The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Excerpts from Remarks by Christina Romer to the Center for American Progress

WASHINGTON, DC- Christina Romer, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers will deliver remarks this afternoon at the Center for American Progress.  The following are excerpts from her remarks.


“In recent months, many have expressed concern about the budget deficit.  This is a concern that President Obama and his entire economic team share.”

***

“(Economists) Auerbach and Gale calculate that roughly half of the long-run deficit is due to the policy actions of the past 8 years.  According to a study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, just 3 percent of the long-run fiscal problem is due to the ARRA.  The rest of this yawning gap is due to projected rises in spending on entitlement programs, primarily Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.  Some of this is the result of the aging of the population.  But the far greater source is the fact that health care costs, both public and private, are rising much faster than GDP.”

***

“Obviously, we can’t go back eight years and make more responsible choices.  And, we can’t take short-run contractionary actions that could endanger the recovery.  We need to look forward and begin to put the nation on a more sustainable long-run fiscal path.  Given the central role of rising health care expenditures, any solution to our long-run budget problem will simply have to include slowing the growth rate of health care costs.”

***

“Some have argued that it is irresponsible to reform our health care system at a time when the budget deficit is so large and our long-run fiscal problems are so severe.  I firmly believe the opposite:  it is fiscally irresponsible not to do health care reform.”

***

“For the first time in decades, we have a chance to genuinely reform health care and expand health insurance coverage in this country.  We must see reform through to completion. But, we must do reform well.”

***

“Though there is some variation across the different versions of the bills, we are also on track to meet the President’s promise that heath reform will not add one dime to the deficit.  The five Congressional committees have identified hundreds of billions of dollars of savings in Medicare and Medicaid.”

***

“[F]iscally prudent health care reform that expands coverage to tens of millions of Americans and transforms our health care system to one that is higher quality and lower cost is possible.”

***

“A public health insurance option would be a credible entrant in concentrated markets, and would serve as a competitive, alternative choice, constraining the ability of insurers to raise premiums, and thus containing the growth rate of costs.”

***

“Slowing the growth rate of health care costs will enable firms to once again give raises in the form of take-home pay rather than more expensive health insurance.”

***

“[S]tate and local governments would save substantially as a result of health care reform.”

***

“Some view health insurance reform as something we should do before or after tackling the deficit.  My plea today is to view it as the most significant act we could take to tackle the deficit.  Putting in place health care reform that genuinely slows the growth rate of costs is truly one of the largest and most important fiscal reforms we can undertake.”

***

“In health care reform we have an opportunity to navigate the difficult path between long-run fiscal responsibility and sensible short-run macroeconomic policy.  Done correctly, health care reform can genuinely slow the growth rate of health care costs and thus put us on a path to greatly reduced budget deficits in the long run.”

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Governor Patrick Fundraiser General Reception

Westin Copley, Boston, Massachusetts

2:34 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Boston!  (Applause.)  It is good to be back in Massachusetts.  (Applause.)  It's good to see some familiar faces -- some folks I haven't seen before, I'm glad about that too.

In addition to this outstanding team behind me, I know that my great friend, Congressman Mike Capuano is in the house, so give Mike a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

Yes, it is good to be back in Boston.  I've got some pretty good memories of this town.  I spent three years in the library across the river -- (laughter) -- trying to make sure I graduated from law school.  I came back here, I gave a little convention speech that went okay.  (Laughter and applause.)  And it was exactly two years ago today, on a beautiful fall night in Boston Common, that I received the endorsement of a man that I am proud to stand with today; a man who's absolutely committed to fighting for Massachusetts families and Massachusetts' future; your governor, my dear, dear friend, Deval Patrick.  (Applause.)

Now, Deval and I go a ways back.  I was mentioning to some folks in the other room we've got a lot in common.  We both have ties to the South Side of Chicago.  (Applause.)  South Side.  (Laughter.)  We're both Sox fans.  (Applause.)  I just said "Sox," that's all I said.  (Laughter.)  We're both surrounded by three beautiful women in our lives that keep us grounded.  (Applause.)  Which means they tell us what to do.  (Laughter.)  These days, I have to actually compete for attention with a dog -- (laughter) -- I don't know if Deval has to deal with that.

Deval supported me when I ran for the United States Senate in Illinois at a time when none of you could pronounce my name.  (Laughter.)  And I remember when he came to me just after I had taken office, and said, "Barack, I've got this crazy idea.  I've got this feeling that the people of Massachusetts might be interested in a different kind of politics.  I've got this hunger to serve."

Now, I have to say that this was when Deval was a bit of a long shot.  He didn't have money or big-name support.  And the pundits didn't give him a chance -- although some people thought it was a good ballot name because they were sure a guy named "Patrick" must be Irish.  (Laughter.)

But here's the thing.  Since he had endorsed me when nobody knew me and I had no chance, I had to return the favor -- even though I really wasn't sure he had much of a chance.  (Laughter.)   It would be pretty hard to say, "Well, now, Deval, hold on a second.  Have you thought everything logically through?" -- when Barack Hussein Obama had run for the United States Senate. 

But here's what else was going on.  I had a feeling about Deval that I've always had ever since I've known him.  And as I watched him travel all across this commonwealth, listening to you, building his campaign -- house by house, block by block, neighborhood by neighborhood -- I was reminded that Deval is competent enough to understand that this isn't about him; it's about you; that this was your campaign -- (applause) -- that you were building a movement for change that couldn't be denied.  And that core integrity of his, that generous vision of his that everybody has a part to play in rebuilding the best possible America that we can, that's something that I felt somehow would end up being irresistible.  And I've come back to Boston today because I need you to understand what a prize you got in Deval Patrick and why we need Deval Patrick and Tim Murray more than ever.  This is the team that's going to lead the Commonwealth of Massachusetts into the future.  (Applause.)

Now, I don't have to tell you we're in challenging times -- not just for Massachusetts, but for America.  You see it in your own lives and your own communities.  Too many folks are out of work, looking for work.  Too many hardworking families are being squeezed by the skyrocketing costs on everything on one side and shrinking wages on the other.  They're men and women who've worked hard all their lives, done everything right -- and now they're worried about whether they can retire with dignity and respect, or send their kids to college; whether they can be the kinds of husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, that they hoped to be because of economic factors that aren't under their control.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We need health care!

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  (Laughter.)

So I know these are tough times.  I know folks are hurting.  But I also know this:  For the past three years, you've had leaders at the helm of this commonwealth during one of the most difficult periods in its history.  And you've had a leader who's been willing to make tough choices in tough times without ever forgetting who he's working for.  You've had a leader who's been willing to put the interests of hardworking families ahead of  special interests.  You've had a leader who's woken up every day asking what he can do on behalf of the people of Massachusetts. That's the kind of Governor Deval Patrick has been.  That's the kind of Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray has been.  That's the kind of leadership that you need.  (Applause.)

Think about what they have done.  Think about what these guys have done.  In just three years, Deval has delivered the reforms and real change that folks on Beacon Hill have been talking about for decades.  He's taken on corruption, he's begun to rebuild the public trust by enacting the first comprehensive ethics and lobbying reform in three decades -- (applause); transportation reform that's saved taxpayers almost $200 million; auto insurance reform that's introduced competition and saved the average family hundreds of dollars at a time when they need it most.

When it came to jumpstarting job-creation and turning the economy around, Deval and I, we've been working hand in hand.  We worked together to enact a Recovery Act that's making a meaningful difference for families all across Massachusetts and all across America.  Because of the Recovery Act, we've put a middle class tax cut into the pockets of 95 percent of hardworking families -- that includes 2.4 million hardworking Massachusetts families.

We've helped stem the tide of layoffs in police departments and fire departments and schools across this commonwealth and across this country -- keeping 100 police officers on Boston's streets alone, 215 teachers and support staff in Boston schools who otherwise would have been let go.  We've increased and extended unemployment insurance for 16 million Americans to help them weather the economic storm, including nearly 420,000 right here in Massachusetts.  We've made COBRA 65 percent cheaper to ensure that you don't lose your health insurance while you're looking for work.  We've funded eight new affordable housing projects right here in Massachusetts that will create more than 900 jobs building 450 housing units for Massachusetts families.  (Applause.)

Now, the Recovery Act didn't just include the most progressive tax cut in American history.  It didn't just include emergency relief for families who've borne the brunt of this recession.  It didn't just help out states with their budgets.  It made critical investments in our long-term priorities.  And that's been the essence of the Patrick/Murray team; that sense of a long-term vision for the future.

Our Recovery Act made the largest investment in clean energy in American history, which helped double the number of solar energy jobs right here in Massachusetts.  (Applause.)  It made the largest investment in education in American history, thanks to the effort of Deval and other far-seeing governors.  It made the largest investment in our nation's infrastructure since President Eisenhower built the Interstate Highway System back in the 1950s -- an investment that's putting Americans to work here in Massachusetts and all across America, rebuilding roads and bridges and waterways.

Even as Deval is helping change the way business is done on Beacon Hill; even as he's leading Massachusetts through the most difficult economic period in our lifetimes; Deval has never lost sight of what makes Massachusetts strong today and what it takes to keep it strong going into the future.

He's solidified Massachusetts' position as not just a national leader in biotechnology, but a world leader, creating new jobs, right now, and a market for new jobs tomorrow.  He's strengthened Massachusetts' position as a national leader in clean energy, convincing companies to create new green jobs right here in Massachusetts.  He successfully implemented health reform, so that 97 percent of this commonwealth's residents today have health insurance.  And because Deval and I know that the only reason we are here is because somebody somewhere gave us a chance at an outstanding education, he's worked to promote innovations in our schools, and close the achievement gap among our children, and protect financial aid for higher education; and he's made the strongest investment in K through 12 funding in Massachusetts history so this commonwealth remains not just the national leader in test scores, but an international leader in test scores.  (Applause.)

That's not bad for three years.  But, you know, there's a tendency to take folks for granted; to ask, well, what have you don't for me lately.  Look, that's understandable.  That's part of what we sign up for.  We ask for this incredible honor of leadership and it means we are responsible for what happens during our watch.

The reason I'm here today, the reason Deval Patrick is here today, and the reason you're here today is because we know our work is far from over.  We've still got huge challenges in this commonwealth and across America.  We're not going to -- we're not going to rest until we solve them.  We're not going to rest until everybody who's looking for work can find a job.  Until the markets aren't just about a stock market going up, but about businesses hiring again.  Until the American Dream is within reach for anybody who believes in it, anybody who's willing to fight for it.  We will not rest until that's happened.  (Applause.)

It's not going to be easy.  It's not going to happen overnight.  But here's what I can say with absolute certainty.  The work of forging a better future has begun.  It has begun in Massachusetts.  It has begun across America.

We've begun to build a clean energy economy that can free ourselves from dependence on foreign oil and generate green jobs that can't be outsourced, and pay well.  We've begun to put in place better standards in our schools, and make college and advanced training more affordable, so that we're preparing American children, Massachusetts children to be able to compete for any job, anywhere in the world.

We're closer than ever to passing health reform nationally that will finally make quality health insurance available to those who don't have coverage.  (Applause.)  And bring stability and security to Americans who do.  And finally, get some control over skyrocketing health care costs that are bankrupting families and businesses and our state and federal budgets.

     I mean, think about it.  For all the affordable health insurance, world-class education, new, clean energy future, a strong economy that works from everybody, that's fair -- that's what Deval has been about.  That's what Tim has been about.  That's what you're about.  That's why you're here.  (Applause.)

     But as I said, it's not going to be easy.  And so in the months ahead as you're going around, you're talking to your friends and neighbors, your family members -- you know what you're going to have to be fighting against.  You'll have to fight against some misinformation, that's always out there in political campaigns.

     But you're also going to just have to fight against the core cynicism that people have when it comes to politics.  I know folks here -- a lot of you in the past have been skeptical about whether your leaders can or will do anything about really hard problems.  And you have every right to be cynical and skeptical.  Because year after year, decade after decade, you've seen progress stymied by special interests and partisan gridlock, whether it's on Beacon Hill or in Washington.

But I'm here today because I want to remind you you've got a governor who represents a better kind of politics.  He's not perfect -- (laughter) -- his wife will tell you.  (Laughter.)  And as he mentioned, sometimes he's stubborn like a mule and he doesn’t want to act the part of the politician.  He doesn’t like talking about himself and his accomplishments.  But he's smart.  He's honest.  (Applause.)  He's devoted to the people of this state.  (Applause.)  He's asked for nothing but the opportunity to serve for you, to serve the people of Boston and Pittsfield and Worcester and Plymouth; to serve all the people of Massachusetts.

But we're going to have to fight for him.  Remember, when this campaign began it wasn't just about him; it was about you -- what are you willing to do?  How hard are you willing to fight?  We ought to give him our continued support because this is when it counts.

We face big challenges right now.  You know, campaigns are always fun -- well, not always, I mean, there was a -- (laughter.)  But there's an aspect of the campaign it's all about, you know, projecting our hopes and our dreams and it's full of excitement.  And now we're in governing mode.  And governing is always tough because, well, there are conflicting interests -- we're in a democracy, it's complicated, things take time, people argue.

Our problems won't be solved overnight -- especially problems that grew over the course of decades -- they're going to take years in some cases to get us to where we want to be.  But that's not a reason to lose heart.

Our first patriots here in Boston, they didn't say, you know, that British Empire, that seems really big.  (Laughter.)  I'm not sure about this whole independence thing.  (Laughter.)  FDR didn't say, I don't think we've got what it takes to get through this Great Depression, fear's not so bad.  (Laughter.)  "I'm scared."  (Laughter.)  JFK didn't say no, that moon, that's just too far, let's go someplace closer.  (Laughter.)

That's not what we do.  We're Americans.  We persist.  We rise to the challenge.  Think about how this country was built:  people striking out, not knowing what they might find but understanding that if they just stayed put they'd never get to where they wanted to be.  They were willing to take enormous risks.  That's in our DNA.  That's where we come from.  That's how all these folks here gathered together.  That's who we are.  That's who we have to be today.  (Applause.)

So if you're willing to stand with me and Deval and Tim; if you're willing to stand up and keep fighting for our future; if you're willing to once again prove that there's nothing false about hope -- then we're going to do what those previous generations did.  We're going to build something better to leave to our children and grandchildren.

And so I just want to make sure you guys aren't tired.  I want to make sure you guys are energized.  This is the fun part here -- fighting for your future.  (Applause.)  I want everybody on the battlefield.  I want you knocking on doors.  I want you to make phone calls.  We've got a lot of work to do.  Our finish -- business is unfinished.  But if you all are working hard, we're going to reelect the Patrick/Murray team and all of you are going to be proud about what happens in this commonwealth.  (Applause.)

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

END

2:51 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness

Jacqueline Kennedy Garden

12:38 P.M. EDT 

     MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you.  Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome.  I am so thrilled you could join us today as we mark National Breast Cancer Awareness Month right here at the White House. 

And I want to thank Jill so much for that kind introduction, as well as her phenomenal work that she's done to educate young women about this disease. 

     I think Jill is one of those examples of how one passionate advocate can really make a difference, and we are grateful to you for your leadership and the successes that you've had in your work.  And most of all, I am grateful to you for your friendship, as always. 

     I also want to thank Tina Tchen, who many of you already know for her outstanding work as Director of the Office of Public Engagement.  Tina, thank you so much.  And I want to take a moment -- yes, let's give Tina -- (applause.)  I don't want to step on your applause, Tina. 

And I also want to take a moment to recognize all of the survivors and the advocates who are here today who have worked so hard and for so long to raise money and raise awareness to fight this disease, particularly Vernal, Joni, and Venus, for having the courage to share their stories with us today.  I mean, it's hard getting up and speaking about good news, right, let alone to talk about something that is so personal to a crowd of strangers and a whole lot of cameras.  (Laughter.) 

So -- but it's important for them and for us to remind them that it's sharing these stories that really makes a difference.  It takes the veil off of this disease, because it wasn't that long ago that people thought that breast cancer was something to be ashamed of and to keep it a secret; something that you didn't discuss in polite company.  Some people even wondered, if you can believe it or not, whether breast cancer was contagious.  And at the first fundraising lunch hosted by the Komen Foundation, the description of the event was written in one paper as a "women's cancer event," because the word "breast" was considered too risqué to print. 

But then, people like you, all of you here, started speaking out, including two of my predecessors, First Ladies Betty Ford and Nancy Reagan.  They began speaking out. 

Survivors and those who love them started organizing and advocating and lobbying for more money, for more research, and better treatment for this disease.  

And then folks like Venus and Jill started working to educate and empower people to promote early detection and make sure that people were getting the care that they needed.      

And today, because of that work, the number of women getting regular mammograms has dramatically increased, and the five-year survival rate when breast cancer is diagnosed in time is 98 percent -- and that's compared to 74 percent in the early 80s.  

And today, we spend $900 million on breast cancer research, which is 30 times more than what we spent in 1982.  So we have come a long way.  (Applause.) 

And you should all be proud of what you've achieved to get us this far.  But what we all know is that we are not finished yet.  We are not finished yet.  We know we're not finished when nearly one in eight women is still diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime -- a total of one woman every three minutes -- and nearly 2,000 men are diagnosed each year as well, and that's something we don't often discuss. 

And we know we're not finished when 40,000 women a year still die from this disease.  That's one woman every 13 minutes who's dying from this disease today. 

And we know we're not finished, especially not when we have a health care system in this country that simply is not working for too many people with breast cancer and too many people who are surviving with breast cancer.  It's a system that only adds to the fear and stress that already comes with the disease.  

And I'm not just talking about women without insurance, who face the terrifying prospect, as you've heard, of having to pay the full cost of their treatment on their own. 

I am talking about people in this country who have insurance who have breast cancer -- folks who all too often find themselves also paying outrageous out-of-pocket costs.    

According to a new report released by the Department of Health and Human Services today, breast cancer patients with employer-sponsored insurance paid an average of more than $6,200 in out-of-pocket costs over the course of a year.  And some wound up paying as much as $10,000 or $20,000, and 5 percent with private insurance paid more than $30,000 a year for their treatment. 

This is with insurance.  These are people who are blessed. 

And then there are those annual lifetime caps that insurance companies set, where once you go over that cap -- as many women do because some forms of breast cancer are so expensive to treat -- then that cap makes it impossible to pay a penny more for that treatment.  

And one recent survey showed that 10 percent of all cancer patients report hitting a cap on their benefits, leaving them scrambling to find alternative insurance to figure out how to pay out of pocket for the rest of their lifetime. 

And then there's what happens when you've gone through all the treatment and you're finally in remission, which should be good news.  You're finally in remission and you're finally feeling like yourself again.  You feel whole and happy.  But then, as you've heard, you're stuck, as Joni said, with a target on your back for the rest of your life with a "preexisting condition," which means that insurance companies can deny you coverage or charge you higher rates for coverage -- sometimes much higher. 

That's exactly what happened to Vernal, to Joni, and to Venus.  These women were denied insurance, and now Joni and Venus are each paying very high premiums for their coverage.  And as you've heard, Venus's insurance won't even cover treatment if she has a reoccurrence. 

So I know that a lot of survivors like them are terrified.  They are living in fear of losing their jobs or changing jobs or even moving, because they worry they won't be able to find affordable insurance. 

And perhaps most heartbreaking of all is the fact that right now, today in America, there are people in this country who have breast cancer but don't even know it, because they can't afford a mammogram.  According to our new report, one in five women age 50 and above haven't gotten a mammogram in the past two years.  And while that's better than it was a few decades ago, it's nowhere near good enough.  

And this is not acceptable.  This is not acceptable in this country.  This is something that could happen to any of us. 

And this is a disease, as we know, that affects not just those diagnosed with it, and not just those who've survived it and those who've lost their lives to it, but it is a disease that also affects those who love and know them -- which these days seems like almost every single person in this country. 

That's why it is so critically important that we finally reform our health care system that is causing so much heartache for so many people affected by this disease.  Now is the time. 

Fortunately, that's exactly what the plans being considered by Congress right now would do.  

So just to be clear, under these plans, if you already have insurance that works for you, then you're all set.  You can keep your insurance and you can keep your doctors. 

The plans put in place some basic rules of the road to protect you from abuses and unfair practices by insurance companies.  That would mean no more denying coverage to people like women we heard from today because of so-called preexisting conditions like having survived cancer.  (Applause.)  Because there's a belief that if you've already fought cancer, you shouldn't have to also fight with insurance companies to get the coverage that you need at a price that you can afford.  (Applause.)  

These plans mean insurance companies will no longer be allowed to cap the amount of coverage that you can get, and will limit how much insurance companies can charge you for out-of-pocket expenses, because in this country, getting sick shouldn't mean going bankrupt.  (Applause.)    

And finally, these plans will require insurance companies to cover basic preventative care -- from routine checkups, to mammograms, to pap smears -- at no extra charge to you.  And though I want to emphasize that in the end, as we all know, it's our responsibility as women to also talk to our doctors about what screenings that we need and then make the appointments to get those screenings, even when it's inconvenient or maybe a little bit uncomfortable.  It's something that we owe not just to ourselves but to the people that love us.  

Because we know the difference that early detection makes.  We know that if breast cancer is detected early, it's far easier to cure and much less costly to treat.  So we can save money, we can save lives, and we do right by the people that we love. 

     So that's how health insurance reform will work.  That's how it will help people who have been diagnosed with breast cancer and those who've survived the disease.  But first, we have to get it passed.  First we have to get it passed.  (Applause.) 

     But that's the hard part.  We know that there are all sorts of myths and misconceptions out there, and we know there are folks who will do anything they can to stop reform because, for whatever reason, they want to keep things the way they are. 

From where we stand now, it might seem like an uphill battle.  But fortunately, folks like you know a little something about an uphill battle, right?  You know a thing or two about overcoming long odds and rallying people to an important cause.  

Now, let's remember that there was a time when those affected by breast cancer never could have imagined all these pink ribbons that would one day grace the White House, offices, storefronts, lapels.  I don't think they could have imagined some hulking NFL player decked out in pink cleats and pink gloves.  (Laughter and applause.)  I don't think they could have imagined a day when so many people would wear jeans to raise money for a cure.  I don't think they could have imagined how many people would lace up their shoes to take part in walks and runs and races all across America. 

And it is my hope that if we pass health insurance reform, then 20 or 30 years from now, just imagine, our daughters and our granddaughters won't be able to imagine a time when any woman in this country couldn't get a mammogram because she couldn't afford it.  (Applause.)  I hope that our children and grandchildren won't be able to imagine a time when anyone in this country went bankrupt just because they had the misfortune of getting sick.  And I hope that statistics like one in eight and one every 13 minutes will be incomprehensible to our kids -- incomprehensible -- because of all the strides that we've made and the work that we've done for this cure and for this reform.  

And in the end, that's really what health insurance reform is all about.  It's not about us.  It's about them.  It's about the future.  That is what we're fighting for.  That's what we have to remember.  That's what this fight is about. 

And that's why we're so grateful to all of you for the hard work and commitment and sacrifices that you've made.  And we look forward to working with all of you in the weeks and months ahead.  Thank you so much.  Thank you. 

END             

12:53 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Challenging Americans to Lead the Global Economy in Clean Energy

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Massachusetts

12:44 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very much.  Please, have a seat.  Thank you.  Thank you, MIT.  (Applause.)  I am -- I am hugely honored to be here.  It's always been a dream of mine to visit the most prestigious school in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  (Applause.)   Hold on a second -- certainly the most prestigious school in this part of Cambridge, Massachusetts.  (Laughter.)  And I'll probably be here for a while -- I understand a bunch of engineering students put my motorcade on top of Building 10.  (Laughter.)

This tells you something about MIT -- everybody hands out periodic tables.  (Laughter.)  What's up with that?  (Laughter.)

I want I want to thank all of you for the warm welcome and for the work all of you are doing to generate and test new ideas that hold so much promise for our economy and for our lives.  And in particular, I want to thank two outstanding MIT professors, Eric Lander, a person you just heard from, Ernie Moniz, for their service on my council of advisors on science and technology.  And they have been hugely helpful to us already on looking at, for example, how the federal government can most effectively respond to the threat of the H1N1 virus.  So I'm very grateful to them.

We've got some other special guests here I just want to acknowledge very briefly.  First of all, my great friend and a champion of science and technology here in the great Commonwealth of Massachusetts, my friend Deval Patrick is here.  (Applause.)  Our Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray is here.  (Applause.)  Attorney General Martha Coakley is here.  (Applause.)  Auditor of the Commonwealth, Joe DeNucci is here.  (Applause.)  The Mayor of the great City of Cambridge, Denise Simmons is in the house.  (Applause.)  The Mayor of Boston, Tom Menino, is not here, but he met me at the airport and he is doing great; he sends best wishes.

Somebody who really has been an all-star in Capitol Hill over the last 20 years, but certainly over the last year, on a whole range of issues -- everything from Afghanistan to clean energy -- a great friend, John Kerry.  Please give John Kerry a round of applause.  (Applause.)

And a wonderful member of Congress -- I believe this is your district, is that correct, Mike?  Mike Capuano.  Please give Mike a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

Now, Dr. Moniz is also the Director of MIT's Energy Initiative, called MITEI.  And he and President Hockfield just showed me some of the extraordinary energy research being conducted at this institute:  windows that generate electricity by directing light to solar cells; light-weight, high-power batteries that aren't built, but are grown -- that was neat stuff; engineering viruses to create -- to create batteries; more efficient lighting systems that rely on nanotechnology; innovative engineering that will make it possible for offshore wind power plants to deliver electricity even when the air is still.

And it's a reminder that all of you are heirs to a legacy of innovation -- not just here but across America -- that has improved our health and our wellbeing and helped us achieve unparalleled prosperity.  I was telling John and Deval on the ride over here, you just get excited being here and seeing these extraordinary young people and the extraordinary leadership of Professor Hockfield because it taps into something essential about America -- it's the legacy of daring men and women who put their talents and their efforts into the pursuit of discovery.  And it's the legacy of a nation that supported those intrepid few willing to take risks on an idea that might fail -- but might also change the world.

Even in the darkest of times this nation has seen, it has always sought a brighter horizon.  Think about it.  In the middle of the Civil War, President Lincoln designated a system of land grant colleges, including MIT, which helped open the doors of higher education to millions of people.  A year -- a full year before the end of World War II, President Roosevelt signed the GI Bill which helped unleash a wave of strong and broadly shared economic growth.  And after the Soviet launch of Sputnik, the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth, the United States went about winning the Space Race by investing in science and technology, leading not only to small steps on the moon but also to tremendous economic benefits here on Earth.

So the truth is, we have always been about innovation, we have always been about discovery.  That's in our DNA.  The truth is we also face more complex challenges than generations past.  A medical system that holds the promise of unlocking new cures is attached to a health care system that has the potential to bankrupt families and businesses and our government.  A global marketplace that links the trader on Wall Street to the homeowner on Main Street to the factory worker in China -- an economy in which we all share opportunity is also an economy in which we all share crisis.  We face threats to our security that seek -- there are threats to our security that are based on those who would seek to exploit the very interconnectedness and openness that's so essential to our prosperity.  The system of energy that powers our economy also undermines our security and endangers our planet.

Now, while the challenges today are different, we have to draw on the same spirit of innovation that's always been central to our success.  And that's especially true when it comes to energy.  There may be plenty of room for debate as to how we transition from fossil fuels to renewable fuels -- we all understand there's no silver bullet to do it.  There's going to be a lot of debate about how we move from an economy that's importing oil to one that's exporting clean energy technology; how we harness the innovative potential on display here at MIT to create millions of new jobs; and how we will lead the world to prevent the worst consequences of climate change.  There are going to be all sorts of debates, both in the laboratory and on Capitol Hill.  But there's no question that we must do all these things.

Countries on every corner of this Earth now recognize that energy supplies are growing scarcer, energy demands are growing larger, and rising energy use imperils the planet we will leave to future generations.  And that's why the world is now engaged in a peaceful competition to determine the technologies that will power the 21st century.  From China to India, from Japan to Germany, nations everywhere are racing to develop new ways to producing and use energy.  The nation that wins this competition will be the nation that leads the global economy.  I am convinced of that.  And I want America to be that nation.  It's that simple.  (Applause.)

That's why the Recovery Act that we passed back in January makes the largest investment in clean energy in history, not just to help end this recession, but to lay a new foundation for lasting prosperity.  The Recovery Act includes $80 billion to put tens of thousands of Americans to work developing new battery technologies for hybrid vehicles; modernizing the electric grid; making our homes and businesses more energy efficient; doubling our capacity to generate renewable electricity.  These are creating private-sector jobs weatherizing homes; manufacturing cars and trucks; upgrading to smart electric meters; installing solar panels; assembling wind turbines; building new facilities and factories and laboratories all across America.  And, by the way, helping to finance extraordinary research.

In fact, in just a few weeks, right here in Boston, workers will break ground on a new Wind Technology Testing Center, a project made possible through a $25 million Recovery Act investment as well as through the support of Massachusetts and its partners.  And I want everybody to understand -- Governor Patrick's leadership and vision made this happen.  He was bragging about Massachusetts on the way over here -- I told him, you don't have to be a booster, I already love the state.  (Applause.)  But he helped make this happen.

Hundreds of people will be put to work building this new testing facility, but the benefits will extend far beyond these jobs.  For the first time, researchers in the United States will be able to test the world's newest and largest wind turbine blades -- blades roughly the length of a football field -- and that in turn will make it possible for American businesses to develop more efficient and effective turbines, and to lead a market estimated at more than $2 trillion over the next two decades.

This grant follows other Recovery Act investments right here in Massachusetts that will help create clean energy jobs in this commonwealth and across the country.  And this only builds on the work of your governor, who has endeavored to make Massachusetts a clean energy leader -- from increasing the supply of renewable electricity, to quadrupling solar capacity, to tripling the commonwealth's investment in energy efficiency, all of which helps to draw new jobs and new industries.  (Applause.)  That's worth applause.

Now, even as we're investing in technologies that exist today, we're also investing in the science that will produce the technologies of tomorrow.  The Recovery Act provides the largest single boost in scientific research in history.  Let me repeat that:  The Recovery Act, the stimulus bill represents the largest single boost in scientific research in history.  (Applause.)  An increase -- that's an increase in funding that's already making a difference right here on this campus.  And my budget also makes the research and experimentation tax credit permanent -- a tax credit that spurs innovation and jobs, adding $2 to the economy for every dollar that it costs.

And all of this must culminate in the passage of comprehensive legislation that will finally make renewable energy the profitable kind of energy in America.  John Kerry is working on this legislation right now, and he's doing a terrific job reaching out across the other side of the aisle because this should not be a partisan issue.  Everybody in America should have a stake -- (applause) -- everybody in America should have a stake in legislation that can transform our energy system into one that's far more efficient, far cleaner, and provide energy independence for America -- making the best use of resources we have in abundance, everything from figuring out how to use the fossil fuels that inevitably we are going to be using for several decades, things like coal and oil and natural gas; figuring out how we use those as cleanly and efficiently as possible; creating safe nuclear power; sustainable -- sustainably grown biofuels; and then the energy that we can harness from wind and the waves and the sun.  It is a transformation that will be made as swiftly and as carefully as possible, to ensure that we are doing what it takes to grow this economy in the short, medium, and long term.  And I do believe that a consensus is growing to achieve exactly that.

The Pentagon has declared our dependence on fossil fuels a security threat.  Veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are traveling the country as part of Operation Free, campaigning to end our dependence on oil -- (applause) -- we have a few of these folks here today, right there.  (Applause.)  The young people of this country -- that I've met all across America -- they understand that this is the challenge of their generation.

Leaders in the business community are standing with leaders in the environmental community to protect the economy and the planet we leave for our children.  The House of Representatives has already passed historic legislation, due in large part to the efforts of Massachusetts' own Ed Markey, he deserves a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  We're now seeing prominent Republicans like Senator Lindsey Graham joining forces with long-time leaders John Kerry on this issue, to swiftly pass a bill through the Senate as well.  In fact, the Energy Committee, thanks to the work of its Chair, Senator Jeff Bingaman, has already passed key provisions of comprehensive legislation.

So we are seeing a convergence.  The naysayers, the folks who would pretend that this is not an issue, they are being marginalized.  But I think it's important to understand that the closer we get, the harder the opposition will fight and the more we'll hear from those whose interest or ideology run counter to the much needed action that we're engaged in.  There are those who will suggest that moving toward clean energy will destroy our economy -- when it's the system we currently have that endangers our prosperity and prevents us from creating millions of new jobs.  There are going to be those who cynically claim -- make cynical claims that contradict the overwhelming scientific evidence when it comes to climate change, claims whose only purpose is to defeat or delay the change that we know is necessary.

So we're going to have to work on those folks.  But understand there's also another myth that we have to dispel, and this one is far more dangerous because we're all somewhat complicit in it.  It's far more dangerous than any attack made by those who wish to stand in the way progress -- and that's the idea that there is nothing or little that we can do.  It's pessimism.  It's the pessimistic notion that our politics are too broken and our people too unwilling to make hard choices for us to actually deal with this energy issue that we're facing. And implicit in this argument is the sense that somehow we've lost something important -- that fighting American spirit, that willingness to tackle hard challenges, that determination to see those challenges to the end, that we can solve problems, that we can act collectively, that somehow that is something of the past.

I reject that argument.  I reject it because of what I've seen here at MIT.  Because of what I have seen across America.  Because of what we know we are capable of achieving when called upon to achieve it.  This is the nation that harnessed electricity and the energy contained in the atom, that developed the steamboat and the modern solar cell.  This is the nation that pushed westward and looked skyward.  We have always sought out new frontiers and this generation is no different.

Today's frontiers can't be found on a map.  They're being explored in our classrooms and our laboratories, in our start-ups and our factories.  And today's pioneers are not traveling to some far flung place.  These pioneers are all around us -- the entrepreneurs and the inventors, the researchers, the engineers -- helping to lead us into the future, just as they have in the past.  This is the nation that has led the world for two centuries in the pursuit of discovery.  This is the nation that will lead the clean energy economy of tomorrow, so long as all of us remember what we have achieved in the past and we use that to inspire us to achieve even more in the future.

I am confident that's what's happening right here at this extraordinary institution.  And if you will join us in what is sure to be a difficult fight in the months and years ahead, I am confident that all of America is going to be pulling in one direction to make sure that we are the energy leader that we need to be.

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

END                

1:03 P.M EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Background on the President Events at MIT Today

TOUR AT MIT
BUSH BUILDING
CAMBRIDGE, MA
12:00 PM EDT

The President will tour a research laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology an institution that has been developing cutting edge clean energy technology. Dr. Susan Hockfield, MIT President, and Dr. Ernie Moniz, Director of the MIT Energy Initiative, will lead the President on the tour of the laboratories, where he will visit stations displaying solar, battery, and wind technology, and a LED light experiment.

Below is a brief summary of what the President will see on the tour:

Solar Station: Professor Marc Baldo
Professor Baldo will demonstrate his work on luminescent solar concentrators which collects sunlight for solar cells. These concentrators promise to reduce the cost of solar electricity because they use fewer solar cells for the same energy output. They can be mounted on rooftops and other space- and weight-sensitive locations that cannot support conventional solar concentrators.

Professor Baldo is a principal investigator in MIT’s Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE). Since his arrival at MIT in, 2002, he has worked on fundamental improvements to the efficiency of organic light-emitting devices, and luminescent solar concentrators — a promising technology that could reduce the cost of solar electricity.

Wind Station: Professor Alex Slocum
Professor Slocum will demonstrate an Offshore Renewable Energy Systems (ORES) for which excess power from a wind turbine pumps water out of a storage volume anchored to the seabed. ORES operates by having water flow past a turbine into the storage volume, creating an inverse lake on the bottom of the ocean. This storage system has two purposes: it enables offshore power generation when the wind is not blowing and power is needed; and can also be used for mooring a floating wind turbine. Storage is a key enabling technology for intermittent renewables such as wind.

Professor Alex Slocum is the Pappalardo Professor of Mechanical Engineering, a MacVicar Faculty Teaching Fellow, and a Fellow of the ASME. Alex is a self-described “gizmologist” who designs machines ranging from medical instruments to manufacturing equipment to big renewable energy machines.

Battery Station: Professors Angela Belcher and Paula Hammond
Professors Hammond and Belcher will demonstrate a high-power battery that can be grown and assembled at room temperature using biological processes and no toxic materials for synthesis — and one that adds no harmful materials to the environment. These batteries have the same power performance as the very best state-of-the-art batteries. When scaled, these materials — and, more importantly, the next-generation of materials — could be used for computers or plug-in hybrid vehicles. These batteries are also being designed for integration into small, unmanned aerial vehicles, and as a way to lighten soldiers’ loads.

Professor Belcher is a materials chemist with expertise in the fields of biomaterials, bio-molecular materials, organic-inorganic interfaces and solid-state chemistry. Belcher received a BA in creative studies and a PhD in chemistry, both from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Hammond is a professor of chemical engineering, pursuing research in two major areas: the development of new biomaterials via nano- to microscale fabrication and self-assembled materials systems for electrochemical energy devices, including fuel cells, batteries and photovoltaics. Hammond holds an SB and PhD in chemical engineering from MIT, and an MS from Georgia Tech.

LED Light Station: Professor Vladimir Bulovic
Professor Bulovic will demonstrate quantum dot lighting which is a replacement for existing light bulbs or fluorescent lights that combines warm, rich color with the high efficiency of LED technology. The remarkably high white-light efficiency of this device is combined with a life span of more than 20 years, which could change the paradigm of lighting technology. These lights can be fabricated in a simple molding process, enabling manufacturability and large-scale deployment. Artificial lighting consumes 8 percent of all U.S. energy and 22 percent of U.S. electricity. The efficiency of present light sources (which are primarily incandescent, fluorescent, and high-intensity lamps) can be doubled or even tripled with the LED white light sources that Bulovic and colleagues are developing.

Professor Bulovic holds a BSE, MA, and PhD from Princeton University and studies the physical properties of organic and organic/inorganic nanocrystal composite thin films and structures, and the development of novel optoelectronic organic and hybrid nano-scale devices.


REMARKS AT MIT
KRESGE AUDITORIUM
CAMBRIDGE, MA
12:30 PM EDT

After the tour the President will deliver remarks at MIT challenging Americans to lead the global economy in clean energy and to highlight Recovery Act investments that are creating jobs and making advancements in wind energy. Dr. Hockfield and Dr. Moniz will give remarks prior to the President’s speech.

The audience of approximately 750 will be composed of MIT faculty and staff, business and community leaders, and entrepreneurs. There will also be local political leaders and Members of Congress in attendance.

Expected attendees include the following elected officials:

US Senator John Kerry, D-MA
US Representative Michael Capuano, D-MA
MA Governor Deval Patrick
MA Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray
MA Attorney General Martha Coakley
MA Auditor of the Commonwealth Joe DeNucci
Mayor of Cambridge Denise Simmons
Mayor of Somerville Joe Curtatone
MA Senate Majority Leader Fred Berry
MA Senate President Pro Tem Stanley Rosenberg
Superintendent of Cambridge Public Schools Jeff Young

 
Susan Hockfield, Ph.D. - President, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Susan Hockfield has served as the 16th President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) since December 2004.  A noted neuroscientist focused on the development of the brain, Dr. Hockfield is the first life scientist to lead MIT and holds a faculty appointment as Professor of Neuroscience in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences. Before assuming the presidency of MIT, she was Provost at Yale University, where she had taught since 1985 and had also served as Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Under Dr. Hockfield’s leadership, MIT has built on its traditional strengths in science, engineering, architecture, management and economics to advance the frontiers of energy research and to pioneer crucial advances at the burgeoning intersection of the life sciences, the physical sciences and engineering.

Ernest J. Moniz - Director, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Energy Initiative
Ernest J. Moniz is the Cecil and Ida Green Professor of Physics and Engineering Systems, Director of the Energy Initiative, and Director of the Laboratory for Energy and the Environment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he has served on the faculty since 1973. Dr. Moniz served as Under Secretary of the Department of Energy from 1997 until January 2001 and, from 1995 to 1997, as Associate Director for Science in the Office of Science and Technology Policy in the Executive Office of the President. At MIT, Dr. Moniz served as Head of the Department of Physics and as Director of the Bates Linear Accelerator Center. His principal research contributions have been in theoretical nuclear physics and in energy technology and policy studies. He serves on President Obama’s Council of Advisors for Science and Technology (PCAST).

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by Vice President Biden in a Joint Statement with Prime Minister Fischer

Prime Minister's Office, Prague, Czech Republic

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN: It's an honor to be with you, and an honor to be in this magnificent city of Prague. It's been a while since I've been here, and I'm delighted to be back, particularly on what is essentially a historic anniversary. It's been five years since the Czech Republic joined the European Union, 10 years since its association with NATO, and 20 years since the Velvet Revolution, which literally -- literally inspired the world.

As Prime Minister Fischer indicated -- and as we were walking down, I think he agrees we had a very good -- we had a very good meeting, and a very good discussion. And while we paid tribute to the past, we spent the bulk of our time talking about the present, and about the future.

One of the high points of my career as a United States Senator, where I served for over 36 years, was being the leader in the Senate on the expansion of NATO to include Central Europe, particularly the Czech Republic. I told the Prime Minister that the Czech Republic has validated every argument I was making back then. You've made me look very, very good in retrospect, Mr. Prime Minister, your country has. There were skeptics then. I know of none now. We see that every day in our relationships. We see that every day in Afghanistan, where our troops are serving side by side, where you are running a provincial reconstruction team in the Logar province, where you are training Afghani police, and where you will soon send back a special operations unit.

And as a parent of one who has served in Iraq and overseas for a year, let me say on behalf of the President of the United States, and me, personally -- to the parents, the husbands, the wives, the children of those deployed Czech forces -- we appreciate the sacrifice that you are making -- not just the troops, but the families. A famous Englishman once said, they who serve -- "also serve who stand and wait." So our appreciation goes out to the parents, the husbands, the wives, and the children of those deployed forces. We want you to know how grateful we are for the service and sacrifice of your troops -- your children, your husbands, your fathers -- and the burdens that that deployment places upon them.

I'm also pleased to return to the site where President Obama made his first trip to Europe, where he demonstrated again America's commitment to the transatlantic relationship and alliance and to a strong Europe, by attending the special summit with a -- with 27 E.U. leaders, and where he laid out America's vision for the world without nuclear weapons. The Prime Minister and I talked about NATO’s commitment to produce a new strategic concept, which will adapt our alliance to the threats of the 21st century, to the 21st century.

Ladies and gentlemen, I urged the Prime Minister to make sure that the final product has a distinctly Czech accent. I know it will, by the way, because one of our great former Secretaries of State, Madeleine Albright, is chairing the experts' committee that will advise NATO on this critical strategy, and she always speaks from her heart with a Czech accent.

One of the new threats to our common security comes from the spread of ballistic missiles, a growing number of which now can reach Europe. The Czech Republic stepped up and did their part in the previous missile defense plan, and today we discussed the potential role the Czech Republic could play in a new architecture, a better architecture -- an architecture that has the capacity to actually protect Europe and is not just focused on the United States of America.

And I'm very appreciative of the Prime Minister's statement to me that the Czech Republic is ready to be a part of that new architecture, and discuss the terms of this -- that this participation will take. He affirmed to me that this is a very important project for Europe, and we appreciate that, and are looking forward to working with him and the government.

A high-level defense team will come to Prague in early November to discuss this as well as defense cooperation in a range of areas. The new missile defense program is designed to meet existing threats in Europe with proven technology that will cover more of Europe, including the Czech Republic, more effectively than the previous system could have done. It also strengthens NATO's defenses against future, more advanced missile threats.

We also discussed energy security, where the Czech Republic has been a leader in Europe. And we appreciate Prague's efforts to promote greater interconnectivity for the E.U.'s gas and electric networks, greater diversification of supply and routes, including the pipeline -- the Nabucco pipeline project -- and we discussed the venture, the effort for you to diversify in the nuclear area as well.

I told the Prime Minister how much we appreciate -- and I mean it sincerely -- the Czech Republic’s leadership, which goes to the heart of our future security and our prosperity.

As you celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution, Mr. Prime Minister, I think it's important for you to understand, because you were in the middle of it, all of you, and I don't think you can fully appreciate how much you inspired the world at the moment. And I hope you appreciate and understand that there are -- you are the model. You are the model as I travel through Eastern Europe -- as I travel to Ukraine and Georgia and other places, you are the model for democracy that they look to. And I am confident with your leadership you will help them on that journey as they make their journey toward a full democracy.

And I thank the Prime Minister for hosting our delegation, for the quality of our conversation, and for the great weather he arranged today. (Laughter.) I appreciate it very, very much.

So I genuinely appreciate it, Mr. Prime Minister, and I look forward to continue to work with you.

Thank you.

END

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at signing of the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act

East Room

2:27 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Please, everybody have a seat.  Good afternoon.  Before we begin, I'd actually like to say a few words about something that is of interest to the broader public.  Obviously how we treat our veterans is hugely important, but I just want to make a quick comment about the decision made public today by Ken Feinberg on executive compensation.

I've always believed that our system of free enterprise works best when it rewards hard work.  This is America.  We don't disparage wealth; we don't begrudge anybody for doing well.  We believe in success.  But it does offend our values when executives of big financial firms -- firms that are struggling -- pay themselves huge bonuses, even as they continue to rely on taxpayer assistance to stay afloat.

And that's why last summer, we gave Ken Feinberg and his team the task of making an independent judgment on the executive pay packages for firms that received extraordinary assistance from the federal government.  He was faced with the difficult task of striking the proper balance between standing up for taxpayers and returning a measure of stability to our financial system.  Under these competing interests, I believe he's taken an important step forward today in curbing the influence of executive compensation on Wall Street while still allowing these companies to succeed and prosper.

But more work needs to be done, which is why I urge the Senate to pass legislation that will give company shareholders a voice on the pay packages awarded to their executives.  And I also urge Congress to continue moving forward on financial reform that will help prevent the crisis we saw last fall from happening again.

Now, in just a few days -- a few weeks -- we will be observing Veterans Day.  We'll pause again to pay tribute to all those who have worn America's uniform.  We reflect on their sacrifices and those of their families -- citizens who've done their duty and who have fulfilled their responsibilities to their nation.  As a nation, we'll pledge to fulfill our responsibilities to our veterans, because our commitment to our veterans is a sacred trust, and upholding that trust is a moral obligation.

On that day, on Veterans Day, after all the parades and all the solemn ceremonies, a lot of veterans may ask:  Does America really mean it?  Will America keep its promise, not simply with words, but with deeds?

Since taking office, my administration has worked hard with many of you to make sure that America fulfills our obligations to our veterans and their families.  With Secretary Ric Shinseki in the lead, we're building a 21st century VA:  We're harnessing technologies to cut the red tape and backlogs.  We're investing in mobile clinics to reach rural areas.  We're moving towards a single lifetime electronic health record for everyone in uniform. We're making it a top priority to end homelessness among our veterans.

We dramatically increased funding for veterans health care:  more care for women's veterans, for our wounded warriors from Iraq and Afghanistan suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, traumatic brain injuries.  For 500,000 "Priority 8" veterans, we're restoring VA health care coverage.

All told, we have made the biggest commitment to veterans -- the largest percentage increase in the VA budget -- in more than 30 years.  (Applause.)  And this includes funding the post-9/11 GI Bill -- making sure it works as intended so our newest veterans and their families have the chance to pursue their education and live out their dreams.

So we're keeping our promises.  We're making real progress for our vets -- like those with us today, including Maryland Lieutenant Governor Anthony Brown, the highest-ranking elected official in the nation who has served a tour of duty in Iraq.  Thank you, Colonel Brown.  (Applause.)

But we're here today because a problem that's gone on for far too long -- the delays and uncertainty that often plague funding for veterans' health care.  Over the past two decades, the VA budget has been late almost every year, often by months.

At this very moment, the VA is operating without a budget, making it harder for VA medical centers and clinics to deliver the care our vets need.  The hardworking folks at the VA know this.  I was there at headquarters this spring.  Michelle was there -- if I'm not mistaken, Ric -- just this Tuesday.  It's frustrating for them and it's frustrating for our vets who pay the price when budgets are delayed:  the new doctors, nurses, and critical staff that aren't hired; the new medical equipment that isn't purchased; the construction of new facilities and clinics that isn't started; the new programs for medical care that are delayed.

This is inexcusable.  It's unacceptable.  It's time for it to stop.  And that's just what we'll do with this landmark legislation -- the Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act.

I want everybody to know today is a victory for all the veterans' organizations who are represented on this stage who fought for years for reform.  (Applause.)  They deserve a huge congratulations.  (Applause.)  Today is a tribute to those who led the fight in Congress:  Senator -- and World War II vet -- Danny Akaka, and Representative Bob Filner -- thank you for your leadership.  (Applause.)

All the leaders who made this possible, starting with Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who made this commitment to veterans organizations when she became Minority Leader.  (Applause.)  I was told some people didn't believe Nancy when she made that promise.  (Laughter.)  Nancy keeps her promises, and I want all our vets to remember that.

Senator Tim Johnson -- for his great work in the Senate.  (Applause.)  Somebody who has been fighting for veterans since he entered into Congress and is just tireless on this issue -- Chet Edwards.  Please give Chet a big round of applause.  (Applause.)
The other members of Congress who worked so hard:  Michael Michaud -- (applause) -- Phil Hare -- Phil is right here.  (Applause.)  Harry Brown -- Harry Brown did great work on this.  (Applause.)  And so many others.  This is a reminder of what's possible when we come together, Democrats and Republicans, to do right by our veterans.

And let me say that I take special pride in this legislation because as a senator I was a proud co-sponsor of this legislation.  I served on the Veterans Affairs Committee.  In the campaign last year, you all remember, I made a promise to pass it.  And today as President, I'm fulfilling that promise and I'm going to sign it into law.  (Applause.) 

With this legislation we're fundamentally reforming how we fund health care for our veterans.  With advance appropriations, veterans' medical care will be funded a year in advance.  For the VA, this means timely, sufficient and predictable funding from year to year.  For VA hospitals and clinics, it means more time to budget, to recruit high-quality professionals, and to invest in new health care equipment.

And most of all, for our veterans it will mean better access to the doctors and nurses and the medical care that they need:  specialized care for our wounded warriors with post-traumatic stress and traumatic brain injuries, and the staffing to welcome back to the VA those half-million "Priority 8" vets.

In short, this is common-sense reform.  It promotes accountability at the VA.  It ensures oversight by Congress.  It is fiscally responsible by not adding a dime to the deficit.  And it ensures that veterans' health care will no longer be held hostage to the annual budget battles in Washington.  (Applause.)

Of course, as we all know, keeping faith with our veterans is work that is never truly done.  Today's veterans expect and deserve the highest-quality care -- as will tomorrow's veterans, especially our men and women serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.  And should they ask this Veterans Day, will America back up its words with deeds -- because of everyone in this room, because of this reform legislation, the answer will be, yes, the United States of America will keep our promise to our veterans.  We will fulfill our responsibilities.  We will uphold our obligations to all who serve.  And that's why I am thrilled to be signing this legislation into law right now. 

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

(The bill is signed.)  (Applause.)

END 

2:39 P.M. EDT 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Opening Remarks by Vice President Biden at a Meeting with President of the Senate Geoana

Ambassador's Residence, Bucharest, Romania

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN: Well, thank you. I'm glad to see you again, happy to be with you. The main message that President Obama wanted me to communicate as I tour Central European nations is that Romania is a good friend. We are committed to the strategic partnership, or relationship. We think Article 5 means something. We believe very strongly in building the relationships, and quite frankly, looking to Romania to not only be a bridge to the Caucuses, but to be an example to other Eastern European nations as to how to move towards free-market economies and democracy. And you set a powerful example.

And I'd be remiss if I didn't say to the Romanian people how proud we are to stand with Romanian forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. Your soldiers are genuine warriors, they are warriors. There are no caveats. There are no limitations on them. They are brave, and they're the troops that American forces want to (inaudible) with. You should be incredibly proud of your troops, and we are incredibly proud and thankful for their service alongside us in the ISAF forces, particularly in Afghanistan.

So thank you to the mothers and fathers, and husbands and wives, and children of those 1,100 warriors who are taking risk of their time and their life on behalf of freedom. And we want to thank you. We want to thank those families.

END 
 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks By Vice President Biden On America Central Europe And A Partnership for the 21st Century

Central University Library, Bucharest, Romania

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Thank you, Mr. Ambassador.  Director, Mr. Mayor, former Presidents who I've had the honor to meet in the past, it's good to be back in Romania.  And, Mr. Mayor, as we say in America, thank you for the passport to come into your city.  I appreciate it very much.

What a magnificent forum, what a magnificent forum.  And I say to all the students, thank you.  I'm honored that you are here.

Ladies and gentlemen, it's an honor to be back in Romania.  This is not my first trip, nor God-willing, will it be my last.  And it's great to be back in Central Europe to help mark an extraordinary season of change.  Twenty years ago, the world watched in awe and admiration as the men and women throughout this region broke the shackles of oppression and emerged a free people.

It's literally hard to imagine that this beautiful library was the scene of such heavy fighting in 1989.  I was reviewing pictures of what it looked like with tanks stationed outside.  Ladies and gentlemen, when the firing stopped and the smoke cleared, the façade of this building was scarred by shells and bullets.  Five hundred thousand books were burned, part of your history and your legacy.  And just blocks away, in University Square, some of freedom’s young defenders were struck down.  But their courage and conviction prevailed, and I hope and know set an example to all of you who followed.

When the Iron Curtain was lifted, the wall fell in Berlin, in their places grew democracy, a democracy that you've deserved for a long time.  Across Europe, a new sense of possibility took hold, galvanizing the region, uplifting a continent, and literally inspiring the world.  The story of freedom –- your story -- is one of the greatest achievements in modern history.  And it's important that we celebrate that remarkable -- that remarkable moment.  It's also important that we remember how far Central Europe has come in the last 20 years.

Early in my career as a United States Senator, a young senator then, I brought my two now grown sons, but then very young sons, to Central Europe as they reached their teenage years.  I took them immediately to Dachau, so they would begin to know what men and women are capable of at their worst, but also understand what men and women were capable of at their best.

I took them to the Berlin Wall.  I had them walk through Checkpoint Charlie, so that the rest of their lives, they'd remember, they'd understand that the freedom we sometimes take for granted was not a birthright for tens of millions of people on this continent.

And today, I come back to Central Europe and Romania, not only with an official delegation from the United States government, but with my 11-year-old granddaughter, Finnegan Biden.  Finnegan, stand up.  I want these people to see you.  (Applause.)  And my daughter, Kathleen Biden.  Would you stand up, Kathleen?  I'm going to embarrass you, I know.  (Applause.)    

I brought them along, because I want them to understand, particularly my granddaughter -- as my son learned -- I want them to see and understand first-hand the story of this region and of this continent.  My granddaughter is visiting museums and monuments that chronicle the turmoil of the 20th century in Poland, here and in the Czech Republic.

And she has seen with her own young eyes, she has seen in the people she meets and in the vibrancy of your cities and your streets the incredible, incredible possibilities of this 21st century.  She is a witness to a powerful fact: that the true validation of 1989, the real story of your country and this region lies less in what you tore down, and more in what you have built. 

Those of us who know about the bloodshed and the freedom fighters in Hungary in 1956; those who felt the chilling end to the warm Prague spring of 1968 in Wenceslas Square; those who shut down the shipyards in Gdansk in 1980; those here in Romania who endured the most ruthless totalitarian dictatorship in the latter half of the 21st [sic] century in Europe.  Each and every one was struggling not only against something, but for something -- for government, a government that responds to the needs of its people; for a more tolerant society, built on respect and dignity; for the freedom to think, to believe, and to pursue your dreams.

You have begun to realize those dreams that only the bold imagined 20 years ago -- a Europe whole and free, anchored in a European-Atlantic alliance institutions of NATO, and the European Union.

We Americans are incredibly proud to have been your partners in the peaceful reunification of Europe.  As President Obama said on the eve of NATO Summit last spring, and I quote him, "This shared history gives us hope –- but it must not give us rest.  This generation cannot stand still." 

We cannot stand still because we now face another season of change, another season of challenge -- an economic crisis that has hurt too many people and eroded their confidence, a war in Afghanistan now in its eighth year, and new forces shaping this young century.  Those new forces, among other things, include the spread of weapons of mass destruction and dangerous disease; the expanding chasm between the rich and poor; ethnic animosities and failed states; a rapidly warming planet and an uncertain supply of energy, food, water; the challenge to freedom and security posed by radical fundamentalism.

I come here today with a straightforward, simple message:  The United States and Europe, a Europe whole and united, will meet these challenges together, for that's the only way they can be met.  No amount of idle talk, no distortion of the facts, can chip away at this unassailable truth:  The United States of America remains committed to our alliance with Europe, which we Americans believe, and continue to believe, is the cornerstone of American foreign policy, as it has been, for the last 60 years.  We are all the more committed, because our European partners have grown broader and stronger.  We, the United States, cannot succeed without you.  And if you will forgive my presumption, I do not believe you can fully succeed without us.

I know that some in Central Europe look at the problems and responsibilities the United States has assumed around the world, and conclude that we have no longer focused -- we no longer are focused on this region of the world.  In fact, it's precisely because of our global responsibilities and your growing and capacity and willingness to meet them with us that we value our partnership with Central Europe and Europe now more than we ever had.  It's quite to the contrary. 

Together, we have responsibilities to shoulder, and we have promises to keep.  Those responsibilities are larger now, and the promises more significant.  We see Central Europeans rising to this moment, heeding the call to leadership of major regional and international institutions.  Twenty years ago, imagine the Presidency of the European Parliament, head of UNESCO, Chair of the Council in Europe, Justices on the European Court of Justice, Commissioners in the European Commission.  The time for Central Europe has come.  You have shown yourselves ready for our common challenges, willing to tackle them, and able to overcome them.  That's why in America, we no longer think in terms of what we can do for Central Europe, but rather in terms of what we can do with Central Europe.

First and foremost, we are bound together by shared values, and a common commitment to protect those values, whenever and wherever they are challenged.  NATO is the bedrock of that commitment.  One of the high points of my career was leading the effort as a United States Senator to expand NATO to Central Europe.  As a matter of fact, Mr. President, you'll remember, I suggested that Romania should be in the first tranche.  I was the one who fought until the very end to see it included in the first tranche.  Thank you for making me look so prescient, you've done so well.

As President Obama has said, there are no old members, there are no new members of NATO; there are just members.  Under Article 5, an attack on one is an attack against all.  Our countries are bound together by America’s dedication to European security –- and by Europe’s dedication to America’s security, which you demonstrated quickly and powerfully in the wake of 9/11, the first time Article 5 was invoked, without us asking. 

Today, we carry heavy responsibilities -- we, all of us.  Our sons and daughters, like my son, are serving side by side in Afghanistan, in Iraq, and in the Balkans.  For this -– for the courage of our friends and for their losses –- the American people are grateful. 

Our alliance was built around consultation and collaboration for collective defense.  That's what it is about.  But faced with new threats, we need a new vision on how to meet them, and new capabilities to succeed.

That's why the decision to develop what we call a new strategic concept for NATO is so very important -– and that's why it is so vital that Central European voices make themselves heard in this process. 

One powerful example of how this can work is our partnership on -- our new approach to missile defense.
 
In the 20th century, NATO successfully prepared to defend Allied territory against what was then a very real Soviet challenge on what we all used to call the "central front" that divided Europe.  Today, a new major threat is growing that could reach all of our European allies well before it reaches the United States.  It comes from ballistic missiles -- short-range and intermediate-range ballistic missiles -- a technology that has spread to many new countries, and less stable countries, since the end of the Cold War.  This technology, coupled with the spread of nuclear know-how, poses a great threat to all of us. 

And we are determined -- we are determined to ensure that our NATO allies have the protection they need when they need it, because that's our solemn obligation under Article 5.  Taking into account how the threat has evolved, and how our technology has improved significantly, the United States believes there is a better way to defend against ballistic missiles than the approach we had been pursuing up until several years ago. 

This phased adaptive approach the United States is proposing, it has adapted its design to meet the growing threat to Europe, with a proven technology that will cover more of Europe –- including Central Europe –- more effectively than the previous approach. 

It meets the missile threats of today, and allows us to improve our defenses against that threat well into the future.  Its flexibility will enable us to adapt if the threat changes.  Its very existence will deter those who might think about coercing or attacking our forces, or our allies in Europe –- and it will defend them, our friends in Europe, against that threat should deterrence fail.  Simply put, our missile defense plan means greater security for Europe, and greater security for America.

Some -- maybe even understandably -- jump to the conclusion that this new missile defense approach was meant to appease Russia at the expense of Central Europe.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  That is absolutely wrong.  Missile defense is not about Russia.  Our approach is driven by security requirements of the United States and our NATO allies, period.  Period.   

What is true is that we are working to strengthen our relationship with Russia.  We believe that a more constructive relationship with Russia will benefit all.  But we're not naïve.  The truth is we share some common interests:  cutting the arsenals of nuclear weapons; securing vulnerable nuclear materials; stabilizing Afghanistan; preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

And we also continue to have disagreements with Russia on matters of basic principle.  In February, in Munich, Germany, in the very first major foreign policy speech of our administration, I enunciated our administration's outline for foreign policy, and I made clear our core principles.  The United States stands against the 19th century notion of "spheres of influence."  We will not tolerate it, nor will we be co-opted by it.  

We stand for the right of sovereign democracies to make their own decisions, to choose their own alliances, without the right of any country to veto those decisions.  We will never make a deal about anything with anyone above your heads or behind your backs.  The maxim we live by is clear:  nothing about you without you, nothing about you without you.  And I would argue, look at our track record, look at our track record. 

We’ve all learned over the past two years that as the globe around us shrinks, the bonds between us grow.  We are partners in today’s global economy.  That’s why we worked with our European partners -- the IMF and the World Bank -- to make sure international support for your economies was there when you needed it most.

That’s why it's heartening to see how many of you have successfully braved this worldwide recession and put your nations on the road to recovery.  And working together, we can all learn lessons from this crisis that will help us lay the foundation for a renewed century of growth and to rebuild prosperity. 

One lesson we need to work together toward is a more secure energy future.  We need sustainable energy security that includes diversification of supplies and transit routes, smart investments to deal with climate change.  The connections between European countries should exist not just through European countries.  Here, in this region -- by history, geography and necessity -- the countries of Central Europe are well placed to lead all of Europe.

Ladies and gentlemen, finally, let me say a word about leadership in an area that Central Europeans are uniquely qualified to provide -- the advocacy of democracy.  Americans, I believe, are rightly proud that people around the world occasionally look to our example, and look for our leadership.  But the truth of the matter is you are the model for millions -- not us, you -- Romania and other Central European countries.  The example you set 20 years ago inspired the world.  The leadership you exert over the next 20 years can change that world, encouraging, supporting, and consolidating young democracies in Central and Eastern Europe. 

In Eastern Europe, countries still struggle to fulfill the promise of a strong democracy, or a vibrant market economy.  Who to look to better than you?  Who to look to better than Central European countries that 20 years ago acted with such courage and resolve, and over the last 20 years, have made such sustainable progress?  You can help guide Moldova, Georgia, Ukraine along the path of lasting stability and prosperity.  It's your time to lead.  Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus can benefit from your personal experiences.  The E.U. Eastern Partnership Initiative is a good example of how you can energize the effort.  And we will partner with you in working to fulfill the promise of 1989.  But your leadership needs to be bold and your voices loud. 

There’s an old Romanian proverb:  "The cheapest article is advice.  The most valuable is a good example."  You are the "good example."  Twenty years ago, the people of Central Europe took the world history that they inherited, and willed it in a new direction toward greater freedom, justice, and fairness.  The odds were stacked against you.  We know from history that destroying old oppressive regimes is a great deal easier than building new flourishing democracies.  But you've delivered on the promise of your revolution.  You are now in the position to help others do the same.

Speaking to our Congress 20 winters ago, Vaclav Havel pointed to a special sense of empathy and imagination the people of Central Europe share.  Years of subjugation, he said, "have given us, however unintentionally, something positive:  a special capacity to look somewhat further than someone who has not undergone this bitter experience."  He went on to say: "A person who cannot move and live a normal life because he is pinned under a boulder has more time to think about hopes than someone who is not trapped in this way."  He was right.

Now you have the freedom to act on those hopes, and you are.  And I believe together we can turn that hope that we shared into a history we can be proud of.  This is the moment.  You students, if we are smart, brave, and lucky will be able to tell your grandchildren you were present at the creation of a new Europe, a new security, a new era of peace, because you were bold enough to seize that moment.  Be like those in '89.  Be bold.  Exercise your leadership.  You have a history, and you have a tradition.  You can make a gigantic difference.  And we'll stand with you.

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for listening.  And may God bless America and all of our allies.  And may God protect all of our troops who are in harm's way.  Thank you very, very much.  It's been an honor to be here.  (Applause.)

END                                       

 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks By Vice President Biden in a Joint Statement with President Basescu

Presidential Palace, Bucharest, Romania

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Well, Mr. President, thank you for your hospitality.  You know, diplomats and high-level politicians always walk out of meetings saying, we had a frank and useful discussion.
Well, we did have a frank and very useful discussion, and I appreciate your insight, and I appreciate your leadership.

I am very pleased to be here today with the President in this magnificent palace.  The United States and Romania have been, and continue to be, close allies and partners in NATO.  And the European-Atlantic alliance is something that I know the President, and President -- my President, President Obama, strongly, strongly support.  And we deeply, deeply value Romania's cooperation.

You know, I was telling the -- I was telling the President, he and his country have made me look very good.  I argued very, very strongly that Romania be admitted into NATO on the first round, as you'll remember.  I was -- and I tried to the very end, as chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee.  Now look how smart I was.

The fact of the matter is, all kidding aside, you've been a tremendous partner -- Romania has been.  And it's -- Romania -- as you start this election season, Mr. President, it reminds me of our own intense political campaigns last year.  And this is the type of -- this is the type of competition, healthy competition that's essential, essential to a vibrant democracy.  And I wish you success in your electoral process, and congratulate the remaining people on what is nothing less than a thriving democracy.

We have -- as we approach our 130th anniversary -- 130th anniversary of our diplomatic relationships to Romania, we want to continue to strengthen what I would argue is already a strong partnership, already a strong partnership.

Our relationship is anchored in interests that are of shared values, working together on global threats, human rights, commercial investment, and trade promotion.  It's the full panoply of things that countries who treat each other as equals deal with.  And our cooperation is both bilateral and multi-lateral, both through NATO and the E.U., but also through our bilateral negotiations and relationships.

We serve together in Afghanistan, in the western Balkans, and in Iraq. And I feel obliged to tell the Romanian people how grateful President Obama and I, and the American people, are for the Romanian troops that are in Afghanistan.  Let me say something as clearly as I can, your troops are warriors, they are warriors.  They have no caveats.  Our troops -- and I mean this sincerely, and my son just got back from Iraq after a year as a captain in the United States Army.  Our troops -- our troops are proud to serve next to Romanian troops, because you are incredibly competent.  Your kids -- I wish I could -- I wish you could all see, as I get to see, just how incredibly competent they are.  You should be proud.

And all the mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, husbands and wives of those 1,100 Romanians that are stationed in Afghanistan -- I mean this sincerely, as a parent -- thank you.  Thank you, thank you, thank you.  There's an old expression attributable to an Englishman. He said, "Those also serve who stand and wait.  Those also serve who stand and wait."  So we not only owe your troops that are deployed, Mr. President, we owe their families.  We genuinely owe them.  And I want to, on behalf of the President of the United States of America, say we appreciate it, and we're proud -- proud to stand next to you and serve with you.

In Afghanistan, your forces are performing skillfully, and in some of the toughest places, the toughest combat.  The United States is grateful for the circus -- service, as well as the sacrifice.  And I want to make one other point as it relates to the strategic side of the relationship.  I really -- with regard to defense, Mr. President, I really appreciate your embrace, and your government's embrace, of the new missile defense architecture that we are introducing into Europe.  There is -- the SM-3 will replace what originally was going to be intended to provide for security.  But it will -- in fact, it is a much better architecture.  It has the benefit of protecting Europe physically, as well as the United States.  And I must tell you I appreciate your almost instant embrace of this new architecture, as well as was embraced by our colleagues in Poland, and others.  As people look at this, they are understanding what you understood from the beginning, that this makes more sense.

We share a desire that -- as well, that Romania's neighbors, including Moldova, will continue along the path toward democratization and economic reform, and that they will be integrated into the Euro-Atlantic institutions when they are ready.  And that's why, as you pointed out, we are participating in helping to hopefully stabilize, economically, Moldova.

And, Mr. President, you and I also discussed energy security issues, the role of Romania and what -- the role you're playing in supporting and developing pipelines, as well as other transit methods to bring new sources of energy to Europe.  I can think of nothing that would be more consequential than that.  And we appreciate your leadership, and the leadership of your country.

And I also would point out that we have an ambassador here -- America, in my view, has sent their best.  But I have to, as we say -- in the United States Senate, there's an expression.  When you stand up on the floor of the Senate, if you're going to talk about something personally, Mr. President, we say, please excuse the point of personal privilege.  And full disclosure, our ambassador is my best personal friend.  We have raised each other's children.  We have -- our wives are close friends.  My grandchildren are -- consider the Gitenstein's to be almost relatives.  So I can assure you first-hand, this is a man I've worked with for 35 years -- 30 years, actually -- and he has my ear.  I know you've already figured that out, because I know you've gone to him and you know he immediately picks up the phone and calls me.  I hope you won't take advantage of my friendship with the ambassador too badly.

But he is new here, but his diplomatic skills and his erudition I think will serve us both well, Mr. President.  He has a direct line, as I said, to me, and he is very effective.  And I'm confident -- I'm confident that our ties with Romania will continue to thrive, will continue to thrive together with our advance of shared objectives of a free and peaceful Europe.

I'll conclude, Mr. President, by saying something that reminded me of my country, of America, the last thing you said, which is what we say, but we don't always hear.  You said, Mr. Vice President, I want to assure you no matter who wins this election, Romania will remain a strong and vital partner to the United States.  That's what democracies are built on.  That's what long-term alliances thrive on.

And so I wish you all the good luck, the people of Romania, and in the conduct of this election.  And I envy the fact that it's only going to last 30 days.  Ours go on considerably longer.  But at any rate, Mr. President, thank you for your hospitality, also for allowing us the opportunity to meet with your -- your staff, and your defense minister, and others.  We have a lot of work to do, but it's good to be back in Romania.  It is one of the most beautiful countries in the world, and I feel so much better than the first trip I took here decades ago about the progress you've made and the partnership reform.

So thank you very much.

PRESIDENT BASESCU:  Thank you very much, Mr. Vice President.  If you allow me to mention something extremely important for us, the Romanian army is the single army which have -- Romanian officers are the single foreign officers which have under command American troops -- is the situation in Afghanistan.  And this is a proof how far the relations between Romania and United States --

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  It is the first time that has ever happened, so obviously we trust your officer corps.  Thank you very, very much.

PRESIDENT BASESCU:  Thank you very much.  Thank you again.

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Thank you.

END