The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Meeting with Senate Democrats

This afternoon at the White House, the President met with a group of Senate Democrats on trade. They had a constructive session and discussed the need to advance legislation to give the President the authority he needs to complete negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership and enforce the agreement. Members in attendance reiterated their support for TPA legislation that will pave the way for high-standard trade agreements that support good American jobs, protect our workers and environment, and ensure that the United States, and not countries like China, write the rules for the global economy. The President and Members committed to continuing work on this important priority in order to ensure workers and businesses can compete on a level playing field in the global economy.  

The following senators attended the meeting:

  • Senator Michael Bennet (D-CO)
  • Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA)
  • Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD)
  • Senator Tom Carper (D-DE)
  • Senator Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND)
  • Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA)
  • Senator Patty Murray (D-WA)
  • Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL)
  • Senator Mark Warner (D-VA)
  • Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR)

The President Joins a Conversation on Poverty

May 12, 2015 | 01:15:55 | Public Domain

President Obama sat down at Georgetown University to discuss how we can address poverty in America. May 12, 2015.

Download mp4 (2877MB) | mp3 (182MB)

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 5/12/2015

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:17 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  It’s nice to see you.  I apologize for the late start of the briefing.  I wanted to give you all an opportunity to see the end of the spirited conversation that the President participated in in Georgetown.  I suspect we’ll have the opportunity to discuss that a little bit more here.

Before we do, however, I want to commend to your attention a statement that was issued earlier today by Bernadette Meehan, who is the spokesperson for the National Security Council.  She issued a statement today that it’s with a heavy heart that earlier this week we marked American journalist Austin Tice’s 1000th day in captivity.

I won’t reread her entire statement, but obviously our thoughts and prayers aren’t just with Austin today, but they're also with his parents, Debra and Marc, and his brothers and sisters who are missing him dearly.  The United States government, working closely with our Czech protecting power in Syria, is trying to bring him home, and that is an effort that is ongoing and has been for some time.  And it’s certainly something that we are very focused on every day, but today we're particularly mindful of this week being his 1000th day in captivity. 

So on that somber note, Jim, let’s move to your questions.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  I wanted to ask you about trade and this procedural vote that's going to take place this afternoon in the Senate.  We're already hearing some pro-trade Democrats kind of lowball expectations on that vote.  I believe Steny Hoyer in the House said that, “If the 60 votes don't materialize, it’s not the end of the story.”  I’m wondering how much of a setback is it for the President to lose this vote today if that were to happen.  Are there other opportunities ahead?  Or is this an uphill climb or a worse climb now?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, the thing that we have been very clear about from the very beginning is that the President was seeking from the United States Congress the authority necessary to complete the TPP agreement and the authority that's necessary to enforce it.  And we were gratified earlier this spring when the Senate Finance Committee acted in bipartisan fashion to produce legislation that would do exactly that.

Not only was that legislation supported by both Democrats and Republicans on the committee, it was supported by a majority of Republicans and a majority of Democrats on the committee.  And that is a testament to the commitment to bipartisanship that's been on display in the Senate, in the Finance Committee, in particular.

Now, what’s also true is that it is not unprecedented, to say the least, for the United States Senate to encounter procedural snafus.  That was true when Democrats were in charge of the United States Senate.  We’ve talked before about how that's been true when Republicans have been in charge of the United States Senate.  And what we're hopeful is that every member of the United States Senate can summon the bipartisan spirit that was on display in the Senate Finance Committee to work through this procedural snafu.

And the good news is that we have seen statements in public already today from people like Leader McConnell, from Senator Wyden, even Senator Hatch -- who obviously was instrumental to crafting this bipartisan compromise -- to a willingness to work in bipartisan fashion to untangle this procedural knot that the Senate right now is mired in.

So we're obviously going to continue to remain engaged with members of the United States Senate.  But the truth is most of our discussions are focused on the substance.  And the Senate has a process for working through these procedural challenges, and we're pleased to see Democrats and Republicans both indicating a willingness to work through these procedural challenges.

Q    It seems one of the main challenges right now is deciding which aspects of trade and trade-related bills get dealt with.  Does the President have a view on whether -- there’s particularly a bill on customs provisions that includes a currency language that the White House is not thrilled with, but certainly did not want it in the trade promotion authority bill.  It ended up in this customs bill.  Does the President want that to proceed?  Would the President prefer that just two bills, as McConnell has proposed, move through the process?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, what we’ve been clear about is the President needs both the authority to complete the TPP deal, as well as the authority necessary to enforce it.  And there are obviously strongly held views in the Senate that many times cross partisan lines about the wisdom of the way in which the legislation is written and advanced through the Senate.

So these are procedural challenges that members of the Senate will have to work through.  And the President of the United States and members of his staff will continue to remain engaged in having conversations with members of the Senate -- both Democrats and Republicans -- about the substance of this proposal.  And we're going to continue to work through these challenges with that.

Q    These procedural challenges ultimately determine the fate of legislation, however.  And I’m wondering, given the effort that the President has put into this, what does it say about those efforts if, right now, on the verge of this vote we still don't know which way it’s going to come out?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I just would observe that these kinds of procedural snafus have cropped up even when we're talking about otherwise pretty simple and straightforward pieces of legislation.

And the legislation that currently is -- that has been passed through the Senate Finance Committee is anything but simple and straightforward.  I think anybody would acknowledge that this is complicated.  But the President believes that it doesn’t give him the authority that's necessary to complete the deal and to enforce it, and that's why he has been strongly encouraging Democrats to support it.

But that's different from the kind of procedural snafu that currently is facing the United States Senate.  So they're going to have to work through this challenge.  And we’ll remain engaged with them as they do.

Roberta.

Q    So a group of pro-trade senators are saying they're not going to support today’s vote unless the four bills are packaged together.  What is the White House position on packaging those four bills together?  Do you agree with them?  Or would you rather they just do the one thing?  Or what are you saying?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the case that we have made to both Democrats and Republicans, but principally Democrats, is that the authority that’s vested in this legislation is critically important to the future of our economy.  And so we have made a case, both publicly and privately, about the importance of the Senate acting in bipartisan fashion to get this done.  And we were gratified that we saw that kind of bipartisanship in the Senate Finance Committee, and it’s going to be incumbent upon Democrats and Republicans in the Senate to work together to figure out how to overcome this procedural snafu and advance legislation that, as we saw in the Finance Committee, has clear bipartisan support in the Senate.

Q    So you’re not going to take a position on how that snafu, as you call it, should be worked through?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, when it comes to these procedural things, we have often made clear that it’s the responsibility of the Senate to work through them.  We’re going to continue to remain engaged and have conversations with members of the Senate as they do exactly that.  But ultimately this will be the responsibility of members of the Senate to work through.

One other thing that I will say is -- and again, I’ve said this about legislation that’s far less complicated than this one, which is that we live in an era of divided government, where there are Republicans who are in charge of both Houses of the Congress, there’s a Democrat that’s sitting in the Oval Office, there is a Republican majority in the Senate, but it’s not a filibuster-proof majority -- which means that for anything to become law, party-line votes are not going to cut it. 

And that’s why we’re going to continue to urge members of the Congress to act in bipartisan fashion.  We’ve seen that kind of bipartisan spirit on display in the Senate Finance Committee, and it yielded a good result.  And we’re hopeful that as the Senate works through this particular procedural snafu, that they will encounter the kind of bipartisan compromise that will be required to advance any legislation.

Q    I just want to ask on one more topic.  Iranian warships are traveling with a cargo ship that is bound for Yemen, and Tehran says that the cargo ship is carrying aid.  What’s the U.S. response to this?  And will the U.S. presence in that region make an effort to stop Iran from moving this -- letting this ship go directly to Yemen?

MR. EARNEST:  Roberta, I can tell you that the United States is monitoring this latest maritime shipment from Iran to Yemen.  What we expect is that the humanitarian assistance that Iran is willing to offer will occur through the process that’s already established by the United Nations.

Now, what the United Nations has done is they’ve established essentially a relief effort inside of Djibouti, where humanitarian aid can be offloaded in Djibouti.  It can be processed by U.N. experts, and effectively and efficiently distributed to those who are most in need in Yemen.  This has the effect of ensuring that, for example, there’s no accusation of political preference being demonstrated by who receives the aid.  We can also make sure that the aid that’s needed in some parts of the country gets to the right places.  In some places, a priority is going to be placed on medical supplies.  In some cases, there will be a priority placed on food.  In other cases, there may be a priority placed on fuel. 

This is basically an effort to try to be responsive to the needs of the local populations, and there are officials at the United Nations that have an expertise in this area.  The thing that’s also important is that using this, essentially, a logistics hub in Djibouti will allow for the enforcement of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2216, which put in place an arms embargo against the Houthi rebels.  And so by allowing the U.N. to process those humanitarian donations and to efficiently distribute them, we’ll make sure that we’re enforcing the arms embargo while at the same time most efficiently and effectively delivering assistance to those who are most in need.

Q    So will the U.S. ensure that that ship does not go direct and instead goes to Djibouti or wherever?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, it’s my understanding that the journey of this particular maritime vessel has only recently begun from Iran and we’re monitoring the shipment.  And, again, we would urge Iran to utilize this relief hub that’s been established in Djibouti.  I mean, the other thing that I’ll -- I guess the last thing I’ll point out on this is that Iran understands that they can’t afford to play games with humanitarian assistance to people who are in dire need, like we see in Yemen.  And the Iranians know as well as anyone that a political stunt to defy their regional rivals outside the U.N. system is provocative and risks a collapse of the U.N.-led humanitarian ceasefire that’s scheduled to go in place later today.

Mara.

Q    Just back to trade for a minute.  You seem to kind of dismiss what’s happening in the Senate as just a procedural snafu.  Assuming it gets solved, do you feel confident you have the votes in both Houses to pass fast track?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what is true -- and I think Senator Wyden himself, through one form or another, made clear that the concerns they have about the current procedural problem in the United States Senate has not in any way affected his overall support for the legislation that advanced through the Senate Finance Committee.

Q    His overall support or Democrats’ overall support?

MR. EARNEST:  His overall support.

Q    Oh, okay.

MR. EARNEST:  And I think that the point is, I think as other Democrats talk about this, I think that you’ll find other Democrats who are saying the same thing.

Q    So you’re confident?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what I’m confident is that the -- that a “no” vote on this procedural situation should not be interpreted as a change in position on the substance of the bill.  And again, I don’t speak for these senators, so you should go ask them, but Senator Wyden I know is one person who has made clear that’s his view.  I suspect that there are a number of others.  I say that based on the fact that there were seven Democrats who voted this particular legislation out of the Senate Finance Committee.  And that, I think, is an indication that there is present already Democratic support for this legislation and the potential that even more Democrats could support the legislation if and when it makes its way to the floor.

Q    Is the President frustrated that Hillary Clinton hasn’t said anything in support of this?

MR. EARNEST:  Not particularly.  She’s not a member of the United States Senate.  I thinks if she were a member of the United States Senate, then we might.  But in this case, she’s got a campaign to run, and I think what she has indicated is consistent with what the President has said about this in terms of the goal of the TPP negotiations, which is to open up opportunity for American businesses overseas in a way that we can ensure benefits middle-class families across the country.  The President obviously shares those values and shares that goal.

Richard.

Q    Thank you, Josh.  Two questions.  First one, Russia.  Is Secretary Kerry bringing a message, a personal message, from the President to President Putin?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t know that there’s a personal message that the Secretary of State is bringing with him -- is taking with him to Russia, but obviously there are a range of issues that will be discussed by the Secretary of State and both his Russian counterpart and President Putin.  Shortly before I walked out here, I was informed that the meeting with President Putin had just begun.  So there are a range of issues for us to talk about -- everything from obviously the situation in Syria to the ongoing negotiations with Iran.  Russia has played a key part in those talks as a member of the P5+1.  And we’re certainly going to spend a lot of time talking about the situation in Ukraine and the need for Russia and the separatists that they back in eastern Ukraine to live up to the terms of the Minsk implementation plan.  So far, we haven’t seen that, but living up to those commitments will be a critical part of deescalating the conflict that we see in Ukraine right now.

Q    Is it conceivable that the relationship will go ahead, even if nothing really changes on the Ukrainian front?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as we’ve talked about a number of times in this room, the United States has a complicated relationship with Russia.  There are some very vigorous disagreements we have on a number of issues.  The most prominent of them is Ukraine; it's certainly not the only one. 

But there are a wide range of other areas where the United States and Russia have been able to work effectively together to advance the interest of citizens in both our countries.  And everything -- this is indicative -- or this is true of the space program where obviously Russian scientists and astronauts have worked closely and effectively with American scientists and astronauts to explore outer space. 

This has also been true of ridding Syria of their declared chemical weapons stockpile.  That that would not have occurred without the effective coordination and cooperation of the United States and Russia to round up that declared chemical weapons stockpile and dispose of it in a way that would prevent the proliferation of those specific materials that would, if proliferated, pose a pretty serious threat to our interests and to our people.

Q    Sorry to be maybe simplistic, but you say often complicated relationship, but will you say it's still a constructive relationship?

MR. EARNEST:  There’s no question that we have been able to use elements of our relationship to advance the national security interest of the United States.  The national security interest of the United States was enhanced with the destruction of Syria’s declared chemical weapons stockpile.  The national security interest of the United States is advanced if we can capitalize on this diplomatic opportunity to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. 

Again, that will require the cooperation and support of Russian negotiators.  And thus far, that’s exactly what we’ve received in a way that’s good for the United States.  It also happens to be good for the people of Russia.  And so I think that is an indication that we can work effectively together despite the significant disagreements we have about the way that Russia has handled their business when it comes to the relationship with Ukraine.

Q    And last question.  Totally different topic.  Sorry.  The Brady story, Tom Brady story.  I just want to know --

MR. EARNEST:  People in Canada are following this closely?

Q    Yes, very closely, actually.  (Laughter.)  And not only the people in general, but also the kids are following American football a lot.  And we’d like to know, how does the White House see prominent players like this?  Should they be a role model -- aren’t they a role model for kids?  And by extension, shouldn’t they follow higher standards of overall behavior?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there has been a lot of discussion -- (laughter) -- I will say that I spent a lot of time thinking about all of things that were going to come up in this briefing and a number of them we’ll get to.  This is one of them, actually.

I will just say that as a general matter, I have not spoken to the President about this particular issue.  And I haven’t thought nearly as much about this issue as obviously executives at the NFL have, and as many NFL fans -- in particular Patriots fans have.  I will say, just as a general matter, that I do think that people around the world, particularly children, particularly boys, do look up to Tom Brady.  He is somebody who has a reputation for professionalism.  He is somebody who has enjoyed tremendous success on the football field and has carried himself off the field in a way that has earned the respect of a lot people. 

And I think that as he confronts this particular situation, and he determines what the next steps will be for him, that he’ll be mindful of the way that he serves to be -- the way he serves as a role model to so many, not just American kids, as you point out, but to kids around the world. 

Andrew.

Q    Raul Castro said today that Cuba and the U.S. could exchange ambassadors as soon as May the 29th, I think he said.  Does that fit your expected timeframe?  Could we see a reestablishment of diplomatic relations within weeks?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I know that there are additional conversations that are planned between now and the end of May.  And our efforts to work with Cuba to start to normalize the relations between our two countries is something that we continue to pursue.  The President had the opportunity to visit with President Castro in Panama a few weeks ago, and that certainly continued to advance this effort toward normalization. 

They also had an opportunity to have an extended discussion about the priority that the United States places on respecting basic universal human rights.  And these are -- we have expressed quite often, in public and in private, the concerns that we have with the Cuban government and the frequency with which they trample the basic universal human rights of their people.  And that’s a concern.

And the President’s view is that after 50 years of a policy that tried to isolate Cuba, that the United States demonstrated very little ability to influence the Cuban government when it came to basic protections for human rights.

And the President feels strongly that by changing our policy, by seeking greater engagement not just between the Cuban government and the American government, but between the Cuban people and the American people, that we can continue to support the Cuban people as they seek the kind of government that respects their rights and allows them to fulfill their ambitions.

So we’re going to continue to advance this process, and it's one that this administration takes very seriously.  And it's been -- it continues to be the source of extensive discussion within the United States government, but also with the Cuban government.

Q    Does the President have an ambassadorial candidate or a short list in mind?

MR. EARNEST:  He may, but not one I'm prepared to announce right now. 

Margaret.

Q    Thank you.  I have a TPP/TPA question.  But first, a Tom Brady follow-up. 

MR. EARNEST:  Okay.

Q    So I just wanted to clarify.  You said that you hadn’t spoken with the President about it yet.  Did you mean the issue of whether Tom Brady should be a role model to kids, or do you mean at all?  Because we were sort of trying to figure out what he thinks as a sports fan about the punishment both for Brady and for the team.  And also, on a related thread, the idea that -- the controversy over whether or not he skipped the White House announcement because he was angry about you and the President’s  --

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I saw some of those news reports myself.  I have not spoken to the President since this latest announcement from the NFL -- I guess it was just yesterday -- about the punishment that they had handed down against the Patriots and against Mr. Brady.  And I have not spoken to the President about Mr. Brady’s status as a role model. 

I have also not talked to the President about Mr. Brady’s decision not to attend the White House celebration of their Super Bowl victory earlier this year. 

Q    Many of our news organizations are interested in if the President would like to weigh in on what he thinks about it. 

MR. EARNEST:  Okay.  There may be an opportunity for you to ask him.

Q    Oh, okay.  On TPA/TPP.  Patty Murray spotted -- as they say -- outside with Denis McDonough just before the President left for Georgetown.  And I'm wondering what that was about.  Was it her coming to give him a heads up?  Was it him trying to do a last minute whip kind of thing?  And was there anyone else here? What was going down there?  What happened?  What was that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, my understanding is that Senator Murray had a meeting at the White House on an entirely different issue.  But as is indicative --

Q    Tom Brady?

MR. EARNEST:  Possibly.  (Laughter.)  Given her status as a loyal Seahawks fan, I doubt it.  But she was here on a different issue, and I do think that the -- I am aware that the Chief of Staff did want to have a conversation with her while she was here on the current efforts to resolve the procedural snafu in the United States Senate. 

This is indicative of the kinds of conversations that the President and senior White House officials have been having over the last several weeks with members of the Senate in both parties -- mostly Democrats, but occasionally a Republican conversation or two. 

And again, we’re going to continue to try to nurture this bipartisan agreement.  And as members of the Senate try to tap into that bipartisan spirit that allowed for the strong support of this legislation at the committee level, hopefully it will be able to advance on the floor as well.

Q    Just, sorry -- I wasn’t sure.  So he grabbed her on the way out because he knew she was here and he didn't want to talk to her about it?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't know if it was on the way out or the way in.  She was here for a different reason, and they did have a brief conversation about --

Q    That's what they were talking about, even though that's not why she was originally coming?

MR. EARNEST:  Correct.

Q    Okay, thanks.

MR. EARNEST:  Correct.  Jon.

Q    You called this issue with the trade bill a “snafu”?

MR. EARNEST:  That's correct.

Q    Once or twice.  (Laughter.) 

Q    A “procedural snafu.”

Q    A “procedural snafu.”

MR. EARNEST:  A procedural snafu.  Thank you, Mark.

Q    Thank you, Mark.

Q    A procedural snafu.  Remind me, what does snafu stand for?  (Laughter.) 

MR. EARNEST:  This is a family program, Jon.

Q    The first words are “situation normal” I believe.  (Laughter.)  But isn’t that the core of the problem here that prominent -- some of the most prominent figures in the President’s party on Capitol Hill are simply not with him on this?  It’s not just Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders on the left.  He hasn’t has support of --

MR. EARNEST:  I think they're prominent figures in their own right. 

Q    Sure.  Yes.  But I mean within the leadership -- and, of course, Elizabeth Warren is now a member of leadership. 

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, I would acknowledge that there are a number of Democrats who do not intend to support this legislation.  But what I would also quickly follow up to say is that it’s the President’s view that there’s ample reason for Democrats to support legislation that would give him the authority to complete the TPP negotiations and the authority that's necessary to enforce whatever agreement is reached.

Q    So what does it say about the President’s power of persuasion within his own party right now that the most prominent players on Capitol Hill don't agree with him on this, are not convinced by his arguments on this, and the most prominent player outside -- Hillary Clinton -- won’t even step forward to make the case or even say she agrees with the President?

MR. EARNEST:  I think what I would do, Jon, is I would urge you to withhold judgment about the President’s persuasion ability until we’ve had an opportunity to try to advance this piece of legislation through the Senate.

Q    So you're predicting a victory on this?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not in the prediction business, particularly when it comes to actions that are taken on Capitol Hill.  But I think the President has made clear that he considers this to be a domestic priority principally because of the positive impact it would have on expanding economic opportunity for American businesses and American workers.

Q    Okay, then one other subject.  The decision to allow Shell to drill in the Arctic.  As you've seen, environmental groups are upset by this decision.  One, Friends of the Earth, said, “It is outrageous how our own government appears determined to sacrifice our precious Arctic Ocean for Shell’s profits.”

What is your response to that?  And how do you square this decision to allow more drilling in the Arctic with what the President has said about climate change?

MR. EARNEST:  Jon, this reflects the all-of-the-above approach that this administration has taken to our energy security.  And the fact is we have taken steps to open up some regions of the Arctic to closely supervised drilling by Shell.  There are some additional permitting steps that need to take place before this activity will begin.  But this is something that will be done under the strict oversight of the Department of the Interior.  And it will be consistent with the upgraded safety standards that have been put in place in the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon disaster.

What’s also true is that there are significant areas of the Arctic that have been designated for protection under the leadership of this President.  That includes 9.8 million acres in the waters of the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas.  That includes the designation to protect Alaska’s Bristol Bay from mining activity.

And you’ll recall there was a big hullabaloo when the President re-upped his proposal to permanently protect another national treasure, the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.  And that's an indication that we need to have an all-of-the-above approach.

What’s also a part of this approach is investment in, and capitalizing on, the opportunity that exists when it comes to renewable energy.  That's why under the President’s watch we’ve seen that the amount of energy that's generated by the wind has tripled just under the President’s tenure in office, and we’ve actually seen that the amount of energy that’s produced by solar has increased 20 times since the President’s first day in office. 
So we’ve made substantial progress in investing in and capitalizing on the opportunity that exists when it comes to renewable energy.  We’ve talked at length about the kinds of steps that we have taken when it comes to increasing energy efficiency, both in our cars and trucks, but also in our buildings in a way that’s had positive economic benefits for middle-class families across the country but also had a positive impact on our climate.

But what’s also true is the President is committed to ensuring that we are doing as much as we can to protect our energy security, and that means looking for opportunities to safely develop sources of energy on American soil.  And I think this -- again, this decision reflects the effort to pursue that all-of-the-above approach. 

Bill.

Q    The President today talked at some length about race with the panel on poverty that he had at Georgetown.  His remarks seemed deeply personal and at much greater length than we’ve heard.  And on top of this, the First Lady of course made some remarks about her experiences with race at her speech at Tuskegee.  Is this something that they have set out to do?  Is this a change of some sort?  Is this a message that they’re starting to send?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think much of what you’ve seen from the President, at least over the last couple of weeks, has been a reflection of the national debate and dialogue that has been taking place across the country when it comes to these issues of the relationship between law enforcement officers and the communities they serve and protect.  There is an obviously significant overlap when it comes to that issue and the issue of race.  They’re not the same thing.  But to deny that race is an element of some of those challenges is to deny sort of the basic fact of what’s going on.  And the President has been asked a number of questions about this, and he has answered them and spoken about it freely.

Q    In the previous six years he’s had relatively little to say about race.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t know.  The President gave a pretty prominent speech when he was running for office on this topic, and the President had ample opportunity to weigh in on things like the tragic death of Trayvon Martin and other situations where the President has spoken out on these issues principally because they’ve been part of the broader national debate.  And the President, as the first black President of the United States, I think has something -- and he thinks has something important to contribute to that debate. 

And so I think what the President was most interested in talking about today was a discussion and an examination and, in some cases, even a debate about how to expand economic opportunity in this country for all Americans.  But at different points in the conversation, it did cause him to reflect more on his own views about how to address some of the challenges that we face when it comes to the persistent divisions around race.

Q    You also mentioned Austin Tice at the outset.  We believe he is being held by the Syrians.  Is there anything in particular we’re doing to try to obtain his release as opposed to other hostages?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we continue to be very focused on trying to rescue and return him.  I don’t have much I can say in terms of our view about where or by whom he is being held, but I can tell you that we continue to work through our Czech protecting power in Syria to get information about his welfare and his whereabouts.  And we’re certainly appreciative of the Czech mission for their efforts on behalf of Austin and effectively on behalf of the American people in trying to secure his safe return.

The other thing that’s true is the United States has been in periodic, direct contact with Syrian government officials, strictly on consular issues, including the case of Austin Tice.  But for privacy and security reasons, I don’t have any additional details about that beyond that description of periodic, direct contact with Syrian government officials.

Q    Do you have anything on a helicopter missing in Nepal?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have anything on that, but we can check on it.

Jim.

Q    Josh, getting back to the President’s remarks at this poverty event, at one point he said there are some communities where I’m not -- I don’t know -- “not only do I not know poor people, I don’t even know people who have trouble paying the bills at the end of the month.  I just don’t know these people.”  Was he trying to say that he is somewhat out of touch?

MR. EARNEST:  No.  (Laughter.)  That would be a gross misreading of his comments. 

Q    That’s why I’m asking.

MR. EARNEST:  That’s good, and I’m glad you did.  The President began those comments by noting that what we see in this country is a greater degree of class segregation.  And what that essentially means is that people who are in the upper-income brackets live in neighborhoods where they’re surrounded by other people who are in the same income bracket and don’t come into regular contact with people who may have trouble paying the bills on a monthly basis.  And the President was articulating his concern that that kind of segregation, class segregation, has affected the policy debate about the best way to address some of these persistent challenges in our society.  And I think the President indicated that it was important for all of us to challenge ourselves to sort of step outside of our own comfort zone and to think more broadly about some of these issues.

Q    And with his comments today and the announcement about the library, it seems to be -- I don’t know, it seems as if he is starting to think about his legacy and that his legacy is on his mind.  And I know you’re going to tell me he is hard at work trying to get things done for the American people and, well, we’ll think about legacy every once in a while but he is not going to spend a whole lot of time thinking about that.  But it does seem like he is spending some time thinking about that.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, the principal reason that the President established a foundation and appointed some of his closest friends and most-trusted advisors to serve on that foundation is so that he wouldn’t have to spend so much time thinking about it.  That has been the work of the board of the foundation, and they have of course kept the President updated on their work.  They’ve kept the First Lady updated on their work, too.  She’s got a say in this.

Q    I guess my point is he is thinking about it.  He’s spending a lot more time thinking about it, talking about it.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I guess my point is that the President is focused on his responsibilities as President of the United States.  And I think that he has been very clear with all of you that he is determined to use every single day that he has remaining in office to advance the agenda that he has put forward for the American people.  And that’s why he would set up a system where he would have people who are focused on his post-presidency life who can start working and planning for that stuff now so that the President himself doesn’t have to dedicate nearly as much time or energy or thought to that process, and he’ll have ample time post-presidency to think about what those kinds of priorities will be.

Q    And what does the selection of the South Side of Chicago say about the legacy of his presidency?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, obviously the South Side of Chicago is where the President got his political start, and the President spent many of his formative years in that community.  And it’s where he met his wife, it’s where he raised his kids, but it’s also where he got interested in politics and interested in public service, and interested in trying to work through the government system to benefit people all across the country but also ensure that we’re expanding economic opportunity for everybody and particularly for middle-class families and for those who are trying to get into the middle class.  And I think that’s what makes the South Side of Chicago an appropriate venue for the future Obama Presidential Library.

Q    And getting back to Putin, is the President trying to test the waters here to see if that relationship can be improved?  Is that why the Secretary met with him?  What’s going on?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, no, I would not describe it that way.  I would describe this as part of our regular efforts to communicate with the Russian government.  Secretary of State John Kerry --

Q    He could do that with Foreign Minister Lavrov.  This has been -- how long has it been since a high-level person from this administration has met with Vladimir Putin?  I would imagine it has been a while.

MR. EARNEST:  It probably has been a few months, at least, since the President spoke to him on the phone.

Q    A significant meeting -- it seems to me this is a significant meeting.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think any time that you’re meeting with the Russian President and it’s the Secretary of State who is doing it, then, yes, that would be an important meeting.  But it is part and parcel of our ongoing effort to communicate with the Russian government on a wide range of issues.  Many of those issues will be difficult ones to discuss around the table because we have pretty -- we have significant differences with them when it comes to the need for Russia to respect the basic territorial integrity of their Ukrainian neighbors. 

At the same time, there are other areas where we're able to work more constructively and cooperatively to advance the interests of both our countries.  And I’m confident that issues in both categories will get significant attention in today’s talks.

Q    Maybe I’m beating around the bush too much, I’ll get right to it.  So the G7 meeting is coming up next month.  There’s no possibility that Russia could be invited back into the G7 and it will become the G8 -- certainly not within the next month I would imagine.  Is that kind of conversation at all happening?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, at this point, I think that's pretty difficult to imagine.  We’ve laid out a long list of concerns that we have with Russian behavior.  But, Jim, I’d be remiss if I didn't point out that we’ve also been very clear, both in public and in private, with the Russians about what kind of steps they can take to essentially reduce the amount of isolation that they're currently facing. 

We’ve seen that the Russian economy has weakened significantly, both because of declining energy prices, but also because of the sanctions that have been put in place by the United States in coordination with our European allies.  And we’ve been very clear that we’d be prepared to take some steps to relax or even remove those sanctions if Russia started to live up to the commitments that they had made in the context of the Minsk Implementation Plan.  And there’s obviously a lot of work for them to do to live up to those commitments because thus far they haven’t. 

But if there’s any mystery about what will be required for Russia to be able to start to enjoy the benefits of a more normal relationship with countries around the world and with countries in Europe and certainly the United States, there shouldn’t be, because we’ve been very clear about what kinds of steps we’d like to see them take.

But I guess my point is I don't envision those -- I’m happy to be proven wrong, but I don't envision those steps being completed in advance of next month’s G7 meeting.

Q    You were talking about Russia and space, and it sounded somewhat more optimistic than some of the language you've heard from this administration over the last several months with respect to Russia and their isolation.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think that underscores the complexity of our relationship, and it certainly doesn't in any way diminish the very serious concerns that we have with Russia’s failure to respect the territorial integrity of their Ukrainian neighbors.

Chris.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  The organizers of the movement to put a woman on $20 bill have announced that they have voted that -- that the public has voted for Harriett Tubman.

MR. EARNEST:   A wonderful choice.

Q    And they have delivered a petition to the White House formally asking the President to take action on this.  Is he even aware of this?  Would he direct I guess it would be Secretary Lew to look into it any further?

MR. EARNEST:  This organization has been quite effective at generating media attention, and the President, as an avid consumer of the news, I’m confident has at last a general awareness of their efforts.  I don't know if he’s aware of the petition that they delivered.  But for questions about the currency, I’d refer you to the Treasury Department and Secretary Lew.

Q    Care to venture a guess on how likely it is we’ll see a woman on the $20 by 2020?

MR. EARNEST:  No.  (Laughter.) 

Q    Going back to trade for a minute.  Beyond the meeting that you referenced with Senator Murray, what else has the White House been doing in these last couple days to make a last push?  Has the President been making calls?  Has Denis McDonough been making calls?  Or at this point, are you just counting on the Senate to resolve this procedural snafu?

MR. EARNEST:  There have been a number of calls that have been placed by everyone -- by many people at the White House, by many senior White House officials, up to and including the President.  I don't have any details about those conversations or those phone calls to share with you.

I think there were reports that the President has scheduled a meeting yesterday with a small group of Senate Democrats that had to be put off because of the voting schedule on the floor of the United States Senate.  You might call that a scheduling snafu.  But these kinds of things crop up.  And I think -- I mention it only to highlight that this gives you a pretty good indication of our ongoing efforts to engage members of the United States Senate and to encourage them to support legislation that would give the President the authority that he needs to complete the agreement, and the authority that he needs to enforce it.

Lesley.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  I wanted to go back to the library.  The President has said that he will not be involved in raising money for it himself.   But a lot of good-government --

MR. EARNEST:  While he’s in office.

Q    While he’s in office, yes.  But a lot of good-government groups have suggested that it still raises the possibility of conflicts of interest by having groups that he’s very much affiliated with raising money for the library.  Does the White House consider this a conflict?  And have you done anything to prevent it?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’d refer you to my colleagues at the foundation who will be steeped in all these details.  But I can tell you that there are a number of steps that the foundation is planning to take to ensure that we live up to the high standard that the President established as a candidate for this office.

The foundation will not accept donations from PACs or lobbyists while the President is in office.  The foundation will not accept donations from foreign governments while the President is in office.  And the foundation intends to disclose on a quarterly basis the donations that they do receive in excess of $200 or $250 -- again to sort of fulfill the transparency that the President has talked about quite a bit.

Go ahead.

Q    Was that something that was worked out with the White House to avoid potential conflicts of interest?

MR. EARNEST:  Certainly, the foundation was interested in living up to the very high standard that the President himself established.  I don't know, frankly, if there are any specific conversations that took place between the White House and the foundation.  But again, based on the fact that the President had appointed to the foundation people who are intimately aware of his knowledge and his approach to these issues in the past, understood that it would be a priority for the foundation to live up to that high standard that the President himself set in the context of his campaign.

Alexis.

Q    To clarify, you're saying, just to make sure, any donor who would like to give to the library while the President is serving as President who would like to give more than $200 has to agree that their donation will be made public?

MR. EARNEST:  That is my understanding.  You should confirm that with the foundation.  But that's my understanding of the rules that they’ve established.

Dave.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  At the GCC summit later this week, does the President intend to bring up human rights concerns in countries that are participating?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that will not be the focus of the meeting.  Obviously, this will be an important opportunity for the United States to deepen and modernize our security cooperation with our GCC partners. 

Much of the conversation will be focused on what these countries can do to better coordinate their own security measures.  So there’s been a lot of talk about sort of what -- what sort of additional assistance will the United States provide.  Obviously there is obviously a significant U.S. military presence in the region.  Each of these countries has a significant military-to-military relationship with the United States when it comes to getting military hardware and security hardware to provide for the security of their country.

The thing that the United States believes would significantly enhance the effectiveness of these countries when providing for their own security is to strengthen their interoperability.  That is to say, what can they do to make sure that the countries are not relying on the United States to make sure that their coordinating their efforts, but what can they do directly to coordinate their efforts. 

Let me give you one example.  There’s been some discussion about how important ballistic missile defense is to the national security of any of these countries, and many of these countries do have a robust infrastructure when it comes to missile defense. But, of course, ballistic missiles don’t respect political boundaries and that the architecture of this missile defense would be greatly enhanced if you had missile defense not just for an individual country but for the entire region, and that you had these missile defense batteries essentially working in concert to protect all of the countries in the GCC. 

And so this is indicative of how important it is for this interoperability to be established and for these individual governments to work together to enhance their security.  It doesn’t necessarily reflect a need for additional hardware; it reflects a need for a commitment to pursuing this kind of cooperative relationship with their neighbors.

Q    Getting back to the human rights question.  Many human rights activists are saying today that the people who are participating in this meeting with the President from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE, are the very people that need to hear from the President about human rights abuses in their countries because they’re the ones who are in charge of the state security apparatus.  And these human rights activists are questioning whether the President is “tough enough” to raise those kind of concerns with these people.  Do you have a response to that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that’s an interesting way to put it.  Again, let me just reiterate that the meetings will be focused on regional security cooperation.  But the President and members of his team will -- as they do in every meeting -- stress the need for long-term solutions that build more inclusive governance and service delivery in conflict-ridden societies, promote reconciliation, protect all minorities and respect universal human rights, including freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly.

This is a priority for the United States both when it comes to our values and our priorities.  But what we also know is that respect for basic universal human rights has an impact on broader long-term regional stability, and that if we -- advancing these goals will benefit the United States and we know will enhance the prospects for long-term regional stability among these partners of ours.

John.

Q    Thank you, Josh.  Two questions.  First, Greece today made its payment back to the IMF of its latest portion of the loan that it had.  Now, there’s been some concern that it might not be able to do so the next time it's up.  The President, we know, has talked to Chancellor Merkel about this.  Is he in regular consultation with her and Prime Minister Tsipras on the Greek loan repayment?

MR. EARNEST:  The President is not.  But the Treasury Secretary, Jack Lew, has been engaged with his counterparts and with some European leaders on this issue, with some regularity.

This is the way that the United States facilitated previous rounds of these financial difficulties.  We’re obviously aware of the significant economic consequences and financial consequences for Greece being able to meet its obligations and continue to be a part of the currency union in Europe.  And that’s why you’ve seen Secretary Lew be actively engaged both with his counterparts but also with some European leaders, including Prime Minister Tsipras, when it comes to trying to facilitate these kinds of solutions. 

But ultimately -- and what we have said is the United States is prepared to support Europe as they confront these challenges. But ultimately it's going to be the responsibility of Greece and the EU and the other multilateral institutions that are involved to resolving these difficulties.

Q    Turning to the home front and Congress, a question about TPP.  Two weeks ago, Chairman Paul Ryan, of the House Ways and Means Committee, insisted that the agreement contains nothing dealing with immigration.  And later, Chairman Goodlatte, of the Judiciary Committee, put out a statement praising USTR Froman for not including immigration.  Now, Senator Sessions and some other lawmakers have said it does indeed include portions of the comprehensive immigration package in a trade deal.  Who is right on this, can the White House say?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think I would trust the word of Ambassador Froman.  He obviously has the principal responsibility for negotiating this agreement.  And I know that this is a discussion that he’s had with members of Congress quite frequently. 

And we believe that the way to ultimately resolve our broken immigration system is to pass legislation that would finally bring some accountability to our broken immigration system.  And we believe that’s something that Congress should do, and we’ve made that case for a long time.  But I do not envision that being coupled together with this other economic priority, which is the passage of TPA legislation that would give the President the authority that he needs to complete a TPP agreement and the authority that he needs to enforce it.

Q    So you’re saying that Chairman Ryan and Chairman Goodlatte are correct when they said TPP has nothing to do with immigration?

MR. EARNEST:  And I think they said that based on their own conversations with Ambassador Froman.  And considering that he is the principal negotiator here, I think he’s an awfully good source.  There’s probably not a better one.

Cheryl.

Q    Thanks.  The President, in his comments this morning on poverty, said it would take some money to invest in early childhood education, worker training and infrastructure jobs.  But the bills coming out of Congress right now -- the spending bills still keep sequestration.  What progress have you made in trying to come to agreement on spending this year?

MR. EARNEST:  Not much.  We’ve obviously raised some significant concerns about some of the appropriations bills that are working their way through the committee process.  Just yesterday, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, Shaun Donovan, sent a letter to members of the Transportation and Housing Appropriations Subcommittee to raise some significant concerns with the legislation that they were working on.

The early draft of that legislation includes a billion-dollar cut in our infrastructure investments; it reflects a significant cut in the Choice Neighborhoods program that would significantly underfund that important priority, particularly when we’re talking about issues of expanding opportunity -- economic opportunity for everybody in this country.

So we have some pretty significant concerns about the current status of those appropriations efforts.  But there’s still ample time for Democrats and Republicans to do what Paul Ryan and Patty Murray did a couple years ago, which is to sit down together in bipartisan fashion and figure out a way that Congress can go beyond the sequester caps that hardly anybody supports.

So that’s what we’re hopeful that they’ll be able to do.  And if we see that Democrats and Republicans are able to work together in that effort, they’ll have the full support of the White House as they try to find that bipartisan common ground.  We believe that would be good for the political process, but most importantly, it would be good for our economy to avoid a government shutdown and to make sure that our priorities both when it comes to defense but also to our economy are properly recognized.

Kevin.

Q    Josh, thanks.  I want to take you back to September 2012, Ben Rhodes’s now infamous memo --

MR. EARNEST:  I think it’s infamous for some of the way that’s been covered in the media.  (Laughter.)  That’s the reason it’s infamous.  But go ahead.

Q    Indeed, yes.  At the time, he said it was not explicitly about Benghazi.  And I want to read to you something that Jay Carney said, your predecessor, in April 2014, when referring to that memo.  He said, in fact, this was not -- it was explicitly not about Benghazi.  It was about the overall situation in the region, in the Muslim world, where you saw protests outside of embassy facilities across the region, including Cairo, Sana’a, Khartoum and Tunis.  Yesterday, former CIA Deputy Director Mike Morell said that Jay misled reporters and the public when he suggested that this was a broad sweep of protests in the region and not specifically about Benghazi.  What’s your reaction to that?

MR. EARNEST:  My reaction is that Mr. Morell makes clear that the talking points surrounding the Benghazi attack were not politicized.  In fact, what he wrote is, “There is no such conspiracy, as I have already explained, and there is no evidence to support such a theory.  No committee of Congress that has studied Benghazi has come to this conclusion.”  He went so far as to call Benghazi the “poster child of the intrusion of politics into national security.”  He went on to say, “I believe Benghazi is an example of what is wrong with American politics -- politicians focused on scoring political points rather than working together to advance the interests of our country.”  And with that, I would whole-heartedly agree with Mr. Morell.

Q    And yesterday he said Jay misled the public and reporters in suggesting that that memo was not politicized.  Is he lying then, or is he lying now?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I think that the point that Mr. Morell makes in his book is the relevant one, which is that it is false to suggest that this thing has been politicized, this tragedy has been politicized by the administration.  I think, unfortunately, we have seen some -- again, as Mr. Morell says -- some who have sought to rather cynically try to score political points by politicizing what is a legitimate tragedy.  And that’s unfortunate. 

Q    Why would McDonough then send Morell with Rice to the Hill, for example, whose talking points, it seems pretty evident, clearly mirrored the memo from Rhodes rather than the CIA’s assessment?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what’s clear is that this administration -- as we have throughout this whole saga of supposed congressional oversight, is to provide members of Congress with the most direct, specific, granular knowledge possible.  And one way to make sure that members of Congress had good insight into what the intelligence community was thinking was to send the Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency up to Capitol Hill to explain it to them.

Q    Last thing.  On a much lighter note, on Brady.  Four games, a million bucks, a couple of draft picks -- appropriate?

MR. EARNEST:  That’s a decision for the NFL to make and --

Q    But what do you think?  (Laughter.)

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, well, I’ve got lots of thoughts, but none I’m willing to share here.

All right, thank you, Kevin.

Chris.

Q    Josh, today the Food and Drug Administration issued draft guidance that would eliminate the lifetime ban prohibiting gay and bisexual men from donating blood, and replace it with a policy requiring one year of abstinence before they can donate.  Does the President think this is a good final policy, or should the FDA move on to eliminate the ban altogether?

MR. EARNEST:  It’s my understanding, based on what I’ve heard about this, that the FDA has not rendered a final judgment on this, that this is the subject of ongoing consideration both by scientists but also by the public health professionals at the FDA that have a responsibility for ensuring that the American people and our blood supply is safe.  Obviously we’re going to be guided by the science when it comes to this.

Q    The President has said before that he opposes discrimination.  Why wouldn’t that naturally apply to the issue of blood donation from gay and bisexual men?

MR. EARNEST:  Because, again, this will be something that is going to be guided by the science.  And the President does have a very strong record when it comes to ensuring that we’re not discriminating against people because of who they love, and the President feels strongly about that principle being abided by.  He also feels strongly about making sure that we have an effective system that manages the reserve blood supply of the country.  And we’re mindful of that, and that’s why we’ve got some of the best scientists in the world at the FDA who are looking at this issue and making sure that we can reach an agreement -- or reach a policy that is in the best interest of the country.

Q    One more thing.  The Texas House of Representatives is scheduled to vote today on a bill that would apparently seek to defy a Supreme Court ruling in favor of same-sex marriage by prohibiting the use of local and state funds to issue a marriage license to a same-sex couple.  Is the President aware of this legislation and does he oppose it?

MR. EARNEST:  I’ve only seen some news coverage of this.  I’d refrain from putting myself on the hook for every piece of legislation that is considered by a state legislature.  But obviously this is among the things that the Supreme Court is considering now and will ultimately have a decision on hopefully later this summer.

Q    Does it sound like bad legislation to you? 

MR. EARNEST:  I wouldn’t draw any conclusions based on the way that it sounds at this point.  But I think the President’s values when it comes to this question are very clearly well-articulated.

Jordan.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  Leader McConnell and Senator Hatch are saying that Senator Wyden backtracked on a commitment for a deal that would bring TPA and TAA to the floor only.  Is that the White House’s understanding as well?  And does the White House still view Senator Wyden as a reliable partner on this trade issue?

MR. EARNEST:  Jordan, what we saw in the Senate Finance Committee was the Chairman, Senator Hatch, working closely with the Ranking Member, Senator Wyden, to put together a trade proposal that ensures the President has the authority that he needs to complete a TPP agreement and the authority that he needs to enforce it.  And we were pleased to see that they were able to work in bipartisan fashion together to put together this bipartisan compromise. 

Then what they did was they worked with members of their committee to craft an agreement that attracted the support of the majority of Republicans and the majority of Democrats.  And that is effective bipartisan work at the committee level in the United States Senate.  And we’re hopeful that that kind of spirit and that kind of focus on the content of legislation that does stand to benefit the American economy will prevail as the Senate works its way through this procedural snafu.

Q    One more on Israel.  The White House said after the elections that it would conduct a reassessment of the U.S.’s diplomatic relationship with Israel.  Now that the government has been formed, is there an update on that reassessment?  Have you guys made any decisions on how you’re going to move forward?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me quibble with one aspect of your question, which is I don't think that there is a reconsideration of our diplomatic relationship with Israel.  The relationship between the United States and Israel is strong and it is focused primarily on the critically important security cooperation between our two countries.  That security relationship is critical to the very existence of Israel, and critical to their national security.  But it also has important benefits for the American people and for American national security. 

And the President did indicate that the Prime Minister’s comments about the pursuit of a two-state solution necessarily prompted a reconsideration of our approach to trying to resolve the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians, but that in no way inhibited our ability to communicate with the Israelis, particularly when it comes to our security cooperation.  And the United States has continued to take a variety of steps even in a range of multilateral fora to stand up diplomatically for Israel even in situations that left the United States feeling a little isolated.

But that underscores the depth of not just the President’s commitment to our relationship with Israel, but it reflects the depth of the relationship between our two countries -- one that has persisted across generations, and one that has persisted even as the leaders of the two countries have been representing different political parties.  And that kind of bipartisan commitment to Israel is a hallmark of that relationship and reflects the deep ties between our two countries that endure to this day.

Q    So we shouldn’t expect any announcements or changes to be made?

MR. EARNEST:  No -- well, again, I wouldn’t expect any broad announcements.  But the approach that we take to trying to facilitate a resolution of the conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians is necessarily different because of the comments made by the Prime Minister in the closing days of his election.

I’ll give you the last one.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  What is objectionable about having the currency language in the TPA bill?

MR. EARNEST:  The concern that we have expressed about some of the currency language that's included is twofold.  The first is that the United States pursuing regular sort of diplomatic economic negotiations has been effective in addressing some of the currency practices of other countries that have put the United States at a disadvantage.

So again, a couple of examples that I’ve cited a couple of times.  Since 2010, China’s exchange rate is up nearly 30 percent on a real, effective basis.  And that's because when U.S. officials are meeting with China in the context of the G20 and in the context of the IMF that there’s an opportunity for us to relay our concerns on this issue, and that diplomacy has been effective in leveling the playing field -- or at least beginning to level the playing field for American businesses who are competing against Chinese enterprises that may benefit from a devalued currency.

We’ve seen a similar phenomenon in Japan that over the last three years Japan has not intervened in the foreign exchange market.  There were significant concerns by U.S. manufacturers, including some in the auto industry, about Japanese interventions.  And we haven’t seen that over the last three years.  And again, that's because of the advocacy of U.S. officials.

So the point is we do have mechanisms in place that will allow us to advance the interests of the U.S. economy when it comes to currency policy.

The other concern that we have is that the proposal -- one of the proposals that's currently being considered by the Congress would -- or at least could potentially undermine the independence of the Federal Reserve, and it could make it easier for other countries to try to encroach on the ability of the Federal Reserve to make independent decisions about what they believe is in the best interests of the U.S. economy.  And the President doesn't believe that's good for the economy at all in this country.  It certainly is not good for American businesses and American workers.

So the point is we believe that we have a variety of effective mechanisms already that allow the administration -- as we’ve effectively done when it comes to China and Japan -- to protect the interest of the United States and our economy when it comes to currency policy.

Q    Then is the White House suggesting lobbying Minority Leader Reid to drop the idea of rolling all four together?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we have made clear what our views are both on this specific topic and more broadly about the need for legislation that would give the President the authority that he needs to complete the agreement and to enforce it.  And that's the guidance that we have shared in all of the conversations that we’ve had with members of Congress.  And what we're counting on is that Democrats and Republicans in the United States Senate will be able to work together in the same way that Democrats and Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee did to find bipartisan common ground and pass legislation that the President believes is critically important to our long-term economic success right here in the United States.

Thanks, everybody.

Q    Thanks, Josh.

END
2:25 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Signs Kentucky Disaster Declaration

The President today declared a major disaster exists in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and ordered federal aid to supplement commonwealth and local recovery efforts in the area affected by a severe winter storm, snowstorm, flooding, landslides, and mudslides during the period of March 3-9, 2015.

Federal funding is available to commonwealth and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe winter storm, snowstorm, flooding, landslides, and mudslides in the counties of Anderson, Bell, Bourbon, Boyd, Breathitt, Bullitt, Butler, Calloway, Carter, Casey, Clay, Daviess, Elliott, Estill, Fleming, Floyd, Franklin, Fulton, Gallatin, Grant, Greenup, Hancock, Harrison, Hart, Jackson, Johnson, Knott, Knox, LaRue, Lawrence, Lee, Leslie, Letcher, Lewis, Magoffin, Marshall, Martin, Mason, Menifee, Metcalfe, Morgan, Nicholas, Ohio, Owen, Owsley, Perry, Pike, Powell, Robertson,  Rockcastle, Rowan, Spencer, Trigg, Washington, Webster, Whitley, and Woodford.

In addition, federal funding is available to commonwealth and eligible local governments on a cost-sharing basis for snow assistance for a continuous 48 hour period during or proximate to the incident period in the counties of Anderson, Boyd, Bourbon, Bullitt, Butler, Calloway, Carter, Daviess, Fleming, Franklin, Fulton, Gallatin, Grant, Hancock, Harrison, Hart, LaRue, Lewis, Marshall, Mason, Nicholas, Ohio, Owen, Robertson,  Rowan, Spencer, Trigg, Washington, and Woodford.

Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures for all counties within the commonwealth.

W. Craig Fugate, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named Joe M. Girot as the Federal Coordinating Officer for federal recovery operations in the affected area. 

FEMA said additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the commonwealth and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.

3 Important Thoughts the President Shared on Poverty in America:

Watch on YouTube

Today at Georgetown University, President Obama sat down with Harvard professor Robert Putnam and American Enterprise Institute president Arthur Brooks to share his views on poverty in America and what we can do to ensure every American — no matter who they are, where they come from, or where they live — has access to the opportunities they deserve.

The conversation, hosted by the Washington Post’s E.J. Dionne, touched on economic solutions that can broaden opportunity, the political will to support initiatives that expand those opportunities, and the minority communities that are disproportionately impacted by the decision — or failure — to make those investments. The President also offered his candid and personal views on how growing up without a father shaped how he sees these issues today. 

Check out the top three highlights from the conversation here: 

Related Topics: Economy

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in Conversation on Poverty at Georgetown University

Georgetown University
Washington, D.C.

11:39 A.M. EDT

MR. DIONNE:  It's a real honor to be here today with my two Presidents -- President Obama and President DeGioia.  (Laughter.) And my friend, David Brooks, hurled the most vicious insult at me ever once when he said that I was the only person he ever met whose eyes lit up at the words, “panel discussion.”  (Laughter.) And I have to confess my eyes did light up when I was asked to do this particular panel discussion -- and not just for the obvious reason, to my left -- and, again, it's a real honor to be with you, Mr. President -- or Arthur or Bob.

Poverty is a subject we talk about mainly when tragic events, such as those we witnessed recently in Baltimore, grab our attention.  Then we push it aside; we bury it; we say it's not politically shrewd to talk about it.  So I salute Georgetown, my friend John Carr and Galen Carey, and all the other extraordinary people who are gathered here for the poverty summit from all religious traditions all over the country.

Our friend, Jim Wallis, once said that if you cut everything Jesus said about the poor out of the Gospel you have a book full of holes.  And these are evangelicals, Catholics and others who understand what the Scripture said. 

Just two quick organizing points on our discussion.  The first is that when it's time to go, please keep your seat so the President can be escorted out.  The other is that Bob and Arthur and I all agreed that we should direct somewhat more attention to President Obama than to the other members of the panel.  (Laughter.)  I just say that -- I say that in advance so that you know this was our call and not some exercise in executive power. (Laughter.)  This was our decision to do this.  (Applause.) 

And in any event, we hope this will be a back-and-forth kind of discussion.  Bob and Arthur, feel free to interrupt the President if you feel like it.  (Laughter.) 

My first question, Mr. President, is the obvious one.  A friend of mine said yesterday, when do Presidents do panels?  And what came to mind is the late Admiral Stockdale, “Who am I?  Why am I here?”  (Laughter.)  And I'd like to ask you why you decided -- this is a very unusual venue for a President to put himself in -- and I'd like to ask you where do you hope this discussion will lead beyond today? 

And I was struck with something you said in your speech last week.  You said, politicians talk about poverty and inequality, and then gut policies that help alleviate poverty and reverse inequality.  Why are you doing this, and how do you want us to come out of here?  
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, I want to thank President DeGioia, the Georgetown community, all the groups -- nonprofits, faith-based groups and others -- who are hosting this today.  And I want to thank this terrific panel.

I think that we are at a moment -- in part because of what’s happened in Baltimore and Ferguson and other places, but in part because a growing awareness of inequality in our society -- where it may be possible not only to refocus attention on the issue of poverty, but also maybe to bridge some of the gaps that have existed and the ideological divides that have prevented us from making progress.

And there are a lot of folks here who I have worked with -- they disagree with me on some issues, but they have great sincerity when it comes to wanting to deal with helping the least of these.  And so this is a wonderful occasion for us to join together.

Part of the reason I thought this venue would be useful and I wanted to have a dialogue with Bob and Arthur is that we have been stuck, I think for a long time, in a debate that creates a couple of straw men.  The stereotype is that you’ve got folks on the left who just want to pour more money into social programs, and don't care anything about culture or parenting or family structures, and that's one stereotype.  And then you’ve got cold-hearted, free market, capitalist types who are reading Ayn Rand and -- (laughter) -- think everybody are moochers.  And I think the truth is more complicated. 

I think that there are those on the conservative spectrum who deeply care about the least of these, deeply care about the poor; exhibit that through their churches, through community groups, through philanthropic efforts, but are suspicious of what government can do.  And then there are those on the left who I think are in the trenches every day and see how important parenting is and how important family structures are, and the connective tissue that holds communities together and recognize that that contributes to poverty when those structures fray, but also believe that government and resources can make a difference in creating an environment in which young people can succeed despite great odds.

And it seems to me that if coming out of this conversation we can have a both/and conversation rather than either/or conversation, then we’ll be making some progress. 

And the last point I guess I want to make is I also want to emphasize we can do something about these issues.  I think it is a mistake for us to suggest that somehow every effort we make has failed and we are powerless to address poverty.  That’s just not true.  First of all, just in absolute terms, the poverty rate when you take into account tax and transfer programs, has been reduced about 40 percent since 1967. 

Now, that does not lessen our concern about communities where poverty remains chronic.  It does suggest, though, that we have been able to lessen poverty when we decide we want to do something about it.  In every low-income community around the country, there are programs that work to provide ladders of opportunity to young people; we just haven't figured out how to scale them up. 

And so one of the things I’m always concerned about is cynicism.  My Chief of Staff, Denis McDonough -- we take walks around the South Lawn, usually when the weather is good, and a lot of it is policy talk, sometimes it’s just talk about values. And one of our favorite sayings is, our job is to guard against cynicism, particularly in this town.  And I think it’s important when it comes to dealing with issues of poverty for us to guard against cynicism, and not buy the idea that the poor will always be with us and there’s nothing we can do -- because there’s a lot we can do.  The question is do we have the political will, the communal will to do something about it.

MR. DIONNE:  Thank you, Mr. President.  I feel as a journalist maybe I’m the one representative of cynicism up here
-- (laughter) -- so I’ll try to do my job.  I want to go through the panel and come back to you, Mr. President.  I want to invite Bob, and I’m going to encourage us to reach for solutions.  But before we get there, I think it’s important to say that your book, Bob, your book, “Our Kids,” is above all a moral call on the country to think about all the kids in the country who have been left out as our kids, in some deep way.  And you make the point that the better off and the poor are now so far apart that the fortunate don’t even see the lives of the unlucky and the left behind.  You wrote, “Before I began this research, I was like that.” 

And following on what the President said, you insist that the decline in social mobility, the blocking of the American Dream for so many is a purple problem.  And I may have some questions later on that, but I really would like you to lay out the red and blue components.  And also, how do we break through a politics in which food stamp recipients are still somehow cast as privileged or the poor are demonized.  But I’d like you to lay out sort of the moral call of your book.

MR. PUTNAM:  Thanks, E.J., and thanks to the President and to Arthur for joining me in this conversation.

I think in this domain there’s good news and bad news, and it’s important to begin with the bad news because we have to understand where we are.  The President is absolutely right that the War on Poverty did make a real difference, but it made a difference more for poverty among people of my age than it did for poverty among kids. 

And with respect to kids, I completely agree with the President that we know about some things that would work and things that would make a real difference in the lives of poor kids, but what the book that you’ve deferred to, “Our Kids,” what it presents is a lot of evidence of growing gaps between rich kids and poor kids; that over the last 30 or 40 years, things have gotten better and better for kids coming from well-off homes, and worse and worse for kids coming from less well-off homes. 

And I don’t mean Bill Gates and some homeless person.  I mean people coming from college-educated homes -- their kids are doing better and better, and people coming from high school-educated homes, they’re kids aren’t.  And it’s not just that there’s this class gap, but a class gap on our watch -- I don’t mean just the President’s watch, but I mean on my generation’s watch -- that gap has grown. 

And you can see it in measures of family stability.  You can see it in measures of the investments that parents are able to make in their kids, the investments of money and the investments of time.  You can see it in the quality of schools kids go to.  You can see it in the character of the social and community support that kids -- rich kids and poor kids are getting from their communities.  Church attendance is a good example of that, actually.  Churches are an important source of social support for kids outside their own family, but church attendance is down much more rapidly among kids coming from impoverished backgrounds than among kids coming from wealthy backgrounds. 

And so I think what all of that evidence suggests is that we do face, I think, actually a serious crisis in which, increasingly, the most important decision that anybody makes is choosing their parents.  And if -- like my grandchildren are really smart, they were -- the best decision they ever made was to choose college-educated parents and great grandparents.  But out there, someplace else, there is another bunch of kids who are just as talented and just as -- in principle -- just as hardworking, but who happened to choose parents who weren’t very well-educated or weren’t high-income, and those kids’ fate is being determined by things that they had no control over.  And that’s fundamentally unfair. 

It also is, by the way, bad for our economy, because when we have this large number of kids growing up in poverty, it’s not like that’s going to make things better for my grandchildren.  It’s going to make things worse for my grandchildren.  So this is, in principle, a solution that we -- a problem that we ought to find solutions to.

And historically, this is a kind of problem that Americans have faced before and have solved, and this is the basis for my optimism.  There have been previous periods in American history when we’ve had a great gap between rich and poor, when we’ve ignored the least of these, in which we’ve -- I’m thinking of the Gilded Age at the end of the 19th century -- and both of you have written about that period, in which there was a great gap between rich and poor and we were ignoring lots of kids, especially lots of immigrant kids.  And America seemed to be going to hell in a hand basket.  And there was a dominant philosophy, social Darwinism, which said that it’s better for everybody if everybody is selfish, and the devil take the hindmost. 

But that, unlike some of the ideology of Ayn Rand that you referred to -- but that period was quickly -- not quickly -- but was overcome by a real awakening of the conscience of America across party lines, with the important contribution of religious leaders and religious people, to the fact that these are all our kids. 

And now is not the time to rehearse all of the lessons of that earlier period, but I think it does actually give me grounds for hope.  This is a kind of problem that we could solve as long as we all recognize that it’s in everybody’s interest to raise up these poor kids and not to leave them in the dust.

MR. DIONNE:  Thank you very much.  By the way, let the record show the President was not looking at Arthur when he referred to cold-hearted capitalists.  (Laughter.)  But it is nice to have somebody here from the AEI.

MR. BROOKS:  Well, D.J., when the President said that, I was just thinking -- what was going through my head was, please don’t look at me, please don’t look at me.  (Laughter.)  But you notice when Bob said this -- about the social Darwinism, he pointed at me.  (Laughter.)  So I'm more outnumbered than my Thanksgiving table in Seattle, let me tell you.  (Laughter.)  

MR. DIONNE:  You just have to look into your heart, Arthur. And in fact, that’s kind of what I want to ask you to do here.  I mean, your views on these subjects have actually changed, and I think it's one of the reasons you wanted to join us today.

Back in 2010, you talked about makers and takers in society and a culture of redistribution.  But in February 2014, you wrote a very important article and commentary -- the open-handed toward your brothers -- and you said we have to declare peace on the safety net, which I think is a really important thing to say.

And as the President suggested, the safety net we have has actually cut poverty substantially.  So twin questions:  Could you talk about how and why your own views have changed -- if I’ve fairly characterized that.  And in the spirit we’re celebrating here of trans-ideological nonpartisanship -- now, there’s a mouthful for you -- in that spirit, where can Republicans cooperate with Democrats, conservatives with liberals, on safety net issues like making the earned income tax credit permanent or expanding the child tax credit?  I mean, where can we find not just verbal common ground, but actual common ground to get things done for the least among us?

MR. BROOKS:  Thank you, E.J.  And thank you, Mr. President. It's an honor to be here and with all of you.  This is such an important exercise in bringing Catholics and evangelicals together, but having a public discussion.

One of the main things that I do as President of AEI is to talk publicly about issues and start a conversation with my colleagues in a way that I hope can stimulate the conversation and spread it around the country. 

At the American Enterprise Institute -- where we have a longstanding history of work on the nature of American capitalism -- when we’re focusing very deeply on poverty, it sends a signal to a lot of people that are deeply involved in the free enterprise movement.  My colleague, Robert Doar is here -- he came to AEI because poverty is the most important thing to him. And indeed, the reason I came into the free enterprise movement many years ago is because poverty is the thing I care about the most. 

And in point of fact, 2 billion people around the world have been lifted up out of poverty because of ideas revolving around free enterprise and free trade, and the globalization of ideas of sharing through property rights and rule of law, and all the things that the President is talking about in policy debates right now. 

That’s why I'm in this particular movement.  But we’ve gotten into a partisan moment where we substitute a moral consensus about how we serve the least of these, our brothers and sisters, where we pretend that that moral consensus is impossible,+++++++ and we blow up policy differences until they become a holy war.  That’s got to stop because it's completely unnecessary.  (Applause.)  And we can stop that, absolutely, with a couple of key principles. 

So how are we on the center right talking about poverty in the most effective way?  Number one is with a conceptual matter. We have a grave tendency on both the left and the right to talk about poor people as “the other.”  Remember in Matthew 25, these are our brothers and sisters.  Jim Olsen and I have this roadshow -- we go to campuses and everybody wants to set up something, right-left debates, and it never works out, because it turns out we both have a commitment to the teachings of the Savior when it comes to treating the least of these, our brothers and sisters. 

When you talk about people as your brothers and sisters you don’t talk about them as liabilities to manage.  They’re not liabilities to manage.  They’re assets to develop because every one of us made in God’s image is an asset to develop.  That’s a completely different approach to poverty alleviation.  That’s a human capital approach to poverty alleviation.  That’s what we can do to stimulate that conversation on the political right, just as it can be on the political left.

One concept that rides along with that is to point out -- and this is what I do to many of my friends on Capitol Hill -- I remind them that just because people are on public assistance doesn’t mean they want to be on public assistance.  And that’s the difference between people who factually are making a living and who are accepting public assistance.  It's an important matter to remember about the motivations of people and humanizing them.  And then the question is, how can we come together?  How can we come together?

I have, indeed, written that it's time to declare peace on the safety net.  And I say that as a political conservative.  Why?  Because Ronald Reagan said that; because Friedrich Hayek said that.  This is not a radical position.  In fact, the social safety net is one of the greatest achievements of free enterprise -- that we could have the wealth and largesse as a society, that we can help take care of people who are poor that we've never even met.  It's ahistoric; it's never happened before.  We should be proud of that.

But then when I talk to conservative policymakers, and say how should you distinguish yourself from the traditional positions in a marketplace of ideas from progressives, you should also talk about the fact that the safety net should be limited to people who are truly indigent, as opposed to being spread around in a way that metastasizes into middle-class entitlements and imperils our economy. 

And the third part is that help should always come with the dignifying power of work to the extent that we can.  Then we can have, with these three ideas -- declaring peace on the safety net, safety net only for the indigent, and always with work -- then we can have an interesting moral consensus and policy competition of ideas and maybe make some progress.

MR. DIONNE:  Thank you.  In fact, I'm hoping people will challenge each other about what that actually means in terms of policy.  And I want to invite the President to do that.

I'm tempted, Mr. President, to ask you to sort of go in a couple of directions at once.  One is, I am, again, hoping that you can enlist Arthur as your lobbyist on this.  One kind of question I want to ask is if John Boehner and Mitch McConnell were watching this and suddenly had a conversion -- and there are a lot of religious people in the audience, so miracles --

THE PRESIDENT:  I assure you they’re not watching this.  (Laughter.)  But it's a hypothetical.  (Laughter.) 

MR. DIONNE:  Well, it's a religious audience.  I believe in miracles.  (Laughter.)  So if they said we are so persuaded that it's time we do something about the poor, Mr. President, tell us a few things that we'll actually pass, we'll do this -- when you think about -- we can talk kind of abstractly about the family on this side, and what government can do.  What do you think would actually make a difference?  So that's one kind of question I'm tempted to ask. 

And maybe you could put that into the context of Bob’s mention of the Gilded Age.  As you know, I was much taken by that Osawatomie speech -- I even learned how to pronounce Osawatomie, thanks to you -- back in 20 -- help me.  (Laughter.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  A couple years ago.

MR. DIONNE:  A couple years ago -- 2011.  And it really did put this conversation in context.  We do seem in certain ways to be having the problems we had back then.  So what would you tell Congress?  Please help me on this.  And how do we sort of move out of this Gilded Age feeling kind of period?

THE PRESIDENT:  Let me tease out a couple things that both Bob and Arthur said -- and maybe some of these will be challenging to a couple of them and they may want to respond.  But let me talk about big picture, and then we can talk about specifics. 

First of all, I think we can all stipulate that the best antipoverty program is a job, which confers not just income, but structure and dignity and a sense of connection to community.  Which means we have to spend time thinking about the macro-economy, the broader economy as a whole. 

Now, what has happened is, is that since, let’s say, 1973, over the last 40 years, the share of income going to the bottom 90 percent has shrunk from about 65 percent down to about 53 percent.  It's a big shift.  It's a big transfer.  And so we can't have a conversation about poverty without talking about what’s happened to the middle class and the ladders of opportunity into the middle class. 

And when I read Bob’s book, the first thing that strikes you is when he’s growing up in Ohio, he’s in a community where the banker is living in reasonable proximity to the janitor at the school.  The janitor’s daughter may be going out with the banker’s son.  There are a set of common institutions -- they may attend the same church; they may be members of the same rotary club; they may be active at the same parks -- and all the things that stitch them together.  And that is all contributing to social mobility and to a sense of possibility and opportunity for all kids in that community. 

Now, part of what’s happened is that -- and this is where Arthur and I would probably have some disagreements.  We don’t dispute that the free market is the greatest producer of wealth in history -- it has lifted billions of people out of poverty.  We believe in property rights, rule of law, so forth.  But there has always been trends in the market in which concentrations of wealth can lead to some being left behind.  And what’s happened in our economy is that those who are doing better and better -- more skilled, more educated, luckier, having greater advantages
-- are withdrawing from sort of the commons -- kids start going to private schools; kids start working out at private clubs instead of the public parks.  An anti-government ideology then disinvests from those common goods and those things that draw us together.  And that, in part, contributes to the fact that there’s less opportunity for our kids, all of our kids.

Now, that’s not inevitable.  A free market is perfectly compatible with also us making investment in good public schools, public universities; investments in public parks; investments in a whole bunch -- public infrastructure that grows our economy and spreads it around.  But that’s, in part, what’s been under attack for the last 30 years.  And so, in some ways, rather than soften the edges of the market, we’ve turbocharged it.  And we have not been willing, I think, to make some of those common investments so that everybody can play a part in getting opportunity.

Now, one other thing I’ve got to say about this is that even back in Bob’s day that was also happening.  It’s just it was happening to black people.  And so, in some ways, part of what’s changed is that those biases or those restrictions on who had access to resources that allowed them to climb out of poverty -- who had access to the firefighters job, who had access to the assembly line job, the blue-collar job that paid well enough to be in the middle class and then got you to the suburbs, and then the next generation was suddenly office workers -- all those things were foreclosed to a big chunk of the minority population in this country for decades. 

And that accumulated and built up.  And over time, people with less and less resources, more and more strains -- because it’s hard being poor.  People don’t like being poor.  It’s time-consuming’ it’s stressful.  It’s hard.  And so over time, families frayed.  Men who could not get jobs left.  Mothers who are single are not able to read as much to their kids.  So all that was happening 40 years ago to African Americans. And now what we’re seeing is that those same trends have accelerated and they’re spreading to the broader community. 

But the pattern that, Bob, you’re recording in some of your stories is no different than what William Julius Wilson was talking about when he talked about the truly disadvantaged.  So I say all this -- and I know that was not an answer to your question.  (Laughter.)  I will be willing to answer it, but I think it is important for us at the outset to acknowledge if, in fact, we are going to find common ground, then we also have to acknowledge that there are certain investments we are willing to make as a society, as a whole, in public schools and public universities; in, today, I believe early childhood education; in making sure that economic opportunity is available in communities that are isolated, and that somebody can get a job, and that there’s actually a train that takes folks to where the jobs are  -- that broadband lines are in rural communities and not just in cities.  And those things are not going to happen through market forces alone. 

And if that’s the case, then our government and our budgets have to reflect our willingness to make those investments.  If we don’t make those investments, then we could agree on the earned income tax credit -- which I know Arthur believes in.  We could agree on home visitation for low-income parents.  All those things will make a difference, but the broader trends in our society will make it harder and harder for us to deal with both inequality and poverty. 

And so I think it’s important for us to recognize there is a genuine debate here, and that is what portion of our collective wealth and budget are we willing to invest in those things that allow a poor kid, whether in a rural town, or in Appalachia, or in the inner city, to access what they need both in terms of mentors and social networks, as well as decent books and computers and so forth, in order for them to succeed along the terms that Arthur discussed.

And right now, they don’t have those things, and those things have been stripped away.  You look at state budgets, you look at city budgets, and you look at federal budgets, and we don’t make those same common investments that we used to.  And it’s had an impact.  And we shouldn’t pretend that somehow we have been making those same investments.  We haven’t been.  And there’s been a very specific ideological push not to make those investments.  That’s where the argument comes in.

MR. DIONNE:  And if I could follow up, which gets to the underlying problem where we talk, piously, sometimes, about let’s tear down these ideological red/blue barriers, yet when push comes to shove, these things get rejected.  How do you change the politics of that?  I mean, as you said, Mitch McConnell and John Boehner were unlikely to be watching us -- that actually has a kind of political significance.  Not to this event, but in general. 

THE PRESIDENT:  I was suggesting they’re busy right now.  They’ve got votes.  (Laughter.)

MR. DIONNE:  No, but I think you were saying something else. How do you tear down those barriers?  Because you laid out a fairly robust agenda there.  And I want to -- forgive me, Arthur and Bob -- but I’m curious, how do you get from here to there?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, part of what happened in our politics and part of what shifted from when Bob was young and he was seeing a genuine community -- there were still class divisions in your small town.

MR. PUTNAM:  True.

THE PRESIDENT:  There were probably certain clubs or certain activities that were still restricted to the banker’s son as opposed to the janitor’s son.  But it was more integrated.  Part of what’s happened is, is that elites in a very mobile, globalized world are able to live together, away from folks who are not as wealthy, and so they feel less of a commitment to making those investments.

In that sense -- and what used to be racial segregation now mirrors itself in class segregation and this great sorting that’s taking place.  Now, that creates its own politics.  Right?  I mean, there’s some communities where I don’t know -- not only do I not know poor people, I don’t even know people who have trouble paying the bills at the end of the month.  I just don’t know those people.   And so there’s a less sense of investment in those children.  So that’s part of what’s happened.

But part of it has also been -- there’s always been a strain in American politics where you’ve got the middle class, and the question has been, who are you mad at, if you’re struggling; if you’re working, but you don’t seem to be getting ahead.  And over the last 40 years, sadly, I think there’s been an effort to either make folks mad at folks at the top, or to be mad at folks at the bottom.  And I think the effort to suggest that the poor are sponges, leaches, don’t want to work, are lazy, are undeserving, got traction. 

And, look, it's still being propagated.  I mean, I have to say that if you watch Fox News on a regular basis, it is a constant menu -- they will find folks who make me mad.  I don’t know where they find them.  (Laughter.)  They’re like, I don’t want to work, I just want a free Obama phone -- (laughter) -- or whatever.  And that becomes an entire narrative -- right? -- that gets worked up.  And very rarely do you hear an interview of a waitress -- which is much more typical -- who’s raising a couple of kids and is doing everything right but still can’t pay the bills.

And so if we’re going to change how John Boehner and Mitch McConnell think, we’re going to have to change how our body politic thinks, which means we’re going to have to change how the media reports on these issues and how people’s impressions of what it's like to struggle in this economy looks like, and how budgets connect to that.  And that’s a hard process because that requires a much broader conversation than typically we have on the nightly news.

MR. DIONNE:  I am tempted to welcome Arthur to defend his network.  But instead, I want to sort of maybe invite him to an alter call here.  (Laughter.)  I want to invite you to a kind of alter call, which is, the President talked about some basis public investments that are actually pretty old-fashioned public investments, along the lines of somebody like President Eisenhower supported a lot of those kinds of investments -- 

THE PRESIDENT:  Republican President Abraham Lincoln thought things like land-grant colleges and infrastructure, investments in basic research in science were important. 

I suspect, Arthur, you’d agree in theory about those investments.  And the question would be, how much? 

MR. BROOKS:  Look, no good economist, no self-respecting person who understands anything about economics denies that there are public goods.  There just are public goods.  We need public goods.  Markets fail sometimes -- there’s a role for the state. There are no radical libertarians up here, libertarians who believe that the state should not exist, for example.  Even the libertarians don’t think that.  So we shouldn’t caricature the views of others because, in point of fact, that impugns the motives. 

I think that what we’re talking about is, one, when are there public goods?  When can the government provide them?  And when are the benefits higher than the costs of the government proving these things?  Because, in point of fact, when we don’t make cost-benefit calculations at least at the macro level about public goods, the poor pay.  This is a fact.

If you look at what’s happening in the periphery countries of Europe today, as George W. Bush used to say, this is a true fact.  (Laughter.)  It’s more emphasis.  There’s nothing wrong.  (Laughter.)  If you don't pay attention to the macro economy and the fiscal stability, you will become insolvent.  And if you become insolvent, you will have austerity.  And if you have austerity, the poor always pay.  Jim Wallis taught me this.  The poor always pay when there’s austerity.  The rich never pay.  The rich never are left with the bill.  It’s the poor who are left with the bill. 

So if you join me in believing the safety net is a fundamental, moral right, and it’s a privilege of our society to provide, you must avoid austerity and you must avoid insolvency. And the only way that you can do that is with smart policies. 

And I’m 100 percent sure the President agrees with me about smart macro-economic public policies, so I’m not caricaturing these views either.  Although can you believe he said “Obama phone”?  (Laughter.)  And he’s against the Obama phone.  So let’s stipulate to that.  (Laughter.)  Just because they took away his phone.  (Laughter.) 

Now, since we believe that there should be public goods, then we're really talking about the system that provides them and provides them efficiently.  The President talked about the changing structure of the income distribution, and it’s unambiguously true.  What I would urge us to regret is this notion that it’s not a shift, but a transfer.  It’s not a transfer. 

Since the 1970s, it’s not that the rich have gotten richer; because the poor have gotten poorer.  The poor are not having their money taken away and given to the rich.  The rich have gotten richer faster than the poor have moved up.  And we might be concerned with that because that also reflects on opportunity. And as an opportunity society, as an equal opportunity society, we should all be really concerned with that.

But the extent that we can get away from this notion that the rich are stealing from the poor, then we can look at this in I think in a way that's constructive.  Why?  Because the rich are our neighbors and the poor are our neighbors, and everybody else should be our neighbors and they're all our kids.  And I think getting away from that rhetoric is really important.

And then the last point, actually, as we come to consensus is remembering that capitalism or socialism or social democracy or any system is just a system.  Look, it’s just a system.  It’s just a machine.  It’s like your car.  You can do great good with it, you can do great evil with it.  It can't go uninhibited.  So far it can't drive on its own.  It will soon enough.  The economy never will be able to. 

Capitalism is nothing more than a system, and it must be predicated on right morals.  It must be.  Adam Smith taught me that.  Adam Smith, the father of modern economics -- he wrote “The Wealth of Nations,” in 1776 -- 17 years before he wrote “The Theory of Moral sentiments,” which was a more important book because it talked about what it meant as a society to earn the right to have free enterprise, to have free economics.  And it was true then, and it’s still true today.

So this is why this conference is so important.  This conversation with the President of the United States is so important, from my point of view -- I say with appropriate humility -- is because we're talking about right morality toward our brothers and sisters, and built on that, that's when we can have an open discussion to get our capitalism right.  And then the distribution of resources is only a tertiary question.  (Applause.)

MR. DIONNE:  I still want to know how much infrastructure you're actually willing to vote for, but I’ll take --

MR. BROOKS:  $41 billion. 

MR. DIONNE:  All right, it’s a start.  We can negotiate. 

I want to -- this is in a way for both the President and Bob, because in this conversation about poverty, there’s kind of consensus on this stage that, yes, you need to care about family structure, it really matters, but if you don't worry about the economy, you're not sort of thinking about why the battering ram is against the family.

And yet, this family conversation can make a lot of people feel uneasy because it sounds like either you're not taking politics seriously, or you're not taking the real economic pressure seriously.  And I just want to share two things with the President and Bob, and have you respond.

One, as you can imagine, I asked a lot of smart people what they would ask about if they were in my position.  And one very smart economist said, look, what we know is when we have really tight labor markets, unemployment down below -- down to 4 or even lower -- Kennedy, Johnson years, World War II, at the end of the Clinton years -- all kinds of good things start happening to poor people.  So maybe, this person said, even though, he says, yes, family structure matters, let’s stop with the moral lectures and just run a really tight economic policy, and we could have some really good things happen to us. 

And then the other thing I wanted to share -- and I’m being pointed here, Mr. President, because you know and I’ve heard you talk about this, but not that often publicly, which is -- you know, I’ve heard you in those sessions you do with opinion reporters -- Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote something back in 2013 about your talk about what needs to happen inside the African American community -- I know you remember this:  “Taking full measure of the Obama presidency thus far, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that this White House has one way of addressing the social ills that afflict black people and particularly black youth, and another way of addressing everyone else.  I would have a hard time imagining the President telling the women of Barnard that ‘there's no longer room for any excuses’ -- as though they were in the business of making them.”

I’d love you to address sort of the particular question about -- maybe it is primarily about economics because we can’t do much about the other things through government policy, and also answer Ta-Nehisi’s critique, because I know you hear that a lot.

THE PRESIDENT:  Why don’t we let Bob --

MR. DIONNE:  Let Bob --

MR. PUTNAM:  Well, I’m going to try to respond to that, and of course, I want to hear what the President has to say about that.  But I wanted to just comment briefly on that earlier conversation, first of all, about public goods. 

I agree very much with the President’s framing of this issue -- that is that we disinvested in collective assets, collective goods that would benefit everybody but are more important for poor people because they can’t do it on their own.  I want to just give one example of that that’s very vivid, and this is a case where we’ve clearly shot ourselves in the foot. 

For most of the 20th century, all Americans of all walks of life thought that part of getting a good education was getting soft skills -- not just reading, writing, arithmetic, but cooperation and teamwork, and so on.  And part of that was that everybody in the country got free access to extracurricular activities -- band and football, and music and so on.  But beginning about 20 years ago, the view developed -- which is really, really deeply evil -- that that’s just a frill. 

And so we disinvested, and we said if you want to take part in football here, or you want to take part in music, you’ve got to pay for it.  And of course, what that means is that poor people can’t pay for it.  It’s a big deal -- $1,600 on average for two kids in a family.  Well, $1,600 to play football, or play in the band, or French club or whatever -- it’s not a big deal if your income is $200,000; but if you income is $16,000, who in their right mind is going to be paying 10 percent of their family income?

So it seems to me that that’s a case where the allocation that the benefits of learning teamwork and hard skills -- I mean grit were only on the individual.  But that wasn’t true.  The whole country was benefitting from the fact that we had a very broad-based set of skills that people had.  So I’m trying to emphasize this -- how deep runs this antipathy in some quarters for the notion that these are all our kids and, therefore, we’ve got to invest in all of them. 

But I also want to then come back, if I can, to I think the thing we maybe haven’t spent enough time here, and that is this is a purple problem.  There are those of us who on the left can see most clearly the economic sources of this problem and want to do something about it.  But then there are people on the conservative side, especially religious people, who use a different lens and they can see most clearly the effects of family disruption among poor families of all races on the prospects of kids. 

And in the stories of the kids that we gathered across America -- I want to return a little bit not just to the abstract discussion of poverty, but to real kids.  Mary Sue from -- doesn’t have anything the like the same opportunities as my granddaughter.  But part of that is because Mary Sue’s parents behaved in very irresponsible ways.  We interviewed a kid from -- a young woman from Duluth who is now on drugs.  How did she get on drugs?  Because her dad was addicted to meth and wanted to get high, but didn’t want to get high alone, so her dad taught -- Molly is her name -- how to smoke -- how to do meth.  I don’t even know how you do meth myself.  I’ll have to check with him.  (Laughter.)

And it’s systematically -- the fact is we all know this, that it’s -- I’m not making an attack on single moms, who are often doing terrific jobs in the face of lots of obstacles, but I am saying it’s harder to do that.  And therefore, we need to think, all of us, including those of us -- and I know the President agrees with me about this -- even those of us on the more progressive side have to think, how did we get into a state in which two-thirds of American kids coming from what we used to call the working class have only a single parent, and what can we do to fix that?

I’m not sure this is government’s role.  But I do think that if we’re concerned about poverty, we also, all of us, have to think about this purple side of the problem -- I mean, this family side of the problem.  And we shouldn’t -- those of us -- I’m now speaking to my side of the choir -- we shouldn’t just assume that anybody who talks about family stability is somehow saying that the economics don’t matter.  Of course, the economics matter.  It’s both/and; it’s not either/or.  (Applause.)

MR. DIONNE:  Mr. President?

THE PRESIDENT:  A couple of things I would say.  First of all, just going back to something Arthur said earlier about how we characterize the wealthy, and do they take this extra wealth from the poor, the middle class -- these are broad economic trends turbocharged by technology and globalization, a winner-take-all economy that allows those with even slightly better skills to massively expand their reach and their markets, and they make more money and it gets more concentrated, and that then reinforces itself.  But there are values and decisions that have aided and abetted that process. 

So, for example, in the era that Bob was talking about, if you had a company in that town, that company had a whole bunch of social restraints on it because the CEO felt it was a member of that community and the sense of obligation about paying a certain wage or contributing to the local high school or what have you was real.  And today the average Fortune 500 company -- some are great corporate citizens, some are great employers -- but they don’t have to be, and that’s certainly not how they’re judged. 

And that may account for the fact that where a previous CEO of a company might have made 50 times the average wage of the worker, they might now make a thousand times or two thousand times.  And that’s now accepted practice inside the corporate boardroom.  Now, that’s not because they’re bad people.  It's just that they have been freed from a certain set of social constraints. 

And those values have changed.  And sometimes tax policy has encouraged that, and government policy has encouraged that.  And there’s a whole literature that justifies that as, well, that's what you’d need to get the best CEO and they're bringing the most value, and then you do tip into a little bit of Ayn Rand.

Which, Arthur, I think you’d be the first to acknowledge because I’m in dinners with some of your buddies and I have conversations with them.  (Laughter.)  And if they're not on a panel, they’ll say, you know what, we created all this stuff and we made it, and we're creating value and we should be able to make decisions about where it goes. 

So there’s less commitment to those public goods -- even though a good economist who’s read Adam Smith’s “Moral Sentiments” would acknowledge that actually we're under-investing, or at least we have to have a certain investment.  So that's point number one.

Point number two, on this whole family-character values-structure issue.  It’s true that if I’m giving a commencement at Morehouse that I will have a conversation with young black men about taking responsibility as fathers that I probably will not have with the women of Barnard.  And I make no apologies for that.  And the reason is, is because I am a black man who grew up without a father and I know the cost that I paid for that.  And I also know that I have the capacity to break that cycle, and as a consequence, I think my daughters are better off.  (Applause.) 

And that is not something that -- for me to have that conversation does not negate my conversation about the need for early childhood education, or the need for job training, or the need for greater investment in infrastructure, or jobs in low-income communities. 

So I’ll talk till you're blue in the face about hard-nosed, economic macroeconomic policies, but in the meantime I’ve got a bunch of kids right now who are graduating, and I want to give them some sense that they can have an impact on their immediate circumstances, and the joys of fatherhood. 

And we did something with My Brother’s Keepers -- which emphasizes apprenticeships and emphasizes corporate responsibility, and we're gathering resources to give very concrete hooks for kids to be able to advance.  And I’m going very hard at issues of criminal justice reform and breaking this school-to-prison pipeline that exists for so many young African American men.  But when I’m sitting there talking to these kids, and I’ve got a boy who says, you know what, how did you get over being mad at your dad, because I’ve got a father who beat my mom and now has left, and has left the state, and I’ve never seen him because he’s trying to avoid $83,000 in child support payments, and I want to love my dad, but I don't know how to do that -- I’m not going to have a conversation with him about macroeconomics.  (Laughter and applause.) 

I’m going to have a conversation with him about how I tried to understand what it is that my father had gone through, and how issues that were very specific to him created his difficulties in his relationships and his children so that I might be able to forgive him, and that I might then be able to come to terms with that.

And I don't apologize for that conversation.  I think -- and so this is what I mean when -- or this is where I agree very much with Bob that this is not an either/or conversation.  It is a both-and.  The reason we get trapped in the either/or conversation is because all too often -- not Arthur, but those who have argued against a safety net, or argued against government programs, have used the rationale that character matters, family matters, values matter as a rationale for the disinvestment in public goods that took place over the course of 20 to 30 years. 

If, in fact, the most important thing is character and parents, then it’s okay if we don't have band and music at school -- that's the argument that you will hear.  It’s okay.  Look, there are immigrant kids who are learning in schools that are much worse, and we're spending huge amounts in the district and we still get poor outcomes, and so obviously money is not the issue.  And so what you hear is a logic that is used as an excuse to under-invest in those public goods.

And that's why I think a lot of people are resistant to it and are skeptical of that conversation.  And I guess what I’m saying is that, guarding against cynicism, what we should say is we are going to argue hard for those public investments.  We're going to argue hard for early childhood education because, by the way, if a young kid -- three, four years old -- is hearing a lot of words, the science tells us that they're going to be more likely to succeed at school.  And if they’ve got trained and decently paid teachers in that preschool, then they're actually going to get -- by the time they're in third grade, they’ll be reading at grade level. 

And those all very concrete policies.  But it requires some money.  We're going to argue hard for that stuff.  And lo and behold, if we do those things, the values and the character that those kids are learning in a loving environment where they can succeed in school, and they're being praised, and they can read at grade level, and they're less likely to drop out, and it turns out that when they're succeeding at school and they’ve got resources, they're less likely to get pregnant as teens, and less likely to engage in drugs, and less likely to be involved in the criminal justice system -- that is a reinforcement of the values and character that we want. 

And that's where we, as a society, have the capacity to make a real difference.  But it will cost us some money.  It will cost us some money.  It’s not free.

You look at a state like California that used to have, by far, the best public higher education system in the world, and there is a direct correlation between Proposition 13 and the slow disinvestment in the public university system so that it became very, very expensive.  And kids got priced out of the market, or they started taking on a whole bunch of debt.  Now, that was a public policy choice, based on folks not wanting to pay property taxes.  And that's true in cities and counties and states all across the country.  And that's really a big part of our political argument.

So I am all for values; I am all for character.  But I also know that that character and the values that our kids have that allow them to succeed, and delayed gratification and discipline and hard work -- that all those things in part are shaped by what they see, what they see really early on.  And some of those kids right now, because of no fault of those kids, and because of history and some tough going, generationally, some of those kids, they're not going to get help at home.  They're not going to get enough help at home.  And the question then becomes, are we committed to helping them instead?

MR. DIONNE:  Mr. President, I want to follow up on that and then invite Arthur and Bob to reply.  Arthur, you clearly got a plenary indulgence in this session on all kinds of positions.  (Laughter.) 

A lot of us, I think, feel that we made bargains with our friends on the conservative side that -- I agree with the idea that you've got to care about what happens in the family if you're going to care about social justice, and you got to care about social justice of you care about the family.  Yet when people like you start talking like this, there doesn’t seem to be much giveback on, “okay, we agree on these values; where’s the investment in these kids?” 

Similarly, when welfare reform was passed back in the ‘90s, there were a lot of people who said, okay, we’re not going to hear about welfare cheats anymore because all these people are going to have to work.  And yet we get the same thing back again. It’s as if the work requirement was never put in the welfare bill.  How do we change this conversation so that it becomes an actual bargain where the other half of the agenda that you talked about gets recognized and that we do something about it?

THE PRESIDENT:  I’ll ask Arthur for some advice on this -- because, look, the devil is in the details.  I think if you talk to any of my Republican friends, they will say, number one, they care about the poor -- and I believe them.  Number two, they’ll say that there are some public goods that have to be made -- and I’ll believe them.  But when it comes to actually establishing budgets, making choices, prioritizing, that’s when it starts breaking down.

And I actually think that there will come a time when political pressure leads to a shift, because more and more families -- not just inner-city African-American families, or Hispanic families in the barrio, but more and more middle-class or working-class folks are feeling pinched and squeezed -- that there will be a greater demand for some core public goods and we’ll have to find a way to pay for them.  But ultimately, there are going to have to be some choices made. 

When I, for example, make an argument about closing the carried interest loophole that exists whereby hedge fund managers are paying 15 percent on the fees and income that they collect, I’ve been called Hitler for doing this, or at least this is like Hitler going into Poland.  That’s an actual quote from a hedge fund manager when I made that recommendation.  The top 25 hedge fund managers made more than all the kindergarten teachers in the country. 

So when I say that, I’m not saying that because I dislike hedge fund managers or I think they’re evil.  I’m saying that you’re paying a lower rate than a lot of folks who are making $300,000 a year.  You pretty much have more than you’ll ever be able to use and your family will ever be able to use.  There’s a fairness issue involved here.  And, by the way, if we were able to close that loophole, I can now invest in early childhood education that will make a difference.  That’s where the rubber hits the road. 

That’s, Arthur, where the question of compassion and “I’m my brother’s keeper” comes into play.  And if we can’t ask from society’s lottery winners to just make that modest investment, then, really, this conversation is for show.  (Applause.) 

And by the way, I’m not asking to go back to 70 percent marginal rates, which existed back in the golden days that Bob is talking about when he was a kid.  I’m just saying maybe we can go up to like -- tax them like ordinary income, which means that they might have to pay a true rate of around 23, 25 percent which, by historical standards in postwar era, would still be really low.

So that’s the kind of issue where if we can’t bridge that gap, then I suspect we’re not going to make as much progress as we need to -- although we can find some areas of agreement like the earned income credit, which I give Arthur a lot of credit for extolling because it encourages work and it could help actually strengthen families.

MR. DIONNE:  Arthur raised capital gains taxes for us here.

MR. BROOKS:  Yes, sure.  Fine.  These are show issues.  Corporate jets are show issues.  Carried interest is a show issue.  The real issue?  Middle-class entitlements -- 70 percent of the federal budget.  That’s where the real money is.  And the truth of the matter is until we can take that on -- if we want to make progress, if the left and right want to make progress politically as they put together budgets, they’re going to have to make progress on that. 

Now, if we want to create -- if we want to increase taxes on carried interest, I mean, that’s fine for me -- not that I can speak for everybody, certainly not everybody on the Republican side. 

And by the way, Mitch McConnell and John Boehner are watching, at least indirectly, and they’re paying attention to this -- 100 percent sure, because they care a lot about this.  And they care a lot about both culture and economics, and they care a lot about poverty.  And, again, we have to be really careful not to impugn their motives, and impugning motives on the other side is the number-one barrier against making progress.  Ad hominem is something we should declare war on and defeat because then we can take on issues on their face, I think.  It’s really important morally for us to be able to do that.

Who, by the way, were you having dinner with who was discussing Ayn Rand and why wasn’t I invited?  (Laughter.) 

So if we want to make progress, I think let’s decide that we have a preference -- I mean, let’s have a rumble over how much money we’re spending on public goods for poor people, for sure.  And Republicans should say, I want to spend money on programs for the poor, but I think these ones are counterproductive and I think these ones are ineffective, and Democrats should say, no they’re not, we’ve never done them right and they’ve always been underfunded.  I want to have that competition of ideas.  That’s really productive.

But we can’t even get to that when politicians on the left and the right are conspiring to not touch middle-class entitlements, because we’re looking at it in terms of the right saying all the money is gone on this, and the left saying all we need is a lot more money on top of these things -- when most people who are looking at it realize that this is an unsustainable path.  It’s an unsustainable path for lots of things, not just programs for the poor.  We can’t adequately fund our military. 

I think you and I would have a tremendous amount of agreement about the misguided notion of the sequester, for lots of reasons, because we can’t spend money on purpose.  And that’s what we need to do.  And when we’re on an automatic path to spend tons of money in entitlements that are leading us to fiscal unsustainability, we can’t get to these progressive conversations where conservatives and liberals really disagree and can work together, potentially, to help poor people and defend our nation.

MR. DIONNE:  I just want to say if the carried interest is a show issue, why can’t we just get it out of the way and move forward?  (Laughter and applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  It is real money.  It’s real money.

MR. DIONNE:  Here is what I’d like to do.  I think we have about three minutes left, so I’d like Bob to speak, and then I have one last question for the President. 

MR. PUTNAM:  All of us would agree about this -- we need to a little bit rise out of the Washington bubble and the debates about these things.  Of course, they’re important.  I understand why they’re important.  But, actually, we’re speaking here to an audience of people of faith.  We’re speaking, more largely, to America.  And I think we ought not to disempower ordinary Americans.  If they care about these problems, Americans can change the politics that would, over the next five to 10 years, make a huge difference.

And I’m not talking about changing Republican-Democrat.  I’m talking about making poverty and the opportunity to escape from poverty a higher issue on both parties’ agendas.  (Applause.)  I have some hope that that will happen.  I understand -- this may not be true, Mr. President -- I understand that there is going to be an election next year.  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  That’s a true fact.  (Laughter and applause.) 

MR. PUTNAM:  And I think American voters should insist that the highest domestic priority issue is this issue of the opportunity gap, the fact that we’re talking about.  This is not a third order issue, it's a really important issue.  And ask candidates, what are you going to do about it?  And then just use your own common sense.  Is that the right way to go forward? 

I think that we need, as a country, not just from the top down and from Washington, but from across the grassroots, to focus -- and in congregations and parishes all across this country, focus on what we can do to reduce this opportunity gap in America.

MR. DIONNE:  Mr. President, I wanted you to reflect on this religious question.  I mean, one of your first salaries was actually paid for by a group of Catholic churches, something -- Cardinal McCarrick knows that, but not a lot of Catholic bishops notice that -- (laughter) -- that you were organizing for a group of South Side churches.  You know what faith-based groups can do. And I’d like you to talk about sort of three things at the same time, which is the role of the religious community simply in calling attention to this problem; the issues of how government can cooperate with these groups; and sort of the prophetic role of these ideas for you, where your own reflections on your own faith have led you on these questions.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, it's true, my first job was funded through the Campaign for Human Development, which was the social justice arm of the Catholic Church.  (Applause.)  And I think that faith-based groups across the country and around the world understand the centrality and the importance of this issue in a intimate way -- in part because these faith-based organizations are interacting with folks who are struggling and know how good these people are, and know their stories, and it's not just theological, but it's very concrete.  They’re embedded in communities and they’re making a difference in all kinds of ways. 

So I think that what our administration has done is really a continuation of work that had been done previously by the Bush administration, the Clinton administration.  We’ve got our office of faith-based organizations that are working on an ongoing basis around a whole host of these issues.  My Brother’s Keeper is reaching out to churches and synagogues and mosques and other faith-based groups consistently to try to figure out, how do we reach young boys and young men in a serious way? 

But the one thing I guess I want to say, E.J., is that when I think about my own Christian faith and my obligations, it is important for me to do what I can myself -- individually mentoring young people, or making charitable donations, or in some ways impacting whatever circles and influence I have.  But I also think it's important to have a voice in the larger debate.  And I think it would be powerful for our faith-based organizations to speak out on this in a more forceful fashion. 

This may sound self-interested because there have been -- these are areas where I agree with the evangelical community and faith-based groups, and then there are issues where we have had disagreements around reproductive issues, or same-sex marriage, or what have you.  And so maybe it appears advantageous for me to want to focus on these issues of poverty, and not as much on these other issues. 

But I want to insist, first of all, I will not be part of the election next year, so this is more just a broader reflection of somebody who has worked with churches and worked in communities.

There is great caring and great concern, but when it comes to what are you really going to the mat for, what’s the defining issue, when you're talking in your congregations, what’s the thing that is really going to capture the essence of who we are as Christians, or as Catholics, or what have you, that this is oftentimes viewed as a “nice to have” relative to an issue like abortion.  That's not across the board, but there sometimes has been that view, and certainly that's how it’s perceived in our political circles.

And I think that there’s more power to be had there, a more transformative voice that's available around these issues that can move and touch people.  Because the one thing I know is that -- here’s an area where, again, Arthur and I agree -- I think fundamentally people want to do the right thing.  I think people don't set out wanting to be selfish.  I think people would like to see a society in which everybody has opportunity.  I think that's true up and down the line and across the board.  But they feel as if it’s not possible. 

And there’s noise out there, and there’s arguments, and there’s contention.  And so people withdraw and they restrict themselves to, what can I do in my church, or what can I do in my community?  And that's important.  But our faith-based groups I think have the capacity to frame this -- and nobody has shown that better than Pope Francis, who I think has been transformative just through the sincerity and insistence that he’s had that this is vital to who we are.  This is vital to following what Jesus Christ, our Savior, talked about. 

And that emphasis I think is why he’s had such incredible appeal, including to young people, all around the world.  And I hope that that is a message that everybody receives when he comes to visit here.  I can't wait to host him because I think it will help to spark an even broader conversation of the sort that we're having today.

MR. DIONNE:  All events are better with a reference to Pope Francis.  Thank you so much, Mr. President.  (Applause.)

I really want to thank Arthur and Bob.  And thank you, Bob, for writing this book that's moved us all.  And thank you, Mr. President, for being here.  And John and Galen and then so many others for creating this. 

If I may close by simultaneously quoting Amos and Dr. King, “Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.  Bless you all.”

Thank you, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

END  
12:55 P.M. EDT

What You Need to Know About the New Contraception Guidance:

It is crucial that insurance companies provide all the benefits that women deserve under the Affordable Care Act, at no cost or inconvenience. So this week, the Obama administration took steps to eliminate any ambiguity around the reforms the ACA calls for. Here is what the Administration’s guidance makes clear:

Most insurers must cover, without cost-sharing, at least one form of contraception in each of the 18 methods for women that the FDA has identified, including the ring, the patch, intrauterine devices (IUDs), and birth control pills.

Related Topics: Health Care

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by National Security Council Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on Austin Tice

This week, it is with a heavy heart that we mark American journalist Austin Tice’s 1,000th day in captivity.  Austin was abducted in August 2012 while reporting from a suburb of Damascus in Syria.  An award-winning journalist and Marine Corps veteran, Austin entered Syria in May 2012 with a desire to report on the impact of the war on ordinary Syrians and an eagerness to help others – values that were instilled in him by his loving family and close friends.
 
The United States government will continue to work tirelessly to bring Austin home to his parents, Debra and Marc, and his brothers and sisters, who have endured anguish and suffering since Austin’s abduction.  We greatly appreciate the efforts of the Czech government, which acts as the U.S. protecting power in Syria, on behalf of our citizens, including Austin. 
 
We strongly urge Austin’s captors to release him so that he can be safely reunited with his family.  We call on all those who may have information about Austin’s whereabouts – governments and individuals – to work cooperatively with us to help bring him home.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by National Security Council Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on the Resumption of Cyprus Settlement Talks

The United States welcomes the announcement that Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot leaders will resume settlement talks on May 15.  We reaffirm our full support for the UN-facilitated process under UN Special Adviser Espen Barth Eide, and we reiterate our willingness to assist the process in any way the parties find useful.  We encourage the parties to reach a settlement as soon as possible to reunify the island as a bizonal, bicommunal federation, which would benefit all Cypriots as well as the wider region. 

Email from Jerry Abramson: "Today's Conversation with the President"

This morning, Jerry Abramson, Director of Intergovernmental Affairs here at the White House, sent the following message to the White House email list.

Abramson says that the tensions that have recently erupted in communities such as Ferguson and Baltimore are not solely tied to policing, but are also linked to the lack of economic opportunity. He also details a number of the efforts that President Obama is taking to expand opportunity for more Americans.

Make sure to tune in today at 11:30 a.m. ET to watch the President's discussion at Georgetown University about poverty and opportunity -- and share with us how these issues are playing out in your own community, and how you think we can continue expanding opportunity for more Americans. (And if you didn't get the email, sign up for updates here.)


From Ferguson and Staten Island to North Charleston and Baltimore, our nation has been moved -- to conversation and debate, protest and action -- by images of tragic encounters between law enforcement and the communities they serve.

But as the President has made clear, these issues are not new, and every mayor (or former mayor, like me) can attest that what we are witnessing in cities across America is not only about policing.

This is also about opportunity.

Everyone should be empowered by the country they call home. Unfortunately, in America, too many young people are limited by the zip code into which they are born. The President doesn't treat this conversation as one to be had only every few months surrounding the latest tragedy captured on camera and replayed on the news.

Tell us how these issues are playing out in your own community, and how you think we can continue expanding opportunity for more Americans.

(And make sure to tune in to WhiteHouse.gov/Live today at 11:30 a.m. ET as the President sits down for a special discussion at Georgetown University about poverty and opportunity.)

Related Topics: Economy