Laughter.)  Like Elvis.  Is there any way, any chance that we can get a readout at least, something later on today from you?  Could you do that?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, we’ll see -- yes, we’ll provide something.  I just haven’t spoken to the President yet about the lunch, but I’m sure we’ll provide something on paper for you.
 
Q    And also speaking about this Romney luncheon and just the phone call with the Speaker, I remember at the onset of this administration about four years ago when they were conversations about transparency.  What do you think about transparency today?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think transparency is very important.  I think that this is the most -- indisputably the most transparent White House that has --
 
Q    As you shut us down all throughout this briefing pretty much?
 
MR. CARNEY:  What are you talking about?
 
Q    What am I talking about?  Governor Romney.  Oh, I’m not going to let you in, can't talk about it.
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President had a private lunch with his opponent from the campaign, as is entirely appropriate.  Nothing is preventing you from speaking with Governor Romney about it --
 
Q    We’re just trying to get --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I mean, that's obviously up to former Governor Romney to decide whether he wants to have a conversation with you.  But the -- and you are welcome when the President next appears before you to ask him about it.  We will provide a readout.  But we didn't -- I think they wanted to have -- each man wanted to have a private conversation.  They didn't want to turn it into a press event.
 
Q    But you’re bringing in -- on the Speaker’s conversation -- you're bringing all these people in, the stakeholders and bringing them into the conversation, but shutting them off and not letting people know exactly what’s going on in conversations or parts of that with the Speaker.  I mean transparency is not --
 
MR. CARNEY:  I think participants in the conversations that have taken place in this building have volubly discussed those conversations with the press, many members right out here at the stakeout and others elsewhere.  So we’re hardly -- I just don't agree.  I think the President is very interested in having business leaders who have met with him, regular -- ordinary Americans who have met with him, labor leaders and others, civic leaders, talk about what they're hearing from the President and his team and what their ideas are about how we move forward.
 
Roger and then Peter.
 
Q    Thanks.  Okay, two questions.  First some old business I had asked yesterday about Mississippi River closing and Senator Harkin -- I understand you might have some --
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I did look into this a little bit more, and I can tell you that the President remains very concerned about the devastating impact of the drought.  He actually raised this with Secretary Vilsack yesterday in the Cabinet meeting.
 
Q    I’m sorry, who?
 
MR. CARNEY:  The President raised it with Secretary Vilsack yesterday in the Cabinet meeting.  He asked about the drought and for an update from Secretary Vilsack in this.  And going back to the summer, he directed -- he, the President, directed his administration to take every step within our authority to mitigate the damage caused by the drought, and the Army Corps has taken proactive action over the time to ensure navigability of the river system.
 
However, we also share the specific concerns from lawmakers and others about the decreasing water level of the Mississippi.  And while there is a complex set of legal technical and policy questions around these issues, we are exploring all possible options.
 
Q    We, meaning the White House?
 
MR. CARNEY:  We the White House.
 
Q    Okay, fine. 
 
MR. CARNEY:  And the administration writ large.
 
Q    Second question, different topic.  Ambassador Susan Rice and her husband hold stock in TransCanada Corporation valued at between $300,000 and $600,000 -- TransCanada being the outfit that wants to build the pipeline under review at the State Department.  If she were nominated as Secretary of State, would that pose any sort of conflict?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’ll give two answers here.  First of all, the President has not made a decision about that or other personnel moves that he has to make because Secretary Clinton is leaving, Secretary Geithner is leaving.  So that’s one point.  So I have no -- I’m not going to speculate about a personnel decision the President has not made, a nomination he has not put forward.
 
Secondly, I would commend Republican opposition researchers for the intellectual bandwidth that is required to read a financial disclosure form, because this was all documented in a financial disclosure form, entirely, appropriately, legally and by the books.  So what this represents I think in vivid fashion is what I’ve been talking about for a while now, which is that none of this has anything to do with the tragedy that occurred in Benghazi.  This is about politics.  And that’s a shame.
 
So I actually, in part of my old-school presentation here that included a hard copy of the President’s proposal, I brought an interesting news article here that begins with the fact that a member of Congress requested those original talking points from the intelligence community that have been so much discussed.  And I liked this couple of sentences.  “More than 10 weeks later, the four pallid sentences that intelligence analysts cautiously delivered are the unlikely center of a quintessential Washington drama in which a genuine tragedy has been fed into the meat grinder of election-year politics.  In the process, the most important questions about Benghazi, where Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed…have largely gotten lost.”  I agree with that.
 
Q    Jay, the question wasn’t about Benghazi at all.  The question is about why the conflict.  If you don’t think it’s a conflict, explain to us why it isn’t.
 
MR. CARNEY:  It’s a hypothetical.
 
Q    What has that got to do with Benghazi at all?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Well, because, Major, I know you’re not so naïve to believe that we’re not seeing these articles because of the continued assault that’s been taking place on Ambassador Rice that has all started with the non-event of her appearances on Sunday shows, one.  Two --
 
Q    No, I’m just trying to help my colleague.  He asked you a specific question --
 
MR. CARNEY:  And I answered that question.  I’m not going to speculate about a nomination process that hasn’t even occurred.
 
Q    Do you believe it’s a conflict, and if not, why not?
 
MR. CARNEY:  That’s based on speculation.
 
Q    Well, if --
 
MR. CARNEY:  If somebody were nominated, would there be a conflict?  Let's address this once we have a nomination.
 
Q    It's not a disqualifier, in other words?
 
MR. CARNEY:  As the President has said and others have said, I have said to the extent that my opinion matters, that Susan Rice is eminently qualified for any number of high-level foreign policy positions, including the one she has where she has performed with great distinction.
 
I owe Peter.
 
Q    I want to go back to -- I think what the Republican point would be is that they have come off the position that they had a year and a half ago where you all put that forward.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Have you seen a proposal that demonstrates that? 
 
Q    No.
 
MR. CARNEY:  Okay.
 
Q    I haven't seen one from you, either.  I'm questioning whether --
 
MR. CARNEY:  You have.
 
Q    No, that’s the same proposal from last year.  They're saying they're willing to go beyond --
 
MR. CARNEY:  But, Peter --
 
Q    Can I finish the question?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Okay.
 
Q    They're saying they're willing to come beyond the proposal that they agreed to last year in terms of non-tax revenues.  They have not given a specific proposal.  You are going to that as a proposal you had last year, which is reasonable.  Are you willing to come beyond that proposal of last year?
 
MR. CARNEY:  I have said, as the -- echoing the President, that he is not wedded to every detail in his plan and he understands that tough choices are required and compromise means moving off of your position.  So I'm not going to get into specifics or numbers about what cuts will look like in this area or that.  But he is committed to spending cuts.
 
But to go back to your question here, the issue is "we haven't seen any spending cuts from the White House," and that’s just fundamentally not the case.  They have not been adopted.  They are still serious, substantive, viable proposals that have not been adopted. 
 
What we've never seen, going back even to the passing of paper in 2011, are anything like -- when it comes to revenue, anything like the kind of specificity we've provided on cuts from the Republicans on revenue.  And to this day we haven't seen that.  And to this day, I believe on the floor of one of the chambers, one of the Republican leaders said -- as if we didn’t have this debate, and as if the American people haven't spoken -- that there is no way we're going to raise rates on high-income Americans.
 
I mean, another way to look at that is that they insist on voting for a tax cut, again, for the top 2 percent.  And if they don’t get that, you, 98 percent of the American people, get a tax hike.  That’s just not a position that plausible.
 
Q    Can I just ask a question --
 
MR. CARNEY:  No, let me give Peter some time.  Yes.
 
Q    I'm sorry, you said he is not wedded to the details, but he is saying he is willing to go with spending cuts that are broader, larger, deeper, more in total amount than that would encompass?
 
MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think that, without getting into a negotiating posture here, that when the President says that he is willing to move off of his proposals, acknowledge that he doesn’t get everything he wants, that he's acknowledging that this is a negotiation and that you don’t get everything you want in a negotiation.  And clearly, Republicans are interested in spending cuts, and he looks forward to having that discussion. 
 
But a fundamental proposition here, which at least rhetorically has been addressed but not in any substantive way, is that revenues have to be a part of this.  And the only way to get to the revenues that are necessary to achieve the balance that the American people want is to not give another tax cut to millionaires and billionaires.  That’s pretty simple. 
 
And as I talked about before, it's sort of a -- it's like a two-step hurdle here.  They've cleared one hurdle by saying that revenues need to be part of this.  Now we get to the next stage, which is what those revenues look like and what they have to look like.  Because there has not been any credible proposal that anyone has seen that could pass Congress or makes economic sense that creates the kind of revenue necessary without raising rates.
 
Good?  Thanks very much.
 
END
2:07 P.M. EST
 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Lunch with Governor Romney

This afternoon, President Obama and Governor Romney visited for an hour over lunch in the Private Dining Room adjacent to the Oval Office.  Governor Romney congratulated the President for the success of his campaign and wished him well over the coming four years. The focus of their discussion was on America's leadership in the world and the importance of maintaining that leadership position in the future.  They pledged to stay in touch, particularly if opportunities to work together on shared interests arise in the future.  Their lunch menu included white turkey chili and Southwestern grilled chicken salad. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Phone Call with President Sebastián Piñera of Chile

On Thursday morning, the President spoke with President Sebastián Piñera of Chile. The President thanked President Piñera for his congratulatory message following his re-election to a second term in office. The Presidents discussed opportunities to strengthen the global economy through job creation and expanded trade, including by moving together expeditiously on the Trans-Pacific Partnership.  The President reaffirmed the importance of the bilateral partnership between the United States and Chile and looks forward to continuing to work with President Piñera to enhance bilateral cooperation.

What $2,000 Means to Middle Class Families

Yesterday, President Obama called on Americans to speak out in favor of keeping taxes low on the middle class. Some took their voices to Twitter and Facebook, and tens of thousands of people wrote in to tell the White House what $2,000 means to their families.

These stories are moving and powerful, and we're going to start sharing some of the best of them -- because real people have to be part of this debate.

Here's what Americans from all over the country told us that $2,000 meant to them:

Crystal, Alabama -- That money would be two house payments. Or three car payments. It would pay for my medication for a year.

Bryan, Michigan -- I'm a small market farmer in northern Michigan. $2000 in additional taxes would mean that we may not be able to buy the two greenhouses that we need to extend our short growing season.

Colby, Mississippi -- $2,000 would allow me to pay off the student loan debt I have incurred to go to college. I am a first generation college graduate currently pursuing a Masters of Taxation degree.

Ruby, Illinois -- With 2 young adults in college, $2,000 is not small change but the difference in having money to pay the mortgage, college tuition, books. Middle class families cannot be held hostage by partisan politics, obstruction in Washington.

Cise, Washington -- A whole year's worth of diapers for my daughter and my gas to commute to work. That is what $2,000 means to me & my family.

Jaime, Arkansas -- $2000 means a hot school lunch to my kids. It means propane in our tank for the whole winter season. It means badly needed dental work for my husband. It means insurance for our vehicles. It means payments on my student loans.

Sheri, Arizona -- $2,000 to me is the January mortgage payment, February mortgage payment, March car payment.

Anne, Pennsylvania -- Groceries on my table for four months. Heating my home for a year. Two mortgage payments.


Learn more

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on the Observance of World AIDS Day

This Saturday, December 1st, on World AIDS Day, we will come together as a global community to stand with people affected by HIV/AIDS, to remember those we have lost, and to renew our commitment to ending the pandemic once and for all.  We have made great strides in combating this disease, and an AIDS-free generation is within sight.  Here in the United States we are implementing a National HIV/AIDS Strategy and concentrating our efforts in communities where HIV rates are highest, including among gay men, Latinos, and African Americans. We are investing in comprehensive HIV prevention and care, including through the Affordable Care Act, to prevent infection and ensure that all people living with HIV have access to life-extending treatment.  Testing for HIV remains a top priority, and thanks to ongoing scientific advancements, finding out your HIV status has never been easier and treatment is more effective than ever.
 
Today, I am pleased my Administration will make public new data that demonstrates we are on track to meet the ambitious treatment and prevention targets I announced on World AIDS Day a year ago.  As of today, we are treating over 5 million people with lifesaving medicines for AIDS, up from 1.7 million in 2008, and, as I pledged last year, we are on track to treat 6 million people by the end of 2013.  This year, we have also reached over 700,000 HIV-positive pregnant women with antiretroviral drugs that will prevent them from passing the virus to their children.  As we meet these new targets, we are joined by a growing number of countries and the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, who share our commitment to doing more so that more may live.  As we continue this important work with our partners around the world and here at home, let us remember the lives we have lost to AIDS, celebrate the progress we have made, and, together, recommit to ourselves to achieving our shared vision of an AIDS-free generation.
 

WORLD AIDS DAY, 2012

- - - - - - -

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

A PROCLAMATION

On World AIDS Day, more than 30 years after the first cases of this tragic illness were reported, we join the global community once more in standing with the millions of people who live with HIV/AIDS worldwide. We also recommit to preventing the spread of this disease, fighting the stigma associated with infection, and ending this pandemic once and for all.

In 2010, my Administration released the National HIV/AIDS Strategy, our Nation's first comprehensive plan to fight the domestic epidemic. The Strategy aims to reduce new infections, increase access to care, reduce health disparities, and achieve a more coordinated national response to HIV/AIDS here in the United States. To meet these goals, we are advancing HIV/AIDS education; connecting stakeholders throughout the public, private, and non-profit sectors; and investing in promising research that can improve clinical outcomes and reduce the risk of transmission. Moving forward, we must continue to focus on populations with the highest HIV disparities -- including gay men, and African American and Latino communities -- and scale up effective, evidence-based interventions to prevent and treat HIV. We are also implementing the Affordable Care Act, which has expanded access to HIV testing and will ensure that all Americans, including those living with HIV/AIDS, have access to health insurance beginning in 2014.

These actions are bringing us closer to an AIDS-free generation at home and abroad -- a goal that, while ambitious, is within sight. Through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), we are on track to meet the HIV prevention and treatment targets I set last year. We are working with partners at home and abroad to reduce new infections in adults, help people with HIV/AIDS live longer, prevent mother-to-child transmission, and support the global effort to eliminate new infections in children by 2015. And thanks to bipartisan action to lift the entry ban on persons living with HIV, we were proud to welcome leaders from around the world to the 19th International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C.

Creating an AIDS-free generation is a shared responsibility. It requires commitment from partner countries, coupled with support from donors, civil society, people living with HIV, faith-based organizations, the private sector, foundations, and multilateral institutions. We stand at a tipping point in the fight against HIV/AIDS, and working together, we can realize our historic opportunity to bring that fight to an end.

Today, we reflect on the strides we have taken toward overcoming HIV/AIDS, honor those who have made our progress possible, and keep in our thoughts all those who have known the devastating consequences of this illness. The road toward an AIDS-free generation is long -- but as we mark this important observance, let us also remember that if we move forward every day with the same passion, persistence, and drive that has brought us this far, we can reach our goal. We can beat this disease. On World AIDS Day, in memory of those no longer with us and in solidarity with all who carry on the fight, let us pledge to make that vision a reality.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States do hereby proclaim December 1, 2012, as World AIDS Day. I urge the Governors of the States and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, officials of the other territories subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, and the American people to join me in appropriate activities to remember those who have lost their lives to AIDS and to provide support and comfort to those living with this disease.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-ninth day of November, in the year of our Lord two thousand twelve, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-seventh.

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks of President Obama and President-Elect Peña Nieto of Mexico Before Bilateral Meeting

Oval Office

4:00 P.M. EST

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, it is my great pleasure to welcome President-elect Peña Nieto to the Oval Office and to the White House.  This is a longstanding tradition where -- almost unique I think in the relationship between countries -- we meet early with the President-elect of Mexico because it symbolizes the extraordinarily close relationship we have between our two countries.

Over the last four years, I’ve been able to work with President Felipe Calderón and I think we established an excellent working relationship so I wish him all the best in his new life.

And I’m very confident that I’m going to establish a strong personal as well as professional relationship with the President-elect, who I know has an outstanding reputation for wanting to get things done.

Now, President Peña Nieto I think represents the close ties between our two countries because I understand that he lived in the United States in Maine for a year, where the winters are even worse than Chicago, my hometown.  (Laughter.)

But I think that’s representative of the strength of the relationship between the United States and Mexico.  It’s not just a matter of policy, but it’s a matter of people, as represented by the many U.S. citizens who travel to Mexico, who live in Mexico, and obviously the incredible contribution that Mexican Americans make to our economy, our society, and to our politics.

I know that President Peña Nieto has a very ambitious reform agenda, and we are very much looking forward to having a fruitful discussion here today about not only how we can strengthen our economic ties, our trades ties, our coordination along the border, improving our joint competitiveness, as well as common security issues.  But I think what I know the President-elect is also interested in is a discussion about both regional and global issues, because Mexico has become not simply an important bilateral partner, but is today a very important multilateral, multinational leader on a whole range of issues from energy to climate change, and we look forward to working with Mexico not only on regional issues, but also on global issues.

And just as President-elect Peña Nieto’s reform agenda is of great interest to us because what happens in Mexico has an impact on our society, I know he’s interested in what we do as well on issues like comprehensive immigration reform.  And I’ll be sharing with him my interest in promoting some issues that are important to the United States, but ultimately will be important to Mexico as well.

So Mr. President-elect, I want to welcome you.  Congratulations on your outstanding victory.  Vice President Biden will be leading our delegation to your inauguration.  We only send the Vice President to inaugurations when the country is really at the top of the list in importance to us and so we just want to wish you well and I look forward to an excellent relationship in the years to come.  

PRESIDENT-ELECT PEÑA NIETO:  (As interpreted.)  Thank you very much, President Barack Obama.  It’s truly a great pleasure to be here with you.  I feel so happy and thank you for your hospitality.  This is of course my first visit as President-elect of Mexico and I also want to congratulate you for your victory last November 6th for your second term as President of the United States.  I of course wish you great success and I know you have a great task before you, but I know, I trust that you will be doing a wonderful job. 

And I also want to thank you so much, President Obama, for having Vice President Joseph Biden go to Mexico for my inaugural ceremony next Saturday, December first.  I feel so pleased to be able to have Vice President Biden represent you in Mexico.  And of course we’re waiting for him and your delegation with open arms.

And I find that this is an opportunity we only have every 12 years.  We’re practically beginning our administration, same that you’ll be starting your next four-year term, I will be starting a six-year administration in Mexico, as you well know, and I think this is really a great opportunity for all of us to have a closer link of brotherhood, of sisterhood, of collaboration, and of course, of great accomplishments we might both have working together.

Yes, and I believe that we have very important tasks before us that are common, as a matter of fact.  For instance, we have many common things.  We were both congressmen -- legislators, as we say in Spanish -- in our respective congresses in our own countries.  And this means we're very sensitive to the needs of our peoples.  And we also share a very important vision, the vision for instance of creating more jobs.  We know this is very important, not only for the American people but also for the Mexican peoples, for both of our nations.  These are two very important demands in our countries.

And we do have the opportunity to grow, but not only that, we also have the opportunity to integrate North America, to be participating in this part of the world.  And I am so pleased that this is the situation we're in. 

And of course, as I said, to increase the integration of North America, to really take advantage of the open spaces we have for our work -- and not only in this part of the world, but also with Asia, of course and just mentioning for instance the TPP, the Trans Pacific Partnership.  And my government is of course very much interested in strengthening this, because we believe that this is going to be a great opportunity for all of us.

Yes, and of course in terms of security that's another major challenge we all face.  My government has set out to reduce the violence situation in our country.  And for that, of course, we have set out to launch a strategy for this purpose.  And I will do everything we can for this.  We want to have -- we have the will to have cooperation, efficient cooperation with respect, respect for our sovereign states.  And of course in terms of the border, we want our border to be a safe, modern, connected border, legal border -- that's exactly what we've set out to accomplish.

Yes, and in terms of the reform for migration, the migration reform, we do have to tell you that we fully support your proposal, sir, for this migration reform.  More than demanding what you should do or shouldn't do, we do want to tell you that we want to contribute.  We really want to participate with you.  We want to contribute towards the accomplishment, so that of course we can participate in the betterment and the well-being of so many millions of people who live in your country and who are also participating.  So we want to be part of this.

And I trust that we'll be able to have a very close relationship in our work, Mr. President.  And of course I want to invite you to come to Mexico, a state visit.  And as you know, next year in 2013, we're going to be holding the North American Summit, the leaders' summit.  And you're of course invited.  And we really hope to see you there.  We'll be waiting for you with open arms.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Any excuse to go to Mexico, I'm always game.  In fact, I'm jealous of Joe Biden.  (Laughter.)  But anyway, thank you very much.  Welcome.  Thank you, everybody.

END 
4:17 P.M. EST

President Obama Holds a Cabinet Meeting

November 28, 2012 | 3:15 | Public Domain

President Obama discusses the issues his cabinet will be working on in the coming weeks and months.

Download mp4 (119MB) | mp3 (8MB)

Read the Transcript

Remarks by the President at a Cabinet Meeting

The Cabinet Room

 

 
3:11 P.M. EST
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Is that brighter than usual?  (Laughter.)  Yes, that's serious.  
 
Well, listen, this is a wonderful opportunity for me to meet with my full Cabinet for the first time since the election took place.  The primary purpose from my perspective is to say thank you, because everybody here, in their respective agencies, has done a remarkable job on behalf of the American people, across the board on a wide range of issues.  They’ve always prioritized how do we make sure that we have a strong middle class, how do we grow our economy, how do we put people back to work, and how do we keep the American people safe and continue to extend our influence and our ideals around the world.  And I could not have a better collection of people, many of whom have stayed here throughout my first term.  And I think we’ve had as little turnover as any President during the course of a first term, and the reason is because everybody has done such a remarkable job.
 
So my main purpose is to say thank you to them, but also to remind them that we’ve got a lot of work to do.  There are going to be a few specific issues that we spend a lot of time on.  One in particular that I should note is that the devastating impact of Hurricane Sandy is still being felt by families all across New York and New Jersey, parts of Connecticut.  We are very pleased that under the leadership initially of Janet Napolitano and FEMA, but now Shaun Donovan, who’s heading up a task force, we’re focusing not only on recovery, but now on rebuilding and making sure those communities come back stronger than ever and people get the help that they need.  So that will be an important topic because it’s really going to be an interagency concern.
 
The second thing that we’ll be talking about, obviously, is what’s on the minds of a lot of American families across the country, and that is making sure that we’ve got this fiscal cliff dealt with and that middle-class taxes don’t go up.  I already spoke extensively about that today.  I’ll just repeat:  There is no reason why taxes on middle-class families should go up.  It would be bad for the economy.  It would be bad for those families.  In fact, it would be bad for the world economy.  And so I think it’s very important that we get that resolved, and I am very open to a fair and balanced approach to reduce our deficit and provide the kind of certainty that businesses and consumers need so that we can keep this recovery going.
 
And obviously, we’ll be spending some time talking about national security issues as well.  
 
But I just want to say thank you to this extraordinary Cabinet for a job well done.  And I will take this opportunity to publicly embarrass two members of the Cabinet whose birthdays are either today or tomorrow:  Ric Shinseki, who is the Department of Veterans Affairs.  Happy birthday to you.  And that is actually today.  (Applause.)  And Janet Napolitano’s birthday is tomorrow.  (Applause.)
 
All right, guys.  Thank you.  We want to get back to work.
 
Q    Mr. President, do you think the Hill is being fair to Susan Rice in its meetings?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much guys.
 
Q    Any thoughts on that at all?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Susan Rice is extraordinary.  I couldn’t be prouder of the job that she’s done as the USPR.  (Applause.)
 
 
END
3:15 P.M. EST

 

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The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 11/28/2012

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:40 P.M. EST

MR. CARNEY:  Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.  Welcome to your daily briefing.  As you can see over my left shoulder, today the White House launched a new effort to help let Americans’ voices be heard in this debate about our fiscal challenges, launching the #My2K online push to pass the middle-class tax cuts, a cause that you’ve heard the President speak about quite a bit. 

As I’m sure you all remember, a year ago, during another big fight to protect middle-class families, tens of thousands of working Americans and tweeted and emailed their representatives asking them to do the right thing.  The same thing happened earlier this year when college students across the country stood up and demanded that Congress keep rates low on student loans. When the American people speak out, they help get things done in Washington.  And you heard the President ask the American people today to once again add their voices to this effort. 

After the President’s event, the White House is calling on Americans across the country to share on Twitter what #My2K means to them, as well as on other social media channels and on whitehouse.gov.  We’ll highlight the #My2K stories received on whitehouse.gov and through social media to elevate the impact of inaction for middle-class families.

With that, I will take your questions.  Mr. Kuhnhenn.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  Two points.  One is, you all announced this morning a meeting tomorrow, at lunch, between the President and Mitt Romney.  What does the President expect to get out of that meeting?  Certainly during the campaign they didn’t seem to agree on much, but is there overlap in their positions on certain things that they could discuss?

And then on the fiscal cliff, the President used the word “framework” today in describing what he thinks they could reach before Christmas.  Does that suggest that there’s not a grand bargain in the making, but more or less kind of an agreement to then pursue other elements of this down the road?

MR. CARNEY:  Let me take tomorrow’s lunch first.  During his news conference two weeks ago, the President said that there are aspects of Governor Romney’s record and Governor Romney’s ideas that he believes could be very helpful.  The President noted that Governor Romney did a terrific job running the Olympics and that that skills set lends itself to ideas that could make the federal government work better, which is a passion of the President’s.  As you know, he’s requested reorganization authority from the Congress to do just that.

I don’t have an agenda for the lunch.  The President, as he said then, looked forward to having this meeting with Governor Romney.  It’s a private lunch; only the two men will be in the room.  And I’m sure it will be a useful discussion.

On the negotiations and where we are now and where we end up at the end of the year, I’m not going to get into any specifics. You saw what the President said.  His priorities continue to be that we have to take action to ensure that 98 percent of the American people do not see their taxes go up on January 1st.  That is essential.  It is something that Democrats and Republicans agree on, and it is something, because there is that agreement, we should be able to act on right away.

We can also work together to build a framework, put together a proposal that should have bipartisan consensus built around the principle of balance, as we tackle our long-term and medium-term deficit and debt challenges.  As we’ve talked about a lot, the three legs of that stool, that balanced stool are discretionary spending cuts, health care entitlement reforms that create savings, and revenue.  We’ve seen some positive developments in the last several weeks in terms of what Republicans have been saying about the need for revenue as part of a balanced package. The President will continue to make the case that that is essential.  It is the only fair way to proceed, and it is the smartest way economically to proceed. 

Because when you’re dealing -- austerity in and of itself is not a goal.  When you are getting your deficits and debt under control, you’re doing it as part of a -- in order to move forward towards a goal that means stronger economic growth, stronger job creation, more middle-class security.  And that requires investing in parts of our economy that will allow us to grow stronger, faster and better in the 21st century -- in education and infrastructure and research and development and the like.

So that’s the President’s vision.  He looks forward to continuing discussions with ordinary Americans, with business leaders -- as you know, he has another meeting with business leaders today -- with members of Congress, leaders of Congress, as we continue to work out what he believes would be the right, balanced approach to deal with these challenges with Congress.

Q    There seem to be competing assessments of where things stand right now.  Erskine Bowles today told some reporters that he was pessimistic, that he only saw a one-in-three chance of a deal being struck before the fiscal cliff.  On the other hand, you have Tom Cole apparently telling leaders in -- Republican leaders that they should take the 98 percent -- the tax extension for the 98 percent. 

Where does -- obviously you’re -- the President is on the optimistic side of that.  But what is it that the President is willing to give in order to get the Tom Coles’s of Congress to go along with that extension?  I mean, it seems that they’re demanding something on entitlement reform.  Do you -- the President has offered $340 billion in cuts, in savings, over 10 years.  Is that -- does that have to be an ironclad part of the deal by the end of the year?

MR. CARNEY:  The $340 billion that you cite is what is in the President’s budget proposal.  And I think it’s important, because even though that budget proposal has been out there for a long time, a lot of people aren’t aware of that.  And it demonstrates another piece of evidence that the President has been willing to make tough choices in order to get our fiscal house in order and in order to try to reach a compromise with Republicans on Capitol Hill. 

The President made clear that he is not wedded to every detail of his plan, that he understands that the nature of compromise is that neither side gets everything that it wants.  And he is open to hearing realistic, concrete, mathematically sound proposals that achieve the kind of balanced approach to deficit reduction that this country needs -- deficit reduction that isn’t borne solely by the middle class or by seniors, and deficit reduction that allows the economy to continue to grow and to create jobs and allows us to continue to invest in some of the areas I talked about before.

But it is important to note that when we talk about, on the one hand, desires by Republicans to see entitlement reforms be part of a balanced package, that the President has put forward $340 billion in additional savings from our health care entitlement programs, and that that figure exceeds the amount of savings from those programs that was achieved in the Simpson-Bowles plan in its first 10 years.

So this is not insignificant.  This is significant.  It is not the final word.  The President, as he said, is not wedded to every detail.  But it demonstrates the President’s fundamental commitment to making tough choices in order to get something done. 

Q    He’s going to press Democrats to accept something like that by the end of the year?

MR. CARNEY:  I think he’s made clear, as he has in the past, that he will be in the future willing to lead members of his party in the effort to achieve a sensible, balanced compromise. 

Reuters.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  Since your briefing yesterday, we’ve gotten more feedback from people on the Hill who have met with Susan Rice.  What is your reaction to their comments, including this morning Susan Collins saying that she would not be able to support Ambassador Rice for Secretary of State without more information?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, my view on this is the same as it was yesterday, which is that the focus on -- and in some cases, the obsessive focus on -- Ambassador Rice’s appearance on a series of Sunday shows several months ago is misplaced and misguided.  Ambassador Rice was using unclassified talking points that were developed by the intelligence community and provided not just to her, not just to the executive branch, but to the legislative branch.  And they represented the best assessment by our intelligence professionals about what had happened in Benghazi at that time.  And that is not just me saying so; that is what the DNI and the CIA have said.

Even at that time, the intelligence community was making clear, and Ambassador Rice and I and others were making clear, that these were preliminary assessments and they might evolve, and as more facts came in, we would clarify what we knew about what had happened in Benghazi.  And that’s the simple sort of end of story about what happened back when Ambassador Rice appeared on those Sunday shows.

What I think the American people care about is not the effort by some to politicize a Sunday show appearance, but what happened actually in Benghazi, who was responsible for the deaths of four Americans, what steps we need to take to ensure that something like that doesn’t happen again.  That’s what the President is focused on.  That’s why there is an FBI investigation.  That’s why there is an Accountability Review Board established by the Secretary of State, at the President’s direction, to review the broader issues of security at our diplomatic facilities.  Those are the concrete issues that need to be investigated and resolved when it comes to what happened in Benghazi. 

And as I think the President has said, and I and others have said, it’s a shame to create a sideshow that seems I think very clearly to be very political out of something that really has no bearing on what happened in Benghazi.

Q    Is the President concerned that this sideshow may affect his nominations both for Secretary of State and for the next Director of the CIA?

MR. CARNEY:  The President has not made any personnel decisions that I can announce, and he made very clear his views on this particular issue when he answered questions about it at his press conference.  I’ll leave it at that.

Q    Let me ask just one more question on a different topic, following up on what Jim mentioned about Erskine Bowles.  Bowles also said that the President has some flexibility about top rates or the highest earners at 39.6 percent.  The President addressed that in his press conference as well, saying he’s open to ideas from both sides.  How much flexibility does he have on that 39.6 percent?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, setting aside rates so that you don’t take my answer to this question to mean specifically -- to reflect specifically on rates, if I told you how much flexibility the President had, it would eliminate his flexibility.  So the President made clear that he is not wedded to every detail of his plan.  The President has also made categorically and abundantly clear that he will not sign an extension of the Bush-era tax cuts for top earners.  It’s bad economic policy and we cannot afford it.  He will not sign that.

He is open to serious, realistic, concrete proposals about how we can get from here to there when we talk about building a balanced package that achieves the kind of deficit reduction target that he set, and that the Simpson-Bowles commission set, and that others have set. 

One fact remains true, which is -- and he talked about this during the campaign -- the most basic, simplest, most efficient way to achieve that revenue target is by returning the rates for top earners back to those that were in place in the Clinton era. When we’ve talked about different ideas that somehow achieved significant revenue out of closing loopholes and eliminating deductions, some of them look good on paper, but they’re not politically realistic.  And some of them don’t even add up on paper.

The President is very interested in closing loopholes and capping deductions where sensible both economically and plausible politically, but the fact remains that the cleanest, simplest way to achieve the kind of revenue target that’s necessary here is to go back to the Clinton-era rates for top earners -- rates, by the way, that were in place during the longest period of economic growth -- peacetime economic expansion in our lifetimes; rates that were in place when the rich got a lot richer and the middle class did really well, too; the rates that were in place during a period that saw deficits disappear and to be replaced by surpluses.

Now, there were some in Washington when President Clinton passed his first economic plans in 1993 who decried them as the end of the economic world as we knew it, that they would surely lead to recession and job loss and broader economic decline.  Those forecasts proved to be a little off.  And they're off now.

Q    Do they need to be 39.6 percent?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I’m not going to negotiate every detail. But it is a fact -- the President is willing to look at anything that’s sensible and realistic and that is mathematically sound.  But our point on rates is that they are the sensible, clean, simple way and proven way to achieve the kind of revenue target that we’ve talked about, as you’ve seen in the President’s proposal, a proposal which includes loophole closures and deduction caps, as well, but ones that are realistic.

Yes, Mary.

Q    Senate Majority Leader Reid said it would be “somewhat foolish” to work out a deal to prevent the economy from going over the cliff without addressing the debt ceiling as well.  Will the President demand that Republicans agree to raise the nation’s debt limit as part of any fiscal deal?

MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think -- Congress raises the debt ceiling.  We certainly expect that Congress will act appropriately because nobody in their right mind would want to go through what we went through last summer -- summer of 2011 -- where holding the full faith and credit of the United States hostage to an ideological agenda proved disastrous to our economy and most especially to the American people and the middle class. That political strategy resulted in a significant drop in consumer confidence.  It resulted in -- it had a series of negative effects on our economy, and we certainly don't expect that right-minded leaders in Congress will want to travel that path again. 

Q    What was the answer to the question?  (Laughter.)

MR. CARNEY:  The question is -- we expect Congress to -- without drama to raise the debt limit.

Q    But as far as --

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not going to negotiate the details of a package that is still under discussion between us and the Capitol -- and members of Congress.  What I will say is that we certainly expect Congress to act responsibly and raise the debt ceiling.

Q    -- the President’s preference?  Can you say that?

MR. CARNEY:  The President’s preference is that Congress do its job.

Ed.

Q    I wonder -- it sounded like, in answer to Jim’s question when he was saying, do you have to do entitlement reform by the end of the year, your answer was in the future.  And I noted that when the President spoke today --

MR. CARNEY:  No, I didn't say it was in the future.

Q    -- would pressure -- when asked about pressuring Democrats, you said, he has vowed to do that in the future. 

MR. CARNEY:  No, he’s done it in the past and he will do it in the future.

Q    We have a record of what you said.  But --

MR. CARNEY:  Right.  I meant "the future" as also in the present tense.  I mean, he has committed, every time he talks about this, to a balanced approach that includes both revenues, spending cuts, and savings through entitlement reform.

Q    So my question is whether that is down the road or now. Because I note as well in the President’s comments, it sounded like he was splitting the negotiation into two pieces, because he said, let’s extend the middle-class tax cuts, and then he said, that would “give us more time next year to work together on a comprehensive plan to bring down our deficits.”  So I’m trying to figure out whether there’s something significant here that the White House is saying -- there’s now essentially a two-step process; take care of the tax rates, and then we’ll do this broader plan next year, which is what it sounds like what the President said.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, broadly speaking, this is obviously a complicated piece of business.  There are two pieces to it.  There are two distinct although related things that we’ve kind of lumped together when we’ve talked about what’s happening in this post-election period between now and the end of the year.  The first is the fiscal cliff, which is extremely time-sensitive and has to do with December 31st deadlines that trigger, if Congress doesn't act, substantial tax increases for everyone, including the middle class, and that trigger across-the-board spending cuts, the combination of which would, by many estimates, not be very good for the economy. 

So that's why the President has long since prior to today talked about the common-sense approach of the House following the Senate’s lead and passing the extension of the tax cuts for 98 percent of the American people so that doing so would provide the kind of certainty that middle-class Americans deserve and need -- especially as we go into this holiday season -- about what their personal economic situation will look like next year.  It will provide a great deal of relief for retailers who depend on consumers for the success of their businesses.  And we can continue to work on the other issues, but since we have a chunk of the fiscal cliff, which is the imminent issue here, that can be addressed simply by extending these middle-class tax cuts, we should do that.

But I’m not -- the broader whether it’s a two-step or -- I think these are all parts of --

Q    But you understand the reality is that --

MR. CARNEY:  No, I understand the question --

Q    -- Republicans now feel like you’re trying to lock in tax increases, which you’re entitled to --

MR. CARNEY:  No, we’re trying to lock in tax cuts.

Q    Okay, tax cuts for 98 percent, as you said.

MR. CARNEY:  Not extending -- voting to extend tax cuts for 98 percent of the American people is not voting for a tax increase.  There are tax cuts that expire at the end of this year.  We’re saying Congress, the House, should take action to extend tax cuts for virtually --

Q    Right, and the Republicans are saying you’re dealing with --

MR. CARNEY:  -- most of the people listening to this today.

Q    Right, but -- so the Republicans are saying on the Hill today -- Boehner had a news conference and said, so you’re trying to lock in tax changes, however each side characterizes it, and then you’re not having any spending cuts now.  You want to do spending cuts next year.  Is that a fact?

MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think -- no, it’s not a fact.  I think that these are all parts of aspects of conversations that are ongoing between the White House, the President’s team, and the congressional negotiators.  And I’m not going to prejudge the outcome of that.  As I said, this is a complicated piece of business and there are two components to it.  One is a fiscal cliff; the other is a desire that the President has to achieve a significant deficit reduction.  And one option, if there’s a concern about putting one thing first, is simply to take up the President’s plan and pass it because that locks in $340 billion in entitlement reform savings, it locks in spending cuts, and it locks in revenue.  So the President has put forward a plan that achieves -- that has at its basis all three legs of the stool.

Q    Last one on this.  So on that very point about how the President has a plan on entitlements, so Congress can pass it, yesterday you were asked about Senator Dick Durbin saying entitlement changes like that, like the President has put on the table should not be part of the fiscal cliff talks.  And you said yesterday, "I haven’t seen those comments yet."  So 24 hours have passed -- do you agree with Senator Durbin, or disagree?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think this is what we’re talking about here, and I think what was reflected in those comments has to do with the reality -- which is forgotten sometimes as we discuss -- that there are two issues here that, while linked, are fairly distinct.  There are absolute deadlines associated with the fiscal cliff.  There is the broader desire by the President and by leaders on Capitol Hill to achieve and lock in significant, long-term deficit reduction in a way that continues to help the economy grow and create jobs.  The President is committed to both, and he’s committed and engaging right now through his team and in direct conversations in negotiations on both issues. 

I don’t want to prejudge how they come out because I wouldn’t pretend to know at this point, because this is obviously a matter of intense negotiation.

Yes.

Q    A couple of quick follows on previously asked questions.  The meeting with Romney -- can you give us a little bit on how that came about?  Did the President call and invite him?  When?  And the President I think said he respects his ability to create efficiencies in the Olympics -- that’s a rough memory.  Does he have a specific ask of Governor Romney in the meeting?

MR. CARNEY:  He does not have a specific ask.  I’m sure that the topics will be many in their lunch.  The President noted during the press conference that Governor Romney was very successful in running the Olympics.  He was obviously a successful businessman and I’m sure has some ideas that the President will find helpful.  But I don’t want to -- I don’t have an agenda for you and I don’t have outcomes before the meeting itself. 

The way it came about was that the President expressed interest in the immediate aftermath of the election in meeting with Governor Romney, and so the staffs of the two men got together and worked out a time for that to happen, and that time is tomorrow.

Q    On Susan Rice, Ambassador Rice, should her meetings on the Hill be read as a trial run for possible nomination, or did she ask to go up to the Hill to have a chance to clear her name before these members?

MR. CARNEY:  There has been a lot of discussion about her appearances on those Sunday shows and the source of the information that she provided on those Sunday shows.  And I think she believed that it was entirely appropriate to meet with members who had been particularly interested in, and sometimes critical of, her appearances and what she said -- to meet with them and discuss exactly what happened, where the information came from.  And because, as we all know and it's been publicly acknowledged, what she said was based on intelligence community assessments that were provided, the Acting Director of the CIA went with her.

Q    So she initiated it?

MR. CARNEY:  I would refer you to her office.  The issue is -- the interest has been -- the intense and, I would say, misplaced focus on her appearances has occurred not in New York but up on Capitol Hill, in particular, with a handful of senators.

Q    Okay.  And finally, on the fiscal cliff.  To date, the administration has said that there are fiscal restraints, budget cuts that you guys have outlined in your current budget.  But given that -- you're asking now the GOP to go further than they've gone before by raising the top rate on top earners.  Would the administration, if they were willing to do that, be willing to go further on Medicare and Medicaid than you've gone in your current budget?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I won't get into specifics, but I will quote my boss, the President, in saying that he is not wedded to every detail and that he understands that reaching a compromise requires tough choices.  Now, he's made tough choices in the past in negotiations like these.  He's demonstrated his willingness to make tough choices in his budget, and I know that he is willing to make tough choices in the negotiations going forward.  His principles --

Q    That sounds like a yes.

MR. CARNEY:  I'm just --

Q    A possible yes.

MR. CARNEY:  I think it's yes in the sense that he's willing to entertain serious, realistic proposals that reflect his principles, which are that anything that we do in this area has to be balanced.  It cannot -- it absolutely cannot put the burden solely on the middle class, solely on seniors, so that the wealthiest Americans get off light and -- because that’s just not fair and it's not economically sound. 

And the fact is, in the decade prior to him coming to office, that was an approach that was taken and it resulted in an intense squeeze on the middle class while those top 2 percent generally did very, very well.  And it's time to, given our fiscal situation, to readdress that and build a package that is more fair and more balanced and that achieves the kind of deficit reduction that’s necessary, but achieves it in a way that allows the economy to grow and allows it to create jobs.  Because, as I said earlier, deficit reduction is not a goal unto itself.  It has to serve the broader purpose of helping the economy grow and helping it create jobs.

Yes, Major.

Q    I have a couple on the fiscal cliff -- but with your indulgence, on Benghazi, setting aside Susan Rice's fate, setting aside the Sunday show appearance, I just want to talk to you about what is asserted to have happened yesterday.  Senators Graham, McCain and Ayotte put out a release that said in their meetings -- as you said, the Acting CIA Director accompanied her -- and they asked the Acting CIA Director who changed the unclassified talking points to remove a reference to al Qaeda.  He said, at 10:00 a.m., the FBI did.  At 4:00 p.m., according to this release, the CIA called back and said, no, that’s incorrect, and that it wasn't correct; that the FBI removed it to prevent compromising an ongoing criminal investigation, but it was done elsewhere. 

Does this, to the President's mind, at this late stage, raise core questions of basic competency about what happened and why with these underlying talking points -- why is there --

MR. CARNEY:  What the President is worried about, Major, is what happened and why in Benghazi.  He is not particularly concerned about whether the Ambassador or I went out and talked about the fact that we believed extremists might have been responsible, and whether we named them as al Qaeda or not does not have any --

Q    (Inaudible.)

MR. CARNEY:  -- no, it certainly doesn’t have any bearing on what happened and who is responsible as that investigation was continuing in Benghazi.  The fact is, as we have made clear, the White House and --

Q    And do you have any reason to doubt the sequence of events?

MR. CARNEY:  No, I don’t.  The White House and the State Department have made clear that the single adjustment that was made to those talking points by either of those two -- of these two institutions were changing the word "consulate" to "diplomatic facility," because "consulate" was inaccurate.  Those talking points originated from the intelligence community.  They reflect the IC's best assessments of what they thought had happened. 

And I would refer you to numerous reporting -- numerous pieces of reporting by serious journalists and serious publications that demonstrate that people who participated in the assault on Benghazi were aware of what was happening in Cairo and were partly motivated by what was happening in Cairo. 

So that obsession here on what Ambassador Rice said on a Sunday show is simply non-material to the key question of why four Americans died in Benghazi.

Q    I understand you want to characterize it as obsession. I’m just talking about what happened yesterday.  These are two serious agencies of the federal government -- the CIA and the FBI.  The CIA told three senators the FBI did this --

MR. CARNEY:  I don't speak for the CIA and the FBI.  What I can tell you is the suggestion --

Q    But the President is not concerned about --

MR. CARNEY:  -- as some of the senators who put out that press release consistently said -- falsely and erroneously and knowingly -- consistently said that we provided those talking points, we at the White House -- that was false and erroneous. And they said it again and again, and they said it on your air.

Your substitute yesterday claimed that the President made the case that Chris Stevens -- made the case that the video was responsible and led to the violence in Benghazi at a speech at UNGA, which is false and erroneous.  That's not the case.  I encourage you to go read the speech.

We have to get our facts straight when we’re talking about this story, okay?  There was basic information developed by the intelligence community that was provided to Ambassador Rice, to Capitol Hill, to me and others.  We used that to describe what we understood to be known at the time in the immediate aftermath of Benghazi.  As we learned more information, we made it available. That's the long and short of it.

What the President cares about, what he believes his responsibility is as Commander-in-Chief is to find out who was responsible and bring them to justice, and to make sure that we take action to ensure that what happened in Benghazi does not happen again.

Q    On the fiscal cliff, you said a moment ago that there are some ideas on revenue that look good on paper but are not politically realistic.  What are those?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, again, I’m not going to get into specifics, but there have been --

Q    But you know what they are. 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, look, I think that --

Q    You wouldn’t have said if you didn't have an idea.

MR. CARNEY:  Sure, broadly speaking, when we -- you look at proposals that suggest you can achieve -- and you can on paper -- very large revenue targets purely through eliminating deductions and caps, there are only -- really basically there are two ways to do that.  The middle class gets hit hard because you raise taxes on the middle class.

Q    Through what?

MR. CARNEY:  Through various closures of loopholes and deductions.

Q    -- mortgage deduction and charitable deductions?

MR. CARNEY:  Those are two that come to mind.  Those two -- so to achieve significant -- you can either go after the middle class, which the President has made clear is a nonstarter, and again, going after the middle class to protect the wealthiest 2 percent, or you suggest changes to our tax code when it comes to deductions and loopholes that are unrealistic politically, that Democrats and Republicans will not vote for; that you can achieve it on paper but --

Q    -- in those --

MR. CARNEY:  -- again in those areas, but depending on how you slice and dice --

Q    You're referring to the mortgage deduction and charitable deductions?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, there are other -- yes, those are two of them, but there are other loopholes and closures that are under discussion.  The point that I’m trying to make is that the President is very pragmatic about this.  He believes that it is entirely appropriate, as the American people do, that the wealthiest should be asked to pay a little bit more as we develop a balanced package for long-term deficit reduction.  And he believes that the right way to do it, because it is mathematically sound and it is the simplest way, is to extend tax cuts for 98 percent of the American people, but not extend tax cuts for the top 2 percent because -- and also to write into law some of the other changes that he’s proposed that include caps on deductions at 28 percent, and include other loophole closures. 

But he’s open to ideas.  I’m not saying that there’s only -- that there's one way to skin this cat, but there’s one way to skin it that’s clean and simple and there are other ways to skin it -- and I’m going to take this metaphor to dangerous places -- (laughter) -- that are full of fur balls.  So the point is that the President is open to ideas, but he’s not open to pie-in-the-sky proposals that aren’t realistic when it comes to asking Democrats and Republicans to pass them on Capitol Hill.

Q    Last one, Jay.  You're more than comfortable telling us what the President won’t sign in the context of something that extends the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy.  The President will not sign that.  You’re very comfortable saying that.

MR. CARNEY:  Yes.

Q    Asserting that as an absolute --

MR. CARNEY:  Yes.

Q    -- understood position of the President.  Are you similarly prepared to say that about anything that comes to the desk to resolve the fiscal cliff that does not include an increase in the debt ceiling?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think I addressed this.

Q    Not precisely.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, how this -- I’m not going to negotiate the particulars of either the deficit reduction package or how we address the fiscal cliff.  What is a fact is that it is Congress’s responsibility to ensure that the United States of America pays its bills.  It is Congress’s responsibility to raise the debt ceiling so that the United States of America does not default for the first time in its history.

And through hard experience, it is the President’s expectation that Congress will find it in its interests, as well as in America’s interest, to ensure that the full faith and credit of the United States is fully met, without drama and without trying to play the kind of political games and ideological games that led to a downgrade, that led to a drop in consumer confidence, and that, of course, hit the middle class hardest of all. 

And that's just not -- the President doesn't expect that leaders in Congress want to go there, so he expects Congress to do its job.  In what form Congress does its job --

Q    -- clear as the other issue you’re not going to.

MR. CARNEY:  I’m going to say that the President absolutely expects Congress to do its job when it comes to ensuring that the United States maintains its full faith and credit.  How it does that, I’m not going to dictate to Congress.

Q    Or when it does that.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think it has to do it --

Q    By February.

MR. CARNEY:  It has to do it so that it does not create a scenario that we went through last summer, which was so bad for everyone.

Mike.

Q    During the campaign, the President told the Des Moines Register the ratio -- I think it was $1 in taxes for every $2.50 in cuts, if I’m correct.  So you’ve outlined that the President has already put forward $340 billion in proposed spending cuts in his budget I guess it was last winter.  By my math, that leaves another $2 trillion in cuts.  Does the President think there’s $2 trillion to be --

MR. CARNEY:  It’s funny because I mentioned that so few people -- even though it’s been out there for so long -- actually know it’s in the President’s budget, so few people, even though they talk about it all the time, actually know what’s in the Simpson-Bowles, Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson proposal.

The President’s budget proposal included $4 trillion in deficit reduction -- $1.6 trillion from revenues; $340 billion from health care savings, entitlement program savings and savings from reduction in interest payments; and the $1 trillion-plus in non-defense discretionary savings that the President has already signed into law, as well as additional savings.  So that I think -- without the calculator in front of me -- adds up to the ratio that you’re talking about.

Q    The President -- you’ve announced your Twitter campaign.  The President is going to some sort of classic swing counties around Philadelphia.

MR. CARNEY:  The election is over, man. 

Q    Evidently, it isn’t --

MR. CARNEY:  He’s going to a great company that makes great products that is very interested in middle-class Americans having --

Q    In an area that’s represented by 

MR. CARNEY:  -- having that $2,000 --

Q    -- three Republicans in the House who are sort of in swing districts.

MR. CARNEY:  It’s also pretty close to here.  So the point is -- we’re making a point that I tried to make yesterday, and the President will make far better than I, that this is a debate that absolutely should involve the American people because the American people have the most at stake.  And it’s entirely appropriate for the President to go out and present to American businesses and ordinary Americans his views on this, and to ask them to let their voices be heard here in Washington, because that’s how we get things done here in Washington.  And we’ve learned this, as I talked about at the top.

Q    If this isn’t about moving votes, what is it about?

MR. CARNEY:  It’s about compelling action in Washington, and if that means moving votes, then that’s what it means.  But that’s always been the case, and that’s what I described at the top.  When the American people demand Congress to act, demand that Washington acts, and they do so by making their voices heard, Washington tends to act.  I mean, that’s a fact and it’s one that’s as old as the Republic. 

Q    Is there no concern about hardening political lines by going so public with all of this?

MR. CARNEY:  No.  I mean, again, let’s look at the history here.  Members of Congress are elected by their constituents -- ordinary Americans in districts and states across the country.  They are answerable to their constituents.  When their constituents get involved and they say, this is what we believe you should do, members of Congress tend to listen.  That’s a good thing.  That’s how the system should work.  And the President also believes that he has a responsibility to go out into the country, to meet with ordinary Americans -- workers and business leaders and the like -- to talk about his vision and his plans when it comes to this debate, to hear their ideas, and to ask them to ensure that their voices are heard here in Washington.  That’s, I think, a terrific description of how the system works and how it should work.

Q    Finally, tomorrow’s lunch -- is there a symbolic element to this, to show the country and the world that there is this -- we’ve had this fight; now we’re going to break bread together?

MR. CARNEY:  I think there is.  I think there is a tradition here, and I think that it is one of the often-overlooked but remarkable things about this democracy, this oldest democracy, is that we have -- we consistently have elections and either pass power on to a new leader of a new power -- party, or because the voters chose, continue to invest power and authority in the office in the same party or the same individual, without violence and without the kind of anguish and disruptions that you see in so many other countries around the world, and you’ve seen throughout history. 

And I think that it is entirely appropriate -- and I know the President feels this way -- to continue that tradition, because fundamentally, whenever we have these elections, the two standard bearers are putting forward their visions for what they believe is best for America and the people decide which vision they prefer.  But I know the President believes that Governor Romney is -- was doing -- was arguing a case that he thought was right, and he did it forcefully, and the President did the same.

Q    Last week, the President gave Speaker Boehner a gift.  Will there be gifts exchanged?  (Laughter.)

MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have any more details about tomorrow’s lunch to provide.

Roger.

Q    Thank you.  Jay, I’d like to revisit a question you had the other day about the low water levels in the Mississippi River.  Since you were asked that question, the shippers and barge industry has gotten together along -- joining Mr. Harkin in asking the President for a federal declaration ordering the Corps to take certain steps to ease the water levels.  I know that you said, talk to the Corps of Engineers, but does this issue --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, the Corps handles these issues.  When it comes to declarations, there’s a process that takes place and my understanding is that’s not how it works.  So I would refer you to the Corps.  The President has been committed to ensuring that his administration takes every step possible to help farmers and ranchers affected by the drought.  And as you know, the administration has already taken a variety of actions to that end.  But again, my answer hasn’t changed since yesterday.

Q    There’s no directive that the President must take ordering --

MR. CARNEY:  I’m not aware of any specific request to the President taking action.  When it comes to, as we’ve seen in recent -- more recent natural disasters, there’s a process by which declarations are made and requested.  I am not aware of this one in particular.

Yes.

Q    Jay, when you’re talking -- the language that you’ve had the last couple of days has been pretty harsh about people in the Senate, about Susan Rice and about -- you’ve certainly taken a tone that -- is it appropriate for the White House to list the criteria by which the Senate should use its advise and consent power?

MR. CARNEY:  Absolutely not.  That’s not what this is about. I have been speaking specifically about the misplaced obsession and focus on an administration official's appearance on Sunday shows -- an administration official who had no line responsibility for security at our diplomatic facilities and no responsibility for the collection and dissemination of intelligence product.

And I am not alone in judging that that obsession and focus is largely driven by political considerations.  The Senate has its constitutionally-mandated prerogative to advise and consent, and that is not what I am talking about.

Q    One more about the meeting, the lunch tomorrow.  The language that you're using today about the meeting and about Governor Romney's strengths and what we heard the President say in the press conference, it reminds me a little bit of what was being said last January when we were talking about the reorganization of the Commerce Department.  Is Governor Romney here tomorrow in some kind of Cabinet-level position?  (Laughter.)  In some kind of audition for that position?

MR. CARNEY:  No. 

Q    Beyond that, is there some kind of reorganization in the Commerce Department where Governor Romney could play a role?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, there is -- the President does not have a specific assignment in mind for the Governor.  He looks forward to discussing with Governor Romney a variety of issues, including the President's interest in making the federal government more efficient -- an interest that was demonstrated by that very broad proposal that he put forward asking Congress for reorganization authority, the same authority that Presidents up through Reagan had had for a long time -- and adding what he felt was a helpful enticement, which is that he would only use that authority with the promise that any action he took to reorganize government would result in savings to the federal government.  And that’s what his proposal with regards to all the entities in government that deal with exports and commerce would do.

Q    Jay, the strengths that Governor Romney brings do comport with the kind of vision that the President has for that reorganization --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think Governor Romney has many strengths, but I know that the President will look forward to having a discussion about broadly the issues of government efficiency.

Yes, sir.

Q    Sort of follow-up on a question of my colleague. 

MR. CARNEY:  Sure.   

Q    I'll put a new light on it.  Obviously, the President is painstakingly taking time to choose the best and the brightest for these senior Cabinet positions.  With one term behind him and his legacy ahead of him, what is the most important characteristic that the President looks for in choosing a Cabinet minister -- a Cabinet member, such as the Commerce or Interior or whatever we're talking about?

Q    State, DOD --

MR. CARNEY:  I haven't had the discussion in a way that boils it down to one characteristic.  He looks for all the appointments he makes for individuals of skill, intelligence and character.

April, and then Bill.

Q    Jay, both then-candidates for the Oval Office seemed to have such disdain for one another, particularly when they were debating.  What is the President's stand on his emotions and his feelings with Mitt Romney now?  (Laughter.) 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, first of all, I would say that elections are serious business, and they tend to represent a clash of ideas and they're hard fought.  And it's certainly no different this time than it has been in every election that I've been around for and covered in the past.

But the President, as he said in the aftermath of the election, believes that Governor Romney has ideas that he's interested in that were developed through some of the experiences that Governor Romney has had in his life, and he looks forward to discussing them with Governor Romney. 

I think the President feels pretty good about how the election turned out, if that’s what you mean.  (Laughter.) 

Bill.

Q    How long is the lunch for?  Is it an hour, hour and a half, two?

MR. CARNEY:  I don’t have an end time for you.  I think it will be a substantial lunch, if not on the plate than in the discussion. 

Yes.

Q    I guess in the interest of anything goes -- (laughter) -- on November 6th, the state of Colorado and the state of Washington voted to legalize the recreational use of marijuana.  That’s against federal law.  Does the Obama administration intend --

MR. CARNEY:  I can't believe you're the one that asked the question, Bill.  (Laughter.) 

Q    -- to respect those two state measures?

MR. CARNEY:  Bill, I appreciate the question.  The Department of Justice has said that they are reviewing these ballot initiatives to which you refer, and I would direct you to them for updates. 

Q    But the direction will come from the White House as to whether this is worth the Justice Department's time and resources, correct?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, the Justice Department is the lead law enforcement agency.  And as the Justice Department has made clear, its enforcement of the Controlled-Substance Act remains unchanged.  In enacting the Controlled-Substances Act, Congress determined that marijuana is a Schedule One controlled substance. The President, in at least a couple of interviews over the course of this year, was asked about this, and you can find his views in those interviews.

Q    A quick follow.  In the last 11 months, according to NORML, the Obama administration -- or the Justice Department has moved to shut down 400 medical marijuana clinics in this country, which is more than happened during the entire eight years of George W. Bush's administration.  So that seems to be a priority for the administration.  Will that also move towards recreational --

MR. CARNEY:  Well, no.  What the President has said is that we're not going to prioritize prosecutions of people with cancer or other serious illnesses.  And the President never made a commitment to give carte blanche to large-scale producers and sellers of marijuana.  And while the President has asked the Department of Justice to use prosecutorial discretion to best prioritize law enforcement resources, he cannot nullify congressional law.

Yes, sir.

Q    Jay, you talk about setting up a framework for long-range deficit reduction.  I shudder at the thought of another super committee being created over income tax or tax reform.

MR. CARNEY:  I feel you.

Q    Is the President, though, ready to make some kind of ironclad commitment toward tax reform, even if it’s a small amount, to Speaker Boehner, which he may very well need to take to his caucus for even a short-term deal?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, the President is very committed to tax reform.  He’s put forward a specific proposal for corporate tax reform and he has made clear his interest in individual tax reform.  Some of the changes while -- in his budget proposal he believes that the best approach is to allow the rates to revert back for top earners to the Clinton-era levels that he introduces elements of tax reform even in his own budget proposal. 

And he remains interested in concrete, mathematically sound, politically realistic proposals that can help get this job done as long as they reflect his principles, which are shared by a significant majority of the American people, which is that we tackle this problem in a balanced way so that the middle class doesn’t get stuck holding the bag as it pretty significantly was in the prior decade.

Q    And for Speaker Boehner?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I don’t want -- I’m just not going to negotiate from the podium the particulars of what a potential compromise would look like.  The President has made clear he’s open to good ideas.  He understands that Republicans are not likely to pass his proposal in its entirety, and he’s not wedded to every item in his proposal.  So he wants to continue to have discussions.

Ann, last one.

Q    Thank you.  The President indicated in his remarks today that maybe -- that he would like to have a deal by Christmas.  What happens now?  Does the President wait -- is it all in Congress's court?  Do they have to call and say, okay, we’re ready with some more concrete, realistic, mathematically-sound proposals? 

MR. CARNEY:  I like the sound of that.

Q    Would the President remain here on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, not travel with his family, if there is still no deal?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not going to speculate and be so pessimistic that we couldn’t achieve a reasonable compromise prior to then.  The President is committed to working with Congress.  He has assembled a team that will work with Congress -- is and will continue to work with Congress.  I don’t have any specific scheduling announcements to make for you, but the President’s week has been very full meeting with various stakeholders in this debate.  It will continue to be so tomorrow and Friday, and I’m sure that he will have conversations with congressional leaders when appropriate.  And Secretary Geithner and others will be having those conversations with their congressional counterparts in the --

Q    And so there’s not a single concrete proposal that’s come to the President?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not going to read proposals from draft pieces of paper to you.  Obviously two things are true.  One is we’ve had this debate for so long and in so much detail that we know the parameters of it.  We know what the numbers look like, especially when everybody is being honest about them.  And two, I don’t think it’s helpful to negotiate every detail of an unfinished and, at this point, definitely unfinished compromise.

Q    I asked you when, not what.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I mean, the President -- I think the President answered that question:  by the end of the year, that’s what he hopes and believes is possible.  Before Christmas.

Q    Just one -- would you please reconsider opening the President’s meeting with Mitt Romney to press coverage since it’s -- (laughter) -- no, just so -- to cameras, because it’s closed coverage and this was an historic election.  This is the first time they’re meeting, and I would just respectfully request --

MR. CARNEY:  I appreciate the request, but we’re going to let the two men, who spent a great deal of time in the public eye over the course of the past year, both of them, have a private lunch together.

Thanks very much.

END
1:34 P.M. EST