THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Vice President
_______________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                             March 13, 2009
REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
AT THE CEREMONIAL SWEARING-IN OF SECRETARY OF LABOR HILDA L. SOLIS
Great Hall
Frances Perkins Building
U.S. Department of Labor Headquarters
9:01 A.M. EDT
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT: You can keep clapping. (Laughter.) I'm only joking, only joking. I can only say that -- (applause) -- at the Labor Department. I'm only joking. (Laughter.) I just wanted Tom Harkin to clap for me -- (laughter) -- that's why -- Senator, welcome, Mr. Chairman. It's great to see you, and so many distinguished guests that are here today to celebrate along with me and others the return of the Department of Labor. (Applause.)
Pam Langley, thank you for the pledge. And, Lisa, thank you for the National Anthem -- your beautiful voice. (Applause.) Folks, I'd like you to -- I got a chance to spend a little time with Sam upstairs, and I told Sam I wanted to thank him, too. And I mean it sincerely, because the spouses of people who take on these jobs that are particularly consuming -- and this will be an all-consuming job, Mr. President -- is that we appreciate it. And thank you very much.
And Anna and Leticia, as we were walking out -- I'm going to embarrass you, Hilda -- or embarrass -- quote -- as you said, "your little sisters." She said, you know, did they tell you they're both engineers? They're the smartest ones in the family. (Laughter and applause.) And welcome to all of you. Thank you all for being here.
It would be hard to look around at all the people and all the energy in this room and not see something special that's happening here. Maybe it's because we have a Secretary of State who understands. Maybe it's because we have a Secretary of Labor who understands. (Laughter and applause.) No, by the way -- by the way, that wasn't an accident. (Laughter.) We have two very, very, very accomplished women taking over -- (applause) -- the most important international job and the most important domestic job that are underway here -- areas that have not had the kind of attention they've gotten before.
And maybe it's because Secretary Solis -- or soon to be -- has worked so hard. Maybe it's because we have a Secretary of Labor who has not only -- not only is willing, but has demonstrated she's willing to fight. Maybe it's because we have a Secretary that we know, someone -- you've all seen her track record. You've seen what she's done before she got to the Congress, and since she's been in the Congress. I could ask her colleagues in the Congress. They could easily testify to her capability, to her sincerity, to her willingness to fight, to her leadership.
Do we have any doubt -- anybody doubt that Hilda Solis understands the job she's about to take over? And, folks, that's a big, big, big deal. (Applause.)
Hilda is the daughter of blue-collar union members –- both her mother and her father. (Applause.) She knows how hard people work. She knows how tough things can be. She's one of seven siblings. And she didn't just accidentally got here -- get here, she did her part -- she did her part like everybody in big families that struggle do.
Things like fairness in the workplace and workplace safety are not just idle phrases that are to be debated in Hilda's mind; they're real. They affect real live people. They're real concerns that people face every single day. She knows that a job is more than about a paycheck. My friends in Labor have heard me say this before -- maybe it's because the way I was raised and the experience of my father and my grandfather -- but a job is more than a paycheck. A job is about dignity. A job is about respect. Hilda understands that. She understands that. (Applause.)
And I don't think anybody in this room has any doubt that Hilda Solis will be heard. When she was in the state legislature, when it came to domestic violence, to health care, to education, she was heard. When she held hearings on sweatshops, she was heard. When she fought to protect low-income and minority communities from landfill and pollution and environmental hazards, she was heard. And in Congress, when she stood up -- she stood up to level the playing field for workers who wanted to organize, she was heard. (Applause.)
And when she said the economy of the future would be built on green jobs, co-sponsoring the Green Jobs Act of 2007 –- the first federal initiative of its kind -- Hilda was heard.
Hilda Solis will demand to be heard. Ladies and gentlemen, why do I repeat that phrase? We have not heard much from this department in a long time. (Applause.) She will be heard. And if any of you know her, don't be put off by this lovely demeanor; this is one hell -- heck of a fighter. (Laughter.) You know, the President kids with me and says, everybody knows don't mess with Joe -- don't mess with Hilda. (Laughter.) She's prepared to fight, and she knows what it takes to get things done.
Listen to the language that was described to her when she was given -- which few people have, as you all know, my colleagues in this room -- the Profile In Courage Award by the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation -- the first woman, I might add, to be so recognized. (Applause.) The award said that she was being given this award for being a politician who, and I quote, "hasn’t shied away from challenging the old boy network." (Applause.) Well, ladies and gentlemen, she hasn't shied away from challenging any network -- old boy, young girl -- doesn't matter. (Laughter.)
And I really -- I really want to get this point across to the people who may be listening to this: This is a woman of great integrity. She's proven it time and again. When it comes to standing up for those who are in the workplace every day, for their health, their safety, for a fair treatment, she's always there. When it comes to standing up for health care to protect families, she's always been there to fight for them. When it comes to retirement security, she has fought, and will continue to fight for people. And when it comes to standing up against job discrimination, she will have none of it.
And so, ladies and gentlemen, when it comes to standing up for expanding this economy for all people, no one is going to be a stronger voice than the new Secretary of Labor. Hilda Solis will fight. And today, we can all be proud this daughter of union members is now America's most forceful advocate for working men and women in this country.
So, Madam Secretary, congratulations to you and your family. And would you please step forward and give me the honor of administering the oath? (Applause.)
(The oath is administered.)
END
9:09 A.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
____________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                    March 13, 2009

Remarks of Lawrence H. Summers
Director of the National Economic Council
Responding to an Historic Economic Crisis: The Obama Program

Brookings Institution, Washington, DC
March 13, 2009
I am glad to be here. This morning I want to describe our understanding of the root of our current economic crisis, talk about the rationale for the Administration's recovery strategy, and connect our longer-term economic strategy to the central objective of sustained and healthy expansion.
Economic downturns historically are of two types. Most of those in post-World War II-America have been a by-product of the Federal Reserve's efforts to control rising inflation. But an alternative source of recession comes from the spontaneous correction of financial excesses: the bursting of bubbles, de-leveraging in the financial sector, declining asset values, reduced demand, and reduced employment.
Unfortunately, our current situation reflects this latter, rarer kind of recession. On a global basis, $50 trillion dollars in global wealth has been erased over the last 18 months. This includes $7 trillion dollars in US stock market wealth which has vanished, and $6 trillion dollars in housing wealth that has been destroyed. Inevitably, this has led to declining demand, with GDP and employment now shrinking at among the most rapid rates since the second World War. 4.4 million jobs have already been lost and the unemployment rate now exceeds 8 percent.
Our single most important priority is bringing about economic recovery and ensuring that the next economic expansion, unlike it's predecessors, is fundamentally sound and not driven by financial excess.
This is essential. Without robust and sustained economic expansion, we will not achieve any other national goal. We will not be able to project strength globally or reduce poverty locally. We will not be able to expand access to higher education or affordable health care. We will not be able to raise incomes for middle class families or create opportunities for new small businesses to thrive.
And so today, I will explain the rationale behind the President's recovery program and our strategy for long-term economic growth. Our problems were not made in a day, or a month or a year, and they will not be solved quickly. But there is one enduring lesson in the history of financial crises: they all end.
I am confident that with the strong and sound policies the President has put forward and the passage of time, we will restore economic growth and regain financial stability, and find opportunity in this moment of crisis to assure that our future prosperity rests on a sound and sustainable foundation.
First, I'd like to describe how best to think about this crisis.
One of the most important lessons in any introductory economics course is that markets are self-stabilizing.
  • When there is an excess supply of wheat, its price falls. Farmers grow less and others consume more. The market equilibrates.
  • When the economy slows, interest rates fall. When interest rates fall, more people take advantage of credit, the economy speeds up, and the market equilibrates.
This is much of what Adam Smith had in mind when he talked about the "invisible hand."
However, it was a central insight of Keynes' General Theory that two or three times each century, the self-equilibrating properties of markets break down as stabilizing mechanisms are overwhelmed by vicious cycles. And the right economic metaphor becomes an avalanche rather than a thermostat. That is what we are experiencing right now.
  • Declining asset prices lead to margin calls and de-leveraging, which leads to further declines in prices.
  • Lower asset prices means banks hold less capital. Less capital means less lending. Less lending means lower asset prices.
  • Falling home prices lead to foreclosures, which lead home prices to fall even further.
  • A weakened financial system leads to less borrowing and spending which leads to a weakened economy, which leads to a weakened financial system.
  • Lower incomes lead to less spending, which leads to less employment, which leads to lower incomes.
An abundance of greed and an absence of fear on Wall Street led some to make purchases – not based on the real value of assets, but on the faith that there would be another who would pay more for those assets. At the same time, the government turned a blind eye to these practices and their potential consequences for the economy as a whole. This is how a bubble is born. And in these moments, greed begets greed. The bubble grows.
Eventually, however, this process stops – and reverses. Prices fall. People sell. Instead of an expectation of new buyers, there is an expectation of new sellers. Greed gives way to fear. And this fear begets fear.
This is the paradox at the heart of the financial crisis. In the past few years, we've seen too much greed and too little fear; too much spending and not enough saving; too much borrowing and not enough worrying. Today, however, our problem is exactly the opposite.
It is this transition from an excess of greed to an excess of fear that President Roosevelt had in mind when he famously observed that the only thing we had to fear was fear itself. It is this transition that has happened in the United States today.
What is the task of policy in such an environment?
While greed is no virtue, entrepreneurship and the search for opportunity is what we need today. We need a program that breaks these vicious cycles. We need to instill the trust that allows opportunity to overcome fear and enables families and businesses to again imagine a brighter future. And we need to create this confidence without allowing it to lead to unstable complacency.
While the economy is falling far short today, perhaps a trillion dollars or more short, we should never lose sight of its potential. We have the most productive workers in the world, the greatest universities and capacity for innovation, an incredible amount of resilience, entrepreneurship, and flexibility, and the most diverse and creative population of any major economy.
One striking statistic suggests the magnitude of the opportunity that is before us in restoring our economy to its potential. Earlier this week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, adjusting for inflation according to the standard Consumer Price Index, was at the same level as it was in 1966, when Brookings scholars Charlie Schultze and Arthur Okun were helping to preside over the American economy.
While there could be many ways to question this calculation, that the market would be at essentially the same real level as it was in 1966 when there were no PCs, no internet, no flexible manufacturing, no software industry, and when our workforce was half and our net capital stock was a third of what it is today, may be regarded by some as the sale of the century. For policy-makers, it suggests the magnitude of the gains from restoring sustained economic growth.
Producing recovery and harnessing these opportunities, however, will depend upon the choices we make now. This is what the President's program sets out to achieve.
Towards this end, the President is committed to an approach that moves aggressively on jobs, credit and housing, thereby attacking the vicious cycles I described earlier at each of their key nodes. In this effort, he has insisted that we all recognize that the risks of over-reaction are dwarfed by the risks of inaction.
The first component of the President's program is direct support for jobs and income to engage the multiplier process in favor of economic expansion. Increases in income lead to financial repair which supports further increases in income. Rising employment will lead to rising spending, which leads to further increases in income and employment.
The Recovery and Reinvestment Act is the largest peacetime economic expansion program in the country's history. It will inject nearly $800 billion into the economy, ¾ of it within the next 18 months. The Council of Economic Advisors' estimates suggest that the Recovery and Reinvestment Act will save or create 3.5 million jobs. It will at the same time do some of the work that the nation has needed done for a long time—doubling renewable energy capacity in the next 3 years, supporting middle class incomes, modernizing ten thousand schools, and making the largest investment in the spine of our national economy – the nation's infrastructure – since Dwight Eisenhower's investment 50 years ago.
Already, its impact is being felt by cops and teachers who would have been laid off but whose jobs have been saved—it may retain14,000 teachers in New York alone. It will, for most American workers, be felt in the coming weeks as withholding schedules are adjusted, in continuing unemployment insurance benefits and health benefits for hundreds-of-thousands of workers who already would have done without, and in contracting already underway with respect to tens-of-billions of dollars of infrastructure projects across the country.
It is surely too early to gauge the broader economic impact of the President's program. But it is modestly encouraging that since it began to take shape, consumer spending in the US, which was collapsing during the holiday season, appears, according to a number of indicators, to have stabilized.
The second major portion of the President's strategy is the financial stability plan. It is directed at addressing the vicious cycles associated with de-leveraging and credit contraction. A strong flow of credit is necessary because factories need it to buy equipment, stores need it to stock their shelves, students need it to attend college, consumers need it to buy cars, and businesses need it to meet their payrolls.
The approach rests on two pillars: The first is a trillion dollars for financing or purchasing mortgages, student small business loans, and other financial instruments through the TALF (or what is now called the Consumer Business Lending Initiative), the GSEs, and public-private investment facilities that Secretary Geithner will be detailing in the weeks ahead.
Reactivating the capital markets is essential to realistic asset valuation, to restarting nonbank lending, and to enabling banks to divest toxic assets when they judge it appropriate.
The second pillar of the program is assuring that our banking system is well capitalized and in a position to lend on a substantial scale. The stress tests now underway will enable a realistic assessment of the position of each different institution and appropriate responses in each case to assure their ability to meet their commitments and lend on a substantial scale. And as the President said in his joint address to Congress, "When we learn that a major bank has serious problems, we will hold accountable those responsible, force the necessary adjustments, provide the support to clean up their balance sheets, and assure the continuity of a strong, viable institution that can serve our people and our economy."
As a result of government interventions in the financial markets, key credit spreads are already substantially narrower than they were last fall. There are some indications that the expectations of future actions have been a positive in reducing credit costs in a number of key areas. It is our hope and expectation that further support for capital markets, transparency with respect to the condition of banks, and infusion of capital into the banking system, will create virtuous circles in which stronger markets beget stronger financial institutions, which beget stronger markets, leading ultimately to financial and economic recovery.
The third component of the President's recovery strategy is addressing the housing market. The vicious cycle of rising foreclosures leading to declining home prices, leading to rising foreclosures – must be contained. This problem is at the heart of our economic crisis.
Through direct interventions, using the GSE's to bring down mortgage rates and make possible refinancings for credit-worthy borrowers who have lost their home equity as house prices decline, and through setting standards and providing significant financial subsidies for measures directed at payment relief to prevent foreclosures, we are achieving several objectives.
Housing wealth and its contribution to expenditures is being maintained. And critically lower mortgage rates mean more income for consumers, and function like tax cuts in support of consumer spending. Depending on market conditions the administration's program may save American households more than 150 billion dollars over the next 5 years.
Taken together, these steps to support incomes, increase the flow of credit, and normalize housing market conditions address each of the vicious cycles that is leading to decline.
With the passage of time, it will permit the re-engagement of the normal processes of economic growth: rising incomes and employment, greater credit flows, increased spending, a stronger US economy and a stronger global economy. They will reinforce crucial dynamics that will also operate to promote recovery.
For example, about 14 million new car sales are necessary for replacement and to accommodate rising population growth. Yet car sales are now running at an annual rate of about 9 million. New household formation requires something like 1.7 million new housing units a year and housing starts are now running about 400,000 a year. Once the inventory is worked off, investment will increase. Historical experience suggests that rapid inventory decline such as we have observed in recent months is followed by increased production to rebuild inventories.
Of fundamental importance is ensuring that we do not exchange a painful recession for another unsustainable expansion. That would not only be irresponsible – it would be counterproductive. We have seen what happens when we pursue policies that produce short-term, instead of durable and sustainable growth.
We have seen housing prices reach unsustainably high levels and credit spreads reach unsustainably low levels in the middle of this decade. And we saw bubbles in technology in the late 1990s.
Bubble driven economic growth is problematic because of disruption and dislocation – affecting those who took part in the bubble's excesses and those who did not. And, it is not entirely healthy even while it lasts. Between 2000 and 2007 – a period of solid aggregate economic growth – the typical working-age household saw their income decline by nearly $2000. The decline in middle-class incomes even as the incomes of the top 1% skyrocketed has a number of causes, but one of them is surely rising asset prices and the fact that financial sector profits exploded to the point to where they represented 40% of all corporate profits in 2006.
Confidence today will be enhanced if we put measures in place that assure that the coming expansion will be more sustainable and fair in the distribution of benefits than its predecessor. That is why the President has priorities that go beyond the immediate goal of containing the downturn and promoting recovery.
An overhaul of our financial regulatory system is one such priority. In little more than two decades, we've witnessed the stock market crash of 1987, the Savings and Loan scandals, the decline of the real estate market, the rapid decline of Asian markets, the collapse of the NASDAQ telecom bubble, Enron, Long Term Capital Management, and today's crisis. This is roughly one crisis every 2.5 years. We can and must do better.
There is room for debate about how regulation should be enhanced, but not about whether we can stay with the status quo. Treasury Secretary Geithner will be laying out the Administration's approach in some detail in the coming weeks and the President is eager to take this issue up with his fellow leaders at the April G-20 meeting. While the discussion can get pretty technical quickly, some things should be clear:
  • Regulatory agencies should never be placed in competition for the privilege of regulating particular financial institutions.
  • Globally, the United States must lead a leveling-up of regulatory standards, not as has happened all too often in the recent past, trying to win a race to the bottom.
  • No substantially interconnected institution or market on which the system depends should be free from rigorous public scrutiny.
  • Required levels of capital and liquidity must be set with a view toward protecting the system, even in very difficult times.
  • And there must be far more vigorous and serious efforts to discourage improper risk taking through transparency and accountability for errors.
An additional requirement for financial stability is that the government's own finances be stable. When I left Washington eight years ago, people were debating what to do when there was no more federal debt. That is hardly our problem today. I hope that all of those who participate in the debate over this year's budget, whether they agree or disagree with President Obama's priorities, will share his commitment to truthful and realistic budgeting and fiscal sustainability to ensure that after recovery, the ratio of the nation's debt to its income stabilizes.
If growth in the coming years is not to be driven by asset price inflation-induced consumption, other engines of growth must be identified. These forms of growth should be sustainable and shared by the majority of American households.
Stronger exports are one sound foundation for sustainable expansion. That is why along with strengthening financial regulation, the President will be working on the global growth strategy at the G20. Priorities will include spurring demand around the world and assuring the adequacy of funding for emerging markets.
These are issues both for global recovery - at a time when 2009 is likely to be the first year of negative global growth since the Second World War - and for a healthy, less debt-dependent US expansion.
But moving away from foreign debt-financed growth is only one component of ensuring a healthy expansion. An additional component is addressing our healthcare system. It is no accident that the period of the most rapidly rising wages for middle income families was the 1990s when healthcare cost inflation was relatively well controlled. Our ability to produce competitively in the United States will be enhanced if we contain healthcare costs. I have heard it said that GM's largest supplier is not a parts company or a tire company, but Blue Cross Blue Shield.
Containing healthcare costs help keep the economy sustainable and so does improving quality and access. A study I helped sponsor while at Harvard demonstrated that less than 1 in 4 Americans with hypertension had it under control. This means huge costs for treating strokes down the road as well as children who will never know their grandparents. By investing in healthcare now, we can make our economy, as well as our people, healthier. We will also increase confidence in the ultimate stability of the nation's finances.
An equally important engine of recovery can be investment in reducing our energy vulnerability and our contribution to climate change. That is why the Recovery and Reinvestment Act provided for doubling renewable energy and weatherizing 75 percent of federal buildings. It is also why the President's budget points toward strong action to implement a market-based cap-and-trade system, after the economy recovers, beginning in 2012.
Let's be realistic. Sooner or later we will have to reduce our dependence on foreign energy and contain our carbon emissions. As Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's doctoral thesis demonstrated 30 years ago, unresolved uncertainty can be a major inhibitor of investment. If energy prices will trend higher, you invest one way; if energy prices will be lower, you invest a different way. But if you don't know what prices will do, often you do not invest at all. That is why we must move forward as rapidly as possible to reduce uncertainty and carefully create a new cap-and-trade regime.
There is another benefit as well. As many enlightened business leaders have recognized, the confident expectation that pricing policy will discourage carbon use in the future will spur a whole range of green investments in the present, when our economy can benefit from all the investment it can get. And in the long run, we believe this will create millions of new jobs. And the evidence is clear: we can choose to lead these industries, with all the commensurate economic and political and environmental benefits, or we can choose to lose out on these jobs and these opportunities.
Finally, while America's education system may not be directly implicated in the current economic crisis, it is surely the case that improving it is essential to the long-run growth of the economy and to ensuring that this growth is shared, lifting up more families who get the opportunities afforded by a better education and expanded access to college.
I've spoken in the language of economists and economic policy – budgets and prices, capitalization and interest rates. That is because I believe there is no substitute for careful analysis in setting economic policy. But as we debate these abstractions, we must always keep in mind that our economic policies affect real lives – and economic problems cause real pain.
The decisions we make will determine whether children will look to their parents with pride when they come home from work – or fear that their home will be lost. Whether families will experience the prosperity this nation is capable of producing, or the disruption and dislocation that too many have found instead.
President Obama inherited an economy in crisis. This is not a crisis we sought – nor is it one we created. But it is one, under the President's leadership, that we have answered. The Obama Administration is embarking on what I believe is the boldest economic program to promote recovery and expansion in two generations. No one can know just when its positive effects will be fully felt. No one can predict when this crisis will be resolved. But in resolution, I am confident there is enormous opportunity for both Americans and for the United States of America. We can and we will emerge more prosperous, stronger, wiser, and better prepared for the future.
##
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the First Lady
_________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                  March 12, 2009

Remarks by the First Lady
At the Fort Bragg Community Center

Fort Bragg Community Center
Fayetteville, North Carolina
4:40 P.M. EDT
MRS. OBAMA: Thank you so much. Thank you, Mayor, for that amazing introduction. This picture is just moving. It says so much, and it is going to go up in my office — tomorrow. Got that? (Laughter and applause.) Thank you.
And thank you to the — what's your name, sir?
MR. CRAFT: Andrew Craft.
MRS. OBAMA: Andrew, it's a beautiful photo. Thank you so much.
I also want to thank your wife Joanne for her leadership in this community, as well. There's nothing like a wonderful mayor with a good, smart wife — (laughter) — right by his side. (Applause.)
I also want to thank Senator Hagan, my dear friend — (applause) — and the Fayetteville City Council, and Kirk deViere, who is here, for joining us. (Applause.)
I also want to thank Dianne Campbell, who's the wife of General Charles Campbell, as well as Charlene Austin, the wife of Lieutenant General Lloyd Austin, who spent the day with me; two amazing women. (Applause.) I really enjoyed my time with you both, and your commitment and dedication and sacrifice speaks volumes of this community, this fort. Thank you for your friendship, and I look forward to working with you in the coming months and years.
I came to Fayetteville last year to learn more about the needs of soldiers and their families. The people I met then — some of whom who are here today, I believe — and the stories that I heard stayed with me. They stayed with me. And I wanted to come back. I said I would come back. And thank you all for sharing your lives with me.
I'm delighted to be back. This has been an exciting, fabulous day. I had a wonderful visit at Fort Bragg today where I was able to tour some of the marvelous facilities and learn about life on the base. Although I was here before and spoke to spouses, this is my first time actually on the base. I sat down with military spouses today, I had the best time visiting one of the excellent child care centers, read "Cat in the Hat" and got lots of hugs — (laughter) — and I spoke with some soldiers while they were having lunch. That was exciting. (Laughter.) It was a very meaningful visit for me.
But what's always powerful for me is that — what I notice is that when you meet a soldier, it is the pride that they have for the work that they do. Don't just see it here; I see it everywhere I go, in the faces, in the conduct of every military person that I meet. They have respect for their work, they have respect for their fellow soldiers, and they have respect for the country that they love. These soldiers, they get up every day and they hold themselves to these extremely high standards, the highest standards imaginable. They work hard to prepare every day, not knowing what tomorrow will bring.
Their dedication isn't just for their own sake, but for the sake of their unit and for the sake of this country. It's pride, high standards, selflessness, dedication, responsibility — these are their values.
And as I speak, there are servicemen and women who at their posts across this nation and around the world, as I speak, they're standing watch, and they're providing the security of our daily lives. We keep them, the wounded who are recovering, and those who made the ultimate sacrifice so that we can live in safety and freedom, we keep them in our thoughts and our prayers every second of the day.
But as my husband, the President, said recently in his address at Camp Lejeune, service doesn't end with the person wearing the uniform; the war doesn't end when a soldier returns home. Military family members have their own special courage and strength.
I have met husbands and wives who keep the family on track while their wives and husbands are deployed or on duty. I've met grandparents, and aunts and uncles, sisters and brothers who take care of children while single moms and dads are away. I've met moms and dads who both serve in uniform and leave their children in the care of family when they're both deployed. I've met mothers and fathers who have lost their beloved children to war.
Our soldiers and their families have done their duty. They do it without complaint. And we as a grateful nation must do ours and do everything in our power to honor them by supporting them.
The President recently announced plans to improve housing, to expand child care, to raise military pay, to expand job training for spouses, to implement the 21st-century GI Bill, and expand counseling and support for families who are dealing with the stress of deployment and war.
These are the issues that soldiers and their families have discussed with me over the last couple of years — and I heard about it again today. Military families bear a very heavy burden — and, again, they do it without complaint. But as a nation, we need to find ways to lighten their load.
Fayetteville, North Carolina is a shining example of how a community can do just that. From holding a baby shower for a thousand expectant mothers — what a day, I imagine — (laughter) — to providing tickets to sporting events, to scholarship programs, to counseling services and support networks designed especially for the children of troops, the people of Fayetteville and the leadership from numerous community organizations and businesses have gone above and beyond the call of duty.
You have found ways to help strengthen families under great stress. You found ways to make life fun for children who wake up and go to sleep worried about their moms and dads. You found ways to celebrate life and provide hope to a new mom who is giving birth all alone. You found ways to comfort a parent when the grief is just too much to bear. Fayetteville clearly does watch over those who watch over us. And thank you for your loyalty and your devotion.
And for those communities out there that don't have a base, there's still work to be done. National Guard and reserve troops come from towns all over this great country, and their families often struggle to cope with the deployment of a spouse or a parent or a child.
So I encourage everyone out there within the sound of my voice to reach out — to reach out on your own, through schools, the PTA, little leagues, churches, workplaces, and find out if there's a soldier or a soldier?s family right there in your own community who needs a little extra support — because they are there. Something as simple as offering help with carpool duty can make the world of difference to a parent who is trying to hold the family together during a very stressful time.
I'd also like to make a special plea that we reach out to the wounded soldiers and their families and that — those who have lost a loved one. Soldiers who return from war and receive care off the base, and widows or widowers and their children can become disconnected from the network of support that comes from living close to a base. And when they lose a troop, all of that is gone. So let's take it upon ourselves to reach out to them at these times more than ever. They need us.
And finally, it is my hope through these efforts that today's and future generations will honor our men and women in uniform by doing one simple thing: by never taking the blessings of freedom for granted and by doing their part to support these families.
So thank you, Fayetteville. Thank you, Fort Bragg. Thank you to our troops. Let us keep them in our prayers. God bless. (Applause.)
END                    4:49 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              March 12, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE BUSINESS ROUNDTABLE

St. Regis Hotel
Washington, D.C.

4:03 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you so much.  Please, everybody have a seat.  I want to get to some Q&A as quickly as possible, so let me dive right in.  First of all, thank you.  It's a pleasure to be here this afternoon.  I see a lot of friends in the room.  It's especially important, I think, for us to be meeting today with the Business Roundtable, because the companies that you lead account for nearly 10 million jobs and generate trillions of dollars in revenue each year.  Your companies have fueled the prosperity of communities across the country and the success stories of countless individuals.  They've enriched our nation; they've served as a tribute to the enduring spirit of American capitalism.  

But for over three decades, the Business Roundtable is also taking a broader view of your responsibilities as chief executives.  You've looked beyond the bottom line and the next quarter to the long-term health of your company.  You've not only served as accomplished leaders, but as engaged citizens -- citizens who understand that it is in the interest of both your companies and your country to have a workforce that's highly educated, healthy, and prosperous; to have a market that is free, but also fair; and to live in a nation that's willing to invest in its own future.  You understand the public responsibility of private enterprise.

It's fitting, then, that we meet at this moment, because over the last few weeks a spirited debate has emerged in Washington -- a debate over what it will take to ultimately break the back of this recession and strengthen our economy for the long run.  It's a debate that centers on one key question:  Does the greatest economic crisis in our lifetime warrant extraordinary action to deal with the array of challenges we face?  Or should we limit our efforts, and try to deal with them incrementally, or one at a time?

Now, let me say that it was not my preference, believe it or not, to launch my administration by passing the largest economic recovery plan in the nation's history, or to face crises in the financial market and the automobile industry.  It was not ideal to take office in the midst of the worst job and growth numbers in decades -- particularly since we're still in the midst of two wars.  But that's the duty I signed on for.

And although my administration did not create these problems, it's now not only my responsibility, but my extraordinary privilege, to help solve them.  It's my job to address every challenge that may threaten the strength and vitality of our families, our businesses, and our entire nation -- now and in the future. 

We must move quickly and aggressively on the most immediate threats to our economy and financial stability:  jobs, housing, and credit.  There's no debate about that.  That's why we've already passed a recovery plan that will save and create 3.5 million jobs over the next two years, more than 90 percent of which will be located in the private sector -- a plan that will also give 95 percent of working families a tax cut that begins by April 1st. 

That's why we've launched a housing plan that will help responsible families lower their monthly payments -- a plan that's already helping responsible homeowners save money by refinancing their loans.  And that's why we've forcefully attacked the credit lockdown that the housing crisis helped create.

As all of you know, credit is the lifeblood of a healthy economy.  The inability of even creditworthy businesses and consumers to get loans today is a major roadblock to our recovery.

To help get credit flowing again, we've created an unprecedented lending fund, in partnership with the Federal Reserve, that will help support up to a trillion dollars in auto loans, college loans, and loans for the consumer -- the consumers and entrepreneurs who keep this economy running.  We'll soon be announcing more efforts to provide even more lending to small businesses, which are being devastated by this credit crisis.

These are all important steps.  But the only way we can truly unlock credit and heal our financial system for good is to address the state of our banking system.  And I know that this crisis is at the top of your list of immediate concerns -- and I promise you, it is at the top of mine, as well.

We all know how we got here.  A wave of complex and risky transactions around mortgages and other loans produced huge profits for financial institutions and those who run them -- until the housing bubble burst.  And now some of the nation's largest banks are holding so-called "toxic assets" -- problematic debt that are dragging down the balance sheets of these institutions with no real market in which to sell them.  And this has caused a slowdown in lending.  And since finance today is global, the virus has spread worldwide.

Now, it's important to note that there are thousands of banks, large and small, that have made sound decisions and are on solid footing.  And all Americans need to know that their deposits are secure.

But the weakened condition of some of our largest banks has implications for the entire system, and those weaknesses must be addressed.

And critical to that solution is an honest and forthright assessment of the true status of bank balance sheets -- something that we've not yet had.  And that's why the Treasury has asked bank regulators to conduct intensive examinations or "stress tests" of each bank.

When that process is complete next month, we will act decisively to ensure that our major banks have enough money on hand to lend to people even in more difficult times.  And if we learn that such a bank has more serious problems, we will hold accountable those responsible, force the necessary adjustments, provide the support to clean up their balance sheets, and assure the continuity of a strong, viable institution that can serve our people and our economy.

I intend to hold these banks fully accountable for any assistance they'll receive, and this time they'll have to clearly demonstrate how taxpayer dollars result in more lending for the American taxpayer.

I also intend to enact tough, common-sense regulatory reforms, equal to the challenges of a 21st century financial system, so that a crisis like this never happens again.  And when I meet with the leaders of the other G20 nations next month, I'll ask them to join us in these actions, because in an age when financial transactions often cross borders, global coordination is essential to safeguard against future crises.

But the truth is that these problems in the financial market, as acute and urgent as they are, are only part of what threatens our economy.  And we must not use the need to confront them as an excuse to keep ignoring the long-term threats to our prosperity:  the cost of our health care and our oil addiction; our education deficit and our fiscal deficit.

Now, I'm not choosing to address these additional challenges just because I feel like it, or because I'm a glutton for punishment.  I'm doing so because they're fundamental to our economic growth, and ensuring that we don't have more crises like this in the future.

You see, we cannot go back to endless cycles of bubble and bust.  We can't continue to base our economy on reckless speculation and spending beyond our means; on bad credit and inflated home prices and over-leveraged banks.  This crisis teaches us that such activity is not the creation of lasting wealth -- it's the illusion of prosperity, and it hurts us all in the end.

Instead, we must build this recovery on a foundation that lasts -- on a 21st century infrastructure and a green economy with lower health care costs that create millions of new jobs and new industries; on schools that prepare our children to compete and thrive; on businesses that are free to invest in the next big idea or breakthrough discovery.

We cannot wait to build this foundation.  Putting off these investments for another four years or eight years or 12 years or 20 years would be to continue the same irresponsibility that led us to this point.  It would be exactly what Washington has done for decades.  And it will make our recovery more fragile and our future less secure.

And that's a future I don't accept -- not for my children, and not for yours.  I did not come here to pass our problems on to the next President or the next generation -- I'm here to solve them.  I'm here to start building an economy and a prosperity that lasts.    

Now, would I prefer to tackle these challenges without having inherited a trillion-dollar deficit or a financial crisis?  Absolutely.  But that's a choice that we don't have.  I don't like the idea of spending more government money, nor am I interested in expanding government's role. 

I've always been a strong believer in the power of the free market.  It has been and will remain the very engine of America's progress -- the source of a prosperity that has gone unmatched in human history.  I believe that jobs are best created not by government, but by businesses and entrepreneurs like you who are willing to take risks on a good idea.  And I believe that our role as lawmakers is not to disparage wealth, but to expand its reach; not to stifle the market, but to strengthen its ability to unleash the creativity and innovation that still makes this nation the envy of the world. 

But I also know this:  Throughout our history, there have been times when the market has fallen out of balance.  There have been moments of economic transformation and upheaval when prosperity and even basic financial security have escaped far too many of our citizens.  And at these moments, government has stepped in not to supplant private enterprise, but to catalyze it -- to create the conditions for thousands of entrepreneurs and new businesses to adapt and ultimately to thrive. 

That's why we laid down railroads and highways to spur commerce and industry -- to stitch this nation together.  That's why, even in the midst of civil war, Lincoln launched a transcontinental railroad, and Land Grant colleges and the National Academy of Sciences.  That's why we initiated universal public high schools and passed a GI bill to nurture the skills and talents of all our workers.  That's why Eisenhower built an interstate highway system, and Kennedy pointed us to the moon, knowing that the exploration would lead to unimagined innovations here on Earth.  

That's what we've done in the past.  And that's why I've chosen to address education, health care, energy and this budget -- because we can't wait to make the investments today that will lead to tomorrow's prosperity.

As members of the Business Roundtable, you know how important this is when it comes to each one of these challenges. 

On education -- I know that you just heard from Arne Duncan.  You've all long understood that the success of your business ultimately depends on its ability to hire workers who have the skills and knowledge to compete with other workers and other companies all over the world.  You also know that America is increasingly falling behind in that competition. 

That's why it will be the goal of this administration to ensure that every child has access to a complete and competitive education -- from the day they are born to the day they begin their career.

We've already dramatically expanded early childhood education, and we will continue to improve the quality of these programs.  For as this organization knows, children who receive a quality early childhood education are more likely to attend college, more likely to hold a job, and more likely to earn more in that job.

This budget also creates new rewards tied to teacher performance and pathways for advancement and rewards for success for those teachers.  And we're going to invest in innovative programs that are already helping schools meet high standards and close achievement gaps.  We've urged states to lift the cap on the number of charter schools they build.  And I've asked every American to commit to at least one year or more of higher education or career training, with the goal of having the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by the year 2020. 

And to meet that goal, we're investing $2.5 million [sic] to identify and support initiatives across the country that achieve results in helping students graduate.  And we'll also make sure that a higher education is affordable for every American who wants to go. 

This budget also recognizes a reality that you understand as business leaders:  In this economy, adults of all ages need opportunities to earn new degrees and skills.  So we will work with our universities and community colleges to prepare workers for good jobs in high-growth industries, and to improve access to job training not only for young people who are just starting their careers, but also for older workers who need new skills to change careers.  That's how we'll create a workforce that will help our businesses compete and win in the 21st century.  And that's how we'll create a workforce that is adaptable to a dynamic, global, capitalist system.

Even as we invest in our workers, we'll also need to create the jobs for them to fill.  And that's why the second major investment that our budget makes is in the jobs and industries of the future.

The recovery plan we passed will ultimately leverage at least $175 billion in private sector investment -- investment in areas like clean energy and small business development and school construction.

This budget builds on that foundation by making historic investments in science and technology and infrastructure; by making permanent the Research and Experimentation Credit; by eliminating capital gains taxes for investments in small business and start-ups; and by providing the resources necessary to finally spark a clean energy revolution.

We all know that the country that harnesses the power of renewable energy will lead the 21st century.  And yet, it's China that's launched the largest effort in history to make their economy energy efficient.  We invented solar technology, but we've fallen behind countries like Germany and Japan in producing it.  New plug-in hybrids will roll off our assembly lines, but they're running on battery cells made in Korea.

I do not accept a future where the jobs and industries of tomorrow take root beyond our borders -- and I know you don't either.  It's time for America to lead.  And to do this, you and I both know that we need ultimately to make clean, renewable energy the profitable kind of energy.  We know that the best way to do that is through market-based caps on carbon pollution that drives the production of more renewable energy in America.

I understand that this will be a difficult transition for many businesses to make, and that's why this budget does not account for such a cap until 2012 -- a time when this economy should be on the road to recovery.  And to support this transition, we'll invest $15 billion a year to develop technologies like wind power and solar power, advanced biofuels, clean coal, and more fuel-efficient cars and trucks built right here in America.

The last major challenge we address in this budget is a threat not only to the well-being of our families and the prosperity of our businesses, but to the very foundation of our economy -- and that's the exploding cost of health care in America.  And I know you had a session with Peter Orszag about this.

For those who believe that this issue is somehow unrelated to our economic crisis, consider the fact that up to 1.5 million Americans could lose their homes this year -- just because of medical crises.  And as everybody in this room is painfully aware, the same soaring costs that are straining our families' budgets are also sinking some of our best businesses or putting enormous strain on your bottom line.

Today, too many small businesses can't even think about insuring their employees.  And major American corporations like yours are struggling to compete with foreign counterparts.  Companies of all sizes are being forced to ship jobs overseas or shut their doors for good.

Medicare costs are consuming our federal budget.  Medicaid is overwhelming our state budgets.  At the fiscal summit we held in the White House a few weeks ago, the one thing on which everyone agreed was that the greatest threat to America's fiscal health is not the investments we've made to rescue our economy -- it's the skyrocketing cost of our health care system. 

You understand this.  For years, the Business Roundtable has worked tirelessly to promote investments in electronic medical records, with strict privacy standards, that will help save money and lives -- investments that we have now made in the recovery plan.  You participated in last week's White House Forum on Health Reform, proving that this time, we find business and labor, medical professionals and patient advocates, all on the side -- same side of the issue, urging meaningful reform.  And you were one of the many organizations that urged us to include health care in this budget -- which is why we've made a historic commitment to reform based on the principle that we must bring down crushing costs and provide quality, affordable health care to every American.  It's a commitment that's paid for in part by efficiencies in the system that are long overdue, and we will need your help to ensure that it is included in the final budget. 

Let me just give you one example:  Medicare.  For years we've been paying Medicare Advantage plans 14 percent more than it would cost for the traditional Medicare plan.  In this budget, we have a simple idea:  Instead of government setting prices for our seniors, why not have private plans bid for Medicare's business?  This competitive bidding is good for businesses, it's good for our seniors, and it's good for taxpayers, because it saves us $177 billion over 10 years.

We've undertaken an unprecedented effort to find savings just like this in every corner of this budget, because with the deficit we inherited, the cost of the recession we face, and the long-term challenges we have to meet, it's never been more important to ensure that as our economy recovers, we do what it takes to cut this deficit in half by the end of my first term in office.     

Now, I know that some have questioned this commitment, and I want you to know that I understand the skepticism, because we've heard promises like this before.  And it's true that this crisis has compelled us to add to our deficit in the short term.  But I ask all of you to look at this budget.  Already, we've identified $2 trillion in deficit reductions over the next decade.  We've announced procurement reform that will save the government $40 billion by greatly reducing no-bid contracts.  We're going to end education programs that don't work.  We will eliminate direct payments to agribusiness that don't need them.  We'll root out even more waste, fraud, and abuse in our Medicare program. 

So, altogether, this budget cuts spending by $1 trillion over the next decade -- $1 trillion from where it would be if we just kept on going on our current path.  And that will reduce discretionary spending for domestic programs as a share of the economy by more than 10 percent over the next decade.  It will be at the lowest level in nearly half a century -- lowest level in nearly half a century. 

Now, if we wanted to, we could have painted a sunnier fiscal picture in this budget.  We could have relied on some of the same gimmicks that our government has used for the last eight years -- gimmicks that would hide spending on things like Iraq and Afghanistan -- gimmicks like assuming that there's never a natural disaster anywhere in the country over the course of a year.  Our deficit would appear $2.7 trillion better -- had we used those gimmicks -- over the next decade.

But I told my team we're not going to do that.  We're not just suffering from a deficit of dollars in this government -- we're suffering from a deficit of trust.  And I believe that restoring that trust begins by restoring a sense of honesty and accountability to our budget.

Now, while we're being honest, let's also talk about taxes, always a favorite subject.  I said in my address to Congress that this is the one issue that always falls victim to the same political scare tactics we've seen for decades.  So let me be very clear:  If this budget is passed, not one American will see their taxes raised a single dime between now and the end of 2010.  All right, so for the next two years, your taxes aren't going up -- nobody.  At that point, at the end of 2010, 97 percent of all taxpayers and 97 percent of all small businesses will still not see a tax increase -- 97 percent.  In fact, 95 percent of all working families will receive a tax cut, so they can buy some of the wonderful products that you make. 

For the top 3 percent of all taxpayers -- and I'm just going to take a shot in the dark and guess that that includes some of the people in this room -- the top tax rate across the board will still be lower than they were during the prosperity of the 1990s.  It will still be lower than they were during the Clinton era.  You will pay a tax rate on capital gains and dividends that is also lower than it was during most of the 1990s.  And the revenue that results from these changes will reduce the deficit by $750 billion over the next 10 years. 

Now, there's no doubt that we've had to make some tough choices in this budget, and we're likely to have to make more in the days and months ahead.  And you and I won't always agree on every decision or every issue, but I do believe that we know what needs to be done to build an economy that's not just revived from a crisis, but rebuilt for the future -- to secure a prosperity that no longer rests on a bubble, but on a firm foundation that will make this country strong and competitive in the 21st century.

That kind of economy -- an economy with workers who are highly skilled and highly educated; with a health care system that is efficient and affordable; with energy that is clean and renewable; with entrepreneurs who are free to invest in the next big idea -- that's an economy that's built to last.  That's a future that's good for business.  And this is a country that will lead and prosper for generations to come. 

And I look forward to your continued cooperation in building that country, because I have absolute faith that we can get there together.  So thank you very much.  (Applause.)

I asked -- I asked my team for some extra time to make sure that I was able to answer as many questions as possible. 

Mr. Chairman of the roundtable, do you want to start us off?

CHAIRMAN:  I do, thank you very much.  And, Mr. President, we really appreciate you taking time to be with us and to give us access to so much of your team throughout the day.

The business community is committed to be a part of the solution.  And those millions of jobs that you talked about, you know, largely, as you say, are coming from businesses.  And therefore, we want to partner with you in terms of, one, ending this economic crisis, increasing liquidity and getting smart regulation.  We're with you and Secretary Duncan on the education agenda, workforce development, personal training, vocational training.  We're for affordable and quality health care costs, and access to that for everyone.

We certainly want to be able to create that energy independence that you talked about.  And we want to be in a position where we can have the kind of investment in our community by keeping our markets open and having access to markets all around.

So we're committed to being able to do all that and working with you.

During the campaign you talked often about having an open administration -- and you were going to push very, very hard for that.  There's a misperception I think in some people's minds that the relationship between business and the Obama administration is like, well, oil and vinegar in that way.  Well, I would like to tell you that, from our standpoint, that couldn't be farther from the truth.  Everybody in this room is anxious to see you succeed and wants to be a part of that.

In that end, you know, we have the same common goals right now -- jobs, growth, recovery, competitiveness -- and as such, the ask that I would have for you is that if you would allow us to set up a regular schedule, such that the expertise of the chief executives here could work with whoever you designate to be a sounding board, pushing back and helping to form those kinds of opinions.

And thank you again for coming.

THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  That's exactly the kind of partnership that we seek.  As I said, there are actually a lot of people in this room who our team has consulted with on a regular basis, and we hope to do more of that in the future.

And I know that, you know, John has attended a number of the summits that we've been putting in place.  I think you will find that this is actually an administration that also wants you to succeed in the same way that you want us to succeed.  As I said before, I am a strong believer in the ability of the free market to generate wealth and prosperity that's shared across the board.  I think there are times where sometimes our economy gets out of balance.  This is obviously one of those times.  And so government has to intervene in a crisis.  But the goals should always be to right the ship and let private enterprise do its magic.

There are going to be a series of fairly complex issues around regulation in the financial markets, which we believe is necessary.  I think we've got to -- and I assume that many of the people here agree that we've got to update the regulatory framework that was created in the '30s for global markets where trillions of dollars are spinning around the globe with the press of a button.  But we are also very mindful that we've got to do those regulatory reforms in a way that doesn't strangle innovation and creativity and entrepreneurship, but deals with the systemic risks that obviously we were unprepared to deal with when this latest crisis occurred.

With respect to a tax policy, again, we want to consult with you, because our belief is that we've got to have a stable system that closes the structural deficit that right now is built into the federal government.  And it's an unsustainable deficit.  If we keep on going down this path, at some point folks who've been financing our ways are going to say, enough; we don't want to buy anymore T-bills.  And then we've got some problems.

So we're going to work with you on that.  We want to do it in a way that encourages work, encourages investment, encourages savings, and make sure that we're financing what we need out of government, but no more than what we need.

So, on a whole host of these issues, we are going to be actively soliciting your advice and your input, and our expectation is that we can use this moment to create a stronger free market system, one that's more stable, one that's more profitable over the long term.  But I think as everybody here recognizes because you're all thinking about it with respect to your own businesses, this is going to take some time.  I mean, we were engaging in a unsustainable model for a very long time, and the bill is now due for a lot of bad habits and bad practices that were built up over the course of many years.

It is complicated, and it is international.  And so our focus right now is to stabilize the financial system, get credit flowing again, to project a budget that allows in future years for us to start tackling these very big problems.  But we've got to get started now if we're actually going to get there -- on health care, on energy, and education.  And that's what we're trying to accomplish.

Let's see -- Sam.

MR. PALMISANO:  Thank you, Mr. President.  Well, first of all, we're very encouraged --

THE PRESIDENT:  Here, we got a mic right behind you.

MR. PALMISANO:  On behalf of everyone in the business community, we're very, very encouraged with your words and your support.  You've always said that you were committed to the competitiveness of American business.  You've always said you're committed to the competitiveness of our country.  And we really appreciate it.  We are in tough times.

I also want to thank you for all the support in the stimulus package.  And when we met, you listened to us and you implemented many of our ideas and your leadership made a difference.  So, again, we appreciate it.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

MR. PALMISANO:  There's one thing that I'd like to mention in that construct of working together and your reaching out, and that is this -- how tax structures are used around the world for economic development.  All of our trading partners have done this for many, many years as part of their industrial policy; we all understand that.  You've argued for a fair playing field; we appreciate that. 

But what's happened in the past is that there was a thing called the deferral.  And the deferral was put in place to normalize all these anomalies.  They're all different, they're not the same, so it was put in place for that purpose.  So it was a normalization to help American competitiveness.

As you know, in the current proposed budget, there's a consideration around the deferral.  We all accept we need to deal with the deficit.  I mean, nobody in this room is going to argue we want big deficits.  They hurt business, as you know; they squeeze capital out of the private sector.  But at the same time, the deferral has been very, very important to this normalization and it allowed us to compete.  So what we really are just asking for, and we mentioned this to Tim earlier today, is just an open dialogue to engage, to give you all the facts that we know, why it's so important to us, so just to kind of reach out and take you up on your offer to listen to our point of view.

THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  Good.  I will certainly listen to your point of view because I want American businesses to be competitive.  And by the way, at some point -- this isn't reflected in our current budget because we've already got a lot on our plate -- but my interest over time in potentially lowering corporate rates in exchange for closing a lot of the loopholes that make the tax system so complex, that's a very appealing conversation to me and I'd like to pursue it. 

With respect to the specific issue of the deferrals, look, it is difficult for I think the average American if they feel as if businesses investing here are paying a higher tax rate than if they're investing overseas.  It's just counterintuitive.  I think people generally feel like let's encourage and motivate corporations to invest here at home, particularly at a time when there's been significant job loss.

I'm appreciative of the fact that if you are a multinational operation, that you've got all sorts of tax rates that create a lot of headaches and you don't want to end up double-paying where you can help it.  So some of this stuff gets pretty technical.  Let's make sure that you and others, representatives of the Business Roundtable, are working with Treasury to find out if we can find that right balance.  I want you to be competitive; I don't want you to be placed at a competitive disadvantage with other countries -- or companies from other countries.  We also want to make sure that not just from a revenue perspective, but also from the perspective of job creation here at home, that we've got a tax code that reflects those values.  Okay?

Anne -- where's Anne?  There you are.  I've got a little list.  (Laughter.)

MS. MULCAHY:  Mr. President, thanks for engaging with us this afternoon -- it's actually been a very productive day.

You know, on that theme of global companies -- and I think lots of us are witnessing further deterioration around the world.  And it's worrying, in terms of the business community.

In a few weeks you're going to meet with G20 leaders, and an ability to coordinate, to have a set of actions that really are aligned, I think is important for the health of the world right now.

What's your -- what are your expectations and how feasible is it to have an aligned agenda?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I actually think that it's very feasible.  We're actively pursuing it.  And I'm having meetings and conversations ahead of the G20.  I already had a meeting with Gordon Brown.  I'll be meeting with people like Kevin Rudd from Australia.  I met with the Chinese Foreign Minister today in preparations for meeting with President Hu in London, when we get -- when we arrive.

I think there are a couple of broad principles that we'd like to see emerging out of the G20 -- number one, that the stimulus efforts of all countries are sufficiently robust to deal with the decline in demand.  We think that's important.  And countries like China, for example, are doing that, and we want to make sure that everybody is mindful that the decline in global demand is enormous and now is the time for us to provide some ballast.

Number two, financial regulation.  We think that it's very important that there is coordination -- not necessarily a super regulator, but that there is coordination and effort so that if we are doing some things that are increasing transparency, openness, trust in -- on Wall Street, that London is doing the same thing and that other financial markets are doing the same thing, so that we don't start seeing a race to the bottom, but rather we see a race to the top where we've got a stable global financial system.

A third thing that we have to pay attention to is the situation in emerging markets.  We've got some very big problems potentially there.  And that is something that the Europeans, for example, should be very interested in, because their banks have enormous exposure to those countries.  We've got to pay a lot of attention to it, not only for economic reasons, but also for national security reasons.

I mean, if you start seeing a lot of emerging markets collapse, it's bad for business, but it also creates a dangerous international environment.  So to that end, the idea of wealthier countries, or countries that are running surpluses, have decent foreign reserves, foreign currency reserves, being able to work with the international financial institutions to provide some help in propping up those economies as we climb out of this recession, I think is going to be very important.

And I just want to make sure that I'm -- I'm doing this off the top of my head.  The last thing, I think, that we have to pay some attention to is making sure that we're not dropping back into protectionism.  I mean, I think everybody understands sort of the history of the Great Depression.  So far at least, we're seeing some movement to contain protectionist sentiments in these various domestic markets, but we have to build on that and I think having a strong statement that encourages trade and making sure that there are -- there are sufficient credit lines for trade, because that's one of the big problems that we've seen right now in terms of -- in terms of world trade is, it's just very hard to -- the traditional mechanisms for lending that facilitate trade have really contracted.

So those are all areas that we've got to spend a lot of time focused on.  I'm confident, actually, that interests will be aligned here more than they have been in the past.  Okay.

Let's see.  How about Bill Green?  Bill is over here.  Do we have a mic?

MR. GREEN:  Thank you, Mr. President, and thank you also for your comments on education over the last several days.  It gave us a lot of clarity and Secretary Duncan did a terrific job of -- I think it's one thing that we're very much aligned on because we realize that a competitive country needs competitive companies and in order to do that we have to have a competitive workforce.

There is something that I think it's important that you know.  We are launching tomorrow the Springboard Project, which is organized by the Business Roundtable.  And what it's focused on, really, is sort of three charges.

The first one is about making sure the education system produces the skills that we need for today's and tomorrow's markets.  The second thing is we need to institutionalize life-long learning.  It's absolutely true, we can see that all now, and it needs to be an individual and a collective imperative for our country.  And I think all of our citizens and all of our workforce needs to understand that.  And the third is, for a problem that's here and now, is we need to facilitate workers in gaining new skills that have been displaced by economic dislocation and other changes in the market, which are going to be a natural occurrence over time, and we need to work forward on that.  So we're just looking forward to working closely with your team to make sure we can tackle those.

THE PRESIDENT:  I look forward to that.  And you're exactly right, that we are going to continue to be the most dynamic economy in the world.  And one of our strengths is our dynamism, the fact that we adapt quickly.  We got risk takers in this country -- that means that sometimes we have higher failure rates, but it also means that we've got greater flexibility and we pursue opportunity.

That is part of the American character that we want to retain.  And so I'm amused sometimes when I read, sort of, this talk of, well, you know, the Obama administration wants to get government in everybody's business.  I don't.  I want you guys to do your thing.

What is true, though, is that in the current global, highly competitive environment that the burdens and benefits, the dislocations of that dynamism are disproportionately borne by workers in certain sectors, in certain regions.  And that creates great pain, it creates great hardship.  And so part of what we want to figure out is how do we make sure that the burdens and benefits of this dynamic economy are spread in a way that maintains strong political and social support for that dynamism.

So for those of you who are concerned about protectionism, the best way to ensure that we're not seeing protectionist tendencies in this country is to make sure that workers are benefitting from trade.  And some sectors are, but some sectors may not be -- if we are retraining them, if we're investing in their futures, if, when there are new opportunities in green energy companies are saying, you know what, let's go to Michigan, or let's go to Ohio where you've seen a huge exodus of jobs -- let's go in there and work on developing the new battery, or the new solar panel, or the new technology that is going to help launch new industries.  That is going to be something that I think benefits everybody and benefits your businesses most of all. 

So I'm excited about the prospect.  That's part of what we've already done in our -- in our recovery package, in the Recovery and Reinvestment Package. 

Carol is going to be talking to you about some of the stuff we're doing on energy.  We've got to train people -- something like the smart grid, which could create huge efficiencies for your businesses as well as individual families, there are a bunch of bottlenecks.  Some of it has to do with local siting issues, but some of it just has to do with the fact that finding enough trained electricians to lay these lines.  Right now we don't have enough -- at a time when we've got huge unemployment out there.

And so figuring out how we're training people for the right jobs, that requires consultation with business.  You guys can help us identify what are the particular skill sets that people are going to need so that working with community colleges, universities, vocational programs, apprenticeship programs, we are teeing that up.

Okay.  Is Ivan here?  Go ahead.

MR. SEIDENBERG:  Mr. President, how are you?

THE PRESIDENT:  I'm doing well, thank you.

MR. SEIDENBERG:  Okay, good. And again, on behalf of all of us, thank you so much for being with us today, and the energy you're putting into all these issues.  It's really encouraging.  Health care -- your comments on health care were terrific and very enlightening.  I think we're all pretty much focused and agree that the costs of health care are way out of line and we need to do something to bring them in line.

We at the BRT have been working on a model, working on a framework to how we move ahead with reform.  I'd just like to point out a couple of things to you to get your reaction to it.

We agree that the goal is to not only broaden access, but to lower the cost and improve the quality for everybody.  So we start with employer-based health care.  We think today most people get health care from their business -- 180 million Americans do.  We can provide not only the current need for their families, but also create the kind of incentives for future well-being and make sure they have good behaviors and deal with all of the kinds of things that create healthy employees -- not just today, but for a long time.  We can work with the insurance carriers to provide the robust policies and plans that will be out in the marketplace.  So it's really important that we start with that framework.

Second thing is to make sure that we have some individual participation.  I think it's very important that we don't have a government plan competing with a private plan and finding out that our employees or the citizens in general could go to a plan that doesn't have the same incentives and requirements and behavioral characteristics to make sure that they do the right things long term.

I think the last thing is the thing that you've mentioned, with respect to health IT.  There are at least two or three dozen things we can do right now that begin driving costs out.  I think the initiative that you approved on health IT is terrific.  The quicker we get the systems built and the data collected, we can start changing the system.  But we can do more.  We can do more with medical reform, medical liability reform.  We can do more with, in effect, Medicare and review the -- and change the payment systems.

So I think health care reform really is the devil is in the details.  And I think if we get the model working correctly, we could make a significant impact on the things that you've articulated today.  Thank you.

THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  I think you make a couple of terrific points, so let me just amplify a few.  Number one, I think we have a moral obligation to make sure that, in a country this wealthy, you don't have single moms not able to send their kids to a doctor because they just can't afford it, and they don't have insurance on their job. 

So I think there's a powerful moral element to health care.  I get 10 letters sent to me out of the 40,000 that are sent to me every day to read every night, just so that I'm attuned to what's happening outside my bubble -- although somebody pointed out the other day, it's a very nice bubble -- but it is a bubble.  (Laughter.)  And I would say at least half of them in some ways relate to a individual family crisis with health care.  And they're heartbreaking -- has to be dealt with.

But having said that, I also just have a very hard-headed analysis about this, which is the path we're on is unsustainable.  If you have six, eight, 10 percent health care inflation every single year, at some point we are all broke; businesses are broke, or you stop providing health care to your employees.  The federal government is way broke with Medicare and Medicaid.  State governments are groaning under the weight of this stuff; it's consuming everything.

So what that also means though -- and this is something I've tried to emphasize to my more progressive friends -- we can't simply just add on a whole bunch of people to a broken system, because that's also unsustainable.  You can't just take people who are currently uninsured, plop them on to a system that is generating those kinds of costs, not dig into the engine and try to figure out how to make the thing run more efficiently, because then you'll just be broke that much faster.  And at some point, you start making very draconian decisions about people losing benefits.

So the cost issue is the thing that we actually think is the big driver in this whole debate.  And that's why -- I know you heard from Peter Orszag -- things like comparative effectiveness, health IT, prevention, figuring out how our reimbursement structures are designed under Medicare and Medicaid.  Medical liability issues -- I think all those things have to be on the table.  And I won't lie to you that everybody agrees on this theoretically until you start getting into the specifics.  And oftentimes though, Ivan, one of the things I'll note, is the resistance is not based on evidence, it's based on people's interests.  Everybody is kind of dug in.  They know that the system doesn't work, but at least it kind of works for them in one particular aspect.

And part of the reason that we did not simply design our own plan and try to jam it down the throats of Congress is we want them to see some of the contradictions in their own positions and, over time, sort through some of those tensions, make some tough choices, working with us.  But we think that we've got to get this done now; this is a window.

Not everything is going to be implemented now.  And this, by the way, goes to a broader issue with respect to our budget.  Because I think there's some people, when we issued the budget they said, boy, these Obama people, they're really ambitious -- they're taking on health care, they're taking on energy, they're taking on education -- don't they know that there's this bank crisis right now, we've got to do one thing at a time.

Look, the budget document that we put forward is a 10-year document.  We are, like any organization -- just like all of yours, we have to do long-term planning even as we're addressing short-term issues.  If we don't do the long-term planning, then we end up having more short-term issues again and again and again and again.

So we don't anticipate that every piece of health care is done this year.  We think that we've got to get the process and get in place a structure and a framework and a funding approach and work out a lot of these details.  But it's going to be implemented over time.  We're not going to have instant health IT all next year.  The same is true on the energy front.  Under the cap proposal that we have it wouldn't even start until 2012, where we're going to be out of this recession -- or you'll have somebody else speaking to you in 2013.  (Laughter.)

But if we don't start now, if we wait until -- to have the debate in 2012, and then suddenly it turns out that oil is at $150 a barrel again, and we say, oh, why is it that we didn't start thinking about this and making some steps now to figure this out.  Well, that's what Washington does.  You guys could not run your business that way.  And so the notion that we are doing some long-term planning now and trying to get this town to think long term, that somehow that's a distraction just defies every sound management practice that I've ever heard of.

And so we've got some immediate stuff that we've got to deal with right now.  What this budget does is it reflects a vision about where we need to go, and I think it's the right vision.

All right, let me see how I'm doing on time.  I've got a little more time.  I'm going to take at least a couple more questions.  Dan Fulton.  Is Dan around?  Yes, sir.  Go ahead. 

MR. FULTON:  Thank you for your leadership.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

MR. FULTON:  My company, Weyerhaeuser, is committed to addressing climate change, and we've adopted significant emission reduction goals, and we support legislation to establish a cap and trade approach to climate change.  In your comments you've expressed support for a cap for -- with a hundred percent auction of carbon allowances to generate revenue for the government.  In your comments earlier today you also talked about an implementation time frame of 2012.

I just wanted to comment that a number of us in the business community are concerned that a hundred percent auction will effectively be a tax that would impose significant costs on energy-intensive industries such as some that we operate, and may impact existing industries' ability to fund needed investments in new low-carbon technologies.

I just wondered if you could explain how the hundred percent auction approach would work in our highly challenged economy -- because we're all feeling a lot of pressure today on costs -- and yet still preserve jobs for existing industries, and strengthen our existing manufacturing sector.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let me start by saying this.  I said during the campaign we were looking at a hundred percent auction.  We are not going to be able to move this in an effective way without partnership with the business community.  But we just -- we can't get it done.  And for businesses like yours that are committed to the concept and the idea, we're going to work to make sure that it works for you.

Now, the experience of a cap and trade system thus far is that if you're giving away carbon permits for free, then basically you're not really pricing the thing and it doesn't work, or people can game the system in so many ways that it's not creating the incentive structures that we're looking for.  The flip side is, you're right, if it's so onerous that people can't meet it, then it defeats the purpose -- and politically we can't get it done anyway.

So we're going to have to find a structure that arrives at that right balance.  We want to create a price structure.  Keep in mind that the reason that I'm interested in a cap and trade approach is precisely because I think the market makes decisions about these technologies better than we do.  You know, for those who are concerned about some heavy-handed command and control regulations coming down the pike, cap and trade is designed to say, you know what, here's a target, here's a price, you guys go figure it out and if you can make money on it, all the better.

So that's the -- that's our goal.  That's what we want.  And how that pricing mechanism works most effectively to actually influence incentives, but also be sufficiently realistic that industries are thriving as opposed to groaning under the weight of it, I think is going to be the trick.  I'm confident that we can do it.  We've done it before.

I mean, keep in mind that when -- I'm trying to remember, this was back in the '70s or early '80s -- I'm getting old enough now where I can't remember -- but, you know, the issue of acid rain was around.  Everybody thought all your trees were going to be dying; you couldn't make any paper.  And we put in an auction system and a trading mechanism and, lo and behold, American ingenuity and American entrepreneurship and inventiveness created options that ended up being much cheaper than anybody had imagined -- much cheaper than anybody had imagined.

Now, in the meantime, I just -- I was talking to some members of Congress just yesterday, you know, who were concerned about this, because I'm sure they're hearing from industries and, you know, what does this mean economically, et cetera.  I just want to point out, you know, anybody who has been to Las Vegas recently and looked at Lake Mead; or who is familiar with what's happening in agriculture in California right now; or go down to Atlanta, which may not have any water soon, because of what's happening in terms of changing weather patterns; or talk to Kevin Rudd in Australia -- that's going to cost us money too.  It's just not -- it's not priced.

And I'm not somebody who -- I've never bought into these Malthusian -- woe -- Chicken Little, the earth is falling -- I tend to be pretty optimistic.  I wouldn't be here if I weren't pretty optimistic.  But I think this is -- the science is overwhelming.  This is a real problem.  It will have severe economic consequences, as well as political and national security and environmental consequences.

And I'm confident that if we do it smart, if we're talking to you guys, if we're talking to industries, if our projections don't end up being wildly unrealistic, then I think we can handle this problem.

All right.  Okay, let me make this the last -- last question.

Dick.

MR. PARSONS:  First I'd like to say, it's good to see you.

THE PRESIDENT:  Good to see you.  Here, we got a mic coming up.  I think those are turned on.

MR. PARSONS:  As you know, Secretary Geithner was here earlier today, and I thought did a terrific job.  And as he went through his hastily prepared -- but prepared -- remarks, I made a little tick mark every time he used the word "confidence" -- talked about restoring confidence -- until I ran out of ink.  I say that somewhat facetiously, but I think he's spot on.  I think he's spot on.

We're in a battle in this country now, and maybe in the world, between confidence and fear.  And it's important that confidence win, because if consumers are confident, they'll spend; and if they're fearful, they won't.  If investors are confident, they'll invest; and if they're fearful, they won't.  And all the money of all the governments in the world can't replace that, right?

THE PRESIDENT:  Right.

MR. PARSONS:  So take it down to our industry, the banking business.  At its core, it's a very simple business:  It takes funds from depositors and other providers of funding, and then it makes those funds available in the credit markets.  And that's how businesses grow, when people buy homes, and send their kids to college, buy cars, and all that sort of stuff.

THE PRESIDENT:  Can I just say, Dick, it hasn't been that simple lately.  (Laughter.)  But I get your theory, though.

MR. PARSONS:  I said at its core.

THE PRESIDENT:  All right, I'll talk to Jamie.  Maybe that's -- (laughter.)

MR. PARSONS:  Some folks got carried away, I'll acknowledge that.  But the core business is essential to restoring this economy to full vitality.  And one of the things the Secretary said was that -- he laid out a four-point program, and he said at the end of the day, though, we're committed to -- particularly for those institutions that are core to the financial system -- to providing support, so that those essential funders -- depositors, bond holders, people who participate in the debt markets -- can have confidence that they'll be protected.

I think if those fundamental funders do have confidence, do believe that we're protected in all of this, our money is going to -- they will help stabilize the banking system; and then what you talked about earlier will happen -- the credit cycle will begin, and then the country and the economy can begin to heal.

I just wondered does your -- among other chiefs, you're the Confidence-Builder-in-Chief -- I wondered if you could either elaborate or drive home that point that the Secretary made, because I think it will help us all.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, this is the most dynamic economy on earth, and our capacity is undiminished.  We've got the same smart folks, engineers and scientists, we've still got the hardest working workers on earth, we've got the best universities, we've got all kinds of innovations.  And you know what?  We've also got a whole bunch of potential customers out there.  As bad as the housing market has been, you're starting to see inventories decline.

And there's a young family out there right now who's going to be thinking about buying a home.  And if we can get them credit, they're going to buy that home.  And if they buy that home, then that construction worker, maybe he comes in and remodels the kitchen.  And that means that he can buy the computer for his kid at school.  And we're off to the races.

So I am very confident about our long-term prospects.  We live in such a rapid-fire information-rich environment that people's attention spans go like this.  And that makes for volatility in confidence.  A smidgen of good news, and suddenly everything is doing great.  A little bit of bad news -- oh, we're down in the dumps.  And I am obviously an object of this constantly varying assessment.  (Laughter.)  I'm the Object-in-Chief of this varying assessment.  (Laughter.)

So my view -- you know, people ask me sometimes, well, you seem like a pretty calm guy, how do you do that?  I say, well, look, I don't think things are ever as good as they say and they're never as bad as they say.  And things two years ago were not as good as we thought because there were a lot of underlying weaknesses in the economy, and they're not as bad as we think they are now. 

We're going to restore confidence by, in a very systematic way, getting this financial system fixed.  I think Secretary Geithner and Chairman Bernanke and Sheila Bair have done an extraordinary job -- it hasn't gotten a lot of fanfare -- but the TALF program that's been in place, the creation of markets once again for some of these securities that are out there so that they can be priced and we can start seeing financing flowing again -- the fact that for all the, you know, angst that's been out there, you've got banking institutions that are still functioning and, lo and behold, making profits.

We still have some big problems in the banking industry.  That's what these stress tests are about.  We are going to make a effective assessment and, even with the worst case scenarios, we're still going to be looking at -- the vast majority of banks are going to be doing fine and in a position to make profits.  Even with the worst case scenarios -- even if things stay bad for a while, the vast majority of these banks are going to be fine.

By the way, depositors are all going to be fine.  That's why we've got the FDIC.  And so I think Americans understand that their deposits are going to be fine.

The market is going to be responding to all this information out there and, you know, the whole issue of animal spirits in the marketplace and when suddenly a rally catches, you know, you guys know that better than I do.  But my focus has to be on the long term.  And my long-term projections are highly optimistic -- if we take care of some of these long-term structural problems.

The one thing I don't want to do is to replicate the false confidence that was premised on bubbles.  And I think that we've really got to think through -- and all of you, as critical captains of industry, have to help us think through -- how do we prevent this froth that builds up and go back to steady growth, fundamental growth that's based on making things, providing good services, innovating, exporting -- as opposed to just borrowing and leveraging?  And that is going to be a challenge, and there's going to be some adjustment.

But even with consumers -- I mean, we've got this interesting situation where we're actually seeing consumers do exactly what we would have liked them to do, just not all at once, and that's starting to save some.  Right?  Paying down credit card bills, making sure that they've socked away a little bit each month for their retirement, for their kids' college education.  That ultimately is a positive thing.

We just want to make sure that everybody understands, you know what, you don't have to stop in your tracks here.  Things are going to get better.  It's going to require some patience.  And the one thing that I think our country and our culture will benefit from is an end to short-term gratification and a recognition that ultimately you build up value by hard work and dedication and sweat, and there are going to be some bumps in the road and things take time.

But I'm very confident about it.  And I hope you are, too.

Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)

END
5:12 P.M. EDT

 
 
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
_________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                 March 12, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT THE DEDICATION OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN HALL
National Defense University
Fort Lesley J. McNair

Washington, D.C.
1:28 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, General Wilson, for the wonderful introduction and your hospitality. Thank you to Secretary Gates and Admiral Mullen for the extraordinary service that they render to this country. I want to acknowledge the other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff who are doing outstanding work and have been a great support to me and Ambassador Ross.
To each of you who are here, for your service to our country and your commitment to our security, I want to say thank you on behalf of the American people. You know, I think so highly of NDU that I picked one of your alumni, General Jim Jones, to be my National Security Advisor. (Applause.)
I know many of you have served in harm's way, and for that you have the respect of a grateful nation. And before I go any further, I want to acknowledge all of our troops now serving overseas. They have shouldered an awesome -- (applause) -- they have shouldered an awesome responsibility. They have performed brilliantly. And they have the full support of the American people.
Today, it is my privilege to join you in dedicating this building to the memory of President Abraham Lincoln. We know, of course, that there are many monuments to Lincoln's memory across this country. His words are written into stately walls, and his image is printed on our currency. His story is taught in our schools, and his name is synonymous with freedom. You and I live in the union that he saved, and we inherited the progress that he made possible.
Yet despite this far-reaching legacy, it is still -- to quote the man himself -- "altogether fitting and proper" that we should set aside this ground, and dedicate this hall, in his memory -- because Lincoln's presidency was characterized by war, even as his ambition was a just and lasting peace. Here, in this indispensable institution, we find a living legacy to that ambition. Here, at National Defense University, men and women come together to think, to learn, and to seek new strategies to defend our union, while pursuing the goal of a just and lasting peace.
The grounds that make up this campus tell us an interesting story about how America can pursue this goal. Fort McNair was built over two centuries ago to protect a young capital against invasion. Its defenses were traditional -- training for soldiers, stockpiles of arms, fortifications to hold advancing armies at bay. It was overrun by a British attack in the War of 1812, and treated the wounded warriors of the Civil War in Lincoln's day.
And then, just over a century ago, President Theodore Roosevelt came here to lay the cornerstone of the Army War College. In dedicating the school, Roosevelt spoke words that resonate to this day. He said, "More and more, it has become evident in modern warfare that the efficiency of the unit, of the individual officer and the individual enlisted man is going to be the prime factor in deciding the fate of fought fields."
More than 100 years later, Roosevelt's insight remained the essential mission of this institution -- the belief that even as our weapons have grown more powerful, individuals still determine the strength of our national security; the belief that individual Americans remain, as Roosevelt said, "the prime factor in deciding the fate of fought fields."
The battlefields that we now face would be unfamiliar to Lincoln and Roosevelt. The days when President Lincoln would wander down to the War Department's telegraph office to get reports from the front are long past, but the threats to our nation are real, and they are direct.
From this Fort, which was founded to defend the city of Washington against invasion, you could stand on September 11, 2001, and watch the smoke from the Pentagon billowing up across the Potomac. The attacks of 9/11 signaled the new dangers of the 21st century. And today, our people are still threatened by violent extremists, and we're still at war with terrorists in Afghanistan and Pakistan who are plotting to do us harm.
Yet terrorism and extremism make up just one part of the many challenges that confront our nation. In Iraq, we will surely face difficult days ahead as we responsibly end a war by transitioning to Iraqi control of their country. A historic economic downturn has put at stake the prosperity that underpins our strength, while putting at risk the stability of governments and the survival of people around the world. We're threatened by the spread of the world's deadliest weapons, by emerging cyber threats, and by a dependence on foreign oil that endangers our security and our planet. Poverty, disease, the persistence of conflict and genocide in the 21st century challenge our international alliances, partnerships and institutions -- and must call on all of us to reexamine our assumptions.
These are the battlefields of the 21st century. These are the threats that we now face. And in these struggles, the United States of America must succeed -- and we will succeed.
We also know that the old approaches won't meet the challenges of our time. Threats now move freely across borders, and the ability to do great harm lies in the hands of individuals as well as nations. No technology -- no matter how smart -- can stop the spread of nuclear weapons. No army -- no matter how strong -- can eliminate every adversary. No weapon -- no matter how powerful -- can erase the hatred that lies in someone's heart.
So it falls to institutions like this -- and to individuals like you -- to help us understand the world as it is, to develop the capacities that we need to confront emerging danger, and to act with purpose and pragmatism to turn this moment of peril into one of promise. That's how we will find new pathways to peace and security. That is the work that we must do.
Now, make no mistake: This nation will maintain our military dominance. We will have the strongest armed forces in the history of the world. And we will do whatever it takes to sustain our technological advantage, and to invest in the capabilities that we need to protect our interests, and to defeat and deter any conventional enemy.
But we also need to look beyond this conventional advantage as we develop the new approaches and new capabilities of the 21st century -- and in that effort, this university must play a critical role.
Our troops are faced with complex missions. Increasingly, they're called upon to defeat nimble enemies while keeping local populations on their side. And that's why my administration is committed to growing the size of our ground forces, and to investing in the skills that can help our troops succeed in the unconventional mission that they now face. We must understand different languages and different cultures; we must study determined adversaries and developing tactics.
That's the education that takes place within the walls of this university, and that is the work that must be done to keep our nation safe. (Applause.)
America must also balance and integrate all elements of our national power. We cannot continue to push the burden on to our military alone, nor leave dormant any aspect of the full arsenal of American capability. And that's why my administration is committed to renewing diplomacy as a tool of American power, and to developing our civilian national security capabilities. This effort takes place within the walls of this university, where civilians sit alongside soldiers in the classroom. And it must continue out in the field, where American civilians can advance opportunity, enhance governance and the rule of law, and attack the causes of war around the world. We have to enlist our civilians in the same way that we enlist those members of the armed services in understanding this broad mission that we have.
Finally, we know that the United States cannot defeat global threats alone. There is no permanent American solution to the security challenges that we face within any foreign nation, nor can the world meet the tests of our time without strong American leadership. And that's why my administration is committed to comprehensive engagement with the world, including strengthened partnerships with the foreign militaries and security forces that can combat our common enemies. Those partnerships are advanced here, within the walls of this university, where we welcome men and women from around the world to study alongside Americans, to understand our values, to forge partnerships -- and hopefully friendships -- that contribute to a safer world.
The lesson of history is that peace and security do not come easily. Each person who passes through this university will play a different role. Some of you will serve in uniform abroad, or help train troops here at home. Some will be diplomats, intelligence officers, or congressional staffers; others will work in the private sector. Some will rise to be senior officers and top strategists, and some of you might even decide to run for public office, although I'd warn you about that. (Laughter.)
Your story is your own, and the education that you're receiving will help you advance it. But you're here because you've also accepted the responsibility of having your story as part of the larger American story. Your story is serving your fellow citizens in the wider world. And my message to you today is simple: Your individual service makes all of the difference. You will make the decisions, large and small, that will help shape our future.
So as we dedicate this building where you and future generations will be prepared to make those choices, remember that the true strength of our nation comes not from the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth -- it comes from the power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, equality, justice and unyielding hope. (Applause.)
Those ideals are embedded in our national character because generations of Americans have chosen to live them in their own lives, to advance them through their service and through their sacrifice. This is the truth that Lincoln understood -- that pragmatism must serve a common purpose, a higher purpose. That's the legacy that we inherit. And that, in the end, is how government of the people, and by the people, and for the people, will endure in our time.
So thank you, God bless you, and God bless the United States of America. (Applause.)
END
1:40 P.M. EDT

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
__________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              March 12, 2009

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT RECOVERY ACT IMPLEMENTATION CONFERENCE

Room 450
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
11:10 A.M. EDT
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Please, have a seat.  I've got my Illinois contingent over here.  Please, everybody have a seat.  Thank you so much.

I just wanted to stop by and say hello.  I know that you heard from Joe Biden at the top of this session, and I wanted to let you know that we are very grateful to all of you for taking the time to come.  We hope that this is being a productive session.  And I want to emphasize that all of you are at the front lines of what is probably the most important task that we have in this country over the next couple of years, and that's getting the economy started again.

I think all of you in your respective roles are hearing stories of people who are going through extraordinary hardship in your respective states.  And we passed this American Recovery and Reinvestment Act because we strongly believe that this is an opportunity not only to deal with the immediate crisis, but also to lay the foundations for long-term growth and prosperity in this country.

And, you know, the American people are behind what we're doing.  And the question then becomes are we going to be able to deliver for them.  They are going to be watching very carefully.  And there are those who believe that government doesn't have a role to play in this recovery.  There are those who believe that we should be focusing exclusively on Wall Street when it comes to this crisis, and that we don't have time to worry about infrastructure, and we don't have time to worry about our health systems, and we don't have time to think about how we're going to improve our educational systems.

And all of you, what you do in the coming weeks and coming months, over the next couple of years is going to make a huge difference in whether or not the trust that the American people have placed in us is justified.

So my main message to all of you is I think you're up to the task; I think you guys will do extraordinary work with using these precious tax dollars that the American people have given up in order to deliver on the kind of economic growth -- short-term and long-term -- and job creation that's going to be so important.

But we're going to need to work really hard and we're going to have to make sure that every single dollar is well spent.  We've got to go above and beyond what I think is the typical ways of doing business in order to make sure that the American people get the help that they need and that our economy gets the boost that it needs.

And so I've said before -- I know Joe emphasized this to you earlier -- if we see money being misspent, we're going to put a stop to it, and we will call it out and we will publicize it.  On the other hand, if the money is being spent as it needs to be spent -- to rebuild our roads and our bridges and our schools, and making sure that we are putting in place the kinds of infrastructure foundations that are necessary for economic growth over the long term -- then I think all of us will benefit and our voters and our constituents, the people we work for, are going to be extraordinarily grateful.

So you've got this -- this wonderful mission and, you know, it's rare where you get a chance to put your shoulder to the wheel of history and move it in a better direction.  This is such an opportunity.  I hope all of you seize it.  I know this is very tough work because you've got a lot of money coming out quickly, it's got to be spent wisely, you don't always have the infrastructure, the organizational structures to accommodate all this stuff right away, and you're going to have to build that -- and do so in record time.

But looking around, you guys look like pretty capable people.  So I have great confidence in you and I think you're going to do a wonderful job.  We appreciate you; good luck; and I'll be seeing you at some ribbon cuttings.  All right.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
11:14 A.M. EDT

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Vice President
_______________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                   March 12, 2009
OPENING REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
AT THE WHITE HOUSE
RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT IMPLEMENTATION CONFERENCE
Room 450
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
9:46 A.M. EDT
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Thank you. (Applause.) You all remember that old joke of state officials -- hey, Matt, how are you? -- all know that old joke, "I'm from the federal government, I'm here to help." (Laughter.)
Ladies and gentlemen, we have an awesome responsibility here. This has never been done before. We have never attempted in the history of this country to revive -- as one of the three legs of the stool -- to revive our economy. We have never attempted to, as transparently and as accountably, get as much money out into the states as quickly in order to help you with countercyclical help, in terms of your budgets, in terms of your employees, whether it's cops or teachers. Nor have we ever invested this much money since Eisenhower in the -- invested in the Interstate Highway System and the infrastructure of this country. This is a first.
And I want to thank the Secretary for being here today, and for, quite frankly, taking the job that he's taken. It's not often I get introduced by a Nobel laureate. But we have, I think, one of the finest and most qualified Secretaries of Energy -- I would say the most qualified since the department came into existence. And he is a no-nonsense guy that knows what he's doing and, like all of you, wants to get this done.
It's really amazing the turnout here -- 49 of the 50 states are represented here, which says to me your governors are taking this in a deadly earnest, deadly serious way. They understand the value to your state, but also the responsibility that we have. You know, I love it, my grandchildren laugh when they -- when President Obama says nobody messes with Joe -- (laughter)
-- talk to my grandkids, then my kids, then my wife, then my staff, but I can tell you one thing, my passion to make sure this is done right, it may exceed my abilities. But I'm telling you this is not anything that I am fooling around with, nor I expect any of you.
Because, folks, look, let's get this straight. We're given a great opportunity here. We've asked a lot of the American people, a great deal of the American people, in supporting this effort. And so this is a different deal. This is not your usual federal grant going to states. And I want to be blunt with you, off-script here: The fact of the matter is all that is legal is not acceptable. Let me say it again. Just because it may be legal, it is not acceptable -- some of it.
For example, you're going to see regulations announced on Friday by the President, with me with him, about things you'd ordinarily be able to spend federal money on, but we are not going to let you spend federal money on. And I suspect most of you would not want to do it anyway. A little hint: No swimming pools in this money; a few other things.
So it really is important -- I know you know it better than we do, because you're there, you're the ones that are facing these high unemployment rates. Some of your states, some of the poorer states in the nation have the highest unemployment rate, and some wealthy states have even higher unemployment rates. This is a crisis. This is a crisis. And I know you feel as I do, that it requires a exercise of discipline and accountability and transparency like nothing we have ever done in terms of federal-state relations. And I am not kidding about that -- and I know you're not either -- but this is a big deal. The work you're doing is going to be critical to the economic well-being of the country.
Let me point out one other thing. If we don't get this right, folks, this is the end of the opportunity to convince the Congress that anything should go to the states. Your state legislatures are struggling. Your governors are struggling. The members of the House and Senate are struggling. They don't want to take up one another's burden. Everyone in this room, I hope you are, in the best sense of the word, good politicians, as well as having very sharp pencils. So I hope you'll understand the dynamic at play here.
So if this -- six months from now, if the verdict on this effort is that we've wasted the money, we built things that were unnecessary, or we've done things that are legal but make no sense, then, folks, don't look for any help from the federal government for a long while. They're going to make sure -- the folks in the House and in the Senate are going to make sure you wear the jacket, not them.
This is a big deal -- this is a big deal. It's also being closely watched not just by me, but by the President, and by Mr. Devaney, who is one of the most respected IGs we have in the federal government, and is known by many of you. And it's also being watched by the taxpayers and it's being watched by the media.
And that's a good thing -- that's a good thing, because the resources being made available through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act are a critical piece -- a critical piece of how we're going to get through this economic crisis, and just as importantly, how we're going to build the economy of the future, which the Secretary referenced.
This is not just an opportunity to help us get out of this mess we're in, but it's an opportunity to begin to lay the foundation for a competitive America in the 21st century. That's something we can never lose sight of. Everyone in this room is has a huge responsibility. We all have the responsibility to make sure this legislation is implemented with maximum efficiency. And we have the responsibility to make sure there's unprecedented transparency for the America people.
Further, there should be no confusion about how this money should be spent. These funds are designed for one of three purposes. First, to -- money to put in people's pockets. That's why we extended unemployment compensation, and 95 percent of the America people are going to see their paychecks fatter, because their payroll taxes will be cut beginning April 1st. They'll have more money in their pocket to spend.
Second, the purpose is to create jobs in the near term, and that's why we -- not just now, but in the near term, over the next 18 months. That's why we've dedicated so much money to rebuilding America's schools, roads, highways, and bridges.
And third, to make investments in those areas that would create the jobs of the future. That's why we've invested in new technologies like wind and solar, a new smart grid for America's electricity, a new superhighway of electricity transmission in the United States of America, and health care technology, to lay the groundwork for saving billions of dollars -- it's the one thing that will get us out of this long-term trajectory of nothing but rising deficits.
And today I'm proud to be announcing two allocations of resources that are a good example of how this money should be spent. First, through the Department of Energy, $8 billion in weatherization funding and energy efficiency grants are going to go out to the states. This is funding that will both create jobs now, and make critical investments in making America more energy efficient in the future.
As the Secretary said, the ultimate answer of our success will be in the black and white of the bill that our constituents receive in terms of their energy costs at the end of the day. Five billion [dollars] of this funding will go to weatherizations of homes for insulation, ceiling leaks, and modernizing heating and air-conditioning equipment. It's an investment that will pay for itself many times over. It's also an investment that will create tens of thousands of jobs right now -- jobs right now.
And additional $3 billion of this money is for state energy programs. That's money that can be used by you for rebates to consumers who are doing energy audits for developing renewable energy projects, and for making state and local government buildings more energy efficient.
You know how to do this well. You are, as they say, the laboratories. You know how to do well -- we're looking to you. We're looking to you not only to receive this money and spend it accountably and transparently, but innovatively. And we hope that some of you, your success will be shared with other states. So there's an opportunity here -- there's an opportunity for real innovation.
Of this $8 billion investment, we'll start with an $800 million allocation right now, with the rest being made available once we get the detailed plans from states and local governments on how you will allocate the money, and give you time to -- you'll hear today how and what kind of plans you need to submit in order to be able to do that.
Second, through the Department of Transportation, the first funding allocations for airport infrastructure projects are being made today -- $10 million to the Pittsburgh International Airport, $2 million to the Allegheny County Airport. This money will be used for runway, taxiway, and ramp repair. Again, this is money that would create jobs now, but it's also an investment in long-term safety of our airports and of their economic viability. Altogether, $1 billion in Recovery Act money has been allocated to airport projects.
There are 3,000 -- I need not tell many of you -- there are 3,400 airports all across your states that will be eligible to compete for this money. But our main purpose here today is not funding announcements, or even to hear from people like me. It's for you to have direct access to the various agencies running these recovery programs.
Many of you have contacted me personally and said, Joe, how do we do this? What are the rules, what are the regs? How do we get this done? What do we do? We want to do it by the numbers; tell us what we need to know. Well, you have an opportunity today to ask questions about the funds that we'll be overseeing, the requirements for receiving these funds and the steps you'll need to take. And it will be a long day, it will be a long day, but an important day, in my view.
But I promise you, you'll leave here with helpful information you need, a commitment by key administration officials to get you what you need, and it may be a bit dry, but it's the nuts and bolts of the hard work of making this program work. And that's what the purpose of today is.
I will be leaving here to meet with -- I assemble the Cabinet about once a week. It's unusual, I know, for Vice Presidents to call Cabinet meetings, but we feel this is so important that I meet with the Cabinet members to sit down and I want to know every week what they're doing, what their plans are, how much money is out the door, how they're attempting to account for it. I met yesterday for a long time with the IG who's in charge of this, Mr. Devaney, and him putting together his staff and the resources he needs to oversee this. As he says, we're not looking to find corruption, we're looking to prevent it. We're looking at the front end of this to prevent errors -- to prevent errors. This is not a witch hunt. This is to make sure that we spend this money well.
And so we're taking this very seriously. I know some of you may be frustrated -- you don't have all the answers right away. But keep in mind, we've been in office 50 days -- 50 days and this has been around about 30 days, maybe less than that. And so we're moving as fast as we can. And that's why we're so thankful you're here to help us -- help us figure out how to move this so everybody knows what the rules of the road are.
Just as importantly, as I said earlier, we want to hear from you. We're urging you and your governors to regularly update us regarding projects that are being funded through the Recovery Act. We want to keep track of the innovations and successes you have. Again, I'm not being solicitous. Some of you in the states have done innovative things that are beyond the capacity of the federal government to do quickly. And we want this to be a clearinghouse, as well. Some of you are going to do very well in some things and come up with some very good ideas, and others aren't, and others are going to be in other areas. We want to share all this information as rapidly and as close to real time as we can. That's a great way for us and for others states to learn, as well.
It's important for the people in your state to know about the jobs that are being saved, as well; restored, as well; created. Some of these 3.5 million jobs are just jobs we're going to keep from being lost. Most economists have acknowledged that had we done nothing in this area, we would have lost another 4 to 5 million jobs this year -- an additional 4 to 5 million jobs, on top of what has already been lost since the recession has been officially declared as having started in the fall.
So, folks, we have a lot to show for -- show to our constituents. It's important, as I said, that they see that citizens know in your state what long-term investments are being made and that there's a prospect, in their view, that it will pay off. People will support us. They know this isn't going to turn around quickly. I can make an analogy to the crime bill. Years ago some of you I worked with on the crime bill. I wrote that bill in the early '90s; it got passed in '94 because of the great leadership of President Clinton, and we passed the bill. And everybody got all nervous after it got passed -- said, Biden, you talked us into this and we're spending $30 billion and the crime rate is not going to go down in a year. And the crime rate could not go down in a year, it would not go down in a year. It was going to take time to build this in.
But guess what. We were transparent with all of you, we were transparent with the American people. We pointed out exactly how many cops we were funding, how many prisons were being built, how much money was being spent with regard to prevention. We made it absolutely transparent. We went all over the country. You, governors, congresspersons, all made it clear to the American people every time we spent a dollar with a new badge. And the reason why it worked is that people said, okay, this makes sense; I think this will produce results. And it did. It ended up for nine years reducing the violent crime rate on average 8.5 percent per year.
But it didn't happen in the first year. It's an analogous circumstance here. It's an analogous -- we're going to have a rough year. I don't have to tell you. DEFAC -- well, in Delaware it's called DEFAC -- but all around the country you have your outside groups and internal groups giving you revenue estimates and cost estimates. And you're not looking at a rosy picture. People will support us if it appears as though what we're doing makes sense, we're accountable, and we're totally transparent.
And so what we want to do is we want to make sure that they see as quickly and as clearly as possible how we're spending the money in each of our respective states. That way, with the implementation efforts you make, we can understand the problems that we're going to face, because we're going to run into problems here, and we can move more quickly to solve them. It's also going to make it possible for us to share your concerns with other states that are being -- that are experiencing similar issues, and how they're going to be answered.
So let me finish by reemphasizing one point: We are all on the line. The American people are looking to us to get this right, and you need to do that. We have to do our part to give you the best guidance we can and the most cooperation we can. You're an important part of helping this nation through one of the worst economic crises in the history of this country. It -- the Great Depression was worse, but it was not as complicated -- sounds ridiculous, but it was not as complicated as this is.
And so, ladies and gentlemen, we have, as I said, an incredible responsibility, so let's make sure we meet it.
And now let me introduce our first presenter, a man who is doing a spectacular job as one of the real day-to-day leaders in making this Recovery Act a reality, and our administration is really fortunate to have his talents -- and I mean that sincerely; it's not hyperbole -- and that is the Deputy Director of OMB, Rob Nabors. And I think Rob is around here -- is he? There you are, Rob. How are you? Come on up and do the hard work. (Applause.)
Folks -- and then let me make one more comment. I really instruct your -- tell your governor -- I know you can't instruct your governors -- (laughter.) Tell your governors, literally, if they have a problem if they're confused, if you're confused about what needs to be done, literally pick up the phone and call me. Call me. I'm not -- that is not -- look, I've been -- I was a senator for 36 years in a state where I commuted every day and the only billboard ever used when I ran for office was "Joe." I'm used to -- I'm used to being accessible. I really mean it -- have your governors call me, and we'll get it straightened out, because we got to get it right.
Sorry, Rob, that's all yours, buddy. I'm heading off to talk to the Cabinet. Thank you, all, very, very much. (Applause.)
END
10:05 A.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the First Lady
________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                    March 11, 2009

Remarks by the First Lady
At the State Department Women of Courage Awards

U.S. Department of State
Washington, D.C.
4:30 P.M. EDT
MRS. OBAMA: Thank you. First of all, good afternoon to everyone, and let me thank Secretary Clinton -- I love saying that -- (laughter) -- for that kind introduction.
I have said this before, but the woman who is running this department, this big huge effort, has always been such a committed person, friend, supporter, to me. We are honored and thrilled to have her serving in this role. She set the bar high in her last post. (Laughter.) And I'm confident that she's going to keep setting the bar high in this post. And I just want to give her a round of applause. (Applause.) Thank you, Secretary Clinton.
I am honored to be on this stage. So thank you for the invitation to participate in International Women's Day here at the State Department.
As Secretary Clinton mentioned earlier today at the White House, President Obama announced the formation of the White House Council on Women and Girls. Again, the goal of this Council is to ensure that young girls have no limits on their dreams and no obstacles to their achievements.
Secretary Clinton has also made this issue of particular importance right here at the State Department by creating a new position and nominating Melanne Verveer as Ambassador-at-large for global women's issues, and I again want to give her a round of applause. (Applause.) We are grateful for her participation. We thank her for her service in advance. She is going to do a phenomenal job.
The President and I share the belief that communities are only as strong as the health of their women. Everyday, we see what happens to families, communities and countries when women don't have access to health and medical care; when they don't have the resources to properly care for their children; when they are oppressed and struggling with emotional, physical, sexual and psychological abuse; when they have no access to education or fair treatment in the justice system.
The difference between a struggling family and a healthy one is often the presence of a strong woman or women at the center of that family.
The difference between a broken community and a thriving one is the presence of women who are valued; where relationships among women and between women and men are based on mutual respect.
The women we honor today teach us three very important lessons. One, that as women, we must stand up for ourselves. (Applause.) The second, as women, we must stand up for each other. (Applause.) And finally, as women, we must stand up for justice for all. (Applause.)
The women we honor here, standing on this stage today, risk their lives to fight for themselves and for their mothers, daughters, sisters, grandmothers, and friends. And in doing so, they create a better society not just for them, but for their fathers, sons, brothers, grandfathers, and husbands.
The women we honor today are not just changing their own circumstances; they're changing the world.
When 12-year-old girls fight for their freedom –- and win –- they change the future for millions of girls just like them.
When advocates are beaten and jailed and still raise their voice, they inspire and nourish hope.
When one woman with a phone in her apartment starts a movement that motivates thousands, her cause can no longer be ignored.
When brave women challenge thousands of years of tradition and history and become leaders in their religious communities, they change minds.
And, when women fight to be educated and then reach out to bring their sisters along, they change the future for generations to come.
This is how real change occurs –- one determined woman at a time. And change is coming. Women have made great strides with regard to equality at all levels of society from families, communities to businesses and government. But the stories of the women we honor today remind us that we still have work to do.
And I am so very proud to be here today to celebrate these brave women who have fought for themselves and, in the process, made the way so much easier for other women and girls.
Again, I thank you for the honor to be here. I am so proud to be a woman today and every single day. (Laughter.) Thank you so much. (Applause.)
END                    4:36 P.M. EDT
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
____________________________________________________________

For Immediate Release                                 March 11, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT SIGNING OF EXECUTIVE ORDER
CREATING THE WHITE HOUSE COUNCIL ON WOMEN AND GIRLS
East Room
1:31 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  Well, today, as we continue our celebration of International Women's History Month, I'm proud to sign this executive order establishing the women's -- the White House Council on Women and Girls.  It's a Council with a mission that dates back to our founding:  to fulfill the promise of our democracy for all our people. 

I sign this order not just as a President, but as a son, a grandson, a husband, and a father, because growing up, I saw my mother put herself through school and follow her passion for helping others.  But I also saw how she struggled to raise me and my sister on her own, worrying about how she'd pay the bills and educate herself and provide for us.

I saw my grandmother work her way up to become one of the first women bank vice presidents in the state of Hawaii, but I also saw how she hit a glass ceiling -- how men no more qualified than she was kept moving up the corporate ladder ahead of her.

I've seen Michelle, the rock of the Obama family -- (laughter) -- juggling work and parenting with more skill and grace than anybody that I know.  But I also saw how it tore at her at times, how sometimes when she was with the girls she was worrying about work, and when she was at work she was worrying about the girls.  It's a feeling that I share every day.

In so many ways, the stories of the women in my life reflect the broader story of women in this country -- a story of both unyielding progress and also untapped potential.

Today, women make up a growing share of our workforce and the majority of students in our colleges and our law schools.  Women are breaking barriers in every field, from science and business to athletics and the Armed Forces.  Women are serving at the highest levels of my administration.  And we have Madam Speaker presiding over our House of Representatives.  (Applause.)  I had the privilege of participating in a historic campaign with a historic candidate, who we now have the privilege of calling Madam Secretary. 

But at the same time, when women still earn just 78 cents for every dollar men make; when one in four women still experiences domestic violence in their lifetimes; when women are more than half of our population, but just 17 percent of our Congress; when women are 49 percent of the workforce, but only 3 percent of our Fortune 500 CEOs -- when these inequalities stubbornly persist in this country, in this century, then I think we need to ask ourselves some hard questions.  I think we need to take a hard look at where we're falling short, and who we're leaving out, and what that means for the prosperity and the vitality of our nation.

And I want to be very clear:  These issues are not just women's issues.  When women make less than men for the same work, it hurts families who find themselves with less income, and have to work harder just to get by.  When a job doesn't offer family leave, that also hurts men who want to help care for a new baby or an ailing parent.  When there's no affordable child care, that hurts children who wind up in second-rate care, or spending afternoons alone in front of the television set.

And when any of our citizens cannot fulfill their potential because of factors that have nothing to do with their talent, their character, their work ethic, that says something about the state of our democracy.  It says something about whether we're honoring those words put on paper more than two centuries ago -- whether we're doing our part, like generations before us, to breathe new life into them in our time. 

That, above all, is the true purpose of our government.  Not to guarantee our success, but to ensure that in America, all things are still possible for all people.  Not to solve all our problems, but to ensure that we all have the chance to pursue our own version of happiness.  To give our daughters the chance to achieve as greatly as the women who join us today.  That's the impact our government can have.

It's the impact of a Health and Human Services Department that funds research by women like Dr. Nina Fedoroff, a biotechnology and life science pioneer -- (applause) -- who won the National Medal of Science in 2006.  It's the impact of a Defense Department that works to recruit and promote women -- women, so that women like Sergeant Major Michele Jones, who was the Army's highest ranking enlisted woman before she retired, can strengthen our military with their leadership.  (Applause.) 

It's the impact of a Department of Education that enforces Title IX, so athletes like -- (applause) -- so athletes like Olympic gold medalist Dominique Dawes and Lisa Leslie -- (applause) -- have a level playing field to compete and to win.  It's the impact of a White House and a Congress that fight for legislation like the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Restoration Act, so that all women can get paid what they deserve.  (Applause.)  I'm very proud this was the very first bill that I signed into law. 

And that's why I'm establishing this Council -- not just to continue efforts like these, but to enhance them.  The Council will be composed of the heads of every Cabinet and Cabinet-level agency, and will meet on a regular basis.  We have many of those Cabinet members here.  Some of the men showed up -- we put them in the second row.  (Laughter.)  But they're going to be fighting -- (applause) -- they're going to be part of this Council, and it's going to meet on a regular basis. 

Its purpose is very simple:  to ensure that each of the agencies in which they're charged takes into account the needs of women and girls in the policies they draft, the programs they create, the legislation they support.  It's not enough to only have individual women's offices at individual agencies, or only have one office in the White House.  Rather, as former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright once said, in our government, "¼responsibility for the advancement of women is not the job of any one agency, it's the job of all of them."  (Applause.)  And she should know -- she helped lead an interagency women's initiative during the Clinton administration. 

At the same time, given the critical importance of its work, this Council must have strong leadership from the White House, and direct accountability to me.  And that's why I'm appointing Valerie Jarrett, one of my closest advisors and most senior members of my administration, to lead it.  Tina Tchen, another senior member of my White House staff, will serve as the Council's Executive Director.

In the end, while many of the challenges women and girls face are new, the work of this Council is not -- it's been with us for generations.  Frances Perkins, who was President Franklin Roosevelt's Secretary of Labor, and the first woman to serve in the Cabinet -- a great hero of the New Deal -- described it well when she said, "¼I had a kind of duty to other women to walk in and sit down on the chair that was offered, and so establish the rights of others long hence and far distant in geography to sit in the high seats."  To sit in the high seats.

That is why I'm standing here today, because of what my mother and grandmother did for me, because of their hard work and sacrifice and unflagging love.  That's what Michelle is doing right now, thinking every day about making sure that Malia and Sasha have the same opportunities as anybody's sons do.  That's why so many of us are here today, because of the women who came before us, who were determined to see us sit in the high seats:  women who reached for the ballot, and raised families, and traveled long, lonely roads to be the first in the boardroom or in the courtroom or on the battlefield and in the factory floor; women who cracked and shattered those glass ceilings, so that my daughters -- and all of our sons and daughters -- could dream a little bigger and reach a little higher.

So now it's up to us to carry that work forward, to ensure that our daughters and granddaughters have no limits on their dreams, no obstacles to their achievements -- and that they have opportunities their mothers and grandmothers and great grandmothers never dreamed of.  That's the purpose of this Council.  Those are the priorities of my presidency.   And I look forward to working with all of you to fulfill them in the months and years to come.

All right, so I'm going to go sign this thing.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)

(The executive order is signed.)  (Applause.)

END
1:39 P.M. EDT

Attendees

United States Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA)
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
United States Representative Tammy Baldwin (D-WI)
United States Representative Judy Biggert (R-IL)
United States Representative Mary Bono Mack (R-CA)
Delegate Madeleine Bordallo (D-GU)
United States Representative Corrine Brown (D-FL)
Delegate Donna Christensen (D-VI)
United States Representative Kathleen Dahlkemper (D-PA)
United States Representative Susan Davis (D-CA)
United States Representative Diana DeGette (D-CO)
United States Representative Rosa DeLauro (D-CT)
United States Representative Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (D-SD)
United States Representative Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-TX)
United States Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX)
United States Representative Marcy Kaptur (D-OH)
United States Representative Nita Lowey (D-NY)
United States Representative Carolyn Maloney (D-NY)
United States Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA)
United States Representative Candice Miller (R-MI)
United States Representative Gwen Moore (D-WI)
United States Representative Grace Napolitano (D-CA)
Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC)
United States Representative Linda Sanchez (D-CA)
United States Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL)
United States Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA)
United States Representative Lynn Woolsey (D-CA)
Attorney General Eric Holder Jr.
Secretary Ken Salazar
Secretary Tom Vilsack
Secretary Hilda Solis
Secretary Shaun Donovan
Secretary Ray LaHood
Secretary Eric Shinseki
Administrator Lisa Jackson
Melody Barnes, Director, Domestic Policy Council
Beth Brooke, Member, US Delegation to the United Nations' Commission on the Status of Women
Carol Browner, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change
Nancy-Ann DeParle, Director, White House Office for Health Reform
Meryl Frank, Chair, US Delegation to the United Nations' Commission on the Status of Women
Valerie Jarrett, Assistant to the President and Senior Advisor
Nancy Sutley, Chair, White House Council on Environmental Quality
Tina Tchen, Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Public Liaison
Jessica Arons, CAP
Megan Beyer
Dr. Rosina Bierbaum
A. Lynn Bolles, University of Maryland, College Park     
Donna Brazile     
Roslyn Brock, NAACP
Anna Burger, Change to Win
Ma. Cristina Caballero, Dialogue on Diversity
Leslie Calman, Mautner Project
Melanie Campbell, Black Women’s Roundtable; National Coalition on Black Civic Participation
Gloria Caoile, AAPI Alliance
Ashley Brey Carson, Older Women’s League
Sheryl Cates, National Domestic Violence Hotline   
Susan A. Cohen, Guttmacher Institute
Rebecca A. Cokley      
Patricia Cornish, National Association of Commissions for Women
Dominique Dawes        
Eileen Chamberlain Donahoe
Tammy Duckworth        
Maria Durazo, LA County Federation of Labor
Sue Else, National Network to End Domestic Violence
Dr. Nina Fedoroff      
Kim Gandy, NOW
Joan Garry, NFC
Irasema Garza, Legal Momentum
Helene Gayle, CARE USA
Teresa S. Ging, Sugar Bliss, Cake Boutique
Judy Gold, Chair, Women's Policy Council, Obama for America
Sandra Goldstein, Hadassah        
Tricia Goodley    
Linda Hallman, AAUW
Shelby Harper     
Heidi Hartmann, Institute for Women's Policy Research
Dr. Dorothy Height
Silvia Henriquez, National Latina Reproductive Health Institute
Priscilla Huang, National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum
Sergeant Major Michelle Jones, US Army
Nancy Keenan, NARAL
Mara Keisling, National Center for Transgender Equality
Kitty Kolbert, People for the American Way
Joan A. Kuriansky, WOW
Patricia W. Lattimore       
Lisa Leslie Lockwood, WNBA
Ann Lewis
Ellen Malcolm, Emily's List
Karol Mason
Nell Merlino
Kate Michelman
Amy Millman, Springboard Enterprises
Sarah Morgenthau, Women for Obama
Daniel Moshenberg, George Washington University
Sammie Moshenberg, National Council of Jewish Women
Irene Natividad, Global Summit of Women                                     
Debra Ness, National Partnership for Women and Families
Darlene Nipper, Gay and Lesbian Task Force
Sarah Opatut      
Donna Orender, WNBA
Lynn Grossman Quinn, Women's Business Enterprise National Council
Joyce Roche, Girls, Inc.
Sloane Kuney Rosenthal, NFPHRA
Nancy Rubin
Laurie Rubiner, Planned Parenthood
Robin Runge, American Bar Association Commission on Domestic Violence
Jocelyn Samuels, NWLC
Vicki Saporta, National Abortion Federation
Susan Scanlan, National Council of Women's Organizations
Ellie Smeal, Feminist Majority Foundation
Dornita Smith, Maury High School, Norfolk, VA
Mary Snider, HRC
Kiersten Stewart, Family Violence Prevention Fund      
Susan Thistlethwaite, Chicago Theological Seminary  
Anna Vasquez-Gonzalez, Banneker High School, Washington, DC
Rev. Carlton Veazey
The Honorable Patricia M. Wald
E. Faye Williams
Barbara Williams Skinner, Skinner Leadership Institute
Sergeant First Class Juanita Wilson, US Army   
JoDee Winterhof, CARE USA
JoAnne Lyons Wooten, Women Work! 
Joan Zlotnik, Institute for the Advancement of Social Work Research 

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Vice President
________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                                 March 11, 2009
REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
ON THE NOMINATION OF CHIEF GIL KERLIKOWSKE
AS DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF NATIONAL DRUG CONTROL POLICY
Room 450
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
12:18 P.M. EDT
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you all for being here -- a lot of familiar faces. Please sit down, I'm only the Vice President -- (laughter) -- but thank you. A lot of -- I see a lot of familiar faces with whom I've worked a long time in both the treatment community and the enforcement side of the ledger. And I'm delighted you're here, and I hope you're as delighted about what I'm about to announce as I am.
Today I'm pleased to announce that President Obama has nominated as Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy -- our nation's drug czar -- Gil Kerlikowske, who is the Chief out in Seattle, and many of you in this room know him well.
Chief, the position you're nominated for, as you know, not only me, but a lot of people in this room fought to create back some years ago when we found out we had 32 agencies dealing with the drug problem and not a lot of coordination. And I should say -- note parenthetically, I've been a little disappointed the last eight years it hasn't gotten the attention that it should have gotten. But that's about to change.
I believe that we needed a drug czar, someone who could lead at a White House level, coordinating all our nation's drug policy, and I still believe that today.
Substance abuse is one of our nation's most pervasive problems, as all of you in this room know. An addiction is a disease -- as Pat Moynihan used to say, disease of the brain, that doesn't discriminate on the basis of age, gender, socioeconomic standing, or status, race, or creed. And as all of you know, it wreaks havoc on all of our communities: urban, rural and suburban.
And the correlation between crime and substance abuse was established undeniably clearly back in the '70s, as you know, Director. And it is something that if we could wave a wand and do anything to deal with violent crime in America, if you had said to eliminate drug abuse, you would eliminate a significant portion of the violent crime in America. So the correlation between violence and drugs is well established.
And all of this carries a very, very heavy price tag, both in terms of personal and emotional terms, and in terms of cost to the American taxpayer. Just the health and economic cost alone from drug and alcohol abuse amounts to over $350 billion a year -- just those costs, $350 billion a year; an even bigger cost in human suffering, the lives lost, the lost dreams that result from the pain and destruction that abuse brings to not only the abuser, but to the family and everyone surrounding, everyone who loves that person.
And there's no one more qualified to take on this job than the Chief. I've worked with him for years. He has 36 years of law enforcement experience. He's served as the highest ranking law enforcement officer in four of our cities in the United States of America. He's been Seattle's chief now for nearly nine years. I know when I called him the first time it was, like, he wasn't sure whether to take the call or not. (Laughter.)
But he is also president of the Major City Chiefs Association -- a group -- and many are represented here today -- a group made up of 56 of the largest law enforcement agencies in the United States. And he's served as a Deputy Director of the COPS program at the United States Department of Justice -- one of the -- in my view -- I'm mildly prejudiced, having written the legislation -- but in my view one of the most effective crime prevention programs we've ever established in the nation's history.
And the chief has been on the front lines in the battle against drugs as well. He's been recognized as one of the most innovative minds in law enforcement and he's been called a "fierce defender of community policing principles." What I find most appealing about the Chief is that he says we can't operate in "silos" -- with barriers thrown up between the criminal justice system, the prevention and treatment community, and the recovery components of this problem. They can't be separated. He knows we need a comprehensive answer.
And that's exactly what the vision we had in mind when we first -- many of you in this room who helped -- when we first created that office. That was the idea from the outset.
We know we needed tough laws, and we have tough laws. But that wasn't enough. We needed a balanced approach in combating drugs -- one that included prevention, treatment and enforcement.
And that's why when I wrote what used to be called the Biden Crime Bill back in the '90s -- and quite frankly, many of you in this room literally sat and wrote that bill with me; it had my name on it, but you all wrote it -- when we wrote that back in 1994, I felt so strongly about the need to create specialized Drug Courts -- so we could have an alternative to incarceration and the traditional probation that included treatment and a way forward.
That's why I fought so hard for the Drug Free Communities Support Program, so we could bring together parents, teachers, business leaders, police, medical profession to prevent drug abuse and addiction in local communities.
And that's why I, along with many of you, worked so hard for the COPS program -- because quite frankly more cops on the street is one of the best ways to keep drugs off the street.
The challenges facing the Chief are going to be daunting. Nowhere is that more true than in the southwest border today. All you have to do is pick up your paper anywhere in the nation, national and local -- since the beginning of last year there have been nearly 7,000 drug-related murders in Mexico. If we had said that years ago we would have looked at each other like we were crazy -- but 7,000 drug-related murders in Mexico. Violent drug trafficking organizations are threatening both the United States and Mexican communities.
And as drug czar the Chief will play a central role in developing and implementing a southwest border strategy -- one that improves information sharing, harnesses the power of new technologies, strengthens federal, state and local law enforcement efforts against violent criminals, and increases the interdiction of both drugs coming into the United States and weapons and cash flowing out of the United States into Mexico. It's a strategy that we need to bring in order to bring the situation under control, to protect our people, and to bring about the demise of the Mexican drug cartels.
And by the way, we've done this before. We did it in Cartagena -- I mean, excuse me, not Cartagena, we did it in Colombia, in Medellin. We've done it before with the help. We've been involved in this. So I don't want people throwing up their hands and saying, there's nothing we can do about this. We can -- with a coordinated and consistent effort.
The other challenges are just as tough. We know about the nexus between drug abuse and crime -- and that poses the greatest need for help for those who are likely to enter the criminal justice system in the first place. That's why the drug courts I spoke about are so important -- as are prisoner reentry programs –- because these can serve as the light at the end of a tunnel, a very long, long, dark tunnel, for those who are stuck in the cycle of drug addiction and incarceration.
I know Chief Kelly understands that we -- every year, every day, when prisoners' times is up and we let them out, a significant portion walk out through that gate addicted to drugs -- as they walk out into the community, they're addicted to drugs.
We know we need to help keep kids away from drugs, as well, and that's obviously not easy. They're bombarded -- kids are bombarded with messages in the media that present inaccurate information and glamorize the use of drugs. It only -- that only makes the National Youth Drug-Anti Media [sic] campaign -- something that you, Chief, will now lead as part of your organization, and which I was -- believed needed to be created back in 1998 –- even more important.
We know the local solutions through local communities –- precisely the efforts we're looking for with the Drug Free Communities Act –- are the only way to build a kind of support system that can help keep kids off of drugs. This is one kid at a time. This is local. You cannot mandate from Washington or anywhere else a policy that's going to do that.
Chief, the challenges ahead of you are great. But the President and I have total confidence in your ability to handle them. Both the President and I believe that you will lead our nation's efforts against illegal drugs with unshakable resolve and exceptional skill, and the President is honored -- is honored to send your nomination to the United States Senate.
Once again, to all my friends out here, I thank you for being here. He's going to need all the help he can get. He's going to need the coordinative capacity that exists in this room. I thank you for being here today and for your timeless -- your timeless commitment -- and I'm including the prevention community that's sitting out here, and the treatment community that's sitting out here. And on behalf of the President and I, to all of you, we thank you.
So please join me in joining the Chief who's going to be our new drug czar, a man you all know well and a man I'm confident is going to be tapping all of you for help. Chief, the floor is yours. Congratulations. (Applause.)
CHIEF KERLIKOWSKE: Thank you very much. Thank you, Mr. Vice President. I want to thank the Vice President for his commitment for combating drugs. You know, it's a great honor for me to stand on the stage with a man who fought to create the Office of National Drug Control Policy. He's recognized for a long time the need for this coordinated comprehensive national drug strategy. I am looking forward to working with you and this administration.
I want to thank the President for this opportunity to serve the country. And I applaud his recognition that the perspectives of those that are closest to the ground, those on the front lines of the fight against drugs -- those are state and local law enforcement officers and service and treatment providers. It's critically important that their viewpoints be taken in.
I'm pleased that many of my colleagues, many of my friends, are here: Commissioner Ray Kelly from the New York City Police Department, a staunch leader in this effort; Chief Bill Bratton from the Los Angeles Police Department; Chief Cathy Lanier from right here in Washington, D.C.; Tom Manger, the Chief of the Montgomery County Police Department. And then others -- David Kass, who's the president of Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, an association that I have been pleased to work on for many years; and Al Lenhardt, who is the head of the National Crime Prevention Council; and Amy Singer, who's the director of Program Planning for Phoenix House. These are the men and women across the country who have dedicated their lives to reducing drug trafficking and use, and of course so many others here today.
I'm heartened to see all of the young people also. I'm delighted to see all of the young people. (Applause.) These are the young leaders, these are the people that are working hard to raise the awareness among their peers about the dangers of drugs.
The success of our efforts to reduce the flow of drugs is largely dependent on our ability to reduce demand for them. And that starts with our youth. Our nation's drug problem is one of human suffering, and as a police officer but also in my own family, I have experienced the effects that drugs can have on our youth, our families and our communities.
I know we need to do a much better job in reducing and eliminating these problems. And tackling our nation's complex drug problem takes a coordinated and multifaceted effort. There's a lot of hard work ahead, but I am absolutely committed to this task, Mr. Vice President.
For too long, we have operated, as the Vice President said, in silence when it comes to making our country drug free and reducing the demand for drugs. It's an incredibly complex problem, and it requires prosecutors and law enforcement, courts, treatment providers, and prevention programs to exchange information and to work together. And our priority should be a seamless, comprehensive approach.
The President and the Vice President have set a new course, and I'm looking forward to working with the Department of State, the Department of Justice, the Department of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services and all of the agencies that are involved in drug policy on implementing this new course.
Already this administration has expanded commitments to critical programs, ones that we've seen such as drug courts, better treatment, prisoner and reentry programs, border security, and counternarcotics initiatives, both domestically and internationally. This is a real commitment to strengthening the tools we have to reduce trafficking, illegal drug manufacturing, and drug-related crime and violence.
There is much work to be done. I'm looking forward to getting to work. Thank you all very much. (Applause.)
END
12:31 P.M. EDT