The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President to the Wall Street Journal CEO Council

Four Seasons Hotel

Washington, D.C. 

3:28 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)  Everybody, please have a seat.  Thank you. 

Well, it is wonderful to be here, and I always look forward to an opportunity to speak to some of our top businesses across the country who are hiring people, investing in America, making the economy run.  And many of you I've had a chance to interact with before.  As you know, oftentimes when I do something like this, I want to spend more time answering questions and having a conversation than giving any formal remarks.  Let me just provide a little bit of an introduction.

Obviously, over the last couple of months, most of the oxygen in this town has been consumed with two things -- one, the government shutdown and the possibility of default that was ultimately resolved; and the second has been the rollout of the Affordable Care Act and the fact that my website is not working the way it's supposed to.  And it's entirely legitimate that those have been issues of great concern. 

The impact of the shutdown and the threat of default I think not only did some significant damage to the economy at a time when we didn’t need self-inflicted wounds, but it also spoke to some of the larger problems we've seen here in Washington, and the sense of dysfunction and the seeming incapacity of both parties in Congress to work together to advance an agenda that’s going to help us grow. 

With respect to the Affordable Care Act, I think people are legitimately concerned because we have a major problem with health care in this country -- 41 million people without health insurance, a lot of people underinsured.  And once again, how we fix a health care system that’s been broken for too many people for too long I think ends up speaking to how much confidence we have in government and whether we still have the capacity, collectively, to bring about changes that are going to be good for our economy, good for our businesses, good for the American people.

I do want to say, though, that beyond the headlines, we have made real progress in the economy, and sometimes that hasn't gotten enough attention.  Some of the tough decisions that we made early on have paid off -- decisions that helped us not only recover from a crisis, but begin to lay a stronger foundation for future growth. 

We refocused on manufacturing exports, and today, our businesses sell more goods and services made in America than ever before around the world.  After a decade of shedding jobs, our manufacturing sector has now added about half a million new jobs, and it's led by an American auto industry that has come roaring back after decades of decline. 

We decided to reverse our dependence on foreign oil, and today, we generate more renewable energy than ever before and more natural gas than anybody in the world.  And for the first time in nearly 20 years, America now produces more of our own oil than we buy from other countries.

When I took office, we invested a fraction of what other countries did in wireless infrastructure, and today, it’s up nearly 50 percent, helping companies unleash jobs, innovation and a booming app economy that’s created more than 500,000 jobs.  When I took office, only 5 percent of the world’s smartphones ran on American operating systems.  Today, more than 80 percent do. 

And it’s not just in the high-tech economy that we’re seeing progress.  For example, American farmers are on pace to have one of their best years in decades, and they have consistently been able to export more, make more profits and help restore rural economies than when we came into office.

And, yes, we decided to take on a broken health care system. And even though the rollout of the new health care marketplace has been rough, to say the least, about half a million Americans are now poised to gain health care coverage beginning January 1st.  That’s after only a month of sign-up.  We also have seen health care costs growing at the slowest rate in 50 years.  Employer-based health costs are growing at about one-third of the rate of a decade ago, and that has an impact on your bottom line.

And after years of trillion-dollar deficits, we reined in spending, wound down two wars, and began to change a tax code that I believe was too skewed towards the wealthiest among us at the expense of the middle class.  And since I took office, we have now cut our deficits by more than half.

Add it all up, and businesses like yours have created 7.8 million new jobs over the past 44 months.  We’ve gone farther and recovered faster than most other advanced nations.  And so in a lot of ways, America is poised for a breakout.  We are in a good position to compete around the world in the 21st century. 

The question is, are we going to realize that potential?  And that means that we’ve still got some more work to do.  Our stock markets and corporate profits are soaring, but we’ve got to make sure that this remains a country where everyone who works hard can get ahead.  And that means we’ve still got to address long-term unemployment.  We still have to address stagnant wages and stagnant incomes.

And frankly, we’ve got to stop governing by crisis here in this town.  Because if it weren’t for Washington’s dysfunction, I think all of us agree we’d be a lot further along.  The shutdown and the threat of default harmed our jobs market, they cost our economy about $5 billion, and economists predict it will slow our GDP growth this quarter -- and it didn’t need to happen.  It was self-inflicted.  We should not be injuring ourselves every few months.  We should be investing in ourselves.  And in a sensible world, that starts with a budget that cuts what we don’t need, closes wasteful loopholes, and helps us afford to invest in the things that we know will help businesses like yours and the economy as a whole -- education, infrastructure, basic research and development.

We would have a grand bargain for middle-class jobs that combines tax reform with a financing mechanism that lets us create jobs, rebuilding infrastructure that your businesses depend on, but we haven’t gotten as much take-up from the other side as we’d like to see so far.  We have the opportunity for bipartisan authority to negotiate the best trade deals possible so businesses and workers can take advantage of new markets that are opening up around the world.  We haven’t seen the kind of take-up from the other side that we’d like to see so far.

We’ve got the opportunity to fix a broken immigration system that strengthens our economy and our national security.  The good news here is the Senate has already passed a bipartisan bill that economists say would grow our economy by $1.4 trillion and shrink our deficits by nearly a trillion over the next two decades.  You wouldn’t turn down a deal that good, and Congress shouldn’t either.  So I’m hoping that Speaker Boehner and the House of Representatives can still work with us to get that done.

And we need to be going all out to prepare our kids and our workers for the demands of a 21st-century economy.  I’ve proposed giving every child an early start at success by making high-quality preschool available to every four-year-old in America.  We know that you get more bang for the buck when it comes to early childhood education than just about anything else, and you’ve got great examples around the country, oftentimes in red states, that are doing just that.  We need to make that same investment.

We’re working to bring down the costs of a college degree so more young people can get a higher education.  And one thing that I’m very excited about -- and this has been a good example of a public-private partnership -- is the idea of redesigning our high schools to make sure that more young people get hands-on training and develop the skills that they need, particularly in math, science and engineering, that businesses are looking for.  And in fact, today we’re announcing a competitive grant program that will encourage more high schools to partner with colleges and local businesses to better prepare our kids for college or a career.  And in December, I'll be bringing together college presidents and other leaders to figure out ways to help more low-income students attend and to succeed in college. 

So just to sum up, my basic message is this:  We know what the challenges are.  We know what the solutions are.  Some of them are tough, but what's holding us back is not a lack of good policy ideas or even what used to be considered good bipartisan policy ideas.  We just have to break through the stubborn cycle of crisis politics and start working together.  More obstruction, more brinkmanship won't help anybody.  It doesn’t help folks politically.  My understanding is nobody in this town is doing particularly well at the moment when it comes to the opinions of the American people, but it certainly doesn't help anybody economically.

On many of the issues, I think you and I would agree, and I want you to know that I'm rooting for your success, and I look forward to making sure that we are able in the remaining three years that I'm President to work together to not only improve the business climate, but also improve the prospects for Americans all across the country who have been treading water, feel like they're losing ground, are anxious about the future and their children's futures, but I think are still hopeful and still possess that fundamental American optimism.  If they see leadership working across the board on their behalf, then I'm confident that we can make enormous progress.

So with that, why don't we get Jerry up here and I'll start answering his questions.  I hope he adds some input.  (Laughter.) If he starts asking me about what happened to the Kansas City Chiefs, I'm not sure I'll have a good answer for that one.  (Applause.)

Q    Well, thank you, Mr. President.  Let me start by thanking you officially for joining us today.  I think you probably see a lot of familiar faces out there, most friendly, most of them.  And I would also note that you're getting here a little late.  Congressman Paul Ryan is coming later.  He is going to get here a little early.  So if you guys overlap a little bit, maybe we can just get some problems solved right here.  What do you think? 

THE PRESIDENT:  Let's do it.  (Laughter.)  Let's do it.

Q    It's your chance.  We have talked amongst ourselves or tried to sort of take the sense of the room.  So I'm going to try to reflect some of the conversations that have been going on here in the questions I'm going to ask you.  You'll not be stunned that I'm going to ask you about health care first.

You indicated there and you've indicated publicly quite clearly that the rollout has been difficult.  What do you think you've learned from this experience about the government's ability to do this sort of thing, about the law itself, or about your own administration?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, there are a couple of things.  Number one is that this has been a big problem for a very long time and so it was always going to be challenging not just to pass a law, but also to implement it.  There’s a reason why, despite a century of talking about it, nobody had been able to successfully try to deal with some of the underlying problems in the health care system. 

The good news is that many of the elements of the Affordable Care Act are already in place and are working exactly the way they’re supposed to.  So making sure that consumers who have employer-based health insurance are getting a better deal and that are protected from some of the fine print that left them in the lurch when they actually got sick -- that’s in place.  Making sure that young people under the age of 26 can stay on their parents’ plan -- that’s helped 3 million children already.  That’s making a difference.  Helping seniors to get better prescription drug prices -- that’s already helped millions of seniors and billions of dollars in savings.  Rebates for people who see insurance companies who are not spending enough on actual care, more on administrative costs or profits, they’re getting rebates.  They may not know it’s the Affordable Care Act that’s giving them rebates, but it’s happening.  So there were a number of things that were already in place over the last three years that got implemented effectively. 

The other thing that hasn’t been talked about a lot is cost. There was a lot of skepticism when we passed the Affordable Care Act that we were going to be giving a lot of people care but we weren’t doing anything about the underlying costs.  And, in fact, over the last three years, we’ve seen health care costs grow at the slowest pace in 50 years.  And that affects the bottom lines of everybody here. 

And there are a lot of smart delivery system reforms that slowly across the system are being implemented and they’re making a big difference.  And that’s saving us money.  That’s why, by the way, some of the projections that in terms of what the Affordable Care Act would do to deficits have actually proved even better than we had originally expected.

What I have learned, though, with respect to setting up these marketplaces -- which are essentially mechanisms where people who are currently in the individual market or don’t have health insurance at all can join together, shop, and insurance companies will compete for their business -- setting those things up is very challenging just mechanically. 

The good news is that choice and competition has actually worked and insurers came in with bids that were even lower than people expected -- about 16 percent lower than had originally been projected.

The challenge has been just making sure that consumers are actually able to get on a website, see those choices, and shop.  And I think that we probably underestimated the complexities of building out a website that needed to work the way it should. 

There is a larger problem that I probably -- speak personally, but also as the administration -- could have identified earlier, and that is the way the federal government does procurement and does IT is just generally not very efficient.  In fact, there's probably no bigger gap between the private sector and the public sector than IT. 

And we've seen that in, for example, the VA and the Department of Defense trying to deal with electronic medical records for our servicemen as they move into civilian life.  Most of that stuff is still done on paper.  We've spent billions of dollars -- I'm not saying "we" as in my administration, I mean we've now had about a decade of experimentation, spent billions of dollars and it's still not working the way it should.

So what we probably needed to do on the front end was to blow up how we procure for IT, especially on a system this complicated.  We did not do that successfully.  Now, we are getting it fixed, but it would have been better to do it on the front end rather than the back end.

And the last point I'll make is that in terms of expectation setting, there's no doubt that in an environment in which we had to fight tooth and nail to get this passed, it ended up being passed on a partisan basis -- not for lack of trying, because I met with an awful lot of Republicans to try to get them to go along -- but because there was just ideological resistance to the idea of dealing with the uninsured and people with preexisting conditions.  There was a price to that, and it was that what was already going to be hard was operating within a very difficult political environment.  And we should have anticipated that that would create a rockier rollout than if Democrats and Republicans were both invested in success.

One of the problems we've had is one side of Capitol Hill is invested in failure, and that makes, I think, the kind of iterative process of fixing glitches as they come up and fine-tuning the law more challenging.  But I'm optimistic that we can get it fixed.

Q    Well, that’s the question I was going to ask next.  Is it possible you've lost enough time here and enough potential customers in the exchanges that you're not going to reach the critical mass of signups that you need to make the marketplace work?  Is that a danger that you have to worry about right now?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it's something that we have to pay attention to.  But keep in mind that this model of marketplaces was based on what was done in Massachusetts, and the experience in Massachusetts was that in the first month, 153 or 163 people signed up out of an ultimate 36,000.  It was less than 1 percent signed up in that first month -- partly because buying insurance is a complicated process for a lot of people.  When they have more choices, it means that they're going to take more time. 

There's no doubt that we've lost some time, but the website is getting better each week.  By the end of this month, it will be functioning for the majority of people who are using it.  They'll be able to shop, see what their choices are.  The prices are good.  The prices are not changing during the open enrollment period that goes out until March.  And so I think that we're going to have time to catch up. 

What's also been expressed as a concern is the mix of people that sign up.  So we might end up having millions of people sign up; they're happy with their new coverage, but we've got more people who are older, more likely to get sick than younger and healthier.  We've got to monitor that carefully.  We always anticipated, though, that younger folks would be the last folks in, just because -- it's been a while since you and I were young -- but as I recall, you don't think that you're going to get sick at that time. 

So, look, I am confident that the model that we've built, which works off of the existing private insurance system, is one that will succeed.  We are going to have to, A, fix the website so everybody feels confident about that.  We're going to have to obviously re-market and re-brand, and that will be challenging in this political environment. 

But keep in mind, in the first month we also had 12 million people visit the site.  The demand is there.  There are 41 million people who don't have health insurance.  The folks in the individual market, many of them are going to get a much better deal in the marketplaces.  And so we've just got to keep on improving the customer experience and make sure that we're fending off efforts not to fix the problem -- because if somebody wants to help us fix it, I'm all game, but fending off efforts to completely undermine it.   

Q    Let me turn to the economy, the broader economy, probably the predominant concern of people in this room.  We seem to be stuck in an economic growth pattern of okay, but not great growth.  Your friend, Larry Summers, was here earlier today and said essentially the problem or one of the problems is that the system can't do two things at once.  It can't cut deficits and spur growth.  It needs to do one or the other right now.  It needs to spur growth, should not worry so much about deficits.  Do you agree?  And if you do agree, how do you make that happen?

THE PRESIDENT:  Actually, Larry and I, and most of my economic team -- in fact, all of my economic team -- have consistently maintained that there is a way to reconcile the concerns about debt and deficits with the concerns about growth.

What we know is, is that our fiscal problems are not short-term deficits.  Our discretionary budget, that portion of the federal budget that isn't defense or Social Security or Medicare or Medicaid, the entitlement programs, is at its smallest level in my lifetime, probably since Dwight Eisenhower.  We are not lavishly spending on a whole bunch of social programs out there. And in many ways, a lot of these programs have become more efficient and pretty effective. 

Defense, we spent a lot from 2001 to 2011, but generally we are stabilizing.  And the Pentagon, working with me, have come up with plans that allow us to meet our security needs while still bringing down some of the costs of defense, particularly after having ended the war in Iraq and on the brink of ending the war in Afghanistan. 

So when we talk about our deficit and debt problems, it is almost entirely health care costs.  You eliminate the delta, the difference between what we spend on health care and what every other country -- advanced industrialized nation spends on health care, and that’s our long-term debt.  And if we’re able to bend the cost curve, we help solve the problem. 

Now, one way to do that is just to make health care cheaper overall.  That’s I think the best way to do it, and that’s what we’ve been doing through some of the measures in the Affordable Care Act.  There are some other provisions that we could take that would maintain our commitment to seniors, Medicare, Social Security, the disabled, and Medicaid, while still reducing very modestly the costs of those programs. 

If we do those things, that solves our real fiscal problem, and we could take some of that money, a very modest portion on the front end, and invest in infrastructure that puts people back to work, improve our research and development.

So the idea would be do some things in the short term that focus on growth; do some things in the long term that deal with the long-term debt.  That’s what my budget reflects.  That’s what a multiple series of negotiations with John Boehner talked about, the so-called grand bargain.  We couldn’t quite get there in the end, mainly because Republicans had a great deal of difficulty with the idea of putting in more revenue to balance out some of the changes that were made on entitlements.

Q    I would guess a lot of people in this room would say another way to make some of those things happen would be to fix the corporate tax code that everybody agrees is a mess.  You’ve got some companies that pay way too much compared to their international competitors; some companies don’t pay at all.  It’s not a good system. it’s not an efficient system, everybody agrees, but it doesn’t ever seem to change.  Can you make it change?  And can you do something about repatriation of U.S. assets overseas?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, here is the good news, is that both my administration and Republicans have talked about corporate tax reform.  And Paul Ryan, who is going to be coming after me, said he’s interested in corporate tax reform.  And we’ve reached out to him and we’ve said let’s get to work.  We put forward a very specific set of proposals that would lower the corporate tax rate, broaden the base, close some loopholes.  And in terms of international companies and competitiveness, what we’ve said is rather than a whole bunch of tangled laws that incentivize folks to keep money overseas, let’s have a modest but clear global minimum tax, get rid of some of the huge fluctuations that people experience.  It will save companies money, make them more competitive and, in terms of transitioning to that system, actually allow some people to bring back money and, in a one-time way, help us finance infrastructure and some other projects that need to get done.

I don’t expect Republicans to adopt exactly the proposal that we’ve put forward.  But there’s not that much separation between what Democrats are talking about -- I know Chairman Max Baucus put out something today, the Chairman of the Finance Committee -- what Dave Camp over in the House has talked about.  This should be bridgeable. 

The one thing I would caution is -- and I’ve said this to the Business Roundtable and other corporate leaders who I’ve talked to -- people like the idea of corporate tax reform in theory.  In practice, if you want to make the corporate tax reform deficit-neutral, then you actually have to close some loopholes.  And people like the idea of a simpler tax system until it’s their particular loophole that’s about to get closed.

And what we can’t afford to do is to keep all the loopholes that are currently in place and lower the corporate tax rate.  We would then blow another hole in the deficit that would have to be filled.  And what I’m not willing to do is to have higher rates on the middle class in order to pay for that.

Q    Some of the CEOs here had a working group earlier today, the mission of which was to address the question of how do you stay competitive.  Interestingly, at least to me, their first priority -- first priority -- was this:  immigration reform.  The U.S. needs immigration reform to retain talented workers educated in the U.S. and attract talent to the U.S.  Immigration reform could provide an instant jolt to the U.S. economy which we need.

I know you agree with that statement, but it’s hard to see that happening right now.  You’ve got the Senate off on one track -- it’s passed a comprehensive bill the House won’t even agree to take up.  Democrats want to do comprehensive reform.  Republicans want to do step-by-step reform.  It’s a poisonous political atmosphere.  Can you make it happen?

THE PRESIDENT:  I am actually optimistic that we’re going to get this done.  I am a congenital optimist.  I would have to be  -- I’m named Barack Obama and I ran for President.  (Laughter.)

Q    And won.

THE PRESIDENT:  And won twice.  (Laughter.) 

So, look, keep in mind, first of all, that what the CEOs here said is absolutely right.  This is a boost to our economy.  Everywhere I go, I meet with entrepreneurs and CEOs who say, I’ve got these terrific folks, they just graduated from CalTech or MIT or Stanford, they’re ready to do business here, some of them have these amazing new ideas that we think we can commercialize -- but they’re being dragged back to their home countries, not because they want to go but because the immigration system doesn’t work.

The good news is that the Senate bill was a bipartisan bill and we know what the component parts of this are.  We’ve got to have strong border security.  We’ve got to have better enforcement of existing laws.  We’ve got to make sure that we have a legal immigration system that doesn’t cause people to sit in the queue for 5 years, 10 years, 15 years -- in some cases, 20 years.  We should want to immediately say to young people who we’ve helped to educate in this country, you want to stay, we want you here. 

And we do have to deal with about 11 million folks who are in this country, most of them just seeking opportunity; they did break the law by coming here or overstaying their visa, and they’ve got to earn their way out of the shadows -- pay a fine, learn English, get to the back of the line, pay their back taxes -- but giving them a mechanism whereby they can get right by our society.  And that’s reflected in the Senate bill.

Now, I actually think that there are a number of House Republicans -- including Paul Ryan, I think, if you ask him about it -- who agree with that.  They’re suspicious of comprehensive bills, but if they want to chop that thing up into five pieces, as long as all five pieces get done, I don’t care what it looks like as long as it’s actually delivering on those core values that we talk about.

Q    But Democrats have been pretty suspicious that all five pieces won’t get done.

THE PRESIDENT:  And that’s the problem.  I mean, the key is -- what we don’t want to do is simply carve out one piece of it  -- let’s say agricultural jobs, which are important, but is easier, frankly, or the high-skilled jobs that many in your audience here would immediately want to do -- but leave behind some of the tougher stuff that still needs to get done.  We’re not going to have a situation in which 11 million people are still living in the shadows and potentially getting deported on an ongoing basis. 

So we’re going to have to do it all.  In my conversations with the Republicans, I actually think the divide is not that wide.  So what we just have to do is find a pathway where Republicans in the House, in particular, feel comfortable enough about process that they can go ahead and meet us. 

This, by the way, Jerry, I think is a good example of something that’s been striking me about our politics for a while. When you go to other countries, the political divisions are so much more stark and wider.  Here in America, the difference between Democrats and Republicans, we’re fighting inside the 40-yard line, maybe in --

Q    You’ve fooled most people on that in the last few months, I’d say.  (Laughter.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, no, no.  I would distinguish between the rhetoric and the tactics versus the ideological differences. I mean, in most countries you’ve got -- people call me a socialist sometimes, But, no, you’ve got to meet real socialists. (Laughter.)  You’ll have a sense of what a socialist is.  (Laughter.) 

I’m talking about lowering the corporate tax rate.  My health care reform is based on the private marketplace.  The stock market is looking pretty good last time I checked.  And it is true that I’m concerned about growing inequality in our system, but nobody questions the efficacy of market economies in terms of producing wealth and innovation and keeping us competitive.

On the flip side, most Republicans, even the tea party -- one of my favorite signs during the campaign was folks hoisting a sign, “Government, keep your hands off my Medicare.”  (Laughter.) Think about that.  (Laughter.)  I mean, ideologically, they did not like the idea of the federal government, and yet they felt very protective about the basic social safety net that had been structured. 

So my simple point is this:  If we can get beyond the tactical advantages that parties perceive in painting folks as extreme and trying to keep an eye always on the next election, and for a while at least, just focus on governing, then there is probably 70 percent overlap on a whole range of issues.  A lot of Republicans want to get infrastructure done, just like I do.  A lot of them believe in basic research, just like I do.  A lot of them want to reform entitlements to make sure that they’re affordable for the next generation; so do I.  A lot of them say they want to reform our tax system; so do I.

There are going to be differences on the details, and those details matter and I’ll fight very hard for them.  But we shouldn’t think that somehow the reason we’ve got these problems is because our policy differences are so great.

Q    Well, the details are obviously important enough to shut down the government just a couple of weeks ago.  And everybody knows we’re headed back toward showdowns again -- January, budget; February, debt ceiling.  Jack Lew was here earlier, your Treasury Secretary, and said he thought maybe the system crossed a threshold in October and has realized it doesn’t want to go back and do that again.  Are you confident it’s not going to go back and do that again?  And by the way, the OECD, the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, suggested today that the U.S. just get rid of the debt ceiling entirely.  Would you be in favor of that?

THE PRESIDENT:  I think that the way our system is set up is like a loaded gun, and once people thought we can get leverage on policy disputes by threatening default, that was an extraordinarily dangerous precedent.  And that’s a principle that I had to adhere to, not just for me but for the next President -- that you’re not going to be able to threaten the entire U.S. or world economy simply because you disagree with me about a health care bill.

I’d like to believe that the Republicans recognize that was not a good strategy, and we’re probably better off with a system in which that threat is not there on a perpetual basis.  I do not foresee what we saw in October being repeated in January.  But the broader point is one that I think all of us have to take to heart.  We have to be able to disagree on policy issues without resorting to the kinds of extreme tactics that end up hurting all of us. 

And that’s been my main disagreement with a lot of my Republican friends.  And frankly, the American people agree with that.  They don’t expect us to march in lockstep.  There’s a reason why we’ve got two parties in this country.  They do expect that we are constantly thinking about how are we making sure they can find a job that pays well, that their kids can go to college and afford it, that we are growing and competitive, that we are dealing with our fiscal position in a sensible way.  And if we keep them in mind consistently, then I think we’re going to be successful.

One thing -- you’ve got some international CEOs here, and I think they’ll confirm this -- when I travel, what’s striking to me is people around the world think we’ve got a really good hand. You just take the example of energy.  They say America is poised to change our geopolitics entirely because of the advances we’ve made in oil production and natural gas production.  It means manufacturing here is much more attractive than it used to be.  That’s a huge competitive advantage. 

We’ve got the most productive workers just about in the world, and our workers have become more and more productive, and a lot of companies look at that and say we wish we had workers who were able to operate the way these folks do.

Our university systems, our research infrastructure -- all those things are the envy of the world.  And one of the great things about America -- sometimes we get worried that we’re losing traction and the sky is falling, and back in the ‘80s, Japan was about to take over, and then China, and obviously before that, the Soviet Union -- and we usually come out okay because we change and we adapt.  I just want everybody to remember that we’re in a very strong position to compete as long as our political system functions.  It doesn’t have to be outstanding.  This is sort of like Winston Churchill, two cheers for democracy.  And it's always going to be messy.  But it's got to function better than it has.

Q    I'm in the red zone on the clock here, but let me -- I do want to ask a question about international affairs.  You've mentioned the world and the U.S. position in it.  There's the possibility this week of an agreement with Iran, a preliminary, limited agreement in which they would free some of their nuclear activities in return for some relief on sanctions.  Your Israeli friends have been arguing, along with some of your friends as well as your foes in Congress, that if you give the Iranian regime any relief on sanctions, the sanctions regime will fall apart; countries that don’t want to be there in the first place will head for the exits; it will all come apart -- and that’s the danger of what you're negotiating right now. 

I know you talked to some senators about this very topic today.  Is there going to be a deal?  And why can you ease sanctions without having them fall apart?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, just by way of background, when I came into office, we had a trade embargo; the U.S. had done some things unilaterally.  We did not have a strong, enforceable international mechanism to really put the squeeze on Iran around its nuclear program, despite the fact that it had violated a range of U.N. and nonproliferation treaty requirements.

So we built, we constructed, with the help of Congress, the strongest sanctions regime ever.  And it has put a bite on the Iranian economy.  They have seen a 5 percent contraction the last year in their economy.  It's projected to be another contraction this year.  And in part because the sanctions have been so effective, we were able to get Iran to seriously come to the table and look at how are they going to give assurances to the international community that they are, in fact, not pursuing a nuclear weapons program.

I don’t know if we'll be able to close a deal this week or next week.  We have been very firm with the Iranians even on the interim deal about what we expect.  And some of the reporting out there has been somewhat inaccurate, understandably, because the P5-plus-1, the members of the -- permanent members of the Security Council in addition to -- and Germany as well -- have kept the negotiations fairly tight. 

But the essence of the deal would be that they would halt advances on their nuclear program; they would roll back some elements that get them closer to what we call breakout capacity, where they can run for -- a weapon before the international community has a chance to react; that they would subject themselves to more vigorous inspections even than the ones that are currently there, in some cases, daily inspections. 

In return, what we would do would be to open up the spigot a little bit for a very modest amount of relief that is entirely subject to reinstatement if, in fact, they violated any part of this early agreement.  And it would purchase a period of time -- let's say, six months -- during which we could see if they could get to the end state of a position where we, the Israelis, the international community could say with confidence Iran is not pursuing a nuclear weapon. 

Now, part of the reason I have confidence that the sanctions don't fall apart is because we're not doing anything around the most powerful sanctions.  The oil sanctions, the banking sanctions, the financial services sanctions -- those are the ones that have really taken a big chunk out of the Iranian economy.  So oil production and oil sales out of Iran have dropped by more than half since these sanctions were put in place.  They've got over $100 billion of oil revenue that is sitting outside of their country.  The rial, their currency, has dropped precipitously.  And all those sanctions and the architecture for them don't go anywhere.

Essentially, what we do is we allow them to access a small portion of these assets that are frozen.  Keep in mind, though, that because the oil and banking sanctions stay in place, they will actually still be losing money even during this six-month period relative to the amount of oil sales they had back in 2011.

So what we are suggesting both to the Israelis, to members of Congress here, to the international community, but also to the Iranians, is, let's look, let's test the proposition that over the next six months we can resolve this in a diplomatic fashion, while maintaining the essential sanctions architecture, and, as President of the United States, me maintaining all options to prevent them from getting nuclear weapons.  I think that is a test that is worth conducting. 

And my hope and expectation is not that we're going to solve all of this just this week in this interim phase, but rather that we're purchasing ourselves some time to see how serious the Iranian regime might be in re-entering membership in the world community and taking the yoke of these sanctions off the backs of their economy.

Q    Well, Mr. President, with that, let me just thank you again for joining us.  I appreciate it very much.  (Applause.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  I enjoyed it.  Thank you very much.  (Applause)

END           

4:13 P.M. EST

 

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at DSCC Women Senators Event

Sheraton Hotel & Towers
New York, New York

12:41 P.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, good afternoon.  (Applause.)  Are you all fired up?  Just how fired up are you?  (Applause.)  This is the time to be very fired up. 

Thank you so much.  It is a pleasure to be here today with so many fabulous women -- and I see a few brave men in there, too.  (Laughter.)  And speaking of fabulous women, I want to start by thanking Senator Tammy Baldwin for that very kind introduction.  She is amazing.  She is doing such a phenomenal job.  (Applause.)

And I also want to recognize Senator Bennet for his terrific leadership as our DSCC Chair.  (Applause.)  So proud of you.  Keep it up.  I also want to thank all of the other senators and senate candidates who have taken the time to be here today.  Truly, we are so grateful for your leadership, for your service.

And of course, most of all, I want to thank all of you for taking the time to be here today.  I want to thank you for everything that you have done for my husband, and for so many other leaders who share our values.  Thank you for being there for them year after year, election after election. 

And, look, I know it hasn’t always been easy.  I know that there have been plenty of ups and downs over these years.  But if you have ever wondered whether your support makes a difference, if you’ve ever doubted that it matters who we elect to serve in Congress, well, I think recent events should put any of those doubts to rest.

What happened last month reminded us that the folks that we send to Washington make decisions about some very important issues –- issues that affect our lives every single day.  Will we be able to see a doctor when we’re sick?  Will our businesses have what they need to create good jobs?  Will our kids have what they need to learn and grow –- things like decent nutrition, safe streets, good schools?

And make no mistake about it, these questions –- questions that are debated every day in Congress –- these questions speak to our most fundamental values and aspirations as a nation.  See, we believe, here in America, no matter how you start out, if you’re willing to work for it, if you're willing to sacrifice for it, you should be able to build a decent life for yourself and an even better life for your kids.  That’s the American Dream that we all believe in.  We can never forget that. 

No, we don’t believe in handouts.  We don’t think anyone should get a free ride.  But we also understand one simple principle -- that “there but for the grace of God go I;" that in the blink of an eye, any of us -- any of us -- could be faced with a terrible diagnosis.  Any of us could be injured in a horrible accident.  Any of us could lose the job we count on to support our family -- any of us.

And when that happens, it shouldn’t mean falling off a cliff.  It shouldn’t mean having to go without food, or medicine, or a roof over our heads –- not here in the United States of America.  Not in the greatest country on the planet.  That is not who we are.

Here in America, while we expect everyone to do their fair share, we also believe that we should give everyone a fair shot.  We believe that everyone should have the basic security they need to provide for their families, give their kids a decent chance in life.  And that’s the kind of security that I and I know so many of you grew up with. 

You know my story by now.  My family wasn’t rich -– far from it.  You know that my father had MS, which is a serious chronic condition.  So we lived with the reality that at any given moment, my father could have had a flare-up, needed medication, even been hospitalized.  That’s how we lived our lives.  But we were lucky -- my father’s job at the city water plant provided health insurance, so my dad was able to stay healthy enough to get up every day and to go work. 

So for families like mine, health insurance meant everything -- it meant everything.  It gave my dad the pride and dignity of being our provider, being able to pay our bills on time.  He was even able to pay the tiny little bit of my college tuition that wasn’t covered by student loans and grants.  And, in turn, that allowed me to get my degree, build my career, and to support a family of my own. 

And every family in this country deserves that kind of security.  Every child deserves that kind of opportunity.  And that’s why Barack has worked so hard to lift up the middle class.  That’s why he fought so hard and risked so much to pass the Affordable Care Act.  (Applause.)  And that’s why, time and again, he has stood strong for our most fundamental values -- whether that’s getting equal pay for women, or ending "don’t ask, don’t tell," or supporting our right to marry the person we love.  (Applause.)

And today, not even five years after Barack took office in the depths of a historic economic crisis, we’re now seeing the results of those convictions and all that hard work.  As Tammy said, our auto industry is back -- there's no doubt about that.  Our housing market is rebounding.  Our deficits are shrinking.  And our businesses have created 7.5 million new jobs. 

But please, let us be very clear, Barack hasn’t done any of this alone, just sitting by himself in the Oval Office -- so sad.  (Laughter.)  Fortunately, he has not been alone.  

Remember the Recovery Act that helped rescue our economy and create all those jobs?  Well, we needed Congress to pass that bill.  And, as Tammy said, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act to help women get equal pay for equal work?  Believe it or not, that bill was passed by Congress back in 2009 -- Congress was working then.  And the Affordable Care Act?  That’s right, Obamacare was passed by Congress in 2010, signed by my husband, and upheld by the Supreme Court.  (Applause.)

So at the end of the day, so many of our most important accomplishments, so much of what Barack has done to help working families, that all happened because of who we had in Congress.  Let’s not forget that some of our most frustrating defeats happened for the exact same reason.

The DREAM Act -- an act that gives immigrant kids a fair shot, kids brought here by their parents through no fault of their own -- this act failed, once by just five votes in the Senate, and once by just four.  So the President had to sign an executive order to finally get these kids some relief.  And let's not forget about that commonsense gun legislation that so many of us feel so strongly about.  Sadly, as you know, that bill failed, and you want to know by how many votes?  It failed by just six votes in the Senate -- six.

So make no mistake about it, the midterm elections matter.  They matter.  And if you want to bring some change to Congress, then we can't just sit around feeling angry or helpless or hopeless.  Because there’s something that we and all of you can do right now, today, to make a huge difference, and it's simple:  You can write a big old fat check.  (Laughter.)  That’s what we need you to do right now.  Write a big check, big huge one.  Write the biggest check you can possibly write.  Take your frustration, your passion, your hope and turn that into real, meaningful support for leaders who will truly represent the people they serve.

Do not wait another minute, because the stakes are simply too high.  They couldn’t be higher.  And so many people, people I meet every day, they are counting on all of us to make our voices heard.  Families who are working harder than ever and deserve to make a decent wage, they’re counting on us, because no one in this country should work 40 or 50 hours a week and still be stuck in poverty.  That’s not who we are.

Folks without insurance who’ve been living from emergency to emergency.  Folks who’ve been ignoring their symptoms and just praying that nothing goes wrong -- that’s been their health care -- because no one should go without health care in one of the wealthiest countries in the world.  (Applause.)  They're counting on us.

Our children and grandchildren all across this country, they deserve good schools, the chance to go to college.  They deserve commonsense gun safety laws to keep them safe in their classrooms and in their neighborhoods.  So those kids, they are counting on us.  (Applause.)

And all the women and families who don’t want anyone interfering with their most private health decisions –- women who are more than capable of making our own choices about our bodies -- those women are counting on us to stand up and fight for their rights and freedoms.  They're counting on us.  (Applause.)  And that’s why we need your support.  That’s why I'm here.  That’s why we're here.  

And I know that some of you might occasionally feel a little bit annoyed that we’re always hitting you up for some money.  Somebody said that to me -- oh, it was you.  (Laughter.)  No, it wasn't.  But that’s okay.  It's okay, you can admit it, it's annoying. 

But the thing is -- it's the truth -- we do this because writing those checks is the single most impactful thing that you can do right now, because it’s not enough for us to have the most dedicated, hard-working, public-minded candidates if they don’t have the resources they need to win elections.  It’s not enough for us to have the best policies and ideas if no one hears about them and we never get a chance to implement them.  

So we can’t just sit back on our moral high ground feeling good about ourselves.  We need to keep moving forward.  And that’s why your support is so vitally important, because when you dig deep, that translates into things like staff hired and offices opened.  It translates into calls made, doors knocked on, and ads running where they need to run.  That’s what happens when you dig deep.  These things don’t happen by magic.  You all know, you've been involved long enough -- they only happen because of folks like you.

And I also know that it feels like we just did this big push for the 2012 Presidential election, and I know it can be hard to get geared up again for the midterms.  But when you find yourself starting to tune out or to get a little fatigued, I just want you to think about some cold, hard numbers that I think about every day.

The fact is that right now, we are just six seats away from losing the Senate -- just six.  That’s how close these midterm elections are.  So it is critical that we elect Michelle Nunn, Alison Grimes, Natalie Tennant.  It is critical that we get them to the Senate.  And it is just as critical that we elect -- reelect Senators Mary Kay Hagan, Mary Landrieu, Jeanne Shaheen -- it is critical, because we all know that it’s not enough to elect Barack Obama President if we don’t give him a Congress that will help him keep moving this country forward.  We know that now.  We've seen it.  We've experienced it.  (Applause.) 

So we need you all to max out.  And just as important, once you’ve maxed out, we need you to get everyone you know to give whatever they can, as well.  (Laughter.)  Yes, there's more.  And I know as women that there's nothing more uncomfortable than asking people for stuff.  I hate doing this.  I love you all, but I hate asking you guys for stuff -- and I've gotten pretty good at it.  (Laughter and applause.) 

We as women, we feel a little awkward asking for stuff.  We feel a little embarrassed to ask people for money.  Oh, my goodness.  But this is what I think when I start feeling shy or embarrassed -- I just think -- I want you to think about all those folks, again, who are counting on us every day; all those kids, all those women, all those families who need someone on their side standing up for them.

So now is not the time for us to be hesitant, or doubtful, or fatigued.  Now is the time for us to be energized.  Ladies, now is the time for us to be inspired -- not in four years, not in two, now is the time.  Now is the time to tap into the deep well of passion and compassion and strength that we all have as women.  No one can do this better than us as women. 

And here's the thing -- we have seen it time and time again -- when we do that, when we step up and dig deep and bring others along with us, then we keep making that change that we believe in.  We keep moving this country forward.  And together, we keep building a future worthy of our children. 

So are you all ready for this?  (Applause.)  Ladies, are we ready for this?  We've got these candidates, they are strong, they are smart, they are the best this country has to offer.  And the only thing standing between them and victory is us.  We can do this.  We've got the right people.  Now we just need to roll up our sleeves and do the work. 

And I'm going to be there with you all and with these candidates every step of the way.  So I'm going to be working hard and I'm going to be counting on each and every one of you to do the same.

So thank you so much, and God bless.  (Applause.) 

END

12:57 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Before Meeting with Insurance Companies

Roosevelt Room

3:31 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  I want to welcome the executives who are here from a lot of the insurance companies that are participating in the marketplace.  We all share a similar value, which is we want to make sure that Americans have good, solid coverage that gives them the security they need for themselves and their family members if and when they get sick. 

And we know the demand is out there for that.  We had, despite all the problems with the website, over a million people apply.  Many multiples of that wanted to see what options were available.  Obviously because of the problems with the website some folks have been blocked from seeing the well-priced benefits that are available in the marketplace, and so we're working 24/7 to get it fixed.  The website is working a lot better now than it was a couple of weeks ago.

And what we're going to be doing is brainstorming on how do we make sure that everybody understands what their options are.  Because of choice and competition, a whole lot of Americans who’ve always seen health insurance out of reach are going to be in a position to purchase it.  And because of the law, we're also going to be able to provide them help even if they are still having trouble purchasing that insurance.  But they’ve got to know what those options are in order to be successful.

So I appreciate all these folks coming in.  We're going to be soliciting ideas from them.  There’s going to be a collaborative process.  We want to make sure that we get this done so that in the years to come every American is going to have the kind of affordable health care that they all deserve.

Thank you very much for being here. 

END
3:33 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 11/15/2013

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

 

1:00 P.M. EST

MR. CARNEY:  Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.  Happy Friday.  Thanks for being here.  Did I hear a yay for Friday?  Let's hear it for Friday. 

Q    A little premature for a yay.  It's only 1:00 p.m.

MR. CARNEY:  It is Friday.  Wait, are you -- (laughter) -- are you questioning the premise of the assertion that it's Friday?  (Laughter.) 

Q    It is Friday.

Q    He’s still bitter he went to Cleveland, and the President had a press conference.

MR. CARNEY:  You're bitter the President had a press conference?

Q    Knoller was in Cleveland. 

Q    He was in Cleveland.

MR. CARNEY:  Oh, Mark, I'm sorry. 

Q    He got a free roll of steel.

MR. CARNEY:  Can we make sure that doesn’t happen again? 

Q    Thank you.  (Laughter.)

Q    Cleveland feels the same way.

MR. CARNEY:  Cleveland was fantastic.  That factory is unbelievable.  Those rolls of steel --

Q    Rolls of steel.  Quite amazing.

MR. CARNEY:  Quite amazing.

Q    They gave us souvenir rolls.  They're about 50 tons. 

MR. CARNEY:  They probably didn’t weigh -- yes.  Didn’t the -- I think somebody told me, I'm not sure it's accurate, that one of those rolls was 40,000 pounds.  Is that -- that’s a lot of --

Q    Yes, 40 tons, something like that. 

Q    I think our hour is up.  Good visit. 

Q    We missed all that.  We were busy here.

MR. CARNEY:  Oh, sorry about that.  So my only topper here is that I do have a hard stop at 1:50 so we'll get right to your questions.  At the end of questions, I do have a week ahead for you.  Jim.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  The President is meeting with insurance company CEOs this afternoon.  It seems that the announcement yesterday is getting some pushback and second-guessing from the industry, from actuaries, from even some insurance commissioners who say that it could result in higher premiums.  And I'm wondering whether this meeting is something that should have taken place ahead of time, rather than after the fact.  And does the White House accept or disagree with this possibility that premiums could increase because of this decision?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, there's a couple of issues here.  We do disagree with the assertion that this is not something that cannot be dealt with.  In fact, part of the fix that the President announced was instructions to -- included instructions to HHS to adjust the risk corridor -- what's called the risk corridor, the policy that allows for adjustments if, for example, the pool is less healthy than expected or more healthy than expected, and there are cost changes accordingly.

So we believe -- I mean, there’s a lot of data here about the portion of the population that’s affected here.  The fact that there’s a myth about -- while there are healthy people, generally, healthier people generally in the individual market -- because insurance companies could discriminate against those who weren’t healthy -- the fact is that it’s a myth that they’re particularly young in the individual market.  In fact, there’s data that shows that the disproportionate number of people in the insurance market are older Americans, are 40 and up.

So having said that, as this policy rolls out, and allowing those with plans in the individual market to renew those plans for a more extended period of time, HHS has the capacity to adjust the risk corridor accordingly, if necessary.

Q    But you still -- I mean, you have actuaries saying -- I mean, is it because they’re not taking into account what HHS will be able to do?  Is that what you’re saying?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I haven’t seen the actuaries’ reports.  What I’m saying is that HHS has the capacity, because of the provision within the ACA, to make adjustments in this risk corridor to deal with changes in costs, swings in costs associated with either more or less risk within the pool of people insured.  So, I mean, the way it works is if the costs are higher, then HHS can mitigate those costs with insurers.  If costs come in significantly lower, then the insurers replenish the fund by passing back some of those profits back. 

So we believe there’s a mechanism here to deal with any swings associated with this provision -- which, remember, again, the size of the population we’re talking about here:  5 percent of the country is in the individual insurance market; a portion of that 5 percent is affected by the cancellation notices.  And what the fix the President announced allows is for -- it basically removes the prohibition from the ACA that said those policies could not be renewed from 2014 into 2015. 

This is something we haven’t talked a lot about, but even under the law, prior to the President’s announcement yesterday, insurers were able to offer renewals of these policies, early renewals of these policies to their policyholders.  And so this extends that possibility so that if you had a plan that was effective through September of next year, you could renew it so that it could go all the way through August 31st, say, of 2015. 

So it’s a way of smoothing the transition.  It’s a way of making an adjustment in response to the problems we saw with the cancellation notices and with that segment of the 5 percent that was put in this position where they did not feel that they had the opportunity to take advantage of marketplace plans that would reduce their costs or keep costs the same.  And the President made clear that he feels like a fix was necessary.  So he looks forward to the implementation of this, looks forward to working with Congress on any sincere effort, good-faith effort, to make improvements to the Affordable Care Act as we implement it.

Q    And having announced the fix yesterday and having this meeting today, didn’t that put the cart before the horse? 

MR. CARNEY:  Well, Jim, I think it is absolutely the case that we have been in consultation with and have had numerous meetings with insurance companies over the course of the last several years with the drafting and passing and implementation of the Affordable Care Act.  And those consultations continue.  The President looks forward to the meeting he’s having later this afternoon with insurers and will talk about ways we can work together to help people enroll through the marketplace and efforts we can make to minimize disruption for consumers as they transition to new coverage.

Q    And last, given the numbers, the enrollment numbers, has the White House given any consideration or have you set aside any thought of extending a waiver period for the mandatory -- the individual mandate so that it doesn’t kick in on March 31st as it’s scheduled to do?

MR. CARNEY:  Jim, as we’ve said all along, the individual responsibility provision is essential to the Affordable Care Act because it is what ensures that individuals with preexisting conditions cannot be denied insurance.  It allows for the rest of the Affordable Care Act to be implemented effectively so that the benefits that the American people deserve are able to be distributed. 

So we are obviously working on a tighter time frame because of the problems with the website and the slowness associated with the rollout and the enrollment period.  But we do have a six-month enrollment period; we are a month-and-a-half into that.  So we're working assiduously to make improvements to the website so that that experience continues to get better for consumers, and more and more Americans are able to enroll.

 Q    So under no circumstance would there be a consideration to extend?

 MR. CARNEY:  Well, I’m not going to speculate about the future.  What I’m going to tell you is that right now we are focused on making the changes and fixes necessary to the website, to improve that experience for consumers, and also to work in a variety of ways to make it easier for Americans to enroll.

One of the things that remains true is that there's enormous interest in the quality, affordable coverage available on the marketplaces.  And where we were unsuccessful is in making that access to that coverage easy from day one, October 1st.  And as the President, I think, made clear to you here yesterday, he takes responsibility for that, we take responsibility for that, and we're about the business of making the fixes necessary to ensure that those benefits are available to the American people who so clearly want them. 

Q    Jay, Henry Chao was raising red flags back in July about the website, saying the plane could crash on takeoff.  Was the White House aware of these concerns at the time?

MR. CARNEY:  Steve, we've said all along -- I know that there's these selective leaks going on out of various House committees, as they conduct oversight into this.  But we've said all along that there were, in the testing of this, instances where there were problems that were identified, and fixes that were undertaken to the website.

What we did not expect was that we would have the size problem that we had, come October 1st.  And if we had expected that, we wouldn't have been promoting the launch of the website and the run-up to it in the way that we were.  The President was very candid about that.  I mean, it does not stand the test of logic to suggest that we somehow knew that this website would perform as poorly as it did, and a week before, or four days before, were encouraging people to go to it and talking about how it would be fairly functional and effective. 

So there's no question -- if the point of these selective leaks is to get everybody to recognize that the website performed terribly on October 1st, I don't think that's a point that anybody here is denying.  So what we're focused on is making the fixes necessary so that the website works in the way that it was intended to.

Q    And a budget question.  You would like to extend unemployment benefits.  What offsets in the budget are you willing to consider to make that happen?

MR. CARNEY:  I appreciate the question.  I think that while we have made substantial progress in bringing the economy back from the brink, there is no question that there are still too many Americans out of work.  And as a nation, we have always taken the approach that in addition to the basic unemployment benefits available to those who lose their jobs and are looking for work, emergency unemployment compensation should be available in times when the labor market is not at full strength.  And while the labor market has been improving, it is not, clearly, at full strength.

At the end of the year, emergency unemployment compensation is set to expire, and that means that 1.3 million unemployed Americans will lose unemployment insurance benefits.  These benefits are crucial for maintaining incomes of the unemployed and their families, and have been shown to reduce poverty and increase the chances of returning the unemployed worker to a good job. 

Independent studies have also shown that in terms of economic impact, these benefits have a big bang for the buck -- because as you know, and anybody who covers these kinds of issues knows, those benefits flow right back into the economy because, almost by definition, those who are strapped and need unemployment benefits are using the benefits that they've received right away, and spending them and injecting that money into the economy, which helps spur growth and create jobs. 

So as Gene Sperling mentioned yesterday -- I think that's why I'm getting the question you mentioned yesterday -- that the President believes we should extend this provision through the end of 2014, and we are confident that Congress will join us in this effort.  And we're confident of that, because if you look back, unemployment compensation, emergency unemployment compensation, has always been extended when the unemployment rate is near current levels.  That was the case under President George W. Bush and it's been the case in the aftermath or in the recovery from the Great Recession. 

So we'll work with Congress for how to make that happen.  But we're confident that Congress will join us in extending these benefits. 

Let me move around.  Victoria. 

Q    The question is, the whistleblowers yesterday at a committee hearing were talking about the Secret Service's apparent sexcapades in 17 countries and visiting bordellos, hiring prostitutes, having one-night stands as well as longer-term relationships with foreign nationals who have not been cleared.  Given this level of what seems to be inappropriate sexual activity going on with the Secret Service, what is the President's level of confidence in them at this point?

 THE PRESIDENT:  The President believes deeply that the vast majority of the men and women who work for the U.S. Secret Service exemplify the highest standards of service, and that they work day and night professionally to protect the President and presidents before him, and presidents -- and they will after him, as well his family and presidential families as well as other protectees. 

 Issues that have arisen, including the visit to Colombia and other issues that arise, the President is confident that they will be fully investigated and that action where appropriate will be taken.  And he believes that the leadership at the Secret Service, including the new director, will address matters as they arise appropriately. 

But it is important to note that the President believes very strongly that these men and women are professionals and that they put their lives on the line to protect the Commander-in-Chief, protect the President, protect his or her family.  And that's a very weighty responsibility, and he greatly appreciates it.

 Q    Does he think that the new director has taken swift action to act on the kinds of allegations that have been in place before she came in?

 MR. CARNEY:  I know that the President believes very strongly that Director Pierson is the right person for the job and has great confidence in her leadership.  I don’t have a specific reaction to any investigation that might be ongoing or accusations that might be leveled currently, except to say that the President has absolute confidence in the leadership at the Secret Service.

Q    Question about this insurance fix the President announced yesterday.  It does introduce a little bit of uncertainty here.  So what advice would you guys give, if any, to these people who have gotten these cancellation letters?  Do they call their insurance company back?  Do they call the state insurance commissioners?  Do they keep trying to log on?  What should they do sort of in the meantime, trying to figure out whether their companies are going to offer this to them?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, a couple of things.  One, what the President did and can do -- and the Secretary has the authority to do -- is essentially waive the provision within the Affordable Care Act that would make plans beyond the current early enrollment phase become compliant with minimum standards.  And, obviously, because we have a system where state insurance commissioners have great authority over the markets in their states, this is something that insurance companies and insurance commissioners will make the ultimate decision on, in terms of offering to extend the renewal period or to offer to renew policies in the individual market where cancellation notices might have gone out. 

What is also required in the fix that the President announced yesterday is that if that offer is made, insurers need to make clear to their customers what benefits are available to them or the fact that benefits are available to them through the marketplace, and also what benefits that might come to them under the new standards are missing in the plans that they might be renewing.  So it's basically eyes wide open is the way -- so that the consumers have the most amount of information possible as they make this decision.

And the whole goal here is to address the problem that has arisen and to give consumers more options as they begin this transition into an insurance marketplace where, over the long run, costs will be contained, minimum benefits will be offered, and you won't be in a situation which has existed up to this very moment where if you're in the individual market you tend to be doing okay as long as you're healthy -- because, A, you'll be offered insurance if you're healthy and you might be thrown off insurance once you get sick; but you’ll also, in this current environment, you might pay more if you're a woman, you might pay double, even, for the same coverage, and you might find that you do not have caps on out-of-pocket expenses, so you could be confronted with a $40,000 or $50,000 bill that’s not covered. 

These are the kinds of things that the Affordable Care Act was designed to fix.  And what the President announced yesterday was a solution to a problem that helps the transition into those marketplaces occur more smoothly.

Q    But it sounds like people who are affected here won't necessarily know for some time whether it's going to be fixed for them.

MR. CARNEY:  We believe that insurers certainly can generate letters, just like they did already, to their customers that advise them of this new opportunity if they choose to make that opportunity available to them, and if there is time to do that.

So we're obviously going to be working with insurers and working with states on this matter.  But we believe there is time, and we believe it's a solution to a problem that has clearly arisen that the President wants addressed.

Q    One more larger one.  We know that the Affordable Care Act has been under fire from the very beginning -- the problems with the website, this issue of people getting these cancellation letters that have only made matters worse.  So the question is, what do you say to the folks who are wondering if the President is going to be able to get back on track and be able to have a productive second term, get his agenda through legislatively?  So how's he going to do that?  What do you say to those folks?

MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think he's going to do it by waking up every day and focusing on addressing the concerns that the American people have, that they want their elected leaders here in Washington to focus on.  And that means, in this case, making the Affordable Care Act deliver on its promise, deliver the benefits that it will provide, when implemented, to millions and millions of Americans.

There's no question that this has been a problem in its rolling out of the policy, as the President I think pretty amply acknowledged yesterday.  But this is an issue that goes to whether or not we are successfully delivering benefits to the American people, delivering on a policy that promises to continue to rein in health care spending over the long term, that provides minimum benefits to Americans that prohibits insurance companies from denying you coverage because you have even a minor preexisting condition. 

This is obviously a challenge and we’re facing the challenge and we’re up to the challenge, but when it comes to what it means more broadly, I think it just goes right to the heart of the fact that the American people want their elected leaders working for them.  And this President wakes up every day focused on what he can do to work for the hardworking Americans and make their lives a little easier, a little better, and a little more secure.  That’s what he’s going to do every day that he is in office.

Jon.

Q    Jay, we’ve already heard from three state insurance commissioners that say the President’s plan simply is not workable.  I mean, what is that going to do for people in those states?  Washington State, Arkansas, Vermont -- all those insurance commissioners said this just won’t work, they’re not going to do it.

 MR. CARNEY:  Well, Jon, I can also cite Kentucky, Florida, and California, I think collectively even a higher population -- states that have said they will -- they’ve announced that they will allow insurers to renew these plans under this policy.  And the fact is --

Q    So states that do it are okay?  States that don’t, those people are out of luck?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, Jon, what you are identifying is the insurance world that we live in, in the United States, where state insurance commissions obviously have a great deal of authority about how insurance is marketed and sold in their state.  So we are going to work with states.  It has always been the case, even up to -- as I noted earlier and this is rarely acknowledged or discussed -- but that the Affordable Care Act has within it the provision that allows insurance companies in those states where the state insurance commissions allow it, to renew existing policies already.  And that was true prior to the problems that we’ve seen in the last several weeks with cancellation notices. 

What the President’s fix does is extend that renewal period.  But it has always been the case -- because, as the President said yesterday, we were trying to build on the existing system to cause the least amount of disruption -- state insurance commissions have authority in their states to govern how policies are marketed and sold, and to set standards for those policies.

Q    So what do you say to Bill Fullner, he’s the guy in Washington State, cancelled -- his insurance policy was cancelled, he was out of luck, took great hope in what the President had said, and then a few hours later finds out that it’s not going to apply to him because his insurance commissioner says the plan is not workable?

MR. CARNEY:  Jon, I would say that what the President said yesterday is that he wants to continue to work with lawmakers of both parties who are engaged in a good-faith effort to make improvements to the Affordable Care Act and even to address this particular issue.  The fact of --

Q    But he’s losing his insurance at the end of the year and is faced now with paying a premium twice as expensive.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, as has always been the case, I don’t know any -- when you throw out an individual to me, I can’t -- I don’t have a capacity --

Q    This would apply to anybody who had a cancellation notice in Washington State.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, no, it wouldn’t apply -- what you just cited about the premium wouldn’t necessarily apply to every individual.  What the fact of the matter is -- and these cases aren’t usually brought into the briefing room here -- that more than half of people who get --

Q    These are real people.  I mean, it’s --

MR. CARNEY:  Oh, absolutely.  And I think you heard the President here at length talk about his concern for those people, and that’s why he’s making this fix, and why he is going to work every day to do what he can and then to work with Congress so that they can do what they can to make the Affordable Care Act implementation go more smoothly and work effectively for the American people. 

What is absolutely the case, Jon, is that the Affordable Care Act, when implemented, will allow Americans across the country, millions of Americans, to purchase affordable, quality health insurance for many of whom that was something that was not possible before.  And even as we deal with the problems that are arising with the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, it is absolutely essential that we remember what the alternative here is.  And the President talked about this a little bit yesterday.  When critics point out -- and they justifiably point out the problems with implementation -- and then they say, well, we should then do away with Obamacare, we should do away with the Affordable Care Act, they are saying that they want to go back to the status quo ante -- which in this market, I don’t know about this individual, but anybody in the individual market was subjected to extreme increases annually in their premiums, to a situation where insurance companies regularly either dropped or abruptly changed the policies that were offered to them, downgrading the coverage that was offered to individuals. 

And that's why -- and to some degree, one of the reasons why we’re seeing this problem is because there has been and is so much churn in that market -- so that the number of people who got cancellation notices was as high as it was because so few policies are maintained for very long, because individuals come in and out of that market because it’s the worst place to be.  It has traditionally been the worst place to be.

So if you’re somebody who buys an individual policy because you have to, because you’re in between jobs, or you have a job where your employer doesn't offer it, and then you get a job with an employer who does, you’re going to go with the employer-provided insurance because the benefits currently available on the insurance market are often substandard, and that is something that the Affordable Care Act was specifically designed to address.

Q    So one more.  Can I just ask you -- the President said yesterday, “I was not informed directly that the website would not be working the way it was supposed to.”  I mean, we’ve heard the latest is the project manager on healthcare.gov warned -- was worried this thing could crash at takeoff.  I’m just wondering, did the President at any point ask the question, has this thing been tested; are we ready to go?  And what was the answer he got?

MR. CARNEY:  Jon, the President was regularly briefed on the implementation of the Affordable Care Act in the run-up to the launch.  What he and others have said is that at no time did we anticipate that the problems that we ended up seeing on October 1st would occur.  And if we had --

Q    I get it.  But the people working on this knew that there were problems and were worried this could happen. 

MR. CARNEY:  No, I get it.

Q    And I’m just asking, did the President ask the question, has it been tested?

MR. CARNEY:  Absolutely, the President constantly asked where we were and what was the progress on --

Q    So who misled him if they knew of these problems and didn't disclose it to him?

MR. CARNEY:  Again, there’s a jump in your logic there.  The fact is, as we acknowledged and have said since October 1st and even before that, we anticipated glitches.  We were told there might be some problems.  And as is the case when any site --

Q    The project manager was worried this could crash at takeoff.

MR. CARNEY:  Could I finish?  Hey, Jon, I know we’re creating an exchange here.  But if I could just exchange -- finish for one second, that the fact is when a site like this is being developed and it’s tested and problems arise, checklists are developed and problems are addressed.  And we believed that the problems were being addressed, and that while there would be some glitches upon launch on October 1st, that, obviously, we never anticipated that we would have the kind of severe problems that we had -- that the site would function as poorly as it did. 

And I really ask for everyone to take a step back and look at the logic here of suggesting that somehow we or anybody responsible for it knew that we would have the problems that we had on October 1st. 

Q    But the project manager is saying that he was worried that it could crash on takeoff. 

MR. CARNEY:  I addressed this when Steve asked it already a few minutes ago. 

Q    This isn't about glitches, this is crashing.  I mean, this is -- he seemed worried about something bigger than that. 

MR. CARNEY:  Again, I think that -- I think it would be -- I would advise everyone who is susceptible to taking these partial transcript leaks from committee staff -- and I think again and again we've seen when the full story is revealed that committee staff hasn’t really been completely transparent with you and others -- that it would be wise to look at the whole story.  And that would be the case in this instance, and I think almost invariably the case when committee staff is trying to make a political point.

There is no question that this goes to -- the fundamental issue is:  Has the website functioned effectively?  Absolutely not.  And nobody is more aware of that or frustrated by it than the President and the people who work for him on this issue.  That’s why we're focused on fixing it and not focused on dribbling out information to score political points.  We're focused on getting it right, because this is about a policy that will deliver benefits to millions of American people who deserve them and have earned them.

Jon-Christopher.

Q    As you know, Senator Lindsey Graham has threatened to put a hold on all confirmations presented by the President, including that of Janet Yellen, the new Chair of the Federal Reserve, until he receives information he's requested on Benghazi.  What steps is the administration taking to resolve this issue and ensure the confirmation of Ms. Yellen, and continuity at the Federal Reserve, which in fact could affect world markets?

MR. CARNEY:  We're very confident that Janet Yellen is absolutely the right candidate for the job.  Her hearing yesterday, we felt, went very well, and it offered an opportunity for her to take questions from committee members of both parties. 

When it comes to Benghazi, we have -- and I will spare everyone here the recitation of the amount of cooperation that we have shown oversight committees with reams of documents and numerous interviews and testimony in hearings.  And that continues.  So we are working with Congress on this as we always do.  And we absolutely believe that the President's highly qualified nominees should not be held, they should be given the votes that they deserve.  And we look forward to their confirmation.

Cheryl.

Q    Yes, do you have either a firm number or a pretty good estimate of the number of cancellation letters that have actually gone out nationwide?

MR. CARNEY:  I meant to mention it -- I think it's this afternoon -- CMS is doing its regular briefing, and I would encourage you to participate in those briefings.  They're going to have more detailed information.  I don’t know if they have a number on that.  The reports in the press vary widely.  I think that one -- I think it's important to note that when you look at the number of people who, for example, get benefits in the marketplaces, tax credits and the like, it’s 17 million.  And I think the largest number I've seen, in terms of cancellation letters, is 3.5 million, and I don't even know if that's accurate.  So I would refer you to CMS.

Major.

Q    You implied a second ago that there's a fuller story about Mr. Chao's testimony, that Jonathan referred to.  Would you like to try to --

MR. CARNEY:  No, I'm simply saying that it has been the case again and again and again, with certain committees, that partial information is produced or leaked to reporters or put out in press releases that, upon further scrutiny, is not quite what they say it was.  What I --

Q    Do you have any reason to dispute what that represents him thinking and fearing before the launch of the website?

MR. CARNEY:  What I can tell you is that there is certainly -- it is certainly the case that in the period leading up to the launch, that individuals involved in it saw problems that needed fixing, and those problems were identified and addressed.  We believed they were addressed sufficiently so that the site would launch with some glitches, but effectively, on October 1st.  And that did not happen.

So again, the logic around this is to suggest that somehow inside the administration, we all knew, or somebody knew, that the thing was not going to work effectively October 1st, and yet we were out there talking about the importance of the launch on October 1st and how everybody should go to the website and take advantage of it.  I don't think if you follow that logic to its conclusion that it makes any sense at all. 

The fact is we did not anticipate that the problems that occurred on October 1st and in the aftermath were going to happen.  We thought there were would be some glitches, as there are with the launches of major websites, but not on the scale that we ended up seeing.

Q    Would you acknowledge that what the President announced yesterday will be difficult for insurance companies to deal with?  They've already raised some just practical issues.  They'll have to contact their consumers -- their customers, rather.  They'll have to recalculate their premiums.  And they'll have to --

MR. CARNEY:  Premiums are locked in for 2014.  They are locked in and set.  That is a fact.

Q    They don't have to recalculate them by re-issuing policies that have been canceled?  Won't that affect some of those calculations?

MR. CARNEY:  The fact of the matter is that any of the existing -- I mean, this is one of the things that consumers need to be aware of -- that as was the case always in the individual market, which was the least regulated portion of the insurance market, these policies were subject to substantial premium increases.  It happened all the time.  The average was 15 percent.  And they were also subject to downgrading on a regular basis, or where individuals had a policy for a year, but if they got sick that year, then they could be dropped. 

None of that exists now.  In the Affordable Care Act and in the marketplaces, there are protections in place for those individuals.  If you choose to renew that existing policy, you need to do so, understanding -- and this is where we're asking the insurance companies to make it clear to their consumers these facts -- that you do not get obviously the tax credits that might be available to you, but also some of the other protections that would come with policies that fit the minimum standards under the Affordable Care Act. 

Q    Do you have any idea or estimate of how many people actually fall into this particular category?  Because it's a broader -- it's a smaller category than the individual market itself.

MR. CARNEY:  No, I think this is what Cheryl was asking.  And I don't -- I've seen a lot of reports.  I would encourage you to participate in the CMS briefings that they have.  They may have more detail about this.  I think the reports have varied.  It is a portion of the 5 percent of the population that participates in the individual market.  What we know is that of that 5 percent, a million -- what's going on here?

Q    No, I was saying it was simulcast.  It's underway now.

MR. CARNEY:  Well, if anybody wants to go get on that call, you can.  You might get answers to the specific question for numbers.  But, in any case, of the 5 percent, a million, roughly, would be eligible for Medicaid in those states that have expanded it. 

And when we talk about -- I mean, here's, again, context.  These individuals are of great concern to the President, the ones who have been adversely affected by this.  And he feels a responsibility for taking steps to fix the problem for those individuals, to make that transition smoother; to allow insurance companies and state insurance commissioners to ensure that they can renew their policies, if they so desire, making sure that they're aware of what their alternative are and aware of the fact that their alternatives might be significantly better for them, both in the benefits they receive and the costs that they incur.

One thing that is absolutely the case when we talk about this, again, more globally, is that all those states out there that have refused, for ideological reasons, to expand Medicaid are depriving millions of Americans of insurance coverage.  Millions.  More than are affected by these cancellation policies.  That's a fact, and it's a problematic fact, because a lot of those individuals are veterans who could be getting Medicaid insurance under the expansion of Medicaid, created by the Affordable Care Act, but for ideological reasons, governors have in some states declined to do that.  Not all Republican governors.  As we know, in Ohio, where the President was yesterday; Arizona, Florida, other states with Republican governors, they have made the decision to do right by their constituents and expand Medicaid and make quality insurance available to millions of low-income Americans who need it.

So we have a problem that we’re trying to fix specific to the section, the subsection of that 5 percent of the population.  But there are other issues here that we need to work together to fix, and that’s why we continue to urge governors in states that haven’t expanded Medicaid to do so for their constituents, not because of their -- they may be ideologically opposed to this President or to a health care reform that has his name on it, but the bottom line is they have the opportunity to help their citizens and they ought to.

Q    It’s no secret to you that House Democrats and Senate Democrats were urging the President to make public whatever fix he was going to have for this problem before the House vote today on the Upton bill, and to give them a place or a position to take, or a policy response to point to, so they wouldn’t be exposed to this vote on the Upton bill or possibly something else in the Senate.  Does the President and the White House believe this fix settles the issue, at least for now, and does not require legislative intervention of the kind that Mary Landrieu and other Senate Democrats are continuing to explore?

MR. CARNEY:  The President said in his remarks, in his prepared remarks yesterday, that he wants to work with lawmakers of both parties who are engaged in good-faith efforts to make improvements to the Affordable Care Act so that it --

Q    No, but on this particular issue.

MR. CARNEY:  That would include on this particular issue.  We absolutely do not support and oppose the Upton bill, because whatever the intentions -- and I think House Republican intentions towards the Affordable Care Act have been pretty clear -- but whatever the intentions of that particular bill, it certainly -- while maybe fixing the problem potentially of those who receive cancellation letters -- it also, by allowing insurers to sell new policies to new customers that don’t meet the standards, is deliberately or not designed to undermine the Affordable Care Act in the long run.

And I think you would find if you talked to insurers that they would have serious problems with something like that, because it would undercut the marketplace and it would create a situation that would be very hard to sustain.

Wendell.

Q    Since the President can’t compel insurers to renew these policies, what’s he going to say to them to convince them to go along, to persuade them, which I gather is what today’s meeting is about?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, look, there are a lot of issues that the President looks forward to discussing with insurers today, when it comes to the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.  This is one of them.  I think that he will certainly raise with them what this fix does and why he thinks it’s the right thing to do, and encourage them to offer renewals to those customers who might want to avail themselves of that choice. 

I mean, the purpose here is to provide a choice, it’s not to compel people to renew or to compel people to choose any particular plan within the marketplace.  It’s to make them -- to give them this option, and when you give them this option, to also make them aware of what’s available to them in the marketplace and also make them aware of what they do not get in terms of protections and benefits if they choose to stick with an individual market plan that does not meet the minimum standards of the Affordable Care Act.

Q    But it requires insurance companies to act rather swiftly over the next 32 days or so.  What will he say to persuade them to make that effort?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think he will talk about -- and I think there was a very lengthy briefing yesterday in which officials more steeped in the minutiae of the policy tried to explain how it works to reporters.  But I think he would explain how he envisioned this working, how we are confident that it would not, for example, on the questions I got at the top of the briefing, create adverse problems for the Affordable Care Act when it came to the risk pools because of the flexibility the Secretary has to make adjustments.  And I’m sure those issues will be discussed.

The goal here is to make this transition as smooth as possible for those Americans who have been affected by cancellation notices and may be in a position of finding their best option in their view, the renewal of an existing policy, even if it doesn’t meet minimum standards and doesn’t give the protections that new plans would offer.  And this extends that possibility.

It’s important to remember, again, when we talk about the world as it existed before the announcement yesterday, that every insurer in the states where this is allowed could have and could offer renewals of those plans already.  What the President announced yesterday would simply extend the period for renewal.

Q    What’s his authority for doing this?  I ask that in the same way that people ask whether he had the authority to basically waive the mandate for larger businesses.  What’s his authority for doing this today?

MR. CARNEY:  I know I -- well, the Secretary has the authority under the law to -- here it is.  The Secretary’s authority can be used in narrow circumstances to ease implementation, short of legislative changes, and this is one of those instances.  There are individuals for whom the implementation of new consumer protections without a transition would result in a loss of an existing plan, even though the law includes a section on the preservation of the right to maintain existing coverage -- what I talked to you about earlier. 

So this type of action was used for last year in the administration’s policy on deferred action for childhood arrivals pending immigration reform, for example.  That was something that DHS did.

So this is authority that exists for the Secretary to use to help smooth the implementation of this policy.

Peter and then Chris.

Q    While we were speaking, the House just passed the Keep Your Health Plan Act, 261 to 157.  In simple language, the message from the White House about why that’s bad is what?

MR. CARNEY:  This is the Upton bill. 

Q    Yes, correct.

MR. CARNEY:  Because whatever its intentions, the plan would, by allowing insurers to sell substandard policies to new customers -- not simply to renew -- allow those individuals who had those policies and received cancellations to renew them, but to sell those policies to new customers, unlimited number of new customers would undermine the central premise of the Affordable Care Act, which is that there should be minimum standards for everyone and that insurance companies should not be able to in the new marketplaces sell plans that charge Athena twice what they charge you; that put annual caps on what benefits you can receive; that give you doctors’ visits, but not hospitalizations; that give you coverage, but not your child because your child has asthma.

So this is -- the problem with the Upton bill and why we will -- the President will veto it if it ever gets to his desk, is because it would basically -- again, whether this is the intention of the author or not -- it would basically go back to in that market the world that existed before, which I think it's important to remember:  Even as we have these legitimate discussions about the problems with the rollout of the Affordable Care Act, it's not a world that most people want us to remain living in for those who have to suffer the vagaries of the insurance market as individuals.  So that's why it won't work.   

 Q    Since the President made the “if you like your plan, you can keep your plan” promise, and now already we've heard from at least three states that say they are not going to allow the change from yesterday -- the idea presented by the White House to go forward -- will, A, the President reach out to those states and push them to do that?  And then what does he say directly to those individuals in those states who say, Mr. President, you've made those promises to me and now they don't apply to me?

MR. CARNEY:  What the President will do and his team will do is work with every state to try to discuss the benefits of this fix -- 

Q    So what do you say to Washington State?

MR. CARNEY:  Well, I think I had this question earlier.  But the answer is that the President will continue to work -- he is doing -- he did yesterday --

Q    Is he disappointed maybe is a better way to put it.  I know you answered -- perhaps his thoughts.

MR. CARNEY:  He did yesterday what he can do administratively to address this problem.  He will work with Congress to do -- so that Congress can do what it can do legislatively in a good-faith effort to address problems, to improve the implementation of the Affordable Care Act.  What he won't do is support policies that essentially are designed to sabotage, repeal, undermine the Affordable Care Act.

Q    So if people are upset, who should they be upset with?  Who should the blame be directed to?  Should it be directed to the President, to the state commissioner, or to the insurance company?  The insurance companies say you're making people direct the blame toward them.

MR. CARNEY:  Two things.  One, the President I think accepted an ample amount of responsibility before you yesterday.  No question.

Q    But it doesn’t fix it for a lot of people even still.

 MR. CARNEY:  Let's also be clear, and it is absolutely incumbent on anyone who reports on this to be clear about the reality of the individual market -- which is that the things that happen to consumers in that market every year can continue to happen, unless individuals end up in the marketplaces where they have the protections under the Affordable Care Act.

So one of the reasons why we got where we are is because insurers have been able to in that market to sell you a plan because you're healthy.  And then, when you get sick during the year that that plan and that contract was in effect, refuse to renew your policy the next year, because you now have a preexisting condition.  They again, as I said, could sell you a plan and take the same plan and market it to a woman of the exact same age and the exact same health, and charge her up to twice as much.

So again, this is not about blame.  But I think it is important to understand what individuals in that market have been dealing with for a long, long time, and problems in that market that have been real and have nothing to do with the Affordable Care Act, except in the fact that the Affordable Care Act was designed in part to prevent those problems from traveling with us into the future.

Q    The President said yesterday there will be an intense evaluation already.  He is asking a lot of tough questions of his team to figure out how we got to this point.  Has the President done anything, communicated anything to his team to go forward now with some form of after-action report, given the fact that the October 1 deadline has already passed?  What is he doing right now for that study to take place?

Q    Peter, I think that the answer to that is no, because the President right now has tasked his team -- and everyone involved in this effort -- to the work needed to improve the website and to improve the implementation of the Affordable Care Act and the delivery of the benefits of the Affordable Care Act.

 I think there are obviously already efforts underway in Congress to engage in oversight.  And what the President is focused on and what his team is focused on is doing the work necessary to make sure that the Affordable Care Act works for the American people.

Q    Does he believe that people should be accountable -- even if that process doesn’t happen yet?

MR. CARNEY:  I think the President stood up in front of you yesterday, as he did in an interview on your network last week, and took responsibility for the problems that have arisen with the rollout of the Affordable Care Act.  He is accountable and his team is accountable.  And, no, his team -- and that’s why he has assigned them to work overtime to make these fixes and get it right.

Chris.

Q    Thanks, Jay.  Yesterday, Speaker Boehner said that he sees no basis or no need for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act when I asked him at a news conference if he would be open to bringing it up for a vote.  Given the repeated statements of opposition from that bill from Republican leadership, is there any reconsideration at the White House to an executive order --MR. CARNEY:  Chris, I appreciate the question and the Speaker’s comments of course are disappointing.  And I think that those who oppose this legislation are taking the wrong position.  And they are taking a position that I think history will prove to be wrong, as has been the case in seminal civil rights legislation throughout our history in this country.

Basic equality is fundamental to who we are as a nation.  And our history is, in part, a story of efforts and struggles to reach that ideal where equality is not only an aspiration but a fact.  The Employment Non-Discrimination Act is a piece of that story, and it ought to be passed by Congress, passed by the House as it was by the Senate, because this President will sign it into law. 

And we believe that we have come a long way -- and I know you and I have had this conversation over the course of the last several years -- and I think that it is fair to say that maybe some close observers of this debate did not believe we would get to where we are now, where the Senate has passed this legislation with bipartisan support.  So we are not at all ready to believe that the fight is over in the House, because it is the President’s strong conviction that this is the right thing to do and that the arguments against it do not hold up to scrutiny or the test of history. 

So we’re going to keep fighting for the House to take it up and urging the House to take it up.  We believe that if it were given a vote on the floor, that it would pass and that Democrats and Republicans would vote yes, and the President would sign it into law.  And we believe, as we've discussed, you and I, over the past many months and years, that that is the best solution here.  And we're going to continue to fight for it. 

Q    If the intransigence continues, would the President be open to the idea of threatening to issue the executive order --

MR. CARNEY:  Look, I think that we're focused on getting this legislation passed right now, Chris.  And for the reasons I just discussed, we believe that resistance to it will eventually fall away, because the rightness of it will prevail.

Let me give you a week ahead, please. 

On Sunday, the First Family will attend the Oregon State versus University of Maryland basketball game in College Park, Maryland. 

On Monday, the President will attend meetings here at the White House. 

On Tuesday, the press will deliver remarks at the White House Journal's CEO Council's annual meeting.

On Wednesday, the President will award the Presidential Medal of Freedom.  The First Lady will also attend.  The Medal of Freedom is our nation's highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.  The medals will be presented at the White House in a morning ceremony.

On Thursday, the President will attend meetings here at the White House. 

And on Friday, the press will host King Mohammed VI of Morocco at the White House.  The visit will highlight the longstanding friendship between the United States and Morocco, and strengthen our strategic partnership.  The President looks forward to discussing a range of issues of mutual interest with the King, including support for Morocco's democratic and economic reforms. 

This visit is also an opportunity to increase our cooperation on addressing regional challenges, including countering violent extremism, supporting democratic transitions, and promoting economic development in the Middle East and Africa. 

That is your week ahead.  Thank you all very much.  Have a great weekend. 

Q    Will you send out a reading --

Q    The insurance meeting?

Q    Yes, will you send out something after the meeting?

MR. CARNEY:  A readout?  We'll see.

 

END              

1:55 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on the Economy in Cleveland, OH

ArcelorMittal Cleveland Steel Factory
Cleveland, Ohio 

3:38 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, Ohio!  (Applause.)  It is good to be back in Cleveland.  The last time I was here was about a year ago, in the final days of the campaign.  I know how much you miss hearing how I approve this message every night on your TV.  (Laughter.)  I will say it is nice to be here when the only real battle for Ohio is the Browns-Bengals game this Sunday.  (Applause.)  He’s got the Browns shirt right here, Browns cap.  (Laughter.) 

I want to thank Scotty for that terrific introduction.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  He is a natural.  I want to thank your CEO, Lakshmi Mittal, for investing in America and the Cleveland area.  We appreciate him.  (Applause.)  And I want to thank all of you for having me here today.

Along with me, there are a couple of people I just want to acknowledge.  First of all, America’s Secretary of Energy, Ernie Moniz, is here.  Right there.  (Applause.)  And Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur is here.  Give Marcy a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  Fighting for working people every day.

And earlier this afternoon I had a chance to see your mayor, Frank Jackson; your county executive, Ed FitzGerald.  And even though they’re not here, I want to thank them for the great work they’re doing on behalf of working people throughout the region.  (Applause.) 

And then, finally, I want to thank Mark and Gary for showing me one of the biggest steel plants in America.  And they told me that folks are proud to have been making steel right here for a century -- 100 years -- right here.  (Applause.)  And they explained that, today, the steel you make in Cleveland is some of the strongest you’ll find anywhere in the world.  It’s one of the most productive plants in the world.  Best workers in the world.  (Applause.)  

And what’s remarkable is, when you think about it, go back to where this plant was just a few years ago.  The economy was in free fall, auto industry on the brink of collapse.  And that meant demand for steel had dried up.  The blast furnaces went quiet.  About 1,200 steelworkers punched out for what might have been the last time.  And that all came at the end of a decade when the middle class was already working harder and harder just to get by, and nearly one in three American manufacturing jobs had vanished -- a lot of them going overseas.  And that could have devastated this community for good.

But we rolled up our sleeves, we made some tough choices.  We rescued and retooled the American auto industry; it saved more than a million jobs.  We bet on American ingenuity and American workers.  (Applause.)  And assembly lines started humming again, and automakers started to make cars again.  And just a few months after this plant shut down, your plant manager got the call:  Fire those furnaces back up, get those workers back on the job.  And over the last four years, you’ve made yourselves one of the most productive steel mills not just in America, but in the world.  In the world.  (Applause.) 

So you retooled to make the stronger steel that goes into newer, better American cars and trucks.  You created new partnerships with schools and community colleges to make sure that folks who work here have the high-tech skills they need for the high-tech jobs -- because I was looking around this factory, and there’s a whole bunch of computer stuff going on.

One of your engineers -- and I want to make sure I get Margaret’s name right here -- Margaret Krolikowski.  Did I get that right, Margaret?  (Applause.)  Where’s Margaret?  Where is she?  There is she is, back there.  So I’m going to quote you -- I’m going to quote you.  Here’s what Margaret said:  “When we came back, we wanted to make sure we were in a position where we never shut down again.”  Never shut down again.  And that means making sure that workers here are constantly upgrading their skills and investments being made in the state-of-the-art technology.

And it was interesting, when I was meeting a number of the folks who were giving me the tour -- folks who have been here 30 years, 40 years -- but obviously the plant has changed, and so during that period they’ve had to upgrade their skills.  And that’s what’s happened.  And the story of this plant is the story of America over the last five years.  We haven’t just been recovering from a crisis.  What we’ve been trying to do is rebuild a new foundation for growth and prosperity to protect ourselves from future crises.  And because of the grit and resilience and optimism of the American people, we’re seeing comeback stories like yours all across America. 

Over the last 44 months, our businesses have created 7.8 million new jobs.  Last month, another 200,000 Americans went back to work.  (Applause.)  And a lot of those jobs are in manufacturing.  So now we’ve got more work to do to get those engines of the economy churning even faster.  But because we’ve been willing to do some hard things, not just kick the can down the road, factories are reopening their doors, businesses are hiring new workers, companies that were shipping jobs overseas, they’re starting to talk about bringing those jobs back to America.  We’re starting to see that. 

And let me give you an example, because we were talking about this -- Mr. Mittal and others were talking about what’s different now.  Take a look at what we’ve done with American energy.  For years, folks have talked about reducing our dependence on foreign oil -- but we didn’t really do it.  And we were just importing more and more oil, sending more and more money overseas.  Gas prices keep on going up and up and up.  We finally decided we were going to do something about it.

So we invested in new American technologies to reverse our addiction to foreign oil, double wind power, double solar power, produce more oil, produce more natural gas, and do it all in a way that is actually bringing down some of our pollution, making our entire economy more energy-efficient.  Today, we generate more renewable energy than ever.  We produce more natural gas than anybody in the world.  Just yesterday, we learned that for the first time since 1995, the United States of America produces more of our own oil here at home than we buy from other countries.  First time since 1995.  (Applause.)  And that’s a big deal.  That’s what America has done these past five years.

And that is a huge competitive advantage for us.  Part of the reason companies now want to move -- we were just talking about it -- this plant, if it’s located in Germany, energy costs are double, maybe triple; same in Japan.  So this gives us a big edge.  But this is also important:  We reached the milestone not just because we’re producing more energy, but also we’re wasting less energy.  And this plant is a good example of it.  We set new fuel standards that double the distance our cars and trucks go on a gallon of gas by the middle of the next decade.  That saves the average driver, everybody here, more than $8,000 at the pump over the life of a new car.  You like that?  (Applause.)  We launched initiatives to put people to work upgrading our homes, and our businesses, and our factories so we’re wasting less energy.  All that saves businesses money on their energy bills.  Your plant is one of the hundreds to answer that call.  And if you’re saving money on energy costs, that means you can invest in equipment, invest in workers, hire more people, produce more products.

And here’s another thing:  Between more clean energy, less wasted energy, the carbon pollution that’s helping to warm the planet, that actually starts going down.  And that’s good news for anybody who cares about leaving a planet to our kids that is as beautiful as the one we got from our parents and our grandparents.  (Applause.)  So it’s a win-win.  Our economy keeps growing, creating new jobs, which means that strengthening our energy security and increasing energy efficiency doesn’t have to be a choice between the environment and the economy -- we can do both.

So we’ve tackled the way we use energy.  That’s making America more competitive in order to attract good jobs.  We’ve also tackled our deficits.  A lot of people have been concerned about deficits.  Since I took office, we cut them in half.  That makes America more attractive when it comes to business investment decisions. 

And we’ve tackled a broken health care system.  Obviously, we’re not done yet.  (Applause.)  Obviously, we’re not done yet.  But over the last three years, health care costs have grown at the slowest pace on record.  And this is a great place to work thanks to a great steelworkers union and cooperation between management and labor.  (Applause.)  But just keep in mind that if businesses’ health care costs are growing at about one-third the rate that they were a decade ago, that makes America a more affordable place to do business, and it also means that the investors here, if they’re putting less money into health care costs, they can put more money in terms of hiring more workers and making sure that they’re getting good pay.

So that’s what all these tough decisions are about:  Reversing the forces that have hurt the middle class for a long, long time, and building an economy where anybody, if you work hard, you can get ahead.  That’s what plants like this have always been about.  It’s not that it’s easy work.  But it means if you work hard, you’ve got a chance to buy a home, you’ve got a chance to retire, you’ve got a chance to send your kids to school, you have a chance to maybe take a little vacation once in a while.  That’s what people strive for.  And that’s what will make the 21st century an American century, just like the last century was. 

But I didn’t run for President to go back to where we were.  I want us to go forward.  I want us to go towards the future.  (Applause.)  I want us to get us to where we need to be.  I want to solve problems, not just put them off.  I want to solve problems.  And we’ve got to do more to create more good, middle-class jobs like the ones folks have here. 

That means we’ve got to do everything we can to prepare our children and our workers for the competition that they’re going to face.  We should be doing everything we can to help put some sort of advanced education within reach for more young people.  Not everybody has got to go to a four-year college, but just looking at the equipment around here, you’ve got to have a little bit of advanced training.  It may come through a community college or it may come through a technical school, but we’ve got to make sure you can get that education, your kids can get that education without going broke -- without going broke, without going into debt.  (Applause.)  So we’re working on that.

Another thing we should be working on:  Fixing a broken immigration system.  (Applause.)  When you think about this whole region, a lot of folks forget, but almost everybody who worked in that plant 100 years ago came from someplace else.  And so we’ve got now a new generation of hopeful, striving immigrants; we’ve got to make sure that they come legally and that we do what we need to secure our borders, but we’ve also got to make sure that we’re providing them opportunity just like your parents, grandparents, great-grandparents received when they arrived at this plant.  And that’s important.  (Applause.)  And, by the way, it will help our economy grow because then they’re paying taxes and helping to invest and build here in America. 

We should do everything we can to revitalize American manufacturing.  Manufacturing is -- that’s the hub of our economy.  When our manufacturing base is strong, the entire economy is strong.  A lot of service jobs depend on servicing manufacturing jobs.  And, typically, manufacturing jobs pay a little bit better.  So that’s been a path, a ticket to the middle class.  So when we make steel and cars, make them here in America, that helps.  Like I said, the work may be hard but it gives you enough money to buy a home and raise a kid, retire and send your kids to school. 

And those kinds of jobs also tell us something else.  It’s not just how much you get in your paycheck, it’s also a sense of, “I’m making something and I’m helping to build this country.”  It helps establish a sense of -- that we’re invested in this country.  (Applause.)  It tells us what we’re worth as a community.  One of your coworkers, Mike Longa -- where’s Mike? 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Back here.

THE PRESIDENT:  Is he back here?  That’s Mike right there.  Mike grew up here.  His mom and dad worked at this plant.  This plant helped put Mike and four brothers and/or sisters through college.  And once this plant started growing again, Mike got his chance to be a steelworker here, and provide for his own two young kids.  So it’s a generational thing, and I want to keep that going.

In my State of the Union address, I talked about how we created America’s first manufacturing innovation institute right here in Ohio.  Marcy Kaptur has been a big proponent of this, because she knows how important manufacturing is.  I want to create more of them -- places where businesses are working with universities and they’re partnering to figure out what are the new manufacturing techniques that keep us at the cutting edge so that China or Germany don’t get ahead of us in terms of the equipment that’s being invested.  We want to be at the cutting edge, so what we’re producing is always the best steel, it’s always the best cars.  But that requires research and investment. 

And your Senator, Sherrod Brown, helped us to create that first manufacturing hub in Youngstown.  And he’s now leading a bipartisan effort -- (applause) -- he’s now leading a bipartisan effort with Senator Blunt of Missouri to move more of these manufacturing innovation hubs all across the country.  And Congress should pass Sherrod’s bill.  We should be doing everything we can to guarantee the next revolution in manufacturing happens right here in Cuyahoga, happens right here in Ohio, happens right here in America.  (Applause.) 

And let me make one last point.  We have to do everything we can to make sure every American has access to quality, affordable health care, period.  (Applause.)  You may have read we had some problems last month with websites.  I'm not happy about that.  And then I had a press conference today and I said, you know what, we fumbled the ball in terms of the rollout. 

But we always knew this was going to be hard.  There's a reason why folks had tried to do it for 100 years and hadn't done it.  And it's complicated.  There are a lot of players involved.  The status quo is entrenched.  And so, yes, there’s no question the rollout on the Affordable Care Act was much tougher than we expected.  But I want everybody here to understand, I am going to see this through.  (Applause.)  I want millions of Americans to make sure that they're not going broke when they get sick and they can go to a doctor when their kids get sick.  And we're not apologizing for that.  We are going to get this done.  (Applause.)

So we're going to get the website working the way it’s supposed to.  The plans are already out there that are affordable and people can get tax credits.  We're going to help folks whose old plans have been canceled by the insurers -- many of them weren't very good -- and we're going to make sure that they can get newer, better options. 

But we're not going to go back to the old system, because the old system was broken.  And every year, thousands of Americans would get dropped from coverage or denied their medical history or exposed to financial ruin.  You guys are lucky that you work at a company with a strong union that gives you good health benefits.  (Applause.)  But you know friends and family members who don't have it, and you know what it's like when they get sick.  You know how scary it is for them when they get sick.  Or some of them have health insurance -- they think they do -- and they get sick, and suddenly the insurance company says, oh, I'm sorry, you owe $50,000.  That's not covered.  Or they jack up your premium so you can't afford it because you had some sort of preexisting condition.  That happens every day.

So we're not going to let that happen.  We’re not going to let folks who pay their premiums on time get jerked around.  And we're not going to walk away from the 40 million Americans without health insurance.  (Applause.)  We are not going to gut this law.  We will fix what needs to be fixed, but we're going to make the Affordable Care Act work.  And those who say they're opposed to it and can't offer a solution, we'll push back.  (Applause.)  

I got to give your Governor a little bit of credit.  John Kasich, along with a lot of state legislators who are here today, they expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.  And think about that.  Just that one step means as many as 275,000 Ohioans are going to have health insurance.  And it doesn't depend on a website.  That's already happening because of the Affordable Care Act.  (Applause.)

And I think it's fair to say that the Governor didn't do it because he just loves me so much.  (Laughter.)  We don't agree on much, but he saw, well, this makes sense -- why wouldn't we do this?  Why wouldn't we make sure that hundreds of thousands of people right here in Ohio have some security?  It was the right thing to do.  And, by the way, if every Republican governor did what Kasich did here rather than play politics about it, you'd have another 5.4 million Americans who could get access to health care next year, regardless of what happens with the website.  That's their decision not to do it.  And it's the wrong decision.  They've got to go ahead and sign folks up. 

So the bottom line is sometimes we just have to set aside the politics and focus on what's good for people.  What's good to grow our middle class?  What's going to help keep plans like this growing?  What's going to make sure we're putting more people back to work?  What's going to really make a difference in terms of our kids getting a great education? 

And, look, we've done it before.  That's the good news.  The good news is that America is -- look, we make mistakes.  We have our differences.  Our politics get screwed up sometimes.  Websites don't work sometimes.  (Laughter.)  But we just keep going.  We didn't become the greatest nation on Earth by accident.  We did it because we did what it took to make sure our families could succeed, make sure our businesses could succeed, make sure our communities could succeed.  And if you don't believe me, listen to one of your coworkers.

So Sherrod Brown, earlier this year, brought a special guest along with him to the State of the Union address -- one of your coworkers, Cookie Hall.  Where's Cookie?  Is Cookie here?

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  No, she's back at the hall.

THE PRESIDENT:  She's back at the hall working.  (Laughter.)  Well, let me say something nice about her behind her back.  (Laughter.)  So Cookie said, one of -- let me make sure I can find this.  She said -- that night she said, "If I get a chance to meet President Obama, I’ll tell him my greatest pride is in our 2012 production record at Cleveland Works.  We’re the most productive steelworkers in the world.”  (Applause.)  More than a ton of steel produced for every single one of the workers at this plant.  That's pretty good.  That's pretty good.  (Applause.) 

So all of you are an example of what we do when we put our minds to it.  This plant was closed for a while.  We go through hard times.  And a lot of our friends are still going through hard times.  But when we work at it, we know we can get to a better place, and we can restore some security to a middle class that was forged in plants just like this one, and keep giving ladders of opportunity for folks who were willing to work hard to get into the middle class.  That's what I'm about.  That's what this plant is about.  I'm proud to be with you. 

And as long as I have the honor of being your President, I'm going to be waking up every single day thinking about how I can keep on helping folks like the ones who work in this plant.  (Applause.)  

God bless you.  Thank you.  God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.  Thank you. 

                                      END                 4:02 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at a DSCC Event

Private Residence

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

7:24 P.M. EST 

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you!  Thank you!  (Applause.)  Thank you so much everybody.  Thank you.  Everybody have a seat.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

Now, I’ve got my own version of this.  (Laughter.)  If David and Rhonda had just hosted one of my first fundraisers after I’d been elected to the United States Senate, that would have been enough.  Dayenu.  (Laughter.)  If they had been -- just hosted one of my first presidential fundraisers -- Dayenu.  (Laughter.)  I have been here so much -- (laughter) -- the only thing I haven’t done in this house is have Seder dinner.  (Laughter.)  But they have just been such great friends and I’m so grateful to them, and I really appreciate it.

In addition to David and Rhonda, I want to just acknowledge a couple of other folks here.  You’ve got an outstanding mayor here in Philadelphia, Mr. Michael Nutter.  We’re very, very proud of him.  (Applause.) 

And you also have in your presence not just two of our best legislators, but two of my favorite people, period.  They are gentlemen.  They are in public service for the right reasons.  They are what’s called workhorses as opposed to show horses in Congress.  And they’ve got wonderful families.  Part of the reason I may just like them so much is they’ve got a lot of daughters.  (Laughter.)  And so we’ve got that dad-bonding thing.  But I’m so glad to call them my friends, and we’re lucky to have them -- your own Bob Casey and Michael Bennet from Colorado.  So, thrilled to have them here.  (Applause.)

One of the benefits of this kind of format is that I don’t have to make a long speech, but instead we can have a dialogue, have an interaction.  So let me just make some brief remarks at the top.

I think David made a critical point, which is, as President of the United States, everybody says, well, the most powerful office on Earth is yours, and yet almost everything I do depends on the hard work and cooperation of members of Congress.  And that’s hard to find sometimes in this political environment.

But we have been blessed with a Democratic Senate that cares about the issues that so many of you have been working for so long.  We could not have brought the economy back from the brink had it not been for people like Bob and Michael being in a position to take some very tough votes.  Right now, the auto industry bailout is very popular.  At the time, it polled at about 10 percent.  But they knew it was the right thing to do.  It was because of them that we were able to make progress on issues like health care reform.  It’s because of them that we were able to make sure that young people got more help when it came to dealing with college costs.  It was because of them that we were able to get rid of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” 

And so that list of accomplishments, obviously I take great pride in, but it is really a partnership.  And particularly at a time when Washington is so polarized, if we do not have at minimum a Democratic Senate, it is very hard to see how we can make some of the advances that we need to make on work that is still undone.  And I’ve got three years left in this office.  In addition to fixing a website -- (laughter) -- I would -- I want to make sure that we’re rebuilding our infrastructure all across the country.  I want to make sure that we are investing in early childhood education that we know gives us the biggest bang for the buck in assuring that every child in this country is prepared for a career in the 21st century. 

I still want to make sure that we are building on all the success we’ve had in promoting an all-of-the-above energy strategy -- not just oil and gas, but solar and wind and biofuels.  I want to make sure that in our foreign policy, that we can continue to pursue peace and diplomacy, not just in the Middle East but around the world. 

And to do all that, in addition to getting deputy assistant secretaries of whatever agency you want confirmed, I’ve got to have a Democratic Senate to do it.  And the only way that we’re going to be able to succeed in that task is if all of you step up.  The way the Senate works, the way these elections work, there are cycles and the maps are laid out, and each election cycle a certain number of senators are up.  And this time out, we’ve got what is considered a tough map.  Most of the seats that are contested are Democratic seats in states, some of which I won, some of which I lost, but all of which are tough.  And so it’s going to be very important for us to be able to get our message out over the next year.  And for you guys to step up the way you have is extraordinary.

So I want to say thank you, but I also want to remind you of something that a dear friend of mine, Ab Mikva, that used to be a congressman from the North Shore of Chicago and went on to be a federal judge, White House counsel, has had a storied career -- he was one of my early mentors when I was thinking about elective office -- he said that being friends with a politician is like having a child perpetually in college.  (Laughter.)  Every so often, you just have to write this really big check.  (Laughter.)  And it seems like it never ends.  In the case of a child in college, it does end; in the case of politicians, it does not.  (Laughter.)  So the analogy breaks down.  But we are going to need all of you to really push hard because the stakes could not be higher. 

Last point I’ll make, and then I want to open it up for questions.  Obviously, this year and over the last three years, we’ve seen a level of polarization that seems unique.  But the truth is, is that as you travel around the country, the country -- ordinary folks aren’t as polarized as Washington would make us think. 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Thank God.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank God, yes.  That’s important.  But the only way that we advance the issues that people around the country care about is if we sync up the spirit and the goodness and the decency of the American people with our politics.  And there is a whole bunch of stuff that mitigates against that:  gerrymandering, and the way campaigns are financed, and super PACs, and the Balkanization of the media.  All of that pushes us apart. 

What can bring us together is when we’ve got people like Bob and we’ve got people like Michael who are principled and strong, but also recognize that before we became Democrats or Republicans, we were Americans.  And so if we want that kind of politics, we’ve got to fight for it, and we’ve got to pay for it.  And all of you have stepped up in the past, and I’m grateful that you’re going to be willing to step up in the future as well.

So thank you very much, everybody.  Thank you.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END           

7:33 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the President on the Affordable Care Act

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:02 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Today I want to update the American people on our efforts to implement and improve the Affordable Care Act, and I’ll take a couple of your questions.  But before I do, I just want to say a few words about the tragedy that's unfolded in the Philippines.

Over the past few days, I think all of us have been shaken by the images of the devastation wrought by Typhoon Haiyan.  It’s a heartbreaking reminder of how fragile life is, and among the dead are several Americans.  So our prayers are with the Filipino people, and with Filipino Americans across our country who are anxious about their family and friends back home.

One of our core principles is, when friends are in trouble, America helps.  As I told President Aquino earlier this week, the United States will continue to offer whatever assistance we can.  Our military personnel and USAID team do this better than anybody in the world, and they’ve been already on the ground working tirelessly to deliver food, water, medicine, shelter, and to help with airlift.  Today, the aircraft carrier USS George Washington and other ships arrived to help with search- and-rescue, as well as supplies, medical care and logistical support.  And more help is on the way.

America’s strength, of course, has always been more than just about what our government can do –- it’s also about what our citizens can do.  It’s about the big-heartedness of the American people when they see other folks in trouble.  So today, I would encourage everybody who wants to help, to visit WhiteHouse.gov/typhoon -- that's WhiteHouse.gov/typhoon -- and that will offer you links to organizations that are working on the ground and ways that you can support their efforts.  Our friends in the Philippines will face a long, hard road ahead, but they’ll continue to have a friend and partner in the United States of America.

Now, switching gears, it has now been six weeks since the Affordable Care Act’s new marketplace has opened for business.  I think it's fair to say that the rollout has been rough so far.  And I think everybody understands that I'm not happy about the fact that the rollout has been wrought with a whole range of problems that I've been deeply concerned about.  But today I want to talk about what we know after these first few weeks and what we're doing to implement and improve the law.

Yesterday, the White House announced that in the first month, more than 100,000 Americans successfully enrolled in new insurance plans.  Is that as high a number as we’d like?  Absolutely not.  But it does mean that people want affordable health care.  The problems of the website have prevented too many Americans from completing the enrollment process.  And that’s on us, not on them.  But there is no question that there’s real demand for quality, affordable health insurance.

In the first month, nearly a million people successfully completed an application for themselves or their families.  Those applications represent more than 1.5 million people.  Of those 1.5 million people, 106,000 of them have successfully signed up to get covered.

Another 396,000 have the ability to gain access to Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.  That’s been less reported on, but it shouldn’t be.  Americans who are having a difficult time, who are poor, many of them working, may have a disability; they're Americans like everybody else, and the fact that they are now able to get insurance is going to be critically important.

Later today, I’ll be in Ohio, where Governor Kasich, a Republican, has expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.  And as many as 275,000 Ohioans will ultimately be better off because of it.  And if every governor followed suit, another 5.4 million Americans could gain access to health care next year.

So bottom line is, in just one month, despite all the problems that we've seen with the website, more than 500,000 Americans could know the security of health care by January 1st -- many of them for the first time in their lives.  And that’s life-changing and it's significant.

That still leaves about 1 million Americans who successfully made it through the website, and now qualify to buy insurance, but haven’t picked a plan yet.  And there’s no question that if the website were working as it’s supposed to, that number would be much higher of people who have actually enrolled.  So that’s problem number one –- making sure that the website works the way it's supposed to.  It’s gotten a lot better over the last few weeks than it was on the first day, but we’re working 24/7 to get it working for the vast majority of Americans in a smooth, consistent way.

The other problem that has received a lot of attention
concerns Americans who have received letters from their insurers that they may be losing the plans they bought in the old individual market, often because they no longer meet the law’s requirements to cover basic benefits like prescription drugs or doctors’ visits. 

Now, as I indicated earlier, I completely get how upsetting this can be for a lot of Americans, particularly after assurances they heard from me that if they had a plan that they liked, they could keep it.  And to those Americans, I hear you loud and clear.  I said that I would do everything we can to fix this problem.  And today I'm offering an idea that will help do it.

Already, people who have plans that predate the Affordable Care Act can keep those plans if they haven’t changed.  That was already in the law.  That's what's called a grandfather clause.  It was included in the law.  Today, we're going to extend that principle both to people whose plans have changed since the law took effect, and to people who bought plans since the law took effect.

So state insurance commissioners still have the power to decide what plans can and can’t be sold in their states.  But the bottom line is, insurers can extend current plans that would otherwise be canceled into 2014, and Americans whose plans have been canceled can choose to re-enroll in the same kind of plan.

We’re also requiring insurers to extend current plans to inform their customers about two things.  One, that protections -- what protections these renewed plans don’t include.  And number two, that the marketplace offers new options with better coverage and tax credits that might help you bring down the cost.

So if you’ve received one of these letters, I’d encourage you to take a look at the marketplace.  Even if the website isn’t working as smoothly as it should be for everybody yet, the plan comparison tool that lets you browse costs for new plans near you is working just fine.

Now, this fix won’t solve every problem for every person.  But it’s going to help a lot of people.  Doing more will require work with Congress.  And I’ve said from the beginning, I’m willing to work with Democrats and Republicans to fix problems as they arise.  This is an example of what I was talking about.  We can always make this law work better. 

It is important to understand, though, that the old individual market was not working well.  And it’s important that we don’t pretend that somehow that’s a place worth going back to.  Too often, it works fine as long as you stay healthy; it doesn’t work well when you’re sick.  So year after year, Americans were routinely exposed to financial ruin, or denied coverage due to minor preexisting conditions, or dropped from coverage altogether -- even if they paid their premiums on time. 

That’s one of the reasons we pursued this reform in the first place.  And that’s why I will not accept proposals that are just another brazen attempt to undermine or repeal the overall law and drag us back into a broken system.  We will continue to make the case, even to folks who choose to keep their own plans, that they should shop around in the new marketplace because there’s a good chance that they’ll be able to buy better insurance at lower cost.

So we’re going to do everything we can to help the Americans who have received these cancellation notices.  But I also want everybody to remember there are still 40 million Americans who don’t have health insurance at all.  I’m not going to walk away from 40 million people who have the chance to get health insurance for the first time.  And I’m not going to walk away from something that has helped the cost of health care grow at its slowest rate in 50 years.

So we’re at the opening weeks of the project to build a better health care system for everybody -- a system that will offer real financial security and peace of mind to millions of Americans.  It is a complex process.  There are all kinds of challenges.  I’m sure there will be additional challenges that come up.  And it’s important that we’re honest and straightforward in terms of when we come up with a problem with these reforms and these laws, that we address them.  But we’ve got to move forward on this. 

It took 100 years for us to even get to the point where we could start talking about and implementing a law to make sure everybody has got health insurance.  And my pledge to the American people is, is that we’re going to solve the problems that are there, we’re going to get it right, and the Affordable Care Act is going to work for the American people. 

So with that, I’m going to take your questions, and I’m going to start with Julie Pace of AP. 

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  The combination of the website problems and the concerns over the policy cancellations has sparked a lot of worry within your own party, and polls also show that you’re taking some hits with the public on both your overall job approval rating and also on factors like trust and honesty.  Do you feel as though the flawed health care rollout has led to a breach in the public trust and confidence in government?  And if so, how do you plan to resolve that?

THE PRESIDENT:  There is no doubt that people are frustrated.  We just came out of a shutdown and the possibility that for the first time in over 200 years, we wouldn’t pay our bills.  And people breathed a sigh of relief when that finally got done, and the next thing they know is, is that the President’s health care reform can’t get the website to work and that there are these other problems with respect to cancellation notices. 

And I understand why folks are frustrated.  I would be, too.  Because sometimes people look at what’s taking place in Washington and they say, not enough is getting done that helps me with my life.  And regardless of what Congress does, ultimately I’m the President of the United States and they expect me to do something about it. 

So in terms of how I intend to approach it, I’m just going to keep on working as hard as I can around the priorities that the American people care about.  And I think it’s legitimate for them to expect me to have to win back some credibility on this health care law in particular, and on a whole range of these issues in general. 

And that’s on me.  I mean, we fumbled the rollout on this health care law.  There are a whole bunch of things about it that are working really well which people didn’t notice because they weren’t controversial -- so making sure kids could stay on their parents’ plans until they were -- through the age of 25, and making sure that seniors got more discounts on their prescription drugs.  There were a whole bunch of stuff that we did well over the first three years. 

But we always knew that these marketplaces, creating a place where people can shop and through competition get a better deal for the health insurance that their families need, we always knew that that was going to be complicated and everybody was going to be paying a lot of attention to it.  And we should have done a better job getting that right on day one -- not on day 28 or on day 40.

I am confident that by the time we look back on this next year, that people are going to say this is working well, and it’s helping a lot of people.  But my intention in terms of winning back the confidence of the American people is just to work as hard as I can; identify the problems that we’ve got, make sure that we’re fixing them.  Whether it’s a website, whether it is making sure that folks who got these cancellation notices get help, we’re just going to keep on chipping away at this until the job is done. 

Major Garrett.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  You said while the law was being debated, “if you like your plan, you can keep it.”  You said after the law was implemented or signed, “if you like your plan, you can keep it.”  Americans believed you, sir, when you said that to them over and over.  Do you not believe, sir, the American people deserve a deeper, more transparent accountability from you as to why you said that over and over when your own statistic published in the Federal Register alerted your policy staff -- and I presume you -- to the fact that millions of Americans would, in fact, probably fall into the very gap you’re trying to administratively fix now?

That's one question.  Second question.  (Laughter.)  You were informed, or several people in this building were informed two weeks before the launch of the website that it was failing the most basic tests internally, and yet a decision was made to launch the website on October 1st.  Did you, sir, make that test?  And if so, did you regret that?

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, on the website, I was not informed directly that the website would not be working the way it was supposed to.  Had I been informed, I wouldn’t be going out saying, boy, this is going to be great. 

I’m accused of a lot of things, but I don't think I’m stupid enough to go around saying, this is going to be like shopping on Amazon or Travelocity a week before the website opens if I thought that it wasn’t going to work.  So clearly, we and I did not have enough awareness about the problems in the website.  Even a week into it, the thinking was that these were some glitches that would be fixed with patches, as opposed to some broader systemic problems that took much longer to fix and we’re still working on them.

So that doesn't excuse the fact that they just don't work.  But I think it’s fair to say that, no, Garrett -- Major, we would not have rolled out something knowing very well that it wasn’t going to work the way it was supposed, given all the scrutiny that we knew was going to be on the website.

With respect to the pledge I made that if you like your plan, you can keep it, I think -- and I’ve said in interviews -- that there is no doubt that the way I put that forward unequivocally ended up not being accurate.  It was not because of my intention not to deliver on that commitment and that promise.  We put a grandfather clause into the law, but it was insufficient. 

Keep in mind that the individual market accounts for 5 percent of the population.  So when I said you can keep your health care, I’m looking at folks who’ve got employer-based health care; I’m looking at folks who’ve got Medicare and Medicaid -- and that accounts for the vast majority of Americans.  And then for people who don't have any health insurance at all, obviously that didn't apply.  My commitment to them was, you're going to be able to get affordable health care for the first time.

You have an individual market that accounts for about 5 percent of the population.  And our working assumption was -- my working assumption was that the majority of those folks would find better policies at lower costs or the same costs in the marketplaces, and that the universe of folks who potentially would not find a better deal in the marketplaces, the grandfather clause would work sufficiently for them.  And it didn't.  And again, that's on us.  Which is why we’re -- that's on me.  And that's why I’m trying to fix it.

And as I said earlier, I guess last week, and I will repeat, that's something I deeply regret because it’s scary getting a cancellation notice.

Now, it is important to understand that out of that population, typically there is constant churn in that market.  This market is not very stable and reliable for people.  So people have a lot of complaints when they're in that marketplace.  As long as you're healthy, things seem to be going pretty good.  And so a lot of people think, I’ve got pretty good insurance -- until they get sick -- and then suddenly they look at the fine print, and they’ve got a $50,000 out-of-pocket expense that they can't pay.

We know that on average over the last decade, each year, premiums in that individual market would go up an average of 15 percent a year.  I know that because when we were talking about health care reform, one of the complaints was:  I bought health care in the individual market and I just got a notice from the insurer, they dropped me after I had an illness; or my premium skyrocketed by 20 or 30 percent, why aren’t we doing something about this?

So part of what our goal has been is to make sure that that individual market is stable and fair, and has the kind of consumer protections that make sure that people don’t get a rude surprise when they really need health insurance.  But if you just got a cancellation notice, and so far you’re thinking, my prices are pretty good, you haven’t been sick, and it fits your budget, and now you get this notice -- you’re going to be worried about it.  And if the insurer is saying the reason you’re getting this notice is because of the Affordable Care Act, then you’re going to be understandably aggravated about it.

Now, for a big portion of those people, the truth is they might have gotten a notice saying, we’re jacking up your rates by 30 percent.  They might have said, from here on out, we’re not going to cover X, Y and Z illnesses, we’re changing the -- because these were all 12-month policies.  The insurance companies were under no obligation to renew the exact same policies that you had before.

But, look, one of the things I understood when we decided to reform that health insurance market, part of the reason why it hasn’t been done before and it’s very difficult to do, is that anything that’s going on that’s tough in the health care market, if you initiated a reform, can be attributed to your law.  And so what we want to do is to be able to say to these folks, you know what, the Affordable Care Act is not going to be the reason why insurers have to cancel your plan.

Now, what folks may find is the insurance companies may still come back and say, we want to charge you 20 percent more than we did last year; or we’re not going to cover prescription drugs now.  But that’s in the nature of the market that existed earlier.

Q    Did you decide, sir, that the simple declaration was something the American people could handle, but this nuanced answer you just gave now was something that you couldn’t handle and you didn’t trust the American people with a fuller truth?

THE PRESIDENT:  No.  I think, as I said earlier, Major, my expectation was that for 98 percent of the American people, either it genuinely wouldn't change at all, or they'd be pleasantly surprised with the options in the marketplace, and that the grandfather clause would cover the rest. 

That proved not to be the case.  And that's on me.  And the American people -- those who got cancellation notices do deserve and have received an apology from me.  But they don't want just words.  What they want is whether we can make sure that they are in a better place, and that we meet that commitment.

And, by the way, I think it's very important for me to note that there are a whole bunch of folks up in Congress and others who made this statement, and they were entirely sincere about it.  And the fact that you've got this percentage of people who have had this impact -- I want them to know that their senator or congressman, they were making representations based on what I told them and what this White House and our administrative staff told them.  And so it's not on them.  It's on us.  But it is something that we intend to fix.

Steve Collinson.

Q    Do you have reason to believe that Iran would walk away from nuclear talks if Congress draws up new sanctions?  And would a diplomatic breakdown at this stage leave you no option but military action?  And how do you respond to your critics on the Hill who say that it was only tough sanctions that got Iran to the table, but only tougher sanctions will make it capitulate?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let me make a couple of points.  Number one, I've said before and I will repeat:  We do not want Iran having nuclear weapons.  And it would be not only dangerous to us and our allies, but it would be destabilizing to the entire region, and could trigger a nuclear arms race that would make life much more dangerous for all of us.  So our policy is Iran cannot have nuclear weapons.  And I'm leaving all options on the table to make sure that we meet that goal.

Point number two:  The reason we've got such vigorous sanctions is because I and my administration put in place, when I came into office, the international structure to have the most effective sanctions ever.  And so I think it's fair to say that I know a little bit about sanctions, since we've set them up, and made sure that we mobilize the entire international community so that there weren't a lot of loopholes and they really had bite.

And the intention in setting up those sanctions always was to bring the Iranians to the table so that we could resolve this issue peacefully, because that is my preference.  That's my preference because any armed conflict has cost to it, but it's also my preference because the best way to assure that a country does not have nuclear weapons is that they are making a decision not to have nuclear weapons, and we're in a position to verify that they don't have nuclear weapons.

So as a consequence of the sanctions that we put in place  -- and I appreciate all the help, bipartisan help, that we received from Congress in making that happen -- Iran's economy has been crippled.  They had a -5 percent growth rate last year.  Their currency plummeted.  They're having significant problems in just the day-to-day economy on the ground in Iran.  And President Rouhani made a decision that he was prepared to come and have a conversation with the international community about what they could do to solve this problem with us. 

We've now had a series of conversations, and it has never been realistic that we would resolve the entire problem all at once.  What we have done is seen the possibility of an agreement in which Iran would halt advances on its program; that it would dilute some of the highly enriched uranium that makes it easier for them to potentially produce a weapon; that they are subjecting themselves to much more vigorous inspections so that we know exactly what they’re doing at all their various facilities; and that that would then provide time and space for us to test, over a certain period of months, whether or not they are prepared to actually resolve this issue to the satisfaction of the international community -- making us confident that, in fact, they’re not pursuing a nuclear weapons program.

In return, the basic structure of what’s been talked about, although not completed, is that we would provide very modest relief at the margins of the sanctions that we’ve set up.  But importantly, we would leave in place the core sanctions that are most effective and have most impact on the Iranian economy, specifically oil sanctions and sanctions with respect to banks and financing.  And what that gives us is the opportunity to test how serious are they, but it also gives us an assurance that if it turns out six months from now that they’re not serious, we can crank -- we can dial those sanctions right back up.  

So my message to Congress has been that, let’s see if this short-term, phase-one deal can be completed to our satisfaction where we’re absolutely certain that while we’re talking with the Iranians, they’re not busy advancing their program.  We can buy some additional months in terms of their breakout capacity.  Let’s test how willing they are to actually resolve this diplomatically and peacefully. 

We will have lost nothing if, at the end of the day, it turns out that they are not prepared to provide the international community the hard proof and assurances necessary for us to know that they’re not pursuing a nuclear weapon.  And if that turns out to be the case, then not only is our entire sanctions infrastructure still in place, not only are they still losing money from the fact that they can’t sell their oil and get revenue from their oil as easily, even throughout these talks, but other options remain. 

But what I’ve said to members of Congress is that if, in fact, we’re serious about trying to resolve this diplomatically -- because no matter how good our military is, military options are always messy, they’re always difficult, always have unintended consequences, and in this situation are never complete in terms of making us certain that they don’t then go out and pursue even more vigorously nuclear weapons in the future -- if we’re serious about pursuing diplomacy, then there’s no need for us to add new sanctions on top of the sanctions that are already very effective and that brought them to the table in the first place.

Now, if it turns out they can’t deliver, they can’t come to the table in a serious way and get this issue resolved, the sanctions can be ramped back up.  And we’ve got that option.

All right.  Roger Runningen.  Roger, it’s his birthday, by the way.  So that’s not the reason you got a question, but I thought it was important to note that.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT:  Happy birthday.

Q    Back to health care.  Can you guarantee for the American people that the health care website is going to be fully operational for all people, not just the vast majority, by November 30?  And second, more broadly, this is your signature domestic piece of legislation.  You hear criticism on the Hill that you and your White House team are too insular.  Is that how this mess came to be?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I think there is going to be a lot of evaluation of how we got to this point.  And I assure you that I’ve been asking a lot of questions about that.  The truth is that this is, number one, very complicated.  The website itself is doing a lot of stuff.  There aren’t a lot of websites out there that have to help people compare their possible insurance options, verify income to find out what kind of tax credits they might get, communicate with those insurance companies so they can purchase, make sure that all of it’s verified.  So there’s just a bunch of pieces to it that made it challenging.

And you combine that with the fact that the federal government does a lot of things really well.  One of the things it does not do well is information technology procurement.  This is kind of a systematic problem that we have across the board.  And it is not surprising then that there were going to be some problems.

Now, I think we have to ask ourselves some hard questions inside the White House as opposed to why we didn't see more of these problems coming earlier on -- A, so we could set expectations; B, so that we could look for different ways for people to end up applying. 

So ultimately, you’re right.  This is something that's really important to me, and it’s really important to millions of Americans who have been waiting for a really long time to try to get health care because they don't have it.  And I am very frustrated, but I’m also somebody who, if I fumbled the ball, I’m going to wait until I get the next play, and then I’m going to try to run as hard as I can and do right by the team.  So ultimately, I’m the head of this team.  We did fumble the ball on it, and what I’m going to do is make sure that we get it fixed.

In terms of what happens on November 30th or December 1st, I think it’s fair to say that the improvement will be marked and noticeable.  The website will work much better on November 30th, December 1st than it worked certainly on October 1st.  That's a pretty low bar.  It will be working a lot better than it is -- it was last week, and it will be working better than it was this week, which means that the majority of people who go to the website will see a website that is working the way it’s supposed to.

I think it is not possible for me to guarantee that 100 percent of the people 100 percent of the time going on this website will have a perfectly seamless, smooth experience.  We’re going to have to continue to improve it even after November 30th, December 1st.  But the majority of people who use it will be able to see it operate the way it was supposed to.

One thing that we’ve discovered, though, that I think is worth noting:  A lot of focus has been on the website and the technology, and that's partly because that's how we initially identified it -- these are glitches.  What we’re discovering is that part of the problem has been technology -- hardware and software -- and that's being upgraded.  But even if we get the hardware and software working exactly the way it’s supposed to with relatively minor glitches, what we’re also discovering is that insurance is complicated to buy. 

And another mistake that we made I think was underestimating the difficulties of people purchasing insurance online and shopping for a lot of options with a lot of costs and a lot of different benefits and plans, and somehow expecting that that would be very smooth.  And then they’ve also got to try apply for tax credits on the website. 

So what we’re doing even as we’re trying to solve the technical problems is also what can we do to make the application a little bit simpler; what can we do to make it in English as opposed to bureaucratese; are there steps that we can skip while still getting the core information that people need

And part of what we’re realizing is that they are going to be a certain portion of people who are just going to need more help and more handholding in the application process.  And so I guess part of the continuous improvement that I’m looking at is not just a technical issue.  It’s also, can we streamline the application process; what are we doing to give people more assistance in the application process; how do the call centers and the people who are helping folks in-person; how are they trained so that things can go more smoothly.

Because the bottom line ultimately is, I just want people to know what their options are in a clear way.  And buying health insurance is never going to be like buying a song on iTunes.  It’s just a much more complicated transaction.  But I think we can continue to make it better -- all of which is to say that on December 1st, November 30th, it will be a lot better, but there will still be some problems.  Some of those will not be because of technological problems -- although I’m sure that there will still be some glitches that have to be smoothed out.  Some of it’s going to be how are we making this application process more user-friendly for folks.

And one good example of this, by the way, just to use an analogy -- when we came into office, we heard a lot of complaints about the financial aid forms that families have to fill out to get federal financial aid.  And I actually remember applying for some of that stuff and remember how difficult and confusing it was.  And Arne Duncan over at Education worked with a team to see what we could do to simplify it, and it made a big difference.

And that's part of the process that we’ve got to go through.  And in fact, if we can get some focus groups and we sit down with actual users and see how well is this working, what would improve it, what part of it didn't you understand --  that all I think is part of what we’re going to be working on in the weeks ahead.

Q    What about the insularity criticism that you hear on the Hill?

THE PRESIDENT:  I’ve got to say I meet with an awful lot of folks, and I talk to an awful lot of folks every day.  And I have lunches with CEOs and IT venture capitalists and labor leaders and pretty much folks from all walks of life on a whole bunch of topics.  And if you looked at my schedule on any given day, we’re interacting with a whole lot of people.

And I think it’s fair to say that we have a pretty good track record of working with folks on technology and IT from our campaign where, both in 2008 and 2012, we did a pretty darn good job on that.  So it’s not -- the idea that somehow we didn't have access or were interested in people’s ideas, I think isn’t accurate.  What is true is that, as I said before, our IT systems, how we purchase technology in the federal government is cumbersome, complicated, and outdated. 

And so this isn’t a situation where on my campaign I could simply say, who are the best folks out there; let’s get them around a table, let’s figure out what we’re doing, and we’re just going to continue to improve it and refine it and work on our goals.  If you're doing it at the federal government level, you're going through 40 pages of specs and this and that and the other, and there are all kinds of laws involved, and it makes it more difficult.  It's part of the reason why, chronically, federal IT programs are over budget, behind schedule.

And one of the -- when I do some Monday morning quarterbacking on myself, one of the things that I do recognize is -- since I know that the federal government has not been good at this stuff in the past -- two years ago, as we were thinking about this, we might have done more to make sure that we were breaking the mold on how we were going to be setting this up.  But that doesn't help us now.  We've got to move forward.

Jeff Mason.

Q    Thank you, Mr. President.  Today's fix that you just announced leaves it up to state insurance commissioners and insurance companies to ultimately decide whether to allow old policies to be renewed for a year.  How confident are you that they will do that?  And secondly, how concerned are you that this flawed rollout may hurt Democrats' chances in next year's midterm elections, and your ability to advance other priorities such as immigration reform?

THE PRESIDENT:  On the first question, traditionally, state insurance commissioners make decisions about what plans can be or cannot be sold, how they interact with insurers.  What we're essentially saying is the Affordable Care Act is not going to be the factor in what happens with folks in the individual market.  And my guess is right away you're going to see a number of state insurance commissioners exercise it.

Part of the challenge is the individual markets are different in different states.  There are some states that have individual insurance markets that already have almost all the consumer protections that the Affordable Care Act does.  They match up pretty good.  It's not some big jump for folks to move into the marketplace.  In others, they're pretty low standards, so you can sell pretty substandard plans in those markets.  And that's where people might see a bigger jump in their premiums. 

So I think there's going to be some state-by-state evaluation on how this is handled.  But the key point is, is that it allows us to be able to say to the folks who received these notices:  Look, I, the President of the United States and the insurance –- that the insurance model, the Affordable Care Act, is not going to be getting in the way of you shopping in the individual market that you used to have.  As I said, there are still going to be some folks who over time, I think, are going to find that the marketplaces are better.

One way I described this to -- I met with a group of senators when this issue first came up -- and it's not a perfect analogy -- but we made a decision as a society that every car has to have a seatbelt or airbags.  And so you pass a regulation.  And there are some additional costs, particularly at the start of increasing the safety and protections, but we make a decision as a society that the costs are outweighed by the benefits of all the lives that are saved.  So what we're saying now is if you're buying a new car, you got to have a seatbelt. 

Well, the problem with the grandfather clause that we put in place is it's almost like we said to folks, you got to buy a new car, even if you can't afford it right now.  And sooner or later, folks are going to start trading in their old cars.  But we don't need -- if their life circumstance is such where, for now at least, they want to keep the old car, even if the new car is better, we should be able to give them that option.  And that's what we want to do.

And, by the way, that's what we should have been able to do in drafting the rules in the first place.  So, again, these are two fumbles on something that -- on a big game, which -- but the game is not over.

With respect to the politics of it, I'll let you guys do a lot of the work on projecting what this means for various political scenarios.  There is no doubt that our failure to roll out the ACA smoothly has put a burden on Democrats, whether they're running or not, because they stood up and supported this effort through thick and thin.  And I feel deeply responsible for making it harder for them rather than easier for them to continue to promote the core values that I think led them to support this thing in the first place -- which is, in this country, as wealthy as we are, everybody should be able to have the security of affordable health care.  And that's why I feel so strongly about fixing it. 

My first and foremost obligation is the American people, to make sure that they can get what's there -- if we can just get the darn website working and smooth this thing out -- which is plans that are affordable, and allow them to take advantage of tax credits and give them a better deal. 

But I also do feel an obligation to everybody out there who supported this effort.  When we don't do a good job on the rollout, we're letting them down.  And I don't like doing that.  So my commitment to them is, we're going to just keep on doing better every day until we get it done. 

And in terms of the impact on me -- I think to some extent I addressed it when I talked to Julie -- there are going to be ups and downs during the course of my presidency.  And I think I said early on when I was running -- I am not a perfect man, and I will not be a perfect President, but I'll wake up every single day working as hard as I can on behalf of Americans out there from every walk of life who are working hard, meeting their responsibilities, but sometimes are struggling because the way the system works isn't giving them a fair shot.

And that pledge I haven't broke.  That commitment, that promise, continues to be -- continues to hold -- the promise that I wouldn't be perfect, number one, but also the promise that as long as I've got the honor of having this office, I'm just going to work as hard as I can to make things better for folks.  And what that means specifically in this health care arena is we can't go back to the status quo. 

I mean, right now everybody is properly focused on us not doing a good job on the rollout, and that’s legitimate and I get it.  There have been times where I thought we were kind of slapped around a little bit unjustly.  This one is deserved.  Right?  It’s on us. 

But we can’t lose sight of the fact that the status quo before the Affordable Care Act was not working at all.  If the health care system had been working fine, and everybody had high-quality health insurance at affordable prices, I wouldn’t have made it a priority; we wouldn’t have been fighting this hard to get it done -- which is why, when I see sometimes folks up on Capitol Hill, and Republicans in particular, who have been suggesting repeal, repeal, let’s get rid of this thing, I keep on asking what is it that you want to do?  Are you suggesting that the status quo was working?  Because it wasn’t, and everybody knows it.  It wasn’t working in the individual market and it certainly wasn’t working for the 41 million people who didn’t have health insurance. 

And so what we did was we chose a path that was the least disruptive, to try to finally make sure that health care is treated in this country like it is in every other advanced country -- that it’s not some privilege that just a certain portion of people can have, but it’s something that everybody has some confidence about.  And we didn’t go far left and choose an approach that would have been much more disruptive.  We didn’t adopt some more conservative proposals that would have been much more disruptive.  We tried to choose a way that built off the existing system.  But it is complicated, it is hard, but I make no apologies for us taking this on -- because somebody sooner or later had to do it.  I do make apologies for not having executed better over the last several months.

Q    And do you think that execution and the flaws in the rollout will affect your ability to do other things, like immigration reform and other policy priorities?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, look, if it comes to immigration reform, there is no reason for us not to do immigration reform.  And we’ve already got strong bipartisan support for immigration reform out of the Senate.  You’ve got -- I met with a number of traditionally very conservative clergy who are deeply committed to immigration reform.  We’ve got the business community entirely behind immigration reform.  So you’ve got a bunch of constituencies that are traditionally much more -- have leaned much more heavily towards the Republicans who are behind this.

So if people are looking for an excuse not to do the right thing on immigration reform, they can always find an excuse --  we’ve run out of time, or this is hard, or the list goes on and on.  But my working assumption is people should want to do the right thing.  And when you’ve got an issue that would strengthen borders, make sure that the legal immigration system works the way it’s supposed to, that would go after employers who have been doing the wrong thing when it comes to hiring undocumented workers, and would allow folks who are here illegally to get right with the law and pay a fine, and learn English and get to the back of the line, but ultimately join fully our American community -- when you’ve got a law that makes sense, you shouldn’t be looking for an excuse not to do it.  And I’m going to keep on pushing to make sure it gets done. 

Am I going to have to do some work to rebuild confidence around some of our initiatives?  Yes.  But part of this job is the things that go right, you guys aren’t going to write about; the things that go wrong get prominent attention.  That’s how it has always been.  That’s not unique to me as President.  And I’m up to the challenge.  We’re going to get this done.

All right?  Thank you, everybody. 

END
12:53 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the First Lady at Disney's Veterans Institute

Disney Boardwalk Inn

Orlando, Florida

 

12:32 P.M. EST

MRS. OBAMA:  Well hello, everyone.  It is a real pleasure to be with all of you today, not just because it's at Disney.  (Laughter.)  Because when you turn off that highway, you just can't help but get excited.  This is a magical place.  And I begged my Secret Service to let me go on some rides -- (laughter) -- but I don’t know if we'll make that happen.

But I want to start by thanking Bob for that very kind introduction, and for Disney's outstanding leadership on behalf of our veterans.  Disney has truly gone above and beyond.  They have created an entire initiative on veterans-hiring here at Disney, and they're also hosting this wonderful summit to help other companies do the same.

And it's this kind of generosity, it's this kind of commitment that we were exactly going for through Joining Forces.  That’s what it's all about.  So I just want to take a moment to give Bob and the Disney team another round of applause.  (Applause.)  Congratulations.

And of course, I want to thank all of you for taking the time to join us here today.  And I understand that you've been busy this morning with panels and remarks, and I also understand you'll be spending all afternoon learning new hiring strategies and best practices.  And I also know that it's not easy for many of you to take this much time away from your businesses, your work -- particularly for those of you from small- and medium-sized businesses. 

But I also know, as Bob said, there's a reason that you chose to be here today.  And it's not just because hiring veterans is the patriotic thing to do -- which it absolutely is.  You're here because hiring veterans is the smart thing to do for your businesses, because veterans are some of the most highly skilled, hardest-working employees that you will ever find. 

And you don’t have to take my word for it.  Just look at the research.  A recent report from the Institute for Veterans and Military Families at Syracuse University states that veterans are resilient, they are good at team-building, they're comfortable with diversity, they're good at handling uncertainty, they have language skills and technical training -- and the report goes on and on and on. 

Many of you already know this from firsthand experience.  For example, those of you who work right here at Disney may have encountered an employee named Glenn Tussing.  Now, Glenn served in the Air Force as Chief of Future Joint Manpower Requirements.  Now, with a title like that, you might wonder how on Earth did Glenn wind up here at Disney.  But if you look at what Glenn was actually doing in the military, it makes perfect sense.

See, Glenn was a manpower expert.  And for every mission he was assigned, he was responsible for figuring out the exact numbers and types of troops needed for that mission to succeed -- from the pilots, to the engineers, to the medical personnel.  Then he would have to locate those troops, and then help them get where they needed to go. 

So when Disney was looking for someone to manage the menus in Disney properties around the world, and then figure out the exact quantities and types of ingredients needed for every recipe at every meal, and then get that information where it needed to go, they knew that Glenn was their guy.  (Laughter.)  In fact, today, Glenn says he's actually using the same types of databases and programs he was using in the military -- although Glenn reports that here at Disney, folks smile a whole lot more.  (Laughter.) 

So it's fair to say that our veterans have some highly marketable and highly transferrable skills, and chances are you won't go wrong if you hire a veteran.  But for many companies, that’s really where the biggest challenge lies -- in the hiring process.

For example, where do you go to find veterans who are looking for work?  How do you translate all those military credentials, those acronyms and jargon on their résumés into civilian qualifications?  And once you've got veterans on board, how do you retain them?  How do you ensure they have the opportunities and support they need to succeed?

So it's really not for lack of interest that small- and medium-sized companies don’t hire veterans.  Often it's just a lack of information or resources.  And as an employer, that deficit can make you hesitant, because when it comes to hiring a veteran, you want to get it right.  And fortunately, that’s what you all have learned about today.

You've learned how to get it right.  You've learned that veterans can bring valuable skills to every part of your business, from marketing to IT, to strategic communications and operations.  You've learned that there are thousands of government job centers and nonprofits that are eager to help you bring veterans on board.  And this afternoon, Disney is going to be teaching you how to successfully recruit and retain veterans all across the country.

So now it's up to you to go home, put all these resources and all this good expertise to use.  And this is the perfect time to get started, because in the coming months, as you know, more and more of our servicemembers are -- be coming home and hanging up their uniforms, and transitioning to civilian life.  And we're counting on all of you to ensure that these veterans can get the good jobs they deserve.

That’s especially true for small- and medium-sized businesses.  Because there are veterans in just about every zip code in this country, but not every community has a Disney.  What every community does have, however, are local businesses like the ones that many of you represent.  So companies like yours can actually hire veterans where they and their families live.

And remember -- you don’t have to be a Disney or a Walmart and hire hundreds of thousands of people to make a difference.  Maybe you can just bring one or two, maybe a dozen veterans on.  And that’s okay, because every single one of those hires matters.  And taken together, they add up pretty fast. 

In fact, two years ago, the small- and medium-sized businesses in the International Franchise Association committed to hiring 80,000 veterans and military spouses.  Pretty impressive, right?  Well, just recently, they announced that they've nearly doubled that number by hiring a total of 150,000 veterans and military spouses in just two years. 

So I know you all can do this.  And once you've gone home and you've made your hires, we need you to reach out and help other small- and medium-sized businesses in your communities do the same thing.  Share what you've learned here today.  Answer their questions.  Ease their concerns.  Follow Disney's example and pass this knowledge on to keep increasing the number of available job opportunities for veterans and military spouses. 

And to the big companies that are here today, I just want to thank you.  Thank you to those of you who have already done so much for our veterans.  In just the past six months alone, you've helped us rack up nearly 100,000 hires.  That makes for a grand total of more than 380,000 veterans hired since we first launched Joining Forces just two and a half years ago.  That’s outstanding.  (Applause.)  That’s outstanding. 

But of course, until every veteran in this country who wants a job has a job, it's still not enough.  So we need you all to really dig deep.  We need you to double down.  And that’s exactly what AT&T is doing.  They've committed to doubling the number of veterans they hire.  Starbucks --  

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Woo hoo!

MRS. OBAMA:  Yes, woo hoo!  (Laughter.)  Starbucks has just announced that over the next five years, they'll be hiring 10,000 veterans and military spouses all across America.  And just since Memorial Day, Walmart has hired 20,000 veterans -- that’s 20,000 hires in less than six months.

So these are really impressive numbers.  And what I want you to remember is that each one of these hires creates a ripple effect that runs through families and communities all across this country.  Because when you hire one veteran, you're not just giving a highly qualified employee the chance to help your company succeed, you're giving one more American hero the chance to keep on serving his or her country.  You're giving that hero's families the security that comes with a steady paycheck.  And you're modeling a certain set of values for your community and for your country.  You're sending a clear message that we honor those who sacrifice for us, and when they come home, we're going to have their backs.

And in the end, that’s really my message to all the veterans here today.  America has your back.  And if you ever need to be reminded of how grateful this nation is and how much we care about you, I just want you to look around this room.  As one example, you have got one of the biggest, most well-respected companies in the world hosting hundreds of other great American companies, and they're all here because they want to serve you as well as you have served this country.

So I want to end today as I started -- by, once again, saying thank you.  Thank you to our veterans for your service and sacrifice, and to your families.  Thank you to Disney for putting together this wonderful event.  And thank you to all of you here today for everything your companies are doing and will continue to do on behalf of our nation's veterans.  And I look forward to working with you all in the months and years ahead. 

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

END                

12:43 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at Tribal Nations Conference

U.S. Department of the Interior
Washington, D.C.

3:57 P.M. EST
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you, everybody.  Everybody, please, have a seat.  Thank you, Karen, for the kind introduction. 
 
A couple of people I want to introduce, or at least acknowledge.  First of all, give it up for our outstanding new Secretary of the Interior, Sally Jewell.  (Applause.)  We’re joined by several other members of my Cabinet, which reflects how much my administration values your partnership, the partnership with your communities.  I want to thank the members of Congress who are here. 
 
I want to give, also, a special shout-out to one of my closest advisors, one of my oldest friends.  But he's also a great friend to all of you, and he doesn’t get a lot of credit because he hates credit; he just likes to work behind the scenes.  But he worked with many of you when he worked in the Senate.  He has been a key advisor on Native American affairs for me throughout this process, and I could not be prouder of him -- Mr. Pete Rouse.  So give Mr. Pete Rouse a big round of applause.  (Applause.) 
 
Now, most of all, I want to thank all of you, especially the tribal leaders who are here today.  And I understand, actually, we've got more tribal leaders here than we ever have at any of these conferences.  So it just keeps on growing each year, which is wonderful news.  (Applause.)  You represent more than 300 tribal nations, each of you with your own extraordinary heritage, each a vital part of a shared American family.  And as a proud adopted member of the Crow Nation, let me say kaheé -- welcome -- to all of you.
 
Now, after I became President, I said that given the painful chapters and broken promises in our shared history, I'd make sure this country kept its promises to you.  I promised that tribal nations would have a stronger voice in Washington –- that as long as I was in the White House, it would be your house, too.  And for the past five years, my administration has worked hard to keep that promise –- to build a new relationship with you based on trust and respect. 
 
And this new relationship wasn't just about learning from the past.  It was also about the here and now –- recognizing the contributions that your communities make to enrich the United States every single day.  Native Americans are doctors and teachers and businessmen and women, and veterans and servicemembers.  And they get up every morning and help make America stronger and more prosperous and more just. 
 
And I want to build on our true government-to-government relationship as well.  So I’m proud to have Native Americans serving with dedication in my administration, including Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs, Kevin Washburn of the Chickasaw Nation; my Senior Advisor for Native American Affairs, Jodi Gillette of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe -- (applause) -- our [inter]governmental affairs office, we've got Charlie Galbraith of the Navajo Nation.  And I look forward to -- (applause) -- so they worked so incredibly hard to make this conference possible, and I look forward to it every year. 
 
I had the privilege of some of you coming to the White House yesterday.  As we made clear in the Executive Order earlier this year that established the White House Council on Native American Affairs, we have a unique legal and political relationship, one that’s been affirmed many times in treaties, in statutes and in the Constitution. 
 
That’s the unique relationship we honor today.  That’s the relationship we're called upon to sustain for the progress of all of our peoples.  And while we should be proud of what we’ve achieved together in recent years, we also should be focused on all the work that we still have to do.
 
I know we've got members of the Iroquois nation here today.  And I think we could learn from the Iroquois Confederacy, just as our Founding Fathers did when they laid the groundwork for our democracy.  The Iroquois called their network of alliances with other tribes and European nations a “covenant chain.”  Each link represented a bond of peace and friendship.  But that covenant chain didn’t sustain itself.  It needed constant care, so that it would stay strong.  And that’s what we’re called to do, to keep the covenant between us for this generation and for future generations.  And there are four areas in particular where I think we need to focus.
 
First, let’s keep our covenant strong by strengthening justice and tribal sovereignty.  We’ve worked with you in good faith to resolve longstanding disputes like establishing the Land Buy Back Program to consolidate Indian lands and restore them to tribal trust lands.  We’ve reauthorized the Violence Against Women Act, so tribes can prosecute those who commit domestic violence in Indian Country, whether they’re Native American or not.  (Applause.)  I signed changes to the Stafford Act, to let tribes directly request disaster assistance, because when disasters like floods or fires strike, you shouldn’t have to wait for a middleman to get the help you need.  (Applause.)
 
But there’s more we can do to return more control to your communities.  And that’s why I’m urging Congress to reauthorize the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act -- because your communities know your affordable housing needs better than Washington does.  (Applause.)  It’s why we’ll keep pushing Congress to pass the Carcieri fix, so that more tribal nations can put their land into federal trust.  (Applause.)  And we’ve heard loud and clear your frustrations when it comes to the problem of being fully reimbursed by the federal government for the contracted services you provide, so we’re going to keep working with you and Congress to find a solution.  (Applause.)  That’s all going to be part of making sure that we’re respecting the nation-to-nation relationship.
 
Now, second, we’ve got to keep our covenant strong by expanding opportunity for Native Americans.  We’ve created jobs building new roads and high-speed Internet to connect more of your communities to the broader economy.  We’ve made major investments in job training and tribal colleges and universities.  But the fact remains Native Americans face poverty rates that are higher by far than the national average.  And that’s more than a statistic, that’s a moral call to action.  We’ve got to do better. 
 
So I said to some of you that I met with yesterday, growing our economy, creating new jobs is my top priority.  We’ve got to stop the self-inflicted wounds in Washington.  Because for many tribal nations, this year’s harmful sequester cuts and last month’s government shutdown made a tough situation worse.  Your schools, your police departments, child welfare offices are all feeling the squeeze.  That’s why I’m fighting for a responsible budget that invests in the things that we need in order to grow -– things like education, and job training, and affordable housing and transportation, including for Native American communities.  And we’re going to work to make sure Native American-owned businesses have greater access to capital and to selling their goods overseas.  So we’ve got to build the economy, create more opportunity.
 
Number three, we’ve got to keep our covenant strong by making sure Native Americans have access to quality, affordable health care just like everybody else.  That’s one of the reasons we fought hard to pass the Affordable Care Act, and we’re working overtime to make sure the law works the way it’s supposed to.  For Native Americans, this means more access to comprehensive, affordable coverage.  It permanently reauthorizes the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, which provides care to so many in your communities.
 
And let me just give you one example of how this law is already working for tribal nations.  Thanks to the ACA, the Puyallup Tribal Health Authority in Washington State created the country’s first tribal family medicine residency program.  Patients are cared for in a culturally sensitive way, often by Native American staff.  And we’re seeing results -– a young physician caring for a revered Tribal Elder; a doctor who has delivered babies in the community for years, and now his son is also doing the same.  And that’s creating more quality health care, but also sustaining bonds between generations.  That’s progress that we need to build on.
 
And then the fourth area that we’ve got to work on is, let’s keep our covenant strong by being good stewards of native homelands, which are sacred to you and your families.  I saw the beauty of Crow Agency, Montana, when I was a candidate for this office.  Next year, I’ll make my first trip to Indian Country as President.   (Applause.)
 
The health of tribal nations depends on the health of tribal lands.  So it falls on all of us to protect the extraordinary beauty of those lands for future generations.  And already, many of your lands have felt the impacts of a changing climate, including more extreme flooding and droughts.  That’s why, as part of the Climate Action Plan I announced this year, my administration is partnering with you to identify where your lands are vulnerable to climate change, how we can make them more resilient.
 
And working together, we want to develop the energy potential of tribal lands in a responsible way and in accordance with tribal wishes.  Over the last four years, we’ve more than doubled oil and gas revenues on tribal lands –- a big reason why the United States is now more energy independent.  So we’re working with tribes to get more renewable energy projects, like solar and wind, up and running.  Your lands and your economies can be a source of renewable energy and the good local jobs that come with it.
 
So standing up for justice and tribal sovereignty; increasing economic opportunity; expanding quality health care; protecting native homelands -- this is the foundation we can build on.  This is the progress that we can make together. 
 
And we don’t have to look far for inspiration.  Some of you know, Monday obviously was Veterans’ Day, a time to honor all who have worn America’s uniform.  (Applause.)   I know everyone here is proud that Native Americans have such a high enlistment rate in our military.  And we’ve seen generations of patriotic Native Americans who have served with honor and courage, and we draw strength from them all.
 
We draw strength from the Navajo Code Talkers whose skill helped win the Second World War.  (Applause.)  We draw strength from Woodrow Wilson Keeble, who many years after his death was finally awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism in the Korean War.  (Applause.)  We draw strength from -- and I want to make sure I get this right -- Lori Piestewa, who during the Iraq war was the first known Native American woman to give her life in combat for the United States.  (Applause.)  And we draw strength from all our men and women in uniform today, including two pilots I rely on when I step onto Marine One -– Major Paul Bisulca, from the Penobscot Nation, and Major Eli Jones, of the Shoshone Bannock.  And those guys are carrying me around, keeping me safe.  (Applause.) 
 
So on this Veterans Day week, even though it’s technically not Veterans Day, I want to ask all the veterans in the audience –- including several legendary Navajo Code Talkers who are here
-– if you can, please stand, accept our gratitude.  (Applause.)
 
For generations, these men and women have helped keep our covenant strong.  So now we’ve got to keep strong what they’ve built, for this and generations to come.  It falls to us to keep America the place where no matter where you come from, what you look like, you can always make it as long as you try, as long as you work hard.  And I know that that’s what -- all of you are working hard.  That’s what you represent as leaders of the communities that are represented here from coast to coast.  I want you to know that's what I’m working for.  That’s the partnership that I cherish, and I will cherish as long as I have the honor of serving as your President.  
 
So thank you.  God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.   Thank you.  (Applause.)
 
END  
4:11 P.M. EST

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Nominating Timothy Massad to Lead the Commodity Futures Trading Commission

State Dining Room

3:28 P.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Have a seat.  Five years ago today, we were in some of the darkest days of one of the worst economic crises in our history.  A financial catastrophe on Wall Street was rapidly fueling a punishing recession on Main Street.  We were looking over the horizon and seeing the potential for a Great Depression, not merely a great recession.  And so we prepared steps to rescue our economy and put people back to work.  But one of our top priorities was also to make sure that a crisis like this never happened again.

And the result was historic Wall Street reform that put in place smarter, tougher, common-sense rules of the road to protect consumers and to end taxpayer-funded bailouts once and for all.  Now, five years later, our economy is growing.  Our businesses are creating jobs.  Our markets have hit record highs and there’s no doubt our financial system is more stable.  And a big reason for that stability is the work of a small but mighty independent agency:  the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.  Was that a little -- (laughter.)

The CFTC has many responsibilities.  Under Wall Street reform, one of them is to guard against some of the most reckless and irresponsible practices at the heart of the financial crisis.  And this includes making sure big banks can’t make risky bets with their customers' deposits -- something we call the “Volcker Rule.”  It also includes oversight of risky trading in derivatives -- some of the complex products that were part of what precipitated the crisis five years ago and products that Warren Buffett once called “financial weapons of mass destruction” even before they nearly brought down AIG and sparked the financial wildfire on Wall Street. 

So these reforms will protect consumers and make financial systems stronger, more competitive, helping to restore confidence in our markets -- confidence that markets around the world depend on.  And that’s why the CFTC has worked tirelessly to implement these reforms.  But they need the resources and the regulators to finish the job, and so that’s why we’re here today.

When I named Gary Gensler to lead the CFTC, I hadn’t even taken office yet.  We were about a month and a half into my transition.  Our economy was bleeding 800,000 jobs a month.  The truth is nobody knew where the bottom would be.  Around that time, Gary sat down with Tim Geithner, who would become my Treasury Secretary, as well as Mary Schapiro, who would become Chairperson of the SEC, and began sketching out on a yellow pad the early outlines of what financial reform would look like.  And ever since, Gary has worked tirelessly to make it real. 

Gary has one of the smallest budgets of any of the agencies charged with protecting consumers, but he has done as much as anybody to implement financial reform.  Under his watch, the CFTC has transformed what was a secretive and shadowy derivatives market by bringing large parts of it onto exchanges to transparent trading.  And CFTC is working hand in hand with other agencies to protect consumers by implementing the Volcker Rule, which Secretary Lew has called on regulators to complete by the end of the year. 

They’ve successfully imposed nearly $1.8 billion in penalties against financial firms that engaged in rate-fixing schemes.  They worked to make sure that an irresponsible few can’t hurt consumers by illegally manipulating or rigging energy markets for their own gain.  And they’ve done it all while a swarm of special interest lobbyists have done everything possible to thwart their every move.  Gary has never once let his team forget what this is all about -- the American people, folks we are so privileged to serve.  So before I introduce his successor, please join me in thanking Gary for his outstanding service.  (Applause.)

Gary, as always a team player, says also a whole bunch of CFTC people are here.  We want to congratulate you.  My working assumption is a bunch of them will be here even after Tim goes and does whatever he does next, because the next person who is going to be taking over is going to need a whole bunch of outstanding, experienced regulators, some of whom are in this room. 

The man I’ve chosen to succeed Gary at the CFTC is Timothy Massad.  And for the past few years, Tim has been charged with -- let's face it -- the thankless task of winding down a program that no one ever particularly liked, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, also known as TARP.  He’s quietly been very successful at it.  President Bush rightly began this program to stop the downward spiral in late 2008.  And we continued that effort, modifying the program to rescue the American auto industry as well.

Now, under Tim’s watch, not only have the banks that benefited from TARP repaid nearly every single dollar, but he has secured a positive return of nearly $30 billion to the American taxpayer.  He has worked tirelessly to improve TARP programs that help more struggling homeowners stay in their homes, more hard-hit communities remove the blight of vacant homes from their neighborhoods.  At the Treasury Department, he has launched new online tools that allow American consumers to track where the funds went and what -- when they were repaid.  And that's a commitment to transparency and openness that I know that he wants to continue at the CFTC. 

Tim started at Treasury as the right-hand man to his predecessor Herb Allison, who passed away earlier this year and was an outstanding CEO as well as a public servant and whose work guiding our financial stability reforms we honor today.  Tim was the right man to succeed Herb, and with a record that reflects a deep commitment to a reform agenda, which is why he’s the right man to succeed Gary as well.  Tim is a guy who doesn’t seek the spotlight, but he consistently delivers.  He gets a high return for American taxpayers without a lot of fanfare.

I have every confidence that he is the right man to lead an agency designed to prevent future crises -– because I think it’s safe to say that he never wants to have to manage something like TARP again.  (Laughter.)

And I just found out that his lovely mother skydived on her 80th birthday -- (laughter) -- which to me is just very cool.  (Laughter.)  She’s very proud of him right now also.

So I urge the Senate to confirm Tim as soon as possible.  Let him can get right into the vital work of protecting America’s economy and the American people. 

And while I’m at it, I would urge Congress to give Tim and the CFTC the resources it needs to do the job.  Ever since we passed Wall Street reform, its opponents have tried to starve funding for the agencies responsible for carrying it out.  The men and women of the CFTC are charged with protecting us from financial harm, but they are undermanned.  They are outgunned.  They are working overtime.  The sequester cuts have made it even harder for them to do their job.  They’ve lost 5 percent of their team this year. 

Recently, Gary announced that some have to drop -- that they have to drop some open enforcement cases because Congress won’t allow them the resources required to do their jobs and complete these cases.  This is like not having enough cops on the beat, not having enough prosecutors to prosecute crimes.  This makes us safer.  It makes our financial system work better, and it’s foolish for us not to adequately resource it. 

The Republican leader in the Senate said a while back that the less we fund these agencies, the better America will be.  That is just not true.  We know that's not true.  We’ve got the scars to prove it, given what happened in 2007 and 2008.  And that’s why we can’t let an army of lobbyists and their allies in Congress delay, defund, dismantle the rules that were designed to protect consumers and protect a crisis from happening again.  We can’t go back to the days when bad behavior could nearly bring down the entire economy unless taxpayers stepped in to rescue it.  And anybody who is working hard to dismantle any of these reforms will have to explain to the American people why they did that when and if a crisis ever does happen again.

It’s important to realize that financial reform is not about punishment; it’s about making sure that everybody plays by the same set of clear and transparent rules that encourage responsible innovation and competition, and discourage fraud and manipulation, and above all, protect the American people.  And these regulations can work when people allow it to work. 

Let me just give you one example:  One of the things we did was pass a credit card bill of rights that imposed a new standard of fairness, transparency and accountability on credit card companies.  And that means a simpler bill with no more hidden fees, no more shifting deadlines or sudden changes of terms or “any time, any reason” rate hikes.  That wasn’t designed to punish credit card companies; they provide a valuable service, they deserve to turn a profit.  A recent study by independent economists show that these new protections are saving consumers more than $20 billion a year. 

The men and women who work for agencies like the CFTC, charged with financial reform in consumer protection, this is the work that they do:  Save consumers money and prevent systemic risk from happening again.  They’ve exposed deceptive mortgage schemes, abusive debt collection practices that prey on Americans who were hit hard by the recession.  They’ve partnered with states to secure a $50 billion settlement for 600,000 homeowners who were targeted by some of these mortgage schemes.  The new consumer watchdog agency we set up is working to empower students and veterans and families with the straightforward information they need to make sound financial choices like buying a home or paying for college.  And so far, it has secured more than $700 million in refunds to more than nearly 8 million hardworking American consumers who were abused by unfair or abusive practices.

So that’s what financial reform is all about.  That’s what a well-functioning CFTC is all about:  Protecting hardworking Americans by making sure everyone plays by the same set of rules, preserving trust in the integrity of our markets and our financial system, preventing a crisis like the one we endured from ever happening again.  And we’ve come too far and the American people have sacrificed too much to go back to the old days.  Our economy is growing, our businesses are creating jobs, and those of us who have been sent here to serve should be doing everything we can to strengthen the middle class, strengthen the financial markets, and rebuild an economy where everybody who works hard has a chance to get ahead. 

That has been what Gary has been up to the entire time that he has served at the CFTC.  We couldn’t be prouder of the work that he has done.  I’m confident that as soon as Congress confirms Tim and allows him to carry on that important work, he is going to be carrying those same values with him, with the outstanding team that we have at this agency. 

So to both of you, thanks for being great public servants.  Gary, good luck to you.  And Tim, congratulations.  Let’s get you confirmed.  (Applause.)

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3:40 P.M. EST