The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in Breakout Session of White House Rural Economic Forum Hosted by Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack

Northeast Iowa Community College, Peosta, Iowa

1:09 P.M. CDT

        THE PRESIDENT:  John, sorry to interrupt.  You were making a good point.  Good to see you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  I just wanted to jump in.  I just came out of a Small Business Breakout Session.  So I don’t want to interrupt.  I just want to emphasize, first of all, I think Vilsack is doing a great job.  (Applause.)

        Second of all, this issue of energy innovation I think is absolutely vital for rural communities, but for the entire country.  If we can harness homegrown fuels -- whether it’s biofuels, wind, solar, geothermal, you name it -- then I think it can generate hundreds of thousands of jobs all across the country.  It can help free ourselves from dependence on foreign oil.  It diversifies sources of income for farmers.  I’m not telling you guys anything that you don’t already know.  

        All I want to emphasize is, is that when you look at farm economies, right now obviously prices are good, but given the volatility of the world market, for us to be able to figure out how we can also use energy and conservation as an enhancement to the core business of feeding people, then I think that we can make enormous progress.  And Tom has a lot of creative ideas.  Our Department of Energy, we’ve made this one of our highest priorities.  And so I’m very interested in figuring out how the federal government can be even more helpful than it already is in moving this agenda forward.

        So, with that, let me just sit back and listen and -- unless somebody has a question for me, then I’ll try to answer it.

END 1:11 P.M. CDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in a Breakout Session of the White House Rural Economic Forum Hosted by SBA Administrator Karen Mills

Northeast Iowa Community College, Peosta, Iowa

12:44 P.M. CDT

        THE PRESIDENT:  I think all I want to say by way of introduction is, I had the chance to have breakfast with a couple of your panelists here, and -- three of them, actually -- and I was just struck by the creativity and the stick-to-it-ness that so many businesses here are exhibiting.  

        The good news, Karen, is all of them, uniformly, on a bipartisan basis, felt that the SBA, their local SBA office, is doing a great job and working really hard.  So there you go.  Just wanted you to know.  (Laughter.)  They were talking behind your back, and it was good.

        At the same time, I think that there was a sense, in the conversation I had at breakfast this morning, that issues of credit are still a problem.  In particular, smaller businesses and startup businesses -- $100,000, $200,000 -- getting that initial startup capital oftentimes was a challenge.  

        And we also heard that getting help on things like marketing could make a big difference for businesses that want to break out beyond their immediate communities, and -- particularly if they’re competing with larger businesses, even if they think they’ve got a better product.

        So what I said to them is the same thing that I say to the entire group:  We genuinely believe that small business is the backbone of America.  It’s going to be the key for us to be able to put a lot of folks back to work.  What we’re looking for is, how can we do our jobs better?  How can the SBA or USDA or any of the other federal agencies that touch on rural America on a regular basis help you create the jobs and businesses and ideas that I think are so evident in a lot of communities all across the country.

        We also heard, by the way, that there are a lot of young people, I think, who want to be more entrepreneurial.  And so are there ways that we can connect, for example, the community colleges -- but even beneath that, high schools -- to help young people think about how they go about organizing getting a business started.

        So that’s my initial report from breakfast, and what I want to do is just hear from all of you.  And Karen will be taking copious notes, and she is somebody who I know is going to execute on any ideas that make sense.

END 12:47 P.M. CDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Opening Remarks by the President at the White House Rural Economic Forum

12:05 P.M. CDT

        THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, hello, hello!  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you very much.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Everybody please have a seat.  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  Thank you so much.

        Well, it is wonderful to be back in Iowa, and thank you for arranging perfect weather these last couple of days.  (Laughter.)  I have just been having a great time.

        I want to first of all make just a few acknowledgments.  Richard Avenarius, who is the mayor of Peosta, please -- where are you, Mr. Mayor?  Well, he was here.  (Laughter.)  Give him a round of applause anyway.  (Applause.)

        This person I know is here, and I want to thank Northeast Iowa Community College for hosting us -- Dr. Liang Wee is here, interim president.  (Applause.)  

        I’ve got a number of members of my Cabinet who are here.  All of them do outstanding work day in, day out.  So I couldn’t be prouder of them.  First of all, this guy you should be a little familiar with because he used to be the governor of this great state -- Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack.  (Applause.)  Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar.  (Applause.)  Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood.  (Applause.)  Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan.  (Applause.)  And the Small Business Administrator Karen Mills.  (Applause.)

        Well, this is an outstanding crowd, and I don’t want to stand in the way of a lot of good work that’s going to be done, so I’m going to just make some brief remarks at the top.  We’ve got small business owners here.  We have farmers.  We have ranchers, public servants, clean energy entrepreneurs and community organizations from all across rural America.  And I’m here because I want to hear from you, and my Cabinet wants to hear from you.

        There are two things that I know for sure:  America is going to come back from this recession stronger than before.  That I’m convinced of.  I believe that.  (Applause.)  And I’m also convinced that comeback isn’t going to be driven by Washington.  (Applause.)  It’s going to be -- it is going to be driven by folks here in Iowa.  It’s going to begin in the classrooms of community colleges like this one.  (Applause.)  It’s going to start on the ranchlands and farms of the Midwest, in the workshops of basement inventors, in the storefronts of small business owners.

        And that’s why I’m here today.  Obviously we’re going through tough times right now; I don’t have to tell you that.  A lot of folks are looking for work.  Even if you have a job or a small business or a farm, you’re maybe getting by with fewer customers or making do with fewer shifts or less money in tips.  And for a lot of families in rural parts of the country, these challenges aren’t new.  For a long time -- a decade, maybe longer -- you’ve known what it means to face hardship.  

        But we also know that while times may be tough, our people are tougher.  You know how to make it through a hard season.  You know how to look out for each other in the face of drought or tornadoes or disasters, looking out for each other until we reach a brighter day.

        And that ethic, that kind of honor and self-discipline and integrity -- those are the values that we associate with small towns like this one.  Those are the values that built America.  And while we’ve taken some hits, this country still has the best workers, the greatest farms, the top scientists and universities, the most successful businesses and entrepreneurs in the world.  

        So as I’ve been saying over the last couple days, there’s nothing wrong with this country; we’ll get through this moment of challenge.  The only question is if, as a nation, we’re going to do what it takes to grow this economy and put people back to work right now, and can we get our politics to match up with the decency of our people.  (Applause.)  

        The question is if we’re going to harness the potential to create jobs and opportunities that exist here in Iowa and all across America.  We know what’s possible if we’re willing to fight for our future and to put aside the politics of the short term and try to get something done.  Already this administration has helped nearly 10,000 rural businesses and 35,000 small and medium-sized farms and ranches to get the financing that they need -- that’s already happened.  And that means a restaurant owner can bust down a wall and set up some more tables.  It means a family farm can buy a new piece of equipment to get more product to market.  And that puts people to work today.

        Now, just as the interstate highways knitted the country together 50 years ago, we’ve also got to do some new things to meet the challenges of the 21st century.  We need to expand the reach of broadband, high-speed Internet, to 7 million more people and hundreds of thousands of businesses in rural communities.  And by taking that step, it’s making it possible for folks to take classes and train for new jobs online.  It’s helping people sell goods, not just down the street but across the country and around the world.  We’ve invested in clean energy, like advanced biofuels, so that we’re moving from an economy that runs on foreign oil to one that runs on homegrown America energy.  That’s a whole new industry that’s taking root here in Iowa and across rural America.

        But the rural economy is still not as strong as it could be.  That’s why I created a Rural Council to look for ways to promote jobs and opportunity right now.  And this council has come up with a number of proposals, and we’re not wasting time in taking up these proposals; we want to put them to work right now.  

        So today, I’m announcing that we’re ramping up our efforts to get capital to small businesses in rural areas.  We’re doubling the commitment we’ve already made through key small business lending programs.  We’re going to make it easier for people in rural areas looking for work to find out about companies that are hiring.  We're going to do more to speed the development of next-generation biofuels, and we’re going to promote renewable energy and conservation.  We’re going to help smaller local hospitals in communities like this one to recruit doctors and the nurses that they need.  And those are just some of the things that we’re already announcing today.  The reason we brought you all together is because I’m looking forward to hearing from you about what else we can do to jumpstart the economy here in rural America.

        We want to leave no stone unturned when it comes to strengthening this economy.  And we’re going to be able to do a lot of stuff administratively.  All the proposals we’re making today didn’t require new laws; it just means that we’re doing things smarter, we’re eliminating duplication, we’re allocating resources to places that we know are really making a difference.

        But we could do even more if Congress is willing to get in the game.  There are bipartisan ideas -– common-sense ideas –- that have traditionally been supported by Democrats and Republicans that will put more money in your pockets, that will put our people to work, that will allow us to deal with the legacy of debt that hangs over our economy.

        I want to cut the payroll tax again to help families make ends meet.  That’s meant an extra $1,000 in the pockets of typical American families.  That means more customers for your business, more buyers of your products.  I want to pass a road construction bill to put tens of thousands of people to work all across America.  

        We’ve got young people returning from Iraq and Afghanistan with incredible skills -– 25-year-olds who have led platoons; 26-year-olds handling equipment that costs hundreds of millions of dollars.  Well, let’s connect them to businesses that can use their talents right now.  

        We should pass trade deals that will level the playing field for American companies.  And no folks benefit more than rural Americans when it comes to our trade.  That’s the reason that our agricultural sector is doing incredibly well, and that has spillover effects, ripple effects throughout the economy here.

        But it also benefits manufacturing.  We’ve got folks in America driving Kias and Hyundais.  I want to see folks in Korea driving Fords and Chryslers and Chevys.  (Applause.)  I want to sell goods all over the world that are stamped with three words:  “Made in America.”  (Applause.)

        And all of these proposals -- all of these proposals will make a difference for rural communities.  The only thing that is holding us back is our politics.  The only thing that’s preventing us from passing the bills I just mentioned is the refusal of a faction in Congress to put country ahead of party.  And that has to stop.  Our economy cannot afford it.  (Applause.)  Our economy can’t afford it.  

        So I don’t care whether you’re a Democrat or Republican, independent, if you’re not registered with any party.  I want to enlist your help.  I need your help sending a message to Congress that it’s time to put the politics aside and get something done.
        The folks here in Iowa do the right thing.  I’ve been traveling through these small towns and talking to folks, sitting down at diners.  And you listen to people, they take such pride doing the right thing -- taking care of their families, working hard, saving for the future, living within their means, giving back to their communities.

        You do your part.  You meet your obligations.  Well, it’s time Washington acted as responsibly as you do every single day.  It’s past time.  (Applause.)  

        We’ve got a lot of work to do, and the only way it will get done is if Democrats and Republicans put country ahead of party and put the next generation ahead of the next election.  And that’s what I’m fighting for.  That’s why I’m out here visiting communities like this one and Decorah, and small towns in Minnesota and Illinois.  

        I’m convinced.  I’ve seen it.  When we come together, there’s no stopping this country.  (Applause.)  There is no stopping it.  

        We can create opportunities for training and education and good careers in rural America so young people don’t feel like they’ve got to leave their hometowns to find work.  We can strengthen the middle class, restore that sense of economic security that’s been missing for a lot of people for way too long.  We can push through this period of economic hardship and we can get to a better place.  That’s why we’re here together.  That’s what this forum is all about.  

        So I appreciate all of your participation.  I expect great ideas coming out of these breakout sessions.  I’m going to join a couple of them.  Let’s get to work.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)

END 12:17 P.M. CDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in a Town Hall Meeting in Decorah, Iowa

Seed Savers Exchange
Decorah, Iowa

5:17 P.M. CDT

THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Decorah! (Applause.) Hello, Iowa! (Applause.) It is good to be back. This place is as pretty as I remembered it. (Applause.) It is spectacular.

Everybody please have a seat. Everybody have a seat. It is wonderful to see all of you. First of all, I’ve got a few introductions I just want to make real quick. The attorney general of Iowa, a great friend of mine, one of my earliest supporters, Tom Miller is in the house. (Applause.) The mayor of Decorah, Donald Arendt is here. Give him a big round of applause. (Applause.) You may remember this guy. He did a great job in Iowa. He’s now one of the finest Secretaries of Agriculture we’ve ever had -- Tom Vilsack is in the house. (Applause.) And I want to thank Diane and everybody at the Seed Saver Exchange for this unbelievable setting. Give them a big round of applause. (Applause.)

And they gave me a pack of seeds for Michelle’s garden. (Laughter.) So I’m going to be in good stead when I get home.

This is a town hall meeting, so I want to spend most of my time answering your questions. But if you don’t mind, I just want to make a couple remarks at the top.

We obviously have gone through one of the toughest times in our history economically over these last two and a half years. We’ve gone through the worst recession since the Great Depression, dating back to 2007, 2008. But what I said earlier today when I was in Cannon Falls is something I believe with every fiber of my being, and that is that there is not a country on Earth that would not be willing to trade places with the United States of America. (Applause.) We’ve got the best universities. We’ve got the best entrepreneurs. We’ve got the best scientists. We’ve got the best market system, the most dynamic in the world.

And so as tough as things are, all of us are incredibly blessed to have been born in the United States of America. (Applause.) And that’s why we continue to attract people from all around the world who see us as a beacon of hope.

But having said that, we have to acknowledge we’ve got some big challenges. Now, some of the challenges are not of our own making. We had reversed the recession, avoided a depression, got the economy moving again, created 2 million private sector jobs over the last 17 months. But over the last six months, we’ve had a run of bad luck, some things that we could not control. We had an Arab Spring that promises democracy and potentially a growth of human rights throughout the Middle East, but it also caused high gas prices that put a crimp on a lot of families just as they were trying to dig themselves out from the recession. Then we had a tsunami in Japan that disrupted supply chains and affected markets all around the world. And then in Europe, there are all kinds of challenges around the sovereign debt there, and that has made businesses hesitant and some of the effects of Europe have lapped onto our shores. And all those things have been headwinds for our economy.

Now, those are things that we can’t completely control. The question is, how do we manage these challenging times and do the right things when it comes to those things that we can control? See, the problem we have is not with our country; the problem is that our politics is broken. (Applause.) The problem is, is that we’ve got the kind of partisan brinksmanship that is willing to put party ahead of country, that’s more interested in seeing their political opponents lose than seeing the country win. (Applause.)

And nowhere was that more evident than this most recent debt ceiling debacle. The fact of the matter is that our debt and deficits are manageable if we make some intelligent choices and make sure that there are shared sacrifices as well as shared opportunities. (Applause.) And had we made some decent decisions over just the last two, three months. Had we been willing to seize the opportunity that was before us, then there is no reason why we had to go through this downgrade, because that did not have to do with economics, that had to do with politics. It was an assessment -- (applause) -- that our Congress is not able to come up with the kinds of compromises that move this country forward.

And I don’t know about you, but I’m pretty frustrated about that. (Applause.) I am pretty frustrated about that because, given the challenges we face, we don’t have time to play games. There are a lot of folks, a lot of our neighbors, a lot of our friends who’ve been out of work too long. We’ve got too many small businesses that are struggling. I see a lot of young people in the audience here today, and they’re thinking about what are their prospects for the future -- graduating from college knowing they’ve got a lot of debt, needing to find a job. They don’t have patience for the kind of shenanigans we’ve been seeing on Capitol Hill. They understand that now is the time for all of us to pull together and do what it takes to grow the economy and put people back to work. (Applause.)

Now, the good news is there are things we could be doing right now that would make a difference for our economy. Back in December, when some of my folks on the other side of the aisle were more willing to compromise, we were able to put a package together that cut taxes for families by an average of $1,000.

And what I’ve said is, let’s continue this payroll tax cut into next year, so as the economy is strengthening, ordinary families who are still digging themselves out of credit card debt or seeing their homes underwater, they’ve got a little more purchasing power. That will be good for small businesses and large businesses, and they will hire.

We could right now say we are going to go ahead and renew that tax cut, and that would be good for the American people and good for the economy. There’s no reason to wait. (Applause.)

There’s no reason for us to wait putting construction workers back to work all across the country. Nobody took a bigger hit than those who were involved in the housing boom when the boom went bust. So why don’t we put them to work right now rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our schools all across America? (Applause.)

There’s a proposal in Congress right now. Congress should pass it and get it done. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t be helping our small businesses and startup businesses. We’ve passed 16 tax cuts for small businesses. And right now, we’ve got a bill pending that is called the American Invents bill. It basically reforms our patent system so if somebody has got a creative idea, they can turn it into a business right away without red tape, without bureaucracy. That’s who we are: a nation of inventors. This traditionally has had bipartisan support. What are we waiting for? We should pass it right now to give a spark to industry. (Applause.)

We’ve got pending trade legislation. Tom Vilsack and I were talking on the way over, on the bus here, and the truth of the matter is, is that the agricultural sector in America, the cornerstone of states like Iowa, is doing very well. But we could be doing more. And my general attitude is, why don’t we want to open up markets so that the extraordinary bounty of the heartland of America is making its way there, but also manufacturing is making its way there.

Look, we’ve got a whole bunch of Kias and Hyundais here in the United States of America on our roads, and that’s fine and good. But I want some Chryslers and some GMs and some Fords on the roads of the South Korea as well. We should go ahead and get those trade deals done. (Applause.)

So there are a whole host of ideas that we could be implementing right now that traditionally have had bipartisan support. The only thing that is preventing us from passing them is that there are some folks in Congress who think that doing something in cooperation with me or this White House, that that somehow is bad politics. Well, you know what, you guys didn’t send us there to be thinking about our jobs. You sent us there to be thinking about your jobs and your future. (Applause.)

Now, we do have to be thinking about how we invest in education and how we invest in infrastructure and how we invest in basic research, but still do it while the government is living within its means. And neither party is blameless on this. The truth is we had a balanced budget in 2000 -- the last time we had a Democratic President -- (applause) -- and what we ended up doing was we had two wars that we didn’t pay for, a prescription drug plan we didn’t pay for. We had two tax cuts that we did not pay for, and the result was a burgeoning debt. And then what ended up happening was because of the recession and the lack of regulation on Wall Street, this wrenching recession meant less tax revenues coming in and more going out, because we were providing help to states to make sure teachers and police officers and firefighters weren’t laid off, and to make sure that we could help small businesses and put people back to work.

So we’ve got a genuine problem with deficits and debt. But here, again, is the good news: If everybody is willing to make some modest sacrifices, this problem we could solve. We could solve it tomorrow. We could solve it next week. If the Speaker of the House had taken the bargain that he and I were talking about, we would have had it solved last month and we would not have gone through everything that we went through over the last several weeks. (Applause.) But it does require compromise and it requires some balance.

Warren Buffett had an article published today in which he said, “Stop coddling billionaires.” (Applause.) He pointed out that -- I think he made about $36 million on income; it was, I guess, an off-year for him -- (laughter) -- but he pointed out that he paid an effective rate of 17 percent when it came to taxes, which meant that he paid a lower tax rate than anybody else in his office, including his secretary, because most of his income came in the form of capital gains.

And he made a simple point. He said, look, nobody’s income has gone up faster than the top 1 percent. In fact, nobody’s gone up faster than the top one-tenth of 1 percent. There’s nothing wrong, when it comes to closing our deficit and managing our debt, to say that we should ask a little bit of help from everybody. I don’t want a tax cut if it means that senior citizens have to pay an extra $6,000 a year for their Medicare. That’s not fair, and that’s not right. (Applause.)

I think it makes sense for us to say, you know what, let’s close some loopholes that only oil and gas companies are able to take advantage of to make sure that we don’t have to cut back on Pell Grants for students who are trying to go to college and get a better education. (Applause.)

Now, that doesn’t mean that we defend every single government program. Everybody has got to make sacrifices; there are programs that aren’t working well. And sometimes there are those in my party who will defend everything, even if it’s not working. Well, we do have to make some cuts on things that we don’t need, and that allows us to invest in the things that we do. But there’s got to be balance, and there’s got to be fairness.

And that’s not just my view; the majority of Republicans agree with that view. Although I have to tell you, when I saw the other day -- my friends in the Republican presidential primary, they were asked, “Would you take a deal in which, for every $1 of tax increases, we cut $10 in government spending?” Ten-to-one ratio, and nobody was willing to take that deal. And what that tells me is, okay, you’ve gotten to the point where you’re just thinking about politics, you’re not thinking about common sense. (Applause.) You’ve got to be willing to compromise in order to move the country forward.

So here’s the upshot: We do have real challenges. We’re going to have to make some tough decisions. And I know that during the two and a half years that I’ve been President, we’ve gone through a lot of ups and downs and a lot of tough times. And our job is not finished until every single American who’s looking for a job can find a job, and until we have fixed the problems that caused me to run for President in the first place, so that we’re growing a middle class and people have basic security and they know, if they’re following the rules, if they’re working hard, if they’re looking after their families and meeting their responsibilities, that they’ve got a chance at the American Dream. (Applause.) You guys are meeting your responsibilities. (Applause.) You’re meeting your responsibilities. You’re working hard. And if you’ve gotten laid off and you don’t have a job, you’re out there looking for a job. You’re looking after your family. You’re tightening your belt where you need to, but you’re still making investments to help your kids with their future. You’re operating with common sense and you’re donating time at your church or a food pantry or Little League. Well, if you’re meeting your responsibilities, the least you can ask is your elected representatives meeting theirs. (Applause.)

And so I understand that after this last midterm, you voted for divided government. But you didn’t vote for dysfunctional government. (Applause.) You didn’t vote for a broken government that can’t make any decisions, can’t move the country forward at all. That’s not what you voted for.

And so some people have been saying, well, Mr. President, why don’t you call Congress back for a special session? And what I’ve said is the last thing that people need for confidence right now is to watch folks on Capitol Hill arguing all over again. (Applause.)

What they need to do is come to Decorah or go to Cannon Falls or meet with their constituents back home and hear the frustration and understand that people are sick and tired of the nonsense and the political games. And hopefully, when they come back in September, they’re going to have a wakeup call that says we need to move the country forward. You’ve got to start focusing on doing the people’s business. (Applause.) That’s what everybody is expecting.

I want you to help hold all of us accountable, me included. I am enlisting you in this fight, because if you are -- if you’re making your voices heard, if you’re letting people know that enough is enough, it is time to move forward, it is time for us to win the future -- if your voices are heard, then sooner or later these guys have to start paying attention. And if they don’t start paying attention then they’re not going to be in office and we will have a new Congress in there that will start paying attention to what is going on all across America. (Applause.)

I’m confident in the power of your voice. I’m confident in your values -- those are the values that we share. I don’t care whether you’re a Democrat or Republican or an independent -- all of us here are patriots and everybody here cares about our country and puts it first. (Applause.) And if we can have that kind of politics then nothing can stop us.

Thank you very much, everybody. God bless you. (Applause.) Thank you. Thank you, Decorah.

All right. So here’s what we’re going -- everybody have a seat. We got a bunch of questions coming. What we’re going to do is folks who have a question can just raise their hand. We’ve got people with microphones in the audience. And I’m going to go boy, girl, boy, girl, so it’s fair. (Laughter.) We want to be fair.

All right, let’s start with this young lady right here. Right in front. And you got a microphone coming right behind you.

Q Okay. I have to say before I ask my question that I’m a very big supporter. So --

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. What’s your name?

Q Emily.

THE PRESIDENT: Hey, Emily.

Q Emily Neil (ph). And this is my daughter Kaya (ph.)

THE PRESIDENT: Hey, Kaya.

Q Anyhow -- so --

THE PRESIDENT: What you eating there? Hold on a second. (Laughter.)

Q She broke her arm.

THE PRESIDENT: Is that a cookie?

Q You want to give him a cookie?

THE PRESIDENT: How did you get a cookie that early?

Q Is that allowed?

THE PRESIDENT: Before dinner? (Laughter.) All right, go ahead. Go ahead.

Q Oh, you don’t want to know what I do for a living. That’s funny. Okay. So when you ran for office you built a tremendous amount of trust with the American people, that you seemed like someone who wouldn’t move the bar on us. And it seems, especially in the last year, as if your negotiating tactics have sort of cut away at that trust by compromising some key principles that we believed in, like repealing the tax cut, not fighting harder for single payer. Even Social Security and Medicare seem on the line when we were dealing with the debt ceiling. So I’m just curious, moving forward, what prevents you from taking a harder negotiating stance, being that it seems that the Republicans are taking a really hard stance?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, let me -- no, this a good question and I’m glad you asked it -- because obviously I’ve been getting a lot of this in the press lately. First of all, when it comes to health care I said during the campaign that we were not going to be able to get a single-payer system and that my priority was making sure that every American who needed health insurance was able to buy it and were going to be treated fairly and it was going to be affordable. We were going to eliminate preexisting conditions -- or we were going to eliminate the bar on people getting health insurance if they had preexisting conditions.

And the health care bill that we passed was not perfect, but we covered 30 million people. We had the strongest patient bill of rights ever. We made sure that folks who were under 26 could stay on their parents’ health insurance. We made sure that there were no lifetime limits and that if you got sick your insurance company -- if you’d been paying your premiums, that they better be paying for your medical care and not trying to wiggle out of it.

So this was a landmark piece of legislation. Yes, getting it through Congress was messy, and it didn’t have every single provision in there that we wanted, but it was entirely consistent with what I campaigned on.

Now, with respect to the Bush tax cuts, I said very clearly that I thought the high-end tax cuts for folks like Warren Buffett should lapse. After the midterms, though, the economy was still weak. It wasn’t clear that we could get -- that in Congress we could hold the line. We couldn’t get what’s called decoupling, which meant Republicans would not go along with just voting for continuing the middle-class tax cuts and letting the high-end lapse. And what that meant was, the choice I had to make would have been to let all the Bush tax cuts lapse, including those for the middle class, which would have meant that the average family saw their taxes go up $3,000 on average, at a time when they were still digging themselves out of a debt hole. It would have been very bad for the economy.

We also would not have gotten unemployment insurance continued into this year. We would not have been able to do the payroll tax, and so the economy would have been much weaker. And so I made a decision that it was better for us at that point to strengthen the economy because we only extended those tax cuts for another two years. And we would be able to take our case to the American people as the economy got stronger as to why we’ve got a different approach than the Republicans do.

Now, on this debt ceiling, it’s pretty straightforward. I felt that it was important for us to try to solve the problem rather than play games. And that was particularly important because if we had allowed default -- if you think that the stock market gyrations this last couple weeks was bad, if we had had a default, then we might not -- genuinely might have gone back into a financial crisis. Because the truth of the matter is, even though we got downgraded -- I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but when the market got all crazy, what do you think people bought? Where did they put their money to avoid risk? They bought Treasury bills.

So the market voted to say, we have complete confidence in America right now. But if we had defaulted, that meant that we might not have the legal authority to issue Treasury bills and we would have had problems making our Social Security payments, making our payments to our troops, our veterans and so forth. And that was not a risk worth taking.

Now, I know that people would like to say, well, just do something to get these guys under control. This was a unique situation in which, frankly, the collateral damage from an actual default would have been so great that I didn’t want to risk the livelihoods and the well-being of millions of people even though I thought the other side was very unreasonable. Now, that’s a unique circumstance.

Moving forward, my basic attitude is we know what to do. I'll be putting forward, when they come back in September, a very specific plan to boost the economy, to create jobs, and to control our deficit. And my attitude is, get it done. (Applause.) And if they don’t get it done, then we’ll be running against a Congress that’s not doing anything for the American people, and the choice will be very stark and will be very clear.

But I guess my broader point is this. Look, I think it was Mario Cuomo who once said, “Campaigning is in poetry and governing is in prose.” And my job as President goes beyond just winning the political argument. I’ve got a whole bunch of responsibilities, which means I have to make choices sometimes that are unattractive and I know will be bad for me politically and I know will get supporters of mine disappointed.

But what I want everybody to think about is the trajectory in which we’ve gone. So, yes, maybe you didn’t get a public option, but we got the closest thing we’ve ever had to universal health care. (Applause.) And, yes, the economy is not fully healed, but it’s a lot better off than it was when I came into office. (Applause.) And, yes, we haven’t transformed our energy system yet, but I tell you what, administratively we just doubled fuel efficiency standards on cars -- the first time that’s happened in 30 years, which will do more for our environment than any piece of legislation that we’ve seen in a very long time. (Applause.) And we will be getting our troops out of Iraq by the end of this year; we’ve already got 100,000 out and they’re all going to be out by the end of this year, and we’re starting to transition out of Afghanistan. (Applause.)

So, look, the bottom line is we’re moving in the right direction. But I know it’s frustrating, because the other side is unreasonable. And you don’t want to -- you don’t want to reward unreasonableness. Look, I get that. But sometimes you’ve got to make choices in order to do what’s best for the country at that particular moment, and that’s what I’ve tried to do. All right?

Okay. (Applause.) It’s a guy’s turn. This gentleman in the back, in the blue shirt.

Q You were heard --

THE PRESIDENT: There you go. (Laughter.)

Q You talk about universal health care. I guess my question is, it it’s so good, why are you allowing so many large companies to opt out?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, you know what? Here’s what it is, is that any time you’re changing big systems like this, there are going to be -- there’s going to be a transition period. So the overall health care reform does not take fully -- does not fully take effect until 2013. That’s when we have the exchanges set up, which means that if you don’t have health insurance or if you’re a small business that only has a few employees and you can’t get a good rate, you’re going to be able to go into the exchange and essentially be part of a big pool -- just like a big company or the federal workers are -- and get a better deal from your insurance companies. But those exchanges are just now being set up. It took about a couple years to get it set up.

So, in the meantime, the question is, how do you manage that transition in a way in which a bunch of companies don’t say to themselves, well, we’re just going to eliminate health care that’s not great but is better than nothing. And our basic attitude has been, we’re willing to give some waivers to some companies that are doing something when it comes to health care, because those employees don’t have a better option right now. But as we build up this better option, then they’ll be able to take advantage of that better option. All right?

So the whole issue here has to do with, how do we transition to get to the point where all these exchanges all across the country are up and running? Now, there are some things that have already taken effect that make a difference in your life even if you’ve got health insurance. I mentioned young people who can stay on their health care -- parents’ health care till they’re 26. Senior citizens, right now, have already gotten a $250 rebate on their prescription drugs, and we’re closing the so-called “doughnut hole” so that if you’ve got high drug expenses, you’re going to start saving potentially thousands of dollars over the next several years as we phase that in.

If you’ve got health insurance right now, you’ve got a lot more security in your health insurance than you used to. And in the meantime, there are small businesses all across the country who are getting millions of dollars in subsidies already; they’re getting big tax breaks to provide health insurance to their employees that they didn’t provide -- that they didn’t get before.

So this thing is already making a big difference in the lives of millions of people all across the country, but it’s not fully implemented yet. And that’s not unusual. I mean, when Social Security started, it took a bunch of years before it was the program that we understand it to be right now. The same was true with Medicaid; the same was true with Medicare. So when you start doing something big like this, it takes a couple years in order for us to implement it.

All right. It’s a young lady’s turn. Okay. Right there, in the stripes. Yes.

Q First of all, I’d like to say what an honor it is to be here with you.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, it’s great to be here, and it’s a beautiful night. (Applause.) It’s nice.

Q We know that the tax system is pretty broken. Is there anything going on about a possible federal sales tax or a flat tax -- anything like that, which would be more fair to all people?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, this is the task that the so-called super committee is supposed to be working on, and that is changing the tax code and reforming it -- closing loopholes, closing special-interest tax breaks. Potentially, if you closed a bunch of these loopholes and tax breaks, you could lower the overall rate, broaden the base, and it would be a fairer, easier system that would combine simplification with, actually, more revenue.

So my hope is that Congress is willing to take up tax reform. So far they’ve said that they’re willing to do it, but so far we haven’t seen a lot of energy on the part of some folks in actually delivering on tax reform.

Now, I have to tell you, I think it’s very important for us to maintain what’s called progressivity in the tax code, though. Because, yes, you can reform the tax code where you just have a flat tax, for example; the problem is Warren Buffett would probably pay even less in taxes, and a lot of companies would pay even less in taxes if you set up that system.

So we can simplify the tax code; we can make it less distorting to the economy. There is no reason why an oil and gas company should get a tax break when a small business here in Decorah doesn’t get a tax break. There’s no reason why you should get a tax break if you build a corporate jet, but you don’t get that same tax break if you build a commercial jet.

So there are a lot of distortions like that that we need to change. And my hope is, is that Congress takes tax reform seriously. But no matter what tax reform happens, it is very important for those of us who are best able to pay, to pay our fair share. That’s a basic principle that I think all of us agree on, all of us understand. (Applause.) And by the way, that’s how it was up until 2000. And when you hear this argument that somehow if you just cut taxes for wealthy folks that the economy is going to be better because they’re the job generators, et cetera, just remember that we created tens of millions of jobs under the tax code that existed before the Bush tax cuts, and we’ve had much less job growth since that time.

So we’ve had an experiment in this theory that you hear propagated all the time -- it didn’t work. And in the meantime, it helped to create these huge deficits, and it means we’re underinvesting in the things that are going to be important.

So states all across the country are laying off teachers -- this is not the time for us to be laying off teachers. We should be training teachers -- (applause) -- putting the best teachers in front of the classroom, because whoever’s best educated is going to win the race for the future.

Now is not the time for us to not invest in infrastructure. We used to have the best roads, the best bridges, the best seaports, and these days China has got better airports than us. Europe has better rail systems. Try to get products to market -- we should have the best. We should have the best smart grid that transmits energy from solar panels and wind turbines to high-population centers, which could be an income generator for rural America and would improve our environment and reduce our dependence on foreign oil. Those are investments we should be making right now. (Applause.)

So there are two contrasting visions that are going to be presented over the next year and a half in this debate that we still have to finish about how to close the debt and the deficit and how we move this country forward. And I’m on the side of a vision that says we live within our means but we still make investments in the future, and everybody pays their fair share and we’ve got shared sacrifice and shared opportunity.

And on the other side you’ve got a vision that says, we are going to make sure that those who have benefited the most pay the least, and we underinvest in education and we underinvest in infrastructure and we underinvest in basic research. That’s their vision. And we dismantle Medicare as we know it and make it into a voucher system. Well, that’s -- I don’t think that’s the way that America is going to grow; that’s not how America is going to prosper. But the only way that we’re going to be able to win that argument is if you guys make a decision that you want a country that’s big and bold and generous, and not one that’s cramped and just believes in a winner-take-all economy in which everybody else is left out in the cold. (Applause.) That’s not the kind of America that I was raised in, not the kind of America I believe in.

All right. A gentleman’s turn. Right there in the green shirt.

Q Thank you, sir. Welcome to Decorah. My name is John Frandsen (ph) and I’m with the Decorah city council -- I’m with the Decorah city council, my name is John Frandsen, and we have several large infrastructure construction companies. You touched on infrastructure, and I think that one of the fastest and best stimulus packages would be infrastructure in America. Can you touch base on that, please?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I completely agree with you. And, as I said, if you think about what’s happened to our economy, we had a huge housing bubble that popped, and a lot of folks who were feeling pretty good about the wealth invested in their homes suddenly felt poor when their mortgages were bigger than the assessment of their homes. And a lot of developers realized, you know what, we can’t sell all the homes that we’ve already built. And a lot of construction workers got laid off. And those construction workers, by the way, a lot of them had been in manufacturing, and when manufacturing got more efficient or moved offshore, they went into the construction trades. And that’s been a huge drag on our economy.

Now, there is no better time for us to invest in infrastructure than right now -- first of all, because we need it. But second of all, because interest rates are very low, so financing infrastructure is cheap. And you’ve got contractors and construction workers who are dying for work. So they’ll come in on time, under budget, if we just give them the opportunity.

So what we’ve said is this: Not only should the government be investing more in infrastructure, but we should be investing in it in a smarter way. There’s been bipartisan support for something called an infrastructure bank, where the federal government would put seed capital in it, but it would basically leverage the private sector that wants to invest in smart infrastructure projects all across the country. And so if you made a $10 billion investment, that might result in $300 billion worth of investment in projects all across the country that could put people to work right now. Because, look, there are a bunch of companies and a bunch of pension funds out there that are looking for ways to invest. They don’t know where to put their money. What better way to invest than investing in America? And it would make the entire economy more productive.

Now, we did some of this during the Recovery Act. So, for example, we said -- thanks to Tom Vilsack, we said, you know what, rural America needs broadband access. And so what we’ve done is to help lay broadband lines; our goal is 98 percent coverage, broadband coverage all across rural America. (Applause.) That’s a good investment. Not only does it put people to work, but it makes the incredible productivity of rural America connected with the world. And if you get a product here in Decorah that sells, you can not only sell in Decorah, you can start selling it in Los Angeles, in Singapore, and all around the world if you’ve got that Internet connection. That’s a good investment.

I mentioned a smart grid. We need to replace our electricity grid to make it more efficient, and then you can transmit energy form biofuels or wind power to major population centers. That’s good for rural America. That’s good for those population centers.

So there’s a lot of investments that we can make. All that’s missing right now is the will to get it done, and we’re going to be pushing Congress hard in September to move forward on that proposal. All right? (Applause.)

Okay. Let’s make sure I get this side here. This young lady right here. We got a microphone right by you.

Q You already did a good job by calling me a young lady. (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT: See? Absolutely.

Q Thank you very much, Mr. President. Mr. President, you’ve got some wonderful ideas. And as a result of my work at Luther College at the diversity center, I’m privileged to hear a lot of good ideas. And I’m privileged to work with people, with partners, who may have different points of view, but we come to common ground. Unfortunately, Mr. President, I don’t see that you have partners. The Congress doesn’t seem to be a good partner. You said so yourself, they’re more interested in seeing you lose than the country win.

My question, Mr. President, is, what actual strategy do you have behind the plan that you say that you’re going to be taking back to Washington so that when Congress comes back they’ll have all these good ideas in front of them? And then my second question is, what happens, Mr. President, to our democracy? We are in a very divided country right now. What can you say to help us with democracy itself? Good old American democracy. Thank you. (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT: You bet. Well, let me say this. First of all, democracy is always a messy business in a big country like this. We’re diverse, got a lot of points of view. We kind of romanticize sometimes what democracy used to be like.

But when you listen to what the Federalists said about the anti-Federalists and the names that Jefferson called Hamilton and back and forth -- I mean, those guys were tough. Lincoln, they used to talk about him almost as bad as they talk about me. (Laughter.)

So democracy has never been for the faint of heart. And you’ve got to get involved and get engaged. And folks are throwing elbows, and that’s always been the way American democracy has functioned. So we don’t want to romanticize it.

But what is true is because of the way our system is set up, we got different branches of government, separation of powers, and in order to do big things we always have had to compromise. That’s just the nature of how our democracies function. And what that means is, is that everybody cannot get 100 percent of what they want.

Now, for those of you who are married, there is an analogy here. (Laughter.) I basically let Michelle have 90 percent of what she wants. But at a certain point, I have to draw the line and say, give me my little 10 percent. (Laughter.) Now, this is mainly -- she’s right 90 percent of the time. (Laughter.)

But you said in your workplace, you guys don’t all agree on everything. But at a certain point when you want to move the institution forward, you say, all right, let’s try to not focus just on our differences. Let’s try to figure out what we have in common.

That is something that we have not seen lately, partly because the way congressional districts are drawn everybody is in very safe districts. And so the Republicans, they’re worried about a Republican primary and they’re not really thinking about the general election. That kind of pushes them to take more maximalist positions.

Part of it is the way our media has evolved. It used to be everybody was sitting there watching Walter Cronkite. Now, everybody is on their own little blog or their own separate news forum. If you’re a Democrat, you’re reading The New York Times. If you’re a Republican, you’re watching FOX News, right? People don’t listen to each other as much. The only way that gets fixed is if voters insist on a different kind of politics and reward people who do seem to be listening to the other side, and do seem to be focusing on trying to get things done.

Now, in terms of how I deal with the current Congress, what I can do is to present my best ideas about how we move the country forward. And by the way, these are ideas that -- many of these ideas traditionally have had Republican support. It’s amusing to watch one of the major Republican candidates now trying to wiggle out of the fact that my health care bill is very similar to the health care bill he passed at a time when he needed to compromise because he was living in a Democratic-majority state.

And so -- some of these folks know better. And what I -- all I can do is to say, I’m going to take the best ideas from everybody -- Republicans, independents and Democrats -- present to them, this is what you should do. But I can’t force them to do it; you can force them to do it. And I will take my case to the American people that this vision is how we move the country forward, and if they’ve got an alternative vision and they don’t want to sit there and do nothing for the next 16 months, while unemployment is still high and small businesses are still suffering, then ultimately they’re going to be held to account by you -- just like I’m going to be held to account by you. (Applause.)

But we’ve got to reward folks who are more serious about solving problems than scoring political points. And I make no apologies -- sometimes people get mad at me -- well, he’s too reasonable. (Laughter.) Now, think about that. Think about that. People, they’re not arguing necessarily that what I’m saying would work. They’re just saying, well, you’re too reasonable. I make no apologies for being reasonable.

But, ultimately, you do have to hold people accountable, because lives are at stake and the economy is at stake and our children’s future is at stake. And so we don’t have time for games. All right?

Okay. The gentleman right here.

Q Hi. Thanks for coming to Decorah. It’s really awesome for you to be here. Mr. Vilsack did a great job before he left office as the governor, in reinstating voting rights for -- (applause) --

THE PRESIDENT: Yay, Tom Vilsack! (Applause.)

Q -- in reinstating voting rights for convicted felons. I have found, as somebody who made a mistake when I was young, that 10 years later it’s still affecting me. And I want to know, like, if there’s anything that is going to be done or could be done so that I can move past that past, and many of the people who are all around me and have something better than an entry-level job.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, there are obviously a bunch of different aspects to the challenges for folks who have some sort of felony record. It affects them economically. It affects them in terms of voting in some states. One of the strengths of America has always been that this is a land of second chances. And as somebody who feels deeply about my faith, one of the things about my Christian faith is that I believe in redemption and second chances.

And so as a consequence, I think it is very important for us -- first of all, if somebody has served their time, for them to be able to participate in their democracy. (Applause.) And historically, many of these issues in terms of eligibility to vote have been set at the state level as opposed to the federal level, but the Justice Department at the federal level does have the capacity and the obligation to monitor what states are doing to make sure that they are not purposely exclusionary.

And so we’re going to be monitoring voting rights all across the country as long as I’m President of the United States, because I think that the burden of proof should be on states to provide a rationale as to why somebody shouldn’t be voting, as opposed to the burden of proof on the person not voting as to why they should have a right to vote. That’s my general view. (Applause.)

Economically, there are a lot of good programs out there -- and to their credit, we’ve actually had some good bipartisan support for second-chance legislation that helps provide training programs and allows, for example, expungement of more minor offenses so that people can get back on their feet and contribute economically. And we’ve actually had some good Democratic and Republican support in Congress for some of that legislation. I think the challenge right now is, when the economy is weak, obviously you’re going to have a tougher time when you apply for a job if there are 100 other applicants for the same job and some of them don’t have a record.

If the economy is stronger, then it puts us in a stronger position to be able to push companies to give people a second chance. And so I think my biggest job as President is to make sure that we’re strengthening the economy, we’re growing it, we’re putting people back to work generally, because this is a situation where a rising tide does lift all boats. If the economy is going strong and the unemployment rate is going down generally, then that’s going to help you as well. All right? (Applause.)

Okay. The woman with the hat. She’s been waving that hat around. (Laughter.) See, you got to have a hat. That’s a huge advantage in terms of getting called on.

Q Hi, my name is Bev Kromgezmi (ph), and I actually used to teach school in the district in which Seed Savers is located. And we have a number of students, former students here, that I taught.

THE PRESIDENT: How was she? Was she a good teacher? (Applause.) You got thumbs up.

Q What can I say?

THE PRESIDENT: What did you teach?

Q High school social studies.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, that’s important stuff.

Q Many unions, especially public sector unions, helped you get elected in 2008. Those public sector unions and their members gained their salaries and benefits through collective bargaining. Recently, those benefits have been under attack. And I realize that this is a state issue mostly, but what can you do to help support collective bargaining in the states and, most of all, support the public sector unions, the middle class, many of whom are union members? Thank you. (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, let’s make one thing clear. The right of workers to come together and join a union is part of what built America’s middle class. It’s the reason why we’ve got a minimum wage. (Applause.) It’s the reason why folks have weekends. It’s the reason why you have basic protections on the job from an abusive employer.

There are a whole range of things that people take for granted, even if they’re not in a union, that they wouldn’t have had if it had not been for collective bargaining. (Applause.) So I think it is very important, whether you are in a union or not -- and I speak particularly to young people, because you’ve grown up at a time when in a lot of circles “union” somehow is a dirty word -- to understand all this is is people joining together so they’ve got a little more leverage; so they’ve got better working conditions, better wages; they can better support their family.

And a lot of us entered into the middle class because our parent or a grandparent was in a union. Remember that. (Applause.) When I hear this kind of anti-union rhetoric and anti-union assaults, I’m thinking these folks have amnesia. They don’t remember that that helped build our middle class and strengthen our economy.

Now, you’re right. Most of this activity right now is being done at the state level, although I will tell you that some of the assaults on collective bargaining are taking place at the federal level. You remember this FAA situation where they were shutting down the airports for -- threatening to shut down the airports and we were going to be laying off tens of thousands of people? The reason that happened was because folks on the other side in the House of Representatives decided, let’s try to slip in a provision that could make it harder for people to collectively bargain in the aviation industry. And Democrats wouldn’t go along. And so they said, okay, well, we’re not going to renew funding for this.

So we’re seeing some of that at the federal level as well, and we’re fighting back, pushing back against these efforts to diminish the capacity to exercise their basic freedoms and their basic rights.

Now, at the state level, in addition to just providing vocal support for public employees, what I also have been trying to do is to help states so that they can meet their obligations to their public employees and to emphasize how important it is to our future collectively that we have, for example, teachers that are getting paid a good wage. (Applause.) We can’t recruit the kinds of teachers that we need in the classroom.

And in most countries that are doing well right now educationally, their teachers are revered. They get paid on par with doctors and engineers, because there is an understanding that this is a critical profession for the future of the nation. (Applause.)

I do say, though, to my friends in the public sector unions that it is important that you are on the side of reform where reform is needed. Because the truth of the matter is, is that at a time when everybody is belt-tightening, there is nothing wrong with a union saying to itself, you know what, we know budgets are hard right now. Let’s sit down and say we’re willing to negotiate so that we’re making some sacrifices to maintain the number of teachers in the classroom and keep class sizes at a reasonable level. We’re willing to make some modifications in terms of how our pension systems work so that they’re sustainable for the next generation of teachers as long as it’s a conversation, as opposed to it simply being imposed and collective bargaining rights being stripped away.

So I think it’s important -- remember we talked about shared sacrifice and burden sharing. Well, this is an area where there’s got to be burden sharing as well. If a public sector employee is able to retire at 55 with 80 percent of their wages, and the average public sector employee has got a 401(k) that they’ve just seen decline by about 20 percent and they have no idea how they’re going to retire, and they’re feeling burdened by a lot of taxes and they don’t feel like the public sector employers are making any adjustments whatsoever to reflect the tough economic realities that are facing folks who are not protected, then there’s going to be a natural backlash.

If there’s a feeling that unions aren’t partners in reform processes in things like education, then they’re going to end up being an easy target. So there’s got to be an understanding of, on the one hand, we’ve got to revere public employees -- I was saying when I was in Cannon Falls that people are tired of politics, but they’re not tired of government. They may not realize it, but government are our troops in Afghanistan and Iraq. Government are our teachers in the classroom. Government are the FEMA folks who help people when there’s a flood or a tornado or a natural disaster. (Applause.)

But we also have to acknowledge -- and sometimes Democrats aren’t good at this -- is acknowledging that not every program in government is working perfectly and we’ve got to make adjustments to become more efficient and more productive, just like the private sector does. And the more we’re willing to be open to new ideas and reform and change, the more we’re going to be able to rally public opinion behind all the outstanding work that public employees do as opposed to public opinion being turned against public employees.

Okay, how many more? We’ve got time for one more? This is always tough, this last one.

Q I have a question.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I -- hold on a second. I’m looking over at this -- sir --

Q How will we --

THE PRESIDENT: Sir ---

Q -- come together when you Vice President is calling (inaudible) terrorists?

THE PRESIDENT: Sir, hold on a second. I know it’s not going to work if -- I know it’s not going to work if you just stand up and start -- no, he’s okay. But, sir, I know it’s not going to work if you just stand up when I asked everybody to raise their hand. Okay, so I was about to call on somebody. (Applause.) I didn’t see you. I wasn’t avoiding you. Please.

Whose turn? Is it a -- I’m going to call on this young man right here. And I'll be happy to talk to you afterwards. Go ahead. This young man right here. We always end with the next generation. Go ahead. (Applause.)

Q Thank you, Mr. President. It’s a real benefit of living in Iowa that we get to meet a lot of famous presidential candidates.

THE PRESIDENT: Yes, people seem to -- for some reason, they just seem to show up in Iowa all the time, don’t they? (Laughter.) It’s shocking.

Q I’m actually in a picture with you somewhere. (Laughter.) You’re talking a lot about how to bring people together and how to get our democracy to work together. It’s all about finding common ground. But over the past -- we’ve seen the rise of the tea party, and they really like to cite Thomas Jefferson for his opposition to big government and support of small government. What they don’t ever mention is his fear of monied interests in politics. (Applause.)

Well, what we saw in 2010 in Iowa were -- and in Wisconsin -- were experienced, dedicated, wise centrist Democratic public servants being challenged by relatively unqualified Republican candidates. And these candidates were backed by millions of dollars of out-of-state company funding. And we also now have the Republican frontrunner for president calling corporations people. So I’m wondering what kind of hope do we have for our political spectrum now that we’re running -- we’re going into the first presidential election where we will be facing unlimited corporate contributions in politics? (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT: All right. Well -- well, let me -- (applause) -- let me say this. First of all, in fairness to this gentleman who raised a question, I absolutely agree that everybody needs to try to tone down the rhetoric. Now, in fairness, since I’ve been called a socialist who wasn’t born in this country, who is destroying America and taking away its freedoms because I passed a health care bill, I’m all for lowering the rhetoric.

I do think that, whether it’s the tea party or activists from whatever walk of life, as I said before, democracy has always been rambunctious in this country. And that’s part of what makes America great, is everybody can express their opinions. And there is real anger and frustration -- understandable -- about the economic situation that we’re finding ourselves in. I get that.

Think about it, we came in -- you’ve got a bunch of irresponsible actors, both in Washington and on Wall Street, that almost brought this economy to the ground, and suddenly everybody else is paying for it. And I think the tea party is an expression of that anger and frustration, as much as sort of the activism on the Democratic side is an expression of anger and frustration. Obviously, I agree more with the view that it wasn’t big government per se that caused this crash, it wasn’t food stamps or public employee unions that caused this crash, and that we should direct our anger effectively at how do we prevent the most powerful forces in our society from acting irresponsibly.

I do share your concern that money has become such a powerful factor in politics that it has a distorting effect, and it doesn’t just have a distorting effect during election time. I mean, this financial regulatory reform bill that we passed -- Dodd-Frank -- we set up a Consumer Protection Bureau, a Consumer Finance Protection Bureau -- some of you may be familiar with this. The basic idea is pretty straightforward -- that we should have somebody in the federal government who makes sure that you’re not getting cheated when you take out a credit card, you’re not getting cheated when you take out a mortgage, that you’re not reading a bunch of fine print that you don’t understand and that you’ve got to be a lawyer to decipher, that consumers should have somebody who’s looking out for them in these complex financial transactions that are increasingly a part of our lives. (Applause.)

So we got this thing passed and we’ve set it up, and now I’ve got millions of dollars in lobbyists and special-interest donations trying to dismantle this thing before it even gets off the ground, and I can’t get the Senate to confirm anybody to take the position. It doesn’t matter how well qualified they are. So right now we’ve nominated the former attorney general of Ohio, who was also the treasurer of Ohio, who when he was in Ohio Republicans and Democrats said was a great consumer advocate who, for the last year and a half, at great sacrifice to himself, has helped to set up this agency; and I’ve got the Republican Senate -- 44 of them, which means that they can filibuster any appointment -- saying, we’re not going to appoint anybody to this thing unless you water down the enforcement capacities of this agency. Well, that’s just -- that is pure special-interest lobbying at work. (Applause.) And that is not how our democracy should work. That is not how our democracy should work.

And as we go into this presidential election, what you’re going to see is unlimited money that’s going to be going on the airwaves -- and, frankly, we’re already seeing it. I mean, I think they’ve already spent about $20 million, $30 million around the country going after me, and nobody even knows where this money is coming from. You got a bunch of front groups. They’re usually called something having to do with freedom or -- you know. We don’t know who they are. They’re not accountable to anybody.

Here’s the good news, though -- I mean, right now, the Supreme Court has made a ruling -- we’re not going to be able to change it -- but slowly, surely, when the American people put their voice behind something, eventually the system responds. It may not always respond as fast as we want, but eventually it responds. And so if voters all across the country say we want a different kind of politics, we will get a different kind of politics.

If all of you are enlisted in the fight to make sure that we’ve got a country that is looking out for middle-class families and promoting common sense, and thinking about the next generation and not just the next election, and is thinking more about country than it is about party, and is less interested in vilifying opponents than figuring out how to get something done, then we’re going to start electing folks who do that.

And let me tell you, when we have that kind of politics, watch out. Watch out. You will not be able to stop this country. You will not be able to stop America from making sure that the 21st century is the American century just like the 20th century was. But I’m going to need your help, everybody.

God bless you. God bless America. (Applause.)

END
6:28 P.M. CDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in a Town Hall Meeting in Cannon Falls, Minnesota

Hannah’s Bend Park, Cannon Falls, Minnesota

11:56 A.M. CDT

        THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Cannon Falls!  Hello, Minnesota!  Well, what a spectacular setting.  Let’s get the grill going.

        AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Fishing!

        THE PRESIDENT:  And do a little fishing?  It is wonderful to see all of you here today.  Thank you for showing up, and what a incredible setting.  Everybody, feel free to have a seat; we’re going to be here for a while.  (Laughter.)

        A couple introductions I want to make real quick, although these folks don’t need any introduction.  The outstanding governor of Minnesota Mark Dayton is in the house.  (Applause.)  Two of the finest senators in the country, Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken are here.  (Applause.)  From your congressional delegation, Tim Walz -- (applause) -- Keith Ellison.  (Applause.)  We’ve got the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack is here.  And I want to thank the mayor of Cannon Falls, Minnesota, for organizing perfect weather -- Robby Robinson is here.  (Applause.)

        So I am very pleased to be out of Washington -- (applause) -- and it is great to be here.  What I’m going to do is I’m just going to say a few things at the top, and then what I want to do is just open it up for questions and comments, and I want to hear from you guys.  That’s the reason that we’re on this bus tour.

        Obviously America has gone through extraordinary challenges over the last two and a half years.  We’ve gone through the worst recession since the Great Depression, dating all the way back to 2007, 2008.  But here’s the interesting thing:  If you ask people around the world, people would still tell you America has got the best universities, we’ve got the best scientists, we’ve got the best entrepreneurs -- we’ve got so much going for us that folks would gladly trade places with us.  (Applause.)  Around the world, people still understand the extraordinary power, but also the extraordinary hope that America represents.

        So there is nothing wrong with America that can’t be fixed; what’s broken is our politics.  (Applause.)  Think about it:  Over the last six months, we’ve had a string of bad luck -- there have been some things that we could not control.  You had an Arab Spring in the Middle East that promises more democracy and more human rights for people, but it also drove up gas prices -- tough for the economy, a lot of uncertainty.  And then you have the situation in Europe, where they’re dealing with all sorts of debt challenges, and that washes up on our shores.  And you had a tsunami in Japan, and that broke supply chains and created difficulties for the economy all across the globe.

        So there were a bunch of things taking place over the last six months that were not within our control.  But here’s the thing -- the question is, how do we handle these challenges?  Do we rise to the occasion?  Do we pull together?  Do we make smart decisions?  And what’s been happening over the last six months -- and a little bit longer than that if we’re honest with ourselves -- is that we have a political culture that doesn’t seem willing to make the tough choices to move America forward.

        We’ve got a willingness to play partisan games and engage in brinksmanship that not only costs us in terms of the economy now, but also is going to place a burden on future generations.  And the question is, can we break out of that pattern?  Can we break out of that pattern?  Think about it:  We just went through this debacle with the debt ceiling -- an entirely self-inflicted wound.  It wasn’t something that was necessary.  We had put forward a plan that would have stabilized our debt and our deficits for years to come.  But because we’ve got a politics in which some folks in Congress -- not the folks who are here -- but some in Congress would rather see their opponents lose than America win, we ended up creating more uncertainty and more damage to an economy that was already weak.

        Now, we can’t have patience with that kind of behavior anymore.  I know you’re frustrated, and I’m frustrated, too.  We’ve got to focus on growing this economy, putting people back to work, and making sure that the American Dream is there not just for this generation but for the next generation.  (Applause.)  

        Another way of putting this is, we expect our political representatives to show the same level of responsibility that all of you show.  I don’t know most of you, but I can guess that you’re all working hard.  You’re managing your budgets.  You’re putting something away for your kids’ college education, maybe for your retirement.  You’re at the local church, working in the food pantry or doing something to help out your community, coaching Little League.  You are following through on your responsibilities, and that’s true all across the country.  People are doing the right thing.

        Well, if you can do the right thing, then folks in Washington have to do the right thing.  (Applause.)  And if we do that, there is not a problem that we face that we cannot solve.

        Think about it.  Our biggest challenge right now is putting people to work.  Biggest challenge is getting the economy growing as rapidly as it needs to grow.  It’s been growing.  We’ve been able to reverse the recession.  We’ve added over 2 million jobs in the private sector over the last 17 months.  (Applause.)

        But we’re not growing it as fast as we need to to drive down the unemployment rate in a significant way and to give people confidence.

        So here are some things that we could do right now, what I’ve been talking about now for months.  We could renew the payroll tax cut that we gave you in December that put $1,000 in the pocket of a typical family so that you’ve got more money in your pockets to spend to meet your obligations.  It also means businesses have more customers.  And it means they might hire a few more folks as a consequence.  All we need to do is renew it.  It’s already in place.  If we have certainty next year that that same tax cut is going to be in place, then that’s going to help businesses make decisions to hire people and open up and make investments.  That’s something we could do right now.  Congress can do that right now.  (Applause.)

        Congress right now could start putting folks to work rebuilding America.  One of the biggest things that caused this recession was the housing bubble, and all those subprime loans that were going out that were getting packaged in Wall Street and folks were making millions and billions of dollars off them, and then the whole thing came crashing down.  And no one has been hit harder than construction workers.

        And so for us to say at a time when interest rates are low, contractors are begging for work, construction workers are lining up to find jobs -- let’s rebuild America.  We could be rebuilding roads and bridges and schools and parks all across America right now.  (Applause.)  Could put hundreds of thousands of folks to work right now.

        There’s a bill sitting in Congress right now that would set up an infrastructure bank to get that moving, attracting private sector dollars, not just public dollars.  Congress needs to move.

        Right now we’ve got our veterans coming home from Iraq and Afghanistan, who’ve taken their place among the greatest of generations, have made extraordinary sacrifices.  I meet these young people -- (applause) -- I meet young people, 23, 24 years old, they’re in charge of platoons, making life or death decisions.  They’re in charge of millions, tens of millions, a hundred million dollars’ worth of equipment, and they’re coming home and they can’t find work.  So we’ve said, let’s give tax credits to companies that are hiring our veterans, and let’s put them back to work and let’s let them use their skills to get this country moving again.  (Applause.)  Congress could do that right now.  

        Trade deals.  You know, trade deals haven’t always been good for America.  There have been times where we haven’t gotten a fair deal out of our trade deals.  But we’ve put together a package that is going to allow us to start selling some Chevys and some Fords to Korea so that -- we don’t mind having Hyundais and Kias here, but we want some “Made in America” stuff in other countries.  (Applause.)  That’s something that Congress could do right now.

        Patent reform is something that a lot of folks don’t talk about, but our entrepreneurs, when they come up with a good idea, if we could reform how that system works and cut some of the red tape, we could have entrepreneurs creating businesses like Google and Microsoft right now, all across the country.  But we’ve got to make this investment, and Congress could make that decision to make it happen.  

        So there is no shortage of ideas to put people to work right now.  What is needed is action on the part of Congress, a willingness to put the partisan games aside and say, we’re going to do what’s right for the country, not what we think is going to score some political points for the next election.  (Applause.)  

        Now, we also need to do this in a way that allows government to live within its means.  Like I said, everybody here, you make responsible choices about what you can afford and what you can’t afford.  America needs to do and can do the exact same thing.  There are some programs that don’t work; we should stop funding them.  There is some red tape that needs to be cut; we should cut it.  But the fact of the matter is that solving our debt and deficit problems simply requires all of us to share in a little bit of sacrifice, all of us to be willing to do a little bit more to get this country back on track.  (Applause.)  And that’s not too much to ask.

        Basically what we need to do is we need to cut about $4 trillion over the next 10 years.  Now, that sounds like a big number -- it is a big number.  But if we were able to, as I proposed, cut about $2 trillion in spending, if folks who could best afford it -- millionaires and billionaires -- were willing to eliminate some of the loopholes that they take advantage of in the tax code and do a little bit more, and if we were willing to take on some of the long-term costs that we have on health care -- if we do those things, we could solve this problem tomorrow.  I put a deal before the Speaker of the House, John Boehner, that would have solved this problem.  And he walked away because his belief was we can’t ask anything of millionaires and billionaires and big corporations in order to close our deficit.  

        Now, Warren Buffett had an op-ed that he wrote today, where he said, “We’ve got to stop coddling billionaires like me.”  (Applause.)  That’s what Warren Buffett said.  He pointed out that he pays a lower tax rate than anybody in his office, including the secretary.  He figured out that his tax bill, he paid about 17 percent.  And the reason is because most of his wealth comes from capital gains.  You don’t get those tax breaks.  You’re paying more than that.  And -- now, I may be wrong, but I think you’re a little less wealthy than Warren Buffett.  That’s just a guess.  (Laughter.)  

        The point is, is that if we’re willing to do something in a balanced way -- making some tough choices in terms of spending cuts, but also raising some revenue from folks who’ve done very well, even in a tough economy -- then we can get control of our debt and deficit and we can start still investing in things like education and basic research and infrastructure that are going to make sure that our future is bright.  (Applause.)  It’s not that complicated, but it does require everybody being willing to make some compromises.

        I was in Holland, Michigan, the other day and I said, I don’t know about how things work in your house, but in my house if I said, you know, Michelle, honey, we got to cut back, so we’re going to have you stop shopping completely -- you can’t buy shoes, you can’t buy dresses -- but I’m keeping my golf clubs -- (laughter) -- you know, that wouldn’t go over so well.  

        The point is, something is happening in Washington where we think that kind of compromise that we do every day in our own families, with our neighbors, with our co-workers, with our friends, that somehow that’s become a dirty word.  And that’s got to change.  That’s got to stop.  (Applause.)  

        So here’s the bottom line:  Obviously, with the markets going up and down last week and this downgrade, a lot of folks were feeling a little anxious and distressed and feeling like, boy, we’ve been working so hard over the last two and a half years to get this economy back out of recession, and some folks worry that we might be slipping back.  I want all of you to understand:  There is nothing that we’re facing that we can’t solve with some spirit of America first; a willingness to say, we’re going to choose party -- we’re going to choose country over party, we’re going to choose the next generation over the next election.  (Applause.)  If we are willing to do that, then I have absolutely no doubt that we can get this economy going again, we can put people to work back again, small businesses can start growing again.  But I’m going to need your help to make it happen.  You’ve got to send a message to Washington that it’s time for the games to stop.  It’s time to put country first.  (Applause.)  It is time for the games to stop.

        Some folks were asking me, well, why don’t you just call Congress back?  And I said, you know, I don’t think it’s going to make people feel real encouraged if we have Congress come back and all they’re doing is arguing again.  So what they need to do is come to Cannon Falls, they need to come to -- they need to go back to their districts, talk to ordinary folks, find out how frustrated they are, and hopefully, when they get back in September, they’re going to have a new attitude.  (Applause.)  

        But I want everybody to understand here that I’m not here just to enjoy the nice weather, I’m here to enlist you in a fight.  We are fighting for the future of our country.  (Applause.)  And that is a fight that we are going to win.  That is a promise that I make with your help.

        Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)

        Thank you.  All right.  So everybody have a seat.  We’re -- here’s how we’re going to do it.  I’m just going to call on folks, and we’re going to go girl, boy, girl, boy to make sure that -- (laughter) -- make sure it’s fair.  I’ve got a couple of daughters, so I know that sometimes, you know -- all right.  

        Right here, go ahead.  Yes, yes.  Hold on, we got a mic -- and introduce yourself for me.

        Q    Okay.  Hi, I’m Cecilia Findorf (ph), and first off, President Obama, I just -- I want to say, as a young voter, thank you for helping me believe that it will be good some day -- like -- (applause) --

        THE PRESIDENT:  It’s going to be good.

        Q    But I have a question, I promise.

        THE PRESIDENT:  You bet.

        Q    My question is, how are you going to use renewable energy to create jobs in the future?

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, this is a great question, especially for rural communities all across America.  Tom Vilsack, who was the former governor of Iowa, knows a little bit about agriculture.  And so when I put Tom in as the head of the Department of Agriculture, one of the first things we talked about was, how can we mobilize the incredible resourcefulness and hard work of rural communities all across this country, not just to create jobs, but also to win back energy independence.   And as a consequence, we have put billions of dollars into energy research and to help move in a direction of greater reliance on fuels that are homegrown.

        So let me give you a couple of examples.  One, obviously, is biofuels.  And a lot of folks here are familiar with corn-based ethanol, but the fact of the matter is the technology is moving where we need to start taking advantage of a whole range of biofuels, using refuse, using stuff that we don’t use for food to create energy.  And we are seeing incredible progress on that front, but it’s key to make sure that we continue to make the research and that we also use the incredible purchasing power of the federal government to encourage it.  

        So one of the things that I know we’re doing is we’re actually working with the Department of Defense to start saying, let’s run some of these -- let me just say this:  The Department of Defense uses a lot of fuel, so the question is, can we get trucks and jeeps and, in some cases, even fighter jets running on alternative fuels, which is important for our national security but also could provide an incredible boost to communities all across Minnesota, all across the country?

        The other thing that we have to do is look at things like wind power and solar power and the next generation of electric vehicles.  You will recall when I came into office they were talking about the liquidation of GM and Chrysler, and a lot of folks said, you can’t help them, and it’s a waste of the government’s money to try to help them.  But what I said was, we can’t afford to lose up to a million jobs in this country, particularly in the Midwest, but we also can’t afford to lose leadership in terms of building an auto industry that we used to own.

        And so we turned around those auto companies -- they are now making a profit for the first time in decades, they’re gaining market share for the first time in years.  (Applause.)  But what we said was, if we’re going to help you, then you’ve also got to change your ways.  You can’t just make money on SUVs and trucks.  There’s a place for SUVs and trucks, but as gas prices keep on going up, you’ve got to understand the market -- people are going to be trying to save money.  

        And so what we’ve now seen is an investment in electric vehicles, and then what we did was we put investments in something called advanced battery manufacturing, because those electric cars, how well they run depends on how good the batteries are -- how long they can run before they get recharged.  We only had 2 percent of the advanced battery manufacturing market when I came into office.  We’re on track now to have 30, 40, 50 percent of that market.  (Applause.)  We are making batteries here in the United States of America that go into electric cars made here in the United States of America.  It creates jobs, and it creates -- (applause) -- and it creates energy independence, and it also improves our environment.

        So that’s the kind of approach that we have to take -- using the private sector, understanding that ultimately the private sector is going to be creating jobs, but also understanding that the government can be an effective partner in that process.  And nowhere is that more true than in rural America.  So, great question.  (Applause.)

        All right, gentleman right here.  You can borrow my mic.  Oh, you got it?  Okay.

        Q    Mr. President, I’m Gary Evans (ph) from Winona, Minnesota.  I run a broadband company there, and I’ve got a couple of messages that I hope you’ll take back to your colleagues in D.C.  The first is, two years ago we had 60 employees; tomorrow we will cross 100.  (Applause.)  We are making the investments in this country, so my first message is:  Help the job creators; do what it takes.  Secondly, it was already apparent as the debt debate went on that the mood in America had shifted again to skepticism, so I’m hoping that you and your colleagues will do everything possible to make certain that confidence is restored to the country and that we have a bright future.  I think broadband is a key, and I appreciate what you did for it during the stimulus act.  Thank you.

        THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  We were talking earlier about rural America.  Despite all its incredible advantages, especially its people, a disadvantage is that rural America, by definition, is a little more spread out.  It’s a little more stretched out, right?  Population density isn’t as great.  So as a consequence, when we’ve seen all these investments in wireless and broadband and all these new technologies that are stitching the world together, a lot of times rural America is left out.

        And that’s why, when we came into office, one of the big investments we said we were going to make is in broadband technology so that we can connect every single town all across America.  We want 98 percent coverage when it comes to broadband, and we want that same kind of coverage when it comes to wireless -- (applause) -- because what that means is -- what that means is, is that if there’s a small business in Cannon Falls that’s got a great idea, you don’t have to just confine your market to Cannon Falls; you can start selling in Rochester, and then you start selling in Des Moines, and then you start selling in New York and maybe you start selling something in Paris.  And there are incredible opportunities in terms of business growth, but it requires a connection to all these wider markets.  

        The days are gone where any business is going to succeed just by selling right where they’re located.  And that’s why we’ve made such a big investment in this, and I’m pleased to see that it’s working.  

        In terms of boosting folks’ confidence, I think people would actually feel pretty confident if they felt like their leaders were working together.  I mean, that’s my belief.  (Applause.)  But I also think that they’re looking for some practical common sense.  I know it’s not election season yet, but I just have to mention, the debate the other party candidates were having the other day, when they were asked to reduce our deficit, reduce our debt, would you be willing to take a deal where it was $5 of spending cuts for every $1 of increased revenues, who would take it?  Everybody said no.  They said, how about 10 to 1?  Ten dollars of cuts for every dollar increase in revenue?  Are you saying that none of you would take it -- and everybody raised their hand.  None of them would take it.  Think about that.  I mean, that’s just not common sense.

        Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton -- the last time we had a balanced budget -- all of them understood that you have to take a balanced approach to solving our deficit and debt problems, the same way a family would.  If you knew that you had to cut down on your budget, you wouldn’t stop funding the college fund for your kid.  You wouldn’t say, sorry, Johnny, you know, things are tight so we’re going to keep on taking our annual vacation and I’m going to buy a new car next year, but you’re not going to college.  That’s not how you balance your budget.

        Well, the American people are expecting that same kind of common sense reflected.  And if it was there, I guarantee you confidence would go up.  I speak to CEOs of companies all across America, and what they tell me is, you know what, we’re actually willing to do a little bit more when it comes to our personal taxes -- because they know they’ve done very well.  They said, the single most important thing we want is making sure that middle-class families and small businesses are successful, because if they’re successful we’re going to be successful, and we’ll have more products.  (Applause.)  That’s what we’re waiting for.  And that can be achieved, but it’s going to require all of us working together.

        All right, who’s next?  Yes, this young lady in the green.  Right there.  And then I’ll call on this guy back there because you’ve been -- you’ve had your hand up a bunch of times.  (Laughter.)

        Q    Okay, thank you.  Welcome, President Obama.

        THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

        Q    My name is Eunice Biel (ph) from Harmony, and my husband and son and his wife were dairy farmers.  And so I just wanted -- for years, we have -- we’ve never had very much money, but we have been creating wealth for this country.  And I would just like to say that I am -- with your rural committee, I just wanted you to keep that in mind that we always create wealth for this country.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  You bet.  You bet.  You know, one thing that I think is worth noting, because -- again, I’m going to brag on Vilsack here, because he’s done a great job -- through the Department of Agriculture, we’ve provided $5 billion in assistance, in terms of loans and other forms of assistance, to small and medium-sized farmers all across the country.  And that creates a lot of jobs.

        One of our great strengths as a country is agriculture.  And one of the pledges that I made when I came into office was we’re going to double our exports.  And a big component of that is agricultural exports.  And so far, we’ve seen agricultural exports rise to over $100 billion.  It creates over two -- that means over 800,000 jobs all across America.  But the fact of the matter is, is that a lot of family farmers are still struggling.  And so one of the things that we’re going to be talking about during this tour -- and we’ve got a big roundtable discussion tomorrow, drawing on the work that our Rural Council did -- is how we can make sure that we can get more capital to small farmers; how can we help young farmers who want to go into farming be able to buy land because land prices have gone up so high; how can we make sure that they’re able to market their products effectively, because right now, if you’re not a mega-farm, a lot of times you get squeezed.  

        So there are a lot of things that we can be doing to help the farm economy.  And if you help the farm economy in rural communities, you help the economy of entire states.  And if you help entire states, then that’s good for the country as a whole.  So thank you for what you do.  (Applause.)

        Young man over here.

        Q    Well, thank you, President Obama, for coming to the great state of Minnesota, home of Senator Paul Wellstone.  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  And Franken and Klobuchar.  (Applause.)

        Q    Yes, for sure.  My name is Will Morrison (ph).  I actually live in Rochester, Minnesota, home of the Mayo Clinic.  Well, I just want to say I don’t think we should solve this debt crisis -- and it is a crisis -- on the backs of the middle class and the poor.  (Applause.)  They don’t have special interests, they don’t have lobbyists.  And I want to be their lobbyist and special interest.  And I just think that if we are serious about this debt, we need to ask the millionaires and billionaires to give up their tax breaks so not all the burden is on us.

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we -- look, I can completely agree with you.

        Q    So with that, I just want to say thank you so much for a great job you are doing.  I support you 100 percent.  And you got my vote in 2008 and I’m going to vote for you in 2012.  Good luck.  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you.  I do want to just say one thing about this debt.  When I came into office, we had about a trillion dollars of debt -- or deficits already.  The debt is the accumulation of the annual deficits, year after year.  We had a balanced budget in 2000.  We then launched two wars that we didn’t pay for.  First time we had ever, by the way, not decided to pay for wars that we were going to fight; we just put it on the credit card.

        We added a prescription drug plan for seniors, which was important to do, but we didn’t pay for it.  And we had tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 that were not paid for.  So that added a huge amount of debt.  And then with the recession coming in, that added more debt, because what happens is you get less tax revenue, businesses have fewer sales, folks may have been laid off.  And you’re also sending more money out because of things like unemployment insurance, helping farms stay afloat, making sure that we were putting folks to work through things like broadband.  

        So the debt problem is real and the deficit problem is real, but as I said before, it is actually a manageable problem.  And if you don’t believe me, think about it:  Even after the downgrade, the next day, when the stock markets were going haywire and everybody was thinking, what’s the best risk-free investment, what did they invest in?  They invested in treasuries.  So the market said this is -- America is still one of our best bets.  They’re betting on us.  And that’s why you have to recognize this is not a financial crisis -- although it could turn into one if we don’t do anything about it -- this is a political crisis.  This is manageable.

        Now, I don’t want to lie to you.  That doesn’t mean that we can’t -- and we don’t have to make some tough choices.  We do.  We cut in this debt deal about a trillion dollars’ worth of spending over 10 years.  We protected programs for student loans through the Pell Grant program, for example.  (Applause.)  We protected programs for hungry kids.  We protected health care for seniors.  (Applause.)  We protected people who are the most vulnerable and need the most help from government.  But we made some cuts in areas -- including defense spending, by the way -- where we had just gotten kind of carried away.  And that was important to do.

        Now, that solves about one-fourth of the problem.  We’ve got more work to do.  The key -- and I want everybody to pay attention to this as the debate unfolds over the next couple of months -- the key is not to try to cut more out of programs for poor folks or programs for seniors.  The key right now is to get a long-term plan for fiscal stability.  And in the short term, we should actually make more investments that would put people to work and get the economy moving.  (Applause.)  And if you combine those two things, we can actually solve this problem and grow the economy at the same time.

        The one area where we are going to have to take a look at how we can improve the system is our health care programs Medicare and Medicaid.  Now, my grandma, even though she worked hard all her life, had a decent income most of her life, she was hugely reliant on Medicare at the end of her life.  So I know what Medicare means to seniors.

        What is also true, though, is our health care costs have been skyrocketing and more seniors are joining up Medicare because the population is getting older.  So part of what I recommended when we were in these negotiations -- although we didn’t get a commitment from the other side -- is to say, can we manage to reduce the overall cost of Medicare in a way that still preserves the integrity of the system and strengthens it so it’s there for future generations?

        Now, what some of the folks on the other side are proposing is actually to turn Medicare into a voucher program.  So instead of fixing the system, they’d just completely overhaul it.  And what would happen would be, is you’d get a voucher that says, you’re allowed to get X amount -- spend X amount on health care, and if your health care costs keep on going above that, you’re out of luck.  And it was estimated that under their plan the average senior would pay about $6,000 more per year for their Medicare when it kicked in.  I think that’s a bad idea.  (Applause.)  I think there are better ways for us to manage the Medicare problem than to put a burden on seniors.   

        And one example is, if I were paying my fair share of taxes, then we don’t have to put that kind of burden on seniors.  We don’t have to.  I don’t want a tax break that requires 33 seniors or 40 seniors to pay thousands of dollars more on their health care.  I don’t need it.  And it’s not the right thing to do.  (Applause.)

        All right.  The young lady right here has been waiting for a while.  Hold on -- hold on, one second, get your microphone.  We want to all hear you.

        Q    Welcome to Minnesota.

        THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

        Q    Mr. President, I’ve been sleeping in my truck for two days to ask you this question.  (Laughter.)  I am recovering from lung cancer.  I tried to get Social Security disability and they turned me down.  My question to you is, we can talk about Social Security a little bit?

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, Social Security -- here’s my commitment -- I don’t know about the other folks, but I’ll make a commitment as long as I’m President of the United States -- Social Security will not only be there for you, but it’s also going to be there for the next generation and the generation after that because it’s one of the most important social insurance programs that we have.  (Applause.)  And by the way, you pay into Social Security.  They call it an entitlement, but it’s not an entitlement; you’re paying for it.  It’s getting taken out of your paycheck.  

        So it is true that as the population gets older there’s going to be more and more pressure on the Social Security system.  But the Social Security system is not the cause of our debt and deficit.  (Applause.)  So don’t let folks fool you by saying that in order to get a handle on our debt we’ve got to slash Social Security.  There are some modest adjustments that can be made that will make it solvent for 75 years -- and that’s about as long as you can think ahead as a country.

        And the way to do it is similar to the way that Ronald Reagan and Tip O’Neill fixed Social Security back in 1983.  They said, okay, we’ll make some modest adjustments that are phased in over a very long period of time; most folks don’t notice them.  But if we do that, and all the money goes back into Social Security -- it doesn’t go anywhere else -- then there’s no reason why Social Security won’t be there for future generations.  But, again, this is an example of where everybody gets so dug in on their positions.  

        And I have to say, in fairness -- because I’ve commented on the other side not always being flexible -- there have been times where our side -- when Democrats aren’t always as flexible as we need to be.  I mean, sometimes I do get frustrated when I hear folks say, you can’t make any changes to any government programs.  Well, that can’t be right.  I mean, most companies every year, they’re kind of thinking, what can we do better?   Are there some changes we could make in order to have the operation go a little smoother?  The government should have to do the same thing.  But that doesn’t mean we have to make radical changes that dismantle what is the most important social insurance program that we have.  But, again, the problem is not the program, the problem is our politics.

        You’ll hear a lot of folks, by the way, say that government is broken.  Well, government and politics are two different things.  Government is our troops who are fighting on our behalf in Afghanistan and Iraq.  That’s government.  (Applause.)  Government are also those FEMA folks when there’s a flood or a drought or some emergency who come out and are helping people out.  That’s government.  Government is Social Security.  Government are teachers in the classroom.  (Applause.)  Government are our firefighters and our police officers, and the folks who keep our water clean and our air clean to breathe, and our agricultural workers.  And when you go to a national park, and those folks in the hats -- that’s government.

        So don’t be confused -- as frustrated as you are about politics, don’t buy into this notion that somehow government is what’s holding us back.  Now, too much government -- if it’s oppressive and bureaucratic and it’s not listening to people and it’s not responsive to the needs of people and isn’t customer friendly -- that’s a problem.  And if you stand in line at some government office and nobody seems to be paying any attention to you, well, that needs to be fixed.  And if somebody is trying to regulate a small business and they’re not paying attention to the realities of the small business, that’s a problem.  

        But don’t buy into this whole notion that somehow government doesn’t do us any good; government is what protects us.  The government is what built the Interstate Highway System.  Government is what sent a man to the Moon.  It’s what invested in the research and development that created innovations all across this country.  (Applause.)

        All right.  I think it’s a gentleman’s turn, isn’t it?  Right back there.  Yes, sir.  Right there.

        Our mic guys are doing a great job, aren’t they?  Give them a round of applause.  (Applause.)

        Q    Thank you.  Are we on?  First of all, welcome to Cannon Falls, President Obama.  We’re really pleased to have you here.

        THE PRESIDENT:  Thrilled to be here.

        Q    You just did a little lead-in to my question a couple of minutes ago when you said that the government is a lot of things.  And as we look around us right now and we see that we are ringed by school buses all the way around this way, that’s kind of where I’m headed here.  It’s because we can’t improve the economy unless we improve its foundations, and education is at the foundation of this economy.  (Applause.)  I would like to know what it is that your administration is planning on doing to bolster education in the face of state cuts, federal cuts -- 45 students to a classroom, cutting teachers and so forth.

        Thank you.  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let me tell you first of all what we did when I came into office.  The Recovery Act, about a third of it was support to states to prevent layoffs of teachers and firefighters and police officers.  And thanks to the work that Amy and Al and Keith and Tim and others did, even after the first round of the Recovery Act, we then gave states some additional assistance to prevent layoffs of teachers.  

        Now, at a certain point, the money ran out.  And states are still going through a tough time.  I personally believe that one of the most effective ways that we could help the economy is making sure that we’re not seeing more teacher layoffs -- (applause) -- and I’m going to be working with Congress and state governments all across the country to prevent that from happening, because you’re exactly right -- we can’t eat our seed corn.  We can’t shortchange investments in the future, and no investment is more important than education.

        Now, the challenge we have in education is not just money, though.  We’ve also got to make it work better.  And that’s why what my administration has done is to say, we’re going to put more money into education, but we’re also going to look for high standards and reform at the state levels.  And what we’ve tried to do is collaborate with governors and say, look, instead of a No Child Left Behind law that labels schools failures but doesn’t give them help that they need -- (applause) -- what we think you should do is we’ll work with you to come up with what are the things that work.  How do we help train young teachers more effectively?  How do we make sure that there’s good data, so instead of just teaching to the test, teachers are able to get results from a test to use to actually improve teaching in the classroom while it’s taking place right then?  (Applause.)

        And the steps we’ve taken, including something called Race to the Top that creates competition and says, you know what, if you’re doing a really great job and you’re coming up with innovative new ideas, we’ll give you a little extra money to implement those reforms and those good ideas -- we’re actually starting to see improvement across the country.  The problem is, if the improvement is undermined because teachers are getting laid off and kids are ending up having to go to school four days a week in some states instead of five, or if suddenly things like music and art and PE that used to be critical to any school experience, suddenly that stuff is going away, then that’s undermining the reforms that we’re making.

        So my argument to every governor and every local school district is, figure out what you can do without, but don’t shortchange education.  And ultimately the most important thing in education are our teachers, and we’ve got to give them support and buck them up.  (Applause.)  In fact, we should be paying them more than they’re getting paid.  (Applause.)  If we’re doing that, then we’ll be in pretty good shape.

        All right.  Gentleman in the yellow -- oh, I’m sorry, it’s a lady’s turn.  Right there, in the sunglasses -- in the blue blouse, right there.  There we go.

        Q    Hi, Mr. President.  My name is Teresa Morel (ph), and I just want to say that I’m really excited that you’re here in Cannon Falls.  And my question is, is there something we can do about the rising cost of prescription drugs?  And number two, if you can’t legalize marijuana, why can’t we just legalize medical marijuana to help the people that need it?

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, a lot of states are making decisions about medical marijuana.  As a controlled substance, the issue, then, is, is it being prescribed by a doctor as opposed to -- well, I’ll leave it at that.  (Laughter.)

        With respect to prescription drugs, the prescription drug program that now is part of Medicare obviously has been very helpful, but the costs had been going up and up and up.  So part of the Affordable Care Act health care reform, also known as “Obamacare” -- by the way, you know what?  Let me tell you, I have no problem with folks saying “Obama cares.”  I do care.  (Applause.)  If the other side wants to be the folks who don’t care, that’s fine with me.

        But, yes, I do care about families who have been struggling because of crushing health care costs.  I met a young man here who -- right here -- who, as a consequence of health care reform -- he’s got a blood disorder that, if it weren’t for the health care reform act, his family would have been capped out and he wouldn’t have the help that he needs.  (Applause.)  So -- and you can tell he’s an outstanding young man and he’s going to do great things, and his family is not going bankrupt as a consequence of it.

        Now, the same thing is true on prescription drugs.  What we did as part of the Affordable Care Act was we said, first of all, we’re going to give a $250 rebate to every senior out there who’s using the prescription drug plan to help lower their costs a little bit, and what we’ve done is we’re starting to close what’s called the “doughnut hole.”  And for those of you who aren’t familiar with the doughnut hole, the way the original prescription drug plan was structured, you would get some coverage up to a certain point -- a couple thousand dollars -- once you spent a few thousand dollars, suddenly it just went away and you were on your own, out of pocket, until you got on the other side where you’d spent many more thousands of dollars, and then you would get a prescription drug plan again.  

        Well, we said, that doesn’t make any sense; let’s close that hole.  And as part of the Affordable Care Act, we will be closing that hole, and we’re also making it cheaper for generics to get onto market as well as brand-name drugs.  So, overall, the health care act should be lowering prices for prescription drugs over the next few years.  It’s getting phased in, so it didn’t all take into effect right away after I signed the bill; it’s getting phased in over the next several years.  But you should start seeing some relief if your family needs prescription drugs.  That was part of the Affordable Care Act.  All right?  

        Gentleman in the yellow shirt right here.

        Q    Hello, Mr. President.  I’m Pat Tulo (ph) from Cannon Falls Township.  First, I want to echo the sentiments of those who have spoken before me in praising you and thanking you for all of your efforts and all the things that you’ve tried to do during probably one of the most difficult situations faced by any president in the face of unreasonable obstruction and opposition.  So thank you.  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you.

        Q    I’d like to follow up on health care reform.  As of two days ago, we now have a split in the 11th Circuit and 6th Circuit Courts of Appeals, where, inevitably, this is heading for the U.S. Supreme Court regardless of how the 4th Circuit rules.  I don’t have a lot of confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court with its conservative wing.  My concern is that they will drive this toward striking down the individual responsibility mandate, which I understand to be so critical to making the system work -- if everybody doesn’t buy in, it really doesn’t work.  My question to you, sir, is, what do we do?  This is a giant step backward if it happens.  And I know I’m counting on -- I’m talking about things that haven’t happened yet, but just in terms of contingency planning, you must be thinking about this.

        THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, I think it’s important for everybody to understand that the Affordable Care Act won’t have fully taken effect until 2013.  So on a big change like this where we’re helping a lot of people, you want to phase it in and do it right.  

        Now, there are a lot of different component parts to it.  I just mentioned prescription drugs, helping seniors be able to afford their prescription drugs.  You’ve got the law that says that folks can stay on their parents’ health insurance up until they’re 26 years old -- (applause) -- so a lot of young people, especially if they don’t have a job yet or they don’t have a job that gives health insurance, they’ve got some security as they’re getting started off in life.

        All the patient -- essentially patient rights that were in the bill, all those things are going to be there.  So no lifetime caps and no fine print that the insurance company gives you where you think you’re covered and then when you’re sick you go to try to get insurance and it turns out that they’re not covering you for that -- all that stuff is going to be in place.  

        And what we’re doing is each state is setting up what’s called an exchange where, essentially, you can pool with your friends who also don’t -- and neighbors who don’t have health insurance, and now you’ve got a big purchasing unit, right, just like a big company does, and that means you can negotiate with the insurance companies and you can get a better deal.  

        How many people here have tried to buy health insurance on their own without a company?  And you know what happens, right?  They will charge you an arm and a leg, because their attitude is you’re not part of a big enough pool that we can spread the risk across.  

        So we’re setting up these exchanges.  Now, where the individual responsibility mandate comes in has to do with the part of the law that says an insurance company can’t reject you because you’ve got a preexisting condition.  And -- which I think is the right thing to do.  (Applause).

        Here’s the problem:  If an insurance company has to take you, has to insure you, even if you’re sick, but you don’t have an individual mandate, then what would everybody do?  They would wait until they get sick and then you’d buy health insurance, right?  No point in you -- I mean, it’s just like your car insurance.  If you could buy -- if the car insurance companies had to give you insurance, you’d just wait until you had an accident and then you’d be dialing on the phone from the wreck, and you’d say, “State Farm, I’d like to buy some car insurance please.”  (Laughter.)

        So that’s why the individual mandate is important.  Because the basic theory is, look, everybody here at some point or another is going to need medical care, and you can’t be a free-rider on everybody else -- you can’t not have health insurance, then go to the emergency room and each of us who’ve done the responsible thing and have health insurance, suddenly we now have to pay the premiums for you.  That’s not fair.  (Applause.)  So if you can afford it, you should get health insurance just like you get car insurance.  

        This should not be controversial, but it has become controversial partly because of people’s view that -- well, let me just say this:  You’ve got a governor who’s running for president right now who instituted the exact same thing in Massachusetts -- this used to be a Republican idea, by the way, this whole idea of the individual mandate, and suddenly some -- it’s like they got amnesia.  (Laughter.)  It’s like, oh, this is terrible; this is going to take away freedom for Americans all over the world, all over the country.  So that’s a little puzzling.

        One court has said -- actually, the majority of courts that have looked at it, the lower courts, have said individual mandate is fine.  Medical care is different from everything else.  There’s nothing wrong with saying to people who can afford to get health insurance, you need to buy health insurance just like car insurance.  You can’t wait and then go to the emergency room, because we can’t turn you away at the emergency room.  And if you’re broke, then we’ll give you some help, but if you can afford it, you should buy it.  That’s what the majority of courts have said.

        There have been two appeals courts so far.  One has said it’s fine.  The other one has taken sort of the conservative line that this restricts freedom and Congress doesn’t have the authority to do it.  If the Supreme Court follows existing precedent, existing law, it should be upheld without a problem.  If the Supreme Court does not follow existing law and precedent, then we’ll have to manage that when it happens.

        But I just want to make everybody understand that there are a lot of components to the health care law that are good for you, even if you don’t have health insurance -- or even if you have health insurance.  It’s true that we helped 30 million people get health insurance.  (Applause.)  But it was also the strongest patient bill of rights that has ever been passed to make sure that if you do have health insurance, the insurance companies don’t jerk you around, that they treat you fairly.  And that is going to stay in place.  And that’s the right thing to do.  (Applause.)

        All right, I’ve got time for one more question.  And I’m going to ask this young lady right here.  I always want to end with the next generation.

        Q    I’m Vanessa Pier (ph) and I’m from Cannon Falls.  And I’m going to say, happy birthday to Val.  (Laughter.)  

        THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, happy birthday, Val.  Val looks like she’s about 29.  (Laughter.)

        Q    And why Cannon Falls?  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  Why Cannon Falls?  Well, I had heard that Cannon Falls has some of the smartest, best-looking kids around.  And you have confirmed the rumor about the outstanding children of Cannon Falls.  (Laughter.)  

        So thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.

END 12:58 P.M. CDT

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Conference Call With Reporters To Discuss Vice President Biden Trip to China, Mongolia, and Japan

Via Telephone

11:03 A.M. EDT

        MS. DUDLEY:  Thank you very much.  And thank you, everyone, for joining the call today.  Our hope is to provide you all with a more detailed sense of the Vice President’s schedule and goals during his trip to China, Mongolia, and Japan.  

        With us today, we have National Security Advisor to the Vice President Tony Blinken, Senior Director for Asian Affairs on the national security staff Danny Russel, and Undersecretary for International Affairs at the Department of Treasury Lael Brainard.  This call will be on the record, and our speakers are happy to take questions after they give some brief opening statements at the top.

        We’d like to keep this call as focused on the Vice President’s trip as much as possible.  So with that, I’m just going to go ahead and turn it over to Tony Blinken and let him kick it off.

        MR. BLINKEN:  Amy, thanks very much and thanks to everyone for joining the call today.  Let me run you through the big picture of the Vice President’s trip with some highlights from the schedule and then turn it over to Danny, and then to Lael, to go into more detail on some of the policy questions we’re looking at.

        This is the Vice President’s first trip to East Asia as Vice President.  But, I think as many of you probably know, he traveled to Asia many times as a senator, including back in 1979 as part of the first Senate delegation to China after we normalized relations.

        This trip that starts tomorrow is part of the administration’s dedicated effort over the last two-and-a-half years to renew and intensify the U.S. role in Asia.  We’ve pursued a consistent strategy set out by President Obama to expand our presence and our influence in the region.  The Vice President’s trip is a reflection of our belief that the United States is a pacific power whose interests are inextricably linked with Asia’s economic security and political order.  

        The trip begins with four days in China, Beijing, and the southwestern city of Chengdu.  We then travel to Mongolia for a day, and finally to our close ally Japan for two days.  The dates specifically are China, August 17 through 22; Mongolia, August 22nd; and Japan, August 22nd to the 24th.  

        So let me just give you a quick preview of each part before I turn it over to Danny and to Lael.  Let me start with China.  This trip to China originated in President Hu Jintao’s state visit in January, when President Hu Jintao formally invited the Vice President to China and we in turn invited Vice President Xi to the United States.  These reciprocal visits are mentioned in the January 2011 U.S.-China joint statement.  

        One of the primary purposes of the trip is to get to know China’s future leadership, to build a relationship with Vice President Xi, and to discuss with him and other Chinese leaders the full breadth of issues in the U.S.-China relationship.  Simply put, we’re investing in the future of the U.S.-China relationship.

        The schedule, very broadly -- there is obviously a lot more detail that will come out in the days ahead.  But let me just give you the headlines from our three days in Beijing and one day in Chengdu.  Day one in Beijing, we’ll have a welcoming ceremony.  There will be two meetings with Vice President Xi and a meeting with the head of China’s National People’s Congress Wen Jiabao, and finally a formal banquet hosted by Vice President Xi in the evening.

        The second day, also in Beijing, will begin with a roundtable discussion with U.S. and Chinese business leaders.  And we’ll be talking about the business communities’ experiences operating in each other’s countries -- the opportunities, the obstacles -- the role that governments can play to enhance cooperation and address some of the challenges that our business communities face.  And then, in the afternoon, the Vice President meets with Premier Wen and with President Hu.  

        Day three is both Beijing and Chengdu.  The Vice President will spend some time with the embassy staff.  And, of course, we have a new ambassador in China, Gary Locke.  So he’ll be meeting with them.  And we’ll be spending some time traveling to Chengdu in the afternoon.  

        And then, day four in Chengdu, a quick word about that.  Given the growth and urbanization of China’s western provinces and also U.S. investment there and the fact that no U.S. leader has visited there, we decided to travel to Chengdu in Sichuan Province.  In Chengdu, the Vice President will give a speech on U.S.-China relations at Sichuan University.  He’ll meet with senior provincial officials from Sichuan.

        He then travels to Dujiangyan City, jointly with Vice President Xi.  They’ll visit a high school that was rebuilt following the 2008 earthquake.  And then, in the evening, we expect the Vice President and Vice President Xi to have an informal dinner at a local restaurant in Chengdu.  

        That then brings us to Mongolia, something we are very excited about.  This is, on one level, a truly historic visit.  I’m sure many of you will recall the last visit of a Vice President to Mongolia.  That was in 1944, when FDR’s Vice President Henry Wallace toured Asia and included a stop in Mongolia.  

        Mongolia offers an important example of a successful transition to a strong democracy and a partner with whom we’re expanding cooperation in a broad variety of diplomatic, economic, and defense areas.  Like China, this visit to Mongolia is a reflection of our broader effort to engage emerging powers as a way to build a secure, prosperous, and democratic Asia.  

        I think many of you know the Mongolian President Elbegdorj was here not too long ago.  He met with President Obama in the Oval Office in June.  And this trip builds on that important visit.

        So we arrive in Ulaanbaatar on the morning of August 22nd.  The Vice President meets with the Prime Minister and then with the President.  And the Mongolians are going to host a cultural display of traditional Mongolian sports for us.  I’m told that may include archery, wrestling, and horse racing.  And we’re looking forward to that.

        And, finally, Japan.  The Vice President will be in Japan for two days.  He is visiting Japan to underscore that the U.S.-Japan alliance is strong.  And, of course, Japan is an ally, but also a friend.  And the U.S. stands with and supports Japan and the Japanese people as they recover from the March earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear emergency.

        So while he is in Japan, the Vice President will meet with Prime Minister Kan.  He is going to visit the northeastern city of Sendai, where American forces took the lead in reopening the airport after the earthquake.  And it also -- he is going to have an opportunity to thank American military and civilian personnel for the remarkable support and assistance they provided during Japan’s so-called “triple disaster” earlier this year.  

        So that’s a broad overview of the trip and stops.  Let me turn it over to Danny Russel to go into more detail on the policy, and then to Lael Brainard.  

        Danny.

        MR. RUSSEL:  Okay, thanks Tony.  And let me pick up on some of the points that you made, hopefully without being duplicative.  Namely that the visit by the Vice President to these three important Asian countries is of course timely, but it really also needs to be seen in context in the continuum of our policy approach to Asia.

        You’ll see that the schedule and the substantive agenda for the meetings exemplifies that approach that’s been taken by the Obama administration since day one, since we’ve been investing heavily in the Asia-Pacific region.  And our policy approach has been built on strengthening U.S. alliances and expanding our cooperation with emerging powers, and also working together in the effort to help to develop regional institutions in the Asia-Pacific region.

        I also want to mention that the Vice President’s trip beginning tomorrow kicks off a very busy diplomatic calendar for our Asia policy that extends through the fall, when President Obama will host APEC in Honolulu in November and then will also attend the East Asia Summit in Bali, Indonesia.  So planning for the upcoming meetings will I’m sure be very much on the Vice President’s mind when he is in Beijing and in Tokyo.

        On China, I guess I would start by reminding everyone that President Obama has met with President Hu Jintao already nine times and with Premier Wen Jiabao three times since 2009.  It seems likely that our two presidents will have meetings at some of the upcoming major multilateral events this fall.  

        And, as Tony mentioned, the Vice President’s trip and Vice President’s Xi Jinping’s reciprocal visit to follow are part of the continuum of interactions between the leaders of our two countries.  I think what’s particularly important is that this will be the first time that a very senior U.S. official has spent a substantial amount of time with Vice President Xi Jinping.

        They have met and begun developing a relationship.  But I think this visit provides an opportunity for the Vice President to talk extensively with Vice President Xi about the breadth of issues in our bilateral relationship and in the region.  

        And, as Tony said, it’s an example of our investing in the future of the U.S.-China relationship.  The context, as I’ve said, for this meeting between the two vice presidents is that we make a point of sustaining regular and high-level contacts with Chinese leaders as a way to ensure that we’re able to speak directly and speak authoritatively about the entire spectrum of issues that we are working together on.

        And what makes the visit timely is that both of our countries are trying to tackle a range of security and economic issues -- North Korea and Iran’s nuclear weapons programs of course; bilateral and global economic issues, which Lael will speak to; the security architecture in East Asia; stability and security in South Asia and Afghanistan and Pakistan.  These are the sorts of issues that we should expect the Vice President to discuss with Vice President Xi, as well as other members of China’s senior leadership during the trip.

        Naturally, there are issues that the Chinese themselves typically raise like Taiwan and Tibet.  And there are issues that every senior official who meets with Chinese leaders is going to raise, like human rights.

        I think the key point with regard to the Vice President’s meetings is that they are part of the continuum, and they continue and expand the ongoing and the constructive dialogue that President Obama has been conducting since he and Vice President Biden came into office.

        Now, to Mongolia -- Mongolia is taking over this year the chairmanship of the Community of Democracies.  And one of the points that the President made when he hosted President Elbegdorj in the Oval Office in June is that Mongolia has an activist approach to strengthening democratic principles throughout the world.  And it’s particularly credible and influential, given the tremendous strides that Mongolia itself has made since the end of the Cold War.

        So the Vice President’s trip to Mongolia is clearly a strong expression of support for Mongolia’s growing democracy.  And the trip reflects also the tremendous strides that we’ve made together in diplomatic and security cooperation.  

        On the diplomatic side, Mongolia has been working with us on a raft of important issues -- non-proliferation, peacekeeping, on human rights.  On the defense and security side, Mongolia is making substantial contributions of troops to the operations both in Iraq and Afghanistan.  So there is a lot of good work and a lot to talk about.

        The third stop, Japan, is significant I think in two respects.  One is as pertains to Japan’s recovery and reconstruction after the March triple disaster.  And I think the other significant element in the Vice President’s visit to Tokyo and Sendai is underscoring the tremendous strength and great importance of the U.S.-Japan alliance.

        The President and the Vice President recognize that the U.S. economy and the global economy has a big stake in Japan’s full and fast recovery.  So this trip I think offers the Vice President the opportunity to see for himself the great strides that the Japanese are making, and in many areas with the help of U.S. companies and certainly with the full support of the U.S. government.

        I know the President and the Vice President are confident Japan will emerge stronger than before, and the sooner that happens, obviously the better, given Japan’s role in regional security and global trade and finance and so on.  

        There’s a lot going on at this particular time, so in addition to economic issues, certainly the Vice President will be discussing security issues in Northeast Asia, particularly regarding North Korea and issues such as stability in Afghanistan where Japan is making an immense contribution.  Of course, there are alliance coordination issues and there are bilateral issues to touch on.

        But I think fundamentally, given the strength of the U.S.-Japan relationship, the Vice President’s visit serves to demonstrate how much we care about our friends.  

        So why don’t I stop there and turn it over to Secretary Brainard.

        MS. BRAINARD:  The economic side of the trip obviously is very important.  The trip provides an opportunity for Vice President Biden to advance American economic interests in the dynamic region in Asia broadly.  Of course, our trade and investment ties with China in particular are growing rapidly in both directions and we expect this to continue to be a vitally important trade investment relationship in terms of our broader jobs and exports agenda.

        If you look over the past year, U.S. exports to China have grown faster than to the rest of the world and have now topped $100 billion over the last year.  And, of course, those experts are supporting hundreds of thousands of American jobs in a whole variety of sectors ranging from high-tech to soy beans, from aircraft to autos.

        We’ve also seen a very rapid expansion of Chinese foreign direct investment into the U.S. market.  It more than doubled over the last year to $6 billion, which is also part of the President and the Vice President’s national jobs and exports strategy.

        The Vice President will be carrying the message that we need to continue to work to level the playing field for American workers and American businesses.  We’ve made quite a bit of progress over the last year, but we’re going to need to continue working on that front.  If you look at the exchange rate, we’ve seen appreciation since China moved to allow its exchange rates to resume flexibility in June of 2010.  

        We’ve seen nearly 7 percent bilateral appreciation against the dollar in nominal terms.  Of course, that is even greater if you adjust for the faster rate of inflation in China relative to the United States.  We’re going to keep pushing on that front.  The exchange rate remains substantially undervalued, but we have seen some important progress there to date.

        Through the President’s visit with President Hu in January through the JCCT, through the Strategic and Economic Dialogue we’ve also made some progress.  China has removed discriminatory procurement policies and it has agreed to strengthen enforcement of intellectual property rights in a number of very important ways.  But, of course, those agendas are a work in progress.  We’re going to continue pushing on that.

        Both China and the United States have tremendous mutual interest in seeing a stronger global economic recovery.  And China has a very important role to play in that process.  China needs to reorient its economic strategy away from a traditional reliance on net export-led growth to a domestic demand-led growth strategy.  And that’s something that we’ve been working together I think very effectively in the G20 and in the Strategic and Economic Dialogue and in the President’s and Vice President’s dealings with Chinese senior leadership.

        And so, the Vice President is going to continue pushing on that front.  And he will also have an opportunity to discuss some of the vital trade issues with the business community.  Those are very important commitments made in the JCCT and the S&ED and in the President’s visit to continue to improve the protection of intellectual property and to continue to open their markets to U.S. exports.  

        I think it’s important to stress that we each have challenges.  China has the challenges of moving from an export-led to a domestic demand-led economy.  They have challenges associated with an aging workforce.  They have challenges of moving from technology adopters to technology originators.  And, as you know, we are also taking on our fiscal and growth challenges with that very important deal that the Vice President was so critical in securing two weeks ago.

        And so, we’re both working very hard to address our respective challenges in a way that I think will be good for our citizens and good mutually for growth in each other’s economies and good for the world economy.  

        So with that, let me turn it back over to Tony.

        MR. BLINKEN:  Great.  Amy, I think we’re ready to take any questions.

        MS. DUDLEY:  Yes, I think we’re ready for questions.

        Q    Yes, thanks for doing this call.  I want to ask you a little bit -- you mentioned that human rights would be something that would be discussed.  Vice President Xi, just a month ago, was in Tibet and was talking a little bit about how -- worried about the separatism, as he puts it, from the Dalai Lama’s group.  What’s your message going to be on human rights and specifically on Tibet considering -- particularly if it involves Vice President Xi in Tibet?

        MR. RUSSEL:  Hi, Danny here.  Let me take that.  As you know, the President just met with the Dalai Lama at the White House last month.  And so our position on Tibet is consistent and clear.  And as we always do, I think the Vice President can be expected to reinforce the message to the Chinese that there is great value in their renewing their dialogue with the representatives of the Dalai Lama, with the goal of peacefully resolving differences.  

        More broadly, the protection of human rights globally is a central part of President Obama’s foreign policy in China as it is elsewhere.  And, as we do consistently, we will raise our concerns about the human rights situation throughout China.  We do this directly and privately with Chinese leaders and policy makers.  And, as the Vice President did during the S&ED -- the Security and Economic Dialogue in Washington in May -- we’ll also make our views known publicly as well.

        Q    Hi, thanks for doing the call.  Obviously, the trip is coming after the prolonged debt debate here.  And we saw some of China’s warnings since then about getting our fiscal house in order.  How much -- I guess, can you go into a little bit of what we might expect to hear from the Vice President in terms of his message to the Chinese about our fiscal situation?

        MR. BLINKEN:  Lael, do you want to start?

        MS. BRAINARD:  Yes, thanks.  I think the -- obviously, the Vice President will be in a good position to talk about the very strong deficit reduction package that we concluded here recently.  Obviously, the United States has the capacity, the will, and the commitment to tackle our major fiscal and economic challenges.

        The agreement that was reached, the Budget Control Act that was signed on August 2nd, is a major step in this direction both enacting $900 billion in deficit reduction right up front through discretionary spending caps, followed by a process for cutting an additional $1.5 trillion through the bipartisan committee whose members have now been named.

        But as you’ve seen in the last week, there continues to be extremely strong investor demand for U.S. Treasury securities, recognizing that this market continues to be the deepest, most liquid in the world and I think recognition widely in China and around the world that the U.S. economy remains the most flexible, the most innovative.  And, again, as China moves forward to address its challenges, as we move forward to address our challenges, we have very strong mutual interests.  And I expect that those are the issues that the Vice President is going to want to raise with the Chinese just as they want to move forward in creating a more hospitable environment.

        To become a more innovative economy, they’re going to need to start addressing some of the fundamental problems that our companies have been encountering in their market for some time -- protection of intellectual property, trying to dismantle a set of financial controls that tend to channel cheaper credit to state-owned enterprises and starve both their more innovative firms’ capital and also create an un-level playing field for our firms.

        So I think as we move forward on addressing our fiscal challenges, Chinese policy makers know that they can no longer count on the U.S. consumer to provide that demand to the global economy.  They’ve got tremendous capacity to help bolster global growth by switching to a domestic demand-led growth strategy.  And there’s tremendous opportunity for U.S. companies to assist them in doing that and to help create jobs here at home.  

        Q    Thank you very much.  Secretary Clinton has promised Senator Cornyn that the decision on F-16 sales would be made by October 1st.  Are you concerned at all that any F-16 sales announcement might have an impact on Vice President Xi Jinping’s reciprocal visit to the United States or even President Hu’s trip to Hawaii for the APEC summit, so much so that Vice President Biden will try to explain to the Chinese why the U.S. has to do what is required by law to do?  Thank you.

        MR. RUSSEL:  Hi, Danny here.  I'll take that.  Well, I think it’s important to make clear that on the issue of Taiwan that the Vice President has no plans to raise the Taiwan issue, certainly not arms sales during his trip.  He is not going to China to address that issue.  He is going, as we described, to address the broad spectrum of security, economic, political issues that we and China have to work together on.

        Now, it would not be surprising at all for the Chinese interlocutors to raise Taiwan, as they typically do, and convey their views and their concerns.  Our China policy is unchanged.  It’s based on the three U.S.-China communiqués.  And our policy towards Taiwan is based on the Taiwan Relations Act, and there is no change in that.  We take our obligations under the Taiwan Relations Act very seriously and we don’t negotiate these issues with China.

        I think that the fact of the matter is that there has been considerable progress in cross-Strait dialogue to reduce tensions.  And this is something that’s in everyone’s interest and something that we hope will continue.  We think that our policy and the Taiwan Relations Act supports an environment that is conducive to the improved relations across the Taiwan Strait and that at the same time U.S.-China relations will continue to flourish.

        Q    Hi.  Thanks for doing the call.  Which U.S. and Chinese business leaders will be at the meeting with the Vice President in Beijing on the second day of the trip?  And then, also will the issue of cyber theft and phone hacking come up in the wake of the McAfee study last week?

        MR. BLINKEN:  In terms of the business leaders and representatives, we’ll get you a list.  I don’t have that at hand, but we’ll get you a list and put that out in the next day or so.

        MR. RUSSEL:  Tony, just on the second part of the question, I won’t comment on a specific report, but I will say that cyberspace is global and both the U.S. and China are major users of cyberspace, and we therefore both have real vulnerabilities.  And, as a result, we began under the Strategic and Economic Dialogue, conversations with the Chinese, which we can discuss cyber security issues and enhance our understanding of our respective systems in order to promote cooperation in addressing both incidents and in system protections.

        Q    Hi, thanks very much.  Just a quick follow up question first for Danny.  Can you comment on the report regarding Taiwan today that the United States refused its request for 66 new Lockheed Martin F-16s?  And then, a follow up for Ms. Brainard as well, do you feel as though the Vice President will have to defend the U.S. and its position on debt and deficit?  I know you mentioned the recent deal, but does this feel in that sense that the Vice President will have to really do a sales pitch while he is there?  Thank you.

        MR. RUSSEL:  Right.  No, I won’t comment specifically on a particular story other than to say, as I did, that we take our obligations under the Taiwan Relations Act very seriously.  That’s manifest in the Obama administration’s decision to conclude an arms sale to Taiwan last year.  

        And this really isn’t what the Vice President’s trip is about.  The Vice President’s trip is about deepening our relationships and our cooperative efforts in Asia.

        MS. BRAINARD:  Yes, I think on the economic front I think the Vice President, of course, is going to want to share with foreign leaders in all three countries the plan that President Obama, Vice President Biden have worked on both to address the deficit, the long-run deficit in the Budget Control Act, but also to help support U.S. recovery, which is very important around the world.

        China has a huge interest in strong growth in the United States.  And, again, there are a lot of strengths of the U.S. economy that I think China is quite interested in helping to learn about.  And just if you look at the very strong rate of foreign direct investment into the U.S. economy over the last year, you’ll see tremendous Chinese interest in the many strengths across a whole variety of sectors that the U.S. has.  

        So, again, Chinese leaders are confronting a set of challenges there having to do with demographics, having to do with a need to move from various labor-intensive, very capital-intensive, export-oriented growth to growth that is supported by domestic consumption; to growth that is much more innovation, intensive; and growth that requires the much more sophisticated financial markets.  And so, there’s a lot of strengths that U.S. companies, the U.S. economic model, can now bring to bear as Chinese leaders think about their own domestic growth challenges.

        MR. BLINKEN:  Let me just add a quick footnote to that.  This is Tony.  I think you’ve got to also put this in a broader context, and I know the Vice President will want to do that as well.  As President Obama recently reminded the American people, and I’m sure the Vice President will have an opportunity to do that on his trip, and I quote -- this is from something the President said last week -- “For all the challenges we face, we continue to have the best universities, some of the most productive workers, the most innovative companies, the most adventurous entrepreneurs on earth.”      

        And, as Lael suggested, it’s the many strengths of our economy that have helped our country withstand economic and financial challenges over the years; strengthen the economy’s institutions, flexibility, the ability to innovate, the ability to give Americans, as well as those who come to the United States, an opportunity to pursue a prosperous future.  So that broader context will certainly be part of the Vice President’s trip.

        Q    Hi.  Yes, I was just curious about more specifics on the Vice President’s Japan portion of the trip, especially the particular date that he will be visiting Sendai.

        MR. BLINKEN:  So for the Japan piece, he will be in Japan for two days.  And he’ll be there -- arriving on the 22nd, and he will be in Sendai on the 23rd.

        Q    Thank you.  Could you elaborate a little bit on the currency issue, such as the Vice President is going to talk to China on the value of the dollar and also the appreciation of the RMB?  And also, one question for Mr. Blinken -- to this speech that the Vice President is going to give in Chengdu, what are some of the key issues that he is going to discuss relative to the U.S. and China relations?  Thank you.

        MS. DUDLEY:  I think this is going to be our last question.  

        MS. BRAINARD:  If you reflect on how the world is growing right now, obviously it is critically important for the continued sustainability and greater balance in global growth for the emerging markets that have capacity, that have untapped domestic demand to be able to play a greater role as consumers in some of the advanced economies including the U.S. build back their balanced sheets.  And that is a widely acknowledged shared challenge that if we do it successfully, it would be good for all of us.

        In China, in the 12th Five Year Plan, Chinese leaders have obviously agreed with the need for China to chart a economic course that is much more domestic demand-led.  A critical part of the adjustment mechanism in the global economy is for China to allow its exchange rate to move more quickly.  And I think Chinese leaders have acknowledged that.  They recognized that this is important in China that the -- the exchange rate to absorb more of the adjustment.  It really takes the pressure off of inflation, and so you would see less inflationary pressures as well.

        So it’s something that we think is very important for global growth.  It’s of course critically important for U.S. exports and jobs.  But we think it’s also directly in the interests of Chinese goals to lessen inflationary pressures.  

        We’ve seen some appreciation of the exchange rate.  As I’ve said, we’ve seen the exchange rate appreciating on a bilateral basis, nearly 7 percent now.  And if you take into account inflation, it’s been somewhat faster.  But we’re not satisfied with that rate of appreciation.  We know that it remains substantially undervalued.  And the Vice President will want to put special emphasis on that, because it’s important for China, it’s important for other emerging markets, and it’s important for U.S. jobs and exports.  

        MR. BLINKEN:  And on the speech, I’m going to let the speech mostly speak for itself in a few days time.  But just very broadly, as I mentioned at the top, the Vice President has been engaged with China for more than 30 years.  And he was in China in 1979, as part of the first delegation of U.S. senators after relations were normalized.  He met with then Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping.  And he of course has been back since and has been very engaged.

        So he has a vantage point to really speak about the broad sweep of the relationship over the past few decades.  How China has evolved, how the relationship has evolved, the work that we’re doing together cooperatively across an incredibly broad range of issues -- security, economic, and others -- and also some aspects of our competition, because we also have a competitive relationship, but one that need not be zero sum, where one side’s gain is the other’s loss.

        And I think one aspect of the speech that -- one issue that he is likely to emphasize in the speech as well are some of the challenges of building an innovation economy in the 21st century.  But the bottom line on the speech and indeed on the trip I think -- and this will be reflected in what the Vice President says -- is that for President Obama, for the Vice President, the bottom line is that it’s two great powers and global actors in this century.  China and the United States face many similar challenges and share many common responsibilities.  

        And the Vice President and President have the conviction that the more we can act on those challenges and on those responsibilities together, the more our people and the world will benefit.  And that’s the larger message of the speech in Chengdu.  Thanks very much.

        MS. DUDLEY:  All right.  Thanks, everyone, for getting on the call today.  If you do have any follow up questions, feel free to direct to me or my colleagues in the Vice President’s press office.  Look forward to updates on the trip and thank you everyone, again.

END 11:43 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Welcome of the Green Bay Packers

South Portico

2:57 P.M. EDT

        THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  (Applause.)  Everybody have a seat here.  Everybody have a seat.  On this spectacular day, I want to welcome everybody to the White House.  Thank you all for being here.  

        I’m just going to come out and say it:  This hurts a little bit.  (Laughter.)  This is a hard thing for a Bears fan to do.  It doesn’t hurt as much as the NFC Championship game hurt -- (laughter) -- but it still hurts -- you guys coming to my house to rub it in.  (Laughter.)  What are you going to do -- go to Ditka’s house next?  (Laughter.)

        But in the interest of good sportsmanship, congratulations to the Green Bay Packers on your fourth Super Bowl championship and record 13th NFL championship.  (Applause.)  

        You know, the problem you have, though, and your franchise -- your fans are not that enthusiastic.  (Laughter.)  You guys have got to work on that.  I'm surprised they're not wearing cheeseheads.  (Applause.)  Oh, there they are.  (Laughter.)  My mistake.  (Laughter.)     

        Look, obviously it's good to have football right around the corner.  Like every football fan, I was thrilled to have the lockout ended.  Nobody likes long, frustrating negotiations -- (laughter) -- with a rigid opposition, taking it to the brink.  (Laughter.)

        I want to recognize Packers President Mark Murphy, -- (applause) -- GM Ted Thompson -- (applause) -- for the outstanding job they've done, as well as Coach Mike McCarthy for guiding them to the next championship.  (Applause.)    

        And I would like to welcome all the players to the White House -- some of them I've had a chance to meet before, wonderful guys.  I guess I especially have to welcome Charles Woodson.  Where's Woodson?  (Applause.)  Hold on a second.  I wasn’t asking for some certificate you're about to give me, aren't you?  (Laughter.)  He's really rubbing it in.  Look at that.    

        Now, look, I admit Woodson is a pretty good ballplayer.  (Applause.)  And for those who don’t know, I gave Charles a little bulletin board material, apparently, last year.  And so after the Packers beat the Bears, Charles addressed the team -- everybody on ESPN saw it; I saw it while I was working out in the morning -- and Charles said “[If] the President [doesn’t] want to come to watch us at the Super Bowl, then we’re going to him.”  (Applause.)  

        Then I flew to Green Bay later that week to visit a local company, and Governor Walker and Mayor Schmidt -- where's Mayor Schmidt?  There he is right there.  (Applause.)  He gave me a jersey from Charles on which he'd written, "See you at the White House."  (Laughter.)  So basically, Charles has been giving me a hard time now for several months.  

        Charles, you're a man of your word.  And I've now learned something that every NFL quarterback already knows too well -- don't mess with Charles Woodson.  (Applause.)  

        Now, in the Super Bowl, the Packers showed just what a championship team is made of and that you deserved those rings Coach McCarthy had you fitted on the night before.  The game was a lot like your season.  Some key players went down with injuries in the first half, including Donald and Charles.  But everybody stepped up.  Your offense exploded behind one of the greatest performances by a quarterback in a Super Bowl -- where's Aaron?  (Applause.)  

        Your defense was flying all over the place like Clay Matthews' hair.  Where's Clay?  There he is.  (Applause.)  And you brought the Lombardi Trophy back home.

        Aaron earned the game's MVP award -- 304 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions.  This was a performance that capped off an incredible playoff run that proved he's not just one of the best quarterbacks in the game; he's one of the best quarterbacks perhaps of all time.  And I know that he's going to be having an extraordinary career going forward.

        We also know that the Packers are made of more than one player or one season.  They're made of the people of Green Bay.  Back in the '20s, fans passed the hat at the games to support the team.  In 1923, after some rough financial years, local businessmen banded together to pay the bills.  Two more times -- in 1935 and 1950 -- the community came to the rescue to keep the club afloat, and today 112,000 people own a piece of this franchise.  It is the only publicly owned team in pro sports.  (Applause.)    

        And after the Super Bowl hundreds of those fans woke up the next day, put on their snow boots and headed over to Lambeau Field to shuffle it out for the victory pep rally.  That support goes both ways.  The Packers have raised more than $4 million for charities in communities all across Wisconsin and Michigan.  (Applause.)  More than 300 schools participate in the Packers Fit Kids program to promote childhood health.  They've given scholarships to local students, sponsored food and blood drives, found creative ways to support our troops and their families.  

        So even a Bears fan can admit that the relationship between  Green Bay and its team is something special.  (Applause.)  It reflects those old-school, small-town values of community and hard work that have always defined what it meant to be an American.  And Super Bowl spotlight or not, that's something that's alive in towns across this country every single day.     

        So to all the Green Bay Packers, to all the fans, congratulations.  Enjoy it while it lasts.  (Laughter.)  Because Bears fans have two dates circled on our calendars -- September 25th and Sunday Night Football on Christmas Day.  (Applause.)  And if you guys are on a roll by then, just keep in mind that there’s only one place -- one person here who can ground all planes in and out of Green Bay -- (laughter) -- if he has to.  

        So, congratulations.  (Applause.)  

        Charles, what do you got here?  You can step up to the mic.

        MR. WOODSON:  Well, on behalf of the Green Bay Packers’ organization and all of the players, we would like to present you with this.  Of course, all the fans own the team, and it hurts us a little bit to give you this, as well -- (laughter) -- but to give you shares of the Green Bay Packers.  (Applause.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  Man, that is outstanding.  Well, if I’m a part-owner, I think -- (laughter) --  

        COACH McCARTHY:  We figured this is the only way we could get you away from the Bears.  (Laughter.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  No, what I’m thinking is I think we should initiate a trade to send Rodgers down to the Bears.  (Laughter.)

        AUDIENCE:  Booo!  (Laughter.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  What do you think?  No?

        MR. WOODSON:  A minority owner, thank you.  (Laughter.)

        THE PRESIDENT:  All right, what else we got?

        MR. RODGERS:  On behalf of the team, we also want to give you the right colors to wear on those two dates you mentioned.  (Laughter.)  We got you this jersey, right here.  

        THE PRESIDENT:  All right, man.  Thank you.  Congratulations.  (Applause.)    

END 3:06 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a DNC Event

Private Residence
New York, New York

7:15 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I must say, first of all, this is a pretty good-looking crowd.  (Laughter.)  I want to thank Harvey and Georgina and Anna and Shelby for being such extraordinary hosts.  To Governor Cuomo, congratulations on the great work that you’ve been doing here in the great state of New York.  And to all of you, thanks for being here.

What I'm going to do is I -- I enjoy having a conversation as opposed to giving a long speech -- although I've been known to -- (laughter.)  So I'm just going to make a few brief remarks at the top.

Obviously this country has gone through as tough of a time as we've seen in my lifetime over the last two and a half years. But even by those standards, this last month and a half have been extraordinary.  And I was just in Michigan, at a advanced battery plant.  We actually have jumpstarted an entire industry here in the United States, building advanced batteries that are going to go into electric vehicles.  Not only does it create jobs, manufacturing jobs that pay well, but it also is going to make a huge contribution in terms of our environment and reducing carbon emissions.

And when you couple it with the fact that for the first time in 30 years we've not only raised fuel efficiency standards but we actually were able to get the entire industry to agree voluntarily to double fuel efficiency standards by the biggest environmental step we've made in the last 30 years on that front.

What was remarkable was to see outside of Washington the enthusiasm, the energy, the hopefulness, the decency of the American people.  And what I said to them is you deserve better. You deserve better than you’ve been getting out of Washington over the last two and a half months -- for that matter, for the last two and a half years.

What's striking as I travel around the country is people understand that this country is going through a fundamental change because of globalization, because of technology, and they recognize that we've got to up our game.  We're going to have to be more competitive.  We're going to have to educate our kids better.  We're going to have to design our businesses more effectively.  We're going to have to revamp how all sorts of systems work in order for us to meet the challenge of the 21st century.

And they're ready to go, and they're doing it at the local level.  Businesses are getting smarter and more productive, and workers are going back to school to retrain, and people are cooperating in their communities to redesign how they live and work and play and educate their kids. 

And so they look at what's happening in Washington and they think, these folks are really from outer space, because they don't seem to understand how critical it is for us all to work together -- Republicans, Democrats, independents -- in order to move this country forward.

Now, here's the good news.  As frustrating as the last couple of months have been, I think as Washington reached a low water mark, I think that the country suddenly realized exactly what Harvey just said, which is we're going to have to get involved and we're going to have to get engaged and we're going to have to speak out and we're going to have to register the fact that we expect more and we expect better.

And if that energy is harnessed and tapped, then I'm absolutely convinced that this country is going to be on the upswing over the next few years.  There is not a single problem we're facing that we cannot solve -- I won't say easily, but we can't solve with some determination and some hard work. 

We can put people back to work and we can get this economy growing again -- if we're putting in place some sensible policies of the sort that were reflected at this advanced battery plant that I saw.  We can educate our kids.  We know what works.  There are schools in New York City that take kids from the toughest neighborhoods and those kids excel.  And they're going to top colleges and doing great.  The problem is we just haven’t been able to scale up, partly because of our politics.

We know what it takes to change the energy equation in this country and free ourselves from dependence on foreign oil.  And it doesn’t require radical changes in our behavior; it requires us taking smart, sensible steps.  And the fact that we have been putting this off decade after decade is a tragedy.  But it can be fixed. 

Our health care system, the most expensive in the world, but doesn’t give us the best outcomes.  We know what to do in order to fix it, and we've made great strides with health care reform, but we've got more work to do. 

And the debt-- I don't know if you’ve noticed, but when the stock market went down, what did everybody buy after the downgrade? 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Treasuries.

THE PRESIDENT:  U.S. treasuries. 

AUDIENCE MEMBERS:  Yes.

THE PRESIDENT:  Everybody understands that the United States still has the greatest economic potential and the greatest businesses, the greatest universities on Earth, and the greatest workers on Earth.  And so the market voted with its feet in terms of its confidence in the marketplace.  And what they also understand is if we were just willing to make some modest adjustments to our tax code and to how entitlement programs like Medicare and Medicaid work, this problem would vanish.  We could solve it.

So the upshot is this.  When I ran in 2008, I think that a lot of folks believed we elect Obama and suddenly we're going to fix politics in Washington.  And Andrew is familiar with this, because everybody figures, well, we're going to fix politics in Albany.  And then it turns out that there are a lot of bad habits that have been built up over time, and we're also a big, diverse country and not everybody agrees with me; not everybody agrees with the folks who live in Manhattan.  (Laughter.)  West of here. (Laughter.)  You guys may not be familiar with it.  (Laughter.) 

And so democracy is messy and it's tough, and our system is broken to a large degree.  And that makes this election more important than 2008.  2008 put us in a position to do some extraordinary things and I can't be prouder of what we did.  But in 2008, I also think everybody figured, we get through this one election and then it's all done.  And then, after two and a half years, and it's been tough and there have been setbacks, there are a lot of folks who suddenly feel deflated, this is hard, I'm not sure I believe in change.  (Laughter.)  They've still got the Obama poster but it's all kind of frayed.  (Laughter.)  And Obama is grayer -- (laughter) -- he doesn’t seem as cool.  (Laughter.) 

But in some ways, that's a healthy thing, because what that means is in 2012, as Harvey just said, we realize this is about us.  This is not about my election; it's not about one person.  It's about competing visions about where we're going to take the country.  Are we going to have a country that's inclusive?  Are we going to have a country that gives opportunity to everybody?  Are we going to have a country where everybody is sharing sacrifices but also sharing opportunities?  Are we going to have a country in which what we project to the world is not just our military might, but it's also our capacity to champion human rights and women's rights and feed folks and help them become self-sufficient?

And those competing visions are going to be determined in this next election as much as they ever have before.  And so I hope you guys aren’t tired because we've got a lot more work to do.  And this is an ongoing project.

I'm going, on the 28th, I'm going to be at the dedication of the new King memorial, which I've flown over and it looks spectacular.  And now that King has his own memorial on the Mall I think that we forget when he was alive there was nobody who was more vilified, nobody who was more controversial, nobody who was more despairing at times.  There was a decade that followed the great successes of Birmingham and Selma in which he was just struggling, fighting the good fight, and scorned, and many folks angry.  But what he understood, what kept him going, was that the arc of moral universe is long but it bends towards justice.  But it doesn’t bend on its own.  It bends because all of us are putting our hand on the arc and we are bending it in that direction.  And it takes time.  And it's hard work.  And there are frustrations. 

And if everybody here is reminded of that fact, then I'm absolutely confident that America's arc is going to be bending in the direction of justice and prosperity and opportunity. 

So I hope you will join me.  Thank you.

END
7:24 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Johnson Controls, Inc.

Johnson Controls, Inc.
Holland, Michigan

2:47 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you!  Thank you, everybody.  Please, please have a seat. 

Hello, Johnson Controls! 

AUDIENCE:  Hello!

THE PRESIDENT:  It is good to be back in Holland, Michigan.  (Applause.)  A couple people I want to thank.  In particular, your CEO Steve Roell is here.  Steve.  (Applause.)  And sitting next to him, one of my favorite people and one of the finest senators in the country, Carl Levin is in the house.  (Applause.) 

So I just had a chance to see what you guys are doing in this plant.  It is very impressive.  Elizabeth was giving me the tour, and she was very patient with me, and I think I understood about half of what she said.  (Laughter.) 

At a time when Americans are rightly focused on our economy, when Americans are asking about what’s our path forward, all of you here at Johnson Controls are providing a powerful answer.  This is one of the most advanced factories in the world.  You’re helping America lead in a growing new industry.  You’re showing us how we can come back from the worst recession that we’ve had in generations and start making things here in America that are sold all around the world.

And that’s why I’m here today.  I’ve said it before; I will say it again:  You cannot bet against the American worker.  (Applause.)  Don’t bet against American ingenuity.  (Applause.)  The reason a plant like this exists is because we are a country of unmatched freedom, where groundbreaking ideas flourish.  We’ve got the finest universities, the finest technical schools, the most creative scientists, the best entrepreneurs -- all of which is why we are home to the world’s most dynamic and successful businesses, large and small.  (Applause.)

And that’s why even in these difficult times, there is not a single country on Earth that wouldn’t trade places with us.  Not one.  We’ve got to remember that.

But we also know that we face some tough challenges right now.  You know what they are.  You live them every day -- in your communities, in your families.  You know too many people who are out of work, or struggling to get by with fewer shifts or fewer customers.  Paychecks aren’t big enough.  Costs are too high.  And even though the economy has started growing again since the recession started in 2007, the fact is, it’s not growing fast enough.

Now, some of what we’re facing today has to do with events beyond our control.  As the economy was improving and improving through 2009, 2010, the beginning of this year, suddenly it was hit with the unrest in the Middle East that helped send gas prices through the roof.  Europe is dealing with all sorts of financial turmoil that is lapping up on our shores.  Japan’s tragic earthquake hurt economies around the globe, including ours, cut off some supply chains that were very important to us.  And all of this has further challenged our economy.  And as we’ve seen, it’s playing out in the stock market, wild swings, up and down, and it makes folks nervous, and it affects the savings of families all across America.

Now, challenges like these -- earthquakes, revolutions -- those are things we can’t control.  But what we can control is our response to these challenges.  What we can control is what happens in Washington.  Unfortunately, what we’ve seen in Washington the last few months has been the worst kind of partisanship, the worst kind of gridlock –- and that gridlock has undermined public confidence and impeded our efforts to take the steps we need for our economy.  It’s made things worse instead of better.

So what I want to say to you, Johnson Controls, is:  There is nothing wrong with our country.  There is something wrong with our politics.  (Applause.)  There’s something wrong with our politics that we need to fix. 

We know there are things we can do right now that will help accelerate growth and job creation –- that will support the work going on here at Johnson Controls, here in Michigan, and all across America.  We can do some things right now that will make a difference.  We know there are things we have to do to erase a legacy of debt that hangs over the economy.  But time and again, we’ve seen partisan brinksmanship get in the way -– as if winning the next election is more important than fulfilling our responsibilities to you and to our country.  This downgrade you’ve been reading about could have been entirely avoided if there had been a willingness to compromise in Congress.  (Applause.)  See, it didn’t happen because we don’t have the capacity to pay our bills -– it happened because Washington doesn’t have the capacity to come together and get things done.  It was a self-inflicted wound.  (Applause.) 

That’s why people are frustrated.  Maybe you hear it in my voice -- that’s why I’m frustrated.  Because you deserve better.  You guys deserve better.  (Applause.)

All of you, from the CEO down, are working hard, taking care of your kids or your parents –- maybe both.  You’re living within your means.  You may be trying to save for your child’s college education or saving for retirement.  You’re donating to the church or the food pantry.  You’re trying to help the community.  You’re doing your part.  You’re living up to your responsibilities.  It’s time for Washington to do the same -– to match your resolve, and to match your decency, and to show the same sense of honor and discipline.  That is not too much to ask.  That’s what the American people are looking for.  (Applause.)  

And if that can happen, we know what’s possible.  We know what we can achieve.  Look at this factory.  Look what’s happening in Holland, Michigan.  Every day, hundreds of people are going to work on the technologies that are helping us to fight our way out of this recession.  Every day, you’re building high-tech batteries so that we lead the world in manufacturing the best cars and the best trucks.  And that just doesn’t mean jobs in Michigan.  You’re buying equipment and parts from suppliers in Florida and New Mexico and Ohio and Wisconsin and all across America. 

So let’s think about it -- what made this possible?  The most important part is you:  your drive, your work ethic, your ingenuity, your management.  The grit and optimism that says, “We’ve got an idea for a new battery technology or a new manufacturing process, and we’re going to take that leap and we’re going to make an investment.  And we’re going to hire some folks and we’re going to see it through.”  That’s what made it possible.

But what also made this possible are the actions that we took together, as a nation, through our government –- the fact that we were willing to invest in the research and the technology that holds so much promise for jobs and growth; the fact that we helped create together the conditions where businesses like this can prosper. 

That’s why we’re investing in clean energy.  That’s why I brought together the world’s largest auto companies who agreed, for the first time, to nearly double the distance their cars can go on a gallon of gas.  (Applause.)  That’s going to save consumers thousands of dollars at the pump.  It’s going to cut our dependence on foreign oil.  It’s going to promote innovation and jobs, and it’s going to mean more groundbreakings and more job postings for companies like Johnson Controls.  And that’s how America will lead the world in automotive innovation and production and exports in this country.

Think about it.  That’s what we got done -- and by the way, we didn’t go through Congress to do it.  (Laughter and applause.)  But we did use the tools of government -- us working together -- to help make it happen.

Now, there are more steps that we can take to help this economy growing faster.  There are things we can do right now that will put more money in your pockets; will help businesses sell more products around the world; will put people to work in Michigan and across the country.  And to get these things done, we do need Congress.

They’re common-sense ideas that have been supported in the past by Democrats and Republicans, things that are supported by Carl Levin.  The only thing keeping us back is our politics.  The only thing preventing these bills from being passed is the refusal of some folks in Congress to put the country ahead of party.  There are some in Congress right now who would rather see their opponents lose than see America win.

And that has to stop.  It’s got to stop.  We’re supposed to all be on the same team, especially when we’re going through tough times.  We can’t afford to play games -- not right now, not when the stakes are so high for our economy.

And if you agree with me –- it doesn’t matter if you’re a Democrat or a Republican or an independent -- you’ve got to let Congress know.  You’ve got to tell them you’ve had enough of the theatrics.  You’ve had enough of the politics.  Stop sending out press releases.  Start passing some bills that we all know will help our economy right now.  That’s what they need to do -- they’ve got to hear from you.  (Applause.)  

Let me be specific -- I’ll give you some examples.  You’ve got to tell them to extend the payroll tax cut, so middle-class families will continue to have more money to spend.  We passed this in December.  The average family received $1,000 from that tax cut, and you need to get it again, because the economy is still weak.  It’s going to help you make ends meet, but it’s also going to mean more customers for businesses.  It will increase demand.  It’s right for the economy, and I would sign that bill today if it came to my desk.  (Applause.)

Tell Congress to get past their differences and send me a road construction bill -- (applause) -- so that companies can put tens of thousands of people to work right now building our roads and bridges and airports and seaports.  (Applause.)  I mean, think about it.  America used to have the best stuff -- best roads, best airports, best seaports.  We’re slipping behind because we’re not investing in it, because of politics and gridlock.  Do you want to put people to work right now rebuilding America?  You’ve got to send that message to Congress.  (Applause.)

Send a message to Congress to come to an agreement on trade deals that will level the playing field and open markets to our businesses –- so we can sell more goods to countries around the world.  (Applause.)  We’ve got a lot of Americans driving Kias and Hyundais.  I want folks in Korea driving Fords and Chevys and Chryslers.  (Applause.)  I’d like to see that.  I want to see billions of dollars’ more products sold around the world stamped with three words:  “Made in America.”  (Applause.)  “Made in America.”  Those trade bills are teed up; they’re ready to go.  Let’s get it done.

Tell Congress we need to reform the patent system, so entrepreneurs like the ones who developed some of the technology here can turn their ideas into businesses more quickly; so companies like this one can better compete against companies around the world.  We shouldn’t make it so difficult for somebody with a good idea to translate that into a business.

Tell Congress we’ve got hundreds of thousands of bright, talented, skilled Americans who are returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan.  And I’ve proposed connecting those veterans looking for work with businesses that need their skills.  You’ve got 24-year-olds and 25-year-olds that are leading platoons and handling equipment that’s worth tens or hundreds of billions of dollars, and they come back here and they can’t find a job?  Let’s put them to work.  These are things we can do right now.  (Applause.)

These are things I’ve already proposed, we’ve worked out the glitches, the legislation is drafted -- let’s get it done. 

Now, given the weaknesses of the economy, we need to do even more than that.  And over the coming weeks, I’m going to be putting out more proposals, week by week, that will help businesses hire and put people back to work.  And I’m going to keep at it until every single American who wants a job can find one. 

Now, we do have to pay for these things.  And in order to pay for these things, Congress has to finish the job of reducing the nation’s budget deficit in a sensible, responsible way.  Not just with more cuts this year or next year -- those cuts would weaken the economy more than it already is, and we’ve already cut a trillion dollars in what’s called discretionary spending.  What we need is a long-term plan to get our nation’s finances in order.  That’s the only way we can invest in places like this.  That’s how we can fund the research at the Department of Energy.  That’s how we can fund the community college that trains folks to be able to work here.  That’s how we can fund the infrastructure and the technology that will help us win the future -- by doing what you do, what families do. 

Think about it:  When things are tight you cut out those things you cannot afford, even if it’s tough, to pay for the things that really matter.  You don’t cut out the college fund for your kids.  You stop maybe going out as often.  You don’t stop taking care of your parent who needs care.  You cut back on some of the things that you don’t really need.  The same principle applies to government.  And by the way, in your own families, I’m assuming you don’t just keep all the stuff you like and tell your spouse, you got to get rid of all the stuff she likes or he likes.  (Laughter.)  That wouldn’t work in my household.  You don’t just cut out the stuff that’s important to you and -- or keep all the stuff that’s important to you and cut out the stuff that’s important for your kids.  The same is true for us as an American family. 

We can’t ask the people in this room -- working families, middle-class families -- to bear the entire burden.  We’re not going to balance our budgets on the back of middle-class and working people in this country.  Everybody has got to do their part.  (Applause.)  Everybody has got to do their part.  Everybody has got to chip in.  That’s fair.  You learn it in kindergarten.  That’s what all this fuss was about in Washington:  Are we going to deal with our deficit in a way that’s fair?  And that means closing tax loopholes for billionaires before we cut college loans for young people.  (Applause.)  That means ending government subsidies for oil and gas companies that are doing very well before you cut health care for seniors.  (Applause.)  It means making sure that the biggest corporations pay their fair share in taxes before we gut the investments in technology and clean energy that made this factory a reality. 

Now, that’s just common sense.  It should have bipartisan support.  These are things we could be doing right now.  That’s how we can jumpstart this economy and speed up the recovery and get more folks working -– while making sure that we get our fiscal house in order.  We can do both.

And I’ll be laying out more proposals in the days ahead.  And I’m going to keep after every idea and every serious proposal to help us grow this economy -– until everybody who wants a job can find one.

But I want everybody to understand here, the problem is not that we don’t have answers.  The problem is, is that folks are playing political games.  We’ve got a long way to go.  We didn’t get into this mess overnight, and it’s going to take time to get us out.  That’s the truth.  But that’s no excuse for inaction.  It’s time to put aside ultimatums.  It’s time to stop drawing lines in the sand. 

You know, in the aftermath of this whole debt ceiling debacle, and when the market’s going up and down like they are, there’s been a lot of talk in Washington right now that I should call Congress back early.  The last thing we need is Congress spending more time arguing in D.C.  (Applause.)  What I figure is, they need to spend more time out here listening to you and hearing how fed up you are.  (Applause.)  That’s why I’m here.  That’s why I’ll be traveling to a lot of communities like this one over the next week.  That’s what Congress should be doing -- go back home, listen to people’s frustrations with all the gridlock.  Listen to how frustrated folks are with the constant bickering and the unwillingness to compromise and the desire to score points, even if it’s at the expense of our country.  And if they’re listening hard enough, maybe they’ll come back to Washington ready to compromise and ready to create jobs and ready to reduce our deficit -- ready to do what you sent them there to do.

You know, America voted for divided government.  And that makes it tough.  You got one party controlling the House of Representatives, another party controlling the Senate.  So they voted for -- you voted for divided government.  But you didn’t vote for dysfunctional government.  You didn’t vote for a do-nothing government.  You didn’t vote for a government where folks are just looking out for special interests.  You didn’t vote for a government that is beholden to lobbyists.

We’ve got a lot of work to do, and the only way we will get it done is if everybody, Democrats and Republicans, find a way to put country ahead of party.  That’s what I’m fighting for.  I’m here to enlist you in that fight.  You’ve got to hold everybody accountable, because if we can come together and find common ground, there is no stopping the United States of America.  There is no holding us back.  (Applause.)  We can strengthen this economy, and we can put our nation back to work.  And we can lead the world in growing industries.  And we will make it through these economic storms and reach calmer waters stronger than we were before. 

Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
3:12 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President during Iftar Dinner

East Room

8:35 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)  Everyone, please have a seat, have a seat.

Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the White House.  Tonight is part of a rich tradition here at the White House of celebrating the holy days of many faiths and the diversity that define us as a nation.  So these are quintessentially American celebrations -- people of different faiths coming together, with humility before our maker, to reaffirm our obligations to one another, because no matter who we are, or how we pray, we’re all children of a loving God.

Now, this year, Ramadan is entirely in August.  That means the days are long, the weather is hot, and you are hungry.  (Laughter.)  So I will be brief.

I want to welcome the members of the diplomatic corps who are here; the members of Congress, including two Muslim American members of Congress -- Keith Ellison and Andre Carson; and leaders and officials from across my administration.  Thank you all for being here.  Please give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.)   

To the millions of Muslim Americans across the United States and more -- the more than one billion Muslims around the world, Ramadan is a time of reflection and a time of devotion.  It’s an occasion to join with family and friends in celebration of a faith known for its diversity and a commitment to justice and the dignity of all human beings.  So to you and your families, Ramadan Kareem. 

This evening reminds us of both the timeless teachings of a great religion and the enduring strengths of a great nation.  Like so many faiths, Islam has always been part of our American family, and Muslim Americans have long contributed to the strength and character of our country, in all walks of life.  This has been especially true over the past 10 years.

In one month, we will mark the 10th anniversary of those awful attacks that brought so much pain to our hearts.  It will be a time to honor all those that we’ve lost, the families who carry on their legacy, the heroes who rushed to help that day and all who have served to keep us safe during a difficult decade.  And tonight, it’s worth remembering that these Americans were of many faiths and backgrounds, including proud and patriotic Muslim Americans.

Muslim Americans were innocent passengers on those planes, including a young married couple looking forward to the birth of their first child.  They were workers in the Twin Towers -- Americans by birth and Americans by choice, immigrants who crossed the oceans to give their children a better life.  They were cooks and waiters, but also analysts and executives.  

There, in the towers where they worked, they came together for daily prayers and meals at Iftar.  They were looking to the future -- getting married, sending their kids to college, enjoying a well-deserved retirement.  And they were taken from us much too soon.  And today, they live on in the love of their families and a nation that will never forget.  And tonight, we’re deeply humbled to be joined by some of these 9/11 families, and I would ask them to stand and be recognized, please.  (Applause.)

Muslim Americans were first responders -- the former police cadet who raced to the scene to help and then was lost when the towers collapsed around him; the EMTs who evacuated so many to safety; the nurse who tended to so many victims; the naval officer at the Pentagon who rushed into the flames and pulled the injured to safety.  On this 10th anniversary, we honor these men and women for what they are -- American heroes.

Nor let us forget that every day for these past 10 years Muslim Americans have helped to protect our communities as police and firefighters, including some who join us tonight.  Across our federal government, they keep our homeland secure, they guide our intelligence and counterterrorism efforts and they uphold the civil rights and civil liberties of all Americans.  So make no mistake, Muslim Americans help to keep us safe.

We see this in the brave service of our men and women in uniform, including thousands of Muslim Americans.  In a time of war, they volunteered, knowing they could be sent into harm’s way.  Our troops come from every corner of our country, with different backgrounds and different beliefs.  But every day they come together and succeed together, as one American team. 

During the 10 hard years of war, our troops have served with excellence and with honor.  Some have made the ultimate sacrifice, among them Army Specialist Kareem Khan.  Galvanized by 9/11 to serve his country, he gave his life in Iraq and now rests with his fellow heroes at Arlington.  And we thank Kareem’s mother, Elsheba, for being here again tonight.  (Applause.)  Like Kareem, this generation has earned its place in history, and I would ask all of our service members here tonight -- members of the 9/11 Generation -- to stand and accept the thanks of our fellow Americans.  (Applause.)        

This year and every year, we must ask ourselves:  How do we honor these patriots -- those who died and those who served?  In this season of remembrance, the answer is the same as it was 10 Septembers ago.  We must be the America they lived for and the America they died for, the America they sacrificed for. 

An America that doesn’t simply tolerate people of different backgrounds and beliefs, but an America where we are enriched by our diversity.  An America where we treat one another with respect and with dignity, remembering that here in the United States there is no “them” or “us;” it’s just us.  An America where our fundamental freedoms and inalienable rights are not simply preserved, but continually renewed and refreshed -- among them the right of every person to worship as they choose.  An America that stands up for dignity and the rights of people around the world, whether a young person demanding his or her freedom in the Middle East or North Africa, or a hungry child in the Horn of Africa, where we are working to save lives.

Put simply, we must be the America that goes forward as one family, like generations before us, pulling together in times of trial, staying true to our core values and emerging even stronger.  This is who we are and this is who we must always be. 

Tonight, as we near a solemn anniversary, I cannot imagine a more fitting wish for our nation.  So God bless you all and God bless the United States of America.  Thank you.  (Applause.)      

END
8:43 P.M. EDT