THE WHITE HOUSE

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

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AND FIRST LADY
AT A "UNITED WE SERVE" SERVICE EVENT

Fort McNair
Washington, D.C.

10:14 A.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, thank you everybody.  Thank you, Michael.  I want to thank Colonel Laura Richardson, the Ft. McNair Base Commander, for her service and for helping make this day possible.  It is so good to see all of you here.  We said we'd do it, right?  (Applause.)  And we're here.  (Applause.)

A little while ago we did some other service together.  We were able to work at the food bank and get some bags packed, and now we're doing this wonderful work for the children of our servicemen and women who are going to get to go to camp.  And I think we've got some great letters, good healthy snacks, a Bo baseball card, which -- (laughter) --

THE PRESIDENT:  Very important.

MRS. OBAMA:  -- is very important.  (Laughter and applause.)  And our hope is that we can get 15,000 of these backpacks packed today.  And it's just a thrill to see you.  We've brought our daughters.  Malia and Sasha are going to be here helping out.  And it's just wonderful to see you all here again. 

There's so much that we can do.  This is a part of one of the efforts we've launched -- actually, I helped to launch on Monday -- "United We Serve," where we're asking every single American to think about a way that they can serve.  I joined Maria Shriver in San Francisco when we did -- helped to build a play lot, and today we're continuing the service here with all of you. 

And the hope is that you go back to your home states, to your communities, and you encourage your family, friends, constituents to find ways to continue to serve.  And I am just so delighted to see all of you all here. 

And once we get through with our work today, then we'll be able to have a little fun.  We've got a great picnic planned, a little luau, with some great hula dancers and tiki torches and all that good stuff.  (Applause.)

So you guys have a great time.  And it is my honor to introduce my husband, the President of the United States, Barack Obama.  (Applause.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Thank you.  Thank you.  Well, first of all, it is great to see all of you here today.  I want to thank all the members of Congress who are here participating, all the families and young people who are here.  I obviously have to thank my wife, Michelle Obama, who has spent much of her adult life focused on service.  (Applause.)  Now, she understands that nothing is more powerful than when you enlist the skill and talent and passion of the American people on behalf of helping others.  And she's been doing that all her life, and she's doing just a great job as First Lady in making that happen.

I want to thank all the men and women here at Fort McNair, and all those who serve our country under our proud flag.  We're grateful to each and every one of you.  (Applause.)  Those Americans in uniform, it's clear the nature of their service.  I think sometimes what's forgotten is when one person in the family serves in our Armed Forces, that means the entire family is serving.  And it's very gratifying to see all of you committed to helping to put together some backpacks and care packages for military families all across the country.  This is an issue that Michelle has taken extraordinary interest in during the course of our campaign.  She would meet with military families and discover that, despite all the things that government may want to do, there are still a lot of holes and a lot of gaps that need to be filled in terms of giving the support to our military families that's necessary, and that's where you come in.

So we're very proud of them, but we're very proud of you.  And we always want to remember that serving our country is not just something that we should expect our members of our Armed Forces to do, that's something that we should expect all of us as citizens to do. 

On Monday, we launched "United We Serve," our summer service initiative.  It's going to run all the way through our National Day of Service on September 11th.  We want to ask every American to take some time out this summer to do something for others.  Parents, take your kids -- they're going to have fun, they're going to be in sports camps, they're going to be watching TV and playing video games.  Once a week, take them down -- whether it's to a soup kitchen or to volunteer on a community project -- teach them what it means to be a real citizen.  You'll find that actually the kids love it, and it's going to make a lasting impression on them.  And if all of us are doing that this summer, then we're going to make this country stronger.  We're working hard, and members of Congress are working really hard right now, to make our government work for people, but government can only do so much.  Ultimately the strength of America doesn't come from Capitol Hill, it doesn't come from the White House.  It comes from the grassroots, and that's what all of you are about.

So I appreciate you.  I hope you guys have some great fun today.  I notice the air conditioning is on in here, which -- (laughter) -- sometimes with some of these service projects, you got to change shirts at the end of the day.  So enjoy yourselves, and I hope I get a chance to say thank you personally and shake some hands before the day is done.  All right?  Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.)

Oh, one other thing that I wanted to mention -- and since we've got a lot of press here -- sometimes people want to be involved in service but don't know how to get involved in service.  And so what I want to do is just remind people, if you go to serve.gov -- serve.gov -- that will give you an entire toolkit for how you can sign up for service in your communities.  So there's no excuses.  And you can find the service project that's right for you.  If you care about animals, you can find a shelter that helps with stray animals.  If you care about tutoring kids or you've got an education background, you'll be able to find something that allows you to use your particular skills.

So get on serve.gov, and that's how you're going to be identify -- going to be able to identify the service project that's right for you and your family.  All right?  Thank you, everybody.  Have fun.  (Applause.)

END
10:21 A.M. EDT

THE WHITE HOUSE

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

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AFTER MEETING WITH MEMBERS OF CONGRESS
TO DISCUSS IMMIGRATION

State Dining Room
 

3:17 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  We have just finished what I consider to be a very productive meeting on one of the most critical issues that I think this nation faces, and that is an immigration system that is broken and needs fixing.

We have members of Congress from both chambers, from parties, who have participated in the meeting and shared a range of ideas.  I think the consensus is that despite our inability to get this passed over the last several years, the American people still want to see a solution in which we are tightening up our borders, or cracking down on employers who are using illegal workers in order to drive down wages -- and oftentimes mistreat those workers.  And we need a effective way to recognize and legalize the status of undocumented workers who are here.

Now, this is -- there is not by any means consensus across the table.  As you can see, we've got a pretty diverse spectrum of folks here.  But what I'm encouraged by is that after all the overheated rhetoric and the occasional demagoguery on all sides around this issue, we've got a responsible set of leaders sitting around the table who want to actively get something done and not put it off until a year, two years, three years, five years from now, but to start working on this thing right now.

My administration is fully behind an effort to achieve comprehensive immigration reform.  I have asked my Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, Secretary Janet Napolitano, to lead up a group that is going to be working with a leadership group from both the House and the Senate to start systematically working through these issues from the congressional leaders and those with the relevant jurisdiction.  What we've heard is through a process of regular order, they would like to work through these issues both in the House and in the Senate.

In the meantime, administratively there are a couple of things that our administration has already begun to do.  The FBI has cleared much of the backlog of immigration background checks that was really holding up the legal immigration process.  DHS is already in the process of cracking down on unscrupulous employers, and, in collaboration with the Department of Labor, working to protect those workers from exploitation.

The Department of Homeland Security has also been making good progress in speeding up the processing of citizenship petitions, which has been far too slow for far too long -- and that, by the way, is an area of great consensus, cuts across Democratic and Republican parties, the notion that we've got to make our legal system of immigration much more efficient and effective and customer-friendly than it currently is.

Today I'm pleased to announce a new collaboration between my Chief Information Officer, my Chief Performance Officer, my Chief Technologies Officer and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Office to make the agency much more efficient, much more transparent, much more user-friendly than it has been in the past.

In the next 90 days, USCIS will launch a vastly improved Web site that will, for the first time ever, allow applicants to get updates on their status of their applications via e-mail and text message and online.  And anybody who's dealt with families who are trying to deal with -- navigate the immigration system, this is going to save them huge amounts of time standing in line, waiting around, making phone calls, being put on hold.  It's an example of some things that we can do administratively even as we're working through difficult issues surrounding comprehensive immigration.

And the idea is very simple here:  We're going to leverage cutting-edge technology to reduce the unnecessary paperwork, backlogs, and the lack of transparency that's caused so many people so much heartache.

Now, we all know that comprehensive immigration reform is difficult.  We know it's a sensitive and politically volatile issue.  One of the things that was said around the table is the American people still don't have enough confidence that Congress and any administration is going to get serious about border security, and so they're concerned that any immigration reform simply will be a short-term legalization of undocumented workers with no long-term solution with respect to future flows of illegal immigration.

What's also been acknowledged is that the 12 million or so undocumented workers are here -- who are not paying taxes in the ways that we'd like them to be paying taxes, who are living in the shadows, that that is a group that we have to deal with in a practical, common-sense way.  And I think the American people are ready for us to do so.  But it's going to require some heavy lifting, it's going to require a victory of practicality and common sense and good policymaking over short-term politics.  That's what I'm committed to doing as President.

I want to especially commend John McCain, who's with me today, because along with folks like Lindsey Graham, he has already paid a significant political cost for doing the right thing.  I stand with him, I stand with Nydia Velázquez and others who have taken leadership on this issue.  I am confident that if we enter into this with the notion that this is a nation of laws that have to be observed and this is a nation of immigrants, then we're going to create a stronger nation for our children and our grandchildren.

So thank you all for participating.  I'm looking forward to us getting busy and getting to work.  All right?  Thank you.

Oh, and by the way, I hope everybody has got their Hawaiian shirts -- (laughter) -- and their mumus for our luau tonight.

END
3:24 P.M. EDT

THE WHITE HOUSE

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

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
IN ABC "PRESCRIPTION FOR AMERICA"
TOWN HALL ON HEALTH CARE

June 24, 2009
East Room
8:01 P.M. EDT
Q    Good evening.  Diane and I are delighted that you could join us this evening.  We are going to be talking about what will be the number one subject for public discourse all through this summer -- and that is health care reform.
Q    The President has said it's a ticking time bomb at the center of the American economy.  And so we have gathered 164 people in the East Room of the White House tonight.  They're from all over the country, all walks of life, on the front lines of health care in America -- they are doctors, businessmen, patients, Republicans, Democrats, independents.  And we know we can't cover every question tonight, but we're going to get the conversation started.
Q    They will be questioning the President, as will we.  And we think by the end of the evening you will have a pretty good sense of what the parameters of this debate are, just what's at stake for each of you and for the country as a whole -- because this will be discussed, as we said, all through the summer in the Congress.  It will be discussed, I think also, in your living room.  Every family I think will be debating this.
So with that as preface we want to thank the President for giving us his parlor and his living room tonight to do this broadcast.
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much, Charlie.
Q    I think this is going to be an interesting evening.
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much, Diane.
Q    Mr. President, thank you.
THE PRESIDENT:  Grateful to have you.
Q    While we head into the East Room we're going to have the audience waiting for us there.  Dr. Tim Johnson is our medical editor, is going to give everyone a sense of some of the key questions.  We're heading to the East Room.
* * * * *
Q    First, access and choice.  The President constantly stresses that if you like what you have, you can keep it.  But he also wants to offer more choice and competition with a one-stop shopping list of approved private insurance plans through a so-called health insurance exchange.  So far he has also insisted that a public option be one of the choices.  It has sometimes been described as Medicare-like -- meaning the government would be involved with the financing, but patients would be able to choose their own doctors and hospitals.
He says this public option would keep the pressure on private insurance to hold down costs.  Critics say government's advantages -- easy funding, huge bargaining power -- would eventually put private insurers out of business, which could affect your current coverage.
Second, effective treatment.  The President agrees with experts who say that about a third of what we now spend on health care is unnecessary.  He says we reward doctors and hospitals the wrong way -- paying for simply doing more tests and procedures, rather than paying for good outcomes.  And he stresses that primary care -- readily available family doctors, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners -- is essential in promoting prevention, making sure we get screening tests and lifestyle advice; and coordination, orchestrating the care of specialists and home care for chronic diseases.
Critics say that if third-party government experts set the rules for what is covered and paid for, patients and doctors will have less of a voice and choice.
And finally, cost control.  The President insists that increasing coverage without controlling costs is a formula for economic disaster.  That would be a tough job, given that estimates for reform now run between $1 trillion and $2 trillion over 10 years; besides savings from the reform of Medicare and Medicaid, he has advocated new tax revenue by limiting deductions for charitable giving, but he has not yet agreed to taxing any insurance benefits from employers as income.
Critics say his plan spends too much and the government just does not have the money.
So Diane and Charlie, three huge challenges, a formula for heartburn -- which, by the way, is something we doctors can fix.  (Laughter.)
Q    Dr. Tim Johnson there, outlining some of the parameters of the debate.  And we're going to try to loosely organize things.  We have this -- we're calling this "Prescription of America," but basically this is "How does this affect me?  How does it affect all of you?" at the doctor's office.  Should there be a public option, public government insurance in all of this?  And what is the cost of all of this, can we afford it?
And as we mentioned, 164 people here from all walks of life, Mr. President.  Before we start, I'm curious, I want to get a show of hands.  How many of you -- whether you agree with the President's approach or not, how many of you agree that we need to change the health care system in America?  And is there anybody here who believes the system should be left unchanged?  Interesting.  But there is a lot of disagreement, because the devil is in the details, as we all know.
THE PRESIDENT:  -- stop now. Let's go, we're ready to --  (laughter.)
Q    So as we say, all of this is "How does this affect me?"  And we want to get to your questions, and I want to start with Dr. Orrin Devinsky, is he here?  Dr. Devinsky.
Q    Yes, in the past, politicians who have sought to reform health care have tried to limit costs by reducing tests, access to specialists.  But they've not been good at taking their own medicine.  When they or their family members get sick they often get extremely expensive evaluations and expert care.  If a national health plan was approved and your family participated -- and President Obama, if your wife or your daughter became seriously ill and things were not going well, and the plan physicians told you they were doing everything that reasonably could be done, and you sought out opinions from some medical leaders in major centers and they said there's another option that you should pursue, but it was not covered in the plan, would you potentially sacrifice the health of your family for the greater good of insuring millions, or would you do everything you possibly could as a father and husband to get the best health care and outcome for your family?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, Doctor, I think it's a terrific question, and it's something that touches us all personally, especially when you start talking about end-of-life care.  Some of you know my grandmother recently passed away, which was a very painful thing for me.  She's somebody who helped raise me.  But she's somebody who contracted what was diagnosed as terminal cancer; there was unanimity about that.  They expected that she'd have six to nine months to life.  She fell and broke her hip.  And then the question was, does she get hip replacement surgery, even though she was fragile enough that they weren't sure how long she would last, whether she could get through the surgery.
I think families all across America are going through decisions like that all the time.  And you're absolutely right that if it's my family member, if it's my wife, if it's my children, if it's my grandmother, I always want them to get the very best care.
But here's the problem that we have in our current health care system, is that there is a whole bunch of care that's being provided that every study, every bit of evidence that we have, indicates may not be making us healthier.
Q    But you don't know what that test is.
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, oftentimes we do, though.  There are going to be situations where there are going to disagreements among experts.  But oftentimes we do know what makes sense and what doesn't.  And this is just one aspect of what is a broader issue.  And if I could just pull back just for a second. 
Understand that the status quo is untenable, which is why you saw, even though we've got Republicans, Democrats, independents, people from all parts of the health care sector represented here, everybody understands we can't keep doing what we're doing.  It is bankrupting families.  I get letters every single day from people who've worked hard and don't have health insurance.  It is bankrupting businesses who are frustrated that they can't provide the same kind of insurance that they used to provide to their employees.  And it's bankrupting our government at the state and federal levels.
So we know things are going to have to change.  One aspect of it, the doctor identified, is can we come up with ways that don't prevent people from getting the care they need but also make sure that, because of all kinds of skewed incentives we are getting a lot of quantity of care but we're not getting the kind of quality that we need.
Q    I want to ask about this, Mr. President, because you said to me when we talked yesterday that you think if everyone has the right information, the doctors will make the right decisions, patients will make the right decisions, and you just said we think we do know what is overtreatment.  Dr. John Corboy, from Colorado, do we always know and what if a patient comes to you and says, no, I want that extra CAT scan, I think I need that extra CAT scan?  And you're at the risk of being sued, among other things.  What are you going to do?
Q    Well, I think you still have to provide the appropriate care and I think we all know that there is a significant amount of care that actually is inappropriate and unnecessary.  And the question then is, for you, Mr. President, is what can you convince -- what can you do to convince the American public that there actually are limits to what we can pay for with our American health care system?  And if there are going to be limits, who is going to design the system and who is going to enforce the rules for a system like that?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, you're asking the right question.  And let me say, first of all, this is not an easy problem.  If it was easy, it would have been solved a long time ago because we've been talking about this for decades.  Since Harry Truman, we've been talking about, how do we provide care that is high-quality, gives people choices, and how can we come up with a uniquely American plan, because one of the ideological debates that I think has prevented us from making progress is, some people say this is socialized medicine and others say, we need a completely free market system.  We need to come up with something that is uniquely American.
Now, what I've said is that if we are smart, we should be able to design a system in which people still have choices of doctors and choices of plans that make sure that the necessary treatment is provided, but we don't have a huge amount of waste in the system, that we are providing adequate coverage for all people, and that we are driving down costs over the long term.
If we don't drive down costs then we're not going to be able to achieve all those other things.  And I think that on the issue that's already been raised by the two doctors, the issue of evidence-based care, I have great confidence that doctors are going to always want to do the right thing for their patients if they've got good information and if their payment incentives are not such that it actually costs them money to provide the appropriate care.
And right now what we have is a situation because doctors are paid fee-for-service and there are all sorts of rules governing how they operate; as a consequence oftentimes it is harder for them, more expensive for them to do what is appropriate.  And we should change those incentive structures.
Q    And people, I think, understand that you want to get away from quantity for quantity's sake, because that's the way the doctor makes more money, and get to quality.  But the question is, how do you do that?  How do you get to the point and still assure people -- as both of the doctors have -- that their cousins, their nephews, their husbands, their wives are going to get everything that is necessary?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let's take an example.  And they may be represented here, I wasn't sure.  But the Mayo Clinic -- everybody has heard of it -- it's got some of the best quality care in the world, people fly from all over the world to Rochester, Minnesota, in order to get outstanding care.  It turns out that Mayo Clinic oftentimes provides care that is as much as one-third less expensive than the average that's provided or some other health care systems that aren't doing as good of a job.
Now, why is that?  Well, part of it is that they have set up teams that work together so that if you go first to your primary care physician and they order a test, you don't then have to duplicate having two more tests with other specialists because they were in the room when you first met with that primary care physician.  They know how to manage chronic diseases in an effective way, so that we have people who are getting regular checkups, if they're trying to manage diabetes, as opposed to us paying for a $30,000 foot amputation because we didn't manage the disease properly.
So they are doing all kinds of smart things that we could easily duplicate across the system, but we don't.  And our job in this summer and this fall -- and which I think everybody understands we've got to move in a different direction -- is to identify the best ways to achieve the best possible care in a way that controls costs and is affordable for the American economy long term.
Q    Mr. President, you mentioned Mayo Clinic -- and I'm going to cross as I talk here, if you don't mind -- but I've been reading a lot of the e-mail questions that we've been getting online.  They've been saying the Mayo Clinic is exactly the point; they're doing it.  Private industry is doing it.  Private hospitals are doing it.  The Safeway Company is taking action.  Why get the government involved in something that is being done already in the private sector and with the right initiative and impetus could be done in the private sector without government involvement?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, you just said with the "right initiative" -- unfortunately, that initiative hasn't been forthcoming.  And as a consequence what's happening is -- see, here's what happening to ordinary families -- because I know one of those boxes was, "How does this affect you?"
The average family has seen their premiums double in the last nine years.  Costs for families are going up three times faster than wages.  So if you're happy with your health care right now -- and many people are happy with their health care right now -- the problem is, 10 years from now, you're not going to be happy because it's going to cost twice as much or three times as much as it does right now.  Out-of-pocket expenses have gone up 62 percent.  Businesses increasingly are having to cut back on health care or -- if you talk to ordinary workers, they're seeing this all the time -- employers even if they don't want to are having to pass on costs to others.
So unfortunately whatever it is that we're doing right now isn't working, Diane.  What we see is great examples of outstanding care, businesses that are working with their employees on prevention, but it's not spreading through the system.  And unfortunately government, whether you like it or not, is going to already be involved.  We pay for Medicare, we pay for Medicaid.  There are a whole host of rules, both at the state and federal level, governing how health care is administered.
And so the key is for us to try to figure out how do we take that involvement not to completely replace what we have but to build on what works and stop doing what doesn't work.  And I think that we can do that through a serious health care reform initiative.
Q    But you say we have to figure out how to do that.  But we have to do that first, "figure out," so people have a good sense that my medical care is going to be sufficient for me.  That's what people are afraid of, that they're not going to get --
THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely people are afraid of it.  People are concerned.  They know that they're living with the devil, but the devil they know they think may be better than the devil they don't.  And that's understandable.  Look, every time we've made progress in this country on health care, there has been a vigorous debate.  Senior citizens love Medicare now, but there was a big debate about whether we could set up Medicare.  The Children's Health Insurance Program, which provides millions of children health care across this country -- that was a big debate.
So these things are always going to be tough politically.  Let me tell you, though, that we actually do know, in a lot of instances, what works and what doesn't.  What's lacking is not knowledge.  We've been debating this stuff for decades.  What's lacking is political will.  And that's what I'm hoping the American people provide because genuine change generally does not come from Washington.  Whether we like it or not, it comes from the American people saying, it's time for us to move forward.  And I think this is that moment.
Q    And when we come back, Mr. President, from the break, we're going to be talking more about the centerpiece of this in many ways -- primary care doctors and providers, and I'm going to turn to Hershaw Davis, who's a nursing student and also an emergency tech at Johns Hopkins.  Stand up, if you will, because how bad is the shortage out there?
Q    It's bad, sir.  Currently our patient load is increasing due to patients not having access either to insurance or primary care.  And I want to ask, what's the administration going to do to place primary care providers -- physician and nurse practitioners -- back in the community so the ER is not America's source of primary care?
Q    All right, let's leave that question on the table.
Q    On the table.
Q    We'll give you a second to think about the answer and we'll take a commercial break.  Be right back.
* * * * *
Q    Mr. President, before we went to break, Hershaw Davis raised what is an elemental question, which is, any kind of new system needs to be built around primary care, and not all the specialists with all the tests, but primary care physicians who then farm you out, in effect.  So how do we reorient the system very quickly to get better primary care, and more primary care?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, we need more people like Hershaw, who are going to school and committed to the kind of primary care that's going to be critical to us bringing down costs and improving quality.  We're not going to be able to do it overnight.  Obviously training physicians, training nurse practitioners, that takes years of work.  But what we can do immediately is start changing some of the incentives around what it takes to become a family physician.
Right now, if you want to go into medicine, it is much more lucrative for you to go into a specialty.  Now, we want terrific specialists, and one of the great things about the American medical system is we have wonderful specialists and they do extraordinary work.  But, increasingly, medical students are having to make decisions based on the fact that they're coming out with $200,000 worth of loans.  And if they become a primary care physician, oftentimes they are going to make substantially less money, and it's going to be much harder for them to repay their loans.
So what we've done in the Recovery Act, we started by seeing if we could provide additional incentives for people who wanted to go into primary care; some loan forgiveness programs I think are going to be very important.  But what we're also going to have to do is start looking at Medicare reimbursements, Medicaid reimbursements, working with doctors, working with nurses, to figure out how can we incentivize quality of care, a team approach to care, that will help raise and elevate the profile of family care physicians and nurses as opposed to just the specialists who are typically going to make more money if they're getting paid fee-for-service.
Q    Is Mary Vigil in the room?  Mary Vigil.  There you are.  You're a medical student, right, coming out?  And how much debt will you -- can we get a microphone to Mary?  How much debt -- how much debt will you have?
Q    I'll be in about $300,000 in medical education debt.
THE PRESIDENT:  That's serious money.
Q    And you would like to go into primary care?
Q    Definitely.  That was my primary motivation in going into medical school.
Q    But you know you will be remunerated at a lesser level than a specialist.
Q    Yes. 
THE PRESIDENT:  And so, one of the things that we've got to figure out is how to change that calculation.  Now, you may still go into primary care, and I hope you do.  But I don't want to make it tougher for you.  I want to make it easier for you.  And one of the things that I'd like to explore -- and I've been working with the administration and with Congress -- are their loan forgiveness programs where people commit to a certain number of years of primary care.  That reduces the costs for their medical education.  That would make a significant difference.
Q    But let me ask a basic question, which may sound silly and naive.  But we've got 46 million people who are uninsured in this country.  And one of your goals, one of the goals of health care reform is to get those 46 million people insured.  We only have X number of doctors in the country.  If you add 46 million people to the insurance rolls -- you can't get an appointment now, Mr. President -- how are you going to get an appointment then, when there's 46 more million people competing for that doctor's time?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, this is going to be a significant issue.  First of all, I think it's important that whatever we do we're going to phase it in; it's not going to happen overnight.
If we provide the right incentives I think we're going to start seeing more young people say that going into medicine is a satisfying, fulfilling profession -- especially if we can eliminate some of the paperwork and bureaucracy that they have to deal with right now.  I have a lot of friends who are doctors and they complain to me all the time about the administrative and business sides of the practice, when they actually got into medicine because they wanted to heal people.
But I also think that one of the big potential areas where we can make progress is what Hershaw talked about, and that is how can we get nurses involved in more effective ways.  If you look at what's happening in some states, like Massachusetts, where they tried to create a universal system -- and they haven't quite gotten there yet -- they have had a problem with an overload of patients.
But one of the areas where we can potentially see some saving is a lot of those patients are being seen in the emergency room anyway, and if we are increasing prevention, if we are increasing wellness programs, we're reducing the amount of emergency room care, then that frees up doctors and resources to provide the kind of primary care that will keep people healthier, but also allow them to see more patients and hopefully give more time to patients, as well.
Q    I want to turn to someone who thinks we should follow up on what we were talking about a while back, namely about in some way reducing the vicious cycle of lots of tests, lots of treatment, what's necessary, what isn't necessary, and saying that somebody has got to enforce this, it's not going to happen if somebody doesn't.  And by the way, he is James Rohack, from Texas, and he is president of the AMA, the American Medical Association.
Q    Thank you.  Mr. President, clearly, when you spoke to us last week, you said that we entered the medical profession not to be bean counters, not to be paper pushers, but to be healers.  And we totally agree.  How are you going to assure the American public that medical decisions will still be between the patient and the physician, and not some bureaucracy that will make decisions on cost and not really what the patient needs?
Q    Once again, we'll leave that question on the table -- you answer it when we come back from commercial break.  "Prescription for America" will continue.
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Q    So, Mr. President, you remember the question?
THE PRESIDENT:  I do.
Well, first of all, I want to thank the American Medical Association.  I did appear before them just last week in Chicago, my hometown, and had a terrific exchange of ideas, and we're continuing to work with all stakeholders -- doctors, nurses, insurers, and obviously patients -- you name it, folks out there are interested in seeing this happen.
The most important thing I can say, James, on this issue is, if you are happy with your plan and you are happy with your doctor, then we don't want you to have to change.  In fact, if we don't do anything, if there's inaction, I think that's where the great danger that you lose your health care exists because of the cost problems that I already talked about.
So what we're saying is, if you are happy with your plan and your doctor, you stick with it.  If you don't have insurance, if it's too much for you to afford, if your employer doesn't provide it or you're self-employed, then we will have what's called an exchange, but you can also think of it as a marketplace, where essentially people can compare and look at what options are out there.  They'll have a host of different health care plans available, each with their own physicians network.  And you will be able to sign up for the plan that works for you.
We will help people who don't have insurance get insurance.  Doctors are not going to be working for the government.  They're still going to be working for themselves.  They're still going to be focused on patient care.  And in terms of how doctors are reimbursed, it's going to be the same system that we have now, except we can start making some changes so that, for example, we're rewarding quality of outcomes rather than the number of procedures that are done.
And this is true not just for doctors, it's also true for hospitals.  One of the things that we could say to hospitals is, reduce your readmission rate, which is often a sign that health outcomes have not been so good.  And it turns out that hospitals, when they're incentivized, actually can find ways to do it that every study shows does not have adverse effects on outcomes.
Q    You keep coming back to that point about if you like what you have, you can keep it.
THE PRESIDENT:  Right.
Q    And I will return to that subject when we get to the issue of the public option and whether the government should be in the insuring business.  But one of the things when you talk about the kinds of changes that may occur -- the elderly are affected.  Medicare will be affected.  Twenty-eight percent -- 26, 28 percent of money in Medicare is spent in the last year of life.  The elderly are very critically affected.  Just a quick sound bite from a couple of people to lay out the parameters of the problem.
(Video is shown.)
Q    And we have with us a couple of people who really represent the opposite ends on this spectrum too.  I want to talk, if I can, to Jane Sturm.  Your mother, Hazel Homer --
Q    Yes.
Q    A hundred years old, and she wanted --
Q    She's 105 now, over 105.  But at 100, the doctor had said to her, I can't do anything more unless you have a pacemaker.  I said go for it, she said go for it.  But the arrhythmia specialist said, no, it's too old.  Her doctor said, I'm going to make an appointment, because a picture is worth a thousand words.  And when the other arrhythmia specialist knew her, saw her joy of life and so on, he said, I'm going forward.  So that was over five years ago.  My question to you is, outside the medical criteria for prolonging life for somebody who is elderly, is there any consideration that can be given for a certain spirit, a certain joy of living, quality of life?  Or is it just a medical cutoff at a certain age?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, I want to meet your mom.  (Laughter.)  And I want to find out what she's eating.  (Laughter.)
But, look, the first thing for all of us to understand is that we actually have some choices to make about how we want to deal with our own end-of-life care.  And that's one of the things, I think, that we can all promote.  And this is not a big government program.  This is something that each of us individually can do, is to draft and sign a living will so that we're very clear with our doctors about how we want to approach the end of life.
I don't think that we can make judgments based on people's spirit.  That would be a pretty subjective decision to be making.  I think we have to have rules that say that we are going to provide good, quality care for all people --
Q    But the money might never have been there for her pacemaker or for your grandmother's hip replacement.
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, and that's absolutely true.  And end-of-life care is one of the most difficult, sensitive decisions we're going to have to make.  I don't want bureaucracies making those decisions.  But understand that those decisions are already being made in one way or another.  If they're not being made under Medicare and Medicaid, they're being made by private insurers.  We don't always make those decisions explicitly.  We often make those decisions by just letting people run out of money or making the deductibles too high or the out-of-pocket expenses so onerous that they just can't afford the care.
And all we're suggesting -- and we're not going to solve every difficult problem in terms of end-of-life care; a lot of that is going to have to be we as a culture and as a society starting to make better decisions within our own families and for ourselves.  But what we can do is make sure that at least some of the waste that exists in the system that's not making anybody's mom better, that is loading up on additional tests or additional drugs that the evidence shows is not necessarily going to improve care, that at least we can let doctors know, and your mom know, that you know what, maybe this isn't going to help, maybe you're better off not having the surgery, but taking the painkiller.
And those kinds of decisions between doctors and patients, and making sure that our incentives are not preventing those good decisions and that the doctors and hospitals all are aligned for patient care -- that's something we can achieve.  We're not going to solve every single one of these very difficult decisions at end of life, and ultimately that's going to be between physicians and patients.  But we can make real progress on this front if we work a little bit harder.
Q    Is that a conversation you're going to have with your mom?  (Laughter.)
Q    What I wanted to say was that the arrhythmia specialist who put the pacemaker in said that it cost Medicare $30,000 at the time.  She had been in the hospital two or three times a month before that, so let's say 20-30 times being in the hospital, maybe going to rehab -- the cost was so much more, and that's what would have happened had she not had the pacemaker.
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, and that's a good example of where if we've got experts who are looking at this and they are advising doctors across the board that the pacemaker may ultimately save money, then we potentially could have done that faster.  I mean, this can cut both ways.
The point is we want to use science, we want doctors and medical experts to be making decisions that all too often right now are driven by skewed policies, by outdated means of reimbursement, or by insurance companies.  And everybody's families I think have experienced this in one way or another.  That's the reason we need reform right now.
Q    We're going to take one more commercial break, Mr. President.  When we come back we're going to get into the issue of whether or not in a reform measure there should be government insurance for people, because a lot of people are very uncomfortable with that idea.  "Prescription for America" continues.
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Q    As I probably could have anticipated, this is running a little longer than we thought.  The President has been nice enough to say he would stay during your local news, and we will continue this discussion during the "Nightline" half hour.
And so we're going to get into that public option and whether there should be the government insurance as part of all of this.  But I do want to get to cost, because as you know, the Congressional Budget Office is estimating that this is going to cost over the next 10 years $1 trillion to $2 trillion.  There are all these estimates.  And the question is, can we afford it?  And there's a lot of people who have that question on their minds.
Q    And bringing in Christopher Bean from Maryland.
Q    Good evening.  It's a pleasure to be here and meet you.
THE PRESIDENT:  Thanks.
Q    I do have kind of a two-base question.  I'm going to read it, because I'm very nervous.  (Laughter.)  In light of this proposed health care reform and national health care system, I have many concerns.  One of them is the "Big Brother" fear:  How far is government going to go in reference to my personal life and health care treatments?  And then secondly, how and who will pay for the national health care system?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, both are great questions.  We've been sort of circling around your first question, the whole "Big Brother" fear.  What kind of insurance, Chris, do you have right now?  What kind of coverage do you have?
Q    It's a BlueCross BlueShield.
THE PRESIDENT:  It's a BlueCross BlueShield.  So if you're happy with your plan, as I said, you keep it.  Now, there are some restrictions we want to place on insurers.  Pre-existing conditions is a tool that has prevented a lot of people from either not being able to get insurance or, if they lose their job, they can't find insurance.  We think those policies should end.  So there are going to be some areas where we want to regulate the insurers a little more.
Now, in exchange, they're going to have a bigger customer pool.  And so we think that they may not make as much profit on every single person that they provide coverage to.  On the other hand, overall, I think they can still be profitable.
In terms of cost, understand that the system is already out of whack in terms of costs as it is.  So if we do nothing, costs are going to keep on going up 6, 7, 8 percent per year, and government, businesses, and families are all going to find themselves either losing their health care or paying a lot more out of pocket.  That's going to happen if we do nothing.
What I've said is, let's change the system so that our overall cost curve starts going down by investing in a range of things -- prevention, health IT, et cetera.  We will have some upfront costs and the estimates, as Charlie said, have been anywhere from a trillion to $2 trillion.  But what we've said is, what my administration has said, what I've said, is that whatever it is that we do, we pay for.  So it doesn't add to our deficit.
Now we've put forward some specific ways of paying for the health reform that we talked about.  About two-thirds of the cost would be covered by reallocating dollars that are already in the health care system -- taxpayers are already paying for it -- but it's not going to stuff that's making you healthier.
So a good example of that:  We spent $177 billion over 10 years on providing subsidies to insurers.  And if we can take that money and use it to help train young doctors for primary care, to provide more coverage, to improve prevention and wellness, that's a good way of spending money that we're already spending.
About a third of the cost will come from new revenue.  And so what I've proposed is, is that we cap the itemized deductions that the top 2 or 3 percent get -- people making over $250,000 a year; me and Charlie -- so that our item -- so that we're itemizing our deductions at the same level as most middle-class families are.  With that additional money, we would have paid for all the health care that I'm proposing.
So there's a way of paying for this that doesn't add to the deficits.  And the last point I'll make -- it's a big question; I was trying to be quick, as Charlie is looking at his watch -- the last point is, all this money that I just talked about, those are hard dollars.  We know they are and so we know that this would not add to the deficit.
It doesn't count all the savings that may come from prevention, may come from eliminating all the paperwork and bureaucracy because we've put forward health IT, it doesn't come from the evidence-based care and changes in reimbursement that I've already discussed about.  And the reason is, is because the Congressional Budget Office, the CBO, which sort of polices what all various programs cost, they're not willing to credit us with those savings.  They say, that may be nice, that may save a lot of money, but we can't be certain.
So we expect that not only are we going to pay for health care reform in a deficit-neutral way, but that's it also going to achieve big savings across the system -- including in the private sector where the Congressional Budget Office never gives us any credit -- but if hospitals and doctors are starting to operate in a smarter way, that's going to help you even if you're not involved in a government system.  That's how we can end up achieving costs.  But it requires all of us making some upfront investments and I think we can find a bipartisan way to do that.
Q    Mr. President, we're going to take a break, come back with a lot more questions about whether the government should be involved in all of this, who is going to be covered, and how.  We'll be back.
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Q    -- from Dr. Gail Wilensky, who ran Medicare in the Bush administration.  Your question.
Q    I want to go back to how we pay for the expansions.  Estimates, as you indicated, probably $1.5 trillion to cover everyone.  You mentioned savings on Medicare and Medicaid, $500 billion to $600 billion from the numbers you've provided.  Another $300 billion from additional revenue.  That leaves about $300 billion to $600 billion more.  What do we do in ways that CBO will count so that we can actually get everybody covered?
Q    And run that down in about 30 seconds.  (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT:  Look, that's the challenge.  And obviously there's a vigorous debate taking place.  There are a whole host of ideas, some that cut across parties, there are people who think that we should tax health care benefits at a certain level, cap the deduction.  There are others who proposed a surcharge on high-income individuals.  There are other cuts that may be obtained that ultimately we could find scorable.
Here's my general point, because I know that we're starting to wrap up.  This is not an easy problem.  And it's especially not an easy problem when the economy is going through a difficult phase.  We've taken a body blow to the economy.  And families were oftentimes hurting even before then.
But the one thing I'm absolutely confident about is that whenever this country has met a significant challenge to our long-term well-being, that we ultimately rise up and meet it.  And this is one of those moments where the stars are aligned.  We've got insurers who are interested, doctors who are interested, nurses, patients, AARP is here and they've seen some of the potential benefits, we're actually going to be filling the "doughnut hole," drug companies have said that they'd be willing to reduce the costs for seniors for prescription drugs as part of health care reform.
But we have to have the courage and the willingness to cooperate and compromise in order to make this happen.  And if we do, it's not going to be a completely smooth ride, there are going to be times over the next couple months where we think health care is dead, it's not going to happen.  But if we keep our eye on the prize, and we recognize that America has always been up to these big challenges, and we can't afford not to act, then I'm absolutely convinced that we can get it done this time.
Q    So that concludes our prime-time special, "Prescription for America" but your local news is coming up next.  And we hope you'll stay with us, the President is going to say with us, our audience stays with us, and we will have more questions for him about health care reform during the "Nightline" half-hour.
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Q    And we welcome you to this special edition of Nightline.  Just to tell you where we are, we're in the East Room of the White House with the President and 164 invited guests here who represent all different perspectives on the subject of health care reform.  And we have questions for the President -- call this "Prescription for America."  We had an hour there on prime time earlier before your local news, but the President is going to stay with us.  And we have more questions, and there are some critical things that we did not get to in that hour.  Most critically of all, in talking about health care reform, there's the very controversial subject of whether there needs to be a public option, whether there needs to be government-run insurance as one of the options to get more people insured, and for the general nature of health care reform.
Your critics on the Republican side of the Senate Finance Committee wrote you a letter and said at a time when major government programs like Medicare and Medicare are already on a path to fiscal insolvency, creating a brand new program will not only worsen our long-term financial outlook but also negatively impact American families who enjoy private coverage for their insurance.  What do you say to them?
THE PRESIDENT:  They're wrong.  (Laughter.)  And so let's just explain, as clearly as possible, what we're talking about.  What we want to do, as I said before, was set up a health care exchange, or a marketplace, essentially giving the American people the same kind of options that members of Congress do or federal employees do.  There is a range of options that are available.  Private insurers will participate.  You will be able to do some one-stop shopping and compare all the different plans, what kind of benefits they provide, what are the deductibles -- figure out what's best for you.
Now, what we've said is, as one option among multiple options, should be a public option where we set up a insurer that isn't profit-driven, that can keep administrative costs low, and that can serve as competition to the private insurers.  Now, what -- the argument that's been made has been that somehow the public option will crowd out private insurers.
Q    It's not a level playing field.
THE PRESIDENT:  And that's the argument, that it's not a level playing field.  And what we've said is, it wouldn't be a level playing field if the government can just print money and subsidize that public plan so that premiums are a lot lower than costs and doctors are getting reimbursed a lot lower than they do in the private sector.  Well, that's true.  It also wouldn't be a very good plan. 
But what we've said is that we can set up a public option in which they're collecting premiums just like any private insurer, that doctors are reimbursed at a fair rate, but because administrative costs are lower, we are able to keep private insurers honest in terms of the growth of costs of premiums and deductibles and so forth.
Now, you'll always hear folks say that the free market can do it better; government can't run anything.  And what I say is, well, if that's the case, nobody is going to choose the public option.  So the private insurers, who I think are very confident that they're providing a good service and a good product to their customers, should feel confident that they can compete with just one other option. 
A lot of the objection to the public option idea is not practical, it's ideological.  People don't like the idea of government being involved.  But keep in mind that the two areas where government is involved -- are involved in health care -- Medicare and the VA -- actually, there's pretty high satisfaction among the people who participate.
Q    Well, Diane is here with the head of a major insurance company.
Q    If I could, I'm going to bring him -- Ron Williams from Aetna, CEO of Aetna.  And if I can reverse the order a little bit, Mr. President, I'd like to ask a question of him and then let you come in on his answer.
THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.
Q    Mr. Williams -- Aetna, to take one, an insurance company, we hear all over the company people see their premiums going up 119 percent in the last several years; they see the profits of the insurance companies in the billions and billions of dollars.  Even in a lean year they see profits in the billions of dollars.  Is the President right that you need to be kept honest?
Q    Well, I would first say, I would commend the President for the commitment he's made to really try to get and keep everyone covered.  And I think, as a health insurance company, we're committed to that.  In the context of the question that you ask, I think that it's difficult to compete against a player who is also the person who is refereeing the game.  And so I think in the context of thinking about a government plan, what we say is, let's identify the problem we're trying to solve, let's work collaboratively with physicians, hospitals, and other health care professionals, and make certain that we solve the problem as opposed to introduce a new competitor who has the rule-making ability that government would have.
Q    Mr. President? 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think that, first of all, I want to say that Mr. Walters [sic] has been very cooperative.  We've been having a series of conversations and I appreciate the constructive manner in which we've been trying to work together.  But I just want to make clear that the government, whatever rules it provides to insurers, a public plan would have to abide by those same rules.  So we're not talking about an unlevel playing -- unequal playing field.  We're talking about a level playing field.
I also want to point out that one of the incentives for private insurers to get involved in this process is that potentially they're going to have a whole bunch of new customers, paying customers.  And if we are, as part of health care reform, going to go forward in providing additional coverage to people who either don't have health insurance or who are underinsured -- and that's a lot of working people, I just want to be clear.  These are people who are working every day and are still finding themselves having a great deal of trouble and oftentimes collecting huge amounts of debt.  If we're going to give all these new customers to the insurance industry, one of the things that we should say is, in return, that we change some of our practices and at least have some competition so that, for example, you can't eliminate people for pre-existing conditions; you can't cherry pick just the healthiest folks.  And a public option is one tool by which we can do this. 
And I think that the insurance companies will still thrive.  They've got terrific leadership.  Aetna is a well-managed company, and I'm confident that your shareholders are going to do well.
Q    Mr. President, there is a lot of doubts about this as to whether it's a level playing field.  The Lewin Group studied this.  There's 177 million people in this country with private insurance through their employers.  That group estimates, with government insurance, that employers will go to that because it will be cheaper, and they estimate -- the head of the Lewin Group, I believe, is here, Mr. Shiels.  They estimated that two-thirds of people would go to the private -- would go to the public insurance option.  Let me get you a microphone.  Can we get him a microphone, please?  Thanks.
Q    Well, we looked at several different options.  You could design it in several different ways.  There was a particular scenario that people looked at, and that's what got all the attention.  It's one where the premiums would be, for a family, for example, would be as much as $2,500 a year less than in the private market.  The reason for it is that they paid under -- they used the Medicare payment reimbursement methodology.  They pay physicians a lot less, hospitals a lot less. 
So the premium came out to as much as $2,500 a family lower in that particular scenario.  That's pretty attractive.  We estimate that 70 percent of anybody with private insurance would make the shift to the public plan.
Q    Which would be millions of people going over to public insurance.  You keep saying, if you have what you like, you can keep it.  But if your employer goes over to the government program, maybe you can't keep what you have.
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, I think it's important to understand, and I think the Lewin Group acknowledges this, that there are a whole series of ways that we could design this.  One of the things that we've said is that if you are eligible for your employer plan, then you can't just go into the public plan.  You can't decide that you're already having a pretty good deal in insurance and you're just going to dump that -- what's called a firewall. 
The other thing we're doing is we're saying to employers, to provide them a disincentive for just dumping people out of existing plans, is there's going to be a "play or pay" provision.  If you're not providing health insurance to your employees and you're a large employer, you're going to have to kick in a certain amount of money because it's not fair for taxpayers to have to cover your employees, whether it's through a public plan or through uncompensated care, essentially sending people to the emergency room -- which, by the way, adds to all of our premiums collectively about a thousand bucks a year.
So we would -- I think there are some legitimate questions in terms of how the public option is designed.  One thing I have to say, though, is it's not an entirely bad thing if, as long as they're reimbursing doctors in a adequate way, and so not being oppressive on health care providers, and as long as there are not a whole bunch of taxpayer subsidies going into a public plan, that the public plan can do it cheaper and provides good quality care, that's the competition that we talked about.  I don't think you're going to get a lot of complaints from people if the deal is a better deal.  If it's not a better deal, then people aren't going to choose it.  But what we think is, is that we can set up a system in which you are expanding choices for individuals as opposed to constricting them.
Q    All right.  We'll take a commercial break.  Nightline will continue.  Stay with us.  More questions for the President.
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Q    And we're back.  Our special edition of Nightline continues.  Mr. President, on this issue of cost of this entire thing, a lot of people are concerned that it's going to be so expensive, their taxes are going to go up.  And we have a question on that very subject.  Is David Hattenfield here?  David, where are you?  Stand up.
Q    Yes, I guess, first of all, I'd like to say it is good to be here this evening.
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you, David.
Q    With the cost of health care, I'm pretty satisfied with my own plan -- it's not everything that it should be or could be -- but I am concerned that -- of the government taking over health care and, you know, Social Security isn't doing real well, at least that's what we're being told, and how can we know that the government is going to be able to handle the cost of health care?  Isn't that going to tax me?  Isn't it going to be taxing my benefits?  Those kind of things.
THE PRESIDENT:  Right.  Well, look, I think it's a very legitimate question.  I guess the first point I'd make is, if we don't do anything, costs are going to go out of control.  Nobody disputes this.  Medicare and Medicaid are the single biggest drivers of the federal deficit and the federal debt -- by a huge margin.  And at the pace at which they're going up, if we don't do some of the things that we've talked about tonight -- changing how we pay for quality instead of quantity; making sure that we are investing in prevention -- all those game-changers that I discussed earlier -- if we don't do those things, Medicare and Medicaid are going to be broke and it will consume all of the federal budget.  Every program that currently exists under the federal budget, except defense and entitlements, all that would be swept aside by the cost of health care if we do nothing.
So that's point number one.  Point number two is that a lot of what we're talking about is reallocating existing health care dollars that are not being spent wisely.  And almost everybody agrees that there is a lot of room for us to improve how we're spending existing health care dollars.
And point number three -- there is going to be a need, initially, for some additional revenue, and I talked about our suggestion, my administration's suggestion, the best way to do that -- capping itemized deductions for people making over $250,000 a year.
But I also believe that if we are doing this right and we're bending the curve on health care, then you, who keeps a private plan, will see reductions in your out-of-pocket costs over time, so that instead of your health care premiums going up three times your wages over the next decade, it may only go up by the amount that inflation goes up generally.  And that's real money in your pocket.  That's real savings that would offset any potential increases.
By the way, I suspect that Charlie and I -- again, 3 percent of the population -- we're the ones who would see our taxes go up a little bit to pay for that initial outlay.
Q    But let me, on this tax question, let me get to this issue of taxing health care benefits.  There is a massive amount of money that employers pay for health care benefits and it is not taxed, for me or you or anybody else in this room.  You went after John McCain when he suggested taxing that money, that we would have to pay taxes on that.  Should we pay taxes on that?  A lot of people question whether there's enough money to pay for all this.  Are you willing to entertain the idea of taxing health care benefits?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I continue to strongly disagree with John McCain's plan that he presented during the campaign, which was to eliminate the deduction -- let me finish --
Q    But you went after him for suggesting that we tax that money.
THE PRESIDENT:  To answer your question, Charlie --
Q    Okay, good.  (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT:  I continue to believe that it would be the wrong way to go for us to eliminate the deduction, or the exclusion on health care benefits; that essentially taxes current benefits.  What's being discussed in Congress right now is capping that deduction, or that exclusion, at a certain level. 
I continue to believe that's not the best way to do it because I think that what you would see -- certainly if you eliminated it completely, essentially employers would stop providing health insurance and then we would really have to have either a public plan or what John McCain was proposing, everybody just gets that money back in wages and then -- or tax credits and you go out and you shop by yourself. 
The problem is that the amount of money you're getting back is not going to be the same as the costs of an average insurance plan, especially if you're not in a pool.
That's not what's being discussed right now in Congress.  They're saying, at a certain level, whether it's $13,000 or $17,000 a year, which is what they consider to be a high-end or a Cadillac plan, maybe your deduction would phase out.  I continue to believe that the better way for us to fund this is through the capping of the itemized deduction.
But I think there are people in good faith who are saying a cap would at least prevent these Cadillac plans that end up having people over-utilizing the system.  That's a debate that's taking place in Congress right now.  I'm pushing my idea.  Other folks are pushing their ideas.  There's going to have to be some compromise at the end of the day.
Q    All right, Mr. President, we'll take another break.  Nightline continues.  Stay with us.
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Q    More quick questions, if we can here.  Charlie, Marisa Milton -- skeptical.
Q    A little skeptical on cost, Mr. President.  Other industrialized nations provide coverage for all of their residents, they have higher-quality care, and they do so spending about less than half of what we spend on health care now.  So there's an argument that could be made that we actually don't need to spend any new money to fix the system if we're willing to make some tough decisions.  Could you comment on that and maybe exploring that as an approach?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, you're absolutely right that we spend at least 50 percent more than any other advanced country and we don't have better outcomes in terms of infant mortality, longevity -- all those various measures of wellness. 
Now, a lot of those other countries employ a different system than we do.  Not all of them, by the way, use a socialized medicine, as I think the British National Health Services is called.  Some of them have what would be considered -- almost of them what would be considered a single-payer system in which the government essentially operates a Medicare for all, even though doctors and health care providers are still separate.
The problem is, is that we have a employer-based system that has grown up over decades.  For us to completely change our system, root and branch, would be hugely disruptive and I think would end up resulting in people having to completely change their doctors, their health care providers, in a way that I'm not prepared to go.  This is one-sixth of our economy.  I think that we can build on what works, fix what's broken, and still save substantial money.
Q    Gary Cloutier, who is a body shop owner.
Q    Yes, body shop owner from Westfield, Massachusetts.  Cloot's Auto Body -- got to give myself a plug.
THE PRESIDENT:  There you go.  (Laughter.)
Q    And I don't have insurance.  I'm one of those 46 million that has none at all.  Under Massachusetts policy I make too much money and I don't qualify.  So I'm on the outside looking in.  What are you going to do for people like me so that we don't fall through the cracks and we're able to get insurance like everybody else?
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think the self-employed are a huge example, and that's a growing part of our population, and that's a huge portion of the people who are having a very difficult time getting health insurance, partly because if you're not part of a big pool, you just can't get a good deal.  It ends up being really expensive. 
That's why we want to set up these exchanges, because for a person like you who is self-employed, doesn't have health insurance, for you to be part of this exchange, this marketplace, along with millions of others, suddenly you've got a little bit of market clout.  Private insurers are going to want your business.  And that means that you can negotiate for a better price.  If we've got a public option in there, then that's also an alternative.  And one of the things that we're going to need to do is to provide some subsidies for folks who just can't afford it, even when the option is provided to them.
That's where some of the money is going to come in, is to make sure that people who don't have health insurance are able to get it without taking on huge amounts of debt.
Q    Dr. Tim Johnson, our medical editor.  We started this with you outlining the parameters of this.  Observation?
Q    Observation would be, if you're successful in getting rid of some of that 30 percent of unnecessary care, you're going to dislocate a lot of people.  Now, some of them are criminals committing fraud and they ought to go to jail, but a lot of them are real people with real jobs.  Why not, right now, start talking about retraining these people for primary care jobs -- nurse practitioners, physician assistants?  I hear no talk about that.
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think you make a reasonable point that if you're going to change this health care system over time, then, to be very specific, the amount of person power that goes into billing, administration -- all the things that we hate about the health care system, even though those are wonderful people who are doing great work -- they're over time hopefully going to be moving into the actually providing care side of the health care industry as opposed to the bean-counting side of the health care industry.
Keep in mind, though, that this is -- our goal here is to over time change the system, over time reduce costs, over time transition those folks into the health care side of it.  We already mentioned that we still have a nurse shortage out there.  We still have a shortage of people who are providing primary care.  People who are already in the health care system I think naturally would gravitate towards that.
     
And the last point I would make is we've got an aging population, so we know that health care is still going to be a growth industry.  And that's not an entirely bad thing.  As societies get older, we spend a certain larger portion of our overall income on health care.  And that's okay.  We just don't want to spend it badly and in a way that bankrupts the entire economy.  And that's why we need the changes that I've discussed.
     
Q    Mr. President, I want to thank you for joining us this evening, both for the earlier hour and for this half-hour of Nightline.  As we mentioned at the beginning, I think this is a topic that is going to be discussed in every living room, over every kitchen table -- not only in the Congress, but mostly in the living rooms and in the kitchens of America.  And that probably is where the decisions overall will be made:  Can we support this?  Are we for this?  Are we certain that we'll have the care we need?  And are we certain that this country can pay for it at a time when we don't have a lot of money.
THE PRESIDENT:  The answers are "yes" to all of that, and if the American people get behind this, this is going to happen.
Q    All right, Mr. President, I thank you for being with us.  Thanks very much.
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)
Q    And we thank you for being with us for this edition of Nightline.  Take care.
END                                       
9:31 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                           June 24, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AFTER MEETING WITH GOVERNORS GRANHOLM, DOUGLAS, DOYLE, ROUNDS AND GREGOIRE
TO DISCUSS HEALTH CARE
Roosevelt Room
2:56 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I just wanted to thank the governors that are represented here today -- Governor Rounds, Gregoire, Douglas, Granholm, and Doyle. They are representative of the bipartisan group of governors that hosted roundtables around the country on health care after some initial meetings that I had with the National Governors Association, in which every single governor -- Republican or Democrat; small state, big state -- emphasized how important it was to reform our health care system to control costs, to assure choice of doctors and plans for individuals, and to make sure that we are providing high-quality care.
And all of them represent states that have done some terrific work, wonderful experiments, have seen successes. But all of these governors also expressed to me, and I think heard from their constituencies, deep concerns about what the future holds. I think there's a recognition that when you have premiums doubling three times faster than wages, when you have businesses seeing 25 or 30 percent increases in terms of their health care costs for their employees, when you look at Medicaid budgets and what that's forcing governors to do in terms of making choices about trying to still fund higher education and the other things that are going to make states competitive, there's a recognition that we have to change the status quo.
And so they've reported back to me. There's no perfect unanimity across the table in terms of every single aspect of reform. I think everybody here wants to make sure that governors have flexibility, that they have input into how legislation is being shaped on the Hill. But they have done my administration and I think the American people a terrific service in bringing some of these individual stories to us. And we're committed to working with them in the weeks and months to come to make sure that when we get health reform done, it is in partnership with the states where the rubber so often hits the road.
And one of the advantages they have, as Joe Biden put it, they've planted a mole inside our administration. (Laughter.) Kathleen Sebelius, very recently a governor, knows exactly what all of them are struggling with, and she and Nancy-Ann are going to be interacting with them on a regular basis as we move this agenda forward.
So I want to thank them publicly. And I look forward to working with them to get this done for the American people and for the people of their respective states in the weeks to come.
Thank you.
Q Is there any give in your deadline, Mr. President?
THE PRESIDENT: We need to get it done.
Q This year?
THE PRESIDENT: We need to get it done this year.
END
2:59 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_______________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                    June 23, 2009
 
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA
AND PRESIDENT BACHELET OF CHILE AFTER MEETING
Oval Office
3:22 P.M. EDT
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, I want to thank President Bachelet for taking the time to visit with me today. We had a chance to get to know each other at the Summit of the Americas, and we’ve spoken on the phone repeatedly. I find her one of the most compelling leaders that we have, not just in the hemisphere but around the world. I congratulate her and her entire team for managing the Chilean economy and the political process in Chile in such a excellent fashion, and I think she’s doing an outstanding job.
Obviously the friendship between the United States and Chile is strong. We have very strong commercial ties, in part because of the free trade agreement that exists between Chile and the United States. One of the things that we’ve discussed here is how we can continually deepen that relationship. So we are announcing cooperative projects on clean energy. There is enormous interest both in the United States and in Chile in how we can develop solar power and wind power and biofuels and a whole host of other clean energy strategies that will make the people of both countries more prosperous and less dependent on imported energy needs. So we are going to be starting a cooperative project in Chile on this issue.
In addition, we think that there is tremendous possibilities for cooperation on science and technology, so a specific project that we’ve discussed is a cancer research center that can help us make progress on that deadly disease.
More broadly, I look to President Bachelet for good advice and good counsel in terms of how the United States can continue to build a strong relationship with all of Latin America. And I think the good progress that we began to make at the Summit of the Americas can be built on with some very concrete steps in the months and years to come. We consider Chile to be one of our most important partners in that process. And so I expect that in the months to come we’ll be working very closely together.
The last point I would make is -- and I mentioned this, actually, at my press conference with the White House correspondents -- I think Chile is to be congratulated on having managed their economy and their fiscal surpluses during good times in such a way that they have now been able to manage the bad times in a good way. And I think that it’s an example for all of us that good fiscal policy, good economic policy, ultimately allows for prosperity through good times and bad times.
And I think that as we move forward in some of the global discussions around how to respond to the deep recession that the world is going through, that we look to countries like Chile to underscore the fact that no matter how big or small the country is, good economic policies can help grow the economy throughout the world.
So we’re very grateful to you for your visit, we’re glad that you’re going to be here for a couple of days, and I look forward to returning the favor by visiting Chile sometime soon.
PRESIDENT BACHELET: Thank you very much, President Obama. As you say, we have had a wonderful conversation and it is because we feel that we are so close to the way President Obama’s administration is understanding the world, its challenges, and how to build relations with (inaudible) of the countries of Latin America.
Of course, he is an idol in our country. I mean, everybody was so enthusiastic about this meeting. And that is because of real reasons, because we understand that the way you are developing your leadership is one who inspire us and makes us feel very comfortable and very confident, too.
And we have congratulated President Obama because of all its foreign policy, all of its efforts to not only nationally but also internationally have a good response to the economic crisis. We have been exchanging points of view on how we can also be part of the solution in the Latin American region to cope, to respond to this economic crisis, how to assure that the countries of Latin America can have the capitals, the flows of capital that they need in order to recover the economy, and be able to tackle challenges like poverty, like health problems, and educational problems, and so on.
Of course, he already mentioned that we have been signing today, earlier today, this cooperation through energy and we are really enthusiastic about clean energy as we share the idea that the crisis should be responded -- also trying to tackle with climate change issues. And clean energy will be a very important, I would say, a support in this direction. Chile has great conditions for solar energy and some others, so we are really enthusiastic about these common efforts.
We will continue also with other initiatives like Chile-California plan, like equal opportunities plan where lots of Chileans have come to the United States to make master degrees, postgraduate studies to help with Chile’s development. And also, Chile is willing to be a very good partner of the United States in this cooperation within the region so we can have a closer relation with the United States and all the Latin American countries.
We’re also are working on health in cancer, but also we have been working with the people -- with the CDC regarding the human flu, and I think it will be very important also for the United States, because when -- in autumn, there will be another probably -- another wave of the human flu. Whatever is learned from Chile, we have good diagnostic capacities, good registration capacity will be upheld for future treatments here in the United States, for vaccine use and so on.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: And since the President is a doctor, you can take her word for it, that’s very helpful.
All right, guys. Thank you, guys. Thank you very much.
Q Just two questions, Mr. President.
MR. FINKENBINDER: Thank you, this way --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Actually, Ben, I’m going to make an exception. We’ll get one question from the Chilean press. How’s that?
Q Mr. President, yes, I’d like to ask you, I realize that your agenda is moving forward. But I’d like to ask you, President Bachelet in a previous trip to the United States made echo of an old joke: "There’s never been a coup d’état in the United States, because there’s no American embassy." The point being that almost --
PRESIDENT BACHELET: That was a joke from an American guy. (Laughter.) I just said it was a good joke.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Yes, it is. (Laughter.)
Q The point being that almost no Latin American nation has been free from CIA -- bloody CIA intervention, Chile being a prime example, President Bachelet being one of its victims. Is it time for a historical apology?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, look, I think you answered your own question right at the beginning, which is I’m interested in going forward, not looking backward. I think that the United States has been an enormous force for good in the world. I think there have been times where we’ve made mistakes. But I think that what is important is looking at what our policies are today, and what my administration intends to do in cooperating with the region.
And I was very clear in Trinidad and Tobago at the Summit of the Americas that we are interested in a partnership in which we are focused on, how can we improve the day-to-day living standards of ordinary people? And that that focus on human development is one that transcends boundaries, should transcend ideologies. I don’t have a litmus test in terms of, you know, whether a government is center-right, center-left, this or that. My approach is if the United States is working together with a country to promote the well-being, the health, the education, the economic opportunities of people in both countries, then we’re going to have a good relationship. And I’m confident that we are moving in that direction and I think that Chile is going to be an excellent partner in that process.
As President Bachelet mentioned -- you know, I think this -- the flu situation is a good example of what the 21st century is going to look like. There are no borders on the flu. This is not an American problem or a Mexican program or a Chilean problem; this is a world problem. And given that the flu season is happening now in the southern hemisphere, if we get good information and we’re both assisting countries in the southern hemisphere, but also learning from the data that is being generated, that will then help the people of the United States. And it’s a good metaphor, I think, for a whole range of issues -- from climate change to poverty to terrorism -- whatever the issue, so many of these issues now cross borders. We can’t look at them in isolation, and that, I think, is going to be the basis for a strong working relationship in the future.
So, thank you.
Q Last question. There is -- there is in Latin America clearly --
Q When are you coming to Chile?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Sorry, everybody is --
Q When are you coming to Chile? When are you --
PRESIDENT OBAMA: I’m looking forward to coming soon.
Q President Obama, can you take a photograph with the Chilean press, please?
PRESIDENT OBAMA: A photograph with the press?
Q Yes.
Q Yes.
PRESIDENT OBAMA: Okay. Why don’t we go outside?
END
3:34 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_____________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                 June 23, 2009
 
PRESS CONFERENCE BY THE PRESIDENT
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room
12:30 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. Good afternoon, everybody. Today, I want to start by addressing three issues, and then I'll take your questions.
First, I'd like to say a few words about the situation in Iran. The United States and the international community have been appalled and outraged by the threats, the beatings, and imprisonments of the last few days. I strongly condemn these unjust actions, and I join with the American people in mourning each and every innocent life that is lost.
I've made it clear that the United States respects the sovereignty of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and is not interfering with Iran's affairs. But we must also bear witness to the courage and the dignity of the Iranian people, and to a remarkable opening within Iranian society. And we deplore the violence against innocent civilians anywhere that it takes place.
The Iranian people are trying to have a debate about their future. Some in Iran -- some in the Iranian government, in particular, are trying to avoid that debate by accusing the United States and others in the West of instigating protests over the election. These accusations are patently false. They're an obvious attempt to distract people from what is truly taking place within Iran's borders. This tired strategy of using old tensions to scapegoat other countries won't work anymore in Iran. This is not about the United States or the West; this is about the people of Iran, and the future that they -- and only they -- will choose.
The Iranian people can speak for themselves. That's precisely what's happened in the last few days. In 2009, no iron fist is strong enough to shut off the world from bearing witness to peaceful protests [sic] of justice. Despite the Iranian government's efforts to expel journalists and isolate itself, powerful images and poignant words have made their way to us through cell phones and computers, and so we've watched what the Iranian people are doing.
This is what we've witnessed. We've seen the timeless dignity of tens of thousands of Iranians marching in silence. We've seen people of all ages risk everything to insist that their votes are counted and that their voices are heard. Above all, we've seen courageous women stand up to the brutality and threats, and we've experienced the searing image of a woman bleeding to death on the streets. While this loss is raw and extraordinarily painful, we also know this: Those who stand up for justice are always on the right side of history.
As I said in Cairo, suppressing ideas never succeeds in making them go away. The Iranian people have a universal right to assembly and free speech. If the Iranian government seeks the respect of the international community, it must respect those rights and heed the will of its own people. It must govern through consent and not coercion. That's what Iran's own people are calling for, and the Iranian people will ultimately judge the actions of their own government.
Now, the second issue I want to address is our ongoing effort to build a clean energy economy.
This week, the House of Representatives is moving ahead on historic legislation that will transform the way we produce and use energy in America. This legislation will spark a clean energy transformation that will reduce our dependence on foreign oil and confront the carbon pollution that threatens our planet.
This energy bill will create a set of incentives that will spur the development of new sources of energy, including wind, solar, and geothermal power. It will also spur new energy savings, like efficient windows and other materials that reduce heating costs in the winter and cooling costs in the summer.
These incentives will finally make clean energy the profitable kind of energy. And that will lead to the development of new technologies that lead to new industries that could create millions of new jobs in America -- jobs that can't be shipped overseas.
At a time of great fiscal challenges, this legislation is paid for by the polluters who currently emit the dangerous carbon emissions that contaminate the water we drink and pollute the air that we breathe. It also provides assistance to businesses and communities as they make the gradual transition to clean energy technologies.
So I believe that this legislation is extraordinarily important for our country; it's taken great effort on the part of many over the course of the past several months. And I want to thank the Chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee, Henry Waxman; his colleagues on that committee, including Congressmen Dingell, Ed Markey, and Rick Boucher. I also want to thank Charlie Rangel, the Chair of the Ways and Means Committee, and Collin Peterson, the Chair of the Agriculture Committee, for their many and ongoing contributions to this process. And I want to express my appreciation to Nancy Pelosi and Steny Hoyer for their leadership.
We all know why this is so important. The nation that leads in the creation of a clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the 21st century's global economy. That's what this legislation seeks to achieve -- it's a bill that will open the door to a better future for this nation. And that's why I urge members of Congress to come together and pass it.
The last issue I'd like to address is health care.
Right now, Congress is debating various health care reform proposals. This is obviously a complicated issue, but I am very optimistic about the progress that they're making.
Like energy, this is legislation that must and will be paid for. It will not add to our deficits over the next decade. We will find the money through savings and efficiencies within the health care system -- some of which we've already announced.
We will also ensure that the reform we pass brings down the crushing cost of health care. We simply can't have a system where we throw good money after bad habits. We need to control the skyrocketing costs that are driving families, businesses, and our government into greater and greater debt.
There's no doubt that we must preserve what's best about our health care system, and that means allowing Americans who like their doctors and their health care plans to keep them. But unless we fix what's broken in our current system, everyone's health care will be in jeopardy. Unless we act, premiums will climb higher, benefits will erode further, and the rolls of the uninsured will swell to include millions more Americans. Unless we act, one out of every five dollars that we earn will be spent on health care within a decade. And the amount our government spends on Medicare and Medicaid will eventually grow larger than what our government spends on everything else today.
When it comes to health care, the status quo is unsustainable and unacceptable. So reform is not a luxury, it's a necessity. And I hope that Congress will continue to make significant progress on this issue in the weeks ahead.
So let me open it up for questions, and I'll start with you, Jennifer.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. Your administration has said that the offer to talk to Iran's leaders remains open. Can you say if that's still so, even with all the violence that has been committed by the government against the peaceful protesters? And if it is, is there any red line that your administration won't cross where that offer will be shut off?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, obviously what's happened in Iran is profound. And we're still waiting to see how it plays itself out. My position coming into this office has been that the United States has core national security interests in making sure that Iran doesn't possess a nuclear weapon and it stops exporting terrorism outside of its borders.
We have provided a path whereby Iran can reach out to the international community, engage, and become a part of international norms. It is up to them to make a decision as to whether they choose that path. What we've been seeing over the last several days, the last couple of weeks, obviously is not encouraging, in terms of the path that this regime may choose to take. And the fact that they are now in the midst of an extraordinary debate taking place in Iran may end up coloring how they respond to the international community as a whole.
We are going to monitor and see how this plays itself out before we make any judgments about how we proceed. But just to reiterate, there is a path available to Iran in which their sovereignty is respected, their traditions, their culture, their faith is respected, but one in which they are part of a larger community that has responsibilities and operates according to norms and international rules that are universal. We don't know how they're going to respond yet, and that's what we're waiting to see.
Q So should there be consequences for what's happened so far?
THE PRESIDENT: I think that the international community is, as I said before, bearing witness to what's taking place. And the Iranian government should understand that how they handle the dissent within their own country, generated indigenously, internally, from the Iranian people, will help shape the tone not only for Iran's future but also its relationship to other countries.
Since we're on Iran, I know Nico Pitney is here from Huffington Post.
Q Thank you, Mr. President.
THE PRESIDENT: Nico, I know that you, and all across the Internet, we've been seeing a lot of reports coming directly out of Iran. I know that there may actually be questions from people in Iran who are communicating through the Internet. Do you have a question?
Q Yes, I did, I wanted to use this opportunity to ask you a question directly from an Iranian. We solicited questions last night from people who are still courageous enough to be communicating online, and one of them wanted to ask you this: Under which conditions would you accept the election of Ahmadinejad? And if you do accept it without any significant changes in the conditions there, isn't that a betrayal of what the demonstrators there are working towards?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, look, we didn't have international observers on the ground. We can't say definitively what exactly happened at polling places throughout the country. What we know is that a sizeable percentage of the Iranian people themselves, spanning Iranian society, consider this election illegitimate. It's not an isolated instance -- a little grumbling here or there. There is significant questions about the legitimacy of the election.
And so ultimately the most important thing for the Iranian government to consider is legitimacy in the eyes of its own people, not in the eyes of the United States. And that's why I've been very clear: Ultimately, this is up to the Iranian people to decide who their leadership is going to be and the structure of their government.
What we can do is to say unequivocally that there are sets of international norms and principles about violence, about dealing with peaceful dissent, that spans cultures, spans borders. And what we've been seeing over the Internet and what we've been seeing in news reports violates those norms and violates those principles.
I think it is not too late for the Iranian government to recognize that there is a peaceful path that will lead to stability and legitimacy and prosperity for the Iranian people. We hope they take it.
Jeff Mason of Reuters.
Q Right here, sir. Switching gears slightly, in light of the financial regulation and reform that you have made, how do you rate the performance of the Fed in handling the financial crisis? And more specifically, how do you rate the performance of Ben Bernanke, and would you like him to stay on when his term ends in January?
THE PRESIDENT: I'm not going to make news about Ben Bernanke -- (laughter) -- although I think he has done a fine job under very difficult circumstances.
I would say that all financial regulators didn't do everything that needed to be done to prevent the crisis from happening. And that's why we've put forward the boldest set of reforms in financial regulation in 75 years, because there were too many gaps where there were laws on the books that would have brought about a prevention of the crisis; the enforcement wasn't there. In some cases, there just weren't sufficient laws on the books -- for example, with the non-banking sector.
I think that the Fed probably performed better than most other regulators prior to the crisis taking place, but I think they'd be the first to acknowledge that in dealing with systemic risk and anticipating systemic risk, they didn't do everything that needed to be done.
I think since the crisis has occurred, Ben Bernanke has performed very well. And one of the central concepts behind our financial regulatory reform is that there's got to be somebody who is responsible not just for monitoring the health of individual institutions, but somebody who's monitoring the systemic risks of the system as a whole. And we believe that the Fed has the most technical expertise and the best track record in terms of doing that.
But that's not the only part of financial regulation. One of the things that we're putting a huge amount of emphasis on is the issue of consumer protection -- whether it's subprime loans that were given out because nobody was paying attention to what was being peddled to consumers, whether it's how credit cards are handled, how annuities are dealt with, what people can expect in terms of understanding their 401(k)s. There's a whole bunch of financial transactions out there where consumers are not protected the way they should, and that's why we said we're going to put forward a consumer financial protection agency whose only job it is to focus on those issues.
Now, the Fed was one of the regulators that had some of those consumer responsibilities. We actually think that they're better off focusing on issues of broad systemic risk, and we have just one agency that's focused on the consumer protection side.
Q But is the Fed getting too powerful?
THE PRESIDENT: If you look at what we've proposed, we are not so much expanding the Fed's power as we are focusing what the Fed needs to do to prevent the kinds of crises that are happening again. Another good example is the issue of resolution authority. I think it wasn't that long ago where everybody was properly outraged about AIG, and the enormous amounts of money the taxpayers had to put into AIG in order to prevent it from dragging the entire financial system down with it.
Had we had the kinds of resolution authority, the kinds of laws that were in place that would allow a orderly winding down of AIG, then potentially taxpayers could have saved a huge amount of money. We want that power to be available so that taxpayers aren't on the hook.
All right? Major Garrett. Where's Major?
Q Right here, sir. In your opening remarks, sir, you were -- you said about Iran that you were appalled and outraged. What took you so long to say those words?
THE PRESIDENT: I don't think that's accurate. Track what I've been saying. Right after the election, I said that we had profound concerns about the nature of the election, but that it was not up to us to determine what the outcome was. As soon as violence broke out -- in fact, in anticipation of potential violence -- we were very clear in saying that violence was unacceptable, that that was not how governments operate with respect to their people.
So we've been entirely consistent, Major, in terms of how we've approached this. My role has been to say the United States is not going to be a foil for the Iranian government to try to blame what's happening on the streets of Tehran on the CIA or on the White House; that this is an issue that is led by and given voice to the frustrations of the Iranian people. And so we've been very consistent the first day, and we're going to continue to be consistent in saying this is not an issue about the United States; this is about an issue of the Iranian people.
What we've also been consistent about is saying that there are some universal principles, including freedom of assembly and freedom of speech, making sure that governments are not using coercion and violence and repression in terms of how they interact with peaceful demonstrators. And we have been speaking out very clearly about that fact.
Q Are Iranian diplomats still welcome at the embassy on the Fourth of July, sir?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think as you're aware, Major, we don't have formal diplomatic relations with -- we don't have formal diplomatic relations with Iran. I think that we have said that if Iran chooses a path that abides by international norms and principles, then we are interested in healing some of the wounds of 30 years, in terms of U.S.-Iranian relations. But that is a choice that the Iranians are going to have to make.
Q But the offer still stands?
THE PRESIDENT: That's a choice the Iranians are going to have to make.
David Jackson.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. Two of the key players in the insurance industry, America's Health Insurance Plans and Blue Cross-Blue Shield, sent a letter to the Senate this morning saying that a government health insurance plan would "dismantle" private insurers. Why are they wrong? And secondly, this public plan, is this non-negotiable? Would you sign a health care bill without it?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, let's talk first of all about health care reform more broadly.
I think in this debate there's been some notion that if we just stand pat we're okay. And that's just not true. You know, there are polls out that show that 70 or 80 percent of Americans are satisfied with the health insurance that they currently have. The only problem is that premiums have been doubling every nine years, going up three times faster than wages. The U.S. government is not going to be able to afford Medicare and Medicaid on its current trajectory. Businesses are having to make very tough decisions about whether we drop coverage or we further restrict coverage.
So the notion that somehow we can just keep on doing what we're doing and that's okay, that's just not true. We have a longstanding critical problem in our health care system that is pulling down our economy, it's burdening families, it's burdening businesses, and it is the primary driver of our federal deficits. All right?
So if we start from the premise that the status quo is unacceptable, then that means we're going to have to bring about some serious changes. What I've said is, our top priority has to be to control costs. And that means not just tinkering around the edges. It doesn't mean just lopping off reimbursements for doctors in any given year because we're trying to fix our budget. It means that we look at the kinds of incentives that exist, what our delivery system is like, why it is that some communities are spending 30 percent less than other communities but getting better health care outcomes, and figuring out how can we make sure that everybody is benefiting from lower costs and better quality by improving practices. It means health IT. It means prevention.
So all these things are the starting point, I think, for reform. And I've said very clearly: If any bill arrives from Congress that is not controlling costs, that's not a bill I can support. It's going to have to control costs. It's going to have to be paid for. So there's been a lot of talk about, well, a trillion-dollar price tag. What I've said is, if we're going to spend that much money, then it's going to be largely funded through reallocating dollars that are already in the health care system but aren't being spent well. If we're spending $177 billion over 10 years to subsidize insurance companies under Medicare Advantage, when there's no showing that people are healthier using that program than the regular Medicare program, well, that's not a good deal for taxpayers. And we're going to take that money and we're going to use it to provide better care at a cheaper cost to the American people. So that's point number one.
Number two, while we are in the process of dealing with the cost issue, I think it's also wise policy and the right thing to do to start providing coverage for people who don't have health insurance or are underinsured, are paying a lot of money for high deductibles. I get letters -- two, three letters a day -- that I read of families who don't have health insurance, are going bankrupt, are on the brink of losing their insurance; have deductibles that are so high that even with insurance they end up with $50,000, $100,000 worth of debt; are at risk of losing their homes.
And that has to be part of reform, making sure that even if you've got health insurance now, you are not worried that when you lose your job or your employer decides to change policies that somehow you're going to be out of luck. I think about the woman who was in Wisconsin that I was with, who introduced me up in Green Bay -- 36 years old, double mastectomy; breast cancer has now moved to her bones and she's got two little kids, a husband with a job. They had health insurance, but they're still $50,000 in debt, and she's thinking, my main legacy, if I don't survive this thing, is going to be leaving $100,000 worth of debt. So those are the things that I'm prioritizing.
Now, the public plan I think is a important tool to discipline insurance companies. What we've said is, under our proposal, let's have a system the same way that federal employees do, same way that members of Congress do, where -- we call it an "exchange," or you can call it a "marketplace" -- where essentially you've got a whole bunch of different plans. If you like your plan and you like your doctor, you won't have to do a thing. You keep your plan. You keep your doctor. If your employer is providing you good health insurance, terrific, we're not going to mess with it.
But if you're a small business person, if the insurance that's being offered is something you can't afford, if you want to shop for a better price, then you can go to this exchange, this marketplace, and you can look: Okay, this is how much this plan costs, this is how much that plan costs, this is what the coverage is like, this is what fits for my family. As one of those options, for us to be able to say, here's a public option that's not profit-driven, that can keep down administrative costs and that provides you good, quality care for a reasonable price -- as one of the options for you to choose, I think that makes sense.
Q Won't that drive private insurers out of business?
THE PRESIDENT: Why would it drive private insurers out of business? If private insurers say that the marketplace provides the best quality health care, if they tell us that they're offering a good deal, then why is it that the government -- which they say can't run anything -- suddenly is going to drive them out of business? That's not logical.
Now, I think that there's going to be some healthy debates in Congress about the shape that this takes. I think there can be some legitimate concerns on the part of private insurers that if any public plan is simply being subsidized by taxpayers endlessly, that over time they can't compete with the government just printing money.
So there are going to be some I think legitimate debates to be had about how this private plan takes shape. But just conceptually, the notion that all these insurance companies who say they're giving consumers the best possible deal, that they can't compete against a public plan as one option, with consumers making the decision what's the best deal. That defies logic, which is why I think you've seen in the polling data overwhelming support for a public plan. All right?
Q Is that non-negotiable?
THE PRESIDENT: Chip.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. Following up on Major's question, some republicans on Capitol Hill -- John McCain and Lindsey Graham, for example -- have said that up to this point, your response on Iran has been timid and weak. Today, it sounded a lot stronger. It sounded like the kind of speech John McCain has been urging you to give, saying that those who stand up for justice are always on the right side of history, referring to an iron fist in Iran -- "deplore," "appalled," "outraged." Were you influenced at all by John McCain and Lindsey Graham accusing you of being timid and weak?
THE PRESIDENT: What do you think? (Laughter.) Look, the -- I think John McCain has genuine passion about many of these international issues, and I think that all of us share a belief that we want justice to prevail. But only I'm the President of the United States, and I've got responsibilities in making certain that we are continually advancing our national security interests and that we are not used as a tool to be exploited by other countries.
I mean, you guys must have seen the reports. They've got some of the comments that I've made being mistranslated in Iran, suggesting that I'm telling rioters to go out and riot some more. There are reports suggesting that the CIA is behind all this -- all of which are patently false. But it gives you a sense of the narrative that the Iranian government would love to play into. So the -- members of Congress, they've got their constitutional duties, and I'm sure they will carry them out in the way that they think is appropriate. I'm President of the United States, and I'll carry out my duties as I think are appropriate. All right?
Q By speaking so strongly today, aren't you giving the leadership in Iran the fodder to make those arguments that it is about the United States?
THE PRESIDENT: Look, I mean, I think that -- we can parse this as much as we want. I think if you look at the statements that I've made, they've been very consistent. I just made a statement on Saturday in which we said we deplore the violence. And so I think that in the hothouse of Washington, there may be all kinds of stuff going back and forth in terms of Republican critics versus the administration. That's not what is relevant to the Iranian people. What's relevant to them right now is, are they going to have their voices heard?
And, frankly, a lot of them aren't paying a lot of attention to what's being said on Capitol Hill, and probably aren't spending a lot of time thinking about what's being said here. They're trying to figure out how can they make sure justice is served in Iran.
Q So there's no news in your statement today?
THE PRESIDENT: Chuck Todd.
Q Mr. President, I want to follow up on Iran. You have avoided twice spelling out consequences. You've hinted that there would be, from the international community, if they continue to violate -- you said violate these norms. You seem to hint that there are human rights violations taking place./
THE PRESIDENT: I'm not hinting. I think that when a young woman gets shot on the street when she gets out of her car, that's a problem.
Q Then why won't you spell out the consequences that the Iranian --
THE PRESIDENT: Because I think, Chuck, that we don't know yet how this thing is going to play out. I know everybody here is on a 24-hour news cycle. I'm not.
Q But shouldn't -- I mean, shouldn't the world and Iran --
THE PRESIDENT: Chuck, I answered --
Q -- but shouldn't the Iranian regime know that there are consequences?
THE PRESIDENT: I answered the question, Chuck, which is that we don't yet know how this is going to play out.
Jake Tapper.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. Before I ask my question, I'm wondering if you could actually answer David's. Is the public plan non-negotiable?
THE PRESIDENT: That's your question. (Laughter.)
Q Well, you didn't answer --
THE PRESIDENT: You think you're going to -- are you the ombudsman for the White House press corps? (Laughter.) What's your -- is that your question? (Laughter.)
Q Then I have a two-part question. (Laughter.) Is the public plan non-negotiable? And while I appreciate your Spock-like language about the logic of the health care plan, the public plan, it does seem logical to a lot of people that if the government is offering a cheaper health care plan, then lots of employers will want to have their employees covered by that cheaper plan, which will not have to be for profit, unlike private plans, and may possibly benefit from some government subsidies, who knows. And then their employees would be signed up for this public plan, which would violate what you're promising the American people, that they will not have to change health care plans if they like the plan they have.
THE PRESIDENT: I got you. You're pitching, I'm catching. I got the question. First of all, was the reference to Spock -- is that a crack on my ears? (Laughter.) All right, I just want to make sure. No?
Q I would never make fun of your ears, sir. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: In answer to David's question, which you co-opted, we are still early in this process, so we have not drawn lines in the sand other than that reform has to control costs and that it has to provide relief to people who don't have health insurance or are underinsured. Those are the broad parameters that we've discussed.
There are a whole host of other issues where ultimately I may have a strong opinion, and I will express those to members of Congress as this is shaping up. It's too early to say that. Right now I will say that our position is that a public plan makes sense.
Now, let me go to the broader question you made about the public plan. As I said before, I think that there is a legitimate concern if the public plan was simply eating off the taxpayer trough, that it would be hard for private insurers to complete. If, on the other hand, the public plan is structured in such a way where they've got to collect premiums and they've got to provide good services, then if what the insurance companies are saying is true, that they're doing their best to serve their customers, that they're in the business of keeping people well and giving them security when they get sick, they should be able to compete.
Now, if it turns out that the public plan, for example, is able to reduce administrative costs significantly, then you know what? I'd like insurance companies to take note and say, hey, if the public plan can do that, why can't we? And that's good for everybody in the system. And I don't think there should be any objection to that.
Now, by the way, I should point out that part of the reform that we've suggested is that if you want to be a private insurer as part of the exchange, as part of this marketplace, this menu of options that people can choose from, we're going to have some different rules for all insurance companies -- one of them being that you can't preclude people from getting health insurance because of a pre-existing condition, you can't cherry pick and just take the healthiest people.
So there are going to be some ground rules that are going to apply to all insurance companies, because I think the American people understand that, too often, insurance companies have been spending more time thinking about how to take premiums and then avoid providing people coverage than they have been thinking about how can we make sure that insurance is there, health care is there when families need it.
But I'm confident that if -- I take those advocates of the free market to heart when they say that the free market is innovative and is going to compete on service and is going to compete on their ability to deliver good care to families. And if that's the case then this just becomes one more option. If it's not the case then I think that that's something that the American people should know.
Q I'm sorry, but what about keeping your promise to the American people that they won't have to change plans even if employers --
THE PRESIDENT: Well, no, no, I mean -- when I say if you have your plan and you like it and your doctor has a plan, or you have a doctor and you like your doctor that you don't have to change plans, what I'm saying is the government is not going to make you change plans under health reform.
Now, are there going to be employers right now -- assuming we don't do anything -- let's say that we take the advice of some folks who are out there and say, oh, this is not the time to do health care, we can't afford it, it's too complicated, let's take our time, et cetera. So let's assume that nothing happened. I can guarantee you that there's a possibility for a whole lot of Americans out there that they're not going to end up having the same health care they have, because what's going to happen is, as costs keep on going up, employers are going to start making decisions: We've got to raise premiums on our employees; in some cases, we can't provide health insurance at all.
And so there are going to be a whole set of changes out there. That's exactly why health reform is so important.
Margaret, from McClatchy. Where's Margaret? There you are.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. As a former smoker, I understand the frustration and the fear that comes with quitting. But with the new law that you signed yesterday regulating the tobacco industry, I'd like to ask you a few questions. How many cigarettes a day --
THE PRESIDENT: A few questions? (Laughter.)
Q How many cigarettes a day do you now smoke? Do you smoke alone or in the presence of other people? And do you believe the new law would help you to quit? If so, why?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, the new law that was put in place is not about me, it's about the next generation of kids coming up. So I think it's fair, Margaret, to just say that you just think it's neat to ask me about my smoking, as opposed to it being relevant to my new law. (Laughter.) But that's fine, I understand. It's an interesting human -- it's an interesting human interest story.
But I've said before that, as a former smoker, I constantly struggle with it. Have I fallen off the wagon sometimes? Yes. Am I a daily smoker, a constant smoker? No. I don't do it in front of my kids, I don't do it in front of my family, and I would say that I am 95 percent cured, but there are times where -- (laughter) -- there are times where I mess up. And, I mean, I've said this before. I get this question about once every month or so, and I don't know what to tell you, other than the fact that, like folks who go to AA, once you've gone down this path, then it's something you continually struggle with, which is precisely why the legislation we signed was so important, because what we don't want is kids going down that path in the first place. Okay?
Macarena Vidal?
Q Mr. President, you're meeting today with Chilean President Michelle Bachelet. You're meeting next week with Alvaro Uribe from Colombia. Two months ago in Trinidad at the Summit of the Americas, you said that -- you called on Latin American countries to help you with deeds, not words, particularly towards less democratic countries. Have you noticed any particular progress in these two months, and can you give us examples?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, I'm very much looking forward to seeing President Bachelet. I think she's one of the finest leaders in Latin America, a very capable person. If you look at how Chile has handled the recession, they've handled it very well in part because the surpluses that they got when copper prices were high they set aside. And so they had the resources to deal with the downturn. It's a good lesson for the United States. When we had surpluses, they got dissipated.
We think that there's enormous possibilities of making progress in Latin America generally. One of the things that I'll be talking about with President Bachelet is the coordination and cooperation between the United State and Chile on clean energy. We'll have an announcement when we do our press conference after my bilateral meeting on some important clean energy partnerships. We're making important progress when it comes to exchanges on cancer research. We continue to have a robust trade regime with Chile. And, by the way, Chile has actually entered into some very interesting partnerships not just with the federal government, but also with state governments like California.
So I think the relationship that we have with Chile -- which, by the way, does not fall in line with U.S. foreign policy on every single issue -- but it's a respectful policy. Chile is an important partner. I think that's the model that we want: partnership. The United States doesn't dictate how Chile should view its own interests, but in fact we've achieved great cooperation. And I will be looking at President Bachelet giving us further advice in terms of how we can take the kind of relationship we have with Chile and expand that to our relationships throughout Latin America.
Q But my question is not only about that -- Chile, but about Latin American countries giving you a hand on -- against less democratic countries.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, the point is, is that I think Chile is leading by example. So I'm using Chile as an example. But the same is true in Brazil, for example. I mean, President Lula came in, and he's got a very different political orientation than most Americans do. He came up through the trade union movement. He was perceived as a strong leftist. It turns out that he was a very practical person, who although maintains relationships across the political spectrum in Latin America, has instituted all sorts of smart market reforms that have made Brazil prosper.
And so if you take a Bachelet or a Lula, and the United States has a good working relationship with them, then I think that points the way for other countries that may be where the democratic tradition is not as deeply embedded as we'd like it to be. And we can make common cause in showing those countries that, in fact, democracy, respect for property rights, respects for market-based economies, rule of law -- that all those things can in fact lead to greater prosperity, that that's not just a U.S. agenda, but that's a smart way to increase the prosperity of your own people.
Okay, Hans Nichols. Hans.
Q Thank you, Mr. President. If I can just return to the economy more generally. When you were selling the economic stimulus package, you talked and your advisors and economists talked about keeping unemployment below 8 percent. Last week you acknowledged that unemployment is likely to reach double digits, being 10 percent. Do you think you need a second stimulus package?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, not yet, because I think it's important to see how the economy evolves and how effective the first stimulus is. I think it's fair to say that -- keep in mind the stimulus package was the first thing we did, and we did it a couple of weeks after inauguration. At that point nobody understood what the depths of this recession were going to look like. If you recall, it was only significantly later that we suddenly get a report that the economy had tanked.
And so it's not surprising then that we missed the mark in terms of our estimates of where unemployment would go. I think it's pretty clear now that unemployment will end up going over 10 percent, if you just look at the pattern, because of the fact that even after employers and businesses start investing again and start hiring again, typically it takes a while for that employment number to catch up with economic recovery. And we're still not at actual recovery yet.
So I anticipate that this is going to be a difficult -- difficult year, a difficult period.
Q What's the high water mark, then, for unemployment? Eleven percent?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I'm not suggesting that I have a crystal ball. Since you just threw back at us our last prognosis, let's not -- let's not engage in another one.
Q Does that mean you won't be making predictions ever? (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: But what I am saying is that -- here are some things I know for certain. In the absence of the stimulus, I think our recession would be much worse. It would have declined -- without the Recovery Act -- we know for a fact that states, for example, would have laid off a lot more teachers, a lot more police officers, a lot more firefighters, every single one of those individuals whose jobs were saved. As a consequence, they are still making their mortgage payments, they are still shopping. So we know that the Recovery Act has had an impact.
Now, what we also know is this was the worst recession since the Great Depression, and people are going through a very tough time right now. And I don't expect them to be satisfied. I mean, one thing that -- as I sometimes glance at the various news outlets represented here, I know that they're sometimes reporting of, oh, the administration is worried about this, or their poll numbers are going down there -- look, the American people have a right to feel like this is a tough time right now. What's incredible to me is how resilient the American people have been and how they are still more optimistic than the facts alone would justify, because this is a tough, tough period.
And I don't feel satisfied with the progress that we've made. We've got to get our Recovery Act money out faster. We've got to make sure that the programs that we've put in place are working the way they're supposed to. I think, for example, our mortgage program has actually helped to modify mortgages for a lot of people, but it hasn't been keeping pace with all the foreclosures that are taking place. I get letters every day from people who say, you know, I appreciate that you put out this mortgage program, but the bank is still not letting me modify my mortgage and I'm about to lose my home. And then I've got to call my staff and team and find out why isn't it working for these folks, and can we adjust it, can we tweak it, can we make it more aggressive?
This is a very, very difficult process. And what I've got to do is to make sure that we're focused both on the short term, how can we provide families immediate relief and jumpstart the economy as quickly as possible; and I've got to keep my eye on the long term, and the long term is making sure that by reforming our health care system, by passing serious energy legislation that makes us a clean energy economy, by revamping our education system, by finally getting the financial regulatory reforms in place that are necessary for the 21st century -- by doing all those things, we've got a foundation for long-term economic growth, and we don't end up having to juice up the economy artificially through the kinds of bubble strategies that helped to get us in the situation that we're in today.
Okay. I've got time for two more questions. April. Where's April?
Q Right here. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: There you are. How are you?
Q I'm fine. Back on the economy, Mr. President, people are criticizing this road to recovery plan. Specifically, there are reports in The Washington Post that say that the African America unemployment rate will go to 20 percent by the end of this year. And then you had your Chairman of Economic Advisers say the target intervention may come next year if nothing changes. Why not target intervention now to stop the bloodletting in the black unemployment rate?
THE PRESIDENT: Look, first of all, we know that the African American unemployment rate, the Latino unemployment rate, are consistently higher than the national average. And so, if the economy as a whole is doing poorly, then you know that the African American community is going to be doing poorly, and they're going to be hit even harder. And the best thing that I can do for the African American community or the Latino community or the Asian community, whatever community, is to get the economy as a whole moving. If I don't -- hold on one second, let me answer the question -- if I don't do that, then I'm not going to be able to help anybody. So that's priority number one.
It is true that in certain inner-city communities, the unemployment rate is -- was already sky high even before this recession. The ladders available for people to enter into the job market are even worse. And so we are interested in looking at proven programs that help people on a pathway to jobs.
There was a reason why right before Father's Day I went to a program here locally in Washington called Year Up, which has a proven track record of taking young, mostly minority people, some of whom have graduated from high school, some maybe who've just gotten their GED, and trained them on computers and provide them other technical skills, but also train them on how to carry themselves in an office, how to write an e-mail -- some of the social skills that will allow them to be more employable. They've got a terrific placement rate after this one-year program. If there are ways that we can potentially duplicate some of those programs, then we're going to do so.
So part of what we want to do is to find tools that will give people more opportunity, but the most important thing I can do is to lift the economy overall. And that's what my strategy is focused on.
All right. Last question. Suzanne.
Q Thank you. Back to Iran, putting a human face on this. Over the weekend, we saw a shocking video of this woman, Neda, who had been shot in the chest and bled to death. Have you seen this video?
THE PRESIDENT: I have.
Q What's your reaction?
THE PRESIDENT: It's heartbreaking. It's heartbreaking. And I think that anybody who sees it knows that there's something fundamentally unjust about that.
Q We also have people on the ground who have been saying that the streets are quieter now and that is because they feel that they're paralyzed by fear -- fear of people gone missing, fear of violence, that perhaps this is a movement that's gone underground or perhaps is dying. Do you have any concern over that?
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. I have concern about how peaceful demonstrators and people who want their votes counted may be stifled from expressing those concerns. I think, as I said before, there are certain international norms of freedom of speech, freedom of expression --
Q Then why won't you allow the photos --
THE PRESIDENT: Hold on a second, Helen. That's a different question. (Laughter.) And I think it's important for us to make sure that we let the Iranian people know that we are watching what's happening, that they are not alone in this process. Ultimately, though, what's going to be most important is what happens in Iran. And we've all been struck by the courage of people. And I mentioned this I think in a statement that I made a couple of days ago. Some of you who had been covering my campaigns know this is one of my favorite expressions, was Dr. King's expression that "the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice." We have to believe that ultimately justice will prevail.
All right. Thank you, guys.
END
1:25 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the First Lady
___________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                              June 22, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY
AT A "UNITED WE SERVE" SUMMER KICK-OFF ACTIVITY WITH MARIA SHRIVER
Bret Harte Elementary School
San Francisco, California
12:31 P.M. PDT
MRS. OBAMA: Oh, wow, thank you. Maria -- First Lady Maria Shriver -- oh my goodness. (Applause.) I am thrilled to be here. This is my first trip, I think, to the West Coast since I've been First Lady. (Applause.) I think so. And this is a great way to spend it.
I have to give kudos back to Maria. She is a girlfriend. She has been such a tremendous support through me -- to me throughout this journey. She has been a role model in so many ways, and she's such a gifted individual. And she's provided me with the kind of inspiration that it takes to get through this wonderful journey that I've been on. And I am so glad to be working on this project with her. Let's give our First Lady, your First Lady, a round of applause. (Applause.)
So one of the reasons why I'm here is that we're here to kick off what we're calling United We Serve. (Cheering.) Yes, they're excited about it! (Laughter.) They are fired up about United We Serve. We should be fired up.
As you may know and as Maria said, community and national service is something that's near and dear to my heart. It's not something that we just started to do in the White House. It's been sort of the air that we breathe in the Obama household in so many ways, and I see faces of people that I have served with who have helped bring me to this point in time -- friends, folks -- (cheering) -- hey! -- (laughter) -- friends who have helped get me to this point in time. So it is just a tremendous honor for me to be here.
And as we think about what we're trying to do through United We Serve, I just think -- imagine the changes that happen with the creation of this park. Kids who were never able to play on a swing set get the opportunity to play. And that just doesn't happen here on this site. Think about the libraries that will be changed because each of us donates a book or two. Or think about the smiles that are on some homeless person's face because you took the time to spend a couple of hours to feed somebody a healthy meal. That's what United We Serve is all about. It's a nationwide effort to call Americans to make service a daily part of their lives -- like all of you here; it's not something that you do in your spare time.
As history has shown again and again, when we come together as a nation, we can really get things done. We saw that in this past election. We've seen it time and time again. Service is how we get where we need to be.
And United We Serve is going to focus on a couple of key strategies: one is education, health, energy and the environment, and community renewal. (Applause.) And the project that we're working on here today has a clear focus on health and community renewal.
And I've been talking a lot about health lately. America's children, as we all know, deserve the healthiest start that we can possibly give them. And there are several components to a healthy start, and one is eating right, and that's something that I've been talking about with the creation of the first White House Kitchen Garden. (Applause.) We just harvested from that garden earlier this week. It was a wonderful event. The garden is blooming. If you visit the White House, you've got to see this garden. The rain has just made it a tremendous -- just bursting with vegetation. It's really good.
But health is just one part of it. The other component, as we all know, is that kids have to be active. They have to move their bodies in order to get their minds flowing. It's important for us to help our children understand that connection between what they eat and how they feel, and the fact that if they move their bodies and get their self going, they just have more energy to get through the day. That's our job as the adults in their life.
And as the President and Congress begin to tackle health care reform, which is coming up, we will begin to see the costly effects of unhealthy habits that burden our health care system. We're going to see the costs, where it's going to be more clear to us. Obesity, diabetes, heart disease, high-blood pressure are all diet-related health issues that cost this country more than $120 billion a year, and that's a conservative figure. While that dollar amount is shocking, and it should be, the effect on our children should be even more shocking.
Childhood obesity in the United States is reaching epidemic proportions. I talked about this last week at the Garden Harvest. Nearly a third of the children in this country are either overweight or obese, and a third will suffer from diabetes at some point in their lifetime. These are children. And in the African American and Hispanic communities, those numbers climb even higher so that nearly half, okay, half of the children in those communities are going to suffer that fate.
And for the first time -- and this is the thing that shocked me -- in this history of our nation, medical experts have warned that our youngest generation may be on track to have a shorter life span than their parents as a direct result from obesity.
This has serious consequences for the immediate and long-term health of individual children and for our national health care system. There are just too many kids that are living a life off of high-calorie food and they're not getting enough exercise. And in order to stay healthy, children are supposed to get 60 minutes of activity every single day. Now, how many kids in your lives are doing that these days, at least 60 minutes every single day?
So that's why we can't underestimate the value of having safe and quality playgrounds in every single community. You know, that's why this project that we're doing here today is so important, and why organizations like Kaboom are just necessary, not just to the health of our children but to the health of the entire nation.
And I've known Kaboom for a long time. They've done stuff not just here in San Francisco but around the country. They've done projects in Chicago, my hometown. (Cheering.) For the last 14 -- yes, a little shout-out for Chicago. (Cheering.) There's nothing wrong with a little shout-out for Chicago. (Laughter.)
For the last 14 years, Kaboom has been building playgrounds in under-served communities across the country. And their vision is to have great places for kids to play within walking distance of their homes, and they do this by enlisting the help of communities and people like you from around the country. That's why we're here.
So now the focus becomes exercise. We've got to get kids moving. We've got to get them active. And the truth is we all know this, but at the same time there are so many kids around this country who don't have access in their schools to recess or outside play. Too many kids are sitting around watching TV, playing computer games. And I don't know about you, but we've instituted Camp Obama in my house -- (laughter) -- which means that the television and the computers are off all day until after dinner and right before bedtime. Bedtime is early. (Laughter.) So we're shutting off the TV and turning off the computers in our house.
And our kids are fortunate, because as you know, we have a swing set -- finally -- (laughter) -- in the White House. (Applause.) And there's nothing like watching kids play. And my kids, they get to swing on the swings, climb on the jungle gym. They're playing; they don't even know they're getting exercise. That's the value of play and that's what we need to get our kids to do in this community -- but we have to provide them with resources to make that happen. This project is so critical.
So I want people, as they think about how they're going to spend this summer, in addition to making your kids play, think about engaging in United We Serve. And think about ways that you can take more time to devote to activities and projects that are going to get our kids healthy and moving, whether it's serving a healthy meal at a soup kitchen, building a play lot, finding a project in your area that's going to focus on the health of our kids, taking time to tutor, mentor, taking a kid to the beach. I know in Chicago there are kids all over my city at home who have never seen the lake. I know that this is true for many communities across the city. Kids don't even know where they can play or what they can play. That's where we all come in. That's where we need your help. And today is just the beginning.
It is a great honor for me to be here. I am so delighted to be a part of the conference that's coming up, to be hanging out with my good friend, and to be able to spend some time getting this playground together. So let me stop talking, and let's get to work. Thank you so much. (Applause.)
END
12:40 P.M. PDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                         June 22, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE SIGNING OF THE FAMILY SMOKING PREVENTION
AND TOBACCO CONTROL ACT
Rose Garden
2:04 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Please, everybody, have a seat -- have a seat. I am thrilled to be here for what is I think an extraordinary accomplishment by this Congress, a bill we're about to sign into law.
I want to acknowledge a few of our special guests. First of all we've got the crew from the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids: Eamon, Christopher, Sarah, and Hoai-Nam. (Applause.) We have our FDA Commissioner, Dr. Peggy Hamburg. (Applause.) We have our CDC Director, Tom Frieden. (Applause.) And we have just some extraordinary members of Congress here on stage: Senator Dodd, Senator Durbin, Senator Enzi, Senator Harkin, Senator Lautenberg, Representative Waxman, Representative Dingell, Representative Christensen, Representative Pallone, and Representative Platts -- all of whom did extraordinary work in helping to move this legislation forward. Please give them a big round of applause. (Applause.) I want to thank all of them.
Now, there are three members of Congress that I have to especially thank: Representative Waxman, Representative Dodd, and -- excuse me -- (laughter) -- Senator Dodd --
SENATOR DODD: Things are tough enough. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: -- and most importantly, Senator Ted Kennedy -- (applause) -- who can't be here today.
You know, the legislation I'm signing today represents change that's been decades in the making. Since at least the middle of the last century, we've known about the harmful and often deadly effects of tobacco products. More than 400,000 Americans now die of tobacco-related illnesses each year, making it the leading cause of preventable death in the United States. More than 8 million Americans suffer from at least one serious illness caused by smoking. And these health problems cost us all more than $100 billion a year.
What's even worse are the effects on our children. One out of every five children in our country are now current smokers by the time they leave high school. Think about that statistic: One out of every five children in our country are now current smokers by the time they leave high school. Each day, 1,000 young people under the age of 18 become new, regular, daily smokers. And almost 90 percent of all smokers began at or before their 18th birthday.
I know -- I was one of these teenagers, and so I know how difficult it can be to break this habit when it's been with you for a long time. And I also know that kids today don't just start smoking for no reason. They're aggressively targeted as customers by the tobacco industry. They're exposed to a constant and insidious barrage of advertising where they live, where they learn, and where they play. Most insidiously, they are offered products with flavorings that mask the taste of tobacco and make it even more tempting.
We've known about this for decades, but despite the best efforts and good progress made by so many leaders and advocates with us today, the tobacco industry and its special interest lobbying have generally won the day up on the Hill. When Henry Waxman first brought tobacco CEOs before Congress in 1994, they famously denied that tobacco was deadly, nicotine was addictive, or that their companies marketed to children. And they spent millions upon millions in lobbying and advertising to fight back every attempt to expose these denials as lies.
Fifteen years later, their campaign has finally failed. Today, thanks to the work of Democrats and Republicans, health care and consumer advocates, the decades-long effort to protect our children from the harmful effects of tobacco has emerged victorious. Today, change has come to Washington.
This legislation will not ban all tobacco products, and it will allow adults to make their own choices. But it will also ban tobacco advertising within a thousand feet of schools and playgrounds. It will curb the ability of tobacco companies to market products to our children by using appealing flavors. It will force these companies to more clearly and publicly acknowledge the harmful and deadly effects of the products they sell. And it will allow the scientists at the FDA to take other common-sense steps to reduce the harmful effects of smoking.
This legislation is a victory for bipartisanship, and it was passed overwhelmingly in both Houses of Congress. It's a victory for health care reform, as it will reduce some of the billions we spend on tobacco-related health care costs in this country. It's a law that will reduce the number of American children who pick up a cigarette and become adult smokers. And most importantly, it is a law that will save American lives and make Americans healthier.
We know that even with the passage of this legislation, our work to protect our children and improve the public's health is not complete. Today, tobacco is the leading preventable cause of death not just in America, but also in the world. If current trends continue, 1 billion people will die from tobacco-related illnesses this century. And so the United States will continue to work with the World Health Organization and other nations to fight this epidemic on a global basis.
But no matter how long or how hard this fight may be, what's happening today gives us hope. When I ran for President, I did so because I believed that despite the power of the status quo and the influence of special interests, it was possible for us to bring change to Washington. And the progress we've made these past five months has only reinforced my faith in this belief.
Despite the influence of the credit card industry, we passed a law to protect consumers from unfair rate hikes and abusive fees. Despite the influence of banks and lenders, we passed a law to protect homeowners from mortgage fraud. Despite the influence of the defense industry, we passed a law to protect taxpayers from waste and abuse in defense contracting. And today, despite decades of lobbying and advertising by the tobacco industry, we've passed a law to help protect the next generation of Americans from growing up with a deadly habit that so many of our generation have lived with.
When Henry Waxman opened that first hearing back in '94 on tobacco with the industry CEOs, he began by quoting an ancient proverb: "A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step."
Our journey for change is far from over. But with the package of -- passage of the kids tobacco legislation that I'm about to sign, we're taking another big and very important step -- a step that will save lives and dollars. So I want to thank not only the members of Congress who are up on stage, but also all the members of Congress in the audience and all the health advocates that fought so long for this to happen. We hope you feel good about the extraordinary service that you've rendered this country. Thank you very much. Let's go sign the bill. (Applause.)
(The bill is signed.)
END
2:12 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_______________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                                   June 22, 2009
 
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
ON THE MEDICARE PART D "DOUGHNUT HOLE"
AND AARP ENDORSEMENT
Diplomatic Reception Room
11:58 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Well, first of all, I want to thank Barry Rand for the introduction, but also AARP, the organization he so ably represents, for coming together with us on this critical issue today.
Last week, in my address to the American Medical Association, I spoke about the urgent need for health care reform and what will be required to achieve it.  And one of the things that will be required, I said, was that everyone in our health care community is going to have to come together and do their part.
In recent days, Chairman Baucus, who has been doing an outstanding job leading the finance committee on this issue, as well as members of my administration, have been in discussions with the pharmaceutical industry to find a way to bring down costs of prescription drugs for America's seniors.  And I'm pleased to report that over the weekend we reached an understanding that will help close the notorious "doughnut hole" in Medicare Part D.  This is a significant breakthrough on the road to health care reform -- one that will make the difference in the lives of many older Americans.
I think many of you in the press are familiar with the issue.  The "doughnut hole" refers to a gap in prescription drug coverage that makes it harder for millions of Medicare beneficiaries to pay for the medication they need.  The way the program is structured, Medicare covers up to $2,700 in yearly prescription costs and then stops, and the coverage starts back up when the costs exceed $6,100.  Which means between $2,700 and $6,100 folks are out of luck.  And this gap in coverage has placing a crushing burden on many older Americans who live on fixed incomes and can't afford thousands of dollars in out-of-pocket expenses.
Chris Dodd, who has been an outstanding leader on a whole host of health care issues throughout his career and who is helping to lead the HELP Committee while Senator Kennedy is undergoing his treatment for his illness -- Chris, I think, will tell you that as we travel around the country, seniors would constantly be coming up to us and saying, how do we deal with this extraordinary burden?  And as a consequence, you'd have seniors who would be taking half their medication, even though the doctor said that is not going to be as effective; you are putting your life at risk.  They had no other choice.
So as part of the health care reform I expect Congress to enact this year, Medicare beneficiaries whose spending falls within this gap will now receive a discount on prescription drugs of at least 50 percent from the negotiated price their plan pays.  It's a reform that will make prescription drugs more affordable for millions of seniors, and restore a measure of fairness to Medicare Part D.    It's a reflection of the importance of this single step for America's seniors that it has earned the support of AARP, which has been fighting for years to address this anomaly in the system on behalf of older Americans.  AARP is committed, as I am, to achieving health care reform by the end of this year.  And I'm committed to continuing to work with AARP to ensure that any reforms we pursue are carried out in a way that protects America's seniors, who know as well as anyone what's wrong with our health care system and why it's badly in need of reform.
Our goal -- our imperative -- is to reduce the punishing inflation in health care costs while improving patient care.  And to do that we're going to have to work together to root out waste and inefficiencies that may pad the bottom line of the insurance industry, but add nothing to the health of our nation.   To that end, the pharmaceutical industry has committed to reduce its draw on the health care system by $80 billion over the next 10 years as part of overall health care reform.
Real health care reform that reduces the spiraling costs of health services and extends quality, affordable health coverage to all Americans will require these kinds of commitments throughout the system. And drug and insurance companies stand to benefit when tens of millions more Americans have coverage.  So we're asking them, in exchange, to make essential concessions to reform the system and help reduce costs.  It's only fair.     Today marks a major step forward.  But it will only be meaningful if we complete the journey.
So I want to commend the House for coming together last week to produce a health care reform bill -- a bill, I might note, that protects seniors and has received the support of the AARP.  I will continue to work closely with the relevant chairs in the House and the Senate, and leaders like Senator Dodd and Senator Baucus, and with members of both parties who are willing to commit themselves to this critical task.  Our families, our businesses, and our long-term fiscal health demands that we act and act now.  Today, we are.  And I'm grateful to all those who helped make this day possible.  And to those who, here in Washington, who've grown accustomed to "sky is falling" prognoses and the certainties that we cannot get this done, I have to repeat -- revive an old saying we had from the campaign:  Yes, we can.  We are going to get this done.
Thank you very much, everybody.
END                                                                                 
12:04 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary

______________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                      June 20, 2009
 

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT
RADIO AND TELEVISION CORRESPONDENTS ASSOCIATION DINNER
June 19, 2009
Washington Convention Center
Washington, D.C.
8:50 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you so much. Thank you very much.  Thanks to all of you.  Please, everybody, have a seat.  Before I get started, as the father of two girls, can I just say how incredibly impressive those three young ladies were.  (Applause.)  Dad would be proud. 
To Heather and all the others who have made this evening possible, thank you so much.  It is wonderful to be here.   
I want to express my appreciation for the opportunity to tell jokes that weren’t funny enough for me to use when we did this five weeks ago.  (Laughter.)  Whatever.  (Laughter.)  The jokes may not be as good, but neither is the guest list.  (Laughter.)  I'm just joking.  For me, there's no contest.  Why bother hanging out with celebrities when I can spend time with the people who made me one?  (Laughter.)  I know where my bread is buttered. 
Plus, we have our own luminaries here in attendance.  The junior senator from Wyoming, John Barasso, is here.  (Applause.) I'm sorry, John Barasso skipped this evening.  (Laughter.)  Let me tell you, though, for those who haven’t met him, John Barasso is the George Clooney of junior senators from Wyoming.  (Laughter.) 
It is great to be here with so much talent from the world of TV and radio.  Despite the flood of new media, I think your programming is more relevant than ever before.  At least, that’s the impression I get when I read the blogs every day.  (Laughter.)    
It's good to see a number of hardworking correspondents here tonight.  Journalists like Chuck Todd.  I think I spotted Chuck over there somewhere.  (Applause.)  At this dinner, Chuck embodies the best of both worlds:  He has the rapid-fire style of a television correspondent, and the facial hair of a radio correspondent.  (Laughter.)  
Mika Brzezinski is here, I believe, in the house.  (Applause.)  Mika and I have a lot in common.  We both have partners named Joe who used to be in Congress and don’t know when to stop talking.  (Laughter.)   
And happening now:  Wolf Blitzer is here.  (Applause.)  He’s the only man -- the only other man in America with his own Situation Room.  (Laughter.)  People assume that mine is cooler, but this is not the case.  As hard as we’ve tried, we have not been able to generate the bandwidth necessary to turn Larry Summers into a hologram.  (Laughter.)  We can't do it. 
Now, one person that you know could not be here tonight is Secretary Hillary Clinton.  As most of you know, Hillary broke her elbow a few days ago on her way to the White House.  And we all wish her a very speedy recovery.  I do have to say, though, that while it’s been reported as an accident, there were some suspicious.  (Laughter.)  Just before the incident, Secret Service spotted Richard Holbrooke spraying WD-40 -- (laughter) -- all over the driveway.  (Laughter.)  
So now, on top of the costs of health care and energy and the recovery plan, we’ve got another fiscal problem.  Fortunately, the lawyers tell me that Hillary is ready to settle. (Laughter.)
I have to admit, though, it wasn’t easy coming up with fresh material for this dinner.  A few nights ago, I was up tossing and turning, trying to figure out exactly what to say.  Finally, when I couldn’t get back to sleep, I rolled over and asked Brian Williams what he thought.  (Laughter and applause.) 
Now, the truth is, Brian Williams is actually a terrible house guest.  He put an empty milk carton back in the fridge.  He leaves his wet towels all over the Roosevelt Room.  We’re pretty sure he clogged the toilet and didn’t tell anybody.  (Laughter.)
Although I must say, the whole thing was worth it.  "Inside the Obama White House" is my favorite new show.  (Laughter.)  There’s just something really compelling about the main character.  (Laughter.)  It's wonderful narrative.  In fact, the show has been such a hit that all of you guys now want to come and tape one in my house.  ABC is planning a series called "Dancing with the Czars."  (Laughter.)  TLC has got something called "John & Kate plus Peter Orszag."  (Laughter.)  That's going to be good.  (Laughter.)  Nick at Nite has a new take on an old classic, "Leave it to Uigurs."  I thought that was pretty good.  (Laughter.) 
Of course, given the fiscal crisis in California, these shows all will be competing directly with Governor Schwarzenegger’s new reality series, "I’m a Celebrity -- Get Me Out of Here!"  (Laughter and applause.)  That's how I feel tonight.  (Laughter.)  
Look, it’s nothing personal, but this dinner conflicts with my date night.  (Laughter.)  I was supposed to be going out with Michelle for Thai food.  In Bangkok.  (Laughter and applause.) 
But I have been doing a lot of traveling.  I just returned from a trip abroad, as you know.  In Egypt, we had the opportunity to tour the Pyramids.   By now I’m sure all of you have seen the pictures of Rahm on a camel.  I admit I was a little nervous about the whole situation.  I said at the time, "This is a wild animal known to bite and kick and spit.  And who knows what the camel might do?"  (Laughter.) 
But I have to say, as I traveled to all these countries, I saw firsthand how much people truly have in common with one another.  Because no matter where I went, there’s one thing I heard over and over again from every world leader:  
"No thanks, but have you considered Palau?"  (Laughter.)
Of course, most of my attention has been focused here back home.  As you know, we’ve been working around the clock to repair our major financial institutions and our auto companies.  But you probably wouldn’t understand the concept of troubled industries, working as you do in the radio and television. 
AUDIENCE:  Oooh!
THE PRESIDENT:  Oh -- we don't joke about that, huh?  (Laughter.)  That's not funny.  (Laughter.)
One problem we’re trying to solve is the high cost of health care in America.  And I’m pleased that in our quest to reform the health care system I've gained the support of the American Medical Association.  It proves true the old expression that it’s easier to catch flies with honey.  And if honey doesn’t work, feel free to use an open palm and a swift, downward movement.  (Laughter and applause.)
 
Now, the challenges we face are many, and I’ll be honest -- I don’t have all the answers.  And when I’m not sure what’s right, I often ask myself, "WWLD?"  What would a wise Latino do? I’m proud of my nominee, Sonia Sotomayor.  (Applause.)  And all those who oppose her, to all those who say that there's no place for empathy on the bench, I say this:  I completely understand how you’re feeling.  (Laughter.)  When you’re upset, I’m upset.  (Laughter.) 
Another difficult challenge is how to help our automakers thrive in the 21st century.  We’ve tried a number of different approaches, and tonight, I’m announcing a new one.  It’s a plan passed on to me by a close friend and advisor, Oprah Winfrey.  So if each of you will look under your seat, you find that -- (laughter) -- you get a car company!  (Laughter.)  You get a car company!  And FOX -- you get AIG. (Laughter.)  Enjoy! 
The truth is, as I’ve said all along, I have no ambition to run an auto company.  I'm not the salesman-in-chief.  And GM will rise or fall on the quality of its products -- like the taut, athletic design of the new Buick Enclave.  (Laughter.)  It’s French-seamed leather and warm wood tones make the Enclave more than transportation.  (Applause.)  It's a modern driver's retreat.  (Laughter.)  Come on, work with me here.  I’ve got cars to move, people!  (Applause.)  
In all seriousness, despite the jokes I’ve told, I’m here tonight because I appreciate the work that all of you do and the role that you play.  You report the news as it happens, and you're covering history as it’s made.  With a handheld camera or a mic, or now even a cell phone or a blog, you bring the truth to people and allow people to bring truth to the world. 
We're seeing that now as history is unfolding.  In the sounds and images broadcast from Iran over the last week, we've seen professional and citizen journalists act as a voice for those who want to be heard, bearing witness to universal aspirations of democracy and freedom.  Often at great risk, and sometimes with great sacrifice, they do it because the rest of us need to hear the stories that they tell.  In recent years, we've seen the same courageous reporting in Iraq, in Afghanistan, and the Congo, and in every dangerous corner of the world.  And everywhere there’s a story that needs to be told. 
I think all of you understand these are changing times.  As journalists, you understand that better than anyone.  But one thing that will never change is the need to report the news as it happens, wherever it happens.  This is what you do; and this is what will help us meet the challenges of our time.  We are grateful to you for that. 
Thank you.  God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)  
END                                  
9:04 P.M. EDT
 
                           
##