THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
____________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                               July 1, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
IN AN ONLINE TOWN HALL ON HEALTH CARE

Northern Virginia Community College
Annandale, Virginia

1:28 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good to see you guys.  Thank you, everybody. Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you, Northern Virginia.  Thank you very much.  What a wonderful welcome.  And I'm so grateful to all of you for taking the time to be here. 

A couple of quick acknowledgments.  First of all, I want to thank President Templin and Chancellor DuBois for their wonderful hospitality.  We are grateful to both of them. 
We've got some extraordinary elected officials -- a few that I want to mention.  First of all, you've got one of the finest governors in the country, who also is doing a great job as DNC chair.  Please give Tim Kaine a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Part of the reason Tim is such a good governor is because he took notes while being lieutenant governor to the former governor and now senator for the state of Virginia, an outstanding public servant, Mark Warner.  (Applause.)  And three outstanding members of Congress:  Bobby Scott, Jim Moran, and Gerry Connolly -- thank you so much, guys, for the great job you do every day.  (Applause.)
So I know there's all kinds of stuff Valerie was explaining. Don't worry, she's in charge, so she'll organize us.  I just want to give a few remarks at the outset, and then we'll save most of the time for questions.
First of all, it's wonderful to be here in Annandale, and I'm looking forward to answering questions about what is obviously one of the most important issues facing American families, American businesses, and the American government.  But before I begin, I just want to say a few words about where we are as a nation and where we need to go.
We're living through extraordinary times -- I don't need to tell you.  This generation of Americans -- our generation -- has been called to confront challenges of a magnitude that we have not seen in decades, perhaps unlike anything we've seen in recent history -- challenges that few generations of Americans are asked to face.  In addition to the immediate threats that we face -- we've got two wars going on and a very deep recession -- our economy has also been weakened by problems that have plagued us for decades:  the crushing cost of health care, the state of our schools, our continuing dependence on foreign oil. 
Now, I know there are some who say we can't tackle all of these problems; it's too much; Congress can't handle it; the President is juggling too many things; my administration is taking on too much too soon; we're moving too fast.
What I say is that America has waited long enough for action on these issues.  It's not too soon to fix our schools when we know that if our children are not prepared they are not going to compete in the 21st century.  It's not too soon to wean ourselves off of dirty sources of energy so that we can grab hold of a clean energy future.  We've been talking about clean energy since Richard Nixon.  And it's time for us to act.  And I congratulate, by the way, the House of Representatives for beginning action this past week on a historic clean energy bill. 
It's also not too soon to reform our health care system, which we've been talking about since Teddy Roosevelt was President.
We are at a defining moment for this nation.  If we act now, then we can rebuild our economy in a way that makes it strong, competitive, sustainable and prosperous once more.  We can lead this century the same way that we led the last century.  But if we don't act, if we let this moment pass, we could see this economy just sputter along for decades -- a slow, steady decline in which the chances for our children and our grandchildren are fewer than the opportunities that were given to us.  And that's contrary to the history of America.  One of our core ideas has always been that we leave the next generation better off than us.  And that's why we have to act right now. 
I know that people say the costs of fixing our problems are great -- and in some cases, they are.  The costs of inaction, of not doing anything, are even greater.  They're unacceptable.  And that's why this town hall and this debate that we're having around health care is so important.
     Let me just give a few statistics.  Many of you already know these.  In the last nine years, premiums have risen three times faster than wages for the average family.  I don't need to tell you this because you've seen it in your own lives.  Even if you've got health insurance -- and 46 million people don't -- if you've got health insurance, you have seen your costs double.  They've gone up three times faster than wages.  If we do nothing, then those costs are just going to keep on going higher and higher.
     In recent years, over one-third of small businesses have reduced benefits and many have dropped coverage altogether since the early '90s -- not because small business owners don't want to provide benefits to their workers, but they just simply can't afford it; they don't have the money.  If we don't act, that means that more people are going to lose coverage and more people are going to lose their jobs because those businesses are not going to be competitive.
     Unless we act, within a decade, one out of every $5 we earn will be spent on health care.  And for those who rightly worry about deficits, the amount our government spends on Medicare and Medicaid will eventually grow larger than what our government spends today on everything else combined -- everything else combined. 
     The Congressional Budget Office just did a study that showed that when you look at the rising costs of entitlement, 90 percent of it is Medicare and Medicaid -- it's not Social Security -- 90 percent of it comes from the federal share of health care costs. So if we want to control our deficits, the only way for us to do it is to control health care costs. 
Now, those are all abstractions, those are numbers.  But many of you know that this translates into pain and heartache in a very personal way for families all across America.  I know because during the two years that I campaigned for President every town hall meeting I had, people would raise horrible stories about their experiences in the medical system.  And now that I'm President, I'm hearing those same stories.  I get 10 letters a day -- out of the 40,000 or so that the White House receives, my staff selects 10 for me to read every single day.  And at least half of them relate to a story about somebody who has been denied coverage because of a preexisting condition, or somebody who finds out that what they thought was going to be a $500 bill ends up being a $25,000 bill.
I was at a town hall meeting in Green Bay, Wisconsin, met a young woman, 36 years old, has breast cancer that's metastasized. She's got two small children.  Her and her husband are both employed, both have health insurance, and yet she still has $50,000 worth of debt.  And all she's thinking about right now is, instead of thinking about how to get well, she's thinking, if I don't survive this, my main legacy to my children may be another $50,000 worth of debt.
Everybody here knows stories like that.  Some of you have experienced them personally.  So this is a problem that we can't wait to fix.  It's not something that we're going to keep on putting off indefinitely.  This is about who we are as a country. And that's why we are going to pass health care reform -- not 10 years from now, not five years from now; we are going to pass it this year.  (Applause.)  That is my commitment.  We're going to get it done.  (Applause.)
Now, we've already started to see some progress in Washington.  Those who said we couldn't do it, they're already being surprised, because as a consequence of us pushing, suddenly the drug companies and the insurance companies and the hospitals, all of them are starting to realize this train is leaving the station, we better get on board.  
So just a few weeks ago, the pharmaceutical industry agreed to $80 billion in spending reductions that we can use to close the so-called "doughnut hole."  Some of you know what the "doughnut hole" is, right, where senior citizens who are on the prescription drug plan under Medicaid, they get their drugs reimbursed up to a certain point, and then suddenly there's a gap until it reaches thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket costs.
And so we've struck a deal with the drug companies; they're willing to cut those costs for seniors in half.  Already we're seeing that when we put pressure to reform the system, then these industries are going to have to respond.  Last month, doctors and hospitals, labor and business, insurers and drug companies all came together and agreed to decrease the annual rate of health care growth by 1.5 percent -- that would translate into $2 trillion or more of savings over the next decade.  And that would mean lower costs for everybody, for ordinary families. 
     In the past two weeks, the committee in the Senate, led by Senator Kennedy and Senator Dodd, have made tremendous progress on a plan to hold down costs, improve patient care, and ensure that you won't lose your coverage even if you lose your job, or if you change your job, or you've got a preexisting medical condition.  
     But now we need to finish the job.  There's no doubt that we have to preserve what's best in the health care system, and that means allowing Americans who like their doctor and their health care plan to keep their plan.  And that's going to be a priority for us.  (Applause.)  But we also have to fix what's broken about the system, and that means permanently bringing down costs and giving more choice for everyone. 
     And to do this, we've got to do a couple of things.  We have to build on the investments that we've made in electronic medical records.  We already made those investments in the Recovery Act  -- because when everything is digitalized, all your records -- your privacy is protected, but all your records on a digital form -- that reduces medical errors.  It means that nurses don't have to read the scrawl of doctors when they are trying to figure out what treatments to apply.  That saves lives; that saves money; and it will still ensure privacy. 
     We need to invest in prevention and wellness that help Americans live longer, healthier lives.  We know this saves money.  If we can help somebody control obesity, they are less likely to get diabetes.  And if they are less likely to get diabetes that means that we are going to be saving a whole lot of money in hospital costs.
     The biggest thing we can do to hold down costs is to change the incentives of the health care system that automatically equates expensive care with good care.  Now, this is an important concept, so I want everybody to really focus on this.  We are -- we've been under the illusion that the more health care we get, the healthier we become.  And it turns out that every study shows that the question is, are you getting the right care, are you getting the best care, the high-quality care, rather than are you having a whole bunch of tests ordered that are unnecessary, getting a bunch of treatments that are unnecessary, staying in hospitals longer than may be necessary -- all of which drives up your costs, but doesn't make you better.
     We have to ask ourselves why there are places like Geisinger Health Care Systems in rural Pennsylvania, or Intermountain Health in Salt Lake City, that offer high-quality health care at costs that are well below average, in some cases 30 percent lower than in other communities.  If they can do it, there's no reason why all of America shouldn't do that.  We've got to identify the best practices across the country; we've got to learn from those successes, and then we've got to replicate those successes elsewhere. 
And we should change the warped incentives that reward doctors and hospitals based on how many tests or procedures they prescribe, even if those tests and procedures aren't shown to actually make people better, or if they result in medical mistakes.  Doctors across this country did not get into the profession just to be bean-counters or paper-pushers, but more and more time that doctors should be spending with patients are spent on administration and worrying how do they deal with how they're reimbursed.  We've got to create a simplified, more effective system where they are reimbursed for quality care, as opposed to having to distort their practices in ways that don't actually make their patients better. 
It's also time to provide Americans who can't afford health insurance with more affordable options.  I believe this is a moral imperative and it is an economic imperative.  (Applause.)  It's a moral imperative because in a country as wealthy as ours, if people are working and holding up their responsibilities, they shouldn't be bankrupted just because they get sick.  On the other hand, it's an economic imperative because every single one of us who do have health insurance, our families, on average, are paying an extra $1,000 in premiums for uncompensated care. 
Hospitals and doctors are adding those costs to your premiums -- insurance companies are adding those costs to your premiums, even if you don't know it.  And if we can get a system in which people are getting regular checkups, mammograms, all the things that we know prevent disease from occurring over the long term, or at least allow us to catch those diseases early, that's going to allow us to drive down costs for everybody.
So what we have been working on is the creation of something called the Health Insurance Exchange.  And this is going to be a marketplace which would allow you to one-stop-shop for health care plans and compare benefits and prices in simple, easy-to- understand language, and then choose the best plan for you.  None of these plans would be able to deny coverage on the basis of a preexisting condition.  All of them would include an affordable, basic benefit package.  If you couldn't afford these plans, then we could provide you a little bit of help so that you can afford these plans. 
I also strongly believe that one of the options in the exchange should be a public option, in order for us to create some competition for the private insurers to keep them honest.  If they are in fact giving good service and providing high-quality coverage, then that's where people will want to go.  But there should be a benchmark there of a public plan, non-for-profit plan, that keeps administrative costs low and is focused on providing good service.  And that way you can make the decision which deal is going to be better for you and your family.
Now, I know one of the biggest questions on everybody's mind is how do we pay for all this, how do we finance reform?  And I have made a commitment, because our deficit is a genuine problem, that whatever we do we have to pay for it.  This can't add to our deficits.  It's got to be deficit-neutral over the next 10 years. 
 
Here's the good news:  About two-thirds of the costs of the reforms that we are proposing will come from reallocating money that is already being spent in the health care system but isn’t being spent wisely.  So it doesn’t involve more spending; it just involves smarter spending.  A lot of the money that's being spent in the health care system right now adds nothing to the quality of patient care. 
And I'll just give you one example.  We spend right now about -- over the next 10 years, we will spend $177 billion -- $177 billion over the next decade -- in unwarranted subsidies to insurance companies under something called Medicaid Advantage -- Medicare Advantage.  Now, this does not make seniors healthier.  People who are signed up for this private insurance subsidized program don't get any better care than those who aren’t.  The subsidies don't go to the patients; they go to the insurance companies.  Now, think if we took that $177 billion and helped families so that they could have insurance, and that we could have preventive care. 
So about two-thirds of the cost of the reform we're proposing is just reallocating money that's already in the system you, the taxpayers, are already paying for.
Now, one-third of it we're going to have to pay for by increased revenues.  And what I've proposed is, is that if we capped the itemized deductions that very wealthy people do -- the top 2 percent use on their income tax -- so that they're getting the same tax breaks as everybody else, as opposed to getting higher tax breaks because they've got a bigger house, then we can pay for the rest of reform.
We've already identified $950 billion over 10 years -- a little less than $100 billion a year -- in order to pay for reform; two-thirds of it reallocating money, one-third of it with increased revenues.  That's a sensible investment for us to make in solving an intractable problem that has been dragging down family finances, businesses, and the federal government for far too long.
Now, keep in mind, by the way, what we've identified as paying for the system, that doesn’t even include the savings that we're going to get from prevention, or the savings that we're going to get from health IT -- because in using congressional jargon, which I'm never supposed to do because nobody understands it -- it's not scorable.  And what that means is, is that the Congressional Budget Office can't identify exactly how much you would save -- even though everybody believes that it will end up saving a lot of money, we can't put a hard number on it.
So we will get additional savings that will drive down costs.  In the meantime, the costs of reform will be paid for with hard dollars that we've identified.
So here's the bottom line.  Now we're going to -- I'm almost done here, but this is a big, complicated topic, so I hope you forgive me.  We're starting to make progress on Capitol Hill.  We're identifying ways not only to reform the system, to make it smarter and more efficient, more user-friendly, better for American families, but also ways to pay for it in a way that doesn’t bloat our deficit. 
But the hardest part is yet to come -- because everybody here knows that the easiest thing to do when you're looking at big policy questions like health care is just to be saying it can't be done.  And the naysayers are already starting to line up and finding every excuse and scare tactic in the book for why reform is not going to happen.  This is going on as we speak.  And what I say to these critics is, well, what's your alternative?  Is your alternative just to stand pat and keep on watching more and more families lose their health care, more and more families with higher out-of-pocket costs for less insurance; businesses who are not able to compete internationally; a Medicare and a Medicaid system that is run amok?  Is that your alternative?
What do you say to all those families who can't pay their medical bills?  What do we tell those businesses that are having to choose between closing their doors or eliminating benefits for their workers?  What do you say to every taxpayer whose dollars are propping up a system that doesn’t work and that's driving us into debt?
This isn't just about those Americans without health care.  It's about every American -- because if we do not act to bring down costs, everybody's health care will be in jeopardy.  If you lose your job, or if you've got a preexisting condition, you don't know that your family is going to be secure.  All of us are in this together. 
So when it comes to energy, when it comes to improving our schools, and when it comes to health care, I don't accept the status quo.  And you shouldn’t either.  And I don't think that the American people want to just stand pat.  They know that change isn’t easy.  They know there are going to be setbacks and false starts.  But they also know this -- that we're in one of those rare moments where everybody is ready to move into the future.  We just can't be scared.  We've got to stop clinging to a broken system that doesn’t work, and we've got to have the courage to reach out for a future that's going to be better for our children and our grandchildren.
I believe we can accomplish it this year.  But in order to make it happen, I'm going to need ordinary Americans to stand up and say, "Now is the time."  You are what are going to drive this process forward -- because if Congress thinks that the American people don't want to see change, frankly, the lobbyists and the special interests will end up winning the day.  But when the American people decide that something needs to happen, nothing can stop us.
So I hope you'll join me.  Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)
Thank you.  Now, all right.  Now, if I'm not mistaken, the way this is going to work -- Valerie, you are going to be in charge of directing -- you're traffic cop.
MS. JARRETT:  I'm going to be in charge.  Thank you very much, Mr. President.
So in my opening remarks, Mr. President, I mentioned that when you released your YouTube video over the weekend, we received literally hundreds of video questions from all across the country.  Your staff looked through all those questions and have selected a cross-section that represents a broad cross-section of the kinds of questions that came up.
I want to emphasize that the President has not seen the questions ahead of time.  (Laughter.)  Absolutely not. 
And so we're going to begin with a video question, Mr. President, if you look at the screen.
THE PRESIDENT:  All right.
     VIDEO Q   Hi, my name is Steve White.  I'm in Spring Valley, New York.  And my question for the President is:  Why are we considering a health care plan which maintains the private insurance companies with their high overhead costs, instead of a single-payer plan, which would eliminate the high overhead costs, saving the American taxpayer hundreds of billions of dollars, while covering everyone in our country?  Thank you.
     THE PRESIDENT:  Sure.  Well, it's a terrific question.  I'm not sure if everybody could hear it, but the gist of the question is, why have we not been looking at a single-payer plan as the way to go?
     As many of you know, in many countries, most industrialized advanced countries, they have some version of what's called a single-payer plan.  And what that means is essentially that the government is the insurer.  The government may not necessarily hire the doctors or the hospitals -- a lot of those may still be privately operated -- but the government is the insurer for everybody.  And Medicare is actually a single-payer plan that we have in place, but we only have it in place for our older Americans.
     Now, in a lot of those countries, a single-payer plan works pretty well and you eliminate, as Scott, I think it was, said, you eliminate private insurers, you don't have the administrative costs and the bureaucracy and so forth. 
     Here's the problem, is that the way our health care system evolved in the United States, it evolved based on employers providing health insurance to their employees through private insurers.  And so that's still the way that the vast majority of you get your insurance.  And for us to transition completely from an employer-based system of private insurance to a single-payer system could be hugely disruptive.  And my attitude has been that we should be able to find a way to create a uniquely American solution to this problem that controls costs but preserves the innovation that is introduced in part with a free market system.
     I think that we can regulate the insurance companies effectively; make sure that they're not playing games with people because of preexisting conditions; that they're not charging wildly different rates to people based on where they live or what their age is; that they're not dropping people for coverage unnecessarily; that we have a public option that's available to provide competition and choice to the American people, and to keep the insurers honest; and that we can provide a system in which we are, over the long term, driving down administrative costs, and making sure that people are getting the best possible care at a lower price.
     But I recognize that there are lot of people who are passionate -- they look at France or some of these other systems and they say, well, why can't we just do that?  Well, the answer is, is that this is one-sixth of our economy, and we're not suddenly just going to completely upend the system.  We want to build on what works about the system and fix what's broken about the system.  And that's what I think Congress is committed to doing, and I'm committed to working with them to make it happen. Okay?
     MS. JARRETT:  Now, how about a question from the audience.
     THE PRESIDENT:  All right.
     MS. JARRETT:  Please, show of hands.
     THE PRESIDENT:  What I always do here is I go girl, boy, girl, boy, so that I don't get into trouble here.  (Laughter.)   All right, this young lady right here -- since somebody was pointing at you, so I figured -- do we have a microphone for folks in the audience, so that everybody can hear the question?  Okay.  I think there's somebody coming from this direction.  You can just hand her the mic.
     Q    Good afternoon, Mr. President.  I'll try not to cry.  I'm trying to figure out what I can do currently.  My situation is I had renal cell carcinoma in '98 that was radiated, because my dad was dying of colon cancer at the time, and I was his health care server on his living will, so I could not be tied up having my kidney removed.  So they did radiation procedures to kill the tumor then.  And I had insurance and everything was taken out. 
     But basically because of the damage that the radiation did in things, I'm no longer able to work and I have no health insurance.  Now I have a new tumor.  I have no way to pay for it. Doctors will not see you without paying $100 or $150 to come into their office.  I can get checked into a hospital -- under their program, they will run tests and release me, but that costs a lot of money.
     So currently I basically -- Social Security will not give me disability because renal failure is no longer a qualifying factor under Social Security currently.  I cannot get Medicaid from the state of Virginia because you have to be considered disabled through Social Security to qualify for Medicaid in the state of Virginia because I have no dependent children at home -- it's just me.  I get food stamps, but that's it.  And I'm just trying to figure out how I'm going to make it in nine years until I'm qualified to get my regular Social Security -- now that I have a new tumor and I have nowhere to turn.
    
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, here, come on over here.  First of all, we're going to find out what -- we'll get your information and we'll see what we can do to help you.  I don't want you to feel all -- like you're alone.  (Applause.)
     You know, without knowing all the details I'm not going to give you an answer right now about exactly how we can help.  We're going to find out what we can do within existing law.  But -- what was your name again?
     Q    My name is Debbie. 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Debbie.  Debbie is a perfect example of somebody who we should, in a country this wealthy, be able to provide coverage for her health care problems.  And what we don't want is a situation where Debbie gets worse and worse because she's not getting treatment, and then ends up having to go to the emergency room.  As I said before, all of you will pay for it anyway; it's just you'll pay for it in terms of a hidden subsidy. And she's not getting the best care, and we're actually paying more than we would have if Debbie right now was getting treated on a regular basis by a physician who knew her history.
     So, Debbie, you are Exhibit A.  And we appreciate you sharing your story.  We are going to try to find ways to help you immediately.  But the long-term problem here is going to be how do we create a system in which Debbie is getting the preventive care that she needs and is able to get regular checkups, is able to get treatment in a way that is much more cost-efficient than the one that we've got right now.  And I'm going to make a commitment that we're going to get that done this year.
     All right?  (Applause.)
     Q    Sir, July 24th through the 26th, there's a thing in Wise County, Virginia, called RAM Ear and Medical, and that is -- Rural Area Medical is where anybody who needs medical treatment can get free treatment for those three days -- the 24th, 25th, and 26th  --
     THE PRESIDENT:  The 24th, 25th, and 26th --
     Q    -- of July.
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, we will help advertise that --
     Q    If you would like to showcase why there's a need.  I think they treated -- Governor Warner and Kaine can say how long -- but I think it's 7,000 people get treatment there every day of those days that it's free.
     THE PRESIDENT:  Which is a wonderful program.  But I think, as Senator Warner and Governor Kaine would agree, we can't have a system that's reliant on three days of free care and 362 days in which people don't have health care.  That doesn't make any sense. 
Debbie, thank you for sharing your story.  We appreciate you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)
     All right.
MS. JARRETT:  Thank you, Debbie. 
So many of the questions that are put to on the videos, Mr. President, are also very personal.  So now we're going to take another from a video.
     (Video is shown.)  SMALL CHILD:  My mommy and daddy have small businesses and we need health care.
     MOTHER:  I actually have to work for a company so that we can get coverage because my older daughter is an automatic decline and we're just too small of a business to be able to absorb the cost.  How can health care reform help us? 
     THE PRESIDENT:  As somebody with two daughters, I'm a sucker for anybody who uses their daughter in their video.  (Laughter.) So my staff probably knew that.  They figured, well, he's going to be a soft touch after that one.
Small business owners are those who are being, in some cases, hardest hit by the rising cost of health care.  And in some cases, they just can't afford to provide health insurance to their employees, and that's frustrating, but they're operating on too small a margin, or they don't have enough employees so they've got no leverage to negotiate with the insurance companies.  And so the offers that insurance companies give them for the cost of coverage per person end up being way higher than they would be for big companies that have more consumer power. 
In some cases, though, it's gotten so bad that small businesses, they can't even afford to provide health insurance for themselves, small business owners.  And a lot of small businesses, a huge percentage of small businesses are sole proprietorships.  Maybe it's a family business -- they've got one or two people working for them.  And so they're like consultants out there or self-employed individuals -- they just can't get a good deal.
This is an example of where this health care exchange could be so helpful, because by creating a health care exchange, part of what we want to do is to allow small businesses, as well as people who are self-employed, individuals whose companies don't provide coverage, to come to this exchange, take a look at a menu of plans that are available, join one of these plans -- you may qualify for a subsidy from the federal government -- and you then become part of a big pool that gives you some leverage over the drug companies and the insurance companies to drive down costs.   
And that's part of the way that health care reform can provide direct savings to American families right now, by giving them more leverage.
Look, I am very pleased that the drug companies decided to cough up $80 billion to help close this "doughnut hole."  I have to be honest with you, though:  Were it not for the prospect of serious health care reform, I don't think they would have given up that money.  That's just my guess.  (Applause.)  And so these same principles apply when it comes to setting up this health care exchange.  If we do it effectively, then not only will families be able to make some very clear choices, and small business owners make some clear choices, about here's the best plan available for us that fits our particular needs, but they're also going to be part of a broader group that can apply some leverage in the system.
And that's essentially what federal health care employees do.  Mark Warner has a plan that all members of Congress and federal employees have, and it's not Cadillac care, but it's good, solid, decent care with a range of options.  Part of the reason that it is a good program is because there's so many federal employees.  Well, we should provide that same kind of leverage for the small business owner who right now is too small on their own to be able to get the best possible deal on the insurance market, and that's what we want to provide in this health care reform package.  All right?  Good.
MS. JARRETT:  All right, I think we're ready to go back to the audience.
THE PRESIDENT:  All right, it's a guy's turn now, all right, so, ladies, keep your hands down.  (Laughter.)  All right, this young man right here.
Q    Thank you.  I've been hearing a lot --
THE PRESIDENT:  What's your name?
Q    Jason Rosenbaum.
THE PRESIDENT:  Hey, Jason.  What do you do, Jason?
Q    I work for a group called Health Care for America NOW.  (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT:  I think he knows something about health care.  This is like --
Q    I've been -- obviously I read the news a lot, and I've been hearing a lot about the price tag of health reform and how people are very concerned that it's going to cost a trillion dollars, and we're trying to keep it under a certain number.  I'm most concerned about making it affordable, folks like me, the American people.  So what do you -- and like you said, you're committed to making this deficit-neutral.  So I hope you could talk a little bit about affordability and what your plans are for that. 
THE PRESIDENT:  Good.  Well, look, the first thing that I think is very important for people to do is to understand the costs of doing nothing, because sometimes opponents of health care reform pretend as if we've got this great thing going here and the Obama administration wants to completely upend it just because I don't have enough to do.  (Laughter.)  And I keep on trying to explain to people, look, I've got a war in Afghanistan; we haven't gotten the troops out of Iraq yet; I've got North Korea and Iran; and H1N1 flu.  So if the health care system was really working well, I would be happy to leave it alone.
     So understand where we're at.  If we don't do anything, the costs are going to keep on rising.  I mean, some employers see their costs going up 8, 9, 10 percent a year.  As I said, families have seen their health care costs double over the last nine years.  So you just project out nine years from now -- your wages or incomes aren't going up that fast, which means that a bigger, bigger bite is being taken out of your paycheck, even if you've got health insurance.  More and more employers are saying in this very competitive atmosphere, we can't afford to do more.
     So what's happened if you've got health insurance?  Your employer has basically done what?  They've increased deductibles; they've increased premiums.  Your out-of-pocket costs have gone up by about 62 percent, and they're just going to keep on rising. And the cost of Medicare and Medicaid, because they track all these other costs, they're going to keep on skyrocketing.  So our deficit will be completely out of control.
     Don't let people fool you with this notion that somehow the reason for our deficit has to do with, for example, the Recovery Act.  The Recovery Act was designed to make sure that local school districts didn't lay off teachers and firefighters and police officers -- and it's done its job, and it's building the kind of infrastructure that we need to be competitive in the future.  But it is a tiny fraction of our long-term deficit projections.  Almost all of the long-term deficit projections come from increases in Medicare and Medicaid.
    
     So the reason I say all this is because the costs are going to be there if we don't do anything.  The deficit will grow if we don't do anything.  Our debt will grow if we don't do anything.  What I'm trying to do is figure out how do we bend the curve of costs so that we're getting more and more efficient care, higher-quality care, at less cost per person?  How do we eliminate the $1,000 per family that's coming out of your pocket in subsidized care, uncompensated care at hospitals that's going on right now?
     And if we can do that, then, A, we can cover more people with the savings; and, B, we have more leverage over the insurance companies and the drug companies so that they give a better deal.  That's what we're trying to do.
     Now, I do think that we can't add to the deficit; we should find ways to honestly pay for whatever reforms we're proposing.  And I already gave you an indication of how we would do it.  About two-thirds of it would come from reallocating money that's currently in the system -- taxpayers, you're already paying for it, so this isn't new money coming out of your pocket; this is money that's right now being spent by the federal government but not spent wisely in a way that makes you healthier.  That's two-thirds of it.
     One-third of it, because we've got to make some initial investments up front and a lot of the savings -- remember what I told you -- aren't scorable, we're going to have to raise some additional revenue to make sure that people are adequately covered and we're providing some help to families who may have health insurance but are really starting to struggle right now.
     And I think the best way for us to pay for it is, as I said, capping the itemized deductions that people making over $250,000 a year, people like myself -- used to be Valerie was making that, but now she's working for the federal government so -- (laughter) -- she wouldn't be affected by this -- capping those itemized deductions.  Then we can raise enough money to pay for a good, high-quality health care reform proposal that will provide health care security for everybody.
     And as I said before, many of you may be satisfied with your health care now.  What you've got to do is project, if current trends continue, are you still going to be happy with your health care five years from now?  Will you have health care five years from now? 
     A lot of people here, if you change jobs right now but you've got a preexisting condition -- and just about anything these days can be called a preexisting condition -- you may have trouble signing up for health care the next time around -- just because you changed a job, set aside the situation where you lose a job. 
     One of the things that we did in the Recovery Act was to help people with COBRA.  Everybody knows what COBRA is?  That's the program that allows you to get health insurance -- to continue your health insurance even when you lose your job.  The problem is premiums are so high that most people, when you lose your job, you can't afford it.  The last thing you can do is afford suddenly a $1,000 or $1,500 in premiums.  So what we did was we subsidized people being able to keep their health insurance longer, cutting those COBRA costs. 
I think that was a pretty smart thing to do.  That was the right thing to do.  But we can't just do that indefinitely.  We can't do patchwork, piecemeal fixes through a Recovery Act.  What we need is a permanent solution that ensures that when you lose your job or change jobs, you can still have health care; if you're self-employed, you've still got health care. 
     Every nation on Earth that is as wealthy as ours is able to do that.  And they don't do it perfectly -- that's why I say we've got to find a uniquely American solution -- but don't tell me that we can't get this done.  And for those who say, well, you know what, this is something that is very complicated so we shouldn't rush into it -- that's what happens in Congress all the time.  They have hearings, they write white papers, and then suddenly the lobbyists and the special interests start going at it, and the next thing you know, another 10 years has gone by and we still haven't done anything. 
That's not what's going to happen this time.  I am going to keep on pressing until we get it done this year.  All right.  (Applause.)
     MS. JARRETT:  All right, Mr. President.  So Macon just slipped me a note, and he said, right now on Facebook and on Twitter, a lot of people are talking about the proposal to tax health care benefits.  For example, Rob on Twitter said, "Does it really make sense, Mr. President, to tax me on my health care coverage?"
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, here's -- let me describe for you how this argument has evolved and where I've stood on it in the past and what's being debated in Congress. 
     Part of the reason that employers provide health care to most American is because they get a big tax exclusion.  They don't pay taxes on -- and you don't pay taxes on the health care benefits that you receive.  So it's a huge subsidy that's provided through the tax code for employers to provide you coverage. 
     Now, up until, let's say, a generation ago, this worked reasonably well.  It's starting to break down because even with the tax exclusion, the cost for employers, just out of pocket, paying the insurers, is getting more and more expensive.
     Some people have said that what we should do is just eliminate this tax exclusion so that the federal government isn't indirectly subsidizing employers providing care, and that we could take that money and then just give everybody a tax break individually and then they could go out and shop for their own health care.  This was essentially John McCain's proposal during the campaign.  I mean, I want to be fair to it.  The idea was, you eliminate the exclusion; the billions of dollars that come back into the Treasury are then given out to each person in the form of a $5,000 or a $7,000 tax credit, and then you go out and you buy your own insurance. 
And the thinking is that if you do it that way, then each of you are going to be more discriminating consumers, and you are going to go out and get the best possible deal, and you won't be overusing the health care system.  You won't be going to the doctor unnecessarily or taking drugs that you don't really need. And you will be the -- you will essentially engage in self-rationing.  That's really the concept behind this idea.
Now, in fairness, the other notion is, is that if you don't have your health care tied to employers, then you're not going to be as worried about losing your health insurance if you change your job because the money follows you as opposed to being with the employer.  So that's the concept.
Now, I opposed this during the campaign, and I opposed it for a couple of reasons:  Number one, if you completely eliminated the exclusion, there is no doubt that what would happen is, is that a lot of employers would stop providing health care.  And so a lot of people who currently get health care through their employers wouldn't be able to get it.
The second thing -- remember what I told you earlier about how if you are on your own shopping for health care you've got no leverage with the insurance company.  Well, the problem is, is that if suddenly now you get a tax credit for $5,000 or $7,000, you try to go buy some health insurance for your family, and it costs $14,000, you're a lot worse off than you would have been.  You're out of luck.  And you've got no leverage; they've got no incentive to give you a lower price because you're on your own.
 
The other problem is that when you're not part of a pool, the insurance companies have every incentive to make sure that if you are older or you are sicker, that they do not cover you.  They want to cover the young, healthy folks like Mark Warner.  (Laughter.)  That's who they want.  But if you're older or sicker, you are more likely to be excluded from coverage, or they really jack up the rates.  When you're part of a pool, then the insurers say, well, I guess we'll take the older, sicker folks because we're also getting the younger, healthier folks at the same time.
So, for all those reasons, I opposed the proposal that was put forward, because essentially it would be, for the first time, taxing the health care benefits that are provided by employers.
Now, nobody at this point is -- or not many folks are talking about taxing benefits or completely eliminating the exclusion.  What they are calling for now in Congress is to cap the exclusion so that people who have very high-priced health care, at a certain point they can only get a deduction up to a certain point, right?  So let's say that the average health care cost for families -- a good health care plan costs $13,000.  What they would say is the employer and the employee get an exclusion up to $13,000, but if you get some Cadillac plan that costs $17,000, then what we're going to do is you're going to have to pay taxes on that last $4,000.  And the idea that is being debated in Congress right now is, is that a good way to ensure that people don't have these big Cadillac plans but instead have more sensible plans?
     Now, I don't think -- and by the way, that also raises some money.  So this has been offered as an alternative way to pay for that extra one-third of health care that we're not able to pay for through simply reallocating money.
     I think the better way to do it remains the proposal I have to cap itemized deductions.  I think that is a way that we can ensure that people who currently have health care aren't suddenly seeing the costs go up to pay for other people's costs going down, but instead everybody's costs can go down effectively.
     But this is something that's going to be debated in the House and the Senate.  Mark Warner is going to have to weigh in on it.  We're all going to have to weigh in on it.  My bottom line, though, is that if you've got health insurance right now, you shouldn't suddenly see your costs go up as part of health care reform. 
Okay?  Good.
     MS. JARRETT:  All right, Mr. President, I think we're teed up for another video question.
     THE PRESIDENT:  All right.
     VIDEO Q   Mr. President, as a physician, I know the cost of defensive medicine drives medical costs upward.  Now, at your health care forum you said that you wanted to find out what works.  In my home state of Texas, we know what works, and our Medical Justice Act has done just that. 
     Now, unfortunately, you recently told the AMA you were opposed to capping non-economic damages, even though a state like mine has proven that it does work.  Now, will you reaffirm your commitment to find out what works and then ask Congress for its implementation?
     THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  I want to make sure everybody understands the question here.  A lot of doctors have argued -- and in some cases they're justified -- that their costs for medical malpractice insurance, the threat of a lawsuit if something goes wrong with a patient, even if it's not their fault, is so high that not only is it increasing their out-of-pocket cost, but they're also engaging in what's called defensive medicine; that they've got to order five tests when one is enough just to make sure that they're covered so that if something goes wrong that's not their fault later, they can say, look, I did everything possible -- even if a lot of that isn't required.
     And so the argument is if you can cap the pain and suffering or the liability that is awarded as a consequence of you being hurt in the hospital or by a doctor, that that would drive down everybody's costs.
Now, what I've said is that I don't like the idea of an artificial cap on somebody if the doctor or the hospital really was negligent.  And in some cases, I've got to tell you, they are.  I mean, there are cases where folks leave a sponge in your gut and sew you back up, and after a while you're feeling worse than when you went in.  And in some cases, obviously that can cause very severe damage, and I want to make sure that people's pain, suffering, out-of-pocket expenses, that those are covered. 
So I don't like the idea of just an artificial cap.  I do want to work with doctors to find ways that we can reduce their liabilities where they haven't done anything wrong, where they've performed effectively.  I want to see, are there ways that we can reduce the constant threat of lawsuits that doctors and hospitals experience, because I do think that that causes defensive medicine.  And so I've committed to working with the AMA to see ways that we can reduce some of these litigation costs and malpractice rates.
One point that I've got to dispute, though, with the gentleman who asked me the question -- he says he's from Texas, and that we've got caps in Texas, and so we've seen what works.  Well, the fact is, is that there was just recently an article about a town called McAllen, Texas, where they have the highest health care costs in the country.  It's down by the border.  And even though they have caps there, in McAllen, Texas, they spend about three times as much per person as -- or not -- they spend about 30 percent more per person than they do in El Paso, Texas, which also is operating under caps.  So what that tells me is the problem of rising costs doesn't simply have to do with whether or not liability is capped.  What it really has to do with is the incentives that are operating in various communities.
There are some places, like the Mayo Clinic, many of you have heard of, provides outstanding care, some of the best in the world.  People fly in from everywhere to go to Mayo Clinic to get treated.  Turns out Mayo provides care much more cheaply than a lot of other health systems, even though it's better care.  And part of the reason is they do some things that are commonsensical, but unfortunately we don't do in the health care system. 
For example, instead of you going to one -- your primary care physician, who has you do a bunch of tests, then refers you to a specialist who has you do a bunch of tests, then maybe you go to a third specialist, another bunch of tests; go to the hospital, they retest you.  What they do is, at Mayo Clinic, when you meet with the -- your primary physician, he calls in all the specialists all at the same time, and as a team they evaluate you, do all the tests right there, so you're not duplicating a whole bunch of stuff.  And that coordinated care drives down costs tremendously.
     That's the kind of common-sense approach that we're going to have to take.  And one of the things that we're going to need to do in the health reform that we're proposing is to incentivize those kinds of smart practices coordinating care, as opposed to what we do right now, which is we just pay you -- the more services you provide, the more we pay you, which gives doctors and hospitals a pretty strong incentive to test you five times instead of one time.  I'm not saying they do it consciously, but right now we're preventing them from coordinating in a smart fashion because of the ways that we reimburse.  That has to be part of the reform that we initiate.
     All right.
     MS. JARRETT:  All right, Mr. President, I'm getting the high sign, so how about one more question from our wonderful audience?
     THE PRESIDENT:  One more question from the audience.  Let's see.  It's a girl's turn, isn't it?  I think so.  This young lady right here.
     Q    Hi, Mr. President.  I'm a member of SEIU and I'm down here in Fairfax County working on Change That Works.  What can I do, as a member of the union, to help you with your reform bill?
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I appreciate the question.  The most important thing I think the American people can do right now is to just be informed.  Tell your friends, tell your neighbors to get informed about what's happening in the health care system right now.  It's very complicated and I don't expect everybody to be an expert, but I want everybody to be well enough informed that the scare tactics of those who would oppose reform don't work.
     So when you hear somebody say this is -- "Obama is proposing a government takeover of health care" -- that's an old argument that's been used for years.  I just want to be clear.  If you've got a health care plan that you get through your employer or some other private plan, I want you to keep it.  I actually think reforming the system is the most likely way for you to keep the health care that you've got.  I don't want to take it over.  I think it's great that you can keep the care that you've got.
     All I've said is I want to make sure that those things that taxpayers are paying for, that we're getting our money's worth.  I don't want to provide $177 billion in subsidies to insurance companies.  I don't want to reimburse for five tests when the evidence shows that you just getting one test is going to be better for you because that means that the taxpayers are saving money and I can use that to lower your costs, or to help somebody who doesn't have health care at all.
I do think we should have a public plan to compete with the private plans.   But these private insurance companies, they're always telling me what a great deal that they give to the American consumer; if it's such a great deal, why are they worried about competing against the public plan, especially when they say government can't do anything?  (Applause.)
So they'll tell you that we're trying to take over health care.  I don't want to take over health care. 
They'll tell you that we're going to try to ration the system.  We don't want to get between you and your doctor.  What we do believe is that if there's good evidence out there that shows that the best way to treat your illness is to give you the blue pill, and instead right now you're getting prescribed the red pill that costs twice as much, I think that you and your doctor, having that information, are probably going to decide to go with the cheaper pill that does just as good of a job, and that will save you money.  That's not rationing.  That's being sensible.
So whenever you start hearing these arguments about socialized medicine, government takeover, rationing, Canada-style health care, what I need you to do -- and I need everybody here to do and everybody who's watching to do -- is to actually pay attention to the argument, and don't let people scare you out of reforming a system that we know is not working.
America -- one of the great things about this country is we've got a system that's sometimes kind of hard to change.  Congress gets kind of bogged down, and part of that is because of the way the Constitution is designed -- it's served us well because it keeps us very stable.  We don't have coups and all kinds of governments collapsing all the time.  But the disadvantage sometimes is, is that it's hard for us to make big, bold steps.  But the great thing about the system is that, every once in a while, when we finally hit a point where things just aren't working at all, we are able to generate the political will to finally get things done. 
That's how we got Social Security.  After the Great Depression, nobody had any pensions or protection, and people started realizing, we can't have a country where suddenly older Americans are just on the streets, after working hard all their lives.  And finally we got Social Security.  And then people said, well, we can't have older Americans who don't have any health care, and we got Medicare.  At every juncture, when we finally need to make a change, we make a change.  This is one of those times. 
So don't be scared about the future.  Let's embrace the future.  Let's go after the future.  If we do, then I'm confident that we can create a health care system that gives you choice, allows you to keep your doctor, drives down costs, makes sure that every American doesn't have to worry if they lose or change their jobs.  That's our aim.  That's our goal.  We're going to make it happen this year. 
Thank you, everybody.  I appreciate you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)
END
2:31 P.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_____________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                              June 30, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
ON COMMUNITY SOLUTIONS AGENDA

East Room

2:21 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you very much.  Well, it is wonderful to see all these do-gooders in one room.  (Laughter.)  And it is always a dangerous thing trying to follow Geoffrey Canada.  (Laughter.)  But I thank you all for being here.
Before we begin the subject of today's gathering, I want to say a few words about an important milestone that we've reached in Iraq.  Today, American troops have transferred control of all Iraqi cities and towns to Iraq's government and security forces.  (Applause.)  This transition was agreed to last year as part of our Status of Forces Agreement with the sovereign Iraqi government.  It's a part of our strategy to responsibly end the war by removing all American combat brigades from Iraq by next September, and all of our troops from Iraq by the end of 2011.
So the Iraqi people are rightly treating this day as a cause for celebration.  This is an important step forward, as a sovereign and united Iraq continues to take control of its own destiny.  And with this progress comes responsibility.  Iraq's future is in the hands of its own people.  And Iraq's leaders must now make some hard choices necessary to resolve key political questions, to advance opportunity, and to provide security for their towns and their cities.  In this effort, America will be a strong partner to the Iraqi people on behalf of their security and prosperity.
Make no mistake:  There will be difficult days ahead.  We know that the violence in Iraq will continue -- we see that already in the senseless bombing in Kirkuk earlier today.  And there are those who will test Iraq's security forces, and the resolve of the Iraqi people, through more sectarian bombings and the murder of innocent civilians.  But I'm confident that those forces will fail.  The future belongs to those who build, not those who destroy.  And today's transition is further proof that those who have tried to pull Iraq into the abyss of disunion and civil war are on the wrong side of history.
Finally, the very fact that Iraqis are celebrating this day is a testament to the courage, the capability, and commitment of every single American who has served in Iraq.  (Applause.)  That's worth applause.  Through tour after tour of duty, our troops have overcome every obstacle to extend this precious opportunity to the Iraqi people.  These women and men are not always in the headlines, but they're in our hearts and prayers, and we will forever honor their selfless service and sacrifice, as well as the service and sacrifice of their families.  There is more work to be done, but we've made important progress in supporting a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq.  And everyone who has served there, both in uniform as well as our civilians, deserves our thanks.
Now, it's fitting that we're here today to talk about what each of us can do to lift up this nation, because our troops' sacrifice challenges all of us to do what we can do to be better citizens.  That's what the people that you've heard from already are doing every single day.
So I want to start off thanking Geoffrey Canada, Robert Chambers, Pat Christen -- who's here with one of Hope Lab's student testers, Richard Ross -- Richard, wave to everybody -- (laughter) -- for speaking with us about the extraordinary work their organizations are doing in their communities.  And I want to thank Richard and Vanessa Nunez for sharing their stories with us today.  Thank you very much.  You both clearly have very bright futures ahead of you.
I want to acknowledge our outstanding Education Secretary, Arne Duncan.  He's worth giving a round of applause.  (Applause.) As well as, if I'm not mistaken, Congressman Jim Moran is here.  There he is, right here in the front, with his daughter, Dorothy. (Applause.)  I want to thank Steve Goldsmith for moderating.  We were discussing the fact that at Harvard -- Vanessa, you were there -- how long ago was that?  Fifteen years ago?  We were together on a conference talking about this very issue.  And so it's nice to see Steve, one of the outstanding mayors at the time, and now continuing to do great work helping people to think about how we can all fulfill our civic responsibilities more effectively.  So thank you very much.
I also want to thank Dave Cieslewicz -- I want to make sure I say that properly -- of Madison, Wisconsin, and Mayor Sara Presler of Flagstaff, Arizona, for their commitment as well.  Please give them a big round of applause.  (Applause.)
And finally, I want to thank all of you here today for everything you're doing to find new solutions to some of our oldest, toughest problems.  I know what you do is not easy.  I know that for many of you, the hours are long, the pay could be better -- let's face it.  But I also know the difference that each of you make.  I know the lives that you change every single day.  You teach us that there's no such thing as a lost cause if you're willing to be creative, and challenge the conventional wisdom, and take some risks -- if you're willing to try, and fail, and then try again until you find something that works.  And today, I want to recognize that pioneering spirit and thank you all for the contributions that you're making to our communities.
What you all do is important in any year.  But at this particular moment, when we're facing challenges unlike any we've seen in our lifetime, it's absolutely critical, because while we're working hard to rebuild our economy and help people who are struggling, let's face it, there's only so much that Washington can do.  Government can't do everything and be everywhere -- nor should it be.
For example, government can help rebuild schools -- and Arne Duncan is working as hard as anybody -- but we need new ways to teach our children and train our teachers and get parents more involved in their children's education.  Government can reform our health care system, but we need innovative approaches to help people manage their illnesses and lead healthier lives.  Government can invest in clean energy, but we need new initiatives to get people to train for green jobs and make their homes and offices more energy-efficient.
So if anyone out there is waiting for government to solve all their problems, they're going to be disappointed.  Because ultimately, the best solutions don't come from the top-down, not from Washington; they come from the bottom-up in each and everyone one of our communities.
As some of you know, I first saw this years ago when I worked as a community organizer in Chicago -- neighborhoods devastated by steel plant closings.  And I spent hours going door to door, meeting with anyone who would talk to me, asking people about their struggles and what an organization could do to help.
And it was slow, laborious going.  We had plenty of setbacks and failed more often than we succeeded.  But we listened to the people in the community and we learned from them and got them engaged and got them involved.  And slowly, block by block, we began to turn those neighborhoods around, fighting for job training and better housing and more opportunity for young people.
The lesson I learned then still holds true today:  that folks who are struggling don't simply need more government bureaucracy; that top-down, one-size-fits-all program usually doesn't end up fitting anybody.  People don't need somebody out in Washington to tell them how to solve their problems, especially when the best solutions are often right there in their own neighborhoods, just waiting to be discovered.
So right now, in communities across America, people are hard at work developing and running programs that could be the next Harlem Children's Zone or the next Genesys Works or the next Hope Lab, and idealistic young people like Wendy Kopp who refused to listen to the skeptics years ago and pushed ahead to bring her vision for Teach for America to life.
We've got young-at-heart people like Robert Chambers, who finish out careers in business or health care or education, and instead of transitioning into retirement, they're just too busy, they're too restless, so they come back for an encore, plowing a lifetime of experience into helping people in need.  We've got people from all backgrounds, all walks of life succeeding where others have failed; getting real, measurable results; changing the way we think about some of our toughest problems.
The bottom line is clear:  Solutions to America's challenges are being developed every day at the grass roots -- and government shouldn't be supplanting those efforts, it should be supporting those efforts.  Instead of wasting taxpayer money on programs that are obsolete or ineffective, government should be seeking out creative, results-oriented programs like the ones here today and helping them replicate their efforts across America.
So if the Harlem Children's Zone can turn around neighborhoods in New York, then why not Detroit, or San Antonio, or Los Angeles or Indianapolis?  If Bonnie Clac can help working people purchase cars and manage their finances in New Hampshire, then they can probably do it in Vermont or all across New England, or all across America.
Now it's not going to be easy to scale up some of these great ideas.  If it was easy, you would have already done it and you wouldn't be here today -- except maybe to just check out the White House.  (Laughter.)  It's hard.  But it's also critical.  And it's absolutely possible if we're willing to work together to give organizations like these the resources they need to reach their fullest potential and have their fullest impact, and if we're able to ensure that best practices are shared all across the country, that we've set up a strong network of ideas.  And that's precisely the idea behind the $50 million innovation fund included in the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act -- an initiative designed to assist community solutions like these that we're asking Congress to fund this year.
We're going to use this fund to find the most promising non-profits in America.  We'll examine their data and rigorously evaluate their outcomes.  We'll invest in those with the best results that are most likely to provide a good return on our taxpayer dollars.  And we'll require that they get matching investments from the private sector -- from businesses and foundations and philanthropists -- to make those taxpayer dollars go even further.
And today, I'm announcing that I'll be asking Melody Barnes, who is our director of the Domestic Policy Council, and our innovation team to lead this process, traveling across the country to discover and evaluate the very best programs in our communities.
And we won't just be looking at the usual suspects in the usual places.  We won't just be seeking the programs that everybody already knows about, but we also want to find those hidden gems that haven't yet gotten the attention they deserve.  And we'll be looking in all sorts of communities -- rural, urban, and suburban -- in every region of this country, because we know that great ideas and outstanding programs are everywhere -- and it's up to us to find them.
We're going to take this new approach, this new way of doing business, government-wide.  So we've already set up a What Works Fund at the Department of Education -- $650 million in the Recovery Act that we'll be investing in the most successful, highest-impact initiatives in our school districts and communities.  It's not just going to be the usual formulas here.  From pioneering teacher training programs and efforts to bring new technologies into our schools, to early learning programs and programs to help at-risk kids -- these are the kinds of initiatives that Arne and his staff at the department are looking to support.
At the Department of Health and Human Services, we're working on a new home-visiting initiative connecting nurses and other trained professionals with at-risk families to ensure that children get a healthy, safe, and smart start to life.  We'll be seeking out the very best programs to achieve those goals -- ones with the strongest record of success -- and we'll test promising approaches to see what works and what doesn't.
So all of this represents a new kind of partnership between government and the non-profit sector.  But I can tell you right now, that partnership isn't complete, and it won't be successful, without help from the private sector.  And that's why I'm glad that there are some deep pockets in the audience here -- foundations, corporations, and individuals.  You need to be part of this effort, as well.  And that's my challenge to the private sector today.
Our non-profits can provide the solutions.  Our government can rigorously evaluate these solutions and invest limited taxpayer dollars in ones that work.  But we need those of you from the private sector to step up, as well.  We need you to provide that critical seed capital to launch these ideas.  We need you to provide those matching funds to help them grow.  And we need you to serve as a partner, providing strategic advice and other resources to help them succeed.
If we work together -- if we all go all-in here -- think about the difference we can make.  Think about the impact we could have with just the organizations represented in this room.
We've got Jim McCorkell here from Admission Possible, a group that helps promising young people from low-income families attend college.  Ninety-nine percent of the Admission Possible class of 2008 got into college -- 99 percent.  (Applause.)  Where's Jim?  Where's Jim?  There he is back there.  The vast majority stay in college and earn their degrees.  Admission Possible operates in just two states now.  So imagine if it was 10, or 20, or 50.
We've got Alfa Demmellash here from Rising Tide Capital.  Where is Alfa?  Right over there.  Did I pronounce your name right?  Good.  When your name is Barack Obama, you're sensitive to these things.  (Laughter.)  So Alfa is with Rising Tide Capital, an organization that helps struggling mom-and-pop entrepreneurs get loans, run their businesses and improve their profit margins.  Seventy percent of their clients are single moms.  All of them rely on their businesses to support their families.  So far Rising Tide has helped 250 business owners in the state of New Jersey.  So imagine if they could help 500 or 1,000 or more all across America.
If we empower organizations like these, think about the number of young people like Vanessa and Richard whose lives we can change; the number of families whose livelihoods we can boost; the number of struggling communities we can bring back to life.
In the end, that's what this effort is about.  It's not about the old partisan lines in the sand.  We know there's nothing Democratic or Republican about just doing what works.  So we want to cast aside worn ideological debates and focus on what really helps people in their daily lives.  That's what each and every one of you are doing all across America.  For that, I honor you, I thank you, and I look forward to working with you in the days and months and years ahead to address the urgent challenges of our time.
Thank you very much, everybody.  Good luck.  (Applause.)
                                             END                                  2:41 P.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
__________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                         June 30, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT NATIONAL FINANCE COMMITTEE FUNDRAISER
Mandarin Hotel
Washington, D.C.
7:08 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  All right, everybody have a seat.  Settle down.  (Applause.) 
What a joy it is to see so many good friends, people who -- it's no exaggeration -- without whom we would not be here.  And there are just a lot of folks in this audience who took an early bet on somebody who I think the professionals didn't give much of a shot at winning the presidency, and I'm grateful to all of you.  (Applause.)
All of you I'm happy to see.  There are four people I want to acknowledge just because they're carrying a little extra burden right now. 
First of all, somebody who was great for our campaign is now doing great work for the DNC.  Please give Jane Stetson a big round of applause.  Thank you, Jane.  (Applause.)
Our fearless leader during the campaign, who never wavered, never waffled, and cracked the whip with grace and good cheer, Penny Pritzker.  (Applause.) 
Somebody who was there for us day in, day out, Andy Tobias.  (Applause.)
And somebody who -- I think some of you know this -- this was the first elected official outside of Illinois to endorse my campaign.  Now, think about this.  This is in February of 2007.  He is the governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia.  (Applause.)  He stands beside me in Richmond, the seat of the old confederacy, and says, I'm endorsing Barack Obama -- (laughter) -- for President of the United States.  (Applause.)  He's been there ever since.  He's my friend, a great governor, a great DNC leader, Tim Kaine.  (Applause.)  He hadn't been in office that long.  He didn't know any better.  (Laughter.)  And Anne, I think, was whispering in his ear.  But Tim has just been an extraordinary friend, and he is now just doing an extraordinary job on behalf of the DNC. 
As I said before, without you, we would not be here, because all of you were here in the beginning when it was hard.  When people in this town didn't give us much of a chance, you stuck in there.  And you didn't just fundraise –- you put your hearts and souls into this campaign.  I look at every single table, and there are people here who took their families, took their grandparents, took their cousins and nephews, and went into Iowa and went to New Hampshire and campaigned and knocked on doors and insisted to skeptics that now was the time for change in America, and lo and behold we're bringing about some change in America.  (Applause.) 
We knew from the start that change wouldn't be easy.  But we also understood we were living in extraordinary times and that we've been asked to confront challenges of a size and a scope that hadn't been seen in recent history –- a set of challenges that few generations of Americans have ever been asked to confront:  two wars, a debilitating recession, a global financial crisis, a crisis that faces the planet when it comes to climate change.   
And we understood that meeting these challenges was going to require some tough choices.  It required us to do what was right, even if it wasn't necessarily always popular -- at least not at first.  It required taking on the status quo in Washington that unfortunately tends to favor inertia over action, and tinkering over real reform.  And we knew that it would require looking beyond the next news cycle and the next election to the next generation; to do what we had to do to ensure that our children and grandchildren inherit an America that is as ascendant, as bold, as imaginative as the America that we inherited from our parents.
Now, that's not just a responsibility.  Meeting these challenges is a privilege and an opportunity, for in our hands lies the chance to shape the world for good and for ill. 

So let's just take a look at what we've done so far over the last six months, because in the blur of activity, I think we may be taking some things for granted.

Not one month into this administration, we responded to this financial crisis with the most sweeping economic recovery plan in our nation's history, a plan that has already provided tax relief to 95 percent of working families, as we had promised, a plan that's saving jobs and creating new ones in construction and clean energy and small business across the country. 
We passed a budget resolution that helps to cut our deficit in half while laying the foundations for all the building blocks required for a post-bubble economy:  reforming our health care system, initiating a clean energy agenda, revamping our education system so that our kids can compete in the 21st century.
We lifted a ban on federal funding of stem cell research.  We expanded the Children's Health Insurance Program to cover 11 million children in need.  We passed a national service bill to create hundreds of thousands of opportunities for people to serve their communities.  We passed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act –- the first bill I signed -– (applause) -- so that equal pay for equal work is a reality all across this country. 
That was just the beginning.  We passed a series of reforms that won't just change policy in Washington, but changes how Washington work.  We brought together auto executives and labor unions and environmental groups, Democrats and Republicans together to set national fuel-efficiency standards for our cars and trucks for the very first time in history.  We will save 1.8 billion barrels of oil as a consequence of this agreement.  We passed bipartisan legislation to help homeowners and to crack down on predatory lenders who are seeking to take advantage of them.  
We passed laws to protect consumers from unfair rate hikes and abusive fees leveled by many credit card companies; a law that will eliminate waste in our defense budget and save taxpayers billions of dollars; and after decades of opposition, we passed legislation that will prevent tobacco companies from marketing to our children.
It's not bad for six months.  (Applause.)  So we should feel proud for what we've accomplished.  But we can't be satisfied.  We should feel confident in the future –- but not complacent.  We can't be content with the present.  Not when there are workers that are still worried about losing their jobs or their homes or their health care.  Not when there are so many children out there who aren't getting the skills that they need to compete in the 21st century.  Not when justice is still elusive for too many in our society. 
This is when it gets hard.  This is when the criticism gets louder, when the pundits grow impatient, when cynicism seeks to reassert itself.  This is when we hear the same voices advocating the same policies that got us into this mess in the first place.  This is where we hear that change just isn't possible.  
     
So this is exactly the moment when we need to fight the hardest.  This is going to be the time when we need to band together and when we decide we're going to do what's right for the country and deliver the change that we promised when I was elected last November. 
Now is the time to build the schools that meet high standards and close the achievement gap and prepare our kids for the challenges of the 21st century.  This is where we start rewarding teachers for performance and create new pathways for advancement.  And this is when we start reaching that goal that I've set for 2020 that we once again are going to have the highest college graduation rates of any advanced country in the world, because we know that's what it's going to take to compete in a 21st-century economy.  (Applause.) 
Now is the time when we're going to pass comprehensive energy legislation -- (applause) -- that caps carbon emissions and creates energy efficiency and millions of new jobs.  On Friday, the House of Representatives took a historic vote and ignored the naysayers and said we are going to reach for the future and not look backwards, not cling to the past.
I don't know about you, but I have never looked at a American history book that praised America for not taking a chance; that said, you know, the thing that really stands out about America is we just stood pat back in the agricultural era. When things were getting industrial, we decided no, we're not going to change.  When the industrial era started moving into the information era -- no, no, no, no, we can't handle the Internet, we're not going to do that.
That's not who America is.  You keep on hearing these folks making these arguments about how we've got to be fearful of the future.  I'm not interested in being afraid of the future.  I'm interested in seizing the future for our children and our grandchildren, and that's what this bill is about.  (Applause.)
     
Now is the time for us to finally do something about health care.  We have been talking about it enough, we have had commissions, we have had white papers -- (applause) -- we have had blue ribbons.  We have talked about it and talked about it, and now it's time to act. 
And for those who would oppose our efforts, just turn to them and say, is there any way for you to defend the status quo?  And you'll hear a bunch of muttering and yammering, and they'll say, well, well, we agree with reform, too.  Okay, if you agree with reform, then step up because we know that right now families are being crushed by the cost of health care.  Right now businesses are being crushed by the cost of health care.  Right now our government is going bankrupt at the state and federal level because of health care.  Right now 46 million people are without insurance. 
Right now there's a woman in Wisconsin that I had a chance to meet who's got breast cancer and two small children.  She's 36 years old.  She had a job, her husband has a job.  She's got health insurance, and she still has $50,000 in debt.  And instead of worrying about how to get well, all she can think about is whether she's going to be leaving a legacy of debt to her family if she doesn't survive this cancer.
That's not the kind of country that any of us are willing to accept.  We know we can do better.  And so I am saying to Congress and I'm saying to the American people, don't be afraid.  Let us step forward.  We know what needs to happen.  We know that if we start applying common-sense rules to raise quality and reduce costs, that we can have a health care system that is uniquely American but finally provides coverage for all and is sustainable for the long term.  You're going to help us make this happen.  It's going to happen this year.  (Applause.)  We are going to have health care this year.  (Applause.)  We're going to have health care this year.  (Applause.)  We're going to have health care this year.  (Applause.)
We are going to have health care this year, we are going to reform the financial industry this year, and we are going to get energy done this year.  And we are going to -- (applause) -- and then we got a whole 'nother year after that.  (Laughter.)
But you've heard the argument.  People say, oh, this is overload, we can't do this much.  And I keep on trying to explain to people I don't do this just for fun.  (Laughter.)  If the health care system was working, we wouldn't remake it.  If we weren't dependent on foreign oil and watching the Arctic Circle melt, then we wouldn't go to the trouble of passing a energy bill.  The naysayers seem to think somehow that we can just keep on doing what we're doing.  And the American people understand we can't.
But the American people are also justifiably concerned about how change is going to come about.  And that's completely understandable because we are going through the toughest economic times in our living memory.  And most of the people here enjoy great, good fortune. 
There are a whole lot of folks out there who are just barely hanging on.  And so when they hear the fearmongerers suggesting that this is going to cost them more money or this is going to cost them jobs, or their health care is going to be taken away from them, and this is all a plot to grow the government, of course they take pause because, you know, they haven't been given a real fair shake for quite some time, and Washington hasn't been working for them, and most of the legislation that's coming out of this town has been a bait-and-switch on them.  They've been promised one thing and they've gotten something else.  So I understand why there's going to be some skepticism out there.
And by the way, this stuff is not going to be easy.  There are going to be bumps in the road and there are going to be times where people get impatient.  There are going to be times where folks lose heart.  There are going to be times where we feel like maybe we bit off too much, and we can't get to our goal.
And when we have those times, I just want you to know that that all sounds pretty familiar, doesn't it?  Because when Tim announced that he was supporting my campaign, the odds of us getting that done were a lot higher than the odds of getting health care done -- (laughter and applause) -- or the odds of getting energy done, or the odds of reforming our financial institutions.     
I want everybody here to understand that at this moment we have the opportunity to seize the future.  And as painful as that is sometimes and as difficult as that is sometimes, it is inherent in the American spirit that we go forward, we don't look backwards.  That's what this party is about, that's what this administration is about.  You've proven that's what you're about.  So help me.  We're going to get there for the American people.  Thank you, everybody.  God bless you.  (Applause.)
 
END                                         
7:26 P.M. EDT
###
 
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                           June 29, 2009

REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA
AND PRESIDENT URIBE OF COLOMBIA
IN JOINT PRESS AVAILABILITY

Oval Office


3:43 P.M. EDT

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, I am very pleased to have President Uribe here today with his delegation from Colombia.  The relationship between the United States and Colombia has been extremely strong.  We've had great cooperation on a whole range of issues, and President Uribe's administration I think has, under very difficult circumstances, performed admirably on a whole range of fronts -- on security, on reducing the influence of the drug cartels, in improving the economic situation for his people, and stabilizing the country.  He has performed with diligence and courage.  And so we are grateful for his friendship and I'm glad that he was able to come and visit us here today.

In our discussions, we talked about a range of issues.  We discussed, most prominently, the interests of both countries in moving forward on a free trade agreement.  This is something that has been discussed for quite some time.  I have instructed Ambassador Kirk, our United States Trade Representative, to begin working closely with President Uribe's team on how we can proceed on a free trade agreement.  There are obvious difficulties involved in the process and there remains work to do, but I'm confident that ultimately we can strike a deal that is good for the people of Colombia and good for the people of the United States.
I commended President Uribe on the progress that has been made in human rights in Colombia and dealing with the killings of labor leaders there, and obviously we've seen a downward trajectory in the deaths of labor unions and we've seen improvements when it comes to prosecution of those who are carrying out these blatant human rights offenses.  President Uribe acknowledges that there remains more work to be done, and we look forward to cooperating with him to continue to improve both the rights of organized labor in Colombia and to protect both labor and civil rights leaders there.
Along those same lines, we obviously think that the steps that have already been made on issues like extrajudicial killings and illegal surveillance, that it is important that Colombia pursue a path of rule of law and transparency, and I know that that is something that President Uribe is committed to doing.
We spoke about the regional challenges.  The drug trafficking that has been such a cancer in the life of Colombia affects the region as a whole.  When I last met with President Calderón of Mexico, he indicated the extraordinary challenges that that country is facing.  Mexico and Colombia are not alone in this.  Throughout the region in Central and South America, we are seeing this problem.  It's important that the United States steps up and cooperates effectively in battling the adverse effects of drug trafficking. 
And that includes, by the way, the United States reducing demand for drugs.  We have responsibilities.  We have responsibilities to reduce the trafficking of guns into the south that help strengthen these cartels and the flows of money and money laundering that at times involves not just the south -- Southern Hemisphere but also the Northern Hemisphere.  And so looking for additional ways that we can cooperate on those issues is very important.
Finally, we spoke about the fact that our relationship is much broader than simply our common enemy in the drug traffickers.  We want a proactive, positive agenda for human development throughout the region and inside Colombia.  And so exploring ways that we can advance clean energy cooperation, how we can advance efforts to improve child nutrition, reduce infant mortality, expand health care to ordinary people -- that is part of what I think President Uribe's comprehensive vision is:  that you don't just use military tools to defeat the enemies of progress, but you use a comprehensive approach that includes improvements in rule of law and improvements in people's day-to-day well-being and their opportunities for economic advancement as very powerful weapons to restore order and to ensure that people feel confident in the future.
And so we want to be a partner with Colombia on these issues.  I'm grateful, again, for President Uribe's friendship, and I'm confident that we are going to be working diligently in the future to advance the interests of both countries.  So, thank you very much.
PRESIDENT URIBE:  Thank you.
Q    President Obama, can we take a picture with you?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Hold on one second.  You know, I just realized there may be Spanish press here and that was a long statement, but if you don't mind I'm going to go ahead and have that translated just so your people can get it.  I'm sorry, I should have slowed down; I forgot.
Q    President Obama, did you talk something about reelection?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Hold on one second. 
(Spanish translation.)
PRESIDENT URIBE:  President Obama, I want to express our gratitude again to you, to your Cabinet, and to the United States.  Colombia in this alliance with the United States has received a great help for us to confront the challenges our people have suffered for long, long time.
I have said to President Obama that Colombia, since the middle of the '40s, in the last century, has not lived one single day in complete peace.  The help of your government is very important for the hope of the new generations of Colombians.  Thank you, President Obama. 
We have had opportunity to speak about many problems, as President Obama has said.  I said to President Obama, I made to him some comments about confidence in Colombia; about security, the advances, the problems we still face; about investment, its relationship with the free trade agreement as a signal to give confidence in Colombia; and about social cohesion, the advances in education, in micro-lending, in health -- the problems we still face, problems in poverty, in income distribution. 
And in the case of human rights, Colombia is rule of law in the utmost expression of public opinion participation.  We -- I am the first with a duty to support of our armed forces, but for that reason of their honor, every soldier, every policeman in Colombia understands that we need credibility for this policing of democratic security, and credibility depends on effectiveness and on transparency.  And transparency is a question of human rights.
Therefore, we are open, we are very receptive, to receive any advice, any suggestion on how we are going to fulfill our goal of ceasing civil violations of human rights in Colombia.
About surveillance, I have said to President Obama that during our administration we have restructured 427 state agencies and we are in the process to restructure the state agency for surveillance.  We hope to issues these decrees in the coming three weeks, and we hope that we can solve the endemic problems of these institutions, of this institution for good.
I have said to President Obama about the importance of the help of the United States for us and the region as a whole to advance social cohesion; help directly from the United States or through the multilateral banks.  For instance, in education and in child nutrition, we have advanced a lot, but we lack infrastructure; coverage has surpassed infrastructure.  In child nutrition, we have advanced a lot, but we lack coverage in education for those under six, not to mention other of our problems.  But we have a recognition to advance in security, human rights, state restructure, to advance in economics, to advance in social cohesion, and for all these things it is very important to have the permanent support of President Obama, of the government of the United States, of the Congress of the United States.
My gratitude again, President Obama.  And we are waiting for you in Colombia.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Thank you.
Q    President Obama, did you talk about the reelection?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Hold on, hold on.  We're going to do -- we only have time for two questions.  I'm going to call on a U.S. reporter, and then President Uribe, you can make a decision on which one of the Colombian reporters you want to call on.
So, Doug Palmer of Reuters.
Q    Right here.  Thank you very much.  You talked about the FTA, and you also talked about some of the obstacles to getting the FTA through Congress.  I wonder, do you have a sense of how close Colombia is to where it needs to be in order for you to send the agreement to Congress?  Is that something that can be accomplished this year?
And then I also wondered if you would comment on the coup in Honduras and what additional steps the U.S. might be considering there.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, let me first of all speak about the coup in Honduras, because this was a topic of conversation between myself and President Uribe.
All of us have great concerns about what's taken place there.  President Zelaya was democratically elected.  He had not yet completed his term.  We believe that the coup was not legal and that President Zelaya remains the President of Honduras, the democratically elected President there.  In that we have joined all the countries in the region, including Colombia and the Organization of American States.
I think it's -- it would be a terrible precedent if we start moving backwards into the era in which we are seeing military coups as a means of political transition rather than democratic elections.  The region has made enormous progress over the last 20 years in establishing democratic traditions in Central America and Latin America.  We don't want to go back to a dark past.  The United States has not always stood as it should with some of these fledgling democracies, but over the last several years, I think both Republicans and Democrats in the United States have recognized that we always want to stand with democracy, even if the results don't always mean that the leaders of those countries are favorable towards the United States.  And that is a tradition that we want to continue.
So we are very clear about the fact that President Zelaya is the democratically elected President, and we will work with the regional organizations like OAS and with other international institutions to see if we can resolve this in a peaceful way.
With respect to the free trade agreement, obviously a lot of work has already been done on the free trade agreement, and we are hopeful that we can -- we can move forward to completion.  I don't have a strict timetable, because I'm going to have to consult with Congress obviously on this issue.  We've got a lot on our plates, if you haven't noticed.  And I think that the burden is not simply on Colombia; I think Colombia has done a lot of excellent work.  It is a matter of getting both countries to a place where their legislatures feel confident that it will be ultimately to the economic benefit of these countries.
I have noted a special concern that is bipartisan and shared both by this administration and Congress, that the human rights issues in Colombia get resolved.  President Uribe has assured me that he is interested in resolving those issues.  And, as I said, great progress has been made.  I trust that we can make more progress.  And I think that will help shape the overall environment in which this issue is being debated in Congress.
Okay?  You want to call on --
PRESIDENT URIBE:  Entonces, Natalia Orozco.
Q    President Obama, President Chavez, it's not a secret, wanted to be reelected; President Zelada [sic] wanted to be reelected; and President Uribe hasn't decided yet.  Are you worried about what relation of those leader, and can have effects in the Western Hemisphere?  Do you have a message for them?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, first of all, I think it's very important that, in all these countries, it's not for the United States to make these decisions.  It's for the people of these countries to make these decisions.  And one of the clear policies that we want to put forward is that we stand on the side of democracy, sovereignty, and self-determination.
We know that our experience in the United States is that two terms works for us and that after eight years, usually the American people want a change.  I related to President Uribe the fact that our most revered President, or at least one of our two most revered Presidents, George Washington, part of what made him so great was not just being a founder of our country, but also the fact that at a time when he could have stayed President for life, he made a decision that after service, he was able to step aside and return to civilian life.  And that set a precedent then for the future.
But as I said, each country, I think, has to make these decisions on their own, and I think what's ultimately most important is that the people feel a sense of legitimacy and ownership, and that this is not something imposed on them from the top, that it's not -- does not involve manipulations of the electorate or rigging of the electoral process or repression of opposition voices, but that whatever is determined is done in an open, transparent way so that people feel confident that whoever is in power represents their voices and their interests.
PRESIDENT URIBE:  Let me make some comments about this question.  I brought to the table some topics that I call topics of internal debate in Colombia at this moment.  And one of the topics I brought to talk about it with President Obama is this topic.  And I want to summarize.
I said to President Obama, first, I am concerned, because I am a member of one generation of the four or five generations that have not lived one single day in peace in Colombia or prosperity.  Therefore, I consider that Colombia needs to extend in that time security, democratic values, investment in social responsibility and social cohesion -- with adjustments.
I don't believe in stagnation, and I don't believe in gross changes.  I believe in one goal, in one mission, with dynamism, with daily adjustments.  And I have said in the second point of this comment that I consider that this is happening, it is necessary to extend these policies.  It is not convenient to perpetuate the precedent.
 
And I have said to President Obama what I want to say to you.  Colombia is a country of solid democratic institutions.  When we speak about institutions, we cannot speak in abstract about institutions.  We have to speak about institutions in concrete terms.  We have 1,102 mayors directly elected by the people; 32 governors.  The regions in Colombia invest 51 percent of the public expenses.  My government has built governments with all the regional governors and mayors regardless their political regions, and they have many, many political regions.
The justice, administration is independent in Colombia.  Colombia has solid free press.  Colombia has bodies, independent bodies, for control.  Colombia is a country with very solid institutions.
I beg you, journalists, to separate the convenience or inconvenience of perpetuating the precedent with the qualification of our institutions.  Anyway, our democratic institutions are totally solid.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Right, and the other thing I should say is that if I were to serve two terms, I'm fairly confident that I would not have the 70 percent approval rating that President Uribe has.  (Laughter.) 
All right, thank you very much, everybody.
 END               4:05 P.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                      June 29, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT LGBT PRIDE MONTH RECEPTION

East Room

4:35 P.M. EDT
     THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Hello, hello, hello.  (Applause.)  Hey!  Good to see you.  (Applause.)  I'm waiting for FLOTUS here.  FLOTUS always politics more than POTUS.
     MRS. OBAMA:  No, you move too slow.  (Laughter.)
     THE PRESIDENT:  It is great to see everybody here today and they're just -- I've got a lot of friends in the room, but there are some people I want to especially acknowledge.  First of all, somebody who helped ensure that we are in the White House, Steve Hildebrand.  Please give Steve a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Where's Steve?  He's around here somewhere.  (Applause.)
     The new chair of the Export-Import Bank, Fred Hochberg.  (Applause.)  Where's Fred?  There's Fred.  Good to see you, Fred.  Our Director of the Institute of Education Sciences at DOE, John Easton.  Where's John?  (Applause.)  A couple of special friends -- Bishop Gene Robinson.  Where's Gene?  (Applause.)  Hey, Gene.  Ambassador Michael Guest is here.  (Applause.)  Ambassador Jim Hormel is here.  (Applause.)  Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown is here.  (Applause.) 
     All of you are here.  (Laughter and applause.)  Welcome to your White House.  (Applause.)  So --
     AUDIENCE MEMBER:  (Inaudible.)  (Laughter.)
     THE PRESIDENT:  Somebody asked from the Lincoln Bedroom here.  (Laughter.)  You knew I was from Chicago too.  (Laughter.) 
It's good to see so many friends and familiar faces, and I deeply appreciate the support I've received from so many of you.  Michelle appreciates it and I want you to know that you have our support, as well.  (Applause.)  And you have my thanks for the work you do every day in pursuit of equality on behalf of the millions of people in this country who work hard and care about their communities -- and who are gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender.  (Applause.)
     Now this struggle, I don't need to tell you, is incredibly difficult, although I think it's important to consider the extraordinary progress that we have made.  There are unjust laws to overturn and unfair practices to stop.  And though we've made progress, there are still fellow citizens, perhaps neighbors or even family members and loved ones, who still hold fast to worn arguments and old attitudes; who fail to see your families like their families; and who would deny you the rights that most Americans take for granted.  And I know this is painful and I know it can be heartbreaking.
     And yet all of you continue, leading by the force of the arguments you make but also by the power of the example that you set in your own lives -- as parents and friends, as PTA members and leaders in the community.  And that's important, and I'm glad that so many LGBT families could join us today.  (Applause.)  For we know that progress depends not only on changing laws but also changing hearts.  And that real, transformative change never begins in Washington.
     (Cell phone "quacks.")
     Whose duck is back there?  (Laughter.)
     MRS. OBAMA:  It's a duck.
     THE PRESIDENT:  There's a duck quacking in there somewhere.  (Laughter.)  Where do you guys get these ring tones, by the way?  (Laughter.)  I'm just curious.  (Laughter.)
     Indeed, that's the story of the movement for fairness and equality -- not just for those who are gay, but for all those in our history who've been denied the rights and responsibilities of citizenship; who've been told that the full blessings and opportunities of this country were closed to them.  It's the story of progress sought by those who started off with little influence or power; by men and women who brought about change through quiet, personal acts of compassion and courage and sometimes defiance wherever and whenever they could. 
     That's the story of a civil rights pioneer who's here today, Frank Kameny, who was fired -- (applause.)  Frank was fired from his job as an astronomer for the federal government simply because he was gay.  And in 1965, he led a protest outside the White House, which was at the time both an act of conscience but also an act of extraordinary courage.  And so we are proud of you, Frank, and we are grateful to you for your leadership.  (Applause.)
     It's the story of the Stonewall protests, which took place 40 years ago this week, when a group of citizens -- with few options, and fewer supporters -- decided they'd had enough and refused to accept a policy of wanton discrimination.  And two men who were at those protests are here today.  Imagine the journey that they've travelled.
     It's the story of an epidemic that decimated a community -- and the gay men and women who came to support one another and save one another; and who continue to fight this scourge; and who demonstrated before the world that different kinds of families can show the same compassion and support in a time of need -- that we all share the capacity to love.
     So this story, this struggle, continues today -- for even as we face extraordinary challenges as a nation, we cannot -- and will not -- put aside issues of basic equality.  (Applause.)  We seek an America in which no one feels the pain of discrimination based on who you are or who you love. 
     And I know that many in this room don't believe that progress has come fast enough, and I understand that.  It's not for me to tell you to be patient, any more than it was for others to counsel patience to African Americans who were petitioning for equal rights a half century ago. 
     But I say this:  We have made progress and we will make more.  And I want you to know that I expect and hope to be judged not by words, not by promises I've made, but by the promises that my administration keeps.  And by the time you receive -- (applause.)  We've been in office six months now.  I suspect that by the time this administration is over, I think you guys will have pretty good feelings about the Obama administration.  (Applause.)   
     Now, while there is much more work to do, we can point to important changes we've already put in place since coming into office.  I've signed a memorandum requiring all agencies to extend as many federal benefits as possible to LGBT families as current law allows.  And these are benefits that will make a real difference for federal employees and Foreign Service Officers, who are so often treated as if their families don't exist.  And I'd like to note that one of the key voices in helping us develop this policy is John Berry, our director of the Office of Personnel Management, who is here today.  And I want to thank John Berry.  (Applause.)
     I've called on Congress to repeal the so-called Defense of Marriage Act to help end discrimination -- (applause) -- to help end discrimination against same-sex couples in this country.  Now, I want to add we have a duty to uphold existing law, but I believe we must do so in a way that does not exacerbate old divides.  And fulfilling this duty in upholding the law in no way lessens my commitment to reversing this law.  I've made that clear.
     I'm also urging Congress to pass the Domestic Partners Benefits and Obligations Act, which will guarantee the full range of benefits, including health care, to LGBT couples and their children.  (Applause.)  My administration is also working hard to pass an employee non-discrimination bill and hate crimes bill, and we're making progress on both fronts.  (Applause.)  Judy and Dennis Shepard, as well as their son Logan, are here today.  I met with Judy in the Oval Office in May -- (applause) -- and I assured her and I assured all of you that we are going to pass an inclusive hate crimes bill into law, a bill named for their son Matthew.  (Applause.) 
     In addition, my administration is committed to rescinding the discriminatory ban on entry to the United States based on HIV status.  (Applause.)  The Office of Management and Budget just concluded a review of a proposal to repeal this entry ban, which is a first and very big step towards ending this policy.  And we all know that HIV/AIDS continues to be a public health threat in many communities, including right here in the District of Columbia.  And that's why this past Saturday, on National HIV Testing Day, I was proud once again to encourage all Americans to know their status and get tested the way Michelle and I know our status and got tested.  (Applause.)
And finally, I want to say a word about "don't ask, don't tell."  As I said before -- I'll say it again -- I believe "don't ask, don't tell" doesn't contribute to our national security.  (Applause.)  In fact, I believe preventing patriotic Americans from serving their country weakens our national security.  (Applause.) 
     Now, my administration is already working with the Pentagon and members of the House and the Senate on how we'll go about ending this policy, which will require an act of Congress.
     Someday, I'm confident, we'll look back at this transition and ask why it generated such angst, but as Commander-in-Chief, in a time of war, I do have a responsibility to see that this change is administered in a practical way and a way that takes over the long term.  That's why I've asked the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to develop a plan for how to thoroughly implement a repeal.
     I know that every day that passes without a resolution is a deep disappointment to those men and women who continue to be discharged under this policy -- patriots who often possess critical language skills and years of training and who've served this country well.  But what I hope is that these cases underscore the urgency of reversing this policy not just because it's the right thing to do, but because it is essential for our national security.
     Now, even as we take these steps, we must recognize that real progress depends not only on the laws we change but, as I said before, on the hearts we open.  For if we're honest with ourselves, we'll acknowledge that there are good and decent people in this country who don't yet fully embrace their gay brothers and sisters -- not yet. 
     That's why I've spoken about these issues not just in front of you, but in front of unlikely audiences -- in front of African American church members, in front of other audiences that have traditionally resisted these changes.  And that's what I'll continue to do so.  That's how we'll shift attitudes.  That's how we'll honor the legacy of leaders like Frank and many others who have refused to accept anything less than full and equal citizenship.
     Now, 40 years ago, in the heart of New York City at a place called the Stonewall Inn, a group of citizens, including a few who are here today, as I said, defied an unjust policy and awakened a nascent movement.
     It was the middle of the night.  The police stormed the bar, which was known for being one of the few spots where it was safe to be gay in New York.  Now, raids like this were entirely ordinary.  Because it was considered obscene and illegal to be gay, no establishments for gays and lesbians could get licenses to operate.  The nature of these businesses, combined with the vulnerability of the gay community itself, meant places like Stonewall, and the patrons inside, were often the victims of corruption and blackmail.
     Now, ordinarily, the raid would come and the customers would disperse.  But on this night, something was different.  There are many accounts of what happened, and much has been lost to history, but what we do know is this:  People didn't leave.  They stood their ground.  And over the course of several nights they declared that they had seen enough injustice in their time.  This was an outpouring against not just what they experienced that night, but what they had experienced their whole lives.  And as with so many movements, it was also something more:  It was at this defining moment that these folks who had been marginalized rose up to challenge not just how the world saw them, but also how they saw themselves.
     As we've seen so many times in history, once that spirit takes hold there is little that can stand in its way.  (Applause.)  And the riots at Stonewall gave way to protests, and protests gave way to a movement, and the movement gave way to a transformation that continues to this day.  It continues when a partner fights for her right to sit at the hospital bedside of a woman she loves.  It continues when a teenager is called a name for being different and says, "So what if I am?"  It continues in your work and in your activism, in your fight to freely live your lives to the fullest.
In one year after the protests, a few hundred gays and lesbians and their supporters gathered at the Stonewall Inn to lead a historic march for equality.  But when they reached Central Park, the few hundred that began the march had swelled to 5,000.  Something had changed, and it would never change back.
     The truth is when these folks protested at Stonewall 40 years ago no one could have imagined that you -- or, for that matter, I -- (laughter) -- would be standing here today.  (Applause.)  So we are all witnesses to monumental changes in this country.  That should give us hope, but we cannot rest.  We must continue to do our part to make progress -- step by step, law by law, mind by changing mind.  And I want you to know that in this task I will not only be your friend, I will continue to be an ally and a champion and a President who fights with you and for you.
     Thanks very much, everybody.  God bless you.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  It's a little stuffed in here.  We're going to open -- we opened up that door.  We're going to walk this way, and then we're going to come around and we'll see some of you over there, all right?  (Laughter.)  But out there.  (Laughter.) 
But thank you very much, all, for being here.  Enjoy the White House.  Thank you.  (Applause.) 
END                4:53 P.M. EDT
 
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the First Lady
__________________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                                    June 29, 2009

REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY TO
UNITY HEALTH CARE CENTER

Unity Health Care Center
Washington, D.C.
 

2:49 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you.  Thanks so much, Vincent.  (Applause.)  Well, I am delighted to be here.  Thank you, Vincent, for that very Irish introduction.  (Laughter.)  Good, hearty.  And we'll talk about our next trip.

MR. KEANE:  Absolutely.

MRS. OBAMA:  Haven't planned it yet, but we'll work on it.  You got that down.  I got my staff.  You got it down.  (Laughter.) 

I also want to commend the center's manager, Margarita Lobo, who I got to meet earlier, and thank her and everyone, all the staff and patients and physicians who I got to meet and who are working here at Unity Health Care and the Upper Cardozo Center, for such an incredible warm welcome and such an informative session right before I came in.  I am incredibly impressed by the people who have committed their lives to caring for the least of these. 

And I'd also like to thank Administrator Mary Wakefield who I just got to meet -- administrator who was able to join me here today.  Mary, thank you so much for your work. 

As you all know, we're at a critical juncture in the debate about health care in this nation.  The current system is economically unsustainable, and I don't have to tell any of you that.  And despite having the most expensive health care system in the world, we're not necessarily healthier for it.

As the President and Congress begin to tackle health care reform, the flag is being raised on the costly effects of preventable diseases that burden our health care system.  And community health centers like Upper Cardozo, Unity Health Care are a vital component for this discussion. 

From the young to the old, from rural to -- communities to the inner cities, both the insured and uninsured, 17 million Americans rely on community health centers every year to help them stay healthy.   

Access to primary care, preventative care, wellness and nutrition counseling help prevent chronic illnesses like obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and high-blood pressure that consume 85 percent of the health care spending in our country.

But it's more than just an economic issue.  It's about the quality of life for all of our citizens, particularly our kids.  I have quoted these statistics on numerous occasions over the last few weeks as we've harvested the garden, and I've done other things, but I think it is so important that I keep repeating them, because these statistics are shocking and I want people to really remember what's at stake.

Nearly a third of the children in this country today are overweight or obese and a third will suffer from diabetes at some point in their lifetime.

When we look at the Hispanic and African American communities, those numbers climb even higher so that nearly half of the children in those communities will suffer this same fate.  Half of those kids.

And for the first time in the history -- and this is the statistic that always gets to me as we have such a sophisticated health care system -- but this generation, medical experts have warned that they may be on track to have a shorter life span -- a shorter life span -- than their parents as a result of the obesity epidemic.  And these statistics are unacceptable for any of us, for any child in any community. 

So we need to educate kids about the need for healthy eating.  These are conversations that we can have, as I've learned.  The programs here at Upper Cardozo are doing that work each and every day, so we know how to have the conversations.  We know what works.  And it has done a good thing in promoting healthy living for many families who get services here. 

The fact is these are all manageable and preventable conditions.  We don't have to suffer from this.  We can fix this.  And community health centers are on the front lines of fighting these epidemics.

But to be effective in this fight, you're going to need more help, you're going to need more resources.  And as Vincent alluded to, that's really one of the main reasons why I'm here today.

I am pleased to announce today the release of $850 million in Recovery Act grants to upgrade and expand community health centers across the country.  (Applause.)  This money will help community health centers reach more people in need and make all of our communities healthier places to live and to work.  This is a new investment on top of the hundreds of millions of dollars that have already enabled health centers to expand and improve their services this year.  So this is more.

For centers around the country, these Recovery Act grants will mean new diagnostic equipment, renovation of facilities that need repair, expanding computer centers to help manage electronic medical records, adding on new staff, expanding programs that work.  And over the next two years, Recovery Act dollars for community health centers will expand desperately-needed services to more than 2.8 million people. 

Right here at Upper Cardozo, as Vincent -- as we see in the diagrams, 20 new exam rooms will be built with the $2.5 million grant that's going to go to Unity Health Care to reach 24 percent more patients.  (Applause.)  And the thing you all know, that's going to have a major impact on the people who use these facilities who live in this community.

And the upgrades and expanded efforts at community health centers across the country will dramatically improve the immediate and long-term health of our people and our nation's health care system. 

The power of well-resourced community health centers to change lives can be seen right here in Upper Cardozo.  These statistics were good to see:  Fourteen percent of the patients here at Unity have hypertension, but thanks to the care they receive, more than half of them have it under control.  Those are really good numbers.  Six percent of the patients who walk through the door at this facility -- in Unity's facilities have diabetes, and many of them are children.  But because of the pediatric obesity services and the nutrition education programs available here, 71 percent of diabetic patients keep their condition in check.  Again, preventable, manageable -- you all are doing it. 

All these folks who, with your help, are able to better manage their chronic conditions do a number of things.  They stay out of the hospital, they stay out of the emergency room, which is the most costly way to receive care in this country, and they stay on the job and in school instead.  A win-win situation.  Health centers are community catalysts that improve lives, and that's why this investment is so critical. 

And there's another part of this equation beyond health.  When Unity builds those 20 new exam rooms, they'll be creating jobs and putting people to work in construction and renovation.  When a health center in rural Illinois purchases a new computer center, it's going to keep a programmer in the Silicon Valley on the job.  So as we provide quality health care to more people, there will be this multiplier effect that will also provide more jobs to more workers.

Just think about the impact of all these Recovery Act grants all over the entire country.  Every single health center that applied for a grant will receive at the very least $200,000. 

And every dollar of every grant is going to make a difference in the life of someone in need.

An inner-city child with chronic asthma will play after school, right, because of these services.  And they'll be able to concentrate on their homework as opposed to spending an afternoon or an evening sitting in the ER getting treatments that they don't have to get.

A single mom with proper care to manage her diabetes will get back to work full-time instead of staying out and using up sick days that she may not even have.   

A grandmother in rural America will get regular checkups so she can be active in her neighborhood organizations.  Maybe be my -- like my mom and help take the kids to school.  (Laughter.) 

And for those workers in the building trades this money will mean new jobs.

With these grants we will strengthen our communities, we'll strengthen our economy, and we'll strengthen our nation.

And I want to just thank everyone here at Unity and Upper Cardozo for your commitment, for your passion, because I met many passionate people -- (laughter) -- and for your continued focus on providing health care, quality health care, to every citizen regardless of their ability to pay.

We are hopeful that these funds will mean something in your lives directly, that you'll keep doing the programs that work so well:  the literacy programs, the nutrition programs, the yoga classes, the classes with teens.  I met some kids whose lives have been turned around because of the programs here.  And by building capacity here by 24 percent, we just hope you keep doing more and more.

So thank you so much for sharing with me.  Good luck in the future, and I'll talk about getting back for the ribbon-cutting.  (Laughter and applause.) 

END
2:59 P.M. EDT
 

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_______________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                    June 29, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT ON ENERGY
Grand Foyer
1:12 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, everybody. Since taking -- excuse me -- since taking office, my administration has mounted a sustained response to a historic economic crisis. But even as we take decisive action to repair the damage to our economy, we're also working to build a new foundation for sustained and lasting economic growth.
And we know this won't be easy, but this is a moment where we've been called upon to cast off the old ways of doing business, and act boldly to reclaim America's future. Nowhere is this more important than in building a new, clean energy economy, ending our dependence on foreign oil, and limiting the dangerous pollutants that threaten our health and the health of our planet.
And that's precisely what we've begun to do. Thanks to broad coalitions ranging from business to labor; investors to entrepreneurs; Democrats and Republicans from coal states and coastal states; and all who are willing to take on this challenge -- we've come together to achieve more in the past few months to create a new, clean energy economy than we have in decades.
We began with historic investments in the Recovery Act and the federal budget that will help create hundreds of thousands of jobs doing the work of doubling our country's supply of renewable energy. We're talking about jobs building wind turbines and solar panels; jobs developing next-generation solutions for next-generation cars; jobs upgrading our outdated power grid so it can carry clean, renewable energy from the far-flung areas that harness it to the big cities that use it.
And thanks to a remarkable partnership between automakers, autoworkers, environmental advocates, and states, we created incentives for companies to develop cleaner, more efficient vehicles -- and for Americans to drive them. We set in motion a new national policy aimed at both increasing gas mileage and decreasing greenhouse gas pollution for all new cars and trucks sold in the United States. And as a result, we'll save 1.8 billion barrels of oil over the lifetime of the vehicles sold in the next five years -- the projected equivalent of taking 58 million cars off the road for an entire year.
And we know that even as we seek solutions to our energy problems at home, the solution to global climate change requires American leadership abroad. That's why I've appointed a global climate envoy to help lead our reengagement with the international community as we find sustainable ways to transition to a global low-carbon economy.
And, now, just last Friday, the House of Representatives came together to pass an extraordinary piece of legislation that will finally open the door to decreasing our dependence on foreign oil, preventing the worst consequences of climate change, and making clean energy the profitable kind of energy. Thanks to members of Congress who were willing to place America's progress before the usual Washington politics, this bill will create new businesses, new industries, and millions of new jobs, all without imposing untenable new burdens on the American people or America's businesses. In the months to come, the Senate will take up its version of the energy bill, and I am confident that they too will choose to move this country forward.
So we've gotten a lot done on the energy front over the last six months. But even as we're changing the ways we're producing energy, we're also changing the ways we use energy. In fact, one of the fastest, easiest, and cheapest ways to make our economy stronger and cleaner is to make our economy more energy efficient. And that's something that Secretary Chu is working every single day to work through.
We know the benefits. In the late 1970s, the state of California enacted tougher energy-efficiency policies. Over the next three decades, those policies helped create almost 1.5 million jobs. And today, Californians consume 40 percent less energy per person than the national average -- which, over time, has prevented the need to build at least 24 new power plants. Think about that. California -- producing jobs, their economy keeping pace with the rest of the country, and yet they have been able to maintain their energy usage at a much lower level than the rest of the country.
So that's why we took significant steps in the Recovery Act to invest in energy efficiency measures -- from modernizing federal buildings to helping American families make upgrades to their homes -- steps that will create jobs and save taxpayers and consumers money. And that's why I've asked Secretary Chu to lead a new effort at the Department of Energy focusing on implementing more aggressive efficiency standards for common household appliances -- like refrigerators and ovens -- which will spark innovation, save consumers money, and reduce energy demand.
So today, we're announcing additional actions to promote energy efficiency across America; actions that will create jobs in the short run and save money and reduce dangerous emissions in the long run.
The first step we're taking sets new efficiency standards on fluorescent and incandescent lighting. Now I know light bulbs may not seem sexy, but this simple action holds enormous promise because 7 percent of all the energy consumed in America is used to light our homes and our businesses. Between 2012 and 2042, these new standards will save consumers up to $4 billion a year, conserve enough electricity to power every home in America for 10 months, reduce emissions equal to the amount produced by 166 million cars each year, and eliminate the need for as many as 14 coal-fired power plants.
And by the way, we're going to start here at the White House. Secretary Chu has already started to take a look at our light bulbs, and we're going to see what we need to replace them with energy-efficient light bulbs.
And if we want to make our economy run more efficiently, we've also got to make our homes and businesses run more efficiently. And that's why we're also speeding up a $346 million investment under the Recovery Act to expand and accelerate the development, deployment, and use of energy-efficient technologies in residential and commercial buildings, which consume almost 40 percent of the energy we use and contribute to almost 40 percent of the carbon pollution we produce.
We're talking about technologies that are available right now or will soon be available -- from lighting to windows, heating to cooling, smart sensors and controls. By adopting these technologies in our homes and businesses, we can make our buildings up to 80 percent more energy efficient -- or with additions like solar panels on the roof or geothermal power from underground, even transform them into zero-energy buildings that actually produce as much energy as they consume.
Now, progress like this might seem far-fetched. But the fact is we're not lacking for ideas and innovation. All we lack are the smart policies and the political will to help us put our ingenuity to work. And when we put aside the posturing and the politics; when we put aside attacks that are based less on evidence than on ideology; then a simple choice emerges.
We can remain the world's leading importer of oil, or we can become the world's leading exporter of clean energy. We can allow climate change to wreak unnatural havoc, or we can create jobs utilizing low-carbon technologies to prevent its worst effects. We can cede the race for the 21st century, or we can embrace the reality that our competitors already have: The nation that leads the world in creating a new clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the 21st century global economy.
That's our choice: between a slow decline and renewed prosperity; between the past and the future.
The American people have made their choice. They expect us to move forward right now at this moment of great challenge, and stake our claim on the future -- a stronger, cleaner, and more prosperous future where we meet our obligations to our citizens, our children, and to God's creation -- and where the United States of America leads once again.
That's the future we're aiming for. I've got a great Secretary of Energy who's helping us achieve it. I want to thank again the House of Representatives for doing the right thing on Friday, and we are absolutely confident that we're going to be able to make more progress in the weeks and months to come.
Thanks, guys.
END
1:22 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
 
Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                                  June 26, 2009
 
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA
AND
CHANCELLOR MERKEL OF GERMANY
IN JOINT PRESS AVAILABILITY
East Room
11:58 A.M. EDT
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Willkommen.  It's my pleasure to welcome Chancellor Merkel to the White House.  We had a very productive discussion in the Oval Office, and our meetings will continue this afternoon.
Chancellor Merkel's visit is the latest chapter in the long partnership between our two countries:  the service of our men and women in uniform who stood together through a long Cold War and who serve today in Afghanistan; the innovation of our entrepreneurs, who helped to sustain our economies; and the bonds of friendship and trust between our people, which are unbreakable.
In recent months I've come to appreciate these bonds through my partnership with Chancellor Merkel.  We've worked closely together at the G20 summit in London, the NATO summit, and the European Union-U.S. summit in Prague.  I value her wisdom and her candor, and I admire very much her leadership and her pragmatic approach to getting things done.  She and the German people have welcomed me to Germany twice -- during the NATO summit and again this month in Dresden, and today I'm pleased to return that hospitality.
Chancellor Merkel shares my belief that no single nation can meet the challenges of our time alone.  Today we reaffirmed that the United States and Germany -- one of our closest allies and an indispensable partner -- will continue to play a leadership role across the range of challenges.
We're building on the bold steps we took at the G20 summit by aggressively confronting the global economic crisis.  I underscored our commitment to strengthening financial regulations, and I welcomed Chancellor Merkel's commitment to reform.  As we prepare for the G8 summit in Italy and look ahead to the G20 summit in Pittsburgh, we agreed on the need to avoid protectionism and to embrace concerted, collective action that creates sustainable growth and shared prosperity.
I reiterated America's commitment to stand with Germany and lead in confronting the energy and climate change crisis.  And let me say, Chancellor, that I've been very impressed by Germany's foresight and commitment to clean energy, which I saw in the many wind turbines as I traveled over the German landscape.  And it's my hope that the United States will match that commitment today when our House of Representatives votes on a critical energy bill that will promote a new generation of clean, renewable energy in our country.
The Chancellor and I discussed the tragic situation in Iran.  Today we speak with one voice:  the rights of the Iranian people -- to assemble, to speak freely, to have their voices heard -- those are universal aspirations.  And their bravery in the face of brutality is a testament to their enduring pursuit of justice.  The violence perpetrated against them is outrageous.  Despite the government's efforts to keep the world from bearing witness to that violence, we see it and we condemn it.  As I've said before, the Iranian people will be the ultimate judge of their government's actions.  But if the Iranian government desires the respect of the international community then it must respect the rights, and heed the will, of its people.
The Iranian government also has other responsibilities. Working with Germany, our other European partners, as well as Russia and China, we're working to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapons capacity and unleashing a nuclear arms race in the Middle East.  We will encourage Iran to take a path that respects international norms and leads to greater security and prosperity for the Iranian people.
We also discussed the broader Middle East and the need for all parties to redouble their efforts to achieve lasting peace, including two states, Israel and a Palestinian state, living side by side in peace and security.  And during our recent visit to Buchenwald, Chancellor Merkel spoke eloquently of Germany's everlasting responsibility to the safety and security of Israel.  Going forward, Germany will remain a critical partner in our efforts to bring safety and security to Israelis, the Arab states and Palestinians -- who must reject violence and recognize Israel's right to exist.
We agreed that confronting violent extremism and preventing terrorist attacks demands our continued commitment and a comprehensive strategy in Afghanistan and Pakistan.  This includes dismantling and disrupting, defeating al Qaeda and its allies.  Germany has been a strong partner in the NATO mission in Afghanistan, and we honor those who serve there, including American and German soldiers who gave their lives there this week.
As I prepare to visit Moscow, Chancellor Merkel and I reaffirmed our commitment to a more substantive relationship with Russia, working with the Russian government on issues where we agree and honestly confronting those areas where we disagree.  In Moscow, we will continue to explore ways in which the United States and Russia can advance our common interests, including our joint commitment to reducing our nuclear arsenals and strengthening the global nonproliferation regime.
Meeting these challenges will be neither quick nor easy.  But I'm reminded of a lesson from my recent visit to Dresden.  Chancellor Merkel took me to a timeless Baroque church devastated in the Second World War.  For decades it lay in ruin, a symbol of war.  But thanks to the donations of Germans and Americans and people around the world, it was rebuilt, and its glory was restored.  Today, it stands as a stunning symbol of what's possible when countries and friends work together.  And in that spirit, I want to welcome my friend Chancellor Merkel.
CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  (As translated.)  Well, thank you very much, and let me say that we very much like to remember -- and when I say "we," I mean the whole of the German people.  We have very fond memories, I should say, of your visit to Dresden, and also very moving memories of your visit, Mr. President, to the former concentration camp of Buchenwald.
We celebrated on the 23rd of May 60-year anniversary of the Federal Republic of Germany, and we're more than aware of the fact that Germany would not stand as it stands today had not our American friends and partners helped us after the end of the Second World War.
But we also know that now, in this 21st century, challenges cannot be met by just one nation going it alone.  So we need to stand together, we need to do this together, and in this spirit, we conducted our talks.
We had a number of issues on our agenda today.  I would like to underline that the Iranian people need to be given the right to peaceful demonstrations; that the Iranian people have the right to have votes be counted and the election results substantiated; that the rights of human beings, of individuals, of citizens are indivisible the world over, and also apply, therefore, to the Iranian people.
We have to work to it that the Iranian nuclear program is stopped; that Iran does not get possession of a nuclear weapon.  In this context, it is very desirable, of course, that also 7:34looms large on our agenda, that the peace process in the Middle East gains momentum, that there is progress, visible progress here, because that, too, might send a positive message to those forces in the Middle East who are not ready to be peaceful.
Germany and America will work very closely together on this, just as on the questions related to arms reduction and disarmament.  We would like to wish you, Mr. President Obama, the best of success during the upcoming visit to Russia.  A partnership with Russia is very important for Germany, also important for the European Union.  But we have every interest also in seeing a very good relationship between the United States of America and Russia.  We need Russia, for example, we need it looking at the problems we have with Iran, and we want to forge a common position wherever possible with Russia, but also with China.  We've done that over the years in the format of the United Nations with the number of resolutions that that needs to be continued.
We dealt with the preparation of the G8 meeting that is upcoming and also the Pittsburgh meeting of the G20.  We're on a good path here.  I think there's been progress.
You have made very important steps here in the United States as regards financial market regulation.  We and the European Union are also working on that.  And in the summer of this year we can then sort of take stock and see where these regulations meet, and try to create a level playing field for the rest of the world.  It makes it possible to lose competition, but that avoids a future crisis of this magnitude.
We are very grateful that we are also able, together with the United States, to work on principles as to how matters are to be taken into the future after this crisis.  But we now have to emerge, obviously, from this crisis and recovery of our economies is a great pre-condition for further progress.
We talked about climate.  Just as I did this morning when I was in Congress, I said that this is indeed a sea change that I see this upcoming bill that was debated today in the House on climate.  That this really points to the fact that the United States is very serious on climate.  And this has -- it should not be underestimated what sort of opportunity this brings to us to come to a good, a sustainable result during the Copenhagen conference.
I have been in many, many climate negotiations and debates in my country, in the European Union, so I know what's at stake when you talk about reduction targets, how tricky that is when you try to come to certain common ground, so I wish you every success.  I hope that you will come to a good result when the vote is taken.  I think it's so important that we are at one in saying, if we want a success in Copenhagen, we need to talk to the emerging countries and the emerging economies as to their possible contribution.  But the fact that with the United States we stand where we stand today is an enormous success, which I would not have thought possible a year ago -- let me be very serious.
Thank you very much for the gracious hospitality offered to me and for the very extensive exchange of views that we were having.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  We've got time for a few questions so I'm going to start with Jeff Zeleny of New York Times.
Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  A couple weeks ago on Iran you suggested that there were few differences with Mr. Moussavi and President Ahmadinejad.  I'm wondering if the ensuing time since you made those comments have changed your view on that?  And will you apologize for interfering in Iranian affairs, as President Ahmadinejad suggested you should, or does he need to apologize for saying that you are "someone like President Bush?"  (Laughter.)
And Chancellor Merkel --
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, Jeff, how many questions are you getting in here, brother?  (Laughter.)  I think you got two in and we want to make sure we give some other folks a chance.
Well, first of all, what I said originally was that given the structure of the Iranian government and that power resided ultimately with Khamanei, the Supreme Leader, and given that there weren't at that point significant differences on the core national security interests that we initially had talked about diplomatically -- i.e., nuclear weapons development in Iran, the exportation of terrorist activity -- that we could not automatically assume that there would be a huge shift on those particular national security issues depending on who won that election.
I think what's absolutely clear is over the course of subsequent days, that Moussavi has shown to have captured the imagination or the spirit of forces within Iran that were interested in opening up, and that he has become a representative of many of those people who are on the streets and who have displayed extraordinary bravery and extraordinary courage.
I continue to believe that ultimately it's up to the Iranian people to make decisions about who their leaders are going to be.  But as I said this week and I've said previously, a government that treats its own citizens with that kind of ruthlessness and violence and that cannot deal with peaceful protestors who are trying to have their voices heard in a equally peaceful way I think has moved outside of universal norms, international norms, that are important to uphold.
And Chancellor Merkel and I share a -- share the belief that what's happened in Iran is unacceptable when it comes to violence against its own citizens and we call on the Iranian government to uphold those international principles.
What was the second part of your question there, Jeff?
Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  I was wondering if you had a response to his call for you to apologize, or if he should apologize for calling you someone like Bush.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  I don't think -- I don't take Mr. Ahmadinejad's statements seriously about apologies, particularly given the fact that the United States has gone out of its way not to interfere with the election process in Iran.  And I'm really not concerned about Mr. Ahmadinejad apologizing to me.  I would suggest that Mr. Ahmadinejad think carefully about the obligations he owes to his own people.  And he might want to consider looking at the families of those who have been beaten or shot or detained.  And that's where I think Mr. Ahmadinejad and others need to answer their questions.
Q    Mr. President, did you talk with the Chancellor about the issue of Guantanamo and the closure?  What do you expect from Germany?  Do you expect that criminals can come to (inaudible)?
(As translated)  Madame Chancellor, could you make any commitments on this?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, first of all, I have discussed in the past with Chancellor Merkel our interest in closing Guantanamo.  I think it has become a symbol internationally of the United States' straying from some of our core ideals in our very legitimate pursuit of our national security and our concerns about international terrorism.  And we are going to be looking for the help of our friends and our allies as we execute that process, one that's going to be admittedly difficult politically.
And so in the past I've spoken not only to Chancellor Merkel, but other European leaders, who are pleased that the EU provided a legal framework for how to evaluate the detainees that are in Guantanamo.  And we have seen a positive response from countries across Europe in the general sense of wanting to help.
And I think the particulars, the specifics of what particular detainee might be transferred where, those are still very preliminary discussions.  And I think that Chancellor Merkel, she has an obligation, obviously, to make sure that Germany's national security interests come first in these considerations.  We understand that and we expect that we will continue to have constructive negotiations on some of these issues.  But there have been no particular requests made about X number of detainees being placed by such and such a date, and Chancellor Merkel has not made commitments that are specific in that sort.  The conversations have remained at a fairly general level at this point.
CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  Well, we did address that issue, as it was said.  And I made it very clear that we're not going to shirk that responsibility.  Our Minister of the Interior is responsible for looking into the matter, and I said that it might be a good idea to continue to have very close contacts to the Home Secretary here in the United States.  These contacts are already in existence because as we've gone through the question of what is to happen with the former detainees of Guantanamo is one thing, we're at the beginning of a process.  We're discussing that.
But let me tell you yet again very clearly we are not going to shirk our particular responsibility, but it needs to be brought in line, as the President says, with the legal situation we have in Germany.  We are showing a constructive spirit and we will come to a result.  I'm confident of that.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Don Gonyea.
Q    Thank you, Mr. President, Madame Chancellor.  A question for each of you.  On Iran, do the events of the past few weeks and even of the past couple of days indefinitely stall your ability to have any kind of meaningful dialogue with him on the nuclear issue, and frankly are you just losing precious time on that issue?
And then on Iraq, an upsurge in violence, a lot of bombings, a lot of deaths, does that give you any second thoughts on the coming deadline to pull the combat troops from the cities?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, on the Iranian issue, I think that we are still waiting to see how the situation in Iran plays out.  Obviously I continue to be deeply disturbed by reports of violence that are taking place there.  I continue to call on the Iranian government to deal with people who are peacefully protesting, wanting their voices to be heard, in a way that respects international principles.
There is no doubt that any direct dialogue or diplomacy with Iran is going to be affected by the events of the last several weeks.  And we don't yet know how any potential dialogue will have been affected until we see what's happened inside of Iran.
I will tell you -- and this was the point that I was making earlier in response to Jeff's question -- we have a continuing set of national security interests that are going to have to be dealt with because the clock is ticking.  Iran is developing nuclear capacity at a fairly rapid clip; they have been doing so for quite some time.  Iran's possession of nuclear weapons would trigger an arms race in the Middle East that would be bad not just for U.S. security, it would be bad for the security of the entire region, including, by the way, Iranian security.
And so even as we clearly speak out in a unified voice in opposition to the violence that's taken place in Iran, we have to also be steady in recognizing that the prospect of Iran with a nuclear weapon is a big problem and that we've got to work in concert with the international community to try to prevent that from happening.
So my expectation would be -- and we did discuss this -- that you're going to continue to see some multilateral discussions with Iran.  There is a structure that exists -- the P5-plus-1 talks that include Russia and China.  There are going to be discussions that continue on the international stage around Iranians’ -- Iran's nuclear program.  I think the direct dialogue between the United States and Iran and how that proceeds, I think we're going to have to see how that plays itself out in the days and weeks ahead.
On Iraq, obviously any time there's a bombing in Iraq we are concerned.  Any time there's loss of innocent life or the loss of military personnel, we grieve for their families and it makes us pay attention.  I will tell you if you look at the overall trend, despite some of these high-profile bombings, Iraq's security situation has continued to dramatically improve.  And when I speak to General Odierno and Chris Hill, our ambassador in Iraq, they continue to be overall very positive about the trend lines in Iraq.
I think there's still some work to do.  I think the Maliki government is not only going to have to continue to strengthen its security forces, but it's also going to have to engage in the kind of political give and take leading up the national elections that we've been talking about for quite some time.  And I haven't seen as much political progress in Iraq, negotiations between the Sunni, the Shia, and the Kurds, as I would like to see.
So there are always going to be -- let me not say "always" -- there will continue to be incidents of violence inside of Iraq for some time.  They are at a much, much lower level than they were in the past.  I think the biggest challenge right now is going to be less those attacks by remnants of al Qaeda in Iraq or other insurgent groups, and the bigger challenge is going to be, can the Shia, the Sunni, and the Kurds resolve some of these major political issues having to do with federalism, having to do with boundaries, having to do with how oil revenues are shared.  If those issues get resolved, then I think you will see a further normalization of the security atmosphere inside of Iraq.
CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  On Iran, over the past few weeks, we have seen horrifying scenes, looking at how, for example, the security forces there dealt with demonstrators.  We will not forget this.  And let me say that we shall do everything in order to identify the exact number of victims, who those victims were, and how they dealt with those demonstrators.
In this day and age of the 21st century, Iran cannot count on the world community turning a blind eye to this.  We are able to see this through images.  My own experience from the GDR tells me that it is so important than one knows when one is in such a situation that people somewhere else in the world are knowledgeable of what is happening to you.
And irrespective of that, the question that Iran must not be allowed to regain possession of their weapon is even more important, without bringing, on the other hand, those in Iran who would like to have a different system, bringing them into difficulties --  I mean, we would like to have a diplomatic solution to preventing Iran from gaining possession of a nuclear weapon.
So I completely agree with the President here.  We have to bring Russia and China alongside in order to see to it that this solution is brought about.  The more resolve, the more determination we show in doing that, the better our prospects also for the Middle East peace process.  And I think we can be successful also in the Middle East process, and then be successful in our talks with Iran.
Q    (Inaudible) -- where's Germany's place?  And I'm asking for two reasons.  You have a half-sister, Auma, she studied in Heidelberg, and I wanted to ask (inaudible) when I wrote the biography about your life.  And what did she tell you about Germany?  Has she had any unpleasant experience as an African woman in Germany in the '80s?
And a second question, you visited Germany twice, but you broke with the tradition of your predecessors to give interviews to the media of the host country before.  Why is this?  And how long do we have to wait -- (laughter) -- before you give, award a German outlet with an interview?  Maybe until November 9, or will it be a little bit earlier?  I would be very interested in that question.
And to the Chancellor --
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Would you like that interview?  (Laughter.)
Q    If this is a commitment, I would appreciate that very, very much.  (Laughter.)
CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  We have to talk about that.  (Laughter.)
Q    Oh, you are coordinating your media policy already?  (Laughter.)
(As translated.)  My second question is addressed to the Chancellor.  You already made a distinction yourself on climate policy between the House of Representatives and the Senate.  But how optimistic are you, after the talks you've had here, that more stringent rules on climate change will be successful, not only in the House but also pass through the Senate?  What would be the consequence of that if they are not able to do this before the Copenhagen conference?  How, then, would America deal with this situation?  Have you received a reply to this?
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  First of all, in terms of my emotional maps-- (laughter) -- the times that I have visited Germany have been extraordinary, and I've had a wonderful time.  And the people of Germany have I think received me with great warmth and affection.  Keep in mind that obviously I visited Germany even before I was elected President, and we had a pretty good rally in Berlin.  It wasn't bad.  And so I will always have I think a warm spot in my heart for Germany, in part because of the response and the reaction that I've received from the German people.
I will tell you that part of the warmth I feel toward Germany is because I like Chancellor Merkel a lot.  I've now dealt with a lot of world leaders, and I think that Chancellor Merkel is smart, practical, and I trust her when she says something.  And so that kind of approach is exactly what you want from an international partner.  And I've very much enjoyed my interactions with her and her team.
My sister, she obviously had a great time in Heidelberg.  When I met her she was going out with a German guy.  And I don't want to comment on how that played itself out.  (Laughter.)  That may have an impact on how she views Germany right now, but that's -- (laughter) -- I think a little too personal for a press conference.
Even though the question wasn't directed at me, I do want to make this point about climate change.  Europe, in many ways, over the last several years has moved more rapidly than the United States on addressing this issue.  And I've been very blunt and frank with Chancellor Merkel that we are still working through creating the framework where we can help lead the international effort.  I think that this legislation that we are seeking to pass indicates enormous progress from where we have been, but I think we all recognize that there's going to be more to do and that the United States is going to have to work with Germany and other advanced economies to make sure that our obligations are clear, and then we're going to have to work with the emerging economies, which have enormous potential for growth but unfortunately also have enormous potential for contributing to greenhouse gases, so that their obligations are clear.
And I'm the first one to acknowledge that the United States, over the last several years, has not been where we need to be.  We're not going to get there all in one fell swoop, but I'm very proud of the progress that's being made, and I think that the energy bill that's being debated in the House is an example of that progress.  If we can get that framework in place, I'm confident the United States can be an important partner in this process.
CHANCELLOR MERKEL:  Well, you will understand my refraining from commenting in any way on the behavior of members of parliament who, after all, are free in their decisions.  That would be totally counterproductive.  But I must say that I'm very gratified to note that the President feels 100 percent committed to this issue, which has become apparent in all of our talks.  He wants to see to it that Copenhagen becomes a success.
We are both convinced that this question of climate change amounts to much more than just numbers and targets.  It means that we take a commitment and shoulder a responsibility for those countries in the world that will be far more heavily affected by climate change, but that we also feel committed to ensuring energy security for our own countries.  Dependence on raw materials, on commodities, is also something that can bring us into very unpleasant political dependence.  So it's always good to look at new technology, to use, for example, when you have finite fuel sources, to deal with them responsibly and economically.  And this is something that we've come out very strong in favor in our own countries, and we do it internationally.
Let me perhaps say something on Auma in Heidelberg.  The book, "Dreams From My Father," she is telling us a little bit about her own impressions in Heidelberg.  You probably read it.  I found this very interesting because on the one hand she describes us as a country where quite quickly you have the impression that each and every one needs to fend for his or her self; there is not this big sort of community, the sort of family network that protects you that you have in Africa.
But then as you go on throughout the book, Auma tells you it was also something good, maybe, because it strengthens people's own sort of awareness of their own self, of their own responsibility.  And I think it's very important to look at this when we deal, for example, with Africa -- that on the one hand we accept that the way that we live may sometimes be very tough, tough on people, but on the other hand we should also perhaps in our dealings with the Africans address how certain things can be dealt with more efficiently.
So it was for me a very enriching experience to read this book, understand a lot of things about her.  And I think Heidelberg, after all, got through this very well.
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Thank you very much, everybody.
END                                                                            
12:33 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                                   June 25, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT LUAU FOR MEMBERS OF CONGRESS AND THEIR FAMILIES

South Lawn

7:05 P.M. EDT

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Welcome to the White House.  It's my great honor to introduce the folks behind me here.  But I just was telling the President on the way over, I like the state he represented -- but I love the state he's from.  (Laughter.)  Mr. President, I'm glad you brought Hawaii to the White House.

Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States of America, Barack Obama.  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Aloha!

AUDIENCE:  Aloha!

THE PRESIDENT:  It is wonderful to see you all.  I am not going to make a long speech.  I just want to say to all the members of Congress, you've been working hard.  I wish I could give you all trips to Hawaii, but I figured since -- given our budget crunch we can't do that, that we'd at least bring Hawaii to you.  (Applause.)

I want to thank our wonderful entertainer, Tihati, thank you very much.  (Applause.)  I want to thank all the chefs who prepared the outstanding food, especially Alan Wong, a friend from Hawaii, does a great job.  (Applause.)  I want to -- in case you don't know, this is Malia Obama -- (applause) -- Sasha Obama -- (applause) -- Michelle Obama -- (applause) -- and the star of the family, Bo Obama.  (Applause.)

I hope you guys have a wonderful time.  Enjoy.  Feel free to just roam around here.  And thank you again, members of Congress, for the unbelievable work that you're doing for the American people each and every day, I appreciate you.  Thank you, guys.  (Applause.)

END
7:06 P.M. EDT

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_____________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                             June 25, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
ON THE IMPORTANCE OF PASSING A HISTORIC ENERGY BILL

Rose Garden
2:00 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Right now, the House of Representatives is moving towards a vote of historic proportions on a piece of legislation that will open the door to a new clean energy economy.
For more than three decades, we've talked about our dependence on foreign oil. And for more than three decades, we've seen that dependence grow. We've seen our reliance on fossil fuels jeopardize our national security. We've seen it pollute the air we breathe and endanger our planet. And most of all, we've seen that others countries realize a critical truth: The nation that leads in the creation of a clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the 21st century global economy.
Now is the time for the United States of America to realize this, as well. Now is the time for us to lead. The energy bill before the House will finally create a set of incentives that will spark a clean energy transformation of our economy. It will spur the development of low-carbon sources of energy -- everything from wind, solar, and geothermal power to safe nuclear energy and cleaner coal. It will spur new energy savings like the efficient windows and other materials that reduce heating costs in the winter and cooling costs in the summer.
And most importantly, it will make possible the creation of millions of new jobs. Now, make no mistake -- this is a jobs bill. We're already seeing why this is true in the clean energy investments we're making through the Recovery Act. In California, 3,000 people will be employed to build a new solar plant that will create 1,000 jobs. In Michigan, investments in wind turbines and wind technology is expected to create over, 2,600 jobs. In Florida, three new solar projects are expected to employ 1,400 people.
The list goes on and on, but the point is this: This legislation will finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy. That will lead to the creation of new businesses and entire new industries. And that will lead to American jobs that pay well and can't be outsourced.
I've often talked about the need to build a new foundation for economic growth so that we don't return to the endless cycle of bubble and bust that has led us into this deep recession. Clean energy and the jobs it creates will be absolutely critical to that new foundation.
This legislation has also been written carefully to address the concerns that many have expressed in the past. Instead of increasing the deficit, it's paid for by the polluters who currently emit dangerous carbon emissions. It provides assistance to businesses and families as they make the gradual transition to clean energy technologies. It gives rural communities and farmers the opportunity to participate in climate solutions and generate new income. And above all, it will protect consumers from the costs of this transition so that in a decade, the price to the average American will be about the same as a postage stamp per day.
Because this legislation is so balanced and sensible, it's already attracted a remarkable coalition of consumer and environmental groups, labor and business leaders, Democrats and Republicans.
Now I urge every member of Congress -- Democrat and Republican -- to come together to support this legislation. I can't stress enough the importance of this vote. I know this is going to be a close vote, in part because of the misinformation that's out there that suggests there's somehow a contradiction between investing in clean energy and our economic growth. But my call to those members of Congress who are still on the fence, as well as to the American people, is this: We cannot be afraid of the future, and we can't be prisoners of the past. We've been talking about this issue for decades, and now is the time to finally act.
There's no disagreement over whether our dependence on foreign oil is endangering our security; we know it is. There's no longer a debate about whether carbon pollution is placing our planet in jeopardy; it's happening. And there's no longer a question about whether the jobs and the industries of the 21st century will be centered around clean, renewable energy. The only question is, which country will create these jobs and these industries? And I want that answer to be the United States of America. And I believe that the American people and the men and women they sent to Congress share that view.
So let's take this opportunity to come together and meet our obligations -- to our constituents, to our children, to God's creation, and to future generations. Thank you very much.
END
2:05 P.M. EDT