The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the American Opportunity Tax Credit

Rose Garden

1:50 P.M. EDT

 
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Before we get to what we’re here to talk about -– which is education -– I just want to say a quick word about what so far appears to be a successful rescue of the trapped Chilean miners.  
 
This is obviously something that's captivated the world’s attention and this rescue is a tribute not only to the determination of the rescue workers and the Chilean government, but also the unity and resolve of the Chilean people who have inspired the world.  And I want to express the hopes of the American people that the miners who are still trapped underground will be returned home safely as soon as possible.
 
Let me also commend so many people of goodwill, not only in Chile, but also from the United States and around the world, who are lending a hand in this rescue effort -– from the NASA team that helped design the escape vehicle, to American companies that manufactured and delivered parts of the rescue drill, to the American engineer who flew in from Afghanistan to operate the drill.
 
Last night, the whole world watched the scene at Camp Esperanza as the first miner was lifted out from under more than 2,000 feet of rock and then embraced by his young son and family. And the tears they shed -– after so much time apart -– expressed not only their own relief, not only their own joy, but the joy of people everywhere.  So it was a thrilling moment and we're hopeful that those celebrations duplicate themselves throughout the rest of today.
 
Behind me I've got the Mohan family -- Edward, Kathleen and Sarah -- raise your hands.  There we go. (Laughter.)  I've got the O’Mealia family -- Mary Ellen with her sons, Sean and Tom, and her daughters, Kelly and Leigh Anne.  And we've got the Maynard family -- Philip and Joanne with son, Gregory, and daughters Katherine and Elizabeth.  
 
We just had a wonderful visit.  And the reason we're here today, all of us, is that one of the most important things that's going to determine our long-term success is education.  Over the past 21 months, as we’ve climbed our way out of this recession, I’ve often said that if we want Americans –- and America itself  –- to succeed in the 21st century, we need to offer all of our young people the best education the world has to offer.
 
At a time when the unemployment rate for folks who’ve never gone to college is almost double what it is for those who have gone to college, when most of the new jobs being created will require some higher education, when countries that out-educate us today will out-compete us tomorrow, offering our children a world-class education isn’t just a moral obligation, it’s an economic imperative.
 
And that’s why, from the start of my administration, we’ve been doing everything we can to make that kind of education possible, from the cradle to the classroom, from college through a career.  We’re reforming Head Start and challenging weak programs to compete for funds -– because if you’re receiving tax dollars you should be delivering results for our kids.  We’re launching a Race to the Top in our states, which is raising standards and promoting excellence in teaching –- so our students, all of them, can graduate ready for college and a career.
 
We’re upgrading our undervalued community colleges so we can link students looking for work with businesses that are looking to hire.  We’re eliminating tens of billions of dollars in wasteful subsidies for banks to profit as middlemen administering student loans, and we're using that money to make college more affordable for millions of additional students.
 
And we’re offering middle-class families what’s called an American Opportunity Tax Credit -– a college tuition tax credit worth up to $2,500 a year.  I am calling on Congress to make this tax credit permanent so it’s worth up to $10,000 for four years of college –- because we’ve got to make sure that in good times or bad, our families can invest in their children’s future and in the future of our country.
 
Today, the Treasury Department is putting out a report showing what a difference these college tuition tax credits are making.  Over our first year in office, we’ve increased tax cuts for higher education by over 90 percent, and we're helping the dream of a college degree -- putting that dream within reach of more than 12 million students from working families.  
 
And I’m so pleased that the families standing behind me could join me here today.  Mary Ellen O’Mealia is a single mom who’s been working hard to put each of her four kids -– Sean, Kelly, Leigh Anne, and Tom –- through college.  And it hasn’t been easy, but it’s been a little easier thanks to what we’ve done.  Like Mary Ellen, Joanne and Philip Maynard, are able to put their son, Gregory, and daughters, Katherine and Elizabeth, through UMass Amherst, in part because of this American Opportunity Tax Credit.  And this tax credit is making possible Kathleen and Edward Mohan to give their daughter Sarah the education she needs to pursue her dream of becoming a nurse.
 
So all these families have benefited directly from this tax credit and they represent families all across the country from every state.   What we need to do is to make it possible for America’s working families to do what the O’Mealias, the Maynards, and the Mohans have been able to do, and that’s to send their kids to college.  
 
Now, if the Republicans in Congress had their way that would be more difficult.  They’ve proposed cutting back on education by 20 percent.  That means reducing financial aid for eight million students and leaving our community colleges without the resources they need to prepare our students for the jobs of the future.
 
Nothing would be more shortsighted.  There’s an educational arms race taking place around the world right now –- from China to Germany, to India to South Korea.  Cutting back on education would amount to unilateral disarmament.  We can’t afford to do that.  The nation that educates its children the best will be the nation that leads the global economy in the 21st century.
 
Now, ultimately, this is not just about making our economy more competitive.  It’s not just about preparing our kids for the jobs of the future –- though all those things are absolutely essential. It’s also about who we are as a people.  It’s about building a brighter future where every child in this country has a chance to rise above any barriers of race or faith or station, and they can fulfill their God-given potential; where the American Dream is a living reality.  By opening the doors of college to anyone who wants to go, that’s a future we can help build together.
 
These three families represent those core values, represent those beliefs.  The parents who are standing here have worked extraordinarily hard to make sure that their children have opportunities. And we need to reward that sense of responsibility, that sense of commitment to the next generation, by making sure they’re not having to do it alone.
 
So thank you all for being here.  Thank you very much, everybody.
 
END
1:58 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks of First Lady Michelle Obama in Support of Senator Russ Feingold

Thank you so much.  I am so thrilled to be here with all of you today.  
 
Thank you, Russ, for that very kind introduction.  And thank you for inviting me here today.  
 
Now, when my husband was here in Wisconsin a couple of weeks ago, he talked about how independent and outspoken Russ is…and how Russ doesn’t always agree with him.  So Russ, that’s something that you and I have in common.  
 
But my husband also said something else about Russ that I think is worth repeating today.  He said that Russ is always looking out for the people of this state.  
 
And I think that’s clear in just about everything Russ has done during his time in office.  
 
Over the years, he’s held more than 1,200 town hall sessions to listen to the people he serves…and day after day, he’s taken courageous and principled stands on their behalf.  
 
He’s stood up for health insurance reform.  He’s stood up for campaign finance reform.  And he’s fought to create jobs and cut taxes for working folks.  
 
So he’s been out there every day working hard for families here in Wisconsin.  And I’m proud to be here for him today. Let’s give him a round of applause.
 
And let’s also give a round of applause for this state’s terrific First Lady, Jessica Doyle…for this District’s terrific Representative, Congresswoman Gwen Moore…and for our terrific candidate for Congress, State Senator Julie Lassa…thanks to all of you for joining us today.  
 
Now, to tell you the truth, this isn’t something I do very often.  
 
In fact, I haven’t really done it since a little campaign you might remember a couple of years ago.  
 
As a self-described Mom-in-Chief, my first priority has been making sure that my girls are happy and healthy and adjusting to their new life in the White House.
 
Like every parent I know, my children are the center of my world.  My hopes for their future are at the heart of every single thing I do.  
 
And that’s really why I’m here today.  
 
You see, more than anything else, I come to this as a mom.  
 
When I think about the issues facing our nation, I think about what it means for my girls…and I think about what it means for the world we’re leaving for them and for all our children.  
 
As I travel around this country, and look into the eyes of the children I meet, I see clearly what’s at stake.  
 
I see it in the child whose mom has just lost her job and worries about how her family will pay the bills.  
 
I see it in the child whose dad has just been deployed and is trying so hard to be brave for his younger siblings.  
 
I see it in the child stuck in a crumbling school, who looks around and wonders, “What does this mean for my future?”  
 
That’s how I see the world.  And I think that’s how most folks see the world.  
 
That’s something that we all share…that regardless of where we’re from…or what we look like…or how much money we have…we all want to leave something better for our kids.  
 
I know that was true in my family growing up.  
 
That’s why even after my Dad was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis, he hardly ever missed a day of work at the city water plant, no matter how sick he was, or how tired he felt…because he wanted something better for me and my brother.  
 
And it was also true in Barack’s family.  
 
That’s why Barack’s grandmother woke up before dawn each morning to catch the bus to her job at a bank.  And even when she was passed over for promotions year after year because she was a woman, she rarely complained…because she wanted something more for Barack and his sister.  
 
That’s what the American Dream is all about…that fundamental belief that even if you don’t have much…if you work hard, if you do what you’re supposed to do…you can build a decent life for yourself, and an even better life for your children.  
 
But for too many folks, that dream feels like it’s slipping away.  
 
Even before this recession hit, for too many people, all that hard work wasn’t adding up like it used to.  
 
For years now, middle class families have seen their incomes falling while the cost of things like health care and college tuition have gone through the roof.  
 
This is something that Barack and I heard in every corner of the country during the campaign – folks asking themselves: Are we going to go broke if we get sick?  
 
What if we can’t pay the mortgage…what will we do then?  
 
How will I ever afford to send my kids to college if I’m not rich?  
 
Where can I find a good public school for my kids?  And if I can’t, what do I do then?  How will I give my kids the same chances that I had?  
 
Folks all over the country were worrying that maybe that fundamental American promise was being broken – and that no one in Washington was listening.   
 
And that’s why my husband ran for President in the first place.  Because he knows that his life, like mine, is only possible because of the American Dream.  And keeping that dream alive and within reach for all Americans is what drives him every single day.  
 
That’s why folks like you across this country joined our campaign.  
 
That’s why you made those calls and knocked on those doors in the freezing snow and the blazing sun.  
 
And that’s why you and I are here today.  
 
We’re not here just because of an election.  We’re not here just because we support Russ.  
 
We’re here to renew that promise.  We’re here to restore that dream.   
 
We’re here because we believe that no child’s future should be limited because of the neighborhood they’re born in.  We believe that every child should have access to good public schools like I had…and that every child should have a chance to go to college even if their parents aren’t wealthy, like Barack and I did.  
 
We believe that if you’re sick, you should be able to see a doctor. And if you work hard, you should make a decent wage, and have a secure retirement.  
 
We believe that if you fulfill your responsibilities every day, you should be able to provide for your family, just like my folks did…and have opportunities to pursue your dreams and leave behind something more for your kids, just like we’re all trying to do today.  
 
That is the vision we all share.  It’s the same vision my husband fought for as a young community organizer all those years ago, trying to bring jobs and hope to struggling neighborhoods on the South Side of Chicago.
 
It’s the same vision he fought for in the Illinois State Senate and the U.S. Senate.  
 
It’s the same vision he talked about all those months on the campaign trail.  
 
And it’s the same vision that has guided him…the change he’s been fighting for…every single day in the White House.  
 
Barack knows that too many folks are out of work right now, and too many paychecks just don’t stretch to cover the bills.  
 
That’s why he cut taxes for middle class families.  He cut taxes for small businesses as well – not just once, not just twice, but 16 times – so these businesses can start creating jobs again.  
 
He stopped credit card companies from jacking up their rates and slapping folks with hidden fees.  
 
And the very first bill he signed into law as President was the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, to ensure that women get equal pay for equal work.  
 
Barack believes that every young person deserves the chances that he and I had to get an education.  
 
That’s why he’s reforming our schools from top to bottom.  
 
He’s made historic investments in our community colleges.  
 
He’s increased student aid and tuition tax credits.  He’s eliminated tens of billions of dollars in wasteful subsidies to big banks that provide student loans…and he’s sending that money where it belongs: to students.  
 
And that’s not just an investment in their future, it’s an investment in our country’s future.
 
Barack believes that it is our solemn obligation to serve our men and women in uniform as well as they’ve served us.
 
So he’s made one of the largest investments in our veterans in decades.  
 
He’s helping them get the education they’ve earned and the good jobs they deserve.  
 
And he’s making sure they get the health care they need…including treatment for the wounds of today’s wars like traumatic brain injury and post traumatic stress disorder.  
 
And as many of you know, I’ve also made supporting military families one of my top priorities as First Lady…because I want to make sure that these hard working families get the respect, the appreciation, and the support they deserve.
 
Barack is also investing in clean energy, so we can create good jobs and leave a healthier planet for our kids.  
 
He’s investing in scientific research, including stem cell research, that will transform our children’s lives long after we’re gone.  
 
And he’s appointed two brilliant, accomplished women to serve as Supreme Court Justices.  And for the first time in history, our daughters – and our sons – watched three women take their seats on our nation’s highest court.  
 
Finally, Barack knows the heartbreak and frustration that our health insurance system has caused far too many families.  That’s why he refused to take the easy route and walk away from health insurance reform.  
 
Because he’ll never forget how his own mother spent the final months of her life fighting with her insurance company because they said her cancer was a pre-existing condition.  
 
Barack doesn’t want any family to go through something like that ever again.  
 
And thanks to the reform that Russ and so many of you helped pass, they won’t have to.  
 
Thanks to this reform, insurance companies can no longer drop your coverage just because you get sick.  
 
They can no longer deny coverage to kids with pre-existing conditions.  
 
Kids can stay on their parents’ plans until they’re 26 years old.  
 
And insurance plans have to provide preventive care – things like breast cancer screenings and prenatal care – at no extra cost.  No extra charges, no extra fees.  And that’s not just going to save money, that’s going to save lives.
 
Now, these are just some examples of the kind of change that we’re making.  And it’s because of all of you…it’s because of leaders like Russ…that so much has been accomplished in such a short period of time.  
 
But I know that a lot of folks are still hurting.  
 
I know that for a lot of folks, change hasn’t come fast enough.  It hasn’t come fast enough for Barack or for Russ either.  Not when so many folks are still looking for work…and struggling to pay the bills…and worrying about providing for their kids.  
 
I think that many of us came into this expecting to see all the change we talked about happen all at once, right away, the minute Barack walked through the Oval Office door.  
 
But the truth is, it’s going to take a lot longer to dig ourselves out of this hole than any of us would like.  The truth is, this is the hard part.  
 
But remember, that’s exactly what Barack told us.  That’s exactly what we all told each other during all those months on the campaign trail.  
 
He told us that change is hard…he said that change is slow…and it doesn’t just happen on its own.  We all understood that change takes struggle and sacrifice and compromise.  
 
From our first days as a nation, every time folks have tried to make change, they faced fear and doubt.  They faced setbacks and disappointments.  
 
But as Americans, we have always pushed past the cynicism and kept moving forward.  
 
And that’s what we need to do again today.  
 
Because there is so much at stake right now – for our future and for our children’s future.  
 
And we’ve come much too far to turn back now.  
 
We’ve come too far to stop giving our kids the chances in life they deserve.  
 
We’ve come too far to stop rebuilding that middle class security for our families.  
 
We’ve come too far to stop putting the American Dream that I know…and that my husband knows…and that Russ knows…back within reach for all of us.
 
Now, it won’t be easy.  Real change never is.  
 
But you know what I do during those times when change seems hardest?  I think about my Dad.  
 
I think about how, no matter how tired he got as he struggled to walk…no matter how frustrated he felt trying to dress himself in the morning…he just kept on going every day.  
 
And that keeps me going.  
 
I think about Barack’s grandmother…and how no matter how discouraged she felt…she just kept getting up and giving her very best.  
 
And I think about all the folks just like her who I’ve met these past few years…the folks who work that extra shift…the folks who take that extra class…the folks who wake up every morning without complaint or regret and do everything they can for the people they love.  
 
Those folks inspire me every single day.
 
Finally, I think about how we all felt on Election Night.  
 
And I think about how we felt on Inauguration Day.  
 
We were excited.  We were energized.  We were hopeful, because we knew we had a chance to change the country we love for the better.  
 
And the truth is, we have that same chance – and we have that same responsibility – today.  The chance to continue the progress we’ve made.  The chance to finish what we’ve started.  
 
Because this election isn’t just about all that we’ve accomplished these past couple of years…it’s about all we have left to do in the months and years ahead.  
 
But my husband can’t do this alone.  He needs leaders like Russ to help him.
 
And we need folks like all of you to make that happen.  We need you to make those phone calls for Russ.  We need you to knock on those doors for Russ.  
 
And we need you to get everyone you know to vote for Russ.  And folks can do that right now, today, because early voting has already started here in Wisconsin.  All you have to do is log on to VoteNowWisconsin.com to find out where to cast your ballot.   
 
We also need you to find those folks who are planning to sit this one out, and we need you to tell them that they can’t vote just once and then just hope for change to happen.  
 
They’ve got to vote all the time, every time.  They’ve got to vote for their council-members, and their mayors, and governors, and for Senators like Russ Feingold.
 
Because in the end, our campaign was never just about putting one man in the White House.  
 
It was about building a movement for change millions of voices strong – a movement that lasts beyond one year and one campaign.  
 
And if you keep standing with Russ, and bringing folks together for Russ…if you’re still as fired up and ready to go as you were two years ago…then I know that we can keep that movement going.  I know we can keep that American Dream alive.  
 
And years from today, our children and grandchildren will be able to look back and say that we kept faith with the values we were raised with…that we gave them that better life they deserved…and that we met our obligation to leave for them, and for their kids and grandkids, an America worthy of their dreams.  
 
Yes we can, and yes we must, and yes we will.  
 
Thank you, God bless you, and God bless America.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a "Moving America Forward" Town Hall

George Washington University, Washington, D.C.

7:06 P.M. EDT
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Well, hello, everybody!  Hello!  (Applause.)  Thank you.  Thank you.  Thank you, everybody.  Please, please have a seat.  Thank you so much.
 
      First of all, Sarah, I think you’ve got a future.  You sounded really good.  I was persuaded.  (Laughter.)  So thank you for the wonderful introduction.
 
      I want to thank Tim Kaine and Paul Hodes who are up in New Hampshire and doing great work.  Jeremy, thank you for helping to moderate.  And I also want to thank Steve Knapp and -- the president of GW -- and all the GW family for helping to host us here today.  Please give them a big round of applause.  Thank you.  (Applause.)
 
      Now, one thing about being President is that you hear yourself talk all the time.  (Laughter.)  So I do not want to spend a whole bunch of time with a long opening speech.  Let me just make a few remarks at the top, and then I really want to hear from you.  And I know we’re not only getting questions from the audience but we’re also going to be getting questions through the Internet and Skype and a whole bunch of other things that Malia and Sasha understand and I’m still trying to sort out. 
 
      You know, when you think back to almost two years ago, election night when I stood in Grant Park in Chicago or the inauguration here in Washington, D.C., there was just such an incredible sense of possibility and promise.  We had run a very unlikely campaign.  It was a campaign based on not fancy endorsements and big special interest money, but it was all based on grassroots participation, ordinary folks who had decided that the country was on the wrong track and we needed to get involved. 
 
      And one of the most inspiring things about the campaign was how so many young people like Sarah got involved in public life for the first time, because what that signaled was a reaffirmation of a central American truth, which is our destiny is not written for us by somebody else.  Our destiny is written by us.  When we decide to join together and make common cause, then there’s nothing we can’t accomplish.  And so we overturned a lot of conventional wisdom in this town as a consequence of that election.
 
      What we understood but maybe didn’t fully appreciate was that I was taking office at a time of extraordinary crisis in this country.  We had just gone through a decade in which job growth had been sluggish and in which middle-class families had seen their wages and incomes actually go down rather than go up.  People had seen their health care costs rise, their college tuition rise.  They had a sense that maybe the American Dream was increasingly out of reach for so many people.
 
      But what we found out when I was sworn in was that we were possibly down a path to a second Great Depression.  The financial system had melted down.  We had lost 4 million jobs in the six months prior to me taking office.  We lost 750,000 jobs the month I took office; 600,000 after that; 600,000 the month after that. 
 
      And so the hole that had been dug was very deep.  And my first challenge was to make sure that we didn’t slide any further.  And we had to take a whole set of emergency actions, some of which, frankly, were unpopular; some of which I hadn’t talked about in the campaign because we hadn’t anticipated having to take these drastic emergency steps.  But my first job was to make sure that we stopped the slide, and we did.
 
      And so now we have an economy that’s growing again.  We have seen nine consecutive months of private sector job growth.  The financial system has stabilized.  And yet because of that hole, we’ve got millions of people across the country who are struggling, and some of you know in your own families those struggles -- people who can’t find work despite sending resume after resume out, small business owners who still are having trouble getting loans, young people who are still having trouble financing their college educations, people who are worrying about losing their homes to foreclosure.
 
      So there’s a lot of anger and there’s a lot of frustration and a lot of fear across the country.  And one of the challenges of this election is to make sure that we understand that as difficult as things are and have been over the last two years, we are moving in the right direction.  And the question is going to be whether once again hope overcomes fear.  Because what essentially the other side has decided is that they’re going to try to ride fear and anxiety all the way to the ballot box on November 2nd.  And frankly, and I’m just going to be blunt, some on our side have said to themselves, well, you know what, everything that we thought was going to happen hasn’t happened immediately in 20 months, and so maybe we don’t have the same enthusiasm and excitement and energy as we did that first time around.
 
      The most important message I can deliver to all of you today is, number one, over the last 20 months not only have we prevented America from slipping into a Great Depression, but we finally started tackling those structural, fundamental issues that all of you cared so much about and that we campaigned on.  So we now have a health care reform in place that can make sure that young people all across America -- (applause) -- that can make sure that young people all across America can stay on their parents’ health insurance until they’re 26 years old; that makes sure that seniors have a Medicare system that they can count on and don’t have over time a doughnut hole that leaves them in the terrible choice of do I buy my prescription drugs or do I instead pay the rent.
 
      We have also set it up so that over time the cost of health care can go down, which will be an enormous relief for small businesses and families, as well as the federal government, because, frankly, we couldn’t afford the trajectory that we were on.
 
      We have reformed our education system in fundamental ways.  All across the country you’re seeing investments in science and math education, and teacher recruitment, and clearing away some of the red tape and bureaucracy that was preventing us from making sure that our kids got the best possible start in life.  And we also transformed the student loan system so that a lot of young people here at G.W. and all across the country are now receiving billions of dollars of additional assistance that previously had been going to banks in unwarranted subsidies.
 
      We, across the country, have seen investments in clean energy -- in solar panels and wind turbines and biodiesel plants that promise a clean energy future, something that I know this next generation in particular is concerned about -- not only for economic reasons, but also for environmental reasons.
 
      So we have made some huge changes over the last 20 months and we can make more.  But we’re not there yet.  We’re not where we need to be yet.  And this election is going to help determine whether we can continue on this path so that America finally takes on these tough challenges, we finally start making sure that the American Dream works for everybody and not just some, and that we’re able to compete on a global stage that is more competitive than it has been at any time in my lifetime -- and I’m a lot older than a bunch of you guys.
 
      So that’s the challenge.  Now, the only way this is going to work is if hope defeats fear, and that manifests itself in you guys committing to vote.  So I need everybody here and everybody who’s listening to commit to vote.  But I also need you to talk to your friends and neighbors, coworkers, aunts, uncles, relatives, whoever it is that you can get your hands on, and tell them November 2nd matters. 
 
      If you were excited in 2008, that was the beginning of the journey; that’s not the end of the journey.  Or to use a sports metaphor, we just finished the first quarter.  We’ve got a whole bunch more work to do.  If all of you, a little wiser, a little older after these past 22 months -- I’m certainly older, I’ve got more gray hair here -- if you can muster and sustain that same effort and energy, then I’m absolutely confident that we will do well in the election.  We will win all across the country.  And the polls bear that out.  But more importantly, America will win because we will not have retreated from the progress that we’ve started.  Rather, we will advance and build off the progress that we’ve started.
 
      So it’s going to be up to you.  The future is going to be in your hands.  And I have to say, the other side right now is excited because they see the opportunity to -- in the midst of some still very difficult economic times, they see the opportunity to take advantage of that politically.
 
      The only thing that is going to counteract their enthusiasm, their excitement and the millions of dollars that are pouring in from special interests into races all across the country are your voices.  We’ve overcome those forces before; there’s no reason why we can’t again.  But it’s going to require that commitment on your part, not only to vote but to make sure that you get other folks to vote as well.
 
      So with that, Jeremy, why don’t we open it up to some questions.  (Applause.)
 
      MR. BIRD:  Well, thank you, Mr. President, for joining us.  As you said, we have questions from -- that we took from different mediums.  We’ve got a Skype question we’re going to get to you later. 
 
      But first -- and we’ll put it up on the screen for you in the room as well --
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.
 
      MR. BIRD:  We have a question online.  The question is from James in California, and he asks:  “Mr. President, how best can citizens work to mitigate the effect of corporate money on elections?”
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Well, this is a big challenge.  Now, let me first of all say that throughout the history of America, money has always influenced elections.  That’s always been the case, starting from the very first presidential election.
 
      And the truth is also that Democrats, just like Republicans, have to get their message out.  And that means we’ve got to send out direct mail and we’ve got to run television ads. 
 
      In a big, complicated democracy like ours, it requires resources to get out your message.  And there’s nothing wrong with that, per se.  But what’s happening in this election is unprecedented because what we’re seeing, partly as a consequence of a Supreme Court decision called Citizens United, is the ability of special interests to mobilize millions of dollars from donors who are undisclosed to run negative ads at levels that are outspending, in some cases, the candidates themselves or the parties.
 
      And when I say negative ads, there was a recent study done estimating that 86 percent of these ads that are being run by these so-called third-party organizations are negative.  Eighty-six percent of them are negative ads that are just bombarding candidates all across the country, and we don’t know where this money is coming from.  We don’t know if it’s being paid for by oil companies who don’t like some of our environmental positions.  We don’t know if they’re being run by banks who are frustrated by some of our financial positions.  We don’t know if they’re being funded by foreign corporations because they’re not disclosed.
 
      And so this poses an enormous challenge.  And one of the most frustrating things is that these ads, when they run, the names of these groups are all really innocuous sounding, right?  There’s Americans For Prosperity and Moms For Motherhood.  I made that one up.  (Laughter.)  But you get the idea.
 
      So if you’re just watching the screen you think, well, gosh, Americans For Prosperity -- I’m for prosperity and they’re saying all these horrible things about the Democratic candidate.  Maybe the Democratic candidate is not for prosperity.
 
      Now, they have every right under the First Amendment to let their voices be heard, but I think all of us would agree that it would make a difference if you were watching these ads and you found out, well, Americans For Prosperity actually are bankrolled by a bunch of very wealthy special interests that are opposed to legislation that you support, that might have an influence in terms of how you interpret that ad.  This is a huge problem.
 
      Now, for this election we’re not going to be able to change the law.  I hope that the Supreme Court at some point looks at the evidence that’s accumulated over the next -- over the past several months and says, this is really hijacking our democracy, this is not a healthy thing.
 
      In the meantime, though, the most important thing we can do is make sure that we vote and make sure that we’re talking to our friends and neighbors and getting out facts and information.
 
      I am confident that if people have good information and can make up their own minds, that we will do well.  The people, by the way, who have the most credibility in delivering that message are you.  Because the truth of the matter is, no matter how negative an ad it may be, it’s sort of background noise.  Most people kind of tune out, especially in these states where they’re getting it every two seconds.  I mean, heaven forbid that you live in a competitive congressional district.  I mean, it must just be nonstop.  So at a certain point, people tune those things out. 
 
      But if they hear from their friend who they respect, their neighbor who they respect, here are the facts about what President Obama did with financial regulation to make sure that credit card companies can’t jack up your rates without any reason or without any notice.  Here’s -- it turns out that because of health reform, you’re going to be able to get health insurance even though you’ve got a preexisting condition.  When they hear those things from you directly, that has more credibility than any television ad. 
 
      And that’s how you overcome all this money that’s pouring into the elections.  You are the most powerful messengers possible.  And that’s how democracy ultimately should work.
 
      MR. BIRD:  Thank you, Mr. President.  And thank you, James, for your question.  (Applause.)
 
      All right, now we’re going to try something new.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  All right.
 
      MR. BIRD:  So we’re going to try a different medium here.  We’re going to go to Skype for the first time ever.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  I’m very excited.
 
      MR. BIRD:  We’re going to actually have someone calling in from their computer here.  And we actually have Paula calling in from the great city and your hometown, Chicago, Illinois.
 
      Paula?
 
      Q    Good evening, Mr. President.  In this last push to get out the vote, is there an overarching message or approach that you think volunteers could best take to persuade voters to get back to the polls on November 2nd?
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Great question, although I don’t think she can hear me, right?  This is not a two-way Skype?
 
      MR. BIRD:  I don’t think it’s -- I don’t think it’s two-way here.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.
 
      MR. BIRD:  She’s watching you online right now.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Well, hello, everybody.  (Laughter.)  I think the most important message to deliver in this election is that it is a choice, because what the other side is counting on is -- understanding the economy is still weak, even though it’s growing; a lot of people are still unemployed, even though we’ve seen private sector job growth -- in that kind of environment, the easiest thing to do is to say things aren’t good enough now; throw the bums out.  That’s going to be their message, particularly since we have control of the House and the Senate, as well as the White House.
 
      We have to make sure that we are delivering a choice to people.  And so the most effective message is to say that this is what Democrats stand for.  We stand for tax cuts for middle-class families who have seen their incomes declining over the last several years.  (Applause.)  We stand for giving tax breaks to companies that are investing in research and development here in the United States, not those who are investing in research and development overseas and jobs overseas.  (Applause.)  We stand for making sure that every young person in this country is getting a good, quality education K-12 and that they can afford to go to college without taking on so much debt that they could never hope to pay it back.  (Applause.)
 
      This is what we stand for:  innovation, research and development, skilled workers, lifelong learning -- all the things that are required to make sure that this a competitive 21st century America that is playing for number one on the global stage. 
 
      And what the other side stands for are the same failed policies that got us into this mess in the first place.  It’s not as if we didn’t try the other side’s theories.  We tried them for eight years.  We had massive tax cuts, much of those tax cuts going to millionaires and billionaires.  We deregulated across the board in every field imaginable, from the financial sector to oil and gas companies to you name it.  We didn’t take the challenges that middle-class families were going through seriously.  We said, you know what, fend for yourselves, you don’t need help from the government; the market will solve all problems.
 
      We tried that.  And it didn’t work.  And so when this election is posed as a choice, then I think people -- sort of the light bulb goes on, “oh, yeah, now I remember -- that didn’t work.”  And that then gives us an opportunity to say what we’ve been doing isn’t enough, we’re only halfway there, but what we’re doing is starting to work and we’ve got to stay on that path.
 
      And for a lot of people here, depending on who you’re talking to, you should tailor a message to speak to those persons’ concerns.  If the young people who are here, if you’re talking to a classmate, it’s not that hard to say, what’s your student loan debt going to be when you graduate?  And they’ve probably calculated, boy, I’m going to owe $50,000, $60,000, $70,000, $100,000.  And you say to them, you know what, the President passed a tax credit for young people that will be worth $10,000 for anybody going to four years of college, and that could be repealed if Republicans take over.  They’ve already proposed to cut education spending by 20 percent.  Well, that will get people’s attention because that’s a pocketbook issue, that’s a bread-and-butter issue. 
 
      If you’re talking to a senior, and you say, I know you’ve heard a lot of nonsense about the health reform bill, but do you know that the trustees of Medicare said that as a consequence of our reforms we extended the life of Medicare, and by the way, if you’re in that zone called the doughnut hole where you’re having trouble paying for your prescription drugs, you’re going to be receiving a $250 check to help pay for those prescription drugs.  And over time, by next year, we’re going to cut your costs for prescription drugs in half -- according to the reform law.
 
      So you want to speak to people in terms of what it is that they’re going through right now in their lives.  And I think that across the board, if they see what the choice is, then I think that we’ll do very well.  (Applause.) 
 
      MR. BIRD:  Thank you, Mr. President.  We’re going to -- before we open it up to the crowd, we’re going to take one more from folks online.  And this one comes from Twitter.  This is from Maureen in New Jersey.  You’ll also see it up on the screen here.  And Maureen asks:  “Can we inform people that the campaign slogan was ‘Yes, we can,’ not ‘Yes, we can in 21 months’?”  (Laughter.)  “It took eight years to get us into this mess.”
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that’s sort of a softball.  (Laughter.)  But I appreciate it, Maureen. 
 
      Look, people have good reason to feel frustrated.  If
      you’re having trouble making your mortgage right now, and you’ve seen your home value go down by $100,000, or you’ve seen your 401(k) drop in value by 20 percent and you’re about to retire, if you’ve had to put off your college education because your family can’t quite afford to help you out now and you’re having trouble, you know, that’s tough.
 
      And so I don’t blame the American people for feeling frustrated and impatient.  But I do think it is important to make sure that we’re communicating that the problems that we have are problems that can be solved, but they’re not going to be solved overnight.  And what we want to make sure of is, is that we’re on the right path.
 
      So let’s take the example of American manufacturing.  We’ve seen manufacturing leave our shores for years now.  Plants closed all across this country.  Some of it has to do with them just shifting to places like China that had lower labor costs; some of it had to do with automation.  And so those are a lot of well-paying jobs that helped to build our middle class that over the last 20, 30 years have been gutted.
 
      Now, I think the American worker is the most productive worker on Earth.  I think we have the most creative and dynamic entrepreneurial culture on Earth.  We still have more innovation than any country on Earth.  But we haven’t harnessed it.  And especially we’re not harnessing it for the jobs of the future.
 
      So when you look at clean energy, for example, when we came into office, we were producing 2 percent of the world’s advanced batteries that go into electric cars and hybrid cars. 
 
      Now, you think about it.  This is where the industry is going.  We were making all our money, to the extent that any of our automakers were making money, making them on SUVs.  So what we said was let’s jumpstart an American advanced battery industry.  And we have seen advanced battery plants open throughout the Midwest, and we’re on pace now to have 40 percent of the market by 2015, in five years’ time.  (Applause.)
 
      Now, that’s just one example of how we can rebuild American manufacturing using innovation, using research, using the skills and talents of our workforce.  But we’re not going to completely replace all the jobs that were lost in manufacturing in two years’ time or three years’ time.  What we have to do is nurture and build on these successes in solar panels and wind turbines and electric cars.  Over time we’re creating a whole new industry that can absorb skilled workers.  And then if we’re training those workers effectively for those jobs, then as those industries grow, opportunities for Americans grow.  And that’s always been how this middle class has been built here in this country.
 
      So I guess my main response to Maureen is, on the one hand, I think you’ve got to be sympathetic to the fact that people need help now, and we’re doing everything we can to make sure that job growth is here now, that we’re helping small businesses get loans right now so they can keep their doors open or they can expand.  We’re making sure that teachers aren’t getting laid off as much as we can by providing help to the states and local governments that are hard-strapped.  There are a lot of things that we’re doing right now. 
 
      But those big structural changes that a lot of folks are worried about, those can be solved but it’s going to require persistent effort.  It’s going to require imagination and stick-to-itness over the course of several years in order for us to get back to where we were.
 
      I’m confident we’ll get there, but we’ve got to make sure that we don’t start going back to the policies that resulted in American manufacturing decline.  And I’m confident we can do that.  (Applause.) 
 
      MR. BIRD:  Thank you.  Now what we’d like to do is just open it up to you to take questions from the audience here.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  All right.  Let’s see who we got.  This young man right here, he’s all ready.  Introduce yourself.
 
      Q    Hi.  I’m Daniel Lippman (phonetic) from Massachusetts and I thank you for coming to GW.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.
 
      Q    And my question is, what are some of the surprises that you’ve encountered in Washington and what lessons have you learned in your 21 months here?  Thank you.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Well, where do I start?  (Laughter.)  You know, let me tell you something.  On the one hand, I’ve been surprised by how the news cycle here in Washington is focused on what happens this minute as opposed to what needs to happen over the course of months, years.  The 24-hour news cycle is just so lightning fast and the attention span I think is so short that sometimes it’s difficult to keep everybody focused on the long term.
 
      The things that are really going to matter in terms of America’s success 20 years from now when we look back are not the things that are being talked about on television on any given day or appear on the Internet on a blog on any given day.  And so that’s challenging.
 
      And I’ve got to constantly figure out how to work with this new media environment to make sure that we stay focused on what’s important.  Are we educating our kids over the long term?  Are we putting enough money into research and development?  Are we helping grow startup businesses and small businesses that are going to create the jobs of the future?  Are we competitive in terms of how we deal with our export sector? 
 
      Those big questions -- a lot of times they’re kind of dull, they’re wonkish, and so they don’t attract as much attention as you’d like.
 
      On the other hand, let me tell you something that I’ve been surprised about is how courageous a lot of members of Congress have been on some of the big, tough issues that we’ve worked on over the last 20 months.
 
      I know it’s fashionable to get down on Congress.  Congress is right now very unpopular, both parties, because people just see the arguments all the time, and the noise, and then they’re absorbing all those negative ads, and they just feel like, gosh, you know, these folks, they don’t care about us.  And I get that.
 
      But there are a lot of folks who took some really tough votes over the course of the last 20 months, knowing that it was bad for them politically; who voted for health care reform even though the polls said this would cause them problems in the next election; who voted for financial regulatory reform, even though they knew that by supporting it, it might attract big money pouring in and directing negative ads against them.  And they did it anyway.  And that was risky for them. 
 
      And so part of the reason why I think this election is so important is I want to make sure that when somebody does the right thing, they get rewarded.  I’m a strong believer in accountability in politics.  And when somebody does the wrong thing, including somebody in my own party, I think they should be held to account.  
 
      But I also think that there have been a surprising number of folks who have been willing to stand up.  There’s a candidate in Virginia, Tom Perriello, who’s a great guy -- (applause) -- who has worked -- he comes from -- his is not a traditionally Democratic district.  But he’s just done what’s right.  And there have been times where he disagreed with me, and he criticized me, but he always did so from a place of principle.
 
      John Boccieri in Ohio, Betsy Markey in Colorado -- I mean, there just have been some folks who really stood up, knowing that they might be putting their congressional careers at risk.  And that’s been a pleasant surprise.
 
      So, all right?  Next.  Let’s see, I’m going to go boy, girl, boy, girl, so that I don’t -- okay, go ahead.  And we’ve got a microphone for you.
 
      Q    Hi, my name is Francesca.  I live in D.C. but I’m originally from Dallas, Texas. 
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Great to see you, Francesca. 
 
      Q    Mr. President, you have pointed out that U.S. students have fallen from the top 20 nations in math and science in test scores, and jobs and contracts are going overseas.  You’ve called education funding a national priority.  But do you think it’s time to label education funding a national security priority?
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  I think it’s a national security priority.  Look, there has never been a nation on Earth that lost its economic edge and maintained its military edge.  And the reason that we have the most effective military on Earth in the history of the world is first and foremost because we have unbelievable men and women in uniform who make sacrifices on our behalf every single day and are extraordinary.  (Applause.)
 
      But the second reason is because we’ve had the biggest economy in the world that can support this incredible armed forces that we have.  And if we start falling behind economically, we will fall behind from a national security perspective.  There’s no doubt about it.
 
      And the single most important determinant of how we do economically is going to be the skills of our workforce.  And you’re exactly right.  We used to be at the top of the heap when it came to math and science education.  We’re now 21st and 25th respectively in science and math.  We used to be number one in the proportion of college graduates in the world.  We’re now ranked around ninth.
 
      Other countries are making huge investments.  I mean, China is doubling, tripling, quadrupling the number of college graduates it’s generating.  I mean, it is putting huge resources into it because it understands that unless they want to build low-wage manufacturing plants for the duration of the 21st century, they’ve got to start moving up the value chain in the economy.  They’ve got to start producing more engineers and scientists.
 
      India understands that.  Germany has long understood that.  And yet here we are, losing that first-place position.  That is unacceptable. 
 
      So here’s the thing.  We know what works.  There are schools out there that do great even with kids who come from the most disadvantaged backgrounds, in the poorest neighborhoods, still producing outstanding results.  And it requires having great teachers; it requires cutting through some of the bureaucracy to make sure that innovative learning is taking place; it means having accountability and the ability to measure the progress that students are making. 
 
      And one of the things I’m very proud that we’ve done is institute this program called Race to the Top that basically says to states all across the country, you know what, you can compete for some special funding, some additional funding for your school district if you start instituting these reforms that we know work. 
 
      And by the way, this is not a Democratic or Republican issue.  Some of the things that we’ve been doing have not always been popular among some Democratic constituencies, but this is an example of doing what’s hard because it’s right.  I’m not interested in us funding the perpetuation of the status quo; I want to fund what works. 
 
      Math and science education -- making sure that we are focused on building excellence in school districts all across the country that can produce more scientists, engineers -- absolutely critical.  And we can do it.  We know how to do it.  But it does require some investment.  It requires us making some good choices.
 
      So when my friends across the aisle propose a tax cut for not just the middle class, right, because we’re in favor of tax cuts for middle-class families, but also then want to give tax cuts that would only go to the top 2 percent of Americans income-wise -- which, by the way, includes me so I’d get a tax break, despite living in this really nice house right down the street -- when they make that argument I say to them, you know what, I would love to keep taxes low for everybody.  And by the way, taxes are a lot lower under an Obama presidency than they were under Ronald Reagan’s presidency.  But I’m not willing to borrow $700 billion that we don’t have that will then require me to cut investments that could produce more math and science teachers, or more scientists and engineers.  That doesn’t make sense.  (Applause.) 
 
      And that’s an example -- that’s an example of the kind of choice that exists on November 2nd.  And when you’re talking to your friends and neighbors and asking them to commit to vote, that’s what you got to be talking about, is our long-term future depends on us making good choices now because this is a more competitive environment than it’s ever been and we’re digging ourselves out of a big hole and we’ve got this big deficit that we inherited, and because of the emergency measures that we’ve taken that has added more pressure on our budget.  And all this means that we’ve got to make smart choices.  We can’t just do everything we want.  We’ve got to do the things that are necessary to make sure that America can compete.  That’s got to be our top priority.
 
      MR. BIRD:  Mr. President, I’m sad to say this, but we have time for one more question.
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  One more question.  All right.  So it’s a guy’s turn.  This gentleman in the purple shirt.
 
      Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  My name is Matt from the great state of Maryland, very close.  A lot of times when I talk to my friends who are looking for jobs for the first time, they’re very anxious about the future, they’re very anxious about finding jobs, about settling down, about owning their first home.  And their parents are also worried about my generation as well.  What can you tell them to reassure them to make sure that they aren’t overcome by fear and can remain hopeful in the future?
 
      THE PRESIDENT:  Well, one of the great strengths of America is our adaptability.  Now, this is not the first time we’ve gone through difficult times, obviously.  This country was founded on defying the odds.  Nobody thought that you could start this country of and by and for the people, and that everybody would be treated equally, and that over time not only would women win the right to vote and slaves be emancipated and become full citizens, but we’d be attracting people from all corners of the Earth, and somehow the whole thing would work.
 
      I mean, that defies imagination that we were able to pull this off.  But that core idea embodied in the Declaration of Independence, in our Constitution, contains such a profound truth about the worthiness of every individual and our ability to come together around a set of principles and laws, that we have been able to overcome slavery, depressions, world wars.  There have been moments where it looked like we were going to be overtaken, and yet somehow we adapted and renewed ourselves and got back on track.
 
      That’s true even in recent history.  I mean, a lot of the young people here won’t remember this, but back in the 1980s, it wasn’t China that everybody was worried about; it was Japan.  And people were having almost the exact same conversation now -- or back in the 1980s that they’re having now.  Japan was cleaning our clock; they’re taking over; they’re buying Rockefeller Center; and there’s no way we can compete.  And yet American businesses got leaner and they got more efficient, and people started working harder, and we were more innovative, and we improved quality control and we made a series of decisions that over time got us in a very strong position.
 
      So we tend to meet these challenges.  But every once in a while, having gone through sort of the wrenching economic turmoil that we’ve gone through, we have to adjust to new realities.  And we have to be honest and critical about where we’re falling short. 
 
      And so right now, we have to be honest that our education system has slipped.  We’ve got to be honest about the fact that competition is rising around the world and that means our businesses have to be more competitive.  We’ve got to focus more on exports.
 
      I think families, as well as the federal government, have understood that you can’t just operate on the basis of debt and consumption; there’s got to be savings and production.  I think we now recognize, painfully, that an economy that’s just built on a financial sector that is thinking about gaming the system all the time instead of actually just financing businesses that are actually producing goods and services for people is not the best way to organize our economy and it means that we’ve got to have more effective regulations.  I think we recognize that if our health care system keeps on gobbling a bigger and bigger percentage of our economy, that we’re not going to be competitive with other countries.
 
      So there a whole bunch of decisions that we’re having to make right now -- but we’ll make them.  We will make them because we’ve made them in the past.  Sometimes it’s painful because this is a big, diverse democracy.  There are a lot of arguments.  People yell at each other and are very passionate about different ideas about how we solve those problems. 
 
      But eventually I think the instincts of the American people are good.  The instincts of the American people are sound.  I think they know that nobody is promising us that this -- this experiment of ours in democracy is going to be easy, but what we know is, is if we work hard, if we’re unified, if we’re respectful of one another, if we stay focused on not just the short term but on the next generation, that we can solve our problems. 
 
      And so I think letting your friends know that America has gone through tougher problems than this and we’ve solved them, and we’re going to solve these problems in our generation, communicating that confidence about the future is going to be really important.  And what makes me confident is all of you because I get a -- one of the great things about being President is I get to meet the American people from every state, every walk of life, every station.  And you guys give me confidence.  You guys give me hope.
 
      But I really need you to get out on November 2nd because then you’ll -- (applause) -- if all of you vote, I promise we’re going to do just great.  Thank you very much, everybody.  Appreciate it.  (Applause.)
 
                   END           7:54 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a Dinner for the DCCC and Representative Ron Klein

Mourning Residence
Miami, Florida

6:16 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Please have a seat, have a seat.  It is good to be back, Miami.  This is quite a view, Alonzo.  (Laughter.) 

To the entire Mourning family, Tracy and Alonzo, Trey, Myka, Alijah, thank you so much for your hospitality and this spectacular setting.  We are grateful to you. 

To Representative Chris Van Hollen, who is here, the chairman of the DCCC -- everybody give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz is here.  (Applause.)  Representative Ron Klein is here.  (Applause.)  And we're going to get him back in Congress.  Representative Kathy Castor -- is Kathy here?  Give her a round of applause anyway, even if she’s not here.  (Applause.)  And I know Representative Ted Deutch is here, and his beautiful family.  (Applause.) 

In addition, I want to say that Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh, I wish you the best of luck when you're not playing the Bulls.  (Laughter.)  I just want to be clear about that.  I like you.  (Laughter.)  But when you're playing the Bulls I'm rooting against you.  (Laughter.)

I am stunned that Alonzo let a Laker in here.  (Laughter.)  But he said that Magic transcends party lines -- (applause) -- and so we're glad to have Magic in the house.

Now, I want to just say a little bit about Ron, because so much of the reason we're here is to make sure that he continues to do the outstanding work that he’s doing on behalf of south Florida.  They have lived here for 25 years.  This is where they raised their family.  This is where Ron helped run a small business.  That's who he’s been fighting for since he got to Washington -- families and small business owners -- because he’s part of them, he understands them.  He’s fought to bring skyrocketing costs of homeowner’s insurance down.  He’s fighting to protect and strengthen Medicare and Social Security.  He was one of the leaders in helping to make sure that we impose sanctions on Iran -- to provide more security for us, but also to provide more security for our ally, Israel. 

He knows the people of south Florida, has been listening to them, has been working with them, is fighting for them.  And he’s an example of the kinds of unbelievable public servants that we've got all across the country who have been doing heroic work under the most difficult circumstances.

So I just want to spend a little bit of time talking about what those circumstances are and why this election is so important.  When people think about elections they tend to think back to 2008 and they remember the Inauguration Day, and Beyoncé was singing, and everybody was looking nice -- or they think about Election Day, and everybody with the signs, and “Yes, We Can.”  They don't remember when we were walking around in the snow in Iowa, knocking on doors and nobody knew who we were.  And it was tough. 

And what I said to people at that time was that the reason I was running for President was because I felt that the country had gone off-track, that it wasn’t working on behalf of the ordinary families where so many of us started -- families in Lansing, or families in Chicago, or families in south Florida -- families that didn’t have a lot, but they had a lot of love; they had a work ethic; they wanted to make sure their kids got ahead.  And they figured if they lived up to their responsibilities, then they would be able to get a good job that pays a living wage.  They could buy a house.  They could send their kids to school, so they could aspire to things they never hoped for themselves. 

They believed that they shouldn’t get bankrupt if they get sick.  They should be able to retire with some dignity and some respect.  They believed in the American Dream.  It didn’t’ matter what color you were, what race you were, what religion you were, there was a notion that we could all make it if we did the right thing by ourselves, our families, our communities.  And people had lost that belief, and that's why I decided to run.

But I also said that the problems we were experiencing had been going on for a decade.  The years between 2001 and 2009 had seen the slowest job growth since World War II.  The years between 2001 and 2009, middle-class families on average lost 5 percent of their wages.  Their incomes actually went down during those years.  And so what I said was the election will not be the end of the journey; that will be the beginning, because then we're going to have to work hard to try to make sure that we rebuild this economy on a solid foundation.

Now, what we didn’t know when I started running, and what we discovered only in the few months before I won, was that we were about to enter into the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.  We lost 4 million jobs in the six months before I took office; lost almost 800,000 jobs the month I was sworn in, 600,000 the month after that, 600,000 the month after that.  Businesses couldn't get credit.  The banking system locked up.  And people were talking seriously that we were about to go into a second Great Depression.

And so my first job coming into office was to make sure that we stabilized the economy.  And we have done that.  An economy that was shrinking by 6 percent is now growing.  An economy that was shredding jobs, we've had nine months straight of private sector job growth.  Businesses can now get loans again.  Corporations are now profitable again.  We have the opportunity to move the country forward.

But we are still digging ourselves out of a enormous hole.  When you lose 8 million jobs, even if you’ve created 800,000 this year, and even if we save 3 million, we’ve still got a deep hole to climb out of.  And so, understandably, people are frustrated and they are angry.  And what the other side is trying to do is to ride that anger and that frustration all the way to the ballot box.

They’re not counting on the need to offer good ideas.  They’re just counting on people being angry and figuring that is sufficient for them to get elected.  And when I came in, and Ron and Chris and Debbie and others who work in Washington -- when we came in, our hope was that in the midst of crisis we could bring everybody together to work on the challenges that confronted us  -- because we may be proud Democrats, but we're prouder Americans.  And our attitude was we are happy to work across the aisle to solve problems. 

That was not the attitude that we confronted.  Basically they said no to everything.  If I said that the ocean was blue, they’d say no.  If I said there were fish in the sea, they’d say no.  Their attitude was, if Obama fails then we win. 

Now, I couldn't play that game because my responsibility was to make sure that even when the decisions were tough we took the decisions that were required to get us on the right track.  And we have now done that.  But moving forward, I can only succeed if I've got help.  Now, I know this is a little too obvious, but I've got to use the basketball metaphor for you.  (Laughter.) 

There’s a reason why Dwyane is really excited to have Chris Bosh and LeBron James -- because he remembers the last time he won the championship, he had a guy named Shaq running around.  Now Shaq is going to try to stop you this time.  But he remembers what it was like to have teammates.  As great as Magic was, he couldn't do it without Worthy and Jabbar and all those tremendous stars from Showtime.

Well, the same is true in politics.  I'm pretty good -- (laughter) -- I'm a pretty good point guard, but I can't do it on my own.  (Applause.)  If I don't have Ron there, if I don't have a Debbie there, doing the hard work each and every day to move this country’s agenda forward, we are not going to succeed. 

I mean, there are folks right now in Washington, some of the pundits who actually say, you know, Obama might be better off with what happened with Clinton -- you lose the House, you lose the Senate -- or you lose some seats, and then you can pivot because the Republicans finally have to take responsibility.  That may be short-term political thinking in the minds of pundits; that's not how I think because I'm thinking about how do I move the country forward. 

I've got to make sure that we have an energy policy where we're investing in clean energy here in the United States of America -- (applause) -- so that we're building wind turbines and solar panels and electric cars right here in the United States.  (Applause.)  So I’ve got to have partners to do that with.  I can’t do it alone. 

I’ve got to make sure that we’ve got the best education system in the world right here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)  And that requires continuing to make investments in our young people.  And I can’t do that by myself.  If we’re going to help small businesses succeed, then we’ve got to make sure that we are providing them the loans and the tax cuts that are going to help them, because those start-ups, that's what creates the vibrancy and the dynamism that helps this economy grow.  I can’t do that by myself.

On every important issue out there, I am going to need help. And the members of Congress who are here today, they’ve shown the courage of their convictions.  They're willing to take tough votes because they're the right thing to do. 

If we’re going to protect Medicare and Social Security at the same time as we’re reducing our deficit, then we’re going to have some very difficult budget choices.  And we’ve got to make sure that the folks who are there have the kind of values that say, we’re going to make sure that our seniors are always protected.  And we’re not going to go back to the days where the poverty rate was higher for people in their golden years.  That's not acceptable.  So we’re going to need some help. 

Now, I hope that we can get help from the other side.  But I’m not optimistic right now.  I’ve seen what they call the “Pledge to America.”  And it would have been one thing if after the disaster of their economic policies, they had gone off and gone to a think tank, or gone into the desert to meditate and come back and said, you know what, we really screwed up, we’ve got a whole new set of answers here.  But that's not what happened.

They have said they will do the exact same thing.  The centerpiece of their economic agenda, their big plan for jobs is to borrow $700 billion that we don't have to give an average $100,000 tax cut to millionaires and billionaires.  Ninety-eight percent of the country would not get these tax breaks, and, as a consequence, they wouldn’t spend them.  So it would do nothing to boost the economy in any significant way.  And we’d be borrowing the money to do it.

And you know how they’ve proposed paying for it?  They haven't -- with the exception of a few suggestions like cutting education spending by 20 percent.  Think about that.  And think about the folks back in your old neighborhood, Magic -- all those kids who are working hard, thinking, maybe I can go to go college if I can get a scholarship, if I can get a Pell Grant.  And we’re going to cut support for them at a time when we know that the single most important thing to determine whether we are winners or loser in the global economy is how well our workforce is educated?

Imagine that.  You think China is cutting back on their education investments?  You think South Korea or Germany are saying, let’s invest less in our young people right now?  Of course not.  They're not playing for second.  And the United States does not play for second, either.  We play for first place.  That's what we’re about and that's what this election is about.  (Applause.)

I should point out, by the way, that a whole lot of people in this room would get a tax cut under that plan.  But the question is -- and that includes me, by the way -- is that really what’s most important to us right now?  Or is it more important that we get this country back on track so that it’s there for future generations?  Are we going to reach back and make sure that somebody else is getting a helping hand?

So as I’ve traveled the country I’ve been using this analogy -- essentially the other side drove the car into the ditch.  And me and Ron and the rest of the outstanding Democrats here, we all climbed down into that ditch.  It was muddy down there, and hot. We had to put on boots.  There were bugs.  But we started pushing -- pushing that car out of the ditch.  Every once in a while, we’d look up and the Republicans would be standing there fanning themselves, sipping on Slurpees, looking all comfortable.  (Laughter.)

We’d say, why don't you come down and help?  No, that's all right, but you all aren’t pushing fast enough.  You’re not pushing the right way.

And even though we did not get any help, we kept on pushing, until finally we got that car up on level ground.  Now, it’s a little banged up, needs some body work, needs a tune-up, but we are pointing in the right direction and we are ready to move forward again.

And suddenly we get this tap on our shoulders.  We look back, and it’s the Republicans.  And they're saying, we want the keys back.  You can’t have the keys back.  You don't know how to drive.  (Laughter and applause.)  Now, if you want to ride, you can ride in the backseat.  (Applause.)  But we’re not going to give you -- (laughter) -- give you the wheel.  (Laughter.)

That's what this election is about.  It is a fundamental choice about the direction of our future.  We cannot do it alone. And in the same way that I need a team, Ron needs a team, members of the Democratic delegation here need a team -- you are that team.  And I need you guys to be as excited as you were in 2008. 

You know, this is just the first quarter.  And we’ve put up a lot of points, under very adverse circumstances.  But we’ve got three more quarters to play.  And if suddenly everybody is acting like, well, that's it, I’m tired, we’ll lose.  And when I say “we,” I mean the country will lose.  One of the marks of a champion is not just talent, it’s not just skill -- it’s heart.  It’s perseverance.  Are you willing to stick with something until it’s finished.   

The project of bringing about change so that this country is more just and more prosperous, and we are growing faster, and we can compete in the global stage, and our young people are prepared for the 21st century -- that project is not done.  And it is hard.  But we need heart.  We need character.  And I believe that's what we’ve got.  I believe in this team.  I hope you believe in it, too.  If you do, then I promise you that not only are we going to win this election, we are going to restore the American Dream for every American.  (Applause.)

Thank you very much, everybody.  God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
6:34 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Reception for the DCCC and Representative Ron Klein

Mourning Residence
Miami, Florida

5:54 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it is wonderful to be here.  I want to thank a few people at the outset.  First of all, I want to thank the Mourning family, who are opening up this beautiful home and arranged this fantastic weather.  We're so grateful to them.  (Applause.)  Yes, you can give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.) 

Chris Van Hollen -- this is the only guy who puts in more miles than me.  (Laughter.)  He has been working so hard as the chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.  He is a great congressman in his own right, a great leader inside the House, but he’s also just been doing a bang-up job in what is one of the more difficult posts in politics.

Debbie Wasserman Schultz is here -- where’s Debbie?  She was here.  She was here.  Well, we love her, so give her a round of applause.  (Applause.)  Ron Klain --

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Klein --

THE PRESIDENT:  No, I've got a -- Biden’s chief of staff is Ron Klain, and I just talked to him on the phone so I slipped up.

Ron Klein is here, and one of the main reasons that we're here -- if he’s not here, I know -- is he?  Where is he?  He’s inside.  All right, we love him.  (Applause.)  Kathy Castor is here.  (Applause.)  Ted Deutch is here and his family.  (Applause.) 

Anybody I miss?  You all are here.  (Applause.)  And we love you. 

Now, the main reason we're here is for Ron, who has done such an unbelievable job in Congress, but more importantly, in the community.  They’ve made south Florida their home for the last 25 years.  This is where they raised their family, where Ron helped run a small business.  That's exactly who Ron has been fighting for since he came to Washington -- the families and small business owners that he grew up with.  All of you.  Those are the folks he cares about.

He fought to bring down the skyrocketing cost of homeowner’s insurance.  He’s fighting to protect and strengthen Medicare and Social Security.  He helped write tough new sanctions to crack down on Iran as they try to develop nuclear weapons -- something I know that everybody here cares deeply about, and my administration has made one of our top priorities.  He has made the security of our ally, Israel, a constant theme in his work.  He knows the people of south Florida because he’s spent so much time listening to your concerns, and he’s one of you.

And so this election I think is representative of what’s happening all across the country.  We've got wonderful candidates like Ron who are working so hard and have, over the last 20 months, done more to get this country back on track than any Congress in my lifetime -- any Congress at least since 1965. 

You know, two years ago, a lot of you worked your hearts out for Ron’s campaign and for my campaign.  And we knew at that point that the country was on the wrong track.  What we didn’t realize was how bad it was going to be by the time we took office.  We have gone through the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.  We have made sure that as a consequence of a bunch of actions that we took we didn’t slip into the second Great Depression.

As Chris was just saying, we now have an economy that is stabilized.  An economy that was shrinking by 6 percent when I came into office is now growing.  (Applause.)  We have seen nine consecutive months of private sector job growth.  Businesses are profitable again and investing again.  And all of that is because members of Congress like Ron and Chris and Ted and Kathy were willing to take tough votes, even in the face of enormous criticism, because they knew it was the right thing to do.

And so at a certain point, the reason you send folks to represent you in Washington is not just to put their fingers up to the wind; it’s not just to figure out what’s going to help keep them in office.  You send them there to do what’s right, and to make sure that they are thinking about you and your families each and every day.

And that's what Ron has done, and that's what Chris has done, and that's what I intend to do as long as I have the great honor of being your President.  That's is our number one priority.  (Applause.)

Now, of course, things aren’t where we want them to be.  We’ve got a lot more work to do.  The question in this election is not whether or not things are where we want them to be; the question is who is going to help us get to where we want to be.  And on that choice, the answer is absolutely clear. 

Look at what the Republicans have been offering out here.  I mean, they have now been out of power for two years, and they had a chance over the last two years to try to work with us to figure out how we could move the country forward.  And instead, their basic philosophy was, we are just going to say no to everything. We’re going to say no to help to small businesses.  We’re going to say no to putting people back to work.  We’re going to say no to helping young people get student loans.  We’re going to say no to making sure that folks aren’t thrown off their health care when they get sick or because they have a preexisting condition. They said no each and every time.

And now they come before you and they say, we want to lead again.  And yet the ideas they're offering are the exact same ideas that got us into this mess in the first place.  It’s not as if they’ve gone off and meditated and decided, you know what, we really screwed up, here’s a whole bunch of new ideas.  (Laughter.)  They don't have new ideas. 

The same philosophy that got us into this mess -- that you basically give tax cuts mostly to millionaires and billionaires, and you cut regulations in the banking industry and in the health care industry and in the oil industry, that you basically leave everybody else to fend for themselves -- that philosophy is the same philosophy that produced the most sluggish job growth since World War II; that saw the wages of middle-class families decline by 5 percent when they were in power; that resulted in the worst crisis that we’ve seen in the financial markets that has an impact far beyond Wall Street; and that took a record surplus left by Bill Clinton and got us into record deficits that I inherited when I walked into the White House.

Now, that same philosophy is what they're peddling right now.  They put a new name on it.  What did they’d call it?  “Pledge to America.”  And when you actually take the time to read it, it turns out that they are peddling the same snake oil they were before.  They put some different names on it, but it’s the same concepts.

Their big idea for putting people back to work, their main economic proposal is to provide $700 billion in tax cuts to the top 2 percent of the income bracket.  The other 98 percent of American people won’t get a dime of it.  And it’s not money that we’ve got.  We’d have to borrow that $700 billion from China or the Saudis.  And they don't pay for it, but the proposals that they’ve talked about to start paying for it include cutting education by 20 percent.

Think about that.  Here we are trying to compete with China and South Korea and Germany, countries that are investing and as a consequence have created a higher proportion of college graduates than we have -- and we’re going to cut education?  We’re going to create a situation where 8 million young people across the country are getting fewer student loans, less help because we want to give tax cuts to folks who don't need them, weren’t even asking for them, and won’t spend them, so they won’t have any impact in terms of boosting demand in our economy -- that does not make sense.  But that's an example of the lack of ideas that we’re seeing from the other side. 

Now, Ron, myself, others -- we’ve got a different idea of how we need to move this country forward.  We envision a situation in which instead of giving tax breaks to companies that are shipping jobs overseas, we give tax breaks to companies that are investing right here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)

We have a vision where we’re rebuilding our infrastructure  -- I talked about this -- so that we’re not just rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our rail systems, but we’re laying broadband lines and we’re making sure that we have the best Internet service in the world. 

We want to invest in our young people to make sure that we have the highest proportion of college graduates of any country. We used to be number one;  we’re now number nine.  I want us to get back to number one by the year 2012.  (Applause.)

I want to invest in clean energy so that solar panels and wind panels -- wind turbines and the electric cars and advanced batteries of the future, that those are made not in Asia, not in Europe, but they're made right here in the United States of America with American workers.  (Applause.)  And by the way, that means we’re also saving our environment in the bargain. 

And, yes, I want to get our budget under control, but I don't want to do it on the backs of folks who need it most.  I want to make sure that we do it in a responsible way. 

And, again, when you look at the hypocrisy of the other side -- we set up a bipartisan fiscal commission that originated as a bipartisan idea, Democrats and Republicans.  And when I decided this was a good idea and I endorsed it, and I said, let’s vote for it, you know what happened?  The Republicans voted against it.

So there’s a fundamental lack of seriousness in terms of how they want to move this country forward.  And these are serious times.  And we’ve got to have people in Congress who are not thinking about the next election but are thinking about the next generation.

The analogy I’ve been using as I’ve traveled across the country -- the other folks, they drove this economy into a ditch. And we decided, even though we hadn’t driven it in the ditch, it was our responsibility to get us out of the ditch.  So Ron and myself and Chris and Debbie and others, we all went down into the ditch.  We put on our boots.  It’s muddy down there.  It’s hot.  We’re sweating.  (Laughter.)  We’re pushing -- pushing and pulling to get that car out of the ditch.  And every once in a while we’d look up, and the Republicans would be standing there, waving at us.  (Laughter.)

And we’d say, why don't you come on down and help?  And they’d say, no, thanks, but you’re not pushing hard enough.  You're not pushing the right way. 

But despite the lack of help, we kept on pushing, until finally we’ve got that car on level ground.  Finally it’s just sitting there ready to go forward.  It’s a little banged up.  It’s got to go to the body shop.  It needs a tune-up.  But we’re pointing in the right direction.  And we get a tap on our shoulders, and we look, and lo and behold, it’s the Republicans. And they want the keys back.  (Laughter.)

We’ve got to tell them, in this election, you can’t have the keys back.  You don't know how to drive.  (Applause.)  You don't know how to drive.  You can get in the car, but you got to ride in the backseat.  (Laughter.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  In the trunk!

THE PRESIDENT:  In the trunk.  (Laughter.)  No, we wouldn’t do that.  We got room in the back.  But we don't want their hands on the wheel.  (Laughter.) 

AUDIENCE:  That's right.

THE PRESIDENT:  And that's why all of you are so important. Look, when I won, when Ron won, we didn't win because of us.  We won because of you.  We won because you guys believed in something.  You decided that you didn't have to have big money, you didn't have to be connected to special interests, you didn't have to be well connected in order to win.  You just had to believe in the American Dream, and want to align our government on the side of people who wake up every day, work hard, and just want that piece of that dream for themselves and their family -- want to make sure they can have a job that pays a living wage; make sure that they're not bankrupt when they get sick; make sure they can send their kids to college and aspire to things that they didn't dream of; retire with dignity and respect.

That's the essence of what Ron’s campaign was about, the essence of what my campaign was about.  That's why you worked so hard.  We’re not finished.  That day that we got elected on Election Night, and then the inauguration, that was a lot of fun, but that wasn’t the end of the journey.  That was just the beginning of the journey.  We’ve got a long ways to go.  And we can’t get there without you.

So I’m grateful for you all being here today, but I’m going to be even more grateful if over the next three weeks, you're out there talking to your friends, you’re talking to your neighbors, you’re talking to your coworkers, you’re talking to family members, and you remind them that as frustrating as things are right now, we have come so far in the last 20 months.  And if you remind them, we’ve got so much more to do -- if you do that, I’m convinced Ron is going to win.  I’m convinced that the American people are going to win.

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

END
6:09 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on Rebuilding America's Infrastructure

Rose Garden

11:08 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning, everybody.  I just had a meeting with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, and governors like Ed Rendell, mayors like Antonio Villaraigosa, and economists and engineers from across the country to discuss one of America’s greatest challenges: our crumbling infrastructure and the urgent need to put Americans back to work upgrading it for the 21st century.

We’re also joined today by two former Transportation Secretaries of both political parties: Sam Skinner, who served under President George H.W. Bush; and Norm Mineta, who served in the Cabinets of both President Clinton and President George W. Bush.  They’re here today because they are passionate about this task.

Their cooperation –- and indeed, this country’s very history –- proves that this is something for which there has traditionally been broad bipartisan support.  So Sam and Norm have been leading a bipartisan group of more than 80 experts who, just last week, released a call to action demanding a “fundamental overhaul” of how America approaches funding and building our infrastructure.  And today, my Treasury Department and my Council of Economic Advisors have released our own study.

And these reports confirm what any American can already tell you: our infrastructure is woefully inefficient and it is outdated.  For years, we have deferred tough decisions, and today, our aging system of highways and byways, air routes and rail lines hinder our economic growth.  Today, the average American household is forced to spend more on transportation each year than food.  Our roads, clogged with traffic, cost us $80 billion a year in lost productivity and wasted fuel.  Our airports, choked with passengers, cost nearly $10 billion a year in productivity losses from flight delays.  And in some cases, our crumbling infrastructure costs American lives.  It should not take another collapsing bridge or failing levee to shock us into action. 

So we’re already paying for our failure to act.  And what’s more, the longer our infrastructure erodes, the deeper our competitive edge erodes.  Other nations understand this.  They are going all-in.  Today, as a percentage of GDP, we invest less than half of what Russia does in their infrastructure, less than one-third of what Western Europe does.  Right now, China’s building hundreds of thousands of miles of new roads.  Over the next 10 years, it plans to build dozens of new airports.  Over the next 20, it could build as many as 170 new mass transit systems.  Everywhere else, they’re thinking big.  They’re creating jobs today, but they’re also playing to win tomorrow.  So the bottom line is our shortsightedness has come due.  We can no longer afford to sit still.

What we need is a smart system of infrastructure equal to the needs of the 21st century.  A system that encourages sustainable communities with easier access to our jobs, to our schools, to our homes.  A system that decreases travel time and increases mobility.  A system that cuts congestion and ups productivity.  A system that reduces harmful emissions over time and creates jobs right now.

So we’ve already begun on this task.  The Recovery Act included the most serious investment in our infrastructure since President Eisenhower built the Interstate Highway System in the 1950s.  And we’re not just talking new and restored roads and bridges and dams and levees, but we’re also talking a smart electric grid and the high-speed internet and rail lines required for America to compete in the 21st century economy.  We’re talking about investments with impacts both immediate and lasting.

Tens of thousands of projects employing hundreds of thousands of workers are already underway across America.  We’re improving 40,000 miles of road, and rebuilding water and sewer systems.  We’re implementing a smarter, more stable, more secure electric grid across 46 states that will increase access to renewable sources of energy and cut costs for customers.  We’re moving forward with projects that connect communities across the country to broadband internet, and connect 31 states via a true high-speed rail network.  And what’s more, a great many of these projects are coming in under budget.

By investing in these projects, we’ve already created hundreds of thousands of jobs.  But the fact remains that nearly one in five construction workers is still unemployed and needs a job.  And that makes absolutely no sense at a time when there is so much of America that needs rebuilding.

So that’s why, last month, I announced a new plan for upgrading America’s roads, rails and runways for the long-term.  Over the next six years, we will rebuild 150,000 miles of our roads -- enough to circle the world six times.  We will lay and maintain 4,000 miles of our railways -- enough to stretch from coast to coast.  And we will restore 150 miles of runways and advance a next generation air-traffic control system that reduces delays for the American people. 

This plan will be fully paid for.  It will not add to our deficit over time.  And we are going to work with Congress to see to that.  It will establish an infrastructure bank to leverage federal dollars and focus on the smartest investments.  We want to cut waste and bureaucracy by consolidating and collapsing more than 100 different, often duplicative programs.  And it will change the way Washington works by reforming the federal government’s patchwork approach of funding and maintaining our infrastructure.  We’ve got to focus less on wasteful earmarks, outdated formulas.  We’ve got to focus more on competition and innovation; less on shortsighted political priorities, and more on our national economic priorities.

So investing in our infrastructure is something that members of both political parties have always supported.  It’s something that groups ranging from the Chamber of Commerce to the AFL-CIO support today.  And by making these investments across the country, we won’t just make our economy run better over the long haul -- we will create good, middle-class jobs right now.

So there is no reason why we can’t do this.  There is no reason why the world’s best infrastructure should lie beyond our borders.  This is America.  We’ve always had the best infrastructure.  This is work that needs to be done.  There are workers who are ready to do it.  All we need is the political will.  This is a season for choices, and this is the choice:  between choice -- between decline and prosperity, and between the past and the future.

Our future has never been predestined.  It has been built on the hard work and sacrifices of previous generations.  They invested yesterday for what we have today.  That’s how we built canals, and railroads, and highways, and ports that allowed our economy to grow by leaps and bounds.  That’s how we led the world in the pursuit of new technologies and innovations.  That’s what allowed us to build the middle class and lead the global economy in the 20th century.  And if we’re going to lead it in the 21st, that’s the vision we can’t afford to lose sight of right now.  That’s the challenge that’s fallen to this generation.  That’s the challenge that this country is going to meet.  And with the help of these gentlemen behind me, and I hope strong bipartisan support, I have no doubt that we will meet these challenges.

Thank you very much, everybody.

END
11:17 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Declaraciones del Presidente sobre la reconstrucción de la infraestructura de Estados Unidos

Jardín de las Rosas

11:08 A.M. EDT

EL PRESIDENTE: Buenos días a todos. Acabo de reunirme con el secretario del Tesoro Tim Geithner, el secretario de Transporte, Ray LaHood, y gobernadores como Ed Rendell, alcaldes como Antonio Villaraigosa, y economistas e ingenieros de todo el país para hablar sobre uno de los mayores desafíos de Estados Unidos: nuestra infraestructura en deterioro y la urgente necesidad de hacer que los estadounidenses vuelvan a trabajar en la labor de actualizarla para el siglo XXI.

También nos acompañan hoy dos ex secretarios de Transporte de ambos partidos políticos: Sam Skinner, que trabajó bajo el Presidente George H.W. Bush, y Norm Mineta, que trabajó en los gabinetes de tanto el Presidente Clinton como el Presidente George W. Bush. Están hoy aquí porque creen fervientemente en esta tarea.

Su cooperación –y, de hecho, la historia misma del país– prueban que esto es algo para lo cual tradicionalmente ha existido extenso respaldo de ambos partidos. Por lo tanto, Sam y Norm han estado dirigiendo un grupo bipartidista de más de 80 expertos quienes apenas la semana pasada dieron a conocer un llamado a la acción que exige una “reforma fundamental” de la estrategia de Estados Unidos hacia la financiación y construcción de nuestra infraestructura. Y hoy, mi Departamento del Tesoro y Consejo de Asesores Económicos (Council of Economic Advisors) dieron a conocer su propio estudio.

Y estos informes confirman lo que cualquier estadounidense ya les puede decir: nuestra infraestructura es deplorablemente ineficiente y anticuada. Durante años hemos pospuesto decisiones difíciles, y hoy nuestro viejo sistema de carreteras y caminos secundarios, rutas aéreas y líneas ferroviarias perjudican nuestro crecimiento económico. Hoy en día, la familia estadounidense promedio gasta al año más en transporte que en comida. Nuestras carreteras, congestionadas de tráfico, nos cuestan $80,000 millones al año en productividad perdida y combustible desperdiciado. Nuestros aeropuertos, abarrotados de pasajeros, cuestan casi $10,000 millones al año en pérdida de productividad debido a retrasos de vuelos. Y en algunos casos, nuestra deteriorada infraestructura cobra la vida de estadounidenses. No debe ser necesario que otro puente colapse o que otro dique falle para obligarnos a actuar después de un doloroso incidente.

Entonces, ya estamos pagando por nuestra falta de acción. Y lo que es peor, mientras más se desmejore nuestra infraestructura, más se perjudica nuestra ventaja competitiva. Otros países lo comprenden. Están invirtiendo al máximo en este rubro. Hoy, como porcentaje del PIB, invertimos menos de la mitad de lo que Rusia invierte en su infraestructura, menos de un tercio de lo que Europa Occidental invierte. En este momento, China está construyendo cientos de miles de millas de nuevas carreteras. En los próximos 10 años, planea construir decenas de nuevos aeropuertos. En los próximos 20 años, podría construir hasta 170 nuevos sistemas de transporte masivo. En todos los demás sitios, se piensa en grande. Están generando empleos ahora, pero también están pensando en ganancias futuras. El asunto es que es hora de poner fin a nuestra falta de previsión. Ya no podemos darnos el lujo de no hacer nada.

Lo que necesitamos es un sistema inteligente de infraestructura a la altura de las necesidades del siglo XXI, un sistema que fomente comunidades sostenibles con acceso más fácil a nuestros empleos, a nuestras escuelas, a nuestras viviendas; un sistema que disminuya el tiempo que pasamos viajando y aumente la facilidad de movimiento; un sistema que reduzca la congestión y aumente la productividad; un sistema que reduzca las emisiones dañinas con el tiempo y genere empleos ahora.

O sea que ya hemos iniciado esa labor. La Ley para la Recuperación (Recovery Act) incluyó la más seria inversión en nuestra infraestructura desde que el Presidente Eisenhower construyó el Sistema Interestatal de Carreteras (Interstate Highway System) en los años cincuenta. Y no estamos hablando simplemente de la reparación de carreteras y puentes y represas y diques, sino también estamos hablando de la red eléctrica inteligente y el Internet de alta velocidad y las líneas ferroviarias necesarias para competir en la economía del siglo XXI. Estamos hablando sobre inversiones que tengan impacto tanto inmediato como duradero.

Decenas de miles de proyectos que emplean a cientos de miles de trabajadores ya están en marcha en todo Estados Unidos. Estamos mejorando 40,000 millas de carreteras y reconstruyendo sistemas de agua y desagüe. Estamos implementando una red eléctrica más inteligente, más estable, más segura en 46 estados, que aumentará el acceso a fuentes renovables de energía y reducirá los costos para los clientes. Estamos avanzando con proyectos que conectan a las comunidades en todo el país a Internet de banda ancha y conectan a 31 estados por medio de una red ferroviaria que realmente es de alta velocidad. Y es más, muchos de estos proyectos están costando menos de lo presupuestado.

Al invertir en esos proyectos, hemos generado cientos de miles de empleos. Pero el hecho sigue siendo que casi uno de cada cinco trabajadores de construcción sigue desempleado y necesita trabajo. Y eso no tiene ningún sentido en un momento en que es necesario reconstruir tanto en Estados Unidos.

Por eso, el mes pasado, anuncié un nuevo plan a fin de mejorar para al largo plazo las carreteras, vías ferroviarias y pistas de aterrizaje de Estados Unidos. En los próximos seis años, reconstruiremos 150,000 millas de carreteras, suficiente como para darle la vuelta al mundo seis veces. Construiremos y mantendremos 4,000 millas de nuestras vías ferroviarias, suficiente como para ir de costa a costa. Y repararemos 150 millas de pistas de aterrizaje y avanzaremos a un sistema de control de tránsito aéreo de próxima generación que reduzca las demoras, para beneficio de los estadounidenses.

Este plan estará totalmente pagado. No contribuirá a nuestro déficit con el tiempo. Y vamos a trabajar con el Congreso para que así sea. Establecerá un banco de infraestructura para aprovechar el dinero federal y concentrarnos en las mejores inversiones. Queremos reducir el despilfarro y la burocracia al consolidar y recortar más de 100 programas diferentes que se duplican. Y cambiará la manera en que Washington opera al reformar el enfoque incongruente con el que el gobierno federal financia y mantiene nuestra infraestructura. Debemos concentrarnos menos en las despilfarradoras asignaciones para proyectos particulares y fórmulas anticuadas. Debemos concentrarnos más en la competencia e innovación; menos en medidas de política cortas de vista y más en nuestras prioridades económicas nacionales.

Entonces, invertir en nuestra infraestructura es algo que los miembros de ambos partidos siempre han respaldado. Es algo que grupos que van desde la Cámara de Comercio hasta la AFL-CIO apoyan hoy en día. Y al realizar estas inversiones en todo el país, no sólo haremos que nuestra economía funcione mejor a largo plazo, sino que generaremos buenos empleos de clase media en este momento.

Entonces, no hay motivo para no hacer esto. No hay motivo para que la mejor infraestructura del mundo deba estar al otro lado de nuestras fronteras. Éste es Estados Unidos. Siempre hemos tenido la mejor infraestructura. Se trata de obras necesarias. Hay trabajadores que están listos para realizarlas. Todo lo que necesitamos es voluntad política. Ésta es una temporada de opciones, y ésta es una verdadera opción: entre opciones… entre deterioro y prosperidad, y entre el pasado y el futuro.

Nuestro futuro nunca ha estado predestinado. Se ha forjado en base al arduo trabajo y los sacrificios de generaciones previas. Invirtieron ayer en lo que tenemos hoy en día. Así construimos los canales y vías ferroviarias y carreteras y puertos que permitieron que nuestra economía creciera a pasos agigantados. Así fuimos los líderes mundiales en nueva tecnología e innovación. Eso es lo que nos permitió forjar la clase media y ser líderes de la economía mundial en el siglo XX. Y si hemos de ser líderes en el siglo XXI, ésa es la visión que no podemos darnos el lujo de perder de vista ahora. Ése es el desafío que le toca asumir a esta generación. Ése es el desafío que este país enfrentará. Y con la ayuda de estos caballeros detrás mío y, espero, el firme apoyo de ambos partidos, no tengo la menor duda de que superaremos estos desafíos.

Muchas gracias a todos.

                        END     

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President and the Vice President at a DNC "Moving America Forward" Rally in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Fulton Elementary School Park
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

4:57 P.M. EDT

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Germantown!  (Applause.)  Hello, Philly!  Well, Governor Rendell, I tell you, look at all these kids down here.  I hope you’re able to vote.  (Applause.)

Hey, folks.  Senator Bob Casey and Chaka Fattah and Bob Brady and Mayor Nutter and soon-to-be governor you just heard from -- I tell you what, man, I hope he remembers me when he’s governor.  And Joe Sestak, the admiral.  (Applause.) 

Well, I have the great honor of introducing the President, but I want to introduce you to the President.  (Applause.)  Mr. President, welcome back to my second city in my native state of Pennsylvania.  (Applause.)  Mr. President, a lot of folks up here have been hit pretty hard by the economic policies of George Bush and his Republican friends.

AUDIENCE:  Boo!

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Knocked a lot of folks down.  After eight years of unregulated greed and skyrocketing deficits, an awful lot of folks have been hurt.

But let me tell you something, Mr. President.  These folks are tough.  These folks don’t stay down.  And they believe -- and they believe in you, Mr. President.  (Applause.)  And Mr. President, like my dad used to say, when you get knocked down there’s only one thing to do, is get up.  Just get up.  (Applause.)

Well, folks, we’re getting up.  And we’re getting up with the help of the man I’m about to introduce.  (Applause.)  Ladies and gentlemen, we’re starting to grow our way out of this Republican debacle of the last eight years.  We’re creating jobs.  We’re building a new clean energy future.  We’re making college affordable to middle-class folks again.  (Applause.)

And Mr. President, that’s because of you.  Mr. President, I promise you one thing.  Philadelphia is coming back.  (Applause.)  Pennsylvania is coming back.  (Applause.)  America is coming back.  (Applause.)  And the Philadelphia Phillies are going back to win the World Series.  (Applause.)  Mr. President, welcome to the home of the Phillies.  (Applause.) 

Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States -- where is he?  (Laughter.)  Well, you know what, I guess that means you have to hear me for 20 minutes.  (Applause.)  No, that’s not good.  No, that’s not good.  Ladies and gentlemen -- that’s it, let’s call for him.  Obama!

AUDIENCE:  Obama!  Obama!  Obama!

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Philadelphia!  (Applause.) 

AUDIENCE:  Yes, we can!  Yes, we can!  Yes, we can!

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you.  This is -- (applause.)  Thank you.  Joe, this is a good-looking crowd, man.  (Applause.)  This is a beautiful crowd on a beautiful day.  It’s good to be back here in Pennsylvania.

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  And they’re all the way back in the parking lot.  They can’t even see you.

THE PRESIDENT:  It is good to be back in Pennsylvania, good to be back in Philly.  (Applause.)  I know part of the reason you’re fired up is because you’ve just heard from one of the finest Vice Presidents we will ever see in this country’s history, Joe Biden.  (Applause.)  Plus, Joe looks cool in those glasses, too, doesn’t he?  (Applause.) 

You know, I want you to know, when I was still campaigning, right after I selected Joe, we went out and we were doing some events, small town hall meetings.  And everywhere we went with Joe, some woman would come by and say, you know, I think Joe is kind of cute.  Can you introduce me to Joe?  (Laughter.)  That was true.  And I had to inform this woman that Joe is married to a wonderful Jill Biden.

In addition to hearing from Joe, I know you’ve heard from Governor Ed Rendell.  (Applause.)  Senator Arlen Specter is in the house.  (Applause.)  Senator Bob Casey is in the house.  (Applause.)  State Treasurer Rob McCord is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Chaka Fattah is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Joe Sestak is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Bob Brady is here.  (Applause.)  Mayor Michael Nutter is in the house.  (Applause.)  And we’ve got Allegheny County Executive Dan Onorato is here.  (Applause.)  I want to thank Pastor Kevin Johnson for the invocation.  (Applause.)  DJ Diamond Kuts.  (Applause.)  And give it up for The Roots.  (Applause.) 

Now, I’m glad to see that this crowd is fired up.  Are you fired up?

AUDIENCE:  Fired up!

THE PRESIDENT:  Are you ready to go?

AUDIENCE:  Ready to go!

THE PRESIDENT:  I’ve got to make sure you stay fired up.  I promise you’ll be out of here to catch the Phillies and the Eagles.  (Applause.)  I don’t want to get between Philly fans and their sports teams. 

Now, Philadelphia, two years ago -- two years ago, you defied the conventional wisdom in Washington.  They said no, you can’t.  They said, no, you can’t overcome the cynicism of politics.  No, you can’t overcome the special interests and the big money.  No, you can’t take on the big challenges of our time.  No, you can’t elect a skinny guy with a funny name to the presidency of the United States.  What did you say?

AUDIENCE:  Yes, we can! 

THE PRESIDENT:  That’s what you said.

AUDIENCE:  Yes, we can!  Yes, we can!  Yes, we can!

THE PRESIDENT:  But, Philly, I’ve got this message for you today.  I want everybody to understand our victory in that campaign, that wasn’t the end of the road.  That was just the beginning of the road.  That was just the start of the journey.  By itself, it does not deliver the change that we need.  I know a lot of you thought just because of election night and the inauguration -- everybody was having fun and Beyoncé was singing and Bono, and so everybody thought, boy, this is it.

But that was just the start.  Because we understood what we were going up against.  The only thing that the election did was it gave us the chance to make change happen.  It made each of you a shareholder in the mission of rebuilding our country and reclaiming our future.  And Philly, I’m back here two years later because our job is not yet done and the success of our mission is at stake right now.  On November 2nd, I need you as fired up as you were in 2008.  (Applause.)

Because we’ve got a lot of work ahead of us.  After that last election, it was my hope that we could pull together, Democrats and Republicans, to confront the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.  I hoped that we could get beyond the divisions of red states and blue states.  That’s what we thought.

AUDIENCE:  Yes, we can!  Yes, we can!  Yes, we can!

THE PRESIDENT:  Because although we are proud to be Democrats, we are prouder to be Americans.  (Applause.)  And I know there are plenty of Republicans out there in this country who feel the exact same way.  

But when we arrived in Washington, the Republicans in Congress, they had a different idea.  They knew it would take more than two years to climb out of this recession.  They knew that by the time of this election, people would still be out of work.  They knew people would still be frustrated.  And so what they figured was, if we just sat on the sidelines, if Republicans just opposed everything we said we could do, if they rejected every compromise we offered, if they spent all their time attacking Democrats instead of attacking problems, they figured they might be able to do well in the polls. 

So they spent the last 20 months saying no -- even to policies that they had supported in the past.  They said no to middle-class tax cuts.  They said no to help for small businesses.  They said no to a bipartisan deficit reduction commission that they had once cosponsored.  If I said the sky was blue, they said no.  If I said there were fish in the sea, they said no.  They figured if Obama fails, then we win.  Am I wrong, Joe?  That’s exactly what they said.
       
Now, they may have thought that playing political games would help them win an election, but I knew it wouldn’t get America through the crisis.  So I made some different decisions.  I took whatever steps were necessary to stop the economic freefall, to stop a second depression -- even if those decisions were not popular, even if they were not easy.  Because you didn’t elect me to do what was easy.  You elected me to do what was right.  That’s why you sent me to Washington.  (Applause.)  You didn’t send me to Washington to put my finger to the wind and figure out which way the wind was blowing, to spend all my time reading the polls.  You sent me there to solve problems.

And 20 months later, we no longer face the possibility of a second depression.  Our economy is growing again.  The private sector created jobs nine months in a row now.  There are 3 million Americans who would not be working today if not for the economic plan that Joe and I put into place.  That’s the truth.  (Applause.) 

Now, what’s also the truth is we’ve still got a long way to go.  The hole we’re climbing out is so deep, the Republicans messed up so bad, left such a big mess, that there are still millions of Americans without work.  I want everybody to understand this, just in case there’s still some undecideds out there.  Before I was inaugurated and before Joe was inaugurated, we had lost 4 million jobs in the six months before that.  We lost almost 800,000 jobs the month I was sworn in; 600,000 the month after that; 600,000 the month after that.  Because any of our economic plans were put into place, we had lost almost 8 million jobs -- because of their policies.

And that means that it’s going to take us a while to get out of this hole.  There are still millions of Americans who can barely pay their bills.  Millions of Americans who are just barely hanging on.  Millions of middle-class families, who were struggling even before this crisis hit, and are out there treading water.  I know.

So of course people are frustrated.  Of course people are impatient with the pace of change.  And believe me, so am I.  But here’s the thing I need everybody to remember.  No matter how angry you get, no matter how frustrated you are, the other side has decided to ride that frustration and anger without offering any solutions. 

And, you know, a lot of folks in Washington think that they’re running a smart strategy.  They’re saying the other party’s supporters are more enthusiastic, more excited.  They say all y’all are going to stay home.  You might not come out like you did in 2008.  They say you might not care as much.  They think, oh, well, Obama’s name is not on the ballot, maybe they’re not going to turn out.  They think you’re going to be willing to let the same politicians and the same policies that left our economy in the shambles back to Washington.

Well, Philadelphia, I think the pundits are wrong.  I think the pundits are wrong.  I think we’re going to win -- but you got to prove them wrong.  (Applause.)  It’s up to you to show the pundits that you care too much about this country to let it fall backwards; that you’re going to keep us moving forward; that you’re ready to fight for your future. 

Just, look, everybody, I need you to understand, this election is a choice.  And the choice could not be clearer.  It’s not as if the Republicans are offering new ideas.  It’s not as if the Republican leaders have changed their agenda since the last time they ran Washington.  In fact, the chairman of one of their campaign committees promised that if the Republicans take control of Congress, they will follow the exact same agenda they pursued the last time they were in power. 

We know what that agenda was.  We know what this agenda was.  You cut taxes, mostly for millionaires and billionaires.  You cut regulations for special interests.  You try to bust the unions.  You cut back on investments in education and clean energy and research and technology.  The basic idea is that if we put our blind faith in the market and we let corporations do whatever they want and we leave everybody else to fend for themselves, then America somehow automatically is going to grow and prosper.

Well, let me tell you something.  The problem with their theory is, it didn’t work.  We tried it for eight years.  It didn’t work for middle-class families who saw their incomes fall and their costs go up when Republicans were in charge.  I want everybody to understand, between 2001 and 2009, the wages of middle-class families went down 5 percent.  They didn’t go up -- they went down.  Job growth was the slowest that it had been at any time since World War II -- slower than it’s been over the last year.  When they were in charge, they took a record surplus from Bill Clinton, and by the time I got there, we had a record deficit.  And because of that free-for-all that they had on Wall Street, we’re still digging our way out of the crisis.  That’s their track record.

Now, listen, everybody, I don’t bring this up because I want to re-litigate the past.  I bring it up because I don’t want to re-live the past.  (Applause.)  I don’t want to go through what we already gone through.  I bring it up because this is the other -- this philosophy that the other side intends to bring if they win in November.  Republicans might have a new name for it -- they call it the Pledge to America -- but it’s the same old stuff they’ve been peddling for years. 

Let’s take a look at the Pledge to America.  Anybody read the Pledge to America?  Let me tell you, for starters, it turns out that the pledge was actually written in part by a former lobbyist for AIG and Exxon Mobil.  That should tell you something right there.  You can’t make that stuff up.

And the centerpiece of the pledge is a $700 billion tax cut that would only go to the top 2 percent, the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans.  Ninety-eight percent of you would not get this tax cut, but they would borrow $700 billion from the Chinese or from the Saudis or somebody.  That’s their big idea to get the economy moving again.  These are the same folks who lecture us on fiscal responsibility, but now they want to borrow $700 billion to give a tax cut worth an average of $100,000 to millionaires and billionaires. 

When you ask them, where are you going to get the money, they say, well, we don’t have it.  But mostly, they’re going to borrow it from other countries.  And just to pay for a small part of it, they want to cut education by 20 percent. 

AUDIENCE:  Boo!

THE PRESIDENT:  They would reduce financial aid for 8 million college students.

AUDIENCE:  Boo!

THE PRESIDENT:  Now, Philadelphia, at a time when the education of our country’s citizens is one of the most important things for economic success, the notion that we would give out tax cuts to folks who don’t need and sacrifice the next generation, that does not make any sense at all. 

I want to ask my Republican friends, do you think China is cutting back on education?  Do you think South Korea or Germany or India are cutting back on education?  Those countries aren’t playing for second place.  They’re playing for first place.  Guess what?  America does not play for second place either.  We play for first place.  (Applause.) 

So, Philly, as long as I’m President, we’re not going to let Washington politicians sacrifice your education for a tax cut we can’t afford.  And that is a choice in this election.   

Joe and I, we’ve got a different idea about what the next two years should look like, and it’s an idea rooted in our belief about how this country was built.  We know government doesn’t have all the answers to all our problems.  We know the private sector is primarily responsible for creating jobs and prosperity.  I believe government should be lean and efficient, and I don’t want anybody in Washington wasting your taxpayer dollars.  That’s why I proposed a three-year spending freeze, set up a bipartisan fiscal commission to deal with our deficit. 

But in the words of our first Republican President, named Abraham Lincoln, we also believe that government should do what people can’t do better by themselves.  We believe in a country that rewards hard work and responsibility.  We believe in a country where we look after one another.  We believe in a country where working people can come together so they can get a minimum wage and better working conditions.  We believe that I am my brother’s keeper, I am my sister’s keeper -- that everybody deserves a fair shot at the American Dream.  That’s the America I know.  That’s the choice in this election.  (Applause.) 

We want to make permanent -- we want to make permanent tax cuts for the middle class, because you deserve a break.  Instead of the other side’s plan to keep giving tax breaks to companies that are shipping jobs overseas, I want to give those tax breaks to companies that are investing right here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)  I want to give it to small businesses and to American manufacturers and to clean energy companies.  I don’t want solar panels and wind turbines and electric cars built in Europe or Asia.  I want them built here in the United States of America by American workers.  (Applause.) 

Instead of cutting education and student aid, we want to make our new college tax credit permanent -- (applause) -- $10,000 in tuition relief for each young person who goes to college.  (Applause.)  We’re going to fight to keep the reforms we’ve made to the student loan system, because thanks to those reforms, tens of billions of dollars in taxpayer subsidies that would be going to banks right now are going to students.  That’s where they belong.  (Applause.)    

If the other side wins, they’ll try their hardest to give rein back to the insurance companies and the credit card companies and the Wall Street banks that we’re finally holding accountable.  We can’t let them do that.  We can’t go back to the days of taxpayer-funded bailouts.  We can’t go back to the day when credit card companies could just jack up your rates without any reason, or insurance companies could deny or drop your coverage just because you get sick. 

We need to keep that new law in place that says if you’re looking for a job or have a job that doesn’t offer you coverage and you’re a young person, you can stay on your parents’ insurance until you’re 26 years old, and that they can’t drop your coverage just because you get sick.  (Applause.)  That’s the choice in this election, Philadelphia.  That’s what’s at stake right now.

So, Philly, it comes down to this.  Many of the Republicans who are running right now, these are the exact same folks who spent the last decade driving our economy into a ditch.  And once we were elected, Joe and I, we put on our boots, we went down into that ditch.  It was muddy and dusty down there and it was hot.  And we started pushing on that car to get it out of the ditch.  And we had a whole bunch of folks like Joe Sestak helping us push that car out of the ditch.  (Applause.) 

And every once in a while, we’d look up at the Republicans.  They were -- they had driven into the ditch, but they had gotten out and they were kind of taking a break, fanning themselves and sipping on a Slurpee, watching us do all the work.  And every once in a while they’d say, why don’t you push harder?  You’re not pushing the right way, Obama.  But they didn’t help. 

And after pushing and pushing over these last 20 months, finally we’ve got that car out of the ditch.  (Applause.)  Now, the car is a little dented up.  The fender is a little busted.  It needs a tune-up.  But it’s moving.  It’s pointing in the right direction.  We’re on level ground now.  We’re starting to make repairs.  And suddenly we get a tap on our shoulder and we look back and who is it?  It’s the Republicans.  And they say -- what are they saying? -- they say, we want the keys back.

AUDIENCE:  No!

THE PRESIDENT:  Philadelphia, they can’t have the keys back.  They don’t know how to drive.  (Applause.)  They don’t know how to drive.  They can ride with us if they want, but they got to get in the back seat.  (Applause.)  Because we want to go forward.  We don’t want the special interests riding shotgun.  We want working families, middle-class families, up front.  They’re our priority.

I just want everybody to notice, when you get in your car and you want to go forward?  You put the car in D.  If you’re going backwards, what do you do?  You put the car in R.  That’s not a coincidence.  You want to ride forward, put it in D on November 2nd.  (Applause.) 

But, listen -- listen, can I just say, at the end of the day, Philly, whether the Republicans get the keys back or not is going to depend on you.  There is no question -- there’s no question the other side sees a chance to get back in the driver’s seat. 

And thanks to a Supreme Court decision called Citizens United, they are being helped along this year by special interest groups that are spending unlimited amounts of money on attack ads -- attacking folks like Patrick Murphy, attacking folks like Joe Sestak -- just attacking people without ever disclosing who’s behind all these attack ads.  You don’t know.  It could be the oil industry.  It could be the insurance industry.  It could even be foreign-owned corporations.  You don’t know because they don’t have to disclose. 

Now, that’s not just a threat to Democrats -- that’s a threat to our democracy.  Every American business and industry deserves a seat at the table, but they don’t get to a chance to buy every chair.  We’ve seen what happens when they do.  They put the entire economy at risk and every American might end up suffering.

So you can’t let it happen.  Don’t let them hijack your agenda.  The American people deserve to know who’s trying to sway their elections.  And you can’t stand by and let special interests drown out the voices of the American people.  (Applause.) 

So, Philadelphia, that’s why I need you working even harder in this election than you did in the last election.  We need you to fight their millions of dollars with our millions of voices.  (Applause.)  I look out on this crowd and I see millions of voices all across the country.  We’ve got to finish what we started in 2008.  Because if everybody who fought so hard for change in 2008 shows up to vote in 2010, I am absolutely confident we will win.  And most of the polls say the same thing. 

See, what the other side is counting on, what they’re counting on is you’re going to stay home.  They’re counting on your silence.  They’re counting on your amnesia.  They’re counting on your apathy.  They’re counting on young people staying home and union members staying home and black folks staying home and middle-class families staying home.  They’re counting on the fact that they made the argument so ugly in Washington that you just completely turned off and you’re not going to vote for anybody.  And if that happens, they win.

Philly, let’s prove them wrong.  (Applause.)  Let’s show Washington one more time change doesn’t come from the top -- it comes from the bottom.  It doesn’t come from millions of dollars of ads -- it comes because people are out there knocking on doors, making phone calls, going into the beauty shops, going into the barber shops.  We have come -- I know we’re a long way from the day, the hope and excitement we all felt on election night.  We’re far from inauguration day.  But I always told you it was going to take time.  I always told you it was going to be hard.  Because change has always been hard.
 
But from the first days as our nation, every time Americans have tried to bring about real, meaningful change, we’ve faced down setbacks, we’ve faced down disappointments.  We have faced fear and we have faced down doubt.  As Americans, we’ve always moved forward.  We’ve always kept fighting.  We’ve always remembered that in the United States of America, our destiny is not written for us -- it is written by us. 

That’s how we came through war.  That’s how we came through depression.  That’s how we got civil rights legislation.  That’s how we got workers’ rights.  That’s how we got women’s rights.  It’s being tested right now, but if you keep moving forward in the face of difficulty, I promise you we will not lose this election.  We will win this election.  And we will make sure that every American has the opportunity to live out the American Dream.

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

END
5:29 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at the Signing of the 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010

East Room

2:06 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Good to see you.  Everybody, please have a seat.  Well, it is wonderful to see all of you here today, to be with all of you.  I want to make some special acknowledgements.  We’ve got some legislators here who have been fighting on behalf of the disabilities community for a very long time.  We’re so proud of the legislation I’m signing today, as well as legislation we signed earlier this week.  So I want to acknowledge all of them. 

First of all, responsible in large part for guiding this process through in the Senate -- Senator Mark Pryor of Arkansas.  Representative Ed Markey, Democrat from Massachusetts.  We also have here Senator Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia.  Senator Barbara Mikulski, Democrat of Maryland.  We’ve got Kent Conrad, as well as Byron Dorgan -- the Dakota boys from North Dakota.  (Laughter.) 

We’ve got Representative Henry Waxman, who’s on so many important pieces of legislation this year, and we’re grateful to him.  Mr. Julius Genachowski is here, who’s the chairman of the FCC.  Where’s Julius?  There he is right there -- a classmate of mine, somebody who has just been a great friend for a long time.

And finally, we’ve got this guy.  (Laughter.)  Some of you may know him.  I happened to be listening to him this morning when I woke up.  He’s what I work out to.  (Laughter.)  He’s what I sweet-talk Michelle to.  (Laughter.)  Mr. Stevie Wonder is in the house.  (Applause.)  I was doing a little rendition of some of his music to him and he was kind enough not to laugh.  (Laughter.)

Now, earlier this year, we celebrated the 20th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act right here in the White House.  Many of you were here.  And it was a moment for every American to reflect not just on one of the most comprehensive civil rights bills in our history, but what that bill meant to so many people.  It was a victory won by countless Americans who refused to accept the world as it is, and against great odds, waged quiet struggles and grassroots crusades until finally change was won.

The story of the disability rights movement is enriched because it’s intertwined with the story of America’s progress.  Americans with disabilities are Americans first and foremost, and like all Americans are entitled to not only full participation in our society, but also full opportunity in our society. 

So we’ve come a long way.  But even today, after all the progress that we’ve made, too many Americans with disabilities are still measured by what folks think they can’t do, instead of what we know they can do.

The fight for progress isn’t about sympathy, by the way -- it’s about opportunity.  And that’s why all of us share a responsibility to keep building on the work of those who came before us -- one life, one law, one step at a time.

So today, we’re here to take two more steps on that journey.  First of all, on Tuesday, I signed Rosa’s Law.  This is named for a nine-year-old girl, right there -- Rosa, wave to everybody.  (Applause.)  That's some good waving there, Rosa.  (Laughter.)

Rosa Marcellino -- it’s so inspiring to have her here.  As one of hundreds of thousands of Americans with Down Syndrome, Rosa worked with her parents and her siblings to have the words “mentally retarded” officially removed from the health and education code in her home state of Maryland. 

Now, Rosa’s Law takes her idea a step further.  It amends the language in all federal health, education and labor laws to remove that same phrase and instead refer to Americans living with an “intellectual disability.”  Now this may seem to some people like a minor change, but I think Rosa’s brother Nick put it best -- where’s Nick?  You right there, Nick?  You can wave, too.  Go ahead.  (Laughter.) 

But I want everybody to hear Nick’s wisdom here.  He said, “What you call people is how you treat them.  If we change the words, maybe it will be the start of a new attitude towards people with disabilities.”  That's a lot of wisdom from Nick.  (Applause.) 

Nick and Rosa’s parents are all choking up because they're really proud of their kids, and appropriately so.

Now, the bill I’m signing today into law will better ensure full participation in our democracy and our economy for Americans with disabilities.  The 21st Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act will make it easier for people who are deaf, blind or live with a visual impairment to do what many of us take for granted -- from navigating a TV or DVD menu to sending an email on a smart phone.  It sets new standards so that Americans with disabilities can take advantage of the technology our economy depends on.  And that’s especially important in today’s economy, when every worker needs the necessary skills to compete for the jobs of the future.    

So together, these changes are about guaranteeing equal access, equal opportunity, and equal respect for every American.  And they build on the progress that we’ve already made as an administration over the last 20 months.

Together, we put in place one of the most important updates to the ADA in 20 years by prohibiting disability-based discrimination by government entities and private businesses and by updating accessibility standards. 

I issued an executive order focused on establishing the federal government as a model employer of Americans with disabilities. 

We passed the Christopher and Dana Reeve Paralysis Act -- the first piece of comprehensive legislation aimed at addressing the challenge faced by Americans living with paralysis.

We reauthorized the Children’s Health Insurance Program, covering an additional 2.6 million children in need in 2009, including children with disabilities.

And the Affordable Care Act we passed will give every American more control over their health care -- and will do more to give Americans with disabilities control over their own lives than any legislation since the ADA. 

So equal access.  Equal opportunity.  The freedom to make of our lives what we will.  Living up to these principles is an obligation we have as Americans -- and to one another.  Because, in the end, each of us has a role to play in our economy.  Each of us has something to contribute to the American story.  And each of us must do our part to continue on this never-ending journey towards building a more perfect union.

So I am so proud of the legislators here today.  I want to thank all the advocates who helped bring this legislation about.  And now I'm very proud to sign the bill.  (Applause.)

END
2:15 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Announcing the Departure of General Jim Jones, National Security Advisor

Rose Garden

1:05 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  When I took office, I pledged to do whatever was required to protect the American people and restore American leadership in the world.  And over the past 20 months, that’s exactly what we’ve done.  During this time, I’ve relied every day on the advice and counsel of my National Security Advisor, General Jim Jones. 

When I talked to Jim about taking this job shortly after the election, it was a difficult decision for him.  He had just retired from the military, had a wide range of family obligations.  But because of his patriotism, his dedication to keeping America safe, we were able to agree that he would serve, but he asked that we would -- he would serve for about two years.  I am extraordinarily thankful that both he and his wife Diane agreed to make that additional sacrifice for our country.

Today, as we approach that two-year mark, I’m announcing that Jim has decided to step aside as National Security Advisor later this month, and that he will be succeeded by his very capable deputy, Tom Donilon.

The American people owe Jim an unbelievable debt of gratitude for a lifetime of service.  As a Marine in Vietnam, he risked his life for our country and was highly decorated for his courage.  As Commandant of the Marine Corps, he led our Marines into the 21st century and won widespread admiration within the Corps and beyond.  As Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, he helped the NATO alliance prepare for the new missions of our time.  And given the multiple crises that we inherited, Jim has drawn on all of these experiences as National Security Advisor.  

The list of challenges that our country has faced these last two years is daunting.  Since my administration took office, we have removed nearly 100,000 troops and ended our combat mission in Iraq.  We’ve refocused on the war against al Qaeda, and subjected its leadership to relentless pressure.  We are pursuing a new strategy that finally devotes the resources we need in the fight against extremism in Afghanistan and Pakistan. 

We’ve reset relations with Russia, and signed a historic New START treaty.  And after years of drift, we have built a broad international coalition to hold Iran accountable, and applied unprecedented pressure through tough new sanctions. 

We have renewed the push for peace in the Middle East, charted a course to secure vulnerable nuclear materials within four years, and reestablished our leadership in the Pacific Rim, while taking the lead in forging a response at the global level to the economic crisis.

And in between, we’ve responded to a range of crises like Haiti and the floods now in Pakistan that are required from us as leaders in the world.

In short, we’ve spared no effort to keep the American people safe, while also repairing old alliances, building new partnerships, and restoring America’s leadership in the 21st century.

Through these challenges, Jim has always been a steady voice in Situation Room sessions, daily briefings, and with meetings with foreign leaders, while also representing our country abroad with allies and partners in every region of the world.  At the same time, he has led an unprecedented reform of our national security staff here at the White House.  Reflecting the new challenges of our time, he put new emphasis on cyber security, development and climate change, and made sure that homeland security is fully integrated into our efforts.

Serving as National Security Advisor is one of the most difficult jobs in our government.  But through it all, Jim —- like the Marine he has always been —- has been a dedicated public servant and a friend to me.  After a lifetime of service, I know this was also an enormous sacrifice for the Jones family.  Many of them are here today, and I want to thank them as well.  Jim, like your father and uncle and generations of Joneses who served before you, you complete this assignment knowing that your country is safer and stronger.  I thank you, and the American people thank you.

GENERAL JONES:  Thank you, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT:  I am also proud to announce that General Jones will be succeeded by his deputy, and one of my closest advisors, Tom Donilon.

Tom has a wealth of experience that will serve him well in this new assignment.  He has served three Presidents and been immersed in our national security for decades.  Over the last two years, there is not a single critical national security issue that has not crossed Tom’s desk.  He has helped manage our national security team and the policymaking process, and won the respect and admiration of his colleagues in the White House and across the administration.  He has a probing intellect and a remarkable work ethic -- although it’s one that depends on a seemingly limitless quantity of Diet Coke.  (Laughter.)

Tom, however, is not the only valuable member of the Donilon team who works here at the White House.  His wife Cathy, who’s here, has done an extraordinary job as Jill Biden’s Chief of Staff.  I’m grateful to the Donilon family for all the work that they’ve already done for our nation, and for agreeing to take on this additional responsibility.

We have some huge challenges ahead.  We remain a nation at war.  And we will not rest in our efforts to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda.  And above all, we are committed to forging the kind of American leadership that can shape the world in the 21st century just as we shaped the world in the 20th –- a world of greater peace; a world of growing markets and expanding prosperity; a world of shared security; a world where American leadership enlists the support of old allies and new partners, while advancing the values that help keep us safe and make America a beacon to the world.

That is the kind of American leadership that Jim Jones has always stood for, and the kind of leadership that Tom and my entire national security team will continue to work for in the years to come.

So with that, I want to once again personally thank Jim for his outstanding service and offer the mic to him to say a few words.

GENERAL JONES:  Mr. President, thank you very much for your extraordinarily kind words and for your confidence in me these past two years.  When we first met just a little over two years ago, I found it impossible to resist your invitation to once again serve the nation, and accepted to be your National Security Advisor. 

Another reason I did so was because I was persuaded that you were willing to take on the hard issues of our time at a very, very difficult moment in our nation’s history, spanning the difference between two very different centuries, the 21st century and the 20th century. 

And I have enjoyed this assignment immensely because of this willingness to engage these difficult issues and to do the right thing for the country.  And I believe that where we are today in the global playing field and how the United States is held in the esteem of the rest of the world is an accomplishment that I frankly find astonishing in such a short period of time. 

And, Mr. President, we owe all of this to your leadership.  And I thank you for letting me be a part of it.

I would also like to emphasize that I thoroughly enjoyed working with the Vice President.  And I’d like to also mention that the First Lady and Dr. Biden have been an inspiration to all military families and men and women in the armed forces of the United States by the work they continually do to make them feel loved and appreciated in all that they do.

None of this could have been possible -- none of these achievements could have been possible without the -- my teammate and friend Tom Donilon.  Tom and I got together just shortly before the inauguration and we scratched out a vision for what -- how we might best help the 44th President of the United States in fulfilling his demanding duties with regard to national security.

We did it on a piece of paper, not far from here.  And for the last two years, it’s been just a rare privilege to be working side by side with Tom as the national security staff for the 21st century and for the 44th President came to life.

Tom has been an extraordinary ally.  He is one of the hardest working human beings I have ever seen.  And my only advice that I could give him is when he becomes the National Security Advisor, he finds himself a deputy just like he was to me.  And I think his family will appreciate that quite a bit.

So, Tom, I do thank you.  I admire you.  You have been -- the work that you have done has enabled me to do other things that are also, hopefully, important.  But you have been the man that kept the trains running on time, and your energy and your dedication is without equal.  And I thank you and I wish you all the best.  Thank you, Tom.  (Applause.)

I would also be remiss if I didn't acknowledge the hard work of other national security staff leaders, specifically John Brennan; Denis McDonough, our chief of staff; Mike Froman; Nate Tibbits, the executive secretary; and also Ben Rhodes, in charge of our strategic communications.  That team is a powerful team, works extraordinarily hard, and gives the President great advice day in and day out on the important issues of our time.

The members of the national security staff, which resulted in the combination of the Homeland Security Council and National Security Council, have served the American people better than you could possibly imagine.  This is the hardest-working group of talented professionals I've seen, and it was a pleasure to know that, even if you're on the other side of the world, that these senior directors and directors, when they go in and brief the President, are doing so with the full trust and confidence of both Tom and myself and everybody else.  And I thank them for their hard work.

Lastly, to my family -- my wife, my children, grandchildren -- I want to thank them for their unwavering support for these many years, including these last two.  Without their support and affection and love, I don't think we could have pulled it off.  But I'm deeply grateful for them -- to them for that -- excuse me. 

And lastly, I just simply could not close without telling you how much every time we do something in the national security arena we think of our troops -- our men and women in uniform -- and their families, and the incredible sacrifice and example they set for us every day around the world.  They are the future of our country -- they are the future leaders; they are the future entrepreneurs; they are the future scientists -- and they will carry us into the 21st century.

The work that we are doing today is going to set the path for this country to arrive at 2050.  I can't think of a more challenging time or more rewarding time to be a part of this government and to work for this President.

Mr. President, thank you very much for allowing me to say a few words.  (Applause.) 

END
1:19 P.M. EDT