The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by Vice President Joe Biden at a Bilateral Meeting with Israeli President Shimon Peres

President’s Residence
Jerusalem

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Thank you, Mr. President.  As I was telling the Prime Minister and the Speaker today, I consider you among one of the fewer than a handful of men in the world who possess not just great experience but genuine wisdom.  And you know and I say to your friends in the press here that I’ve always sought it.  I’ve sought it over the past 40 years, and I mean that sincerely.

Mr. Sullivan and I, my national security adviser, on the way back from the Sharon ranch, were talking about -- he raised the point that you may be the most eloquent and articulate man he’s ever heard.  And I’ve pointed out that not only are you eloquent and articulate but you possess great wisdom.

President Obama wanted me to be here today not merely -- primarily to pay our respects to a great war hero, but a man whose life seemed to, from my perspective at least, mirror the changes that occurred in Israel since its inception as a nation.  At the very outset, the overwhelming necessity was literally to keep from being pushed into the sea by hostile neighbors that were more powerful and had larger armies and more weapons.  And he led the fight and changed the circumstance where Israel is no longer in physical jeopardy as a consequence of being overwhelmed; Israel is a significant power in its own right. 

But as that changed, it seemed to me as though former Prime Minister Sharon not changed but changed his focus.  And I said today that one of the last utterances he made, major statements, was he wanted to work on peace.  God only knows what would have happened if the last eight years had been one where he was still in that vineyard working for peace.  I think it reflects a change in the region, the need to -- the understanding that Israel’s ultimate security rests in a genuine accommodation with the Palestinians that it is born out of secure borders that are peaceful. 

And I was saying earlier, Mr. President, that the Arab Spring is an incredibly historical phenomenon, but I think our grandchildren and great-grandchildren are going to look back on it and say, why did they think they could manage it?  It has a life of its own, and we can only hope to be wise enough to help steer it in the right direction.

But the one place where there’s a possibility for an island of stability, quite frankly, is what you said, and that is between the Palestinian people and the Israeli people in two secure states respecting one another’s sovereignty and security.  And the President believes and I believe that this is one of those opportunities, one of those moments in history where it has to be seized.   

As you know, my friend -- and he is my close, close friend for a long time -- John Kerry, is passionate about creating and trying to help accommodate that outcome.  And there are difficult decisions.  There are going to be very difficult decisions.  And I, like you, believe that the Prime Minister is up to it.  It’s not easy.  None of this is easy. 

And let me say one last thing, Mr. President.  I said to you privately, as we were waiting for the actual burial, that it is truly remarkable that, from my perspective, God blessed this great country at its inception with such a group of exceptional men and women, exceptional leaders.  It seems as though if you look at your generation of leaders from Ben Gurion to many who I’ve gotten to know, I knew, from Golda Meir to Rabin to all of the men and women who were -- as they say, to steal a phrase from a book written in the United States -- “present at the creation” -- 

PRESIDENT PERES:  -- by Dean Acheson.

VICE PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Yes, exactly right.  And it was -- and so part of it was to -- even though all of you had different political points of view, you are all absolutely convicted about the necessity for there to be a nation state of Israel as the ultimate security for Jews around the world.  And I still believe that to be the case.

And I think, and I’m convinced that all your life’s work has been leading to this moment.  And God willing, it will be able to be seized.  God willing, Abu Mazen will be up to the task because he’s got to make some difficult decisions.

So I’m looking forward to having a chance when we sit alone to plumb your -- the depths of your knowledge about how you see things actually unfolding in a detailed basis.  But let me conclude by saying -- and I’ve said this many, many times -- that it’s an honor to be with you.  And you’re one of those men who every time I meet with I learn something.  And I appreciate that.  And so I’m anxious for us to be able to now have -–

Thank you.

END

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks by Vice President Joe Biden at the State Funeral of Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon

The Knesset, Jerusalem

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  When a close-knit country like Israel, a country that has been tested as much as Israel, loses a man like Prime Minister Sharon, it doesn’t just feel like the loss of a leader, it feels like a death in the family.  And many of my fellow Americans, some of whom are here, feel that same sense of loss. 

I say to Prime Minister Sharon’s beloved and devoted sons, Omri and Gilad, and the entire family, particularly the sons who spent so much time caring for their father in the last few years, it’s a great honor you’ve afforded me on behalf of my country to bring the sympathies of the President of the United States and the American people on this occasion. 

To you, to Prime Minister Netanyahu and the government of Israel, to President Peres, and to the grieving men and women of the nation of Israel, but most particularly to his beloved IDF, his fellow warriors, I fear an attempt to capture him and what he stood for is beyond my capabilities. I knew him for over 30 years.  He was not only a powerful man, he was a powerfully built man.  And as a young senator, when you first met him you could not help but understand, as they say in the military, this man had a command presence.  He filled the room.

The first time I was invited to his office, he said to me -- and I remember thinking, is he serious? -- he said, Senator, you are mostly welcome.  I didn’t know if it was a matter of something being lost in translation or whether he was pulling my leg, as we say in the States, until I spent a few moments with him and realized how incredible his hospitality was.  But when the topic of Israel’s security arose, which it always, always, always did in my many meetings over the years with him, you immediately understood how he acquired, as the speakers referenced, the nickname “Bulldozer.”  He was indomitable. 

Like all historic leaders, Prime Minister Sharon was a complex man about whom, as you’ve already heard from his colleagues, who engendered strong opinions from everyone.  But like all historic leaders, all real leaders, he had a North Star that guided him -- a North Star from which he never, in my observation, never deviated.  His North Star was the survival of the State of Israel and the Jewish people, wherever they resided.

In talking about his spiritual attachment to the land of Israel back in an interview in the late ‘90s, he said, and I quote, “Before and above all else, I am a Jew.  My thinking is dominated by the Jews’ future in 30 years, in 300 years, in a thousand years.  That’s what preoccupies and interests me first and foremost.”  And because he possessed such incredible physical courage -- and I would add political courage -- he never, never, never deviated from that preoccupation and interest, as he referred to it.  It was his life’s work that even someone on the shores hundreds of -- thousands of miles from here could see, could smell, could taste, could feel, and when you were in his presence there was never, never any doubt about it.

The physical courage he had to lead men straight into enemy lines and deep behind them.  I remember, as a young senator, that iconic picture of him with that bandage around his head, standing there after a decisive victory, which seemed to symbolize, as Bibi -- as the Prime Minister said, an Israel that had reclaimed its roots of standing up and fighting, needing no help, standing on its own.  The political courage it took, whether you agreed with him or not, when he told 10,000 Israelis to leave their homes in Gaza in order, from his perspective, to strengthen Israel.  I can’t think of much more controversial; as a student of the Jewish state, I can’t think of a much more difficult and controversial decision that’s been made.  But he believed it and he did it.

The security of his people was always Arik’s unwavering mission, an unbreakable commitment to the future of Jews, whether 30 years or 300 years from now.  We have an expression in the States:  never in doubt.  Arik was never uncertain from my observation.  I don’t know him nearly as well as the Israeli people and his colleagues, but he seemed never in doubt.  But there were times when he acted, and those actions earned him controversy and even condemnation.  And in certain instances, American leaders -- American Presidents -- had profound differences with him, and they were never shy about stating them nor was he ever shy about stating his position.  As I said, from my observation he was a complex man, but to understand him better I think it’s important history will judge he also lived in complex times, in a very complex neighborhood.

Since he passed away, in the days ahead, there will be much written about the Prime Minister.  And it’s right for the Israeli people to reflect on all aspects of his life -- the triumphs as well as the mistakes, taking full measure of the man, the arc of his life.  For I would argue the arc of his life traced the journey of the State of Israel. 

And through it all, the United States whether we agreed or disagreed with a specific policy has been unflagging in its commitment to the State of Israel.  We have never stepped away.  We have never diminished our support.  We have never failed to make Israel’s case around the world.  We have never failed to defend Israel’s legitimacy. 

And no one in any corner of this world has any doubt about where America stands with regard to Israeli security, the independent State of Israel that is the ultimate refuge for Jews wherever they are in the world.  And that will never change.

As President Obama said when he was here in Jerusalem last year, and I quote, “Those who adhere to the ideology of rejecting Israel’s right to exist, they might as well reject the earth beneath them and the sky above because Israel is not going anywhere.  So long as there is a United States of America, you are not alone.”

For his part, Arik Sharon greatly valued that close friendship between the United States and Israel, and particularly during his years as prime minister, he worked hard to deepen our relationship.

I find it fascinating, maybe it’s I’m getting older -- I find it fascinating how some look at Israel today and say its success was inevitable.  Why didn't everyone understand this was just inevitable?  But at the outset it was anything but inevitable.  It was the opposite of inevitable.  Israel’s very survival was against all odds.  But thankfully Israel was blessed with a founding generation that understood exactly what it took to overcome those odds.  So many of that generation, because of the people of the United States, I have the great honor of personally meeting and getting to know.  I did not know David Ben Gurion, but I knew all but one -- every Prime Minister since that time. 

President Peres, you and Prime Minister Sharon are part of one of the most remarkable founding generations in the history not of this nation, but of any nation.  Historians will look back and say, but for -- but for -- the rare and unique men and women at that moment, but for that it’s hard to see how we’d be standing here on this day -- leaders like David Ben Gurion, Golda Meir, Menachem Begin, Yitzhak Rabin, the list goes on, and you, Mr. President, you all had one thing in common from an outside observer’s perspective, despite your political differences, it was that you knew in your bones, as one Israeli Prime Minister told me over 35 years ago when I was opining of the difficulty Israel faced surrounded by hostile neighbors at the time, looked at me and said, Senator, don't worry.  We Jews have a secret weapon in our struggle in the region.  We have nowhere else to go.

That realization, it seems to me, is what energized your entire generation of leadership.  I believe that's one of the reasons by Arik Sharon and so many others fought so hard their whole lives. 

Prime Minister Sharon was not only loved by the Jewish people, he not only loved them -- the Jewish people -- but he loved the land of Israel.  Not just the idea of it, but the actual land itself.  Born on a farm, about to be buried on a farm, a ranch, I remember one of the meetings I had with him.  It was a somewhat heated, and he had his maps.  And he spread them out in his office again.  And I somewhat irreverently said, Mr. Prime Minister -- I said, do you want me to do it, or are you going to do it?  Because I had heard his presentation many times.  And in the midst of it, he looked at me, and he said, let me tell you about the new calf that I just got on my ranch.  And he started talking about a calf.

Ladies and gentlemen, the Book of Genesis says, “Arise and walk the length and breadth of the land.”  Arik Sharon did just that.  He tilled it as a farmer.  He fought for it as a soldier.  He knew every hilltop and valley -- every inch of the land.  As I said, he loved his maps.  He used to come to the meetings with maps of the land rolled up under each arm.  They were always maps.

I’m reminded -- my mother’s blessed memory, I’m reminded of -- if you’ll forgive me -- an Irish poet, an Irish writer.  I’m sure Prime Minister Blair will forgive me.  That Irish writer was James Joyce.  And he said, “When I die, Dublin will be written on my heart.”  I am absolutely sure the land of Israel, the Negev is etched in Arik Sharon’s soul as it was written on Joyce’s heart.

     And the defining attributes of this great man’s character -- passion for the Jewish people, physical and political courage, and love of this land -- they have all played out on the canvas of the State of Israel’s historic trajectory. 

Arik Sharon’s journey and the journey of the State of Israel are inseparable.  They are woven together, in war, in politics, in diplomacy. 

Toward the end of his life, he said, I've been everywhere.  I've met kings, queens, presidents.  “I've been around the world. I have one thing that I would like to do:  to try to reach peace.”  

We’ll never know what the ultimate arc of Arik Sharon’s life would have been had he been physically able to pursue his stated goal.  That will be for historians to speculate and debate.  But we do know this:  As prime minister, he surprised many.  I’ve been told that, in reflecting on the difference between how he viewed things as a general and as prime minister, he would paraphrase an Israeli song lyric that said, things you see from here, look different from over there.  What would have -- what would they have looked like had he lived in good health and led those eight years?

He left us too soon, but the work of trying to reach peace continues.  And to quote Shakespeare:  He was a man, take him all in all, we shall not look upon his like again. 

May the bond between Israel and the United States never, ever be broken. 

END

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on Promise Zones

East Room

2:24 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, welcome to the White House, everybody. And that was one of the best introductions I’ve ever had.  (Applause.)  So we’re so proud of Kiara for the introduction and for sharing your story, and you’re just so poised.  And I know Geoff Canada is just out there all excited -- (laughter) -- and proud, and I know your mom is proud.  I know she is.  She should be. 

Kiara and the rest of these young people grew up in a 97-square-block section of Harlem.  It’s a place where the odds used to be stacked against them every single day, even just graduating from high school was a challenge.  But with the help of some very dedicated adults and a program called the Harlem Children’s Zone, they’re right on track to go to college.  Together, students, teachers, administrators, parents, community, they’re changing the odds in this neighborhood.  And that’s what we’re here to talk about today -– changing the odds for every American child so that no matter who they are, no matter where they are born, they have a chance to succeed in today’s economy.

Now, the good news is that, thanks to the hard work and sacrifice of the American people all across the country over the last five years, our economy has grown stronger.  Our businesses have now created more than 8 million new jobs since the depths of the recession.  Our manufacturing, our housing sectors are rebounding.  Our energy and technology and auto industries are booming.  We’ve got to keep our economy growing.  We’ve got to  make sure that everybody is sharing in that growth.  We’ve got to keep creating jobs, and then we’ve got to make sure that wages and benefits are such that families can rebuild a little bit of security.  We’ve got to make sure this recovery, which is real, leaves nobody behind.  And that’s going to be my focus throughout the year. 

This is going to be a year of action.  That’s what the American people expect, and they’re ready and willing to pitch in and help.  This is not just a job for government; this is a job for everybody. 

Working people are looking for the kind of stable, secure jobs that too often went overseas in the past couple of decades. So next week, I’ll join companies and colleges and take action to boost high-tech manufacturing -- the kind that attracts good new jobs and helps grow a middle class.  Business owners are ready to play their part to hire more workers.  So this month, I’m going to host CEOs here at the White House not once, but twice:  First to lay out specific steps we can take to help more workers earn the skills that they need for today’s new jobs; second, they’re going to announce commitments that we’re making to put more of the long-term unemployed back to work. 

And on January 28th, in my State of the Union address -- which I want all the legislators here to know I’m going to try to keep a little shorter than usual -- (laughter) -- they’re cheering silently -- (laughter) -- I will mobilize the country around the national mission of making sure our economy offers every American who works hard a fair shot at success.  Anybody in this country who works hard should have a fair shot at success, period.  It doesn’t matter where they come from, what region of the country, what they look like, what their last name is -- they should be able to succeed.

And obviously we’re coming off of a rancorous political year, but I genuinely believe that this is not a partisan issue. Because when you talk to the American people, you know that there are people working in soup kitchens, and people who are mentoring, and people who are starting small businesses and hiring their neighbors, and very rarely are they checking are they Democrat or Republican.  There’s a sense of neighborliness that’s inherent in the American people -- we just have to tap into that. 

And I’ve been very happy to see that there are Republicans like Rand Paul, who’s here today, who are ready to engage in this debate.  That's a good thing.  We’ve got Democratic and Republican elected officials across the country who are ready to roll up their sleeves and get to work.  And this should be a challenge that unites us all.

I don't care whether the ideas are Democrat or Republican.  I do care that they work.  I do care that they are subject to evaluation, and we can see if we are using tax dollars in a certain way, if we’re starting a certain program, I want to make sure that young people like Kiara are actually benefiting from them.

Now, it’s one thing to say we should help more Americans get ahead, but talk is cheap.  We’ve got to actually make sure that we do it.  And I will work with anybody who’s willing to lay out some concrete ideas to create jobs, help more middle-class families find security in today’s economy, and offer new ladders of opportunity for folks to climb into the middle class.

And, personally, I hope we start by listening to the majority of the American people and restoring the unemployment insurance for Americans who need a little help supporting their families while they look for a new job.  And I’m glad the Republicans and Democrats in the Senate are working together to extend that lifeline.  I hope their colleagues in the House will join them to set this right.

Today I want to talk about something very particular, a specific example of how we can make a difference.  We are here with leaders who are determined to change the odds in their communities the way these kids and their parents and dedicated citizens have changed the odds in Harlem.  It’s now been 50 years since President Johnson declared an unconditional War on Poverty in America.  And that groundbreaking effort created new avenues of opportunity for generations of Americans.  It strengthened our safety net for working families and seniors, Americans with disabilities and the poor, so that when we fall -- and you never know what life brings you -- we can bounce back faster.  It made us a better country and a stronger country.

In a speech 50 years ago, President Johnson talked about communities “on the outskirts of hope where opportunity was hard to come by.”  Well, today’s economic challenges are different but they’ve still resulted in communities where in recent decades wrenching economic change has made opportunity harder and harder to come by.  There are communities where for too many young people it feels like their future only extends to the next street corner or the outskirts of town, too many communities where no matter how hard you work, your destiny feels like it’s already been determined for you before you took that first step.

I’m not just talking about pockets of poverty in our inner cities.  That's the stereotype.  I’m talking about suburban neighborhoods that have been hammered by the housing crisis.  I'm talking about manufacturing towns that still haven't recovered after the local plant shut down and jobs dried up.  There are islands of rural America where jobs are scarce -- they were scarce even before the recession hit -- so that young people feel like if they want to actually succeed, they've got to leave town, they've got to leave their communities. 

And I've seen this personally even before I got into politics.  In fact, this is what drove me into politics.  I was just two years out of college when I first moved to the South Side of Chicago.  I was hired by a group of churches to help organize a community that had been devastated when the local steel plants closed their doors.  And I'd walk through neighborhoods filled up with boarded-up houses and crumbling schools, and single parents and dads who had nothing to do with their kids, and kids who were hanging out on the street corners without any hope or prospects for the future. 

But these churches came together.  And then they started working with other non-profits and local businesses.  And the government -- local, state and federal -- participated.  And we started getting some things done that gave people hope.  And that experience taught me that government does not have all the answers -- no amount of money can take the place of a loving parent in a child’s life.  But I did learn that when communities and governments and businesses and not-for-profits work together, we can make a difference.  Kiara is proof -- all these young people are proof we can make a difference.

For the last 17 years, the Harlem Children’s Zone -- the brainchild of Geoffrey Canada, who’s here today -- has proven we can make a difference.  And it operated on a basic premise that each child will do better if all the children around them are doing better.  So in Harlem, staff members go door to door and they recruit soon-to-be parents for “Baby College,” preparing them for those crucial first few months of life; making sure that they understand how to talk to their child and read to their child, and sometimes working with parents to teach them how to read so they can read to their child and give them the healthy start that they need. 

And then, early childhood education to get kids learning at four years old.  And then a charter school that help students succeed all the way through high school.  And medical care and healthy foods that are available close to home.  And exercise.  I was very pleased to hear that -- Michelle was very pleased to hear that -- (laughter) -- that they've got a strong Phys Ed program.   And then students getting help finding internships and applying to college, and an outstanding, dedicated staff that tries to make sure that nobody slips through the cracks or falls behind.

And this is an incredible achievement, and the results have been tremendous.  Today, preschool students in the Harlem Children’s Zone are better prepared for kindergarten.  Last year, a study found that students who win a spot in one of the charter schools score higher on standardized tests than those who don’t. In a neighborhood where higher education was once just something that other people did, you’ve got hundreds of kids who’ve now gone to college.

And Harlem is not the only community that’s found success taking on these challenges together.  In Cincinnati, a focus on education has helped to make sure more kids are ready for kindergarten.  In Nashville, they’ve redesigned high schools and boosted graduation rates by almost 20 percent over the past 12 years.  In Milwaukee, they’ve cut teen pregnancy in half. 

Every community is different, with different needs and different approaches.  But communities that are making the most progress on these issues have some things in common.  They don't look for a single silver bullet; instead they bring together local government and nonprofits and businesses and teachers and parents around a shared goal.  That's what Geoffrey did when he started the Harlem Children’s Zone.  Government was involved -- so don't be confused here, it has an important role to play.  And already there are government resources going into these communities.  But it’s important that our faith institutions and our businesses and the parents and the communities themselves are involved in designing and thinking through how do we move forward.

And the second thing is they’re holding themselves accountable by delivering measurable results.  We don't fund things, we don't start projects just for the sake of starting them.  They’ve got to work.  If they don't work we should try something else.  And sometimes those of us who care deeply about advancing opportunity aren't willing to subject some of these programs to that test:  Do they work? 

In my State of the Union address last year, I announced our commitment to identify more communities like these -- urban, rural, tribal -- where dedicated citizens are determined to make a difference and turn things around.  And we challenged them.  We said if you can demonstrate the ability and the will to launch an all-encompassing, all-hands-on-deck approach to reducing poverty and expanding opportunity, we’ll help you get the resources to do it.  We’ll take resources from some of the programs that we're already doing and concentrate them.  We'll make sure that our agencies are working together more effectively.  We'll put in talent to help you plan.  But we're also going to hold you accountable and measure your progress.

And if you're doing real stuff that is making a difference in the lives of young people like Kiara, then we're going to be there.  Your country will help you remake your community on behalf of your kids, family by family, block by block.

We call these communities Promise Zones.  They’re neighborhoods where we will help local efforts to meet one national goal -- that a child’s course in life should be determined not by the zip code she’s born in, but by the strength of her work ethic and the scope of her dreams.

So we're here today to announce the first five Promise Zones in America.  And I could not be prouder to be joined by Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles; and Mayor Michael Nutter of Philadelphia; and Councilwoman Ivy Taylor from San Antonio; Chief Gregory Pyle, one of our tribal leaders, and Jerry Rickett from the Kentucky Highlands Investment Corporation -- some of the leaders from these neighborhoods who are helping to make it happen.

In the East Side neighborhood of San Antonio, nearly four in 10 adults don’t have a high school diploma.  The violent crime rate is 50 percent higher than the rest of the city.  So schools and community members are focused on getting more kids into pre-K, boosting math and science in high school, and they’re putting more cops on foot patrol to make their neighborhoods safer.  It's a project worth investing in. 

In a section of L.A. that stretches from Pico-Union to Hollywood, the population decreased by 13,000 people in just 10 years.  So developers are working to build more affordable housing; technical schools and community colleges are helping more people get the training they need to get jobs.  It's a project worth investing in.

In Philly, nearly four out of every 10 kids lives below the poverty line –- and a lot of them are on the West Side of the city.  So a local university is helping connect middle and high school students with mentors to get them ready for college.  You've got a supermarket that’s being planned that will create jobs and provide healthy food where there’s been too little of both.  We're going to invest in that.

In Senator Mitch McConnell’s home state of Kentucky, there are communities that have been struggling for decades with shutdowns and layoffs.  So they’re taking steps, locally initiated, to attract new businesses and create new jobs in new industries.  You've got a local college that's stepping up to expand technical training and help more kids get a higher education.

And in the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, where up to half of the residents in some areas live in poverty, community leaders are determined to change things.  And they’re making financing available to help women start their own businesses; they're investing in new water and sewer systems that will make the area more attractive for companies looking to locate there; and they’re helping farmers and ranchers create more jobs, and more families thereby get access to healthy foods.

So these are America’s first five Promise Zones.  And over the next three years, we're going to help launch 20 in all.  And each of these communities is designing from the bottom up, not the top down, what it is they think they need, and we're working with them to make that happen.  And each of these communities is prepared to do what it takes to change the odds for their kids.  We will help them succeed -- not with a handout, but as partners with them every step of the way.  And we're going to make sure it works, and we're going to hold them accountable to make sure it is making a difference in the lives of kids.

As a nation, we've got plenty of reasons to hope.  And I just want to end with one story just to give you a sense of what we're talking about here.  Roger Brown came here today from Harlem.  Where is Roger?  There he is right here.  I used to have a haircut like that -- (laughter) -- and maybe after I'm done with the presidency, I'm going back to that.  (Laughter.) 

Growing up -- I want you to listen to Roger's story, because it's unique and it's special, but it's also representative.  Growing up, Roger spent some time in the foster care system before going to live with his mom, who was working two jobs to make ends meet.  When Roger was in 6th grade, his mom entered his name in the Promise Academy Charter School lottery and prayed.  And Roger won a spot.

Now, the way I hear it, Roger, you were still having some problems sometimes.  He was the class clown and acting out, and almost got himself expelled.  But the teachers and the staff did not give up on him.  They saw something in him.  They kept pushing him.  And then one summer when Roger was home visiting his foster family, he looked around the room and he realized nobody in that room had gone to college, and nobody in that room had a job.  And at that moment, something clicked.  And Roger decided he wanted something better for himself -- and for his mom and for his two sisters that looked up to him. 

So Roger buckled down.  He went from failing his classes to passing his classes.  He became a member of the first graduating class at the Promise Academy.  (Applause.)  And today Roger is a sophomore at Hunter College in New York, one of the best colleges in the country -- the first person in his family to get that far. And now he wants to go to medical school and become a neurologist.  (Applause.) 

If you want to know why I care about this stuff so much, it's because I'm not that different from Roger.  There was a period of time in my life where I was goofing off.  I was raised by a single mom.  I didn’t know my dad.  The only difference between me and Roger was my environment was more forgiving than his.  That’s the only difference.  If I screwed up, the consequences weren't quite as great. 

So if Roger can make it, and if I can make it, if Kiara can make it, every kid in this country can make it.  But we've got to believe in that.  We can't just give lip service to it.  And it can't just get caught up in a bunch of political arguments. 

There are legitimate questions about how the best way to do this is, how we can best make progress.  And there are legitimate debates to be had about how big of a role is government in that process, how big of a role is the private sector.  And there's no disagreement that there has to be individual initiative -- it's got to start inside.  Roger had to have a change of attitude.  I had to have a change of attitude.  Kiara -- she probably didn’t need a change in attitude.  (Laughter.)  She was focused the whole time. 

We don’t dispute that, but we do know that sometimes we talk about this stuff as if we care and then we don’t deliver.  We don’t follow through.  We don’t make the effort.  It's not sustained.  We lose interest.  And then we say to ourselves, well, maybe nothing can be done, and we put up with it.  And as a consequence, a lot of our kids get lost.  And we can't allow that to happen.  That’s what the Promise Zones represent.

I want more kids to have the chance that Roger got.  I want more kids to have the chance this country gave me.  We should all want every one of our kids and their families to have a shot at success.  If you are willing to dream big and work hard, you should grow up with the same opportunities in life as any other child living in any other place. 

That’s what we're fighting for. That’s what America is about.  So let's act.  Let's make it happen this year, all right? 

Thank you.  God bless you.  God bless America.  (Applause.)

END
2:49 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Importance of Extending Emergency Unemployment Insurance

East Room

11:55 A.M. EST
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Please, everybody, have a seat.  (Applause.)  Well, Happy New Year, everybody. 
 
AUDIENCE:  Happy New Year!
 
THE PRESIDENT:  I hope you're keeping warm.  A few weeks ago, I said that 2014 could be a breakthrough year for America.  Think about it:  Five years ago this month our economy was shedding 800,000 jobs just in one month.  But as Americans buckled down and worked hard and sacrificed, we began to come back.
 
And our businesses have created more than 8 million new jobs since we hit the bottom.  Our auto industry has gone from bust to boom.  Manufacturing is rebounding.  The housing market is rebounding.  Stock markets are restoring retirement accounts.  The promise of energy independence is actually in sight.  Health care costs eat up less of our economy; over the past four years, costs have grown at the slowest rate on record.  And since I took office, we’ve cut our deficits by more than half. 
 
So America is getting stronger and we've made progress.  And the economy is growing, and we've got to do more to make sure that all Americans share in that growth.  We've got to help our businesses create more jobs.  We've got to make sure those jobs offer the wages and benefits that let families rebuild a little security.  In other words, we've got to make sure that this recovery leaves nobody behind.  And we've got a lot of work to do on that front.  The good news is I’m optimistic we can do it if we do it together. 
 
Now, before the holidays, both parties compromised on a budget that lifts some of the drag that’s been on the economy from these indiscriminate cuts we call sequester.  And as a consequence, this year we may see more stability when it comes to economic growth.  And I think I'm not alone in saying that we are all grateful in the New Year that we won't have another partisan shutdown, hopefully, going forward.  (Applause.)
 
So that was a good sign.  And we should build on that progress with what I said should be the first order of business in 2014, and that is extending insurance for the unemployed.  (Applause.)  The good news is this morning the Senate took a very important step in that direction.
 
For the Americans who have joined me at the White House today and millions like them who were laid off in the recession through no fault of their own, unemployment insurance has been a vital economic lifeline.  For a lot of people, it’s the only source of income they’ve got to support their families while they look for a new job.  These aren't folks who are just sitting back waiting for things to happen.  They're out there actively looking for work.  They desperately want work. 
 
But although the economy has been growing and we've been adding new jobs, the truth of the matter is, is that the financial crisis was so devastating that there's still a lot of people who are struggling.  And, in fact, if we don't provide unemployment insurance it makes it harder for them to find a job.     
 
You heard Katherine’s story.  And she's far more eloquent than I could ever be.  She wrote me last month to say, "Please let those who think I am sitting at home enjoying being unemployed know that I would much rather be working."  And I had a chance to talk to Katherine, and I think it's pretty clear that that's the case.  Katherine went on to say, "I have applied to everything for which I am possibly qualified to no avail.  I have worked hard all my life, paid taxes, voted, engaged in political discussion, and made the ultimate sacrifice:  My two sons serve in the U.S. military.  Job loss is devastating, and if I could fix it myself, I would.  I challenge any lawmaker to live without an income.”  That’s what Katherine said.  It's hard.  (Applause.) 
 
So when we've got the mom of two of our troops, who is working hard out there, but is having to wear a coat inside the house, we've got a problem.  And it's one that can be fixed.  And Katherine is not alone. 
 
Devlin Smith, who’s watching today from her home in California, wrote me about her hunt for a new job.  Since she was laid off 13 months ago, she has sent out hundreds of résumés, she has volunteered, she has done seasonal work.  She doesn’t want to just be sitting around the house.  She’s been taking online courses to learn new skills.  Without unemployment insurance, though, she won’t be able to pay for her car or her cellphone, which makes the job hunt that much harder.  And Devlin wrote to me and said, “I’ve wanted nothing more than to find a new full-time job and have dedicated every day to that mission.  I’m asking you to advocate for me and the millions like me who need our extended unemployment benefits to make ends meet.”
 
So I just want everybody to understand this is not an abstraction.  These are not statistics.  These are your neighbors, your friends, your family members.  It could at some point be any of us.  That’s why we set up a system of unemployment insurance.  The notion was everybody is making a contribution because you don’t know when the business cycle or an economic crisis might make any of us vulnerable. 
 
And this insurance helps keep food on the table while Dad is sending out résumés.  It helps Mom pay the rent while she's learning new skills to earn that new job.  It provides that extra bit of security so that losing your job doesn’t mean that you have to lose your house, or everything you've worked so hard to build for years.  We make this promise to our fellow Americans who are working hard to get back on their feet, because when times get tough, we are not a people who say, you’re on your own.  We're a people who believe that we’re all in it together.  And we know, "there but the grace of God go I."  (Applause.) 
 
So that’s the values case for this.  That’s the moral case for this.  But there's an economic case for it, as well.  Independent economists have shown that extending emergency unemployment insurance actually helps the economy, actually creates new jobs.  When folks like Katherine have a little more to spend to turn up the heat in her house or buy a few extra groceries, that means more spending with businesses in her local community, which in turn may inspire that business to hire one more person -- maybe Kathy. 
 
That’s why, in the past, both parties have repeatedly put partisanship and ideology aside to offer some security for job-seekers with no strings attached.  It’s been done regardless of whether Democrats or Republicans were in the White House.  It’s been done regardless of whether Democrats or Republicans controlled Congress.  And, by the way, it’s been done multiple times when the unemployment rate was significantly lower than it is today. 
 
And what’s important to keep in mind also is that the recovery in a big country like the United States is going to be somewhat uneven.  So there are some states that have a 2.5 unemployment rate, and then there are some places that may still have a 7, 8, 9 percent unemployment rate.  The people living in those respective states may be working equally hard to find a job, but it’s going to be harder in some places than others.
 
     Now, two weeks ago, Congress went home for the holidays and let this lifeline expire for 1.3 million Americans.  If this doesn’t get fixed, it will hurt about 14 million Americans over the course of this year:  5 million workers along with 9 million of their family members -- their spouses, their kids. 
 
     Now, I’ve heard the argument that says extending unemployment insurance will somehow hurt the unemployed because it zaps their motivation to get a new job.  I really want to go at this for a second.  (Laughter and applause.)  That really sells the American people short.  I meet a lot of people as President of the United States, and as a candidate for President of the United States, and as a U.S. senator, and as a state senator -- I meet a lot of people.  And I can’t name a time where I met an American who would rather have an unemployment check than the pride of having a job.  (Applause.)
 
     The long-term unemployed are not lazy.  They’re not lacking in motivation.  They’re coping with the aftermath of the worst economic crisis in generations.  In some cases, they may have a skills mismatch.  They may have been doing a certain job for 20 years; suddenly they lose that job.  They may be an older worker, may have to get retrained.  It's hard -- sometimes employers will discriminate if you've been out of work for a while; they decide, well, we're not sure we want to hire you, we'd rather hire somebody who's still working right now. 
 
     So it's hard out there.  There are a lot of our friends, a lot of our neighbors who have lost their jobs and they're working their tails off every single day trying to find a new job.  Now, as the job market keeps getting better, more and more of these folks will find work.  But, in the meantime, the insurance keeps them from falling off a cliff.  It makes sure they can pay their car note to go to that interview.  It makes sure they can pay their cell phone bills so that if somebody calls back for an interview, they can answer it.  (Laughter.) 
 
     And Katherine explained this.  Katherine, in the letter that she wrote to me, said, do folks really think that "cutting this benefit will make someone hire me?"  I mean, that’s not how employers are thinking.  
 
So letting unemployment insurance expire for millions of Americans is wrong.  Congress should make things right.  I am very appreciative that they’re on their way to doing just that thanks to the bipartisan work of two senators.  You had a Democrat from Rhode Island, Senator Reed, and you had a conservative Republican from Nevada, Senator Heller.  And despite their political differences, they worked together on a plan to extend unemployment insurance at least for three months temporarily while we figure out a longer-term solution.  And this morning, a bipartisan majority of senators agreed to allow this common-sense provision to at least move forward in the process. 
 
The Senate is a complicated place.  (Laughter.)  So just because they agreed on this vote, all they’ve agreed to so far is that we’re actually going to be able to have a vote on it.  They haven't actually passed it.  So we've got to get this across the finish line without obstruction or delay, and we need the House of Representatives to be able to vote for it as well.  (Applause.)  That's the bottom line. 
 
Voting for unemployment insurance helps people and creates jobs, and voting against it does not.  Congress should pass this bipartisan plan right away, and I will sign it right away.  And more than 1 million Americans across the country will feel a little hope right away.  And hope is contagious.  (Applause.) 
 
When Katherine has a little bit more confidence about her situation, when she finds a job, she is going to be able to help somebody down the line maybe who is also down on their luck.  When Congress passes a bipartisan effort starting here right at the beginning of the New Year, who knows -- we might actually get some things done this year.  (Laughter.)  So after all the hard work and sacrifice of the past five years to recover and rebuild from the crisis, what I think the American people are really looking for in 2014 is just a little bit of stability.  Let's just do the common-sense thing.  Let's do what's right. 
 
We're going to have to see action, though, on the part of Congress.  And I'll be willing to work with them every step of the way -- action to help our businesses create more of the good jobs that a growing middle class requires; action to restore economic mobility and reduce inequality; action to open more doors of opportunity for everybody who is willing to work hard and walk through those doors. 
 
When I was listening to Katherine, I was just so struck by her strength and dignity.  And I think people when they bump into some tough times, like Katherine, they're not looking for pity.  They just want a shot.  (Applause.)  And they just want to feel as if -- as a part of this country, as a part of their communities, that if misfortune strikes, all the things that they've done in the past, all the hard work they've done raising children and paying taxes and working hard, that that counts for something, and that folks aren't suddenly just going to dismiss their concerns, but we're going to rally behind them.  That's not too much to ask.  That’s who we are as Americans.  That's what built this country.  That's what I want to promote.  (Applause.)
 
So thank you very much, everybody.  Let's get to work.  Let's get this done.  (Applause.)  
 
END               
12:11 P.M. EST
 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Weekly Address: Time to Pass Bipartisan Legislation to Extend Emergency Unemployment Insurance

WASHINGTON, DC— In this week’s address, President Obama said Congress should act to extend emergency unemployment insurance for more than one million Americans who have lost this vital economic lifeline while looking for a job.  Letting emergency unemployment insurance expire not only harms American families, but it is also a drag on the overall economy. The President urges both parties to pass the bipartisan three-month extension under consideration in the Senate so that we can once again focus on expanding opportunities for the middle class and creating jobs for all hardworking Americans.

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, Saturday, January 4, 2014.

Remarks of President Barack Obama

Weekly Address

The White House

January 4, 2014

Hi, everybody, and Happy New Year. 

This is a time when we look ahead to all the possibilities and opportunities of the year to come – when we resolve to better ourselves, and to better our relationships with one another.  And today, I want to talk about one place that Washington should start – a place where we can make a real and powerful difference in the lives of many of our fellow Americans right now.

Just a few days after Christmas, more than one million of our fellow Americans lost a vital economic lifeline – the temporary insurance that helps folks make ends meet while they look for a job.  Republicans in Congress went home for the holidays and let that lifeline expire.  And for many of their constituents who are unemployed through no fault of their own, that decision will leave them with no income at all. 

We make this promise to one another because it makes a difference to a mother who needs help feeding her kids while she’s looking for work; to a father who needs help paying the rent while learning the skills to get a new and better job.  And denying families that security is just plain cruel.  We’re a better country than that.  We don’t abandon our fellow Americans when times get tough – we keep the faith with them until they start that new job.

What’s more, it actually slows down the economy for all of us.  If folks can’t pay their bills or buy the basics, like food and clothes, local businesses take a hit and hire fewer workers.  That’s why the independent Congressional Budget Office says that unless Congress restores this insurance, we’ll feel a drag on our economic growth this year.  And after our businesses created more than two million new jobs last year, that’s a self-inflicted wound we don’t need.

So when Congress comes back to work this week, their first order of business should be making this right.  Right now, a bipartisan group in Congress is working on a three-month extension of unemployment insurance – and if they pass it, I will sign it.  For decades, Republicans and Democrats put partisanship and ideology aside to offer some security for job-seekers, even when the unemployment rate was lower than it is today.  Instead of punishing families who can least afford it, Republicans should make it their New Year’s resolution to do the right thing, and restore this vital economic security for their constituents right now.

After all, our focus as a country this year shouldn’t be shrinking our economy, but growing it; not narrowing opportunity, but expanding it; not fewer jobs, but doing everything we can to help our businesses create more of the good jobs that a growing middle class requires. 

That’s my New Year’s resolution – to do everything I can, every single day, to help make 2014 a year in which more of our citizens can earn their own piece of the American Dream. 

After five years of working and sacrificing to recover and rebuild from crisis, we have it within our power, right now, to move this country forward.  It’s entirely up to us.  And I’m optimistic for the year that lies ahead. 

Thank you, and have a great weekend.

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Photo & Remarks from the First Lady's Conversations with Children While Tracking Santa with NORAD

Via Telephone

11:06 A.M. HAST

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello?

CHILD:  Hi.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, is this Kileen?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Kileen.  How are you?  This is Michelle Obama.  Are you calling to find out where Santa is? 

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, you’re looking for Santa?  I am at NORAD, where they track Santa, and I’m looking at the computer, and right now, as we speak, Santa and his sleigh are flying over Egypt.  Can you imagine that?  That’s all the way in another part of the world.  But I can see him on the tracker -- I see Santa, and his sleigh, and I see eight tiny reindeer, and I think I see one with a little red nose -- that might be Rudolph.  So I think he’s coming your way, okay?  Are you excited?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  How old are you, Kileen?

CHILD:  I’m six.

MRS. OBAMA:  You’re six?  What’s the number-one gift you asked Santa for this year?

CHILD:  (Inaudible.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  Well, have you been good this year?  Have you been a good girl this year?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  All right, well, I think that Santa is on his way to your house so you better go to sleep because he won’t come until you’ve gone to sleep, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right.  Have a merry Christmas, okay?

CHILD:  You too.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, thanks so much, sweetie.  Bye-bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Sofia and Jessica, it’s Michelle Obama, the First Lady.  I’m helping to track Santa with NORAD.  I’m helping NORAD tonight.  How are you guys doing?

CHILD:  Good, how are you?

MRS. OBAMA:  I’m doing really good -- I’m so excited it’s Christmas Eve and I’m watching Santa on the radar.  How old are you guys?

CHILD:  Eleven.

MRS. OBAMA:  And --

CHILD:  Eleven, and my sister is nine.

MRS. OBAMA:  And nine?  You guys want to know where Santa is right now, as we speak?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  I am looking at the tracker.  I see the screen and he is in Sudan.  He is all the way in Africa, and he’s moving at the speed of light.  He is going so fast and delivering all kinds of gifts all over the world.  Pretty exciting, huh?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes.  Yes, what, sweetie?

CHILD:  Okay, do you know when he is going to come to Boston, Massachusetts?

MRS. OBAMA:  He darts all over the world, and he doesn’t come to your house until you guys are fast asleep, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, so he’s looking -- so he’s going to know when you guys are out and your eyes are closed, and that’s when he’s going to make it to your house, okay?  But right now he’s delivering some gifts to some little kids all the way in Africa, as we speak, because they’re asleep right now, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  So as soon as you close your eyes and go fast asleep, he’s going to come and deliver gifts to your house -- isn’t that exciting?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, so I know you guys have been good girls this year.

CHILD:  Yes.  Merry Christmas to you and President Obama.

MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you, sweetie.  Merry Christmas to you and your family, too, okay?

CHILD:  Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Have fun tomorrow.

CHILD:  Bye, thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Bye-bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, is this Ella?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Ella.  This is First Lady Michelle Obama.  I’m here today helping the folks out at NORAD track Santa, and is that what you’re calling for?  Are you calling to find out where Santa is?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  Well, I’m looking on the radar screen and I see his sleigh.  I see his sleigh with eight tiny reindeer and he is over Sudan -- South Sudan.  That’s in Africa.  And right now, he’s delivering some gifts.  He’s going down, swooping down to some little kids who are in South Sudan, okay?  That’s where he is right now.  It’s really, really very cool, don’t you think?

CHILD:  When are you coming to Kansas City?  (Laughter.)  When is Santa coming to Kansas City?

MRS. OBAMA:  Santa is going to come to your house, Ella, when you are fast asleep -- that’s how he works.  I think he is in Sudan now because there are some kids over there who are already tucked in bed with their eyes closed.  So he is going to come to your house as soon as you’re asleep.  Are you getting ready for bed any time soon?

Ella, I think that if you go to bed right now and you shut your eyes, and you go to sleep, he might just show up at your house now, okay?  Because he can go anywhere in the world at the speed of light.

CHILD:  Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, well, have a good night’s sleep and merry Christmas to you and your whole family, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.  Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, bye-bye.  Thanks for calling.  Merry Christmas to you guys. 

CHILD:  Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA:  Thanks so much, you guys.  Enjoy your holiday.  Bye-bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, this is First Lady Michelle Obama.  I hear that Wyatt and Alex are on the phone looking for Santa.

CHILD:  Hi.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, is this Wyatt?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  How are you, Wyatt?

CHILD:  I’m good.

MRS. OBAMA:  You’re good?  How old are you?

CHILD:  Nine.

MRS. OBAMA:  You’re nine?  Is Alex there, too?  Are you excited, Wyatt?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  What do you want for Christmas?

CHILD:  A Zoomer.

MRS. OBAMA:  A Zoomer?  That sounds exciting, that sounds fun.  Well, I’m here at NORAD, and I’m helping them track Santa.  And I’m looking on their radar screen and right now, Santa is headed to the Republic of Rwanda -- that’s in Africa, that’s all the way in Africa.  Right now, he is delivering toys to some little girls and boys all the way in Africa.  Can you believe that?

CHILD:  No.

MRS. OBAMA:  He is flying so fast -- at the speed of light -- and from the satellite radar tracker, I can actually see his sleigh and I think I can make out two, four, six -- eight tiny reindeer and there’s -- oh, they just turned, and there’s one leading the way with a red nose.  It’s flashing.  They just turned.  They made a sharp turn.  I think that’s Rudolph that’s leading the sleigh.  Really exciting, don’t you think?

CHILD:  Yes.  What I want for Christmas is the Transformer -- whose name is Metroplex.

MRS. OBAMA:  That sounds good.  If you guys have been good this year, I know that Santa is going to come and deliver some great toys.  But you know what -- you have to be fast asleep before he comes to your house in South Carolina, okay, because Santa only comes when you guys are fast asleep.

CHILD:  My cousin said we were going to sleep at eight.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, that sounds good.  That sounds like a really good bedtime.  All right, well, you guys have a merry, merry Christmas, okay?

CHILD:  Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, you guys give your whole family my best, okay?

CHILD:  All right, thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, take care.  Bye-bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, is this Daisy?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Daisy.  It’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  I’m here at NORAD, and I’m helping them track Santa tonight -- is that why you’re calling?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  How old are you, Daisy?

CHILD:  Five.

MRS. OBAMA:  You are five?  What a big girl!  Oh my goodness.  Well, let me look on the radar screen and -- oh my goodness -- I see his sleigh.  And I can make out a little man with a little white beard, and there are eight reindeer.  And one in the front, I think it’s Rudolph.  You know where they are right now?  They’re in a place called Burundi, all the way on the other side of the world in Africa.  Can you imagine?

CHILD:  Uh-uh.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, I think there are some little kids there in that country that are fast asleep now, and he’s dropping off lots of presents.  Right now, he has delivered over 3 million presents -- already.  Can you imagine that?  How much work it takes?

CHILD:  Three billion?

MRS. OBAMA:  Hm?

CHILD:  Three billion?

MRS. OBAMA:  Right now it’s 3 million -- yes, it’s 3 million.  He’ll probably get to 3 billion before the night is out, but right now, he has delivered 3 million.  He still has a lot of work to do.  He has got to get all the way to your house tonight, right?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  But he’s not going to come until you’re fast asleep, okay, sweetie?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  So make sure you go to sleep, close your eyes, get a good night’s sleep, and as soon as you’re fast asleep, Santa is going to know and he’s going to turn his sleigh around and he’s going to come right to you, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right.  Be a good girl, all right?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  And have a merry, merry Christmas, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, thanks for calling, sweetie.

CHILD:  You’re welcome.

MRS. OBAMA:  Bye-bye.

CHILD:  Bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, is this Anthony?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Anthony, it’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  I’m here at NORAD.  I’m helping them track Santa tonight.  It’s one of my most favorite things I get to do on Christmas Eve.  Is that why you’re calling?  You’re trying to find out where Santa is right now?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Right now I’m looking at the radar screen and he is flying over a country called Burundi, which is in Africa.  Right now I see his sleigh and you could make out these little hooves like feet moving and it looks like his reindeer are pulling him.  He’s moving so fast.  But the NORAD tracker can track him.  So he is in Africa right now because there are some boys and girls that are fast asleep there in that country, and he is dropping off toys.  And I think he is going to come to your house, Anthony, as soon as you go to sleep.  What time are you going to go to bed tonight?

CHILD:  Eight-thirty.

MRS. OBAMA:  Eight-thirty?  That sounds like a great bedtime.  Do you know what you want for Christmas this year?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  What’s your number-one toy?

CHILD:  (Inaudible.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  That’s exciting.  I think if you get to bed and you shut your eyes, Santa is going to be there as soon as he knows you’ve fallen asleep, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, well, you’re going to have a merry Christmas tomorrow, right?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  Be a good boy.  You sound like a really smart kid so have a great Christmas, okay?

CHILD:  Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, merry Christmas, sweetie.  Goodnight.

CHILD:  Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  Bye-bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Kailean, it’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  How are you doing?

CHILD:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  I’m at NORAD tonight and I’m helping them track Santa.  And I’m manning the phones, I’ve talked to a lot of boys and girls tonight who are looking to find out where Santa is -- is that why you’re calling?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  So right now, I’m looking at the radar screen and I see -- I see his sleigh.  I can make out his sleigh, and I can make out reindeer.  And I see eight reindeer and one in the front -- who do you think that one is?

CHILD:  Rudolph.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes -- his nose, you can see his nose flashing right now.  He is flying over the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- do you know where that is?

CHILD:  No.

MRS. OBAMA:  That’s all the way in Africa.  Right now, he is flying over Africa, and I think he’s there because there are some boys and girls that are fast asleep right now.  And you know Santa only comes when you’re fast asleep, right?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes.  So as soon as you go to sleep, sweetie, as soon as you shut your eyes and Santa knows that you’re fast asleep, that’s when he’s going to come to your house, okay?

CHILD:  I have a question.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, sweetie, what is that?

CHILD:  When is he going to come to Virginia?

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, he comes all over the country at different times, all over the world at different times, and it depends on when kids are asleep.  So I think first he is going to figure out whether you’re fast asleep and when most of the kids where you live in Virginia are fast asleep.  So what time do you think you’re going to bed?

CHILD:  About nine.

MRS. OBAMA:  About nine?  And I’ve talked to a couple of other kids in Virginia that are going to bed at about 8:30, 9 o’clock, so if a lot of kids in Virginia are starting to go to bed right around then, that’s when he is going to come, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, are you excited?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, me too.  I love Christmas.

CHILD:  Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, merry Christmas, sweetie, and the best to your whole family, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, bye-bye.

CHILD:  Bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, is Marcus there?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Marcus, it’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  How are you?

CHILD:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  I’m here at NORAD tonight.  Every Christmas Eve, I help them track Santa.  And I’ve been taking calls from boys and girls all over the country -- is that why you’re calling, to find out where Santa is?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  I’m looking at the radar screen right now, and I see Santa.  He is headed -- in one minute, he is going to be flying over Zambia.  And that’s a country in Africa.  Right now, he’s been spending a lot of time in Africa.  From the calls I’ve been getting where he’s traveling -- he has spent a lot of time in Africa because a lot of the kids in that part of the world are fast asleep.  Isn’t that exciting?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  How old are you, Marcus?

CHILD:  Five.

MRS. OBAMA:  You’re five?  Wow, you sound like a big boy.  What do you want for Christmas this year?

CHILD:  (Inaudible.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  Have you been good? 

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  I bet you have.  I can tell -- you sound like you’re a good boy.  Well, as soon as you go to sleep -- what time do you think you’re going to go to bed tonight?

CHILD:  About nine -- or earlier.

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, the earlier you go to bed, the quicker Santa gets there, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  I told you there are a bunch of kids right in your area that have told me they’re going to go to bed about 8:30 or 9 o’clock.  So if you get to bed at that time, that’s probably when Santa is going to try to come -- when all the kids in that area are starting to go to sleep.  Okay?

CHILD:  Cool.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, you have a merry Christmas.  It’s exciting, isn’t it?

CHILD:  Yes, you too.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, thanks, sweetie.  Wish your whole family a merry Christmas for me, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, bye-bye.

CHILD:  Goodnight.

MRS. OBAMA:  Goodnight.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, is this Caitlin?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Caitlin, it’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  How are you?

CHILD:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  I’m here at NORAD.  I spend every Christmas Eve helping them track Santa.  Is that why you’re calling?  You’re calling to find out where Santa is?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, let me look on the radar screen.  Right now, I’m looking -- I’ve spotted him again.  I can see him, I can see him with his sleigh, and I can make out some little hooves moving -- I think that’s the reindeer.  I see eight reindeer and one leading the way -- do you know who that could be?

CHILD:  Rudolph.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, it’s Rudolph, he’s got Rudolph tonight leading the way.  And right now, he is headed -- he is in Africa, can you believe that?  He is over a country called Zimbabwe right now, right as we speak.  He’s dropping off toys for some boys and girls in Zimbabwe all the way in Africa.  And a lot of the boys and girls there have already gone fast asleep, that’s why he is in that part of the world right now.  So what time do you think you’re going to go to bed tonight, Caitlin?

CHILD:  Eight.

MRS. OBAMA:  At eight?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  That sounds like a great bedtime, because you know what, I’ve talked to a lot of boys and girls tonight in your part of the world and they’re planning on going to bed right at that time, too.  So I think as soon as all of you guys are fast asleep, that’s when Santa is going to shoot over and he is going to deliver some gifts.  Right now, he has already delivered more than 3 million gifts already tonight.  Can you believe that?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, and he is going to keep going.  He is delivering them really fast.  Have you been a good girl this year?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  I know you have.  So you get to bed, all right, get a good night’s sleep, close your eyes, and as soon as you do, Santa is going to come your way, okay?

CHILD:  I will.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  You have a great Christmas, okay?  And wish your whole family a merry Christmas for me, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.  Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Have fun tomorrow, okay, sweetie?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  Bye-bye.

CHILD:  Bye-bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Cal.  It’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  How are you?

CHILD:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  I’m here at NORAD because I’m helping them track Santa.  Is that why you’re calling?  You wanted to call to find out where Santa is right now?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Right now, I’m looking at the radar screen -- (gasps) -- oh my goodness, I can see his sleigh.  I see Santa in his sleigh.  I see eight tiny reindeer, and I see one leading the way.  Do you know who that one is?

CHILD:  Santa!

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, that’s Santa, and he’s got Rudolph with him.

CHILD:  Rudolph!

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, he’s got Rudolph and right now he is in Africa.  He’s flying over a country called Botswana.  Do you know why he is in Africa right now?

CHILD:  Why?

MRS. OBAMA:  Because there are a lot of little boys and girls there who have already gone to bed.  And Santa doesn’t come until you’re fast asleep, okay?  What time do you think you’re going to go to bed tonight, Cal?

CHILD:  Nine o’clock.

MRS. OBAMA:  Nine o’clock?  You know what -- nine o’clock?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  That sounds like a perfect time, do you know why?  Because I’ve talked to a lot of little boys and girls who live right in your area, and they’re planning to go to bed at the same time.  So as soon as a lot of kids of Wisconsin, in your part of the world, have started to go to sleep, that’s when Santa is going to shoot over.  And he is going to drop off toys at the houses in your part of the world.  So the sooner you go to bed, the sooner you go fast asleep, the sooner Santa will come and deliver toys, okay?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  Well, you have a merry Christmas, all right, Cal?

CHILD:  Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, tell your whole family merry Christmas for me, okay?

CHILD:  Merry Christmas.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, thank you, sweetheart.  You sound like a sweet kid.  Have fun tomorrow, okay?

CHILD:  Thank you.

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, bye-bye.

CHILD:  Bye.

***

 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello, is Anderson there?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, Anderson, it’s First Lady Michelle Obama.  I’m here at NORAD.  Every Christmas Eve, I help them track Santa.  Is that why you’re calling?

CHILD:  Yes?

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, I’m going to take a look at the radar screen and -- oh my goodness, I can see him.  He’s moving fast.  Right now, Santa is flying over Africa, and he’s flying over Johannesburg, South Africa.  Right now, he has just reached South Africa, the southern part of Africa.  Can you believe that?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  How old are you, Anderson?

CHILD:  Six.

MRS. OBAMA:  What do you want for Christmas from Santa?

CHILD:  A bicycle.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  That sounds pretty cool.  Tell me, Anderson, where do you live?

CHILD:  Uh --

MRS. OBAMA:  You’re in Pennsylvania?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, guess what, Anderson.  I’ve talked to about five or six other kids who live in Pennsylvania, and they plan on going to bed at about 8:30 or 9 o’clock.  What time are you going to go to bed?

CHILD:  Nine.

MRS. OBAMA:  Nine?  That sounds like a great time because I think as soon as you go to bed, there are all the kids in your part of the country that are going to go to bed and that’s when Santa is going to shoot over and deliver toys to you guys -- as soon as he knows you’re fast asleep, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, well, you have a good night’s sleep, okay, sweetie?

CHILD:  Okay.

MRS. OBAMA:  Merry Christmas, okay?  You all have a very merry Christmas, okay?

CHILD:  Okay.  Bye.

MRS. OBAMA:  Bye-bye.

END
11:36 A.M. HAST

*** Photo available here: http://bit.ly/1gVaGu6 ***

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Conference by the President

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room
 
 
2:18 P.M. EST
 
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  I know you are all eager to skip town and spend some time with your families.  Not surprisingly, I am, too.  But you know what they say -- it’s the most wonderful press conference of the year -- right now.  (Laughter.)  I am eager to take your questions, but first, I just want to say a few words about our economy.
 
In 2013, our businesses created another 2 million jobs, adding up to more than 8 million in just over the past 45 months. This morning, we learned that over the summer, our economy grew at its strongest pace in nearly two years.  The unemployment rate has steadily fallen to its lowest point in five years.  Our tax code is fairer, and our fiscal situation is firmer, with deficits that are now less than half of what they were when I took office. 
For the first time in nearly two decades, we now produce more oil here at home than we buy from the rest of the world, and our all-of-the-above strategy for new American energy means lower energy costs.  The Affordable Care Act has helped keep health care costs growing at their slowest rate in 50 years.  Combined, that means bigger paychecks for middle-class families and bigger savings for businesses looking to invest and hire here in America.
 
And for all the challenges we’ve had and all the challenges that we've been working on diligently in dealing with both the ACA and the website these past couple months, more than half a million Americans have enrolled through healthcare.gov in the first three weeks of December alone.  In California, for example, a state operating its own marketplace, more than 15,000 Americans are enrolling every single day.  And in the federal website, tens of thousands are enrolling every single day.  Since October 1st, more than one million Americans have selected new health insurance plans through the federal and state marketplaces.  So, all told, millions of Americans, despite the problems with the website, are now poised to be covered by quality, affordable health insurance come New Year’s Day.  Now, this holiday season, there are mothers and fathers and entrepreneurs and workers who have something new to celebrate -- the security of knowing that when the unexpected or misfortune strikes, hardship no longer has to.
 
And you add that all up and what it means is we head into next year with an economy that’s stronger than it was when we started the year.  More Americans are finding work and experiencing the pride of a paycheck.  Our businesses are positioned for new growth and new jobs.  And I firmly believe that 2014 can be a breakthrough year for America.  But as I outlined in detail earlier this month, we all know there’s a lot more that we're going to have to do to restore opportunity and broad-based growth for every American.  And that’s going to require some action.
 
It’s a good start that earlier this week, for the first time in years, both parties in both houses of Congress came together to pass a budget.  That unwinds some of the damaging sequester cuts that created headwinds for our economy.  It clears the path for businesses and for investments that we need to strengthen our middle class, like education and scientific research.  And it means that the American people won’t be exposed to the threat of another reckless shutdown every few months.  So that's a good thing.
 
It’s probably too early to declare an outbreak of bipartisanship.  But it’s also fair to say that we’re not condemned to endless gridlock.  There are areas where we can work together. 
 
I believe that work should begin with something that Republicans in Congress should have done before leaving town this week, and that's restoring the temporary insurance that helps folks make ends meet when they are looking for a job.  Because Congress didn’t act, more than one million of their constituents will lose a vital economic lifeline at Christmastime, leaving a lot of job-seekers without any source of income at all. 
 
I think we’re a better country than that.  We don’t abandon each other when times are tough.  Keep in mind unemployment insurance only goes to folks who are actively looking for work -- a mom who needs help feeding her kids when she sends out her resumes, or a dad who needs help paying the rent while working part-time and still earning the skills he needs for that new job. So when Congress comes back to work, their first order of business should be making this right.  I know a bipartisan group is working on a three-month extension of this insurance.  They should pass it, and I’ll sign it right away. 
 
Let me repeat:  I think 2014 needs to be a year of action.  We’ve got work to do to create more good jobs, to help more Americans earn the skills and education they need to do those jobs and to make sure that those jobs offer the wages and benefits that let families build a little bit of financial security.  We still have the task of finishing the fix on our broken immigration system.  We’ve got to build on the progress we’ve painstakingly made over these last five years with respect to our economy and offer the middle class and all those who are looking to join the middle class a better opportunity, and that's going to be where I focus all of my efforts in the year ahead.
 
And let me conclude by saying just as we're strengthening our position here at home, we're also standing up for our interests around the world.  This year, we’ve demonstrated that with clear-eyed, principled diplomacy, we can pursue new paths to a world that’s more secure -- a future where Iran does not build a nuclear weapon; a future where Syria’s chemical weapons stockpiles are destroyed.  By the end of next year, the war in Afghanistan will be over, just as we’ve ended our war in Iraq, and we’ll continue to bring our troops home.  And, as always, we will remain vigilant to protect our homeland and our personnel overseas from terrorist attacks.
 
Of course, a lot of our men and women in uniform are still overseas, and a lot of them are still spending their Christmas far away from their family and their friends, and in some cases, are still in harm’s way.  So I want to close by saying to them and their families back home, we want to thank you.  Your country stands united in supporting you and being grateful for your service and your sacrifice.  We will keep you in our thoughts and in our prayers during this season of hope.
 
So, before I wish a Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night, I will take some questions.  Jay prepared a list of who’s naughty and nice -- (laughter) -- so we'll see who made it.
 
Julie must be nice.  (Laughter.)  Julie Pace.
 
Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  Despite all of the data points that you cited in your opening statement, when you look back at this year, very little of the domestic agenda that you outlined in your inaugural address and your State of the Union have been achieved.  Health care rollout obviously had huge problems and your ratings from the public are near historic lows for you.  When you take this altogether, has this been the worst year of your presidency?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  I’ve got to tell you, Julie, that’s not how I think about it.  I have now been in office five years -- close to five years -- was running for President for two years before that, and for those of you who’ve covered me during that time, we have had ups and we have had downs.  I think this room has probably recorded at least 15 near-death experiences.  And what I’ve been focused on each and every day is are we moving the ball in helping the American people -- families -- have more opportunity, have a little more security to feel as if, if they work hard, they can get ahead. 
 
And if I look at this past year, there are areas where there obviously have been some frustrations, where I wish Congress had moved more aggressively.  Not passing background checks in the wake of Newtown is something that I continue to believe was a mistake.  But then I also look at because of the debate that occurred, all the work that’s been done at state levels to increase gun safety and to make sure that we don’t see tragedies like that happen again.
 
     There’s a lot of focus on legislative activity at the congressional level, but even when Congress doesn’t move on things they should move on, there are a whole bunch of things that we’re still doing.  So we don’t always get attention for it, but the ConnectEd program that we announced where we’re going to be initiating wireless capacity in every classroom in America will make a huge difference for kids all across this country, and for teachers. 
 
A manufacturing hub that we set up in Youngstown, something that I talked about during the State of the Union, is going to create innovation and connect universities, manufacturers, job training to help create a renaissance -- build on the renaissance that we’re seeing in manufacturing. 
 
     When it comes to energy, this year is going to be the first year in a very long time where we’re producing more oil and natural gas here in this country than we’re importing.  That’s a big deal. 
 
So I understand the point that you’re getting at, Julie, which is that a lot of our legislative initiatives in Congress have not moved forward as rapidly as I’d like.  I completely understand that, which means that I’m going to keep at it.  And if you look at, for example, immigration reform, probably the biggest thing that I wanted to get done this year, we saw progress.  It passed the Senate with a strong bipartisan vote.  There are indications in the House that even though it did not get completed this year that there is a commitment on the part of the Speaker to try to move forward legislation early next year.  And the fact that it didn’t hit the timeline that I’d prefer is obviously frustrating but it’s not something that I end up brooding a lot about.
 
     Q    But, sir, it’s not just your legislative agenda.  When you look at polling and you talk to Americans, they seem to have lost confidence in you, trust in you.  Your credibility has taken a hit.  Obviously the health care law was a big part of that.  So do you understand that the public has changed in some way their view of you over this year?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  But, Julie, I guess what I’m saying is if you’re measuring this by polls, my polls have gone up and down a lot through the course of my career.  I mean, if I was interested in polling, I wouldn't have run for President.  I was polling at 70 percent when I was in the U.S. Senate.  I took this job to deliver for the American people.  And I knew and will continue to know that there are going to be ups and downs on it.
 
     You're right, the health care website problems were a source of great frustration.  I think in the last press conference I adequately discussed my frustrations on those.  On the other hand, since that time I now have a couple million people, maybe more, who are going to have health care on January 1st.  And that is a big deal.  That's why I ran for this office. 
 
And as long as I've got an opportunity every single day to make sure that in ways large and small I'm creating greater opportunity for people -- more kids are able to go to school, get the education they need; more families are able to stabilize their finances; the housing market is continuing to improve; people feel like their wages maybe are inching up a little bit -- if those things are happening, I'll take it. 
 
     And I've said before, I've run my last political race.  So at this point, my goal every single day is just to make sure that I can look back and say we're delivering something -- not everything, because this is a long haul.
 
     Mark Felsenthal.
 
     Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  One of the most significant events of this year was the revelation of the surveillance by the National Security Agency.  As you review how to rein in the National Security Agency, a federal judge said that, for example, the government had failed to cite a single instance in which analysis of the NSA's bulk metadata actually stopped an imminent attack.  Are you able to identify any specific examples when it did so?  Are you convinced that the collection of that data is useful to national security and should continue as it is?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Let me talk more broadly, and then I'll talk specifically about the program you're referring to. 
 
As you know, the independent panel that I put together came back with a series of recommendations, 46 in total.  I had an extensive meeting with them down in the Situation Room to review all the recommendations that they had made.  I want to thank them publicly, because I think they did an excellent job and took my charge very seriously, which is I told them I want you to look from top to bottom at what we're doing and evaluate whether or not the current structures that we have and the current programs that we have are properly addressing both our continuing need to keep ourselves secure and to prevent terrorist attacks, or proliferation of weapons of mass destruction or other threats to the homeland, and are we also making sure that we're taking seriously rule of law and our concerns about privacy and civil liberties.
 
     So what we're doing now is evaluating all the recommendations that have been made.  Over the next several weeks, I'm going to assess based on conversations not just with the intelligence community but others in government and outside of government how we might apply and incorporate their recommendations.  And I'm going to make a pretty definitive statement about all of this in January where I'll be able to say, here are the recommendations that we think make sense; here are ones that we think are promising but still need to be refined further; here's how it relates to the work we're doing not just internally but also in partnership with other countries.  And so I'm taking this very seriously because I think, as I've said before, this is a debate that needed to be had. 
 
One specific program, the 215 program, is the metadata, the bulk collection of phone numbers and exchanges that have taken place that has probably gotten the most attention, at least with respect to domestic audiences.  And what I've said in the past continues to be the case, which is that the NSA, in executing this program, believed, based on experiences from 9/11, that it was important for us to be able to track if there was a phone number of a known terrorist outside of the United States calling into the United States, where that call might have gone, and that having that data in one place and retained for a certain period of time allowed them to be confident in pursuing various investigations of terrorist threats.
 
And I think it's important to note that in all the reviews of this program that have been done, in fact, there have not been actual instances where it's been alleged that the NSA in some ways acted inappropriately in the use of this data.  But what is also clear is from the public debate, people are concerned about the prospect, the possibility of abuse.  And I think that’s what the judge and the district court suggested.  And although his opinion obviously differs from rulings on the FISA Court, we're taking those into account.
 
The question we're going to have to ask is can we accomplish the same goals that this program is intended to accomplish in ways that give the public more confidence that, in fact, the NSA is doing what it's supposed to be doing.  I have confidence in the fact that the NSA is not engaging in domestic surveillance or snooping around, but I also recognize that as technologies change and people can start running algorithms and programs that map out all the information that we're downloading on a daily basis into our telephones and our computers, that we may have to refine this further to give people more confidence.  And I'm going to be working very hard on doing that.
 
And we've got to provide more confidence to the international community.  In some ways, what has been more challenging is the fact that we do have a lot of laws and checks and balances and safeguards and audits when it comes to making sure that the NSA and other intelligence agencies are not spying on Americans.  We’ve had less legal constraint in terms of what we’re doing internationally.  But I think part of what’s been interesting about this whole exercise is recognizing that in a virtual world, some of these boundaries don’t matter anymore, and just because we can do something doesn’t mean we necessarily should.  And the values that we’ve got as Americans are ones that we have to be willing to apply beyond our borders I think perhaps more systematically than we’ve done in the past.
 
     Okay?  Ed Henry.
 
     Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  I want to follow up on that because -- and merry Christmas, by the way.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Merry Christmas to you.
 
     Q    When Edward Snowden first started leaking the information, you made a statement on June 7th in California, and you claimed to the American people that you had already reformed many of these surveillance programs.  You said you came into office -- “my team evaluated them, we scrubbed them thoroughly, we actually expanded some of the oversight,” and you did expand some of it.  
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Yes.
 
     Q    You also said we may have to rebalance some, there may be changes.  But you concluded with, “You can complain about Big Brother and how this is a potential program run amok.  But when you actually look at the details, then I think we’ve struck the right balance.”  That was only six months ago.  Now this judge is saying no, your own panel is saying no, even you’re saying no, we haven’t really struck the right balance perhaps, that changes have to be made.  My question is:  Were you wrong then because you were not fully read in not just on these programs but on other programs outside of the ones you just talked about, where we were potentially listening in on the German leaders, the Brazilian leaders and others, that suggest there were abuses?  Number one. 
 
     And number two, if you were fully read in on these programs, is it another example of what Julie was getting at with this question of credibility with the American people, that just like on health care, “you like your plan, you can keep it”?  On surveillance, you looked the American people in the eye six months ago and said, “We’ve got the right balance,” and six months later you’re saying maybe not.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, hold on a second, Ed.  I think it’s important to note that when it comes to the right balance on surveillance, these are a series of judgment calls that we’re making every single day, because we’ve got a whole bunch of folks whose job it is to make sure that the American people are protected.  And that’s a hard job, because if something slips, then the question that’s coming from you the next day at a press conference is, “Mr. President, why didn’t you catch that?  Why did the intelligence people allow that to slip?  Isn’t there a way that we could have found out that in fact this terrorist attack took place?”
 
     Q    so why were you so -- why did you say we struck the right balance?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  So the point is, Ed, not that my assessment of the 215 program has changed in terms of technically how it works.  What is absolutely clear to me is that given the public debate that’s taken place and the disclosures that have taken place over the last several months, that this is only going to work if the American people have confidence and trust. 
 
     Now, part of the challenge is, is that because of the manner in which these disclosures took place, in dribs and drabs, oftentimes shaded in a particular way, and because of some of the constraints that we’ve had in terms of declassifying information and getting it out there, that that trust in how many safeguards exist and how these programs are run has been diminished.  So what’s going to be important is to build that back up.  And I take that into account in weighing how we structure these programs. 
 
     So let me just be very specific on the 215 program.  It is possible, for example, that some of the same information that the intelligence community feels is required to keep people safe can be obtained by having the private phone companies keep these records longer and to create some mechanism where they can be accessed in an effective fashion. 
 
That might cost more.  There might need to be different checks on how those requests are made.  There may be technological solutions that have to be found to do that.  And the question that we’re asking ourselves now is, does that make sense not only because of the fact that there are concerns about potential abuse down the road with the metadata that’s being kept by a government rather than private companies, but also does it make sense to do it because people right now are concerned that maybe their phone calls are being listened to, even if they’re not?  And we’ve got to factor that in.
 
     So my point is, is that the environment has changed in ways that I think require us to take that into account.  But the analysis that I’ve been doing throughout has always been periodically looking at what we’re doing and asking ourselves, are we doing this in the right way?  Are we making sure that we’re keeping the American people safe, number one?  Are we also being true to our civil liberties and our privacy and our values?
 
     Q    I understand it’s a tough job, and, God forbid, there’s another terror attack, every one of us is going to be second-guessing you, and that is extremely difficult to be in the Oval Office.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  That’s okay.  I volunteered.
 
     Q    But as you said, you took that on. 
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Yes.
 
     Q    You put it on your back.  And so my question is do you have any personal regrets?  You’re not addressing the fact the public statements you’ve made to reassure the public -- your Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, months ago went up, got a question from a Democrat, not a Republican, about whether some of this was going on, and he denied it.  Doesn’t that undermine the public trust?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Ed, you're conflating, first of all, me and Mr. Clapper --
 
     Q    He's the Director of National -- he's still on the job.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  I understand.  But what I'm saying is this, that, yes, these are tough problems that I am glad to have the privilege of tackling.  Your initial question was whether the statements that I made six months ago are ones that I don't stand by.  And what I'm saying is, is that the statements I made then are entirely consistent with the statements that I make now, which is that we believed that we had scrubbed these programs and struck an appropriate balance, and there had not been evidence and there continues not to be evidence that the particular program had been abused in how it was used, and that it was a useful tool, working with other tools that the intelligence community has, to ensure that if we have a thread on a potential terrorist threat, that that can be followed effectively.
 
     What I've also said, though, is that in light of the disclosures that have taken place, it is clear that whatever benefits the configuration of this particular program may have may be outweighed by the concerns that people have on its potential abuse.  And if that's the case, there may be another way of skinning the cat.
 
     So we just keep on going at this stuff and saying, can we do this better?  Can we do this more effectively?  I think that the panel's recommendations are consistent with that.  So if you had a chance to read the overall recommendations, what they were very clear about is we need this intelligence.  We can't unilaterally disarm.  There are ways we can do it potentially that gives people greater assurance that there are checks and balances, that there's sufficient oversight, sufficient transparency.  Programs like 215 could be redesigned in ways that give you the same information when you need it without creating these potentials for abuse. 
 
And that's exactly what we should be doing, is to evaluate all these things in a very clear, specific way, and moving forward on changes.  And that's what I intend to do.
 
     Q    So you have no regrets?  You have no regrets?
    
     THE PRESIDENT:  That's what I intend to do.
 
     Jon Karl. 
 
     Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  It's been a tough year.  You may not want to call it the worst year of your presidency, but it's clearly been a tough year.  The polls have gone up and down, but they are at a low point right now.  So what I'm asking you -- you've acknowledged the difficulties with the health care rollout.  But when you look back and you look at the decisions that you have made and what you did, what you didn't do, for you personally, what do you think has been your biggest mistake?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  With respect to health care, specifically, or just generally?
 
     Q    The whole thing, back at this tough year.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Well, there's no doubt that when it came to the health care rollout, even though I was meeting every other week or every three weeks with folks and emphasizing how important it was that consumers had a good experience, an easy experience in getting the information they need, and knowing what the choices and options were for them to be able to get high-quality, affordable health care, the fact is it didn't happen in the first month, the first six weeks, in a way that was at all acceptable.  And since I'm in charge, obviously we screwed it up.
 
     Part of it, as I've said before, had to do with how IT procurement generally is done, and it almost predates this year. Part of it, obviously, has to do with the fact that there were not clear enough lines of authority in terms of who was in charge of the technology and cracking the whip on a whole bunch of contractors.  So there were a whole bunch of things that we've been taking a look at, and I'm going to be making appropriate adjustments once we get through this year and we've gotten through the initial surge of people who’ve been signing up.
 
     But having said all that, bottom line also is, is that we've got several million people who are going to have health care that works.  And it's not that I don't engage in a lot of self-reflection here.  I promise you, I probably beat myself up even worse than you or Ed Henry does on any given day.  But I've also got to wake up in the morning and make sure that I do better the next day, and that we keep moving forward. 
 
     And when I look at the landscape for next year, what I say to myself is, we're poised to do really good things.  The economy is stronger than it has been in a very long time.  Our next challenge then is to make sure that everybody benefits from that, not just a few folks.  And there are still too many people who haven't seen a raise and are still feeling financially insecure. 
     We can get immigration reform done.  We've got a concept that has bipartisan support.  Let's see if we can break through the politics on this. 
 
     I think that, hopefully, folks have learned their lesson in terms of brinksmanship, coming out of the government shutdown.  There have been times where I thought about, were there other ways that I could have prevented those three, four weeks that hampered the economy and hurt individual families who were not getting a paycheck during that time -- absolutely.  But I also think that, in some ways, given the pattern that we had been going through with House Republicans for a while, we might have needed just a little bit of a bracing sort of recognition that this is not what the American people think is acceptable.  They want us to try to solve problems and be practical, even if we can’t get everything done.
 
     So the end of the year is always a good time to reflect and see what can you do better next year.  That’s how I intend to approach it.  I’m sure that I will have even better ideas after a couple days of sleep and sun. 
 
     Brianna.
 
     Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  On the debt ceiling, your Treasury Secretary has estimated that the U.S. government will lose its ability to pay its bills come late February or early March.  House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan has said that “Republicans are going to decide what it is they can accomplish on this debt limit fight” -- his words.  Will you negotiate with House Republicans on the debt ceiling?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, Brianna, you know the answer to this question.  No, we’re not going to negotiate for Congress to pay bills that it has accrued. 
 
Here’s the good news -- I want to emphasize the positive as we enter into this holiday season.  I think Congressman Ryan and Senator Murray did a good job in trying to narrow the differences and actually pass a budget that I can sign.  It’s not everything that I would like, obviously.  It buys back part of these across-the-board cuts, the so-called sequester, but not all of them.  So we’re still underfunding research; we’re still underfunding education; we’re still underfunding transportation and other initiatives that would create jobs right now. 
 
But it was an honest conversation.  They operated in good faith.  And given how far apart the parties have been on fiscal issues, they should take pride in what they did.  And I actually called them after they struck the deal and I said congratulations, and I hope that creates a good pattern for next year, where we work on at least the things we agree to, even if we agree to disagree on some of the other big-ticket items.
 
     I think immigration potentially falls in that category, where let’s -- here’s an area where we’ve got bipartisan agreement.  There are a few differences here and there, but the truth of the matter is, is that the Senate bill has the main components of comprehensive immigration reform that would boost our economy, give us an opportunity to attract more investment and high-skilled workers who are doing great things in places like Silicon Valley and around the country.  So let’s go ahead and get that done.
 
     Now, I can’t imagine that having seen this possible daylight breaking when it comes to cooperation in Congress that folks are thinking actually about plunging us back into the kinds of brinksmanship and governance by crisis that has done us so much harm over the last couple of years. 
 
To repeat:  The debt ceiling is raised simply to pay bills that we have already accrued.  It is not something that is a negotiating tool.  It's not leverage.  It's the responsibility of Congress.  It's part of doing their job.  I expect them to do their job.  Although I'm happy to talk to them about any of the issues that they actually want to get done.  So if Congressman Ryan is interested in tax reform, let's go.  I've got some proposals on it.  If he's interested in any issue out there, I'm willing to have a constructive conversation of the sort that we just had in resolving the budget issues.  But I've got to assume folks aren't crazy enough to start that thing all over again.
 
Q    If I may just quickly, on a more personal note, what is your New Year's resolution?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  My New Year's resolution is to be nicer to the White House Press Corps.  (Laughter.)  You know?  Absolutely.
 
Q    All right. 
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Major Garrett. 
 
Q    That's quite a lead-in, Mr. President, thank you.  Rick Leggett, who is the head of the NSA task force on Edward Snowden, told "60 Minutes" that it was, "worth having a conversation about granting Edward Snowden amnesty."  To what degree, sir, were you pleased that he floated this trial balloon?  And under what circumstances would you consider either a plea agreement or amnesty for Edward Snowden?  And what do you say to Americans, sir, who after possibly being alerted to Judge Leon's decision earlier this week, reading the panel recommendations, do you believe Edward Snowden set in motion something that is proper and just in this country about the scope of surveillance and should not be considered by this government a criminal?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  I've got to be careful here, Major, because Mr. Snowden is under indictment, he's been charged with crimes. And that's the province of the Attorney General and, ultimately, a judge and a jury.  So I can't weigh in specifically on this case at this point.  I'll make -- I'll try to see if I can get at the spirit of the question, even if I can't talk about the specifics.
 
I've said before and I believe that this is an important conversation that we needed to have.  I've also said before that the way in which these disclosures happened have been damaging to the United States and damaging to our intelligence capabilities. And I think that there was a way for us to have this conversation without that damage. 
 
I'll give you just one specific example.  The fact of the matter is that the United States, for all our warts, is a country that abides by rule of law, that cares deeply about privacy, that cares about civil liberties, that cares about our Constitution.  And as a consequence of these disclosures, we've got countries who actually do the things that Mr. Snowden says he's worried about very explicitly -- engaging in surveillance of their own citizens, targeting political dissidents, targeting and suppressing the press -- who somehow are able to sit on the sidelines and act as if it's the United States that has problems when it comes to surveillance and intelligence operations.  And that’s a pretty distorted view of what's going on out there.
 
So I think that as important and as necessary as this debate has been, it is also important to keep in mind that this has done unnecessary damage to U.S. intelligence capabilities and U.S. diplomacy.  But I will leave it up to the courts and the Attorney General to weigh in publicly on the specifics of Mr. Snowden's case.
 
Q    Sir, if I could follow up, Mr. Leggett is setting this in motion, at least raising this as a topic of conversation.  You, sir, would I'm certain be consulted if there was ever going to be a conversation about amnesty or a plea bargain with Edward Snowden.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  I think that’s true, Major, and I guess what I'm saying is there's a --
 
Q    Would you rule it out forever that you would never consider it?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  What I'm saying is, is that there's a difference between Mr. Leggett saying something and the President of the United States saying something.
 
Q    That’s why I'm trying to get at you.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  That’s exactly right.  (Laughter.) 
 
Chuck Todd.
 
Q    Thank you, Mr. President, and Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.  You talk about the issues with health care and the website rollout, but there have been other issues -- the misinformation about people keeping their policies, the extended deadlines, some postponements.  We have a new waiver that HHS announced last night.  How do you expect Americans to have confidence and certainty in this law if you keep changing it?  This one here, this new waiver last night, you could argue you might as well have just delayed the mandate.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, no, that’s not true, because what we're talking about is a very specific population that received cancellation notices from insurance companies.  The majority of them are either keeping their old plan because the grandfather clause has been extended further, or they're finding a better deal in the marketplace with better insurance for cheaper costs. 
But there may still be a subset -- a significantly smaller subset than some of the numbers that have been advertised -- that are still looking for options, are still concerned about what they're going to be doing next year.  And we just wanted to make sure that the hardship provision that was already existing in the law would also potentially apply to somebody who had problems during this transition period.  So that’s the specifics of this latest change. 
 
You're making a broader point that I think is fair and that is that in a big project like this, that what we are constantly doing is looking, is this working the way it's supposed to, and if there are adjustments that can be made to smooth out the transition, we should make them.  But they don’t go to the core of the law.
 
First of all, the core of the law is, is that for 85 percent of the population, all they've been getting is free preventive care, better consumer protections, and ability to keep their kids on their insurance plan until they're 26, thousand-dollar or five hundred-dollar discounts on prescription drugs for seniors on Medicare.  So 85 percent of the population, whether they know it or not, over the last three years have benefited from a whole set of the provisions of the law.  And, by the way, if it were to be repealed, you would be taking away all those benefits from folks who already are enjoying them.
 
You had this sub-portion of the population, 15 percent, who either don’t have health insurance or are buying it on the individual market.  And that’s still millions of people.  And what we’re doing is creating a marketplace where they can buy insurance and we can provide them some tax credits to help them afford it. 
 
     The basic structure of that law is working despite all the problems -- despite the website problems, despite the messaging problems.  Despite all that, it’s working.  And again, you don’t have to take my word for it.  We’ve got a couple million people who are going to have health insurance just in the first three months, despite the fact that probably the first month and a half was lost because of problems with the website and about as bad a bunch of publicity as you could imagine.  And yet you’ve still got 2 million people who signed up, or more. 
 
     And so what that means then is that the demand is there and, as I said before, the product is good.  Now, in putting something like this together, there are going to be all kinds of problems that crop up, some of which may have been unanticipated.  And what we’ve been trying to do is just respond to them in a common-sense way.  And we’re going to continue to try to do that.  But that doesn’t negate the fact that a year from now or two years from now, when we look back, we’re going to be able to say that even more people have health insurance who didn’t have it before. And that’s not a bad thing, that’s a good thing.  That is part of the reason why I pushed so hard to get this law done in the first place. 
 
And I’ve said before this is a messy process, and I think sometimes when I say that people say, well, A, yes, it’s real messy; and B, isn’t the fact that it’s been so messy some indication that there are more fundamental problems with the law? And I guess what I’d say to that, Chuck, is when you try to do something this big, affecting this many people, it’s going to be hard.  And every instance -- whether it’s Social Security, Medicare, the prescription drug plan under President Bush -- there hasn’t been an instance where you tried to really have an impact on the American people’s lives and wellbeing, particularly in the health care arena, where you don’t end up having some of these challenges.  The question is going to be ultimately, do we make good decisions trying to help as many people as possible in as efficient a way as possible.  And I think that’s what we’re doing.
 
Q    But with 72 hours to go, you make this change where people are buying the junk -- frankly, a junk-type policy that you weren’t -- you were trying to get people away from.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, keep in mind, Chuck, first of all, that the majority of folks are going to have different options.  This is essentially a additional net in case folks might have slipped through the cracks.  We don’t have precision on those numbers, but we expect it’s going to be a relatively small number, because these are folks who want insurance and the vast majority of them have good options.  And in a state like North Carolina, for example, the overwhelming majority of them have just kept their own plans -- the ones that they had previously.
 
But we thought and continue to think that it makes sense that as we are transitioning to a system in which insurance standards are higher, people don’t have unpleasant surprises because they thought they had insurance until they hit a limit, and next thing you know they still owe $100,000 or $200,000 or $300,000 for a hospital visit -- that as we transition to higher standards, better insurance, that we also address folks who get caught in that transition and there are unintended consequences.
 
And I’ll be -- that was the original intent of the grandfather clause that was in the law.  Obviously, the problem was it didn’t catch enough people.  And we learned from that, and we’re trying not to repeat those mistakes.
 
Q    So does the mandate need to be enforced?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  Yes.
 
Let’s see, Phil Mattingly.
 
Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  What was the message you were trying to send with not only your decision not to attend the Sochi Games, but also with the people you named to the delegation to represent the United States at those games?
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, I haven’t attended Olympics in the past, and I suspect that me attending the Olympics, particularly at a time when we’ve got all the other stuff that people have been talking about, is going to be tough, although I would love to do it.  I’ll be going to a lot of Olympic Games post-presidency.  (Laughter.)  I think the delegation speaks for itself.  You’ve got outstanding Americans, outstanding athletes, people who will represent us extraordinarily well. 
 
And the fact that we’ve got folks like Billie Jean King or Brian Boitano, who themselves have been world-class athletes that everybody acknowledges for their excellence but also for their character, who also happen to be members of the LGBT community, you should take that for what it's worth -- that when it comes to the Olympics and athletic performance, we don't make distinctions on the basis of sexual orientation.  We judge people on how they perform, both on the court and off the court -- on the field and off the field.  And that's a value that I think is at the heart of not just America, but American sports.
 
     I'm going to just roll down these last few, real quickly.  Ari Shapiro.  Last day at the White House.  He deserves a question.  (Laughter.) 
 
     Q    Thank you very much, Mr. President.  Senator Max Baucus was widely seen as the best hope for a large-scale deal to overhaul the tax code.  What does your decision to nominate him as ambassador to China say about your hopes for major tax bill in your second term?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  It says that Max Baucus is going to be an outstanding ambassador to China, and I'd like a swift confirmation.  And my expectation and hope is, is that if both the Senate Democrats -- or if Democrats and Republicans in the House and the Senate are serious about tax reform, then it's not going to depend on one guy, it's going to depend on all of us working together.  And my office is ready, willing, and eager to engage both parties and having a conversation about how we can simplify the tax code, make it fairer, make it work to create more jobs and do right by middle-class Americans.
 
     Jackie Calmes.
 
     Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  And how do you say it in Hawaii?  Mele Kalikimaka?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Mele Kalikimaka.  (Laughter.) 
 
     Q    Since we've been looking back at the year, I'd like to ask you what your reaction was to the nonpartisan truth-telling group, PolitiFact, when it said that the lie of the year was your statement that if you like your health care plan, you can keep it. 
 
     And related to the health care problems that we've seen over the past year, the fallout from that seems to be making Democrats, particularly in the Senate, a little rambunctious and independent of you, which is evidenced most clearly in the debate over the Iran sanctions.  It looks like Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has expedited consideration of an Iran sanctions bill for January, even as your administration -- and you have been trying to get them to lay off sanctions while your --
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  Jackie, I've got to say, you're stringing a bunch of things along here.  Let's see if we can hone in on a question.  I mean, I --
 
     Q    Two questions.  That's a lot less than Ed Henry had.  (Laughter.) 
 
     Q    Oh!  I thought we were trying to get along for Christmas.  (Laughter.)   
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  How about I separate out the Iran question from the health care question?  On the health care question, look, I think I've answered several times -- this is a new iteration of it -- but bottom line is that we are going to continue to work every single day to make sure that implementation of the health care law and the website and all elements of it, including the grandfather clause, work better every single day.  And as I've said in previous press conferences, we're going to make mistakes, and we're going to have problems, but my intentions have been clear throughout, which is, I just want to help as many people as possible feel secure and make sure that they don't go broke when they get sick. And we're going to just keep on doing that.
 
     On Iran, there is the possibility of a resolution to a problem that has been a challenge for American national security for over a decade now, and that is getting Iran to, in a verifiable fashion, not pursue a nuclear weapon.  Already, even with the interim deal that we struck in Geneva, we had the first halt and, in some cases, some rollback of Iran's nuclear capabilities -- the first time that we've seen that in almost a decade.  And we now have a structure in which we can have a very serious conversation to see is it possible for Iran to get right with the international community in a verifiable fashion to give us all confidence that any peaceful nuclear program that they have is not going to be weaponized in a way that threatens us or allies in the region, including Israel.
 
     And as I've said before and I will repeat, it is very important for us to test whether that's possible, not because it's guaranteed, but because the alternative is possibly us having to engage in some sort of conflict to resolve the problem with all kinds of unintended consequences. 
 
Now, I've been very clear from the start, I mean what I say: It is my goal to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. But I sure would rather do it diplomatically.  I’m keeping all options on the table, but if I can do it diplomatically, that’s how we should do it.  And I would think that would be the preference of everybody up on Capitol Hill because that sure is the preference of the American people. 
 
And we lose nothing during this negotiation period.   Precisely because there are verification provisions in place, we will have more insight into Iran’s nuclear program over the next six months than we have previously.  We’ll know if they are violating the terms of the agreement.  They’re not allowed to accelerate their stockpile of enriched uranium -- in fact, they have to reduce their stockpile of highly enriched uranium. 
 
Ironically, if we did not have this six-month period in which we’re testing whether we can get a comprehensive solution to this problem, they’d be advancing even further on their nuclear program.  And in light of all that, what I’ve said to members of Congress -- Democrats and Republicans -- is there is no need for new sanctions legislation.  Not yet. 
 
Now, if Iran comes back and says, we can’t give you assurances that we’re not going to weaponize, if they’re not willing to address some of their capabilities that we know could end up resulting in them having breakout capacity, it’s not going to be hard for us to turn the dials back, strengthen sanctions even further.  I’ll work with members of Congress to put even more pressure on Iran.  But there’s no reason to do it right now. 
And so I’m not surprised that there’s been some talk from some members of Congress about new sanctions -- I think the politics of trying to look tough on Iran are often good when you’re running for office or if you’re in office.  But as President of the United States right now, who’s been responsible over the last four years, with the help of Congress, in putting together a comprehensive sanctions regime that was specifically designed to put pressure on them and bring them to the table to negotiate -- what I’m saying to them, what I’ve said to the international community, and what I’ve said to the American people is let’s test it.  Now is the time to try to see if we can get this thing done.  
 
And I’ve heard some logic that says, well, Mr. President, we’re supportive of the negotiations, but we think it’s really useful to have this club hanging over Iran’s head.  Well, first of all, we still have the existing sanctions already in place that are resulting in Iran losing billions of dollars every month in lost oil sales.  We already have banking and financial sanctions that are still being applied even as the negotiations are taking place.  It's not as if we're letting up on that.
 
     I've heard arguments, well, but this way we can be assured and the Iranians will know that if negotiations fail even new and harsher sanctions will be put into place.  Listen, I don't think the Iranians have any doubt that Congress would be more than happy to pass more sanctions legislation.  We can do that in a day, on a dime.  But if we're serious about negotiations, we've got to create an atmosphere in which Iran is willing to move in ways that are uncomfortable for them and contrary to their ideology and rhetoric and their instincts and their suspicions of us.  And we don't help get them to a position where we can actually resolve this by engaging in this kind of action.  
 
     Okay, everybody, I think I'm going to take one more question.  Colleen McCain Nelson.  And that is it.
 
     Q    Thank you, Mr. President.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  There you are.
 
     Q    Some of your longtime advisors are leaving the White House and new folks are coming in.  Others are taking on new roles in the West Wing.  As you reshape your team a bit, how does that change the dynamic here and how does it impact what you think you can accomplish going forward?
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  I just had lunch with Pete Rouse, who is leaving me.  And that's tough.
 
     Q    He says so.
 
     THE PRESIDENT:  He says so right now at least.  I love that guy and that will be a significant loss, although he'll still be in town and, hopefully, I'll be able to consult with him on an ongoing basis. 
 
I think the fact that John Podesta is coming in will be terrific.  He may deny it, but I've been trying to get him in here for quite some time.  He ran my transition office.  I asked him when he was running the transition office if he would be willing to join us, and at that time I think he was still feeling that he wanted to develop CAP and other organizations.  But John is a great strategist, as good as anybody on domestic policy.  And I think he'll be a huge boost to us and give us more bandwidth to deal with more issues.
 
I suspect that we may have additional announcements in the New Year.  There's a natural turnover that takes place.  People get tired.  People get worn out.  Sometimes, you need fresh legs.
 
But what I can tell you is that the team I have now is tireless and shares my values, and believes the thing that I think I've repeated probably four or five times in this press conference, which is we get this incredible privilege for a pretty short period of time to do as much as we can for as many people as we can to help them live better lives.  And that’s what drives them.  That’s the sacrifice they make being away from families and soccer games and birthdays, and some of them will end up working over Christmas on issues like Iran.  And the fact that they make those kinds of sacrifices I'm always grateful for. And if they then say to me after making those sacrifices for three, four, five years, I need a break, then I completely understand. 
 
All right?  Have a great holiday, everybody.  Appreciate you. 
 
Q    Merry Christmas.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Merry Christmas.  Happy New Year. 
    
 
                        END           3:20 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the First Lady

REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY AT TOYS FOR TOTS SERVICE PROJECT

Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling Washington, D.C.

2:38 P.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  Hello everyone, how are you all doing?  You excited?  It's almost Christmas!  Do you feel the excitement? 

CHILDREN:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  Are you guys out of school yet?  Are you on vacation? 

CHILDREN:  No.

MRS. OBAMA:  When do you get out?  On Friday, tomorrow?

CHILDREN:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  Will you be excited about that?

CHILDREN:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, me too.  Thumbs up, thumbs up.  (Laughter.) 

Well it is always a pleasure to be here with you all.  And I just want to say on behalf of my family, what we do is a drop in the bucket of what happens -- what you all do to make this happen.  And it is always an honor and a privilege for me to play this small role to do whatever I can to lift up this effort at the very end of the drive to make sure that we get our numbers and that folks are aware. 

But I want to start by, of course, thanking Lieutenant General Osman, not just for his kind introduction, but for his passionate leadership of Toys for Tots.  He is a phenomenal spokesperson, and a true believer in the meaning of Christmas, and that is giving back to families and children in need.  So I think we should give him a round of applause.  (Applause.)  It's always a pleasure working with you. 

And I also want to recognize Staff Sergeant Perez -- yes, indeed -- (applause) -- who is leading up this effort.  As you all know, she is your fearless leader in this effort, and you all sacrifice so much I'm sure your family hasn't seen much of you because you've been here making this happen.  So I want to personally thank you, as well as all of the other Marines who have been a part of this effort.  You all are outstanding individuals, and I'm very proud and honored. 

I also want to thank Lieutenant Colonel Strickland as well, for his outstanding leadership not just here in Washigton, but across this country; and also, Captain Calandra for hosting us here at Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling today.  Thank you, as always.  It's good to be back.  It feels like home.  So thank you for making this happen. 

One other thing that I want to mention -- I hear that there are four Marines at this base that just returned home from Afghanistan last week, right in time for the holidays.  So I just want to take a moment to say on behalf of myself and my husband, your Commander-In-Chief, welcome home.  We're glad to have you back.  Where are -- do we have these individuals here?  Let's see who you are.  Yes!  (Applause.)  Welcome home.  We've got five of them.  We are so proud.  We are grateful for your service.  And we're just so glad you could be home in time for the holidays.  Thank you all so much, we're really proud.  And thank your families, as well. 

And finally, I want to thank all of you and all of the volunteers and donors for Toys for Tots running year after year.  One thing I always say is that I don’t know if people realize everything it takes to make this happen -- the thousands of hours that go into making this drive possible.  I think people just see the nice commercials, they donate a toy, and they think magically it just happens. 

But the truth is that you all spend hours manning those donation boxes in the freezing cold, you then spend hundreds of hours sorting those toys by age so that it make it easier for those toys to get to the kids that need them.  And then you do the work of actually getting those toys out there.  It is a herculean task, and you all do it with grace and poise and efficiency, just like the Marines.  So it's good that you all are handling this.

And because of all of you, the work that you do, Toys for Tots has grown from collecting 5,000 toys starting back in 1947 when this program, this initiative first started, to collecting nearly 16.8 million toys last year.  That’s how much this effort has grown over the decades, and it's because of you.

And that kind of success, the kind of dedication to the mission and your commitment to service, that’s really the reflection of the spirit that I see in military families all across this country.  That’s why one of my most important issues is working for your families, Jill Biden and I.  Because we see that commitment and dedication in every single thing you do.  And the holiday season is just one more reason for you all to find a reason to serve this nation. 

And I always want people to know that you're doing this on top of the stresses and challenges that you all face just every day as families -- don’t worry about it.  Your mom is about to get you.  (Laughter.)  They are still children.  I see you, you've got a dagger in the back of his head.  (Laughter.)  You've got to watch it.  Mom's still watching you.  (Laughter.)  But the kids are involved, too, because while you're doing this work, you're not spending time with them.

What most people have to understand is these men and women and their spouses, they're doing this maybe in the face of the fifth or sixth deployment that their family is experiencing.  You're doing it all on top of maybe trying to still unpack from your most recent move to another base.  You're trying to get your lives in order, scrambling once again to enroll your kids in another school.  Maybe your spouse has just returned home and your family is still readjusting.

Most people don’t understand that you do all of this service on top of all of the challenges that you face as servicemembers and as military families.  And that’s the example that I think the rest of the country needs to see -- that even in the midst of your challenges, you find a way to give back to those less fortunate. 

And that’s what makes me proud.  That’s what makes me want to step up and do whatever I can to support this effort and to support you all as men and women, and as young men and women -- young heroes, our military kids, who do so much sacrificing.  And I really don’t know how you all do it.  I am amazed, I'm fascinated.  But I am grateful that you are who you are, and that you make those sacrifices. 

So I just want to make sure that while we have our press here that we make sure that people know that Toys for Tots is still looking for donations.  We are -- these folks work until the bitter end.  And if you want to donate, you can go to the Toys for Tots website, you can donate online.  Or you can look up the nearest location in your community online, and just use the drop-off method. 

I try to emphasize each year sort of the age groups that are falling short, and I understand from General Osman that this year, we're still looking for gifts for kids -- young infants 0-2.  Those are the gifts that folks need.  And also, I always try to make a push for our teenagers, because oftentimes we forget that these families are made of all ages.  And it's fun to buy the Barbie doll and the cute little toy, but there are a lot of young people out there who are going to need toys and who go without. 

And that’s one of the areas -- when we do donations from our family, we try to hit the teenage market.  I've got teenagers, and if anybody is thinking of ideas, just think of your own teen, what do they need.  They want clothes; girls want makeup; maybe they need a nice pair of shoes, a good coat, any kind of electronic gadget, something for their education.  Just think about what your teens need, and that’s the same thing that these young people need on this holiday season.

So I hope, for those of you who are still out there watching, that you know these donations are real.  They go to real families.  And we need your help and support.  So go to the Toys for Tots website and make it happen.  We still have a few more days, right, to make it happen.

So again, I want to thank you all.  And I think it's time for us to get to work, don’t you think?  We're going to start with the young people in the front row.  I'm going to come and collect some gifts from you guys, and then we'll get to sorting. 

You guys, thank you again.  Happy holidays.  You all be safe, be good -- because Santa is still watching.  (Laughter.)

                        END                2:47 P.M. EST

###

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President and First Lady after Meeting with Moms on the Affordable Care Act

Oval Office

2:54 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Michelle and I just had a wonderful conversation with this group of moms and one aunt who have been working tirelessly out there on behalf of our mission, which is to make sure that everybody in America, regardless of where they live, their background, that they are able to get high-quality health care coverage that provides them with financial protection and looks after them when they get sick.

And obviously, over the last couple of months, we had a rocky start with the website and all this.  Despite that, we've seen hundreds of thousands of people signing up, more and more every single day, in part because we've got these wonderful folks like the people we met with today who are out there telling their personal stories -- what it’s like when a son gets sick and you have to make sure that not only are you providing the care that they need now, but also making sure that in the future they’re going to be able to get health care because they’ve got a preexisting condition; knowing what it’s like to be in a position where your child is transitioning from college to the workplace and maybe their first job is part-time or they’re working two part-time jobs, so they’re doing everything they can to be responsible but they still can't get health care on the job. 

And I think this conversation really drove home in a very personal way why this is important.  Sometimes here in Washington, this is a very abstract conversation or an entirely political conversation.  But when you boil it down to stories and people hear what it means to have the security of solid health insurance at an affordable price when you need it, it reminds me at least of why we've been fighting so hard to get this done. 

And we anticipate that there’s still going to be challenges over the coming months and we're going to continue to find ways to smooth out this transition and make sure that people know what the Affordable Care Act is actually about.  But we're absolutely confident that the demand is there, the need is there, and the more people learn about the fact that we've got 3 million young people who are able to stay on their parents’ plan until they’re 26, or the more they learn about the free preventive care that can avoid illness in the first place, or the more that they hear about the fact that there are no lifetime limits so if you end up having a really severe illness you're not going to be hurt with a bunch of fine print -- the more information they get I think the more satisfied they’re going to be that this was the right thing to do and that it’s been worth the fight.

And the last point I would just make -- and I know, Michelle, you want to say a little bit -- is what we communicated to the women here is there’s something about moms -- (laughter)  -- that, number one, they’ve got credibility generally; number two, women oftentimes are the ones who are making the health care decisions of the family; number three, moms can tell young people who think they’re invincible that they’re not and prod them to at least get information.

So as much as here in the White House we're going to continue to promote the Affordable Care Act, as much as we're going to be working hard with other organizations like AARP and others around the country to make sure people are signing up, nothing can replace the story that Mary Todd is telling in the grocery store to somebody who may be skeptical.  And that kind of face-to-face interaction makes this concrete and it describes exactly why this is so important.

So I just want to say to all the women here who have been telling their stories and working with others to make sure that people get good information, we are grateful.  It’s a great gift, what you're doing, and we're really, really appreciative. 

MRS. OBAMA:  The words that come to mind for me are peace of mind.  And what the Affordable Care Act provides and can provide for so many families out there is peace of mind.  This isn't about politics; it’s about making sure that every family has the peace of mind to know that if a child gets sick, or someone loses a job, or someone has an illness that requires hundreds of thousands of dollars in coverage, that they’re going to have the safety net that they need to make sure that they don't lose their home, that they aren't spending the rest of their lives paying off medical fees. 

And as Barack said, your stories are powerful.  And it’s our job as mothers to make sure that our young people are informed about their “invincibility,” to make sure that other moms and families out there really understand what this law provides and that they can take advantage of it.  This is the beauty of it.  People have choices.  They can go on to the website; they can talk to a navigator; they can learn for themselves what the law means and what it doesn’t mean.  And that's really, really what we want people to do, is educate yourselves.  Get that education. Make the choice that's best for your family, because the options are there.

So we are, again, very grateful to you all.  And we urge everyone out there who has a story to share it.  And we urge people to reach out.  And if they’ve signed up their child, then sign up their friends.  If you’ve got grandkids, make it a Christmas treat around the table to talk about a little health care.  (Laughter.)  Ring in the New Year with new coverage.  (Laughter.) 

But we can really change the face of health care in this country.  We can be a country that focuses on prevention.  We can be a country where no one goes bankrupt because they get sick.  And that is a worthwhile goal.  So thank you all for being a part of this.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you guys.

Q    Mrs. Obama, why did you want to be involved in the health care push?

MRS. OBAMA:  Because I'm a mom.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you guys.  Merry Christmas.  Happy New Year. 

END
3:00 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at the Children's National Medical Center

Children's National Medical Center
Washington, D.C.

2:25 P.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  All right.  How's everybody doing?

AUDIENCE:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes?  You guys excited about Christmas?

AUDIENCE:  Yes!  (Applause.) 

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, we're going to read one of my favorite Christmas tales, "'Twas The Night Before Christmas."  Can everybody hear me?  Can you hear me?  Are we good? 

AUDIENCE:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes.  All right, okay.  Here we go. 

'Twas the night before Christmas -- Sunny, you ready?  'Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse.  You know this one, Santa, right? 

The stockings were hung by the chimney with care in hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there.  The children were nestled all snug in their beds while visions of sugarplums danced in their heads.  Has anybody had any sugarplums dancing in their heads?  Me neither.  (Laughter.)  I wonder where they got that from. 

And Mama in her kerchief and I in my cap had just settled our brains for a long winters nap.

CHILD:  Mommy!

MRS. OBAMA:  Oh, mom!  (Laughter.)  Help me!  (Laughter.)  Oh, no.  Oh, goodness.  All right, this is the night before Christmas.  How many people like the night before Christmas, Christmas Eve?  (Applause.)  It's exciting, isn't it? 

When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter, I sprang to the bed to see what was the matter.  Away to the window I flew like a flash, tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. What do you think was going on out there?  Any guesses?  Well, let's find out!  (Laughter.)

The moon on the breast of the new-fallen snow gave the luster of midday to objects below.  When what to my wondering eye should appear but a miniature sleigh and eight tiny reindeer.  Is that you, Santa?  Oh, it's Santa! 

With a little old driver so lively and quick, I knew in a moment it must be -- who?

AUDIENCE:  St. Nick!

MRS. OBAMA:  St. Nick. 

CHILD:  Santa!

MRS. OBAMA:  Or Santa.  That’s another name, it's true. 

More rapid than eagles his coursers they came, and he whistled and shouted and called them by name -- do you guys know the reindeers' names?

CHILD:  Rudolph!

MRS. OBAMA:  There is Rudolph, but he for some reason isn't in this story.  (Laughter.) 

Now, Dasher, now, Dancer, now Prancer and Vixen; on Comet, on Cupid, on Donder and --

AUDIENCE:  Blitzen.

MRS. OBAMA:  Blitzen.  Here they are, the mighty reindeer.  Where did you find these reindeer, Santa?  The best of the best. 

To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall -- now dash away, dash away, dash away, all!  As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly when they meet with an obstacle mount to the sky -- these reindeer are awesome.  (Laughter.)

So up to the housetop the coursers they flew with the sleigh full of toys -- and St. Nicholas, too.  How many people have ever seen Santa delivering toys on Christmas -- you've seen him?  Oh, Santa, you're slipping.  (Laughter.) 

And then in a twinkling I heard on the roof, the prancing and pawing of each little hoof.  As I drew in my head and was turning around, down the chimney St. Nicholas came with a bound.  He was dressed all in fur from his head to his toe, and his clothes were all tarnished with ashes and soot -- it was really his foot.  I messed up that one.  (Laughter.) 

A bundle of toys he flung on his back, and he looked like a peddler just opening his sack.  His eyes, how they twinkled; his dimples, how merry.  His cheeks were like roses; his nose like a cherry.  (Laughter.)  His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow, and the beard of his chin was as white as the snow.  See, our -- Santa, do you agree this is a good like -- good-looking guy.  (Laughter.) 

The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth, and the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath.  He had a broad face and a little round belly that shook when he laughed like a bowl full of jelly -- come on, Santa. 

(Santa laughs.)

There we go.  (Laughter.)  That’s it. 

He was chubby and plump and a right jolly old elf, and I laughed when I saw him in spite of myself.  A wink of his eye and a twist of his head soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread -- that means you never have to be afraid of Santa Claus, right?

AUDIENCE:  No.

MRS. OBAMA:  Never, ever.  Santa is all good. 

He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work and filled all the stockings, then turned with a jerk.  And laying his finger aside of his nose and giving a nod, up the chimney he rose.  He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a whistle, and away they all flew like the down of a thistle. 

But I heard him exclaim as he drove out of sight -- what did he say -- Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night.  That means on Christmas Eve you're supposed to go to bed.  (Laughter.)  You're not supposed to stay up late on Christmas -- go to bed.  That’s the message from Santa Claus, right, parents?

AUDIENCE:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Go to bed!  All right, here -- this is -- oh, I'm sorry, Bo.  Not yet.  You can sit.  Down.

                   * * * * *

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes.  Okay.  There are people with -- you guys figure it out.  I’m not going to pick.  It’s too hard.  Go ahead.

MODERATOR:  So, yes, Mrs. Obama -- sorry, we’re in the corner here.  We’ve got a young man who has a question.

Q    Hello, Mrs. Obama.  My name is Jaytlin (ph) and my question for you today is:  What’s your favorite holiday song?

MRS. OBAMA:  What’s my favorite holiday song?  Chestnuts roasting on an open -- oh, I forgot the press was here.  (Laughter.)  Okay, you guys, all right, can we just, you know?  (Laughter.)  Have you heard that song before?  That’s an oldie.  That’s one of my favorites.  Thanks for the question. 

Next question.  All right.

     Q    Mrs. Obama, my name is Jaden (ph), and my question is, what was your favorite Christmas tradition as a kid?

MRS. OBAMA:  What’s my favorite what?

Q    Christmas tradition as a kid.

MRS. OBAMA:  Christmas tradition as a kid?  Getting toys on Christmas Day.  (Laughter.)  That was a great tradition.  I loved that.  No, I’m serious, that was it.  That was the tradition I loved.  (Laughter.)  I loved Christmas Eve, when you knew you were going to get toys, and then Christmas morning, when you got the toys!  This is a great tradition!  (Laughter.)

All right, next question. 

MODERATOR:  Right here, Mrs. Obama, to your --

Q    What are you getting Sunny and Bo for Christmas?

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay.  Close your ears.  Close your ears.  (Laughter.)  They are getting chew toys.  (Laughter.)  Yes, lots of the hard ones because they chew their toys up.  So they’re going to get more doggie toys. 

Okay, next.  Right here.

Q    Hi, Mrs. Michelle.  (Laughter.)  What did Sasha and Malia ask Santa for this year?

MRS. OBAMA:  You know what?  They didn’t ask for much this year.  I have to honestly say -- Malia wanted a cell phone, but then her father got it for her, and I was like, you messed it up.  (Laughter.)  It’s like, that should have been a Christmas gift.  So we’re -- I can’t say this.  They’re going to get stuff.  They don’t know what they’re going to get.  They’re going to get small things.  We don’t do a lot of big gift-giving.  They get to ask for three things, and they usually stick to -- where are you going, Sunny?  So there’s nothing that they really, really just want.

All right.  Anybody else?  Who’s got the mic?  All right.

Q    Do Sunny and Bo like snow?

MRS. OBAMA:  They have -- I don’t know if -- Sunny hasn’t seen snow.  Bo loves snow, but sometimes it takes them a second to figure out what it is.  So when Bo -- the first time he came out of the door and there was snow on the ground, he literally turned around and went back in the house.  (Laughter.)  It was sort of like, whoa, I don’t understand what this is.  But Bo really loves the snow.  He loves that -- the one year when we had the huge snow storms and the drifts were really high, he would just -- he would, like, bounce through the snow because he’d get lost in the snow.  So he would just sort of hop.  But yes, they like the snow.

SANTA:  -- my reindeer.

MRS. OBAMA:  I think Sunny would be much better.  She’s faster.  He’s a little slow.  He’s getting old.  (Laughter.)

Next question.  Yes?

Q    Hello, my name is Lauren (ph).  What’s your favorite Christmas treat to eat?

MRS. OBAMA:  My favorite Christmas treat to eat?  Oh, that’s good.  Gosh, that’s a hard one.  I like pumpkin pie.  Is that considered a Christmas treat?  What?

Q    That’s my favorite.

MRS. OBAMA:  That’s your favorite?  Pumpkin pie?  Do you like whipped cream on it?  Yes.  The President loves pumpkin pie.  That’s for sure his favorite treat.

Next question.  Hey.

Q    Kingston.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hey, Kingston!  (Laugther.)

Q    Hi. 

MRS. OBAMA:  What’s going on?

Q    How many Christmas trees are there in the White House?

MRS. OBAMA:  There are over 40.  There are about 44 Christmas trees in the White House.  Yes.  (Laughter.)  Is that what -- (laughter.)  All right.  You’re busted.  (Laughter.)  Oh, that’s why I love kids. 

All right, another question.  Yes, sweetie.

Q    Hi, Mrs. Obama. 

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, sweetie.

Q    My name is Gabby (ph), and you look very beautiful.

MRS. OBAMA:  You, too.  What happened to your teeth?  Who took them?

Q    They’re all gone now.

MRS. OBAMA:  They’re gone now.  (Laughter.)  Did you get something in return for those teeth?

Q    Yes, I got $5 for both of them. 

MRS. OBAMA:  Ooh, nice -- inflation.  (Laughter.)

Q    No, wait, one was seven.

MRS. OBAMA:  One was seven, and one was five?

Q    Yes. 

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, one had more value.  What do you think the tooth fairy was thinking?

Q    I was just lucky.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, just lucky, just lucky.  What’s your question, sweetie?

Q    What are you getting -- what present are you getting for the President?

MRS. OBAMA:  Oh, okay.  All right, you guys, don’t put this in the papers because he’s going to read it tomorrow.  I might get him some workout clothes.  (Laughter.)  Well, that’s what he wanted, though.  He said that’s what he wanted.  Don’t think -- I’m not forcing my husband to work out.  (Laughter.)  Don’t think -- there’s going to be some Let’s Move joke about how I’m strapping him to the treadmill.  No, he likes to work out.  Yes. 

All right, next question.

Q    Hi, my name is Kaley (ph).  Where do you hang your stockings at the White House?

MRS. OBAMA:  Our tradition is that we go to Hawaii, where the President grew up, every year.  We’re going to leave Friday.  So we hang our stockings in the house that we stay in.  There’s a mantelpiece by the tree.  And sometimes we hang them when we come back and open gifts -- we have them in the Yellow Oval Room.  That’s one of the rooms in the White House.  If you look from the South Lawn, you’ll see these balconies that curve.  They’re sort of oval, and there are two of them, and one is the Blue Room, and then upstairs where we live, the top one is the Yellow Oval, and that’s where we have our main gift tree.  That’s where we put our stockings.

Q    Cool.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes.  (Laughter.)   More questions right here.

Q    Hi, Mrs. Obama.  My name is Gracie (ph).  What’s your favorite holiday movie?

MRS. OBAMA:  Movie?

Q    Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  Oh, one of the kids I visited was watching “A Christmas Story.”  And I like “It’s a Wonderful Life.”  That’s one of my favorites.  And I like “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”  And I like “The Grinch Who Stole Christmas.”  (Laughter.)  I like when the Whos gather around the tree, and it’s, “Dah Who Doraz” and they open up and let the Grinch come in, and they close back up like a gate.  That’s my favorite part.  I could go on.  I like a lot.  I like "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer."  I like that animation.  I love those things. 

What about -- what are you guys’ favorites?  Okay, what’s your favorite?

Q    -- "The Santa Clause."

MRS. OBAMA:  The movie "The Santa Claus?"  All right, next question.  Oh, yes, sweetie?

Q    Hi, Mrs. Obama.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, sweetie.

Q    My name is Jaylen (ph).  Do you prefer a Christmas with snow or one without?

MRS. OBAMA:  Oh, that’s a good one.  Okay.  The truth is, now that I’m older, I prefer a Christmas without snow.  (Laughter.)  But when I was younger I really thought that Christmas meant you had a lot of snow, because Santa needed snow to land on for his sleigh and his reindeer, but as I got older I realized that Santa comes everywhere regardless of the snow.  But I grew up in Chicago, and Chicago, it was always snowy, so that always felt like Christmas.  But now when you’re older, old people, snow is a hassle.  You’ve got to shovel it.  And then when the ice forms on your car window shield, there’s nothing worse than scraping that off.  Come on, people.  You’ve got -- (laughter) -- that’s kind of a hassle.  But that’s just what us old people think.  Young people, snow is beautiful.  It’s a beautiful thing.

Next question.  Who’s got the mic?

MODERATOR:  We have a question over here.

MRS. OBAMA:  Where’s over here?

Q    Can I just say, I’m glad I came to the hospital today?  (Laughter.)  What is the best Christmas gift you ever got?

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, the best Christmas gift I ever got?  Wow.  I’m sure it was something when I was little that I didn’t think I was going to get, something that Santa brought.  I’m sure it was some Barbie-related thing.  When I was little, I loved Barbie dolls, and I had everything Barbie.  I had the townhouse and the car and all the little outfits, and the shoes that never stayed on their feet.  So you lose the shoes. 

But this is one of my favorite traditions now as an adult.  I have to say, coming to see you guys at the hospital and coming to visit the kids who can’t come downstairs, and then hanging out with you guys -- I rarely -- I don’t take questions from the press.  They will tell you that.  I only take questions from you guys once a year, here at the Children’s Hospital.  So this is a good gift for me.  This right here, this is a great gift.  (Applause.)

MODERATOR:  I think we have time for two more questions.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right, two more questions.  Okay.  I’m not looking at who’s going to ask.  I’m not going to pick.  Just --

Q    Hi.

MRS. OBAMA:  Hi, sweetie.

Q    Hi, Mrs. Obama.  My name is Sierra (ph).  I know your birthday is coming up and I just wanted to know what you’re going to be doing -- like, if you’re going to be celebrating at all?

MRS. OBAMA:  I’m going to be 50.  Yes, 50.  (Applause.)  Fifty.  Fifty and fabulous.  January 17th.  And I’m not exactly sure yet what I’m going to do, but it might involve some dancing.  (Laughter and applause.)  A little Dougie.

Q    Mine is the 15th.

MRS. OBAMA:  Yours is the 15th?  Capricorn!  (Laughter.)  How old are you going to be? 

Q    Thirteen.

MRS. OBAMA:  Thirteen?  You’re much younger than me.  (Laughter.)  But believe me, your best years are ahead of you.  Yes, yes.

All right, we’ve got one more?  Who’s our last -- who’s our final question?  You are funny.  (Laughter.) 

Q    Did you -- my name is Matthew Braithwaite (ph).  Did you decorate one of the Christmas trees in the White House?

MRS. OBAMA:  One of our traditions is that -- because there are 44 trees, and we have volunteers who come in from all over the country to help us decorate the White House, because there’s no way that we can do it -- although the President, he always tells people that he did everything -- (laughter) -- but between you and me, he does nothing.  (Laughter.)  But we have one tree -- the tree that’s in the Yellow Oval Room that I talked to you about.  The girls like to -- they like to decorate one tree. 

So after the White House is decorated, we welcome the first set of volunteers.  We have a tradition where just us, the family, and these two if they’re paying attention, we go to the Yellow Oval Room; they leave, like, half of the tree undone because it’s a big tree -- it would take forever to finish -- and they leave some ornaments.  We have hot chocolate.  That’s probably the best part of the tradition for the girls.  And that’s the first night that I played my Christmas music playlist on my iPod.  (Laughter.)  That’s when we know that it’s Christmas. 

So we take time after dinner.  The girls have finished their homework.  We do that.  So we decorate about half of one tree in the Yellow Oval Room.  And this year, I have to say, the President actually put most of the ornaments on the tree -- because he says I’m bossy, so I just sat back and let them do it.  So he and Sasha did most of the work, and me and Malia, we drank a lot of hot chocolate.  (Laughter.) 

You guys, thanks so much.  (Applause.)  Here’s the thing -- I want you all to be good.  Be good, even after Christmas is over.  Be good, eat your vegetables.  Listen to your parents.  Did you hear that one?  Listen to your parents.  Study.  Work hard in school, okay?  Everything you want to be in life starts with getting a good education, and that’s the secret to success, okay?  And know that the President and I, that we love you guys and we’re very proud of you, okay? 

So have a merry Christmas.  And Sunny and Bo and I, we’re going to walk around, and whoever wants to pet them can; whoever doesn’t, just back away.  All right, you ready?  You ready to see these little people?

MODERATOR:  Mrs. Obama, thanks for taking time out of your schedule.

MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you so much.  It’s a pleasure.

MODERATOR:  Thanks so much.  (Applause.

END
2:45 P.M. EST