The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Situation in Libya

East Room

2:22 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  I want to take this opportunity to update the American people about the situation in Libya.  Over the last several weeks, the world has watched events unfold in Libya with hope and alarm.  Last month, protesters took to the streets across the country to demand their universal rights, and a government that is accountable to them and responsive to their aspirations.  But they were met with an iron fist.
 
Within days, whole parts of the country declared their independence from a brutal regime, and members of the government serving in Libya and abroad chose to align themselves with the forces of change.  Moammar Qaddafi clearly lost the confidence of his own people and the legitimacy to lead.
 
Instead of respecting the rights of his own people, Qaddafi chose the path of brutal suppression.  Innocent civilians were beaten, imprisoned, and in some cases killed.  Peaceful protests were forcefully put down.  Hospitals were attacked and patients disappeared.  A campaign of intimidation and repression began.
 
In the face of this injustice, the United States and the international community moved swiftly.  Sanctions were put in place by the United States and our allies and partners.  The U.N. Security Council imposed further sanctions, an arms embargo, and the specter of international accountability for Qaddafi and those around him.  Humanitarian assistance was positioned on Libya’s borders, and those displaced by the violence received our help.  Ample warning was given that Qaddafi needed to stop his campaign of repression, or be held accountable.  The Arab League and the European Union joined us in calling for an end to violence.
 
Once again, Qaddafi chose to ignore the will of his people and the international community.  Instead, he launched a military campaign against his own people.  And there should be no doubt about his intentions, because he himself has made them clear.
 
For decades, he has demonstrated a willingness to use brute force through his sponsorship of terrorism against the American people as well as others, and through the killings that he has carried out within his own borders.  And just yesterday, speaking of the city of Benghazi -- a city of roughly 700,000 people -- he threatened, and I quote: “We will have no mercy and no pity” -- no mercy on his own citizens.
 
Now, here is why this matters to us.  Left unchecked, we have every reason to believe that Qaddafi would commit atrocities against his people.  Many thousands could die.  A humanitarian crisis would ensue.  The entire region could be destabilized, endangering many of our allies and partners.  The calls of the Libyan people for help would go unanswered.  The democratic values that we stand for would be overrun.  Moreover, the words of the international community would be rendered hollow.
 
And that’s why the United States has worked with our allies and partners to shape a strong international response at the United Nations.  Our focus has been clear: protecting innocent civilians within Libya, and holding the Qaddafi regime accountable.
 
Yesterday, in response to a call for action by the Libyan people and the Arab League, the U.N. Security Council passed a strong resolution that demands an end to the violence against citizens.  It authorizes the use of force with an explicit commitment to pursue all necessary measures to stop the killing, to include the enforcement of a no-fly zone over Libya.  It also strengthens our sanctions and the enforcement of an arms embargo against the Qaddafi regime.
 
Now, once more, Moammar Qaddafi has a choice.  The resolution that passed lays out very clear conditions that must be met.  The United States, the United Kingdom, France, and Arab states agree that a cease-fire must be implemented immediately.  That means all attacks against civilians must stop.  Qaddafi must stop his troops from advancing on Benghazi, pull them back from Ajdabiya, Misrata, and Zawiya, and establish water, electricity and gas supplies to all areas.  Humanitarian assistance must be allowed to reach the people of Libya.
Let me be clear, these terms are not negotiable.  These terms are not subject to negotiation.  If Qaddafi does not comply with the resolution, the international community will impose consequences, and the resolution will be enforced through military action.
 
In this effort, the United States is prepared to act as part of an international coalition.  American leadership is essential, but that does not mean acting alone -– it means shaping the conditions for the international community to act together.
 
That’s why I have directed Secretary Gates and our military to coordinate their planning, and tomorrow Secretary Clinton will travel to Paris for a meeting with our European allies and Arab partners about the enforcement of Resolution 1973.  We will provide the unique capabilities that we can bring to bear to stop the violence against civilians, including enabling our European allies and Arab partners to effectively enforce a no fly zone.  I have no doubt that the men and women of our military are capable of carrying out this mission.  Once more, they have the thanks of a grateful nation and the admiration of the world.
 
I also want to be clear about what we will not be doing. The United States is not going to deploy ground troops into Libya.  And we are not going to use force to go beyond a well-defined goal -- specifically, the protection of civilians in Libya.  In the coming weeks, we will continue to help the Libyan people with humanitarian and economic assistance so that they can fulfill their aspirations peacefully.
 
Now, the United States did not seek this outcome.  Our decisions have been driven by Qaddafi’s refusal to respect the rights of his people, and the potential for mass murder of innocent civilians.  It is not an action that we will pursue alone.  Indeed, our British and French allies, and members of the Arab League, have already committed to take a leadership role in the enforcement of this resolution, just as they were instrumental in pursuing it.  We are coordinating closely with them.  And this is precisely how the international community should work, as more nations bear both the responsibility and the cost of enforcing international law.
 
This is just one more chapter in the change that is unfolding across the Middle East and North Africa.  From the beginning of these protests, we have made it clear that we are opposed to violence.  We have made clear our support for a set of universal values, and our support for the political and economic change that the people of the region deserve.  But I want to be clear:  the change in the region will not and cannot be imposed by the United States or any foreign power; ultimately, it will be driven by the people of the Arab World.  It is their right and their responsibility to determine their own destiny.
 
Let me close by saying that there is no decision I face as your Commander in Chief that I consider as carefully as the decision to ask our men and women to use military force.  Particularly at a time when our military is fighting in Afghanistan and winding down our activities in Iraq, that decision is only made more difficult.  But the United States of America will not stand idly by in the face of actions that undermine global peace and security.  So I have taken this decision with the confidence that action is necessary, and that we will not be acting alone.  Our goal is focused, our cause is just, and our coalition is strong.  Thank you very much.
 
END
2:31 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by President Obama, Vice President Biden, and Prime Minister Enda Kenny of Ireland at a St. Patrick's Day Reception

East Room

7:18 P.M. EDT

     VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Hello, everybody.  Glen, wherever you are, thank you for that entertainment.  I don’t know how you got a Shriver to sing, but -- (laughter.)  Welcome to the White House, everyone, and happy St. Patrick’s Day.  (Applause.)
 
     You know, all of you Irishmen out there, my -- hey, Ambassador Rooney, how are you? -- they talk about the luck of the Irish.  My grandfather Ambrose Finnegan didn’t like that expression as much.  He liked the expression, he used to say, if you’re lucky enough to be Irish, well, you’re lucky enough.  (Laughter.)
 
And I think we’re all pretty lucky in here tonight -- lucky to be here at the White House, lucky to be here about to hear the two people I’m about to introduce.  And I’m fortunate to have the honor of being able to introduce Fionnuala Kenny and her husband, the Taoiseach.  In this town, in this administration -- it must be a bunch of Englishmen talking back there.  (Laughter and applause.)  I’m really diplomatic, aren’t I?  (Laughter.)  I’m really diplomatic.  I don’t know -- it’s in the blood, what can I say?  (Laughter.)
 
In this town, the President is known as Michelle Obama’s husband.  I am known as Jill Biden’s husband.  And after you meet Fionnuala, you’ll know why the Taoiseach is known as her husband.
 
Ladies and gentlemen, we’re here to celebrate friendship between two great nations, Ireland and the United States, and two nations that define me the most, and I expect define most of you.  There’s an old Irish proverb -- there’s a million of them -- but there’s an old Irish proverb that says there is no strength without unity.
 
And one of the things that has been the case for a long time is we celebrate in this house the unity derived from all of the Irish that have peopled this great country, 40 million of us claim it, and that beautiful Ireland.  And actually, since the birth of America on -- we have on March 17th, 1776, when the British forces under Sir William Howe evacuated Boston, literally there was a password to get to George Washington’s encampment, and it was Saint Patrick.  That was the password.
 
     Well, ladies and gentlemen, that still works here in the White House.  (Laughter.)  Just ask Bill Daley or Tom Donilon or McDonough or Brennan, the entire national security team -- it’s still Saint Patrick.  The President is surrounded by us.  (Laughter.)
 
     Ladies and gentlemen, there have been eight Irish Americans who signed the Declaration of Independence and a full 22 -- half our Presidents -- have claimed Irish heritage, including the one you’re about to hear from.  (Laughter.)  True.  (Applause.)  You know, my mom Catherine Eugenia Finnegan Biden used to say, honey, to be Irish -- and I really mean this -- she said, to be Irish is about family, it’s about faith, and it’s about courage.  She said, without courage you can’t love with abandon.
 
Well, ladies and gentlemen, that’s why she liked Barack Obama so much.  I think he got used to her calling him “honey” -- (laughter) -- but she thought that he embodied all those virtues.  And I can tell you from experience of working with him side by side these last two years, he abounds in courage.
 
     There’s also another Irish expression that says, a good friend is like a four-leaf clover -- hard to find and lucky to have.  I consider myself extremely lucky to have become and have two good friends in Michelle and Barack Obama.  And after spending the morning with the Taoiseach and his wife, I hope I found two more friends.
 
     Ladies and gentlemen, let me introduce you to my four friends and your friends, the President of the United States and Michelle Obama, as well as the Taoiseach and Fionnuala Kenny.  (Applause.)
 
     PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Good evening, everybody.  Welcome to the White House on this beautiful St. Patrick’s Day.  (Applause.)  It was remarked upon that the fountain is the appropriate green this year.  (Applause.)  Last year, Michelle asked the White House team to make the fountain green, and it was a little tepid.  (Laughter.)  So people just thought there was algae in the fountain.  (Laughter.)  This year they made sure that there was no confusion, so we’re very happy about that.  (Applause.)
 
     I am not going to stand up here very long because, as the old Irish saying goes, everyone is wise until he speaks.  (Laughter.)  And I know we’ve got some entertainment to get to.  But the Irish also tells us that what fills the eye fills the heart.  And tonight, in this room filled with so many friends both old and new, I can’t imagine a better place to be than right here with the sons and daughters of Ireland -- and those who wish they were.  (Laughter.)
 
     I want to start by welcoming Taoiseach Kenny and his lovely wife, Fionnuala.  Please give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Now, poor Taoiseach, he’s only been in office for a little over a week.  (Laughter.)  He’s already jetlagged.  (Laughter.)  But I’m honored that he agreed to leave the unpacking for another day and fly across the ocean to be with us here tonight.
 
     We also have more than a few Irish and Irish American friends in the house tonight.  I want to thank our very talented performers, as well as the members of my administration and the members of Congress who are here.  (Applause.)  We are joined by three very Irish governors -- Martin O’Malley, Dan Malloy, and Pat Quinn.  Thank you for coming.  (Applause.)
 
     Every year at this time, we’re reminded of just how many strands of green are woven into our American story.  And even though St. Patrick’s Day has perhaps been better known for revelry than reflection, it’s also a chance for us to remember how the journey to America began for so many of our ancestors -- including, as I discovered as I was running for office, one of mine -- how millions of Irish boarded dank and crowded ships with a promise to send for their families later, often with no friends, no money, and nothing but hope waiting for them on the other side.
 
     Like so many immigrants who came to call this country home, these men and women were guided by a deep faith and an unwavering belief that here in America a better life is available for anybody who’s willing to try.  And even though they weren’t always welcomed in their new land, they persevered.  They built and led and defended our country while still holding fast to their heritage.  And in many ways, what it means to be Irish helped to define to what it means to be American.
 
That’s why today when we think about a Tip O’Neill -- whose daughter, by the way, is here tonight and his granddaughter, and it was wonderful to meet them -- (applause) -- or a Ronald Reagan, we see an example of how it’s possible to argue over policy without sacrificing friendship; how it’s easy to disagree without being disagreeable, if you make the effort.
 
When we think about a Henry Ford or a Cyrus McCormick, we see the ingenuity that has driven generations of Americans to build the businesses and create the inventions that have helped makes a nation an engine of prosperity.
 
     When we think about an Audie Murphy or a John King, two of the hundreds of Irish Americans who have won the Medal of Honor, we see the heroism and bravery that comes with risking your own life for your country.
 
When we think about a family like the Kennedys, we see a steadfast belief in the importance of service and the duty each of us has to stand up for those who can’t stand up for themselves.  (Applause.)
 
In so many ways, the Irish and their descendants have set an example for us as a people.  But they’ve also set an example for us as a nation struggling to be more just and more free.  In 1845, Frederick Douglass, the great fighter for freedom here in this country, had just published his Narrative of a Life of an American Slave.  And even as the book was a bestseller, Douglass began receiving steady streams of threats to his life.
 
So he decided to embark on a two-year lecture tour of the British Isles until things cooled down.  He began by spending four months in Ireland, far from the threat of slave catchers, where he quickly found common ground with the people locked in their struggle against oppression.
 
As Douglass wrote, “I have spent some of the happiest moments of my life since landing in this country.  I seem to have undergone a transformation.  I live a new life.”  It was at a Dublin rally that Douglass met the Irish nationalist Daniel O’Connell.  And soon, the two struck up an unlikely friendship.  O’Connell was a fierce opponent of slavery, and he began calling Douglass “the black O’Connell of the United States.”  (Laughter.)
 
For his part, Douglass drew inspiration from the Irishman’s courage and intelligence, ultimately modeling his own struggle for justice on O’Connell’s belief that change could be achieved peacefully through rule of law.  Daniel O’Connell never lived to see another great emancipator named Abraham Lincoln put pen to paper and bring slavery to an end.  But the two men shared a universal desire for freedom -- one that cannot be contained by language or culture or even the span of an ocean.
 
And stories like this remind us just how deeply intertwined our two nations are.  Nights like this remind us how much we share.  And so as we celebrate together, let us take a moment to appreciate all that Ireland has given to America -- the faith we keep, the family we hold close, the laughter and song and warmth we feel when surrounded by the ones we love.
 
On behalf of the American people I want to thank the people of Ireland.  In the years ahead, may our sons and daughters only grow closer.  And now, I would like to present to you the Taoiseach of Ireland.  Happy St. Patrick’s Day to all of you.  Taoiseach.  (Applause.)
 
PRIME MINISTER KENNY:  Thank you very much and happy St. Patrick’s day.  Mr. President, thank you for your warm invitation to join you here this evening.  Fionnuala and I are honored on behalf of the Irish people and delighted to accept your invitation.
 
On St. Patricks’s Day, sometimes we remember some of our leaders -- Michael Davitt, who began one of the great agrarian movements throughout Europe; the great Ulster clans of the O’Neills and the O’Donnells; the O’Connells of Munster -- I’ve left a book on Daniel O’Connell for your protocol section, Mr. President.  (Laughter.)  And dear I say it, the Obamas of Leinster.  (Applause.)  Certainly if that’s the case, I can tell you that in the history of the English language, never has a single apostrophe meant so much to so many.  (Laughter and applause.)
 
Yes, you see, there is no one as Irish as Barack Obama.  (Laughter and applause.)  And may I say, sir, Mr. President, they’re queuing up in the thousands to tell you that in Moneygall when you visit us in May of this year.  (Applause.)  And I want to say this, sir:  The news of your decision to visit Ireland in May has reverberated around the world already.  They’re causing a stir that you will see, sir, when you go there, that you will get a céad míle fáilte, which is 100,000 welcomes -- the traditional welcome of the Irish people.
 
     I’d like to echo the words of the President, because as we gather here in the White House this evening, we do remember the various ways and the different journeys that people took to get here.  The Irish, driven out by what we called an Gorta Mór, or the Great Hunger, when the potato crop from the New World failed.  As the writers said, in scattered lines they made for the quayside, their only sound the slow slap of their souls on the immigrant flagstones.
 
     But, you see, ours was not a self-contained journey, because on another Atlantic coast other people were waiting -- waiting to be herded into ships; mothers soothing children, perhaps not even their own; husbands calling for wives; wives calling for husbands.
 
Two peoples on the far coasts of one ocean, where in the words of Seamus Heaney, tireless waves came glinting, sifting from the Americas.  And that was Africa’s Cape Coast, and Ireland’s Cape Clear.  Two peoples who would cross that single dividing ocean -- the Irish to freedom; the Africans to slavery.
 
Though they didn’t know it, in time theirs were the genes that would build this great country of the United States of America.  (Applause.)  They actually are the genes that unite us here in the White House this evening, designed by an Irish architect, to claim and to celebrate Saint Patrick, who came himself to redeem the soul of a people.  And he -- he was slave.
 
Mr. President, at Cape Coast Clear, you said it seemed as if the walls were talking.  They might well have said:  respect, mercy, obligation -- never again.  Because I, too, believe in the intense, unyielding, but compassionate Patrick; that his life unites us here today not only in our Irish ancestry but also in our common heredity.
 
As President Kennedy said about his Family of Man two weeks before he passed away, “If our society is to promote the Family of Man, then let us realize the magnitude of our task.”  And in the places around the world, nobody knows that more than the man standing behind me, the President of the United States.
 
     Whether the Family of Man has to be promoted across the valleys of Kenya, or the mountains of Ireland, or the scattered islands of Indonesia, or in the wreckage of Japan with that country’s difficulties at the moment, or whether, Mr. President, we have to take it to places that are still forgotten around the world, this is our task.  This is the task of political leaders, because not only are we leaders but also fathers and parents teaching our children, our countries’ children, about duty and about obligation, the need to fight cruelty, the need to fight injustice and inhumanity, wherever it happens.  (Applause.)
 
Our stories, indeed, might be singular but we do know that our destiny, our children’s destiny, is a shared prospect.  Do as I do -- lead, teach by example, create a future from the unknown.  We’re glad, Mr. President, that you will visit us in a short time.  I hope, when you do so, your stay will symbolize the life-giving bond between Ireland and the United States of America.  We are your gateway to Europe.  And I say again this evening, that gateway is wide open and continues to be ready for business.
 
Mr. President, we meet here in this historic building almost at the spring equinox, when new light returns to our lives.  You will come to us in May, the start of what was known as the Celtic summer -- or as we call it in the Gaelic language, in the Irish language, Bealtaine, the feast of the bright fires.  And when you do, sir, you will return to your own people, your own place.  Mr. President, you will come, in a way, home to Ireland.
 
So tonight, let me paraphrase the words of one more famous than I:  Let the world go forth from this time and place.  Let it go forth high and clear into the eves of this great city; that the bonds between Ireland and America as warm and as strong as they’ve ever been in the history of our two great countries -- warm and strong and vigorous, and so they shall remain.  Because we are united, inspired, sustained by our faith -- our faith, I might say, in the audacity of hope.  (Applause.)
 
Thank you, Mr. President.  Thank you.  And God bless you and the people of America and the work you do for the oppressed and the disadvantaged around the world.  And thank you on behalf of the people of Ireland.
 
My concluding words are these:  I said to the President and the First Lady outside, I know now that miracles do happen.  The fountain is green and I’ve arrived in the East Room here in the White House.  (Laughter.)  One week in office:  enough to build the world -- that’s what the creator had.  If we keep this up, Ireland will be great again inside a very short time.  (Applause.)
 
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Thank you.  All right.  With that, everybody, go ahead and have a party.  (Applause.)

END
7:40 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Situation in Japan

Rose Garden

3:35 P.M. EDT
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everyone.  Over the last several days, the American people have been both heartbroken and deeply concerned about the developments in Japan.
 
We’ve seen an earthquake and tsunami render unimaginable -- an unimaginable toll of death and destruction on one of our closest friends and allies in the world.  And we’ve seen this powerful natural disaster cause even more catastrophe through its impact on nuclear reactors that bring peaceful energy to the people of Japan.
 
Today, I wanted to update the American people on what we know about the situation in Japan, what we’re doing to support American citizens and the safety of our own nuclear energy, and how we are helping the Japanese people contain the damage, recover and rebuild.
 
First, we are bringing all available resources to bear to closely monitor the situation, and to protect American citizens who may be in harm’s way.  Even as Japanese responders continue to do heroic work, we know that the damage to the nuclear reactors in Fukushima Daiichi plant poses a substantial risk to people who are nearby.  That is why yesterday, we called for an evacuation of American citizens who are within 50 miles of the plant.  This decision was based upon a careful scientific evaluation and the guidelines that we would use to keep our citizens safe here in the United States, or anywhere in the world.
 
Beyond this 50-mile radius, the risks do not currently call for an evacuation.  But we do have a responsibility to take prudent and precautionary measures to educate those Americans who may be endangered by exposure to radiation if the situation deteriorates.  That’s why last night I authorized the voluntary departures of family members and dependents of U.S. officials working in northeastern Japan.
 
All U.S. citizens in Japan should continue to carefully monitor the situation and follow the guidance of the U.S. and Japanese governments.  And those who are seeking assistance should contact our embassy and consulates, which continue to be open and operational.
 
Second, I know that many Americans are also worried about the potential risks to the United States.  So I want to be very clear:  We do not expect harmful levels of radiation to reach the United States, whether it’s the West Coast, Hawaii, Alaska, or U.S. territories in the Pacific.  Let me repeat that:  We do not expect harmful levels of radiation to reach the West Coast, Hawaii, Alaska, or U.S. territories in the Pacific.  That is the judgment of our Nuclear Regulatory Commission and many other experts.
 
Furthermore, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and public health experts do not recommend that people in the United States take precautionary measures beyond staying informed.  And going forward, we will continue to keep the American people fully updated -- because I believe that you must know what I know as President.
 
Here at home, nuclear power is also an important part of our own energy future, along with renewable sources like wind ***[and] solar, natural gas and clean coal.  Our nuclear power plants have undergone exhaustive study, and have been declared safe for any number of extreme contingencies.  But when we see a crisis like the one in Japan, we have a responsibility to learn from this event, and to draw from those lessons to ensure the safety and security of our people.
 
     That’s why I’ve asked the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to do a comprehensive review of the safety of our domestic nuclear plants in light of the natural disaster that unfolded in Japan.
 
     Finally, we are working aggressively to support our Japanese ally at this time of extraordinary challenge.  Search and rescue teams are on the ground in Japan to help the recovery effort.  A disaster assistance and response team is working to confront the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami.  The U.S. military, which has helped to ensure the security of Japan for decades, is working around the clock.
 
     To date, we’ve flown hundreds of missions to support the recovery efforts, and distributed thousands of pounds of food and water to the Japanese people.  We’ve also deployed some of our leading experts to help contain the damage at Japan’s nuclear reactors.  We’re sharing with them expertise, equipment, and technology so that the courageous responders on the scene have the benefit of American teamwork and support.
 
     And the American people have also opened up their hearts.  Many have given generously to support the ongoing relief efforts.  The Red Cross is providing assistance to help meet the immediate needs of those who’ve been displaced.  And I would encourage anybody who wants to lend a hand to go to usaid.gov to learn more -- that’s usaid.gov -- to find out how you can be helpful.
 
     As I told Prime Minister Kan last night, and reaffirmed at the Japanese embassy here in Washington today, the Japanese people are not alone in this time of great trial and sorrow.  Across the Pacific, they will find a hand of support extended from the United States as they get back on their feet.  After all, we have an alliance that was forged more than a half century ago, and strengthened by shared interests and democratic values.  Our people share ties of family, ties of culture, and ties of commerce.  Our troops have served to protect Japan’s shores, and our citizens have found opportunity and friendship in Japan’s cities and towns.
 
Above all, I am confident that Japan will recover and rebuild because of the strength and spirit of the Japanese people.  Over the last few days, they’ve opened up their homes to one another.  They’ve shared scarce resources of food and water. They’ve organized shelters, provided free medical care, and looked out for their most vulnerable citizens.  One man put it simply:  “It’s a Japanese thing.  When hard times hit, we have to help each other.”
 
In these hard times, there remains, nevertheless, hope for the future.  In one small town that had been flattened by the tsunami, emergency workers rescued a four-month-old baby who had been swept out of her parents’ arms and stranded for days among the debris.  No one can say for certain just how she survived the water and the wreckage around her.  There is a mystery in the course of human events.
 
But in the midst of economic recovery and global upheaval, disasters like this remind us of the common humanity that we share.  We see it in the responders who are risking their lives at Fukushima.  We show it through the help that has poured into Japan from 70 countries.  And we hear it in the cries of a child, miraculously pulled from the rubble.

In the coming days, we will continue to do everything we can to ensure the safety of American citizens and the security of our sources of energy.  And we will stand with the people of Japan as they contain this crisis, recover from this hardship, and rebuild their great nation.
 
Thanks very much.
 
END
3:42 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Friends of Ireland Luncheon

U.S. Capitol

1:04 P.M. EDT

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, everybody.  Thank you so much.  Everyone, please have a seat.
 
To Taoiseach Kenny; to his lovely wife, who has made a wonderful luncheon companion; to the Vice President who is here; to our host, Speaker Boehner, for gathering us together; Ambassador Collins and Mrs. Collins; distinguished members of the House and Senate; distinguished guests from Irish, Northern Irish, and British governments:
 
It is wonderful to be here and a great privilege.  It’s my privilege to join all of you today for this wonderful          St. Patrick’s Day celebration –- a day when red, white, and blue has a strong hint of green.
 
Taoiseach Kenny, welcome.  We thank you for joining us.  Your presence at this lunch virtually guarantees that any partisan clashes will be limited to who is more Irish than whom. (Laughter.)
 
Now, speaking of ancestry, there has been some controversy about my own background.  (Laughter.)  Two years into my presidency, some are still bent on peddling rumors about my origins.  So today I want to put all those rumors to rest.  It is true my great-great-great-grandfather really was from Ireland.  (Applause.)  It’s true.  Moneygall, to be precise.  I can’t believe I have to keep pointing this out.  (Laughter.)
 
As John mentioned, this tradition began with Tip O’Neill and President Reagan -– two men of Irish stock, quick wit, and no small amount of fighting spirit.  Tip’s and Gip’s differences were real; their beliefs and their battles were sincere.  But so, too, were the bonds of affection and respect for one another.  In fact, on the Speaker’s 70th birthday, President Reagan threw him a small party at the White House, where he offered up a toast.  “Tip,” he said, “If I had a ticket to heaven and you didn’t have one, I would give mine away and go to hell with you.”  (Laughter.)  The two later left the room arm in arm.
 
Before six o’clock, it was politics.  After six o’clock, they could be friends.  They extended that safe zone to        St. Patrick’s Day, setting aside this lunch each year so that folks in both parties could enjoy the good cheer and the good company.  Our dear friend, Ted Kennedy, and others persuaded Taoiseach to join them.  And the only hint of fighting in the air was the contest to out-do one another’s stories.
 
President Reagan insisted that this lunch not be a place for policy battles –- but rather for good cheer and fellowship that so often is missing in Washington.  “Our friendship,” President Reagan said of Tip O’Neill, “is testimony to the political system that we’re part of and the country that we live in -– a country which permits two not-so-shy and not-so-retiring Irishmen to have it out on the issues, rather than on each other or their countrymen.”  I think that’s a sentiment that we should all strive to keep in mind -– whether Irish or not.
 
Over the past week we’ve witnessed one of our finest allies, Japan, endure a terrible tragedy.  As Americans, our first instinct naturally has been to help in any way that we can.  And we will help the Japanese people as they recover and rebuild.  But what these events should also remind us is that, in the scheme of things, our differences are small.  In the face of all that we have in common, our differences are insignificant.  None of us are alone in this world.  We need one another -- especially in times of turmoil and trial.
 
And as servants of the people who sent us here, we can all do better to live up to the example that Tip O’Neill and Ronald Reagan and others often set -– to put the differences of the day aside; to seek common ground; to forge progress for the sake of this country that we love.  Even before six o’clock.
 
So, in the months and years ahead, I hope we can summon some of the spirit of this day and work together with renewed commitment to bring about better days for all of our people.  But today is a day for tens of millions of Americans of Irish descent to celebrate the tremendous influence that one small island with a big-hearted people has had on our country.
 
Prime Minister Kenny, I thank you and your lovely wife for coming today.  We are proud to call Ireland a friend on this   St. Patrick’s Day, and on all the days of the calendar -– and we thank the Irish people for all that they’ve done to enrich the United States of America.
 
So let me grab a glass.  To our guest, the Taoiseach of Ireland.  Happy St. Patrick’s Day to all of you.  And may the friendship between our two countries grow ever greener.  Cheers. (Applause.)

END
1:10 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by President Obama and Prime Minister Enda Kenny of Ireland

Oval Office

11:18 A.M. EDT

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Hello, everybody.  It is my great pleasure on St. Patrick’s Day to welcome the new Taoiseach, Prime Minister Kenny.  We are thrilled to have him here.  And we want to congratulate him on his historic victory.
 
We obviously have the strongest possible relationship with Ireland.  The warmth, the affection, the familial and person-to-person contacts between our two countries extend far beyond any dry policy issues.  There is just an incredible bond between our two countries.  And that’s one that we want to reaffirm here today.
 
We have had an excellent conversation about how Ireland is going to be bouncing back from the severe economic challenges that it’s experienced over the last several years.  The Taoiseach shared with me his plans and his efforts to make sure that people are put back to work in Ireland, that the financial system is stabilized.  And he exudes great confidence, and I’m sure that we will be cooperating very closely with him and providing any assistance that we can on the economic front.
 
In addition, Ireland obviously plays an important role in the world.  We want to thank him for the operations at Shannon that are so vital for us moving our troops into Afghanistan.  It is a testimony to Ireland’s friendship to us.  In addition, Ireland actually has trainers in Afghanistan that have provided us great assistance.  And I expressed my appreciation for those sacrifices.  We’ve worked together on issues like international food security, and we will continue to work on those issues as well.
 
We remarked on the fact that the situation in Northern Ireland has proven to be stable, and we are going to continue to pursue all the progress that’s been made there.
 
So, overall, the state of the relationship between our two countries is extraordinarily strong.  This is a wonderful tradition each St. Patrick’s Day for me to be able to once again reaffirm the great warmth and affection that we have towards the people of Ireland.
 
And finally, I wanted to say today that I intend to come to Ireland in May, and I’m expecting to go not only to all the famous sites, but also to go to Moneygall, where my great-great-great-great-great grandfather hails from.  Joe Biden is envious because he wants to go first -- (laughter) -- but my expectation is, is that I’ll just be laying the groundwork for what I’m sure will be an even more wonderful trip by him.
 
     But I’m very much looking forward to that.  And thank you so much for being here today.  Thank you.
 
     PRIME MINISTER KENNY:  Well, could I just say that it’s an honor and a privilege for me to be here, as the Taoiseach of Ireland, together with my wife, Fionnuala, representing the Irish people, being the Prime Minister, and to meet President Obama and later his wife Michelle as well.
 
     My message to the American people is that the new government, which I lead, which has the strongest mandate in the history of the state, will continue to build on the very strong traditional links that we’ve had with the United States -- in business and in politics and in culture and the arts, and so on.
 
     And Ireland is open for business and we continue to be open for business to the United States.  We appreciate the investment of so much foreign direct investment from the U.S. to our country.  But unlike previous centuries, we come bearing gifts as well.  There are many Irish companies now operating in the U.S. with at least 80,000 American jobs created by the Irish firms here.
 
     So from that point of view, Ireland will continue to be a very strong and loyal friend of the United States and we will work with the authorities and the political process to the benefit of both countries.
 
     I’ve explained to the President what our program is for our new government, how that’s been accepted in terms of its fiscal element by the IMF, who have been in Dublin recently.  We also reiterated that I will work with our European colleagues for the benefit of the European Union -- a union of 500 million people, which is so important in the interests of this connection with the United States and the bigger world outside.
 
     I’m absolutely thrilled, I have to say, that President Obama has confirmed that he is to come to Ireland.  He follows a long line of Presidents of the United States who visited Ireland.  And I can assure you, Mr. President, that this visit will be rapturously received by the people of Ireland.
 
     And from that perspective, I thank you and hope that you will enjoy the fulfilling experience during your visit of visiting Moneygall, where some of your ancestors contributed to the welfare and the well-being of that little village right in the center of Ireland.  You will be made very welcome, President, and we appreciate for a person with so many difficulties on his plate as you have, in the global sense, that you’d take time to visit Ireland.
 
     So from that point of view, I can testify as the Irish Taoiseach, this is another great day in our country’s journey and it’s a very significant statement of confidence by the most powerful political office in the world that the President of the United States decides to come to Ireland in May.  We appreciate that very much, indeed, Mr. President.  And we’ll make sure that your visit is warmly received and generously treated.  And if you want to do a round of golf I’d be very happy to participate with you.
 
     PRESIDENT OBAMA:  I hear Taoiseach is pretty good, so I’ve got to be careful.  I may have to practice before I play with him.
 
     So, thank you so much.
 
     PRIME MINISTER KENNY:  Thank you very much, indeed, Mr. President.

END
11:25 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a DNC Event

Marriott Wardman Park Hotel Washington, D.C.

5:00 P.M. EDT

      THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Everybody, have a seat, have a seat.  (Applause.)  You're making me blush.  (Laughter.)

      AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you!

      THE PRESIDENT:  I love you back!  (Applause.)

      It is -- boy, it is nice to see so many friends in a room.  (Laughter.)  I live in Washington, so that doesn’t always happen. (Laughter.)  But when you gather up so many folks who helped get me where I am today -- I am reminded of that story of Abraham Lincoln when he was President.  Back then anybody could have -- he had office hours.  And he’d let people come in and meet with him.  And somebody insisted on coming to see him, barged through the door, said to his personal assistant, “I need to see the President.  I'm the one who got him elected.”  And none of you have done that, of course.  (Laughter.)

      So the assistant goes in, mentions this to Lincoln.  Lincoln looks at his watch -- he’s got a little bit of time.  He says, “Oh, bring the guy in.”  He says, “Sir, I understand you're the person responsible for getting me elected.”  He says, “That's right.”  He says, “Well, I forgive you.”  (Laughter.)  So I forgive all of you.  (Laughter.)

      I want to acknowledge obviously somebody who has done extraordinary work.  This is the person who not only has fought for the things we care about, first as a mayor, then as a governor, most recently as DNC chair -- he’s also somebody who was the first elected official to endorse me outside of Illinois when I announced for President of the United States.  And he did so in the capital of the Old Confederacy, at a time when very few people thought I was going to win.  So, clearly, he was term-limited -- (laughter) -- but nevertheless, it took a lot of courage.  (Laughter.)  And so I just want to say how much I appreciate my dear, dear friend, Tim Kaine.  (Applause.)

      I also just want to say a few things about David Plouffe.  Somehow he figured out how to get a two-year sabbatical after the election, and as a consequence, has earned the enmity of all the rest of my staff, because he’s now strolled in all fresh and perky.  (Laughter.)  And he’s got a smile on his face every day. The rest of us are -- got those bags under our eyes.  And he’s like, “Boy, this is fun!”  (Laughter.)

      But not only did he engineer what may have been one of the finest presidential campaigns in American history, but even in the few months that he has now been in the White House, we’ve already seen just the enormous focus and energy and wisdom that he brings to the task of trying to make America adapt to the 21st century and be successful for generations to come.  And so I'm just so proud to have David Plouffe here, and I want everybody to give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

      Now, as David mentioned, obviously the last two years have been extraordinary and historic.  And the American people have gone through as tough a time as they have certainly in my lifetime and in the lifetime of most of us here.  When we put together the campaign in 2008, we all understood that America was at a turning point.  We understood that the wheels of history were turning more and more rapidly, and that the old ways of doing business weren’t going to be sufficient to make us competitive, to make sure that the American Dream lived for the next generation.

      And so our campaign was geared towards the notion that there are time-tested values that bind us together as Americans -- a belief in hard work and individual initiative and the free market, but also community, looking out for one another, embracing diversity -- and that our task was to make sure that we worked hard to seize this moment and make sure that our institutions, our politics, our government were all working to ensure that these values that date back to our founding would be renewed and live for this generation and the next.

      And that meant that we had to make sure that our schools were educating our kids not only to be outstanding workers and entrepreneurs, but also outstanding citizens.  We had to make sure that we rebuilt America so that we could compete in this new century.  We had to make sure that we had an energy policy that would not only protect the planet but also free ourselves from dependence on foreign oil.

      We had to make sure that in a nation as wealthy as ours, we were able to deliver a health care program that made sure nobody went bankrupt just because they went sick.  We had to make sure that the ideals of equality and justice for all people -- regardless of race and religion and sexual orientation -- that those were lived out each and every day.

      And we haven’t finished that task, but we have made extraordinary progress over these last two years.  It’s been tough.  There have been times where we had to make some very difficult decisions.  And obviously, what we didn't anticipate was the depth of the recession in which we would try to -- we would have to try to make some of these changes.  But when you look back at the track record of work that we’ve done over the last two years, I think that it’s fair to say the promise that we made to the American people has been kept, that we have delivered on change that we can believe in.  (Applause.)

      But we aren’t finished.  We’ve got more work to do.  Now, obviously, 2012 is coming up, and everybody here is interested in politics and electoral votes and strategy, and I’m sure each one of you have a campaign plan -- (laughter) -- that you’ll be handing off to Messina and Patrick Gaspard before you leave here tonight.  And there will be time for campaigning and there will be time for politics.  But I guess what I want to really emphasize to all of you today is that I’ve always been a firm believer that good policy was good politics.  And I’ve always been a good -- I’ve always been a believer that what made 2008 special was we didn’t tack to the varying political winds; we didn’t make decisions about where we stood on issues simply based on political expediency.  Our goal was to make progress for the country.

      And I think that the American people sensed that.  Even when they disagreed with us, I think they sensed that our real objective here was to make sure that we had a government that was worthy of the decency and goodness of the American people.

      And I don’t want us ever to lose that spirit.  I don’t want us ever to look back and say, you know what, we said things that we didn’t believe in, or we pursued policies that weren’t the best possible policies for the country, just because it made for smart and convenient politics.

      Because ultimately the one thing about being in this job, in addition to getting a lot of gray hair -- (laughter) -- in addition to consistently being so proud of all the hard work of people in the White House who make huge sacrifices for their families -- or make huge sacrifices to be with their families, because it’s such a challenging job, whether they’re in the National Security Council or on our economic team -- in addition to revering even more the role of our military and keeping America secure, because as Commander-in-Chief, I have the opportunity to deal with everybody from the newest private to the highest general, and you constantly are amazed by the sacrifices and extraordinary devotion that our military shows each and every day -- the one thing that has consistently been reinforced for me as President of the United States is the basic goodness of the American people.

      They’re distracted sometimes.  They’re busy.  They’re worrying about making sure their kids get to school on time, and making sure that their businesses stay open, and trying to figure out how to pay the mortgage, and worried about high gas prices -- and so they’re not following every in and out of the debates in Washington.  But deep down there is a set of core values and core principles that are good and are right.  And when we tap into that, there’s nothing that can stop America.  When we tap into that, only good things can happen.

      And so my job as President, the job of my administration, and your job as my closest supporters, is to constantly find ways that we can tap into that goodness, and constantly find ways that, through our policies and through our -- the issues that we promote, that we’re bringing people together to solve problems.

      Now, David mentioned on health care, that means that over the next couple of years we’re going to have to make sure that we implement health care in a way that makes us proud and shows the American people that it’s delivering for them, and it’s providing them relief from the incredible costs of health care.

      It means that on energy, despite the progress that we’ve made, for example, increasing fuel efficiency standards and making sure that we’re promoting green energy like never before, that we keep pushing to find ways to free ourselves from dependence on foreign oil, and make sure that America is the capital of clean energy for decades to come.

      It means that on education, we can’t just stop with the incredible work that Arne Duncan has done with Race to the Top; we’ve got to reform No Child Left Behind to make sure that not only is no child left behind, but every child gets ahead.  And that means that we’re going to have to -- (applause.)  That means we’re going to have to work hard this year and the next to try to forge a bipartisan consensus on how we recruit incredible new teachers and get them in the classroom, and reinvigorate our schools across the country, and make sure that higher education continues to be affordable.

      It means on infrastructure we’ve got a lot of work to do.  We’ve got a lot of crumbling roads and bridges and high-speed rail to build, and broadband lines to lay, that can put hundreds of thousands of people all across America to work and make sure that we’re laying the foundation for long-term economic growth.

      It means that we’re going to have to work on the deficit in a serious way -- not to score political points, not trying to take an expedient way out of what are going to be some very tough decisions, but rather embracing those tough decisions and saying there’s a way that our government can live within its means, even as we’re investing in those things that we need to win the future.

      We’ve made incredible progress when it comes to issues like “don't ask, don't tell,” but we’re still going to have work to do to make sure that this is a more equal and more just society.  We’ve still got work to do on immigration reform.  We’ve got a system that is broken right now, and as tough as that issue is, I am confident that we can be a nation of law and a nation of immigrants.

      And then we’ve got foreign policy.  We’re at a moment in a time where obviously all of us are heartbroken by the images of what’s happening in Japan, and we’re reminded of how American leadership is critical to our closest allies.  Even if those allies are themselves economically advanced and powerful, there are moments where they need our help, and we’re bound together by a common humanity.

      But we also have the convulsions in the Middle East that offer the prospect of incredible change and offer enormous opportunities so that our children could live in a more peaceful world.  But we’re going to have to take advantage of them.  We’ve ended combat operations in Iraq, but we’ve still got a lot of work to do to bring the Afghan war to an honorable end in a way that is safe and secure.  And we’re going to have to continue to be vigilant on dealing with terrorism even as we are protective of our civil liberties.

      So we’ve got enormous challenges ahead.  And the one thing, I guess, I want to say to all of you is that as tough as these times have been, what’s amazing is the resilience that the American people have shown through as tumultuous a time that I remember in my lifetime.  That’s part of America as well -- not only their goodness, but also their strength and their resilience.

      And that’s what we want to represent when we’re out there talking to our friends and neighbors and our coworkers.  As 2012 unfolds, I expect that we’re going to have a lot of questions and there are going to be vigorous debates, but I don’t want us to lose sight of the huge opportunities we have to seize the moment and make sure that America is not just changed, but is changed for the better.

      There are times where Michelle reminds me that I volunteered for this job -- (laughter) -- because she looks at me and I looked tired.  But I'm telling you, I am having an extraordinary time, because there aren’t many moments in our lives where we know that we’re making a difference.  And this is one of those moments.

      Everybody here is incredibly accomplished.  Everybody here has achieved in their respective fields extraordinary things.  I know many of your families, and you’ve got beautiful kids that you couldn’t be prouder of.  So all of us have things that we’re proud of.  But I tell you what, this is something that is a truly worthy endeavor, trying to make this country as good as it can be.

      And so the main message I have for all of you is thank you. I appreciate all the hard work that you put in to help me become President.  I appreciate your counsel.  I appreciate your advice. I appreciate the fact that you’re rooting for me and some of you are praying for me, and some of you make me laugh when I see you and give me encouragement.  And, yes, I appreciate all the excellent policy advice that you give me, as well.  (Laughter.)

      And my hope is that the same spirit that helped change this country in 2008, that that spirit is still in each and every one of you.  Obviously the first time around it’s like lightning in a bottle.  There’s something special about it, because you’re defying the odds.  And as time passes, you start taking it for granted that a guy named Barack Hussein Obama is President of the United States.  (Laughter and applause.)  It’s not -- but we should never take it for granted.  And I hope that over the next couple of years, as we’re seeing a lot of you as I travel around the country, I hope that all of you still feel that sense of excitement and that sense of possibility, because we still have so much more to do.

      Last point I’m actually going to make is I hope that as we go forward, even though the politics in this country can be tough -- and I’m sure that some of you are like Michelle and at some point had to just stop watching cable TV because it was getting too frustrating -- I also want you to remember that as important as our political labels are -- Democrat and Republican -- as many tough fights as we’re going to have, part of what made 2008 special is we brought the country together, reminding everybody that there’s a lot more that we have in common than separates us, and that the contest between Democrats and Republicans is much less important than the contest to make America what it can be.

      I know that sometimes people may get frustrated and think, you know what, Obama is being too nice and we need to get in there and take it to them.  (Laughter.)  And there will be times where that's important.  But I also think it’s important for us not to lose that spirit that animated us early on, which was to say that we don't want to just fight the same old battles over and over again.  It’s important for us to make sure that we are actually doing the work of changing our politics even as we are changing our policies.

      And that's tough.  It makes our job a little bit harder sometimes.  But I think it’s absolutely important if we’re going to achieve our goals.

      So, thank you, everybody.  God bless you.  I’m proud of you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  (Applause.)

                          END 5:22 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at White House Kitchen Garden Planting

South Lawn

3:33 P.M. EDT

      MRS. OBAMA:  What’s going on?  How are you guys doing?

      AUDIENCE:  Fine.

      MRS. OBAMA:  Fine!  Are you excited?

      AUDIENCE:  Yeah!

      MRS. OBAMA:  You ready to do something?

      AUDIENCE:  Yeah!

      MRS. OBAMA:  All right, first I’ve got to find out who’s here.  I see some Bancroft t-shirts.  Are you guys all from Bancroft?

      AUDIENCE:  Yeah.

      MRS. OBAMA:  It’s good to have you back.  What grades are you?  What grades do we have?

      AUDIENCE:  Fifth!

      MRS. OBAMA:  Fifth grade, nice!  Awesome!  Now, Tubman?  Is Tubman in the house?

      AUDIENCE:  Yeah.

      MRS. OBAMA:  Where are the Tubman people?  Let’s see some Tubman action.  Yes!  And what grades are you all in?

      AUDIENCE:  Fourth!  Fifth!

      MRS. OBAMA:  Fourth and fifth.  How exciting.  Now, who’s been here before?  All right, cool, cool.  And who -- all right, let’s see new hands, new hands.  Anybody who hasn’t been here before?  All right, great.

      Well, this is exciting for all of us because this is the planting season for the White House Garden.

      AUDIENCE:  Yay!

      MRS. OBAMA:  And we’re excited to have you guys.  We rely on you all so much to get all this done, because look how much we have to plant.  There’s no way we would get this done without your help.  So we really appreciate it.  So how many of you guys know what we’re going to plant today?  All right, give me something.  Let me hear it.  What are we going to do?  Who told you?

      AUDIENCE:  Spinach.

      MRS. OBAMA:  Spinach?  We got some --

      AUDIENCE:  Cauliflower.

      MRS. OBAMA:  Got some cauliflower, got some cabbage.  Collards, cauliflower, what else?

      AUDIENCE:  Peas!

      MRS. OBAMA:  Peas, we got some peas!  Beets.  Uh-oh.  The President doesn’t like beets.  (Laughter.)  But it’s okay.  We’re an equal opportunity garden.  (Laughter.)  What else?  Swiss chard, that’s what it is.  Do you know what Swiss chard is?  It’s like a green.  It’s like a -- it’s like a lettuce that you cook. It’s like greens, collards, mustard -- something like that.  Yeah, yeah.

      So what kind of vegetables do you all like?

      AUDIENCE:  Broccoli.

      MRS. OBAMA:  Do I hear a little broccoli?  Malia and Sasha’s favorite -- broccoli.  Spinach.  We’re spinach lovers, too.  Turnips?  A little lettuce?  Some corn?  Corn is good.  I think we’re going to try to do some corn.  Yeah.  Was that me?  Oh, he’s giving directions to other people.  No corn yet, but we’re going to get there.  Leeks -- you like leeks?  You guys know what leeks are?

      AUDIENCE:  No.

      MRS. OBAMA:  All right.  Sam, explain leeks.

      MR. KASS:  Leeks are in the family of --

      MRS. OBAMA:  The leek family.

      MR. KASS:  Leek family -- (laughter.)  And the thing about leeks, when you plant the leek you keep putting soil on top of it as it grows.  So the part that you want to eat stays white -- gets no sun so it stays white and really tender.  They’re delicious.

      AUDIENCE MEMBER:  What would happen if --

      MR. KASS:  Then it would just grow really green and you can’t eat it --

      MRS. OBAMA:  So the fun thing is, is that after we plant it, this stuff starts growing, we can try all this stuff.  So that’s going to be the fun part, is trying some new things.  So maybe if you haven’t had leeks, you’ll try some leeks.  Yes, you’ll try some leeks with me.  (Laughter.)  Maybe some Swiss chard.  You’ll try some of that, too.

      All right, that sounds good.  But more importantly, you guys are helping do something that’s really important to me and that’s be a part of a program that we started here called “Let’s Move.” Have you guys heard about “Let’s Move”?  “Let’s Move” is to fight the epidemic of childhood obesity, to make sure you guys are getting off to a healthy start.  But it’s not just about planting good vegetables; it’s about passing the information on.

      So you guys are lucky enough to be here and we are grateful to have you here, but there are a lot of kids who don’t get the opportunity to come plant at the White House.  You’ve got family members and other people who need to know what you’re learning.  So we’re going to want you guys to pass this information on, especially go home and get your parents and grandparents and aunts and uncles to cook some vegetables, to make sure you guys are trying new things -- because a lot of times they say they don’t try it because you guys won’t eat it.  So you got to let them know you’re ready to try some things, right?  And you’ve got to talk to the other kids at your school as well, right?

      Well, we’re grateful to have you.  We know that our White House chefs have also been working with the Tubman School on Chefs Move to School.  So they come and hang out with you guys all the time, I understand.

      And this is Bancroft.  You guys have been here for the full three years that we’ve been working on the garden, so it’s really exciting to have you guys back.

      So I’m going to stop talking and we’re going to start getting to work.  Okay.  We ready?

      AUDIENCE:  Yes!

      MRS. OBAMA:  All right, let’s move!  Let’s get it done!  (Applause.)

                                        END                         3:37 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks By The First Lady At National League Of Cities Conference

Marriott Wardman Park, Washington, D.C.

This morning, First Lady Michelle Obama addressed the Congressional City Conference of the National League of Cities to make the economic case for communities to address childhood obesity. Childhood obesity is not just a health or family issue alone. It is an economic issue that impacts workforces, job growth, and local budgets across the country.

9:59 A.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you.  Thanks so much.  (Applause.) Thank you all so much.  It’s wonderful to be here.  It’s great to see you all.  Please rest yourselves.  You’ve been working hard.  Take a seat.  (Laughter.)  Relax yourselves.

I am just thrilled and honored to be here with all of you for your annual conference.  I want to thank Valerie for that very kind introduction and for everything that she does for this administration and for this country.

I also want to recognize President James Mitchell -- (applause)-- yay -- (applause) -- as well as Don Borut, Carolyn Coleman, and Leon Andrews for all of their outstanding work for the National League of Cities.  Let’s give them a round of applause.  (Applause.)

And finally, I’m here because I want to thank all of you for the vitally important work that you’re doing every day in cities and towns all across America.

And that’s why I wanted to be here with all of you today, because you’re the ones who deal with the issues that determine not just the future of our communities, but the future of our country.  And I want to talk with you about an issue we face in every city and in every town in America.  It’s an issue that has people talking all across the nation, but it’s not always one we think about as a local issue.  But, if ignored, it's an issue that can drastically alter the economic landscape of our cities and towns for generations to come.

And I am obviously talking about the epidemic of childhood obesity.  Now, usually, when I talk to groups like this, I start by discussing the statistics:  how the incidence of obesity has more than tripled in the last 30 years; how nearly one out of every three of our children is overweight or obese; and how small, personal choices like what you serve your kids at the dinner table, or how getting them away from the computer and getting them out into the fresh air can really make the world of difference on this issue.  And all of this is absolutely critical if we’re going to start turning the tide on this issue. 

But if we’re going to make any progress at all, we must acknowledge that there is a problem, and then we have to do everything in our power to work together to fix it.
So I'd like to spend a moment today really to focus on the economic impact that this issue is having on cities and towns all across America.
Now, everyone in this room is worried about budget shortfalls.  I know that.  All of you are making wrenching tradeoffs and painful cuts just to stay afloat.  I know that's what's going on.  And I know that the last thing you need during times like these is a new issue on your plates.
But all of you here know something else, and that is this isn't a new issue at all.  You all know better than anyone that childhood obesity is already affecting your communities.  It’s already weighing down your budgets.  It’s already hampering economic growth. 

And here’s how.  In the 10 cities with the nation’s highest obesity rates, the direct costs connected with obesity and obesity-related diseases are roughly $50 million per 100,000 residents.  And if these 10 cities just cut their obesity rates down to the national average, all added up they combine to save nearly $500 million in healthcare costs each year.

And that’s just the beginning.  Childhood obesity is affecting your workforces, too.  I mean, studies show that obese children are less healthy and miss far more days of school on average.  So for the parents of those kids, that can mean more tardiness, more early departures from work, and higher absenteeism to stay home to care for these kids. 

And all that doesn’t just affect businesses that are already located in your communities.  It also affects whether new businesses will set up shop in your towns and cities in the first place. 

A recent report by the Trust for America’s Health explains why.  And this is a quote from that report.  They say that, “Businesses are reluctant to locate in areas where the population, particularly the future workforce, is unhealthy.”  They go on to say that, “High health care costs and lower productivity are unattractive to employers and investors.”

So make no mistake about it:  When we talk about childhood obesity, we’re talking about the workforce that you're trying to build.  We're talking about the businesses that you’re trying to attract.  We're talking about the budgets that you’re trying to balance each and every day. 

That’s why we're seeing that more and more leaders around the country like you are beginning to see childhood obesity not just as something you get around to doing when you have the money, but as something that could affect whether you have the money in the first place.

And you aren’t the only ones whose priorities have started to shift because of the impact of childhood obesity.  Just take the military, for example.  Now, when you think about the issues that are keeping four-star generals up at night, childhood obesity is probably not one that comes to mind, right?  But from the day we launched “Let’s Move” -- and that's our nationwide campaign to tackle this issue –- high-ranking military leaders have been some of our strongest supporters. 

And that’s because right now, today, nearly 27 percent of 17- to 24-year-olds are too overweight to serve in our military.  And for many who make the cut, years of inactivity and poor nutrition mean that they often are still overweight, and out of shape, and they’re far more likely to injure themselves in basic training.

So that’s what these generals are telling us that they’re seeing.  And so they’re starting to take action -- like at Fort Jackson in South Carolina.  That's the largest facility in the country for training Army recruits.  And I recently visited there and saw how they’ve started revamping their cafeterias to provide healthier choices for these recruits.  They’re also educating these young people on proper nutrition so that they can make good choices about what they eat and so that they’re at the top of their form for training. 

So military leaders realized way before many of us that obesity was affecting their core mission.  They realized that it was driving up their costs.  And then they decided to do something about it. 

And it’s similar to what many of you are doing in cities and towns in this country, as well.  In Philadelphia, Mayor Michael Nutter has worked with state officials, non-profits, and businesses on a Fresh Food Financing Initiative.  He’s doing this because he’s not only thinking about today, he’s thinking about tomorrow, as well. 

And as he put it, he said, “The foundation of a smart, 21st century workforce starts with the most fundamental building block –- healthy food.”

So what they’re doing in Philly is helping to open supermarkets in underserved areas, so that every neighborhood has access to fresh, affordable food.  And I got a chance to see this for myself last year, when I visited one of the new grocery stores in North Philly, an area with nearly 25 percent poverty.  And I got a chance to talk to so many people in that neighborhood who were grateful to have this new store in their neighborhood.  They were grateful and they were proud. 

And for thousands of communities across this country, a new grocery store means a whole lot.  It means that people don’t have to depend on whatever packaged food happens to be on the shelves of a local mini-mart.  A new grocery store means that fresh fruits and vegetables can find their way to the dinner table a little more often.  A new grocery store can do so much more.  It can help drive business and create jobs for an entire neighborhood. 

In Philadelphia, when these grocery stores started springing up, they began attracting other businesses to the area, as well.  And then those new businesses attracted new customers.  And all of that is starting to revitalize the struggling neighborhood and neighborhoods throughout the city.  One store alone resulted in more than 250 jobs in Philadelphia.  And that’s happening all over the city and all over the state.  (Applause.) 

And all told, this Fresh Food Financing Initiative has created or preserved more than 5,000 Pennsylvania jobs and improve access to healthy food for more than half a million people.  And that -- that’s real impact.  And that’s something you all understand and know.  And what many of you already understand is that a healthier community can lead to a healthier economy.

     Now, we know that there is not a one-size-fits-all solution here.  I mean, for every one of you in this room, there is a solution that works best for your city, for your community.  And many of you are already getting started on finding some of those answers.  In just the last year, we’ve had 550 communities sign up for Let’s Move Cities and Towns.  Now, this is a program that we started to help leaders like you build healthier communities for our kids.  And let’s be clear, you don’t have to pass sweeping new ordinances or spend a fortune to get results on this issue.  I mean, sometimes it’s very simple common sense ideas that really can make a big difference. 

Mayor Robert Cluck in Arlington, Texas, for example, there they provided pedometers to every student in their school district; last summer they did this.  And they challenged these kids to walk as much as they could during their school vacation.  So 4,500 students signed up, and the winner of the challenge logged 6.8 million steps in just three months, and that’s something.  (Applause.)  That’s something.

And the point here is that something like this, a little idea that turns into something big -- and this is the kind of thing that can happen in every community across this country, it really can.  And oftentimes, all it takes is the right person.  All it takes is the right leader just to push a little bit on this issue.  So I want to emphasize the impact that you can make just by using the resources that you already have at your disposal.

So if you haven’t already, I hope that all of you here will sign up for Let’s Move Cities and Towns.  All you have to do is join.  To join is to e-mail the regional director.  I think he’s listed -- that person is listed in your handouts, and they’ll get you all the information that you need to get started.  It is really that simple.  We have tried to make this pretty easy. 

And I also hope that when you get home, you get back to your hometowns and your home communities, I hope that you will reach out to anyone you think can make a difference -- city officials, community and business leaders, your local media, and reach out to young people themselves.  Encourage them to visit us at letsmove.gov.  You can sign up the schools in your community for the HealthierUS Schools Challenge. 

But most importantly, I’m here today to ask for your help.  I’m here today to ask for your support on this issue, truly, because each of you is in a position to do what no one else can in this country, because by investing in even just one grocery store, you might be able to revitalize an entire neighborhood, maybe attract more businesses and new jobs. 

By building more sidewalks, you could help kids get healthier today and reduce health costs and budget strain tomorrow.  By investing in more nutritious school lunches or more P.E. time, you can take steps that will lead to a healthier, more productive workforce in the future. 

You’re the ones who can spur action.  You’re uniquely positioned to put our communities on a stronger, healthier and more financially sound foundation for the future. 

And that’s what really this effort is all about, in the end.  It’s really about our future.  And as Valerie said, if we truly want to compete effectively as a nation, if we are truly going to win the future -- and we all want that desperately -- then we have to do everything we can today to give all our kids the healthy future that we all know they deserve.

So I want to thank you.  I want to thank you for all that you’ve done, because so many of you have stepped up and you’re doing creative things.  We want you to keep sharing those ideas.  We want everybody to learn from one another.  We’re so proud of the efforts that we’ve had with Let’s Move Cities and Towns, but we want to double those numbers.  We want to get more schools involved, and we’re going to need all of you stepping up.  This is not a Republican issue, it’s not a Democratic issue, it is about our children.  (Applause.)

So thank you all in advance.  I look forward to working with you all in the future.  Thank you so much.

END          
10:15 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks By The President In Drop-By- To Student Overflow

Kenmore Middle School, Arlington, Virginia

10:04 A.M. EDT

     THE PRESIDENT:  Hey, Kenmore!  How are you?  Good to see you guys.  (Applause.)   Hello, everybody!  Hello, everybody!  How are you?  All right, everybody, have a seat.  Everybody, have a seat.

     Well, you know, I was just wandering out and I suddenly -- suddenly all of you were here.  (Laughter.)  Well, it is wonderful to see you guys.  First of all, I want to introduce -- this is Arne Duncan, who is the Secretary of Education, and a good friend of mine.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

     How is everybody doing today?

     AUDIENCE:  Good!

     THE PRESIDENT:  Good.  Well, I wanted to come by partly because we’ve designated this Education Month at the White House, and what we are doing is traveling all across the country, finding schools that are doing a great job, and highlighting how we can make sure that every school is doing a great job.

     So I want to congratulate your principal.  I want to congratulate your teachers.  And most of all, I want to congratulate the students for doing some outstanding work here at Kenmore.  You guys have made us proud.  When we look at the improvement that you’re making, day in, day out, what that tells me is, is that you’ve got a lot of hardworking young people who are really focused on learning.

     And there’s never been a time where that’s more important.  Part of what I’m going to do when I speak to the other group is to explain that it used to be if you were willing to work hard, you didn’t really need an education to get a good job.  You could go to a factory and you could build things, you could make things, but you didn’t necessarily have to know math; you didn’t necessarily have to be able to communicate that effectively.

     These days, if you want to get a good job, have a great career, the only way you’re going to do it is if you have a good education.  And so that starts early.  It can’t -- you can’t wait until you get to be old like me -- (laughter) -- to get an education; you got to start young.  And that’s what you guys are doing each and every day.

     So the main message I have for you is that we’re proud of you, but we need you all to buckle down and keep working hard.  This is right about the age when I -- what grades are you guys?  Seventh, eighth?

     AUDIENCE:  Eighth grade.

     THE PRESIDENT:  Eighth grade?  I’ve got a confession to make.  This is probably right around the time I was at my worst. I mean, I was getting in trouble all the time.  I was in the principal’s office all the time.  I was -- and so, boys especially -- (laughter) -- this is the age where you start getting a little distracted.  And so I just hope that everybody really stays focused.  Have fun, but listen to your teachers, listen to your parents, and make sure that you really are doing everything you can to succeed in school. 

And I know that -- I know you will and as a consequence I know that you guys are going to be able to do anything that you ever want to do, including maybe being the Secretary of Education or the President of the United States.

All right.  Thank you, guys.  See you later.  (Applause.)  See you.  And teachers, good job!  We’re proud of you.  (Applause.)

END
10:08 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on Education in Arlington, Virginia

Kenmore Middle School
Arlington, Virginia

 

10:24 A.M. EDT

 

     THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody!  Hello!  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Everybody have a seat.  Have a seat, everybody. 

It is wonderful to be here at Kenmore.  And I want to, first of all, thank our principal, Mr. -- Dr. John Word.  Doctor. (Applause.)  Superintendent of Arlington Public Schools, Patrick Murphy.  (Applause.)  I believe that the Arlington County School Board is represented here -- where are they?  There they are over there.  (Applause.)  All doing great work.  We've got your own congressman, Jim Moran, here in the house.  (Applause.)  And we've got somebody who I believe is going to go down as the finest Secretary of Education we've ever had -- Arne Duncan.  (Applause.)   

Now, before I begin, let me just say that like all Americans, I continue to be heartbroken by the images of devastation in Japan.  And I know all of you, young and old, have been watching the full magnitude of this tragedy unfold.  I want to reiterate America’s support for the people of Japan, who are some of our closest friends and allies.  And I’ve said directly to the Prime Minister of Japan, Prime Minister Kan, that the United States will continue to offer any assistance we can as Japan recovers from multiple disasters, and we will stand with the people of Japan in the difficult days ahead.

Now, I just had a chance to talk with some of your teachers, as well as some students, who told me about your all-school project that’s weaving the life and music of Duke Ellington into your classes.  And by getting students engaged in learning, you’re teaching the kinds of skills about how to think and how to work together that young people are going to need in college and beyond.  That’s what all of our schools need to be doing. 

And in an economy that’s more competitive and connected than ever before, a good job and a good career is going to demand a good education.  Over the next 10 years, nearly half of all new jobs are going to require more than a high school diploma.  So, if you want a bright future, you’re going to need a college degree or advanced training.

And as Arne mentioned, unfortunately too many students aren’t getting a world-class education today.  As many as a quarter of American students aren’t finishing high school.  The quality of our math and science education lags behind many other nations.  And America has fallen to 9th in the proportion of young people with a college degree.  Understand, we used to be first, and we now rank 9th.  That’s not acceptable.

And turning these statistics around isn’t just the right thing to do for our kids -- it’s the right thing to do for our economy, because the best jobs program out there is a good education.  The best economic policy is one that produces more college graduates.  (Applause.)  And that’s why, for the sake of our children and our economy and America’s future, we’re going to have to do a better job educating every single one of our sons and daughters -- all of them.

Now, that responsibility begins not in our classrooms, but it begins in our homes.  It begins with parents who are instilling in their kids not only a love of learning, but also the self-confidence and especially the self-discipline and work ethics that are at the heart of success in school and success in life.  We’ve got to work hard.  Young people, I’m talking to you. I’ve got a couple of them at home.  And the truth is the world is going to be more competitive and nobody is going to just give success to you -- you’re going to have to earn it.  And that means you’ve got to apply yourself. 

So that, you’re going to learn at home -- first and foremost.  But that's not where the responsibility ends.  All of us have a responsibility, not just as parents, but as citizens, for giving our kids the best possible education.

     Now, for a long time we weren’t sure about how to give our kids that kind of education.  There were a lot of arguments for a lot of years.  Some people thought if you just put more money into education that would solve the problem.  And then the other side thought, money doesn’t matter; what we need is reform.  In fact, there were those who argued that we should just dismantle the public education system altogether.  Rather than working together, both sides remained locked in this stalemate year after year, decade after decade, and nothing much changed.

And then something began to happen in states and local schools districts.  Instead of getting caught up in these old, stale debates, people began to agree that, you know what, we need both more money and more reform.  We need more resources for the schools, but we’ve got to reorganize how our schools are doing business in order to assure success for our young people.   People began coming together -– parents, students, teachers, administrators, reformers, local officials -– and we started witnessing amazing success stories all across America.

There’s a school in Denver, Bruce Randolph School, that went from being one of the worst schools in Colorado to graduating 97 percent of its seniors last May.  In Cincinnati, Taft High School went from handing out only one diploma for every five students to graduating 95 percent of its seniors, and preparing them for careers in technology.

So our goal as an administration, my goal as President, has been to build on these successes across America.  We know what can work.  And so two years ago, we started doing exactly that -- trying to figure out how do we incentivize success by starting something, a competition called Race to the Top.  So what we’re doing is we’re saying to states, prove you’re serious about reform, and we’ll show you the money. 

And because it’s a competition for less than one percent of what our country spends on education each year, Race to the Top has led over 40 states to raise their standards for teaching, learning, and student achievement -- and these standards weren’t developed in Washington but they were developed by Republican and Democratic governors all across this country.

So we’ve made enormous progress.  As Arne has said, this is probably the most significant education reform initiative that we’ve seen in a generation.  But we need to make sure we’re reaching every child in America, not just those in states or districts that take part in Race to the Top.  And that’s why not only do we need to continue this competition we’ve got to open it up.  We’re letting local school districts apply.  (Applause.)  We’re going to let local school districts apply. 

And that’s why we need to take the same bottom-up approach when it comes to reforming America’s most important education law, otherwise known as No Child Left Behind.  We have to reform No Child Left Behind.  (Applause.)

Now, over these last few weeks, during what we’ve called Education Month around the White House, I’ve been traveling across the country talking with folks about education.  In fact, we’ve actually been doing that for the last couple of years.  And what I’ve heard, what Arne has heard, what the rest of my team has heard loud and clear from teachers and students and parents and communities is that No Child Left Behind got some things right and got some things wrong.  The goals of No Child Left Behind were the right goals:  Making a promise to educate every child with an excellent teacher -- that’s the right thing to do, that’s the right goal.  Higher standards are right.  Accountability is right.  Shining a light on the achievement gap between students of different races and backgrounds, and those with and without disabilities, that’s the right thing to do.

But what hasn’t worked is denying teachers, schools, and states what they need to meet these goals.  That’s why we need to fix No Child Left Behind.  We need to make sure -- (applause) -- we need to make sure we’re graduating students who are ready for college and ready for careers.  We need to put outstanding teachers in every classroom, and give those teachers the pay and the support that they deserve.  (Applause.)  I got some applause for that.  (Laughter.)

We need to not only hold failing schools accountable, we need to help turn those schools around.  In the 21st century, it’s not enough to leave no child behind.  We need to help every child get ahead.  We need to get every child on a path to academic excellence.  (Applause.)

Now, here’s the good news.  I am proud of the commitment by Democrats and Republicans in Congress to fix No Child Left Behind, to make this reform a reality -- because they recognize education is an area where we can’t afford to drag our feet.  As Arne says, our kids only get one shot at an education, and we’ve got to get it right.  So that’s why I’m calling on Congress to send me an education reform bill I can sign into law before the next school year begins -- (applause) -- before next year’s school year.  (Applause.) 

I want every child in this country to head back to school in the fall knowing that their education is America’s priority.  Let’s seize this education moment.  Let’s fix No Child Left Behind.  (Applause.)   

Now, last week we got a reminder of why it’s so critical that we reform this law.  According to new estimates, under the system No Child Left Behind put in place, more than 80 percent of our schools may be labeled as failing -- 80 percent of our schools.  Four out of five schools will be labeled as failing.  That’s an astonishing number.  And our impulse is to either be outraged that the numbers are so high, or skeptical that they’re even true.  And let’s face it, skepticism is somewhat justified. We know that four out of five schools in this country aren’t failing.  So what we’re doing to measure success and failure is out of line. 

In fact, the list of supposedly failing schools includes schools that are actually making extraordinary progress -- including Kenmore.  So, yes, we’ve still got more work to do here at this school to close the achievement gap.  I think Dr. Word would agree with that.  We’ve got to make sure that every student is on track.  But, I mean, we can see here at Kenmore -- Kenmore is thriving.  You guys are doing great.  You got more work to do, but you’re doing fine.  (Applause.) 

So what this means, though, is that we need a better way of figuring out which schools are deeply in trouble, which schools aren’t, and how we get not only the schools that are in really bad shape on track, how do we help provide the tools to schools that want to get even better to get better.  

That way of measuring success and failure, that’s the first problem with No Child Left Behind that we need to fix.  Instead of labeling schools a failure one day and then throwing up our hands and walking away from them, we need to refocus on the schools that need the most help.  We need to hold our schools accountable for the success of every child –- black, white, Latino, Asian, students with disabilities, English language learners. 

We need to make sure some of our best teachers are teaching in some of our worst schools.  We need to reward schools that are doing the difficult work of turning themselves around.  (Applause.)  We’re going to have to take a series of steps across a broad range of measures to not only target our most troubled schools, but also raise expectations for all our schools.

So first we’re going to have to fix how schools are labeled and identified.  But we’ve got to do more than that.  In recent years, 15 states have actually lowered their standards to make it easier for their kids to meet the targets set by No Child Left Behind.  Think about that.  That was -- that’s a pretty perverse incentive when states say to themselves, you know what, let’s lower our standards so that we have an easy time -- easier time passing those standards so that we don’t get punished under No Child Left Behind.  That makes no sense.  That’s inexcusable.

So instead of measuring students based on whether they’re above or below an arbitrary bar, we need to set better standards to make sure our students are meeting one clear goal –- they’re graduating ready for college and ready for a career.  That’s the goal we need to set.  (Applause.)    To know whether our kids are on track to meet that goal, we need better assessments. 

Now, I want to speak to teachers in particular here.  I’m not talking about more tests.  I’m not talking about teaching to the test.  We don’t need to know whether a student can fill out a bubble.  We do need to know whether they’re making progress.  We do need to know whether they’re not only mastering reading, math, and science, but also developing the kinds of skills, like critical thinking and creativity and collaboration that I just saw on display with the students that I met here.  Those are skills they’re going to need for the rest of their lives -- (applause) -- not just to be good workers, but to be good citizens.  (Applause.)  

Now, that doesn’t mean testing is going to go away; there will be testing.  But the point is, is that we need to refine how we’re assessing progress so that we can have accountability without rigidity -- accountability that still encourages creativity inside the classroom, and empowers teachers and students and administrators. 

Of course, we also know that better standards, better assessments and a better curriculum won’t make a difference without outstanding teachers.  Every day in this country, teachers are doing a heroic job for their kids -- (applause) -- every day.  They’re taking on the problems that follow students into class, come in early to re-write lessons, spending hours after school tutoring students.  I know; my sister is a teacher. In South Korea, teachers are known as “nation builders,” and I think it’s time we treated our teachers with the same level of respect right here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)

But if we’re serious about treating teachers that way, if we’re serious about educating all our kids with an excellent teacher, then we’re going to have to fix No Child Left Behind.

What No Child Left Behind says is that teachers need to be certified before they step into the classroom.  Now, certification can be an important measure of the quality of the teacher, and obviously we want teachers to be well qualified.  But when the quality of a teacher can make or break a child’s education, we’ve got to make sure our certified teachers are also outstanding teachers -- teachers who can reach every last child. (Applause.) 

And so what we need to do is a better job preparing and supporting our teachers, measuring their success in the classroom, holding them accountable.  We’re going to have to stop making excuses for the occasional bad teacher.  We’re going to have to start paying good ones like the professionals that they are.  (Applause.)  If we truly believe that teaching is one of the most valued professions in society -- and I can’t think of a more important profession -- then we’ve got to start valuing our great teachers.  (Applause.)

And there are a lot of ways of valuing teachers.  I don’t know any teacher who got into it for the pay.  (Laughter.)  The teachers who are here, you got into it for the kids; for the satisfaction of feeling like your passing on knowledge that these young people will use and carry on for the rest of their lives.

So we need to reward you by letting you make more of a difference for your kids.  We need to build on what’s being done here at Kenmore, give our best teachers more time to learn from each other, more time to mentor each other, more responsibilities in their schools.  And to replace the Baby Boomers who are retiring in the coming years, we’re going to have to recruit a whole new generation of teachers -- including 100,000 new math and science teachers over the next decade.

So these are the steps we’re going to have to take to fix No Child Left Behind.  And together with what we’re already doing to make college more affordable for millions more students, I’m confident these reforms will help us meet the goal that I set when I took office -– which is, by the end of the decade we will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world.  We’ll be number one again.  That’s my priority.  (Applause.)

So these steps will require reforms.  They’ll require a change in rules and standards and even attitudes.  But let me just point out there’s no avoiding the fact they’ll also cost some money.  Fixing our failing schools costs money.  It requires reform, but it costs some money.  Recruiting and rewarding the best teachers will cost money.  Making it possible for families to send their kids to college costs money. 

Now, after a decade of deficits, there isn’t a lot of money to go around.  I understand that.  And for too long, the government has been spending more than it’s been taking in, and we can’t keep that up.  We’re going to have to cut whatever spending we can afford to do without.

So I’ve called on a five-year freeze on annual domestic spending.  That will cut the deficit by more than $400 billion over the next decade, making that kind of spending a much smaller share of the economy -- smaller than it’s been in 50 years.  Right now, we’re sitting down with Republicans and Democrats to find other ways to get our deficits under control.

But even as we do, we can’t be reckless and we can’t be irresponsible about how we cut.  Let me make it plain:  We cannot cut education.  (Applause.)  We can’t cut the things that will make America more competitive. 

Think about what happens in your own family when somebody loses a job or has an illness, and you need to cut back.  What do you do?  You start by skipping that vacation you’d been planning, or you see what’s on TV instead of going to the movies.  Maybe you start packing your own lunch.  There are a whole bunch of things that you might do.  The last thing you’re going to do is to dip into your child’s college savings.  That’s too important. You’re not going to give that up.

Well, what’s true for your family is true for the American family.  (Applause.)  It’s the same principle.  A budget that sacrifices our commitment to education would be a budget that’s sacrificing our country’s future.  That would be a budget that sacrifices our children’s future.  And I will not let it happen. (Applause.)

So, yes, I’m determined to cut our deficits.  But I refuse to do it by telling students here who are so full of promise that we’re not willing to invest in your future.  I’m not willing to tell these young people right here that their education isn’t a priority. 

I’m talking about students like Katherine Diaz, who says, “I think I should have the opportunity to be who I want to be.”  And it turns out that Katherine wants to either be a professional violinist, or the first woman President of the United States.  (Laughter and applause.)  So she’s still -- Katherine is still -- she’s not sure yet.  (Laughter.)  She might do both.  You could do it one at a time -- professional violinist, President.  (Laughter.)   

Or I’m talking about Roberto Claure.  Where’s Roberto?  There’s Roberto right here.  He says, “With good schools and good teachers, we can grow up to be anything we want.”  (Applause.)  It turns out Roberto wants to be the first Hispanic President of the United States.  (Laughter and applause.)  So you guys will have to work out sort of the sequence.  (Laughter.)

Roberto, Katherine, the millions of students like them across the country, they need us to offer them the best education possible -- not only because that’s how they’ll succeed, not only because that’s how we’ll out-compete countries around the world, but because that’s what we do.  That’s who we are.  That’s what America is about.

We are a place that believes every child, no matter where they come from, can grow up to be anything they want; where  Katherine, or Roberto, or a skinny kid with a funny name named Barack Obama -- (laughter) -- can grow up to be President of the United States.  That’s who we are.  That’s the commitment we make to the next generation. 

And I’m confident that if we fix No Child Left Behind, if we continue to reform American education, continue to invest in our children’s future, that’s the America we will always be.

Thank you.  God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.) 

             

                    END               11:02 A.M. EDT