The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at the Wounded Warrior Project Soldier Ride Event

South Lawn

 

11:24 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Good morning, everybody!  (Applause.)  What a gorgeous day.  I will just point out, it is always beautiful at this particular event.  It is gorgeous every single day.  And I want to thank Vice President Biden and VA Secretary Bob McDonald for being here. 

This is the sixth time that we’ve welcomed the Soldier Ride to the White House.  It’s one of our favorite events of the year.  You all know the story.  Over 10 years ago, a young Long Island bartender, a civilian named Chris Carney, dreamed up the idea of biking coast-to-coast to raise money and support for our wounded warriors.  And back then, he probably would not have predicted how far the Soldier Ride would go; how thousands of Americans would join the cause; how a nation would be inspired by all of you.

We’ve got a number of folks here who are currently serving or have served in uniform.  We’ve got Army.  (Hooah!) We’ve got Navy.  (Applause.)   Air Force.  (Applause.)  We’ve got Marines.  (Oorah!)    And we’ve got some Coast Guard. 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Yeah!  (Laughter.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  That’s it, man.  (Applause.) 

We’ve got some extraordinary military families who support you every single mile.  (Applause.)  So we are among heroes here today -- all the riders, I just had a chance to say hi to them, and they look great.  Don’t get too comfortable, though -- you’ve got a lot of miles ahead.  This is just a pit stop so we can all cheer you on.   

Just to give you some sense of who these riders are -- we’ve got heroes like Sergeant William Armstrong.  Where’s William?  There he is in the back.  (Applause.)  William was 24 years old and serving in Afghanistan when a roadside bomb tore the ligaments in his knee and broke the bones in his leg.  As a lifelong distance runner, he was devastated that he might never run again.  But he didn’t give up.  His caretakers at Walter Reed got him a bike so he could get into shape.  After a lot of surgeries and months of physical therapy, two weeks ago, William ran a marathon.  (Applause.)  And I want to quote what William said here.  He said, “This Army put me back together,” he says.  But it was being “with people with similar life experiences… that exhilarated and motivated me.”  Thank you, William, for your incredible service.  (Applause.) 

We’ve got Specialist Teresa Ann Jackson.  Where’s Teresa?  There she is right there.  (Applause.)  Two years ago, while serving as a medic at Fort Campbell, Teresa fell ill with a rare disease that affected her arteries.  Doctors had to amputate both her feet.  She remembers the shock and isolation she and her husband felt afterwards.  And again, I want to quote her:  “I wasn’t expecting to be in a wheelchair at 30,” she says.  And at first, her -- at her first Wounded Warrior event, she found a community of people who welcomed her, who understood what she was going through, who continue to support her today through her recovery.  And today, Teresa wants to study to be a social worker so that she can give back to others.  Teresa, we thank you.  (Applause.)   

And we’ve got Captain Vincent Cerchione.  Where’s Vincent?  There he is right there.  (Applause.)  In 2003, Vincent led a dozen soldiers of the 3rd Infantry Division into battle in Iraq, taking rocket fire on a daily basis.  He served two tours there, and then came home with the kind of wound you can’t always see -- post-traumatic stress.  But with courage and the support of his wife, Vincent reached out for help, which is what we want all of our warriors to do.  He says that when he found the Wounded Warrior Project -- and I’m quoting here -- “It was the first time since I returned that I’d ever talked to anybody and felt like I wasn’t alone.”  Vincent, you are never alone.  And because of your service, we also know that we are never alone and we’re always safe.  Thank you so much for everything you’ve done.  (Applause.) 

So that’s what these riders represent here today -- that sense of community and support and love for each other.  And that’s what binds everyone who serves proudly under our flag and all the Americans who cheer you on.  It’s our chance to say to all our returning heroes that you’re not alone, that we’ve got your back, we’re going to be with you every step of the way.  We will be with you all that long journey that it often takes to recover every single mile.  

You and all the men and women of our Armed Forces represent what’s best in America.  And for me and Michelle and the girls, for Joe Biden and Jill, and I know Bob and his family, time with you has been some of the most inspiring parts of our jobs.  We could not be prouder of you or more grateful to you and your families for everything you’ve done to protect our freedom. 

And that’s why, as Commander-in-Chief, I’m going to keep doing everything in my power to make sure that we serve you as well as you serve us.  That means getting you the care and benefits that you deserve and have earned, including wounds like traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress.  It means making sure our veterans have the education and the jobs and opportunities that you have to have in order to get your shot at the American Dream that you helped to defend.  It means recognizing and supporting the incredible families and caregivers who sacrifice so much.  They serve as well.  We’ve got to be there for those families.

So I want to encourage every American along the route to get out and cheer for these men and women.  And I want all of our riders -- and all those that you’re riding for, including some who were left behind on the field of battle -- we want all of you to know that we’re not just going to be with you for three days and these 60 miles.  As a nation, as Americans grateful for your sacrifices, we’re going to be with you on all the roads of your life ahead.

So God bless you and your families, all who serve.  God bless America.  With that, I’m going to do my favorite part which is blow the horn.  (Laughter.)  Let’s get this ride started.  (Applause.)

 END               
11:30 A.M. EST

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at Grammys On The Hill Awards' Tribute to Alicia Keys

The Hamilton
Washington, D.C.

8:34 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you all so much.  (Applause.)  Well, good evening.  You all rest yourselves.  You’ve got a long night.  (Laughter.) 

Let me start by thanking Neil.  He has been such a terrific friend and partner.  I’m just grateful for all that he does for music, for young people.  He is terrific.  And I want to thank you all for having me here tonight for the annual Grammys on the Hill Awards.  (Applause.)  I am -- yes!  (Applause.) 

I am here tonight because I am so proud and so honored to pay tribute to a woman whose songs light up my iPod -- (laughter) -- no, no, they keep me going through some long rides and some long trips -- and a woman whose service to others is an inspiration to me and to millions of people across the globe.  My friend, my girl, Alicia Keys.  (Applause.) 

Now, over the years, I have rocked out to “Girl on Fire.”  I have tried -– and failed -– to sing along to “Fallin’.”  (Laughter.)  I have truly cried my eyes out at “The Inevitable Defeat of Mister & Pete,” just a beautiful, beautiful film.  I’ve loved every minute of Alicia on the big screen, and I’ve watched this woman sell tens of millions of albums and win countless awards.

But when I first finally got to meet this woman in person, face to face, what struck me most was her seriousness not just about her own artistic career, but about her broader mission on this Earth.  After just a few minutes with Alicia, I realized that she doesn’t just see herself as an artist or a celebrity, but as an individual with a relationship -– and a responsibility –- to the world. 

See, Alicia goes through life with her eyes wide open to the struggles and injustices, the heartbreaking inequalities that folks here in America and across the globe are facing every single day.  And this is where Alicia truly finds her purpose.  This is how she truly measures her success -- not by the awards she’s gotten or the money she’s made, but by the lives she’s saved, and the people she’s inspired, and the communities she has transformed.  In fact, in an interview, Alicia said that she views celebrity as a kind of currency.  And she said -- these are her words -- “Currency, like celebrity, should be used wisely and purposefully.” 

So Alicia doesn’t use her fame just to further her fame; to get more magazine covers or Twitter followers.  No, she uses her fame to further the cause of folks who are struggling -- families in wrenching poverty, women desperate to keep their babies safe from HIV, young girls yearning to make their voices heard. 

And let me vey clear:  Alicia doesn’t do the “just attend a fancy gala once a year” kind of work, or the “just write a check and be done with it” kind of work.  No, Alicia does the real, on-the-ground kind of work.  She goes directly to the places where folks are in need and she offers them her heart, her network, and the full power of her voice.  And then she comes back and convinces others to join her and offer their voices and their resources. 

So Alicia, she’s not just a giver herself.  She’s a force-multiplier, inspiring others to give more.  And I imagine that when Alicia asks you to pitch in, it’s kind of hard to say no.  Because she has this wrap-you-in-her-arms kind of warmth; this “we can change the world” kind of optimism; this overflowing, Stevie Wonder kind of love.  (Laughter.)  We all understand that.  There is no ego, no sense of entitlement.  This woman couldn’t be a diva if she tried.

And in the end, with Alicia, you get nothing but Alicia.  She simply is who she is, and she does what she knows is right, no matter what anyone else might think.  And with her example, Alicia has truly set a new standard for us all.  That’s why I’m here.  I love this woman.  To measure our lives not by how much we have and how many people know our name, but by how much we give and how many people we help. 

And that is why we are honoring her tonight, and’s why I’m so proud to be here to present her with the Recording Artists Coalition Award.  So let us all show our love for the one and only Alicia Keys.  (Applause.) 

END
8:40 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President in Working Mothers Town Hall

ImaginON
Charlotte, North Carolina

2:52 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody!  (Applause.)  Thank you!  Everybody, please have a seat.  Thank you so much.  Well, this is fun.  (Laughter.)  I was just hanging out with the Cat in the Hat that’s in the back there.  (Laughter.)  Hello, everybody. 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:   Hello!

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello!  (Laughter.)  Let me start by acknowledging two of North Carolina’s champions in Congress who flew down with me -- Alma Adams is here.  Give her a big round of applause.  (Applause.)  There she is.  And David Price -- where’s David?  (Applause.)  And your own outstanding Mayor, Dan Clodfelter, is here.  Where’s Dan?  (Applause.) 

I want to thank Dianna for the introduction.  I’m actually here because Dianna sent me a letter, and I wanted to reply in person.  (Laughter.)  And I want to thank Lisa and everybody who helped put this together.  

Let me just read an excerpt of what Dianna wrote me:  “As part of the middle class, I know how it feels to work hard every day, and even with a college education and a full-time job find it harder and harder to make ends meet.”  Now, I think it's fair to say that what Dianna said is true for so many people here in North Carolina and all across the country.  

It’s the kind of letter that I would get all the time from folks who ask for one thing -- that in America, their hard work and their sense of responsibility is rewarded with the chance to get ahead.  And I know it’s on the minds of working moms every day -- (baby cries) -- yes it is, and you, too.  (Laughter.) (Baby cries) -- There, yes, I know.  (Laughter.) 

And because a lot of working moms use BlogHer and SheKnows to talk about these issues, we’ve decided to partner with them for this town hall.  So I’m going to keep my remarks brief at the front end so we can spend most of the time having a conversation.

Now, thanks, in part, to some of the decisions that we made early on in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression -- right when I came into office -- we’ve made real progress.  Our businesses have created more than 12 million new jobs over the past five years.  The unemployment rate has fallen from 10 percent right when I was coming into office to 5.5 percent.

More kids are graduating from high school.  More kids are attending college.  More people are able to save more money at the pump because our energy production has gone up.  Our clean energy production has gone up.  More Americans know the security of health care because of this thing called the Affordable Care Act, aka, Obamacare.  (Applause.) 

And so the recovery reaches more Americans every single day. And the question we now face is, are we going to accept an economy in which, going forward, just a few folks are doing exceptionally well, or, are we going to have an economy where everybody who’s willing to work hard is able to get ahead? 

And that’s what I’ve been calling middle-class economics.  The idea that in this country, we do best when everybody is getting a fair shot, and everybody is doing their fair share, and everybody is playing by the same set of rules.  And that’s what has driven my policies ever since I became President.  A lot of my policies have been specifically focused on working moms, because I believe that when women succeed here in America then the whole country succeeds.  I'm a firm believer in that.  (Applause.)   

Now, part of middle-class economics means helping working families feel more economically secure in this global, technologically driven, constantly changing economy.  Which is why my budget puts forward proposals to lower the taxes for working families who are trying to pay for things like child care and college and retirement. 

In today’s economy, having both parents in the workforce is an economic reality for many families.  But in 31 states, including North Carolina, high-quality child care costs are higher than a year of tuition at a state university.  Average cost here in North Carolina, $16,000 for child care.  And that’s why my plan would make it much more affordable for every working and middle-class family with young children.

In today’s economy, higher education has never been more important -- or more expensive.  And that’s why I want to bring down the cost of community college for responsible students -- all the way down to zero -- (applause) -- so that they know that if they are doing well in high school they can get that higher education they need for a job.

  In today’s economy, women still hold most of the low-paying jobs -- jobs that often demand the hardest work.  And that’s why we’ve successfully worked with states, and cities, and companies to raise their workers’ wages without having to wait for Congress -- which, although Alma and David Price are on board on this, for some reason we’ve got a whole bunch of members of Congress who don’t get it when it comes to raising wages.  And I know there are workers here in Charlotte and across the country that are organizing for higher wages.  It's time that we stood alongside them and made it happen.  America deserves a raise.  (Applause.)

Now, it is significant that today is Tax Day.  (Laughter.)  If you haven’t filed, you -- (laughter.)  But the reason I mentioned all the policies that I just talked about is that overall when you put my policies together in the budget, I want to cut taxes for more than 5 million middle-class families who need help paying for child care.  (Applause.)  I want to cut taxes for more than 8 million families of students who need help paying for college.  (Applause.)  I want to cut taxes to help 30 million workers save for retirement.  I want to cut taxes for 13 million low-wage workers the same way that I fought to expand tax cuts like the child tax credit and the earned income tax credit  -- and we’ve been able to implement those.

So all told, my plan would cut taxes for 44 million working and middle-class families.  That’s who our tax code should benefit -- working Americans who are out there struggling every day, doing the right thing, supporting their families and trying to get a leg up in this new economy. 

Now, it is a good thing that Republicans in Washington have started to talk about wages and incomes and the middle class.  It’s better late than never, and so I’m encouraged.  Unfortunately, the policies they’re putting forward don’t answer the mail -- they don’t speak to the issues that ordinary families are facing. 

I’ll just give you a couple examples.  Their tax plan would give the average millionaire and billionaire a $50,000 tax cut.  That’s about what the average middle-class worker makes in an entire year.  They’re also pushing a new $270 billion tax cut for the very wealthiest of the wealthiest.  It would affect about 5,000 families all across America; it would cost $270 billion.  Here in North Carolina, it would benefit precisely 120 households.

AUDIENCE:  Ooooh --

THE PRESIDENT:  For $270 billion, which is the cost approximately of the tax breaks I’m giving to 44 million people, it would benefit a little over 5,000 people. 

So their plan would cut taxes for the top one-tenth of 1 percent and let taxes go up on 25 million working families and students.  And my view is we don’t need tax cuts for millionaires and billionaires.  I don’t need a tax cut.  We’re already doing well.  (Applause.)  We’ve been blessed by this country and the opportunities it offers, and now what we have to focus on is making sure everybody has opportunity and making sure middle-class families have tax cuts, and a young family that just had their first child and are still struggling to get by, that they get a little bit of relief, a little bit of a break.  Those are the folks who need help.  That’s what middle-class economics is all about, and that’s what I’m going to be fighting for.  (Applause.) 

But I’m going to stop talking because I promised I would be short.  (Laughter.)  And one of the things that I’m going to want to do is not just do the talking but I also want to do some listening.  And what I’m really interested in is hearing from all of you about what are you facing in your lives.  How do you think government policy would be helpful?  What do you think folks in Congress, the President, mayors, governors, what do you think would actually make a difference in the lives of middle-class families?  And because we’ve got some powerful, hardworking women around here -- (applause) -- I also want to specifically hear from the women in terms of what you think would make a different as well. 

So with that, I’m going to take my seat right here.  (Laughter.)

MS. STONE:  Thank you, Mr. President.  I’m going to be selfish and kick off with the first question.  But then we are going to hand over a few questions to you all.  And when the time comes for you, just raise your hand and a mic wrangler will magically appear and hold it for you.

I’d like to cover off on something that happened yesterday: Equal Pay Day in the United States.  The Paycheck Fairness Act has failed I believe now four times in Congress.  I know you’ve been a proponent of it.  I heard from a user of SheKnows.com yesterday, Lily Onate (ph) -- she works one-and-a-half jobs to be the single supporter of her son.  She’s making just enough that she cannot afford to get sick, but she also cannot achieve certain benefits.  She’s trying to save for college.  And more than anything, she is very disappointed to learn she is making less than men 10 years younger than she is on the job.  Women make 78 cents on the dollar unless they’re women of color, in which they make significantly less. 

Why is the Paycheck Fairness Act failing?  And does someone dispute the existence of the pay difference?

THE PRESIDENT:  The reason we haven’t gotten it done is because Republicans in Congress have blocked it.  And some of them do dispute that it’s a problem.  I mean, many say it’s a woman’s choice that is resulting in women getting paid less than men; lifestyle decisions, and they’d rather stay at home, or they’d rather work part time, or what have you.

Now, understand that the whole point of equal pay is people doing the same job and getting paid less.  That’s the problem.  The Paycheck Fairness Act would say not that women should get paid more or the same if they’re doing less work; it’s saying they should get paid the same for doing the same work. 

Now, this should be a no-brainer.  There are some things that are conceptually complicated.  (Laughter.)  There are other things that are pretty simple.  If you’ve got two people doing the same job, they should get paid the same. 

And this is personal for me, because I think a lot of people are aware, I was raised by a single mom who worked, went to school, got her advanced degree, and helped raise me and my sister.  And we also got help from my grandparents, and actually the main breadwinner in our entire family was my grandmother.  And she’s a great story.  Grew up in Kansas -- my grandfather went to fight in World War II in Europe.  When he came back he got benefits of the GI Bill, but she was Rosie the Riveter.  She was working back home on an assembly line.  And she didn’t get, unfortunately, benefits the way we set up the Post-9/11 GI Bill, where spouses and family members can get help, as well.

So she never got a college education.  But she was smarter than my grandfather -- I apologize, Gramps -- (laughter) -- but I think everybody who knew her understood that.  She got a job as a secretary, worked her way up, became the vice president of a bank, but then hit the glass ceiling, and for the next 20 years, kept on training younger men who came up and would end up going ahead of her, including the presidents of the banks.

And that was pretty typical at that time.  The question is, why is it still typical now.  I’ve got two daughters.  I expect them to be treated the same as somebody else’s sons when it comes to their opportunities on the job. 

So what we did when I came into office, we passed something called the Lilly Ledbetter Act, named after -- (applause) -- a good friend of mine, Lilly Ledbetter, who had worked for years and found out long into her work that she had been getting paid all these years less than men, substantially.  She brought suit. They said, well, it’s too late to file suit because you should have filed suit right when it started happening.  She said, I just found out.  They said, it doesn’t matter.  So we changed that law to allow somebody like Lilly, when they find out, to finally be able to go ahead and file suit. 

What we also did then is I signed what’s called an executive order that said if you want to be a federal contractor with us then you’ve got to allow your employees to share compensation data.  Because a lot of companies discourage or even penalize employees for telling each other what they’re getting paid, in part, because they don’t want everybody finding out that maybe the men are getting paid more than the women for doing the same job.  So we said you want to work for the federal government, you can’t do that.

But we still need to get this Paycheck Fairness Act passed. And it really is just a matter of convincing a number of Republicans to recognize that they’ve got daughters, too, they’ve got spouses, and at a time when the majority of families have both spouses working, or if you’ve got a single parent -- that’s most likely to be a single mom -- working, this is an economic issue.  It’s a family issue.  It’s not just a women’s issue.  Families are going to be better off.

Let me tell you, now, Michelle would point out First Ladies get paid nothing.  (Laughter.)  So there’s clearly not equal pay in the White House when it comes to her and me.  But before we were in the White House, I wanted to make sure Michelle got paid as much as she could.  (Laughter.)  I want a big paycheck for Michelle.  (Laughter.)  That wasn’t a women’s issue.  If she had a bigger paycheck, that made us able to pay the bills.  (Applause.)  Why would I want my spouse or my daughter discriminated against?  That doesn’t make any sense.

So this should be a no-brainer.  And hopefully we’ll -- we’re just going to keep on pushing until the light bulb goes off above the heads of some of these Republican friends of mine.

MS. STONE:  Well, I’d like to see some hands from people in the audience who are interested in asking a question.  Please stand up.  Yes. 

Q    Hi, Mr. President. 

THE PRESIDENT:  I think we can hear you.

Q    Okay.

THE PRESIDENT:  Are you guys hearing that back here?  No?  Uh-oh.  (Laughter.)  Testing, one, two three.

MS. STONE:  Why don’t we work on that mic and we’ll --

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, hold on a second.  I mean, she -- this stretches.  (Laughter.)  I’ll be like Phil Donahue.  (Laughter.) 
Q    Hi, Mr. President.  I’m Erin Odum (ph) from Worzel, North Carolina and TheHumbledHomemaker.com.  It’s an honor to meet you.  My question is -- first of all, I believe that the key to economic growth and the key to ending the cycle of poverty is education, which I think you would agree.  My question is:  What can the government do on a federal level to increase the wages of our teachers, which is traditionally and stereotypically a female profession?  (Applause.)  

Now, I’ll tell you, my husband is a public school teacher.  I’m a blogger.  Through our business -- we call it our business because he helps me we make significantly more money on a mommy blog than he makes as a public school teacher.  For three years we were on government aid, and I’m thankful we had that so that we could survive through our WIC checks, through Medicaid.  But there are teachers that are leaving the profession -- good teachers -- because they can't afford to feed their families.  And I want the children in our country to have a good education. And females -- my husband is a male, but females that are single women supporting their families on a teacher’s salary, they can't do it.  So I know it’s a state thing, but what can the federal government do to put pressure on the states to increase teacher income?  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, do you guys have kids?

Q    Yes, sir.  We have three daughters -- two, four and six. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Oh, you're busy.  (Laughter.)  Two, four and six.  Do you bring them here to the -- this is pretty nice.  I was saying before I came out here, I loved those days when Malia and Sasha were that age and I could come hang out at these places.  Plus you could go to all the movies like “Monsters, Inc.” and stuff -- (laughter) -- and I love those movies.  “Toy Story” -- and people didn't think you were weird watching them because you had two little kids.  (Laughter.)

Your point about teachers is absolutely right.  And you're also right that, historically, this has been a state issue.  Schools are generally funded through the state and typically through property taxes.  And the federal government’s total education budget accounts for about 7 percent of total education spending. 

And one of the things that we think is really important is making sure that the federal government, in providing assistance to school districts, encourages states to do their fair share, as well.  And in fact, there was a debate that was taking place because the House Republicans were talking about changing the formula where federal state aid was provided so that it would be okay to take federal aid and then reduce the amount of state dollars that were going to education, and pay for tax cuts for somebody else, and then teachers would be no better off.

But I’ll be honest with you, the primary way that we can have an impact at the federal level is to point out states that are doing better and states that are doing worse, and to talk about the importance of teachers in our economic growth and our society. 

My sister was a teacher, and so I know how little she got paid.  It’s hard to support a family.  And there are a lot of young people who are really talented who want to go into teaching.  In places like Korea and Finland, where the education system is really doing well, teachers are paid at the level that doctors and engineers are paid, and it is respected as a profession.

So, frankly, we've just got to put more pressure on states, because there aren't that many levers that we have in order to encourage states to change their pay structure. 

Now, I'm just going to editorialize a little bit.  Here in North Carolina, this used to be the state in which the promise of education was understood at the state government level, and the reason North Carolina did better economically than many of the other Mid-Atlantic and Southern states was because of the Research Triangle and the emphasis on education, and my good friend, Jim Hunt, the Governor, who used to place such a big emphasis on it. 

Funding now here in the state and teacher pay is ranking as low as it gets.  And so part of it is just pointing that out and hopefully understanding this shouldn’t be a partisan issue.  It shouldn’t matter whether you're a Republican or Democrat; you should want to make sure that schools are successful.  And that requires teachers that are motivated, have professional training, but are also making enough of a living that they can afford a middle-class lifestyle.  (Applause.) 

MS. STONE:  Picking up on that, Erin mentioned that she has a two-, four-, and six-year-olds.  We surveyed 57 different moms here in the North Charlotte Greater Area.  And their primary concern was family-friendly policies.  They feel that they are particularly struggling with early childhood.  We had a question online from Feminista Jones (ph), who said, the U.S. is behind -- other countries have been successful in developing paid maternity leave, in some cases, paternity leave.  We are not investing in the first five years of childhood to the same tune as some of our international economic competitors.  What is the solution for that?

THE PRESIDENT:  The solution is for us to expand access to early childhood education.  (Applause.) 

Here’s what we know.  We know this is the smartest investment we can make as a society.  Every dollar we put into high-quality early childhood education we get $7 back in reduced teen pregnancy, improved graduation rates, improved performance in school, reduced incarceration rates.  The society as a whole does better. 

And this is not just a problem for the poorest of the poor, although that obviously is a very important factor because you’ve got a lot of single moms out there -- if we want to get them into the workforce they’ve got to feel like there’s some reliable child care.  But we also want to make that child care high quality so that those kids now start having ladders of opportunity that are available to them.  But it's also -- this is a middle-class -- this is an American issue. 

Look, when Michelle and I, when our daughters were five, six or younger, one of the biggest challenges we had was finding good child care and being able to afford child care.  At a time when we were still paying off debts from our student loans, we're trying to buy a house for the first time, juggling all those things was tough.  And we were making a lot more money than a lot of people do.  So I know if it was hard for us, I can only imagine what it's like for somebody who’s making $40,000, $50,000 a year or less.

And the good news is that at the state level we've actually seen some recognition of this issue.  I'm really encouraged by the fact that it's not just the traditional states you’d expect, but also a lot of so-called red states where the governors, Republican governors have said, you know what, this is important. Oklahoma has got outstanding early childhood initiatives going.  (Sneezes.)  Excuse me.

MS. STONE:  Bless you.

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  I was fighting that one for a while.

Georgia is doing some excellent work around early childhood. So what we've been doing is actually providing some early childhood education grants through the Department of Education to try to help put together public-private partnerships, to get state and federal money so that we can develop models of outstanding early childhood education and show what a difference it can make.  And it can make a huge difference in terms of long-term performance. 

We know, for example, that a very poor child, when they show up at kindergarten, they’re already behind millions of words.  They’ve just heard so much less vocabulary that there’s a gap that needs to be closed.  But we also know that if there’s a high-quality early childhood education program, particularly ones that are working with the parents, then even a parent who didn’t graduate from high school, if they’re talking to their child and they’re getting support, and the child is at a high-quality early childhood level, that gap can close pretty quickly -- because kids are resilient and they’ll soak up like a sponge what they’re getting.

So what we’re trying to do is put together coalitions at the state levels and city levels, and our hope is, is that by showing that this can work in a variety of places, that eventually Congress catches up and recognizes this is a competitive issue for us globally as well. 

In France, the early childhood programs are so good that everybody, the wealthiest as well as the poorest, all send their kids to these early childhood education programs.  And the teachers there aren’t just babysitters; they are professionally trained in early childhood development.  And it really pays off. It’s a great way for us to make sure every child gets opportunity in this country, and to relieve some pressure from parents who have to work.  (Applause.)

MS. STONE:  Thank you. 

Other questions?  I want to make sure we’re -- yes, ma’am.  In the red.

THE PRESIDENT:   Hold on, let’s get a mic so we can hear you.

Q    Hi, my name is Collette Forest (ph), and I’m a single parent here in Charlotte, North Carolina.  I used to receive a child care voucher, so I know how important it is.  But when the Republican-controlled legislature took over, we lost it.  And a lot of fellow sisters that are with me, we had to make choices whether or not to pay for before-school care or after-school care, because we had to work and we needed it.  How can you help us?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, now, this was not a plant, but it so happens -- (laughter) -- that we’re actually proposing as part of my budget package to triple the child credit, which would translate to potentially an additional $900 a year for child care.  And that’s going to make a big difference in a lot of families. 

So at the federal level at least, this should be one of our top budget priorities.  And it is in everybody’s interest to make sure that our kids -- and I say “our” because the one thing I really believe is that even if you’re single, even if your kids are grown, even if your kids are like mine -- on their way to college soon, and think I’m boring and don’t want to hang out with me as much as they used to -- (laughter) -- that your kid is important to me, too.  And that’s not out of charity; that’s because your child -- is it a son or a daughter?

Q    Eight-year-old son.

THE PRESIDENT:  An eight-year-old son.  Your son, if he is doing well, that means he is paying taxes.  That means he is contributing to society, he’s staying out of trouble.  That’s a good investment for me.  So we want to make sure that those families who are working hard, doing the right thing, that they get some tax relief.  And we can afford this.  The one thing I want to emphasize -- because sometimes when we talk about things like early childhood, people say, well, that’d be nice, but we can't afford it.  Well, the truth is, is if we closed a few corporate tax loopholes that are not contributing to the economy right now, then we could afford it without increasing the deficit.  (Applause.)

And I want to make this point, even though it’s a little off topic, but it oftentimes is the backdrop against which these debates take place -- if you listen to some of my political critics, they always want to paint me or the Democratic Party as this “tax and spend” and irresponsible.  Let me say this -- since I came into office, the federal deficit has come down by two-thirds.  It hasn’t gone up.  It’s come down by two-thirds.  (Applause.)  So when Bill Clinton was President -- budget got balanced and we had low deficits.  Then somebody else came in and -- (laughter) -- deficits started going up.  And then I came in and I inherited this huge recession that drove up the deficits. And then we started whittling them down -- even as we were expanding the earned income tax credit, even as we were expanding Pell grants -- because part of what we did was we said, well, let’s make sure the tax code is fair.  Let’s make sure that we're eliminating programs that don't work to help middle-class families.

There are ways to afford in our budget what needs to be done to help middle-class families without blowing up the deficit.  But it does require us making some choices -- which is why when I hear a proposal from the House Republicans to reduce what we call the trust fund loophole so that the top one-tenth of 1 percent are getting a tax break -- literally fewer than 6,000 families benefit from this, because right now the way it works is you don't even pay this tax until you already have $5.5 million or $11 million for a couple.  And we're going to give those folks a tax break for $270 billion.  And all that money we could be spending, we could provide tax credits for child care or for kids wanting to go to college.  You got to have some priorities here.

It turns out that as President you end up knowing a lot of people, including a lot of rich people.  Some of them are big supporters of mine, good friends of mine.  Warren Buffett is a great friend of mine.  Warren Buffett doesn't need a tax break.  (Laughter.)  He really doesn't.  He has too much money to spend. He can't spend it all.  Even with all the money he’s giving way, he still can't spend it all.  Why would we be giving him a tax break when there are a whole bunch of families who need help? 

And this is something that we really have to focus on.  And as I said, it shouldn’t even be a partisan issue.  It’s just a matter of common sense and fairness.

MS. STONE:  Mr. President, you were just talking about some of the nation’s leading wealthy and also a little bit of corporate responsibility.  I want to ask you about the private enterprise and their role. 

I am visiting beautiful North Carolina today from Silicon Valley, where for the past year, unfortunately, it seems the Valley has become a poster child for the challenges women are having penetrating the leadership of some of our best technology companies.  Women are lacking in venture capital firms.  We're not running as many companies.  We're not in the leadership pipeline. We're not in the engineering product groups in the same number.  In fact, we are not getting as many STEM-related majors as we used to. 

So when I think about some of the responsibilities you're saying the government has, I would ask you what is the economic risk, either in Silicon Valley or here in the entire American economy, competitively, to having fewer women empowered in both leadership positions at home and in corporate America?  What are we giving up in the economy?  Product benefits?  Insight?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, let me use a sports analogy since I’m in North Carolina.  There’s some pretty good basketball here in North Carolina.  (Applause.) 

MS. STONE:  And perhaps I’m off base.

THE PRESIDENT:  No -- oh.  Did everybody catch that -- off base?  (Laughter.)  You wouldn’t field a team with just half the players, right?  You wouldn’t go in the game and the other side has got 12 players and you decide, well, we’ll just have six.  You’d want all the team, the entire team to be available for you to win.  And the same is true for the country. 

You mentioned, for example, engineers.  We have a shortage of engineers in this country.  We need more.  But the fact of the matter is, is that because of how we structured STEM education -- that’s science, technology, engineering, and math -- the way we structure it, oftentimes girls get discouraged early from going into those fields.  And we know, actually, from experiments and data, and what happens in the classroom, that some of it's just making little changes in terms of how things are taught so that girls feel more empowered and more engaged in those fields.  They’ve got just as much talent as the boys do. 

And that, unfortunately, is still true in a lot of our economy.  There are certain things that we don’t encourage our daughters to do.  They start making choices because they don’t see representation of themselves in certain fields. 

Really interesting story:  My Chief Technology Officer, Megan Smith, who came over from Google, she told me that when CSI came on -- now, I’ve got to admit, I don’t watch that very often. I mean, I just don’t watch -- no offense to CSI -- I just don’t see it.  It seems like a really popular show.  But apparently, there was a woman -- or women -- who were involved in forensics, in the show.   A lot of the show is about finding hair fiber or something, and then you solve a big crime.  And once this show came on, the number of young women going into the field skyrocketed.  Because all it took was a girl saying, oh, I didn’t know I could be that.  I didn’t know I could do that.

So we as a society have to do better -- public sector, private sector.  We’re putting a lot of emphasis on STEM education specifically for girls.  The same is true, by the way, for underrepresented minority groups -- African Americans, Latinos are underrepresented in these fields and we’ve have got to -- (applause.)  Now that requires us, collectively -- parents, community, churches, others -- encouraging people into these fields -- because these are the fields where we’re going to be growing. 

But some of it also has to do with companies have to want to make it happen.  They’ve got to be intentional about it.  They’ve got to pay attention to it.  And those companies that pay attention to it end up succeeding in recruiting more women, promoting more women, and those companies end up being more successful. 

And I'm trying to set an example in the White House right now.  The highest level of advisor I have on the White House staff is called an Assistant to the President, and we actually have more women than men right now -- I think 13 to 11.  (Applause.)  But that wasn’t always the case, because when I first came in, we had to say, you know what, we got to do better, and how do we make sure that we’re promoting talent. 

And it's true that companies can make a big difference.  I'm going to give two examples of how companies can make a difference -- slightly different issue, but it shows the power companies have.  When we started this minimum wage campaign, one of the places I went to was Costco, because not only did they pay their workers minimum wage, they paid them a living wage, and they provided them health care benefits.  And they were a hugely profitable company, and we wanted to show that could be done.  And then suddenly you had other companies like Gap announce that they were going to raise wages on their employees.  And then, most recently, Walmart came in.  And once Walmart is paying people more, then you know that something is happening, right?  (Laughter.)

So you can change attitudes and culture through a corporate example.  One of the issues that’s important to a lot of families is the issue of paid leave.  There are 40 million-plus Americans who are working and don’t have sick leave.  They don’t have sick leave.  They get sick, there’s nothing they can do.  Either they go to work sick or they lose their job, potentially, or at least they lose a paycheck.  And family leave is still unpaid, so a lot of women can’t take advantage of it if their child is sick at home. 

Well, recently, Microsoft just announced that not only does it make sure that it has strong sick leave and paid leave, but it’s actually only going to do business with contractors that do the same thing.  (Applause.)  So a big company like Microsoft can start influencing some of their subcontractors and suppliers down the chain.  That can end up having a huge impact. 

So for companies that are brand names and set the standard, for them to show we’re doing more to recruit women, promote women, put them in positions of authority, that sends a signal to our daughters, but it also sends a signal to other companies that it’s the right thing to do.  (Applause.) 

MS. STONE:  Thank you, Mr. President.  A number of the women and men here are small business owners.  And it would be very interesting to hear your thoughts on how we could encourage those businesses, how those businesses could get some of the support that doesn’t exist. 

So if there are, it sounds like, federal policies from which a Microsoft and a Costco can benefit from, showing good faith towards its employees -- I’m assuming I’m right -- they benefitted from creating those programs -- what Small Business Administration-level programs are available to small business men and women who actually don’t have a safety net, don’t have an HR department, and don’t have an ability to call on a larger power?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, it’s important -- the examples I used in terms of raising the minimum wage and in terms of paid sick leave, they didn’t get a federal benefit.  They just thought it was smart business sense -- because what happens is you get lower turnover, higher productivity from your employees, greater employee satisfaction, and the company just ends up doing better.

For small businesses, sometimes that’s tougher.  You’ve got smaller margins.  You’re trying to figure out how do I keep the doors open, how do I pay the bills.  And really our focus when it comes to small business has been to make sure, number one, that the Small Business Administration, the SBA, that people are taking advantage of it. 

Because there are a lot of programs focused -- the biggest problem a lot of small businesses have is in financing.  And when I first came into office, small businesses were the ones that were getting hit the worst by the Great Recession.  So we actually eliminated fees and made it easier for small businesses to get loans, and that helped a whole lot of small businesses get back on their feet.  And we’re continuing to try to expand outreach to let small businesses know how they can take advantage of financing through the SBA, and to try to reduce the paperwork and the hassle that’s involved in taking out a loan.  That’s hugely important.

We’re also focusing specifically on women-owned businesses, and how we can make sure that they are networked and able to access financing. 

And then the federal government is a huge purchaser.  We’re just a big -- we’re the biggest customer in the world.  We buy a lot of stuff.  We buy everything.  There’s all kinds of stuff -- at the Pentagon alone, I mean, you just think about -- the Pentagon annual budget is well over $500 billion.  It’s the largest organization on Earth, and that means it’s got some purchasing power.

So part of what we’ve been doing is working with the heads of our agencies, saying, you’ve got to do more to make sure that opportunities are opened up.  And a lot of times it’s as simple as, for example, breaking up contracts so that they’re in bite-sized pieces so that small businesses can take advantage of them. Because a lot of times, traditionally, what’s happened is they’ll put out a contract for pencils, and it will be like 40 million pencils.  And a small business can’t bid on 40 million pencils, but if you say, well, why don’t we chop this up so that small businesses can actually bid on it, that ends up making a big difference.

And through the use of our purchasing power, our market power, we’re trying to also encourage more women-owned businesses and minority-owned businesses to be able to just get their foot in the door and show what they can do. 

Keep in mind, every big business started as a small business.  (Applause.)  And we want to make sure that we’re continuing to innovate in our economy.  That’s how, ultimately, jobs get created.

MS. STONE:  Thank you, sir. 

Other questions?  Yes, ma’am, in the red hat.  Please.

Q    Hi, Mr. President.  My name is Jonette Harper, and I am the co-founder of Sarcoidosis of North Carolina.  And I’m pretty sure you are familiar with Sarcoidosis.  There are a lot of people in our group, including myself, who started out life young, who thought everything was going to go their way.

THE PRESIDENT:  First of all, you’re still young.  But I just wanted to --

Q    Thank you.

THE PRESIDENT:  All right.  You sound like -- geez -- (Laughter.) 

Q    No, I’m a proud 47-year-old woman.

THE PRESIDENT:  -- the world has passed you by.

Q    Thank you very much.  But there’s a lot of other people in the group who had their lives ahead of them, wanted to do big things, and they got sick.  Now, along with other diseases like  -- Sarcoidosis is an invisible, chronic illness.  A lot of companies can’t tell by looking at someone when they’re sick.  So a lot of mothers, as well as fathers -- because men get Sarcoidosis also -- but a lot of them are put aside or given jobs that they know that they can’t -- which they’re forced out of the workforce.  My question to you is, is there any, or will there be any opportunity to give companies either tax credits or something that will encourage them to hire people who are on disability who -- their families break up, their children worry about college because mom can't keep a job because she’s always sick.  Is there -- can there be a way to encourage companies to -- even though people may only be able to work 20 hours a week, that might be the best 20 hours that that company gets.

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, first of all, let me just say that this is an example of why I’ve always felt like health care can't be a privilege, it’s got to be a right in this country.  And this is why we passed the Affordable Care Act -- (applause) -- to make sure that we start building a health care system instead of a disease care system; that we start focusing on prevention; that we empower people to take care of their health better -- get regular checkups, mammograms, all the things that we know can contribute to long-term health.  And I’m very proud of the millions of people who are being helped.  And it’s working. 

For all the criticism and all the political ups and downs and all the -- me getting beat up about it, the fact of the matter is, is you’ve got more than 16 million people who got health insurance who didn't have it before.  You've got health insurance -- uninsured rates have gone down drastically.  (Applause.)  And by the way, the cost has been lower than anybody projected.  Health care inflation has gone up at its slowest rate in 50 years.  If the trajectory of health care inflation had kept on going up at the same pace as it was before the Affordable Care Act passed, even those of you who had health insurance and still have, you’d be paying $1,800 more on average in premiums.  You're saving that money -- even though you don't know it.  And you're protected from preexisting conditions.  So if you lose your job you can always assure yourself that you're going to get health insurance coverage.  Insurers can't discriminate against you because you've got, for example, a chronic illness.  So that's been very important.

Now, in terms of somebody who does have a chronic illness and they have a disability, each case is going to be different.  There are going to be -- there are laws in place, the Americans with Disabilities Act, that protects people who are officially disabled from being discriminated against.  And employers have to find accommodations where possible.

But what we also need to do is to see if we can work with companies to identify some of these illnesses and get them educated -- because sometimes it’s just misinformation in terms of them knowing what a person can or cannot do.  And one of the trends that we want to encourage in companies is, because of the power of the Internet, people having a little more flex time can make a huge difference. 

And that’s particularly important for women, by the way, because no matter how enlightened your husband may pretend he is, women still oftentimes bear a disproportionate burden when it comes to child care.  And the more we’re able to structure flexibility at the workplace, the better off women are going to be, the better off children are going to be, and ultimately the better off everybody is going to be.  That company is going to do better.  And that obviously could have some application to somebody who has got a chronic illness but otherwise is very productive.  (Applause.)

MS. STONE:  Thank you so much for that question.  It really echoes a lot of what we hear from American women who are eager to work, dying to work, even when they are stuck at home for one reason or another.  And I think that -- I got a great question from Theresa from Raleigh -- “The Importance of Being Reese” --  she’s here.  She’s here somewhere.  She said, what can we do as individuals to encourage involvement in gender and wage issues in our communities?  We’ve talked about government responsibility, we’ve talked about enterprise responsibility.  What is the individual responsibility that we as Americans have to pursue these issues if they matter to us?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I’ve always said the most important office in a democracy is the office of citizen.  And I was recently in Selma celebrating the 50th anniversary of the march there.  The world was transformed because maids and Pullman porters and young priests and rabbis just decided to march and to highlight issues.  And so community participation is critical. 

And I’m going to play the role of interviewer here for a second.  Lisa, you tell me, when you -- you’ve got this huge network that you guys have been able to set up.  And that’s part of the power of the Internet, is being able to make sure that people don’t feel alone on these issues.  They suddenly say, oh, what I’m reading here, that’s what I’m going through. 

Now, the key is, once you connect like that, with millions of people, how does that then translate into action in specific cities or specific communities.  And I don’t know the degree to which people have the opportunity through your site not only to share stories but also to potentially act on them.

MS. STONE:  Well, thank you.  When we started this company in 2005, we were trying to answer the question, where are the women who blog and use social media?  And the question was easily answered.  There were already millions of women doing it.  So we pulled together a conference and had an opportunity for women to get together regularly online.  Then Facebook was born.  Twitter happened.  People started connecting their blogs to community members who were interested in their voices across the board. 

SheKnows Media today, we reach 82 million women every month across our sites, and 165 million across social media.  And that has everything to do with the power of the 20,000 experts in our community.  Women are inspiring women every day.  And it’s very interesting to see the use of the hashtag and the use of social media to literally lean into what they care about.

And we may lean in so hard that we fall over.  But it doesn't mean that we aren’t in there every day.  So for example, the #Obamatownhall that we're working with today, we’ve had questions come in nationally and internationally for you and for each other about priorities.  So it’s interesting.  For a long time people wanted to make us a mommy blogger network when, in fact, parenting is just one of the many things I see American women caring enormously about.  Thank you for asking.  (Applause.) 

THE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  Good. 

Why don't we get a young person here?  This young lady right here.  Oh, see, now, you can't do that, now.  (Laughter.)  What, you're trying to drop an assist over here.  (Laughter.)  All right, what’s the team?

Q    We're from Johnson & Wales University ladies basketball team.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  (Applause.)  So this must be your point guard here.

Q    One of them.

THE PRESIDENT:  Yes, because she basically -- she took the ball and -- (laughter).  All right, go ahead.

Q    So being that we’ll be graduating from a private college, it’s known, it’s a fact that we’ll have a lot -- we will have a lot of student loans.  And my question to you is, is there something that will done to alleviate the bind that's going to be pushed on our backs after we graduate, or that can help students that are economically inclined less -- less economically inclined?

THE PRESIDENT:  Right.  What year are you in school?

Q    I’m a junior.

THE PRESIDENT:  So how many juniors do we have?  How many seniors?  Freshmen?  Seniors? 

Q    So junior, junior, senior, junior -- well, three juniors and then everyone else is freshmen.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  You've got a young team, that's good. 
Q    It’s our first year.

THE PRESIDENT:  First year, fantastic.  (Applause.)  Well, this is something that -- along with child care, college and retirement, those are probably the three things that people feel so much pressure on.  And sometimes they feel pressure at the same time.  We had so many student loans, Michelle and I, when we got married that paying back student loans was more than our mortgage at a time when we were already starting to try to save for Malia and Sasha’s education.  So families feel like, I don’t know, even if I'm saving a little bit, what pot do I put it in? 

And this is part of the reason why we expanded Pell grants so that we tried to get more grants, fewer loans.  The way we did that, by the way, was when I came into office, banks were a pass- through for all student loan programs and they were taking out a couple billion dollars every year.  The thing was, the loans were federally guaranteed, so the banks really weren’t taking any risk.  And we said, well, why don’t we just cut out the middleman, give the loans directly to the students, and then we can expand it for millions of students -- which is exactly what we did.  And we actually raised the level of Pell grants.

Second thing we did was capped the interest rate for students on student loans.  The third thing we did, which I want a lot of people here to hear about because not as many people take advantage of it -- we set up a program called income-based repayment that says if you are graduating you can make an arrangement whereby you never pay more than a certain percentage of your income -- let’s say, 10 percent of your income. 

Which is especially important if you decide, for example, to go into teaching.  And you’ve got -- you love teaching, but you have got all these loans.  It makes sure that you can stretch out your loan payments longer, and that is helpful.  But in the end, the most important thing we have got to do is actually just reduce the cost of higher education in general.  (Applause.) 

And that’s why this proposal that we put forward for making the first two years of community college free is so important.  It is one way that we can reduce costs.  Because for a lot of young people, the community college may be their best option, either because they just need technical training to go then get a job, in which case, after two years, they go work with an associate’s degree and they have very little debt.  Or even if they’re going to a four-year university, you can go for two years first and then transfer to get your four-year degree, and you’ve just cut the amount of tuition and potential debt you’ve got in half. 

Now, this is something that we’ve put forward, we’re going to be continuing to push in Congress.  There are other things we’re doing, trying to pull together university presidents, community college presidents, and others, to try to find other ways to reduce the overall cost of higher education. 

So, for example, using more online learning -- that could make a difference.  Making sure that young people, when they come in, are counseled so that they graduate on time.  Because a lot of times debt increases because kids -- they’re supposed to graduate in four years; it takes them six because they started off the first two years taking classes that had no application to the things they were interested in, but nobody had told them. 

Helping to educate young people on how student loans work and interest rates -- “Know Before You Owe.”  Because, I will tell you, and I’ll fess up -- when I first got into college and I had these -- I basically got through with grants and loans, and school was much less expensive for me, so I didn’t have much debt undergraduate.  But by the time I got to law school, once you were admitted, people just kind of said, well, you know, don’t worry about it.  And so you’re kind of running around thinking, oh, I’m fine.  And then right before you get out, suddenly they say, oh.  (Laughter.)

So what we’ve said to schools is no, no, no.  Advise the young person before they enroll so that they can start planning ahead of time and, in some cases, maybe they don’t spend quite as much money as they need to.  Making textbooks cheaper.  There are a whole bunch of things that we should be doing that reduces the cost of higher education.  And we’re working with colleges and universities to try to make that happen.  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay, I think, Lisa, I think this is our last question.

MS. STONE:  One last question.  Shall we take one here in the front?  Yes, ma’am.

Q    Thank you so much.  Hello, Mr. President.  My name is Ashley Taylor.  I’m here from the blog “The Dose of Reality.” I’m also a registered nurse here in Charlotte at a clinic that is greatly benefitting from Obamacare, so we appreciate your work with that.  I wanted to ask you, as the mother of two daughters, how would you suggest I best empower them to work hard, study hard, get a good education, if they know from the outset they’re going to be paid less than their male counterparts for the same skillset with the same background? 

And my second part of that question is, in addition to the Paycheck Fairness Act, is there something that you can do on a federal level as far as executive action goes, should Congress continue to stall on this bill?

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, on the second part of your answer, we’ve probably exhausted what I can do through executive actions because basically what I can do is I can impact federal contractors, but it’s hard for me to go beyond federal contractors.  My executive actions don’t apply automatically to the private sector who are not doing business with the federal government.

But I think what we need to do is just build a movement, build political pressure.  Educate people.  Make sure that women know and husbands know that this is a family issue and an economic issue.  And the thing is, if you ask anybody -- I don’t care if they’re Democrat, Republican -- if you ask them what’s fair, they’d say, well, women should be paid the same as men.  But it becomes somehow this political issue when this is not political.  I mean, there are some areas that are tough where there really is differences of opinion in this country about issues -- when it comes to issues like gun safety laws, for example.  I mean, there are real passions on both sides, and sometimes they’re not completely reconcilable.  But on this one, I guarantee you, the majority of Republican voters, they support equal pay for equal work.  But when it gets to Congress, somehow it becomes a political issue.  We’ve got to stop that. 

In terms of your daughters, look, you’ve got to remind your daughters that things aren’t always perfectly fair, but people who are determined can make them fair.  America is not perfect, but it’s a lot better than it was when my grandmother was trying to come up in that bank and hit that glass ceiling.  Today, she would have probably gotten -- been able to get a college education and would have been more likely to run that bank than she was 30 years ago. 

So the way things get better is by that next generation taking ownership and being inspired, and seeing their mom working a tough shift and then going out there and still rabble-rousing. That’s what we want.  We want all these young people on the basketball team and young ladies who are in attendance here, we want them to feel like the world is wide open to you.  You can remake this thing. 

Ultimately, at some point, you guys are going to be in charge.  And so we want to not send a message to them that somehow they’re limited.  We want to tell them what I tell Malia and Sasha, which is, there’s nothing you can’t do -- because they’re already smarter than me as well as better-looking.  (Laughter.)  Which is why I married Michelle -- to improve my gene pool.  (Laughter and applause.)

Listen, this has been great.  Thank you, everybody.  (Applause.)

MS. STONE:  Thank you, Mr. President.  Thank you so much for joining us here. 

END
3:55 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by The First Lady at White House Kitchen Garden Planting

Kitchen Garden

3:24 P.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Hey, guys!  It’s good to have you here!  You guys look great.  Hi, everybody!  Well, we’re about to do a planting.  You know the drill, right? 

I’m going to take care of a few housekeeping things to make sure everybody knows what we’re doing.  I’ve got notes today because we’re covering a lot.  This is an important planting because this is the fifth birthday of Let’s Move!, and we’re celebrating today.  And we are doing it by having representatives from all of the Let’s Move! initiatives throughout the country as a real reflection of how many kids and how many families are being impacted.

And I just want to give you a sense of all the programs that are out there around the country.  We have representatives from Let’s Move! Active Schools; Let’s Move! Childcare; Let’s Move! Cities and Towns and Communities [Let’s Move! Cities, Towns and Counties]; Let’s Move! Faith and Communities; Let’s Move! Indian Country; Let’s Move! Museums and Gardens; Let’s Move! Outside; Let’s Move! Salad Bars to Schools -- way to go.  Way to be into it.  (Laughter.)  Let’s Move! Chefs to Schools, and Let’s Read! Let’s Move!. 

So all these sub-initiatives have been developed over the course of this five years, and we’ve got two kids from every initiative who has been, hopefully, positively impacted by one of those initiatives.  So we’ve got a lot of new kids here who have never helped us plant.  And of course, we’ve got our kids from Bancroft and Tubman who come with us every year.  Every season they plant and they harvest.  And we’ve got two young people from each -- from school.  Where are my Bancroft kids?  Way to go.  Welcome.  Where are my Tubman kids?  Welcome.  It’s good to have you guys.

I also want to thank all the partners who are here today.  All of the work you guys have done to keep the initiatives going, it’s really exciting and we’re thrilled to have you here.  All our chefs and our National Park folks, you guys are always there with us and it’s good to have you this time around.

We’re also launching a wonderful new map I know that the press was briefed on, which gives you an opportunity to really see the impact that the Let’s Move! initiatives are having.  We’re launching that today, and people can go to the website and just check it out.  For people who want to know how to get involved in some of these sub-initiatives, what’s going on in your communities, this map is an active way to check that out.  And I think most people here were shown a little taste of that map, so I encourage people to go check it out if they want to get involved in Let’s Move! and see what’s going on in their communities.

And last but not least, I’ve been doing this cool thing called the GimmeFive Challenge to help celebrate the birthday.  Have you heard about this challenge, young man?

CHILD:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  You like that granola bar?  (Laughter.)  It’s a healthy snack.  But we’re going to do something this time with the planting.  We want to encourage kids, communities, schools who have community gardens out there to join us.  I challenge you to plant the five new vegetables that we’re going to be planting here in the garden, which include -- do you guys know what the vegetables are?  We’ve got broccoli.  We’ve got spinach.  We’ve got bok choy.  We’ve got radishes.  What’s the --

CHILD:  Lettuce. 

MRS. OBAMA:  And lettuce.  These kids are on it.  (Laughter.)  So we want to encourage all the kids out there -- because we have seen just an increase in community gardens all throughout the country since we planted the beautiful White House Kitchen Garden.  So this is a good way to get the country really jiving and working around gardening.  You guys like that word?  (Laughter.) 

So we hope that folks out there will take up the challenge and tell us how their planting is going by hashtag -- go on the web and -- going to #GimmeFive.  Let’s share our progress, because we’re going to come back and harvest in a few months and I’d love to see what other community gardens and schools -- school gardens are doing out there to move forward on getting our kids to eat healthy.

So I think that’s all the housekeeping that I have to do.  And now it’s time to get to work.  Are you guys ready?

CHILDREN:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, that’s good.  (Laughter.)  You guys have your partners?  You know where you’re supposed to be? 

CHILDREN:  Yes.

MRS. OBAMA:  All right.  Well, let’s move.  Let’s get planting.  Get it done!  (Applause.)

END  
3:31 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Nominates Justice Wilhelmina Marie Wright to Serve on the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Barack Obama nominated Justice Wilhelmina Marie Wright to serve on the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota.

“I am proud to nominate Justice Wilhelmina Marie Wright to serve on the United States District Court bench,” said President Obama. “She has a long and distinguished record of service, and I am confident she will serve on the federal bench with distinction.”

Justice Wilhelmina Marie Wright: Nominee for the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota
Justice Wilhelmina Marie Wright has served as an Associate Justice on the Minnesota Supreme Court since 2012. Previously, she served as a judge on the Minnesota Court of Appeals from 2002 to 2012 and on the Ramsey County District Court in St. Paul, Minnesota from 2000 to 2002. Prior to her appointment to the bench, Justice Wright served as an Assistant United States Attorney in the District of Minnesota from 1995 to 2000. From 1991 to 1995, she was an associate at Hogan & Hartson LLP (now Hogan Lovells LLP). She began her legal career as a law clerk for Judge Damon J. Keith of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit from 1989 to 1991. Justice Wright received her J.D. in 1989 from Harvard Law School and her B.A. cum laude in 1986 from Yale University.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Before Meeting with West African Leaders on Ebola

CABINET ROOM

10:45 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I want to welcome Presidents Sirleaf, Koroma and Condé.  The United States has a long partnership with Liberia and Sierra Leone and Guinea -- partnerships that prove to be critical in the fight against Ebola.  We’re here to assess progress today and to look ahead.

We begin by noting the incredible losses that took place in all three countries.  More than 10,000 people have died from Ebola -- men, women and children.  On behalf of the American people, we want to express our deepest condolences to the families and recognize how challenging this has been for all the countries involved.

Under extraordinary circumstances, the people of these three countries have shown great courage and resolve, treating and taking care of each other, especially children and orphans.  The United States has been proud to lead an international effort to work with these three countries in a global response.

Last week, there were fewer than 40 new cases, so we’ve seen major progress.  In Liberia right now, there are zero cases.  In Sierra Leone and Guinea combined, there were fewer than 40 new cases last week and that’s around the lowest number in a year.  Now we’re focused on a shared goal, and that is getting to zero.  We can’t be complacent.  This virus is unpredictable. 

We have to be vigilant, and the international community has to remain fully engaged in a partnership with these three countries until there are no cases of Ebola in these countries.  Health systems also have to be rebuilt to meet daily needs -- vaccines for measles, delivering babies safely, treating HIV/AIDS and malaria.  And with our Global Health Security Agenda, we intend to do more to prevent future epidemics.

So the Ebola epidemic has been also an economic crisis.  That’s part of the reason why these three presidents are here.  They’re going to be meeting with a number of the multilateral institutions -- the IMF and World Bank here in Washington.  There’s the challenge of restoring markets and agricultural growth, promoting investment and development.  So I’m going to be looking forward to hearing from them on how the United States can stand shoulder to shoulder with them to work hard to take this crisis and turn it into an opportunity to rebuild even stronger than before:  To strengthen administrative systems, public health systems, to continue the work that they’ve done in rooting out corruption, reinforcing democratic institutions -- all of which will be the foundation stones for long-term progress and prosperity. 

So Madam President, Mr. Presidents, we are very grateful for the hard work that you’ve done.  We’re proud to partner with you and we intend to see this through until the job is done.

Thank you, everybody.

END
10:49 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at "In Performance at the White House"

East Room

7:42 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  (Sings) Well… (laughter and applause.)  I hope everybody is in the spirit tonight.  (Applause.)  Bringing some church to the White House. (Applause.) 

Good evening, everybody.

AUDIENCE:  Good evening.

THE PRESIDENT:  Tonight, we continue one of my favorite traditions here at the White House by celebrating the music that has helped to shape our nation.  And over the years, we’ve had the quintessential sounds of America fill this room, from jazz to Motown, to blues, to country.  So it is fitting that, tonight, we honor the music that influenced all those genres -- gospel.

I want to start by thanking tonight’s amazing performers: Shirley Caesar, Darlene Love, Rhiannon Giddens, Rance Allen, Emmylou Harris, Rodney Crowell, Tamela Mann, Lyle Lovett, and the Morgan State University Choir.  (Applause.)  And I also want to thank tonight’s MC, Robin Roberts, who we love.  (Applause.) 

Now, I’ve got to say, you’re having a pretty good night when T-Bone Burnett and the Queen of Soul herself, Aretha Franklin, show up at your house to jam.  (Applause.)  We've got royalty here tonight.  It’s a state visit tonight.  (Laughter.) 

We don’t know everything about the origins of gospel, but we do know that this music is rooted in the spirituals sung by the  slaves, which W.E.B. Du Bois called “the most beautiful expression of human experience born this side of the seas.”

Even though they were often forbidden to read or write or even speak freely, slaves were permitted to sing.  Songs were where their dreams took flight, where they expressed faith and love, as well as pain and fear and unimaginable loss.  Songs were also how they conveyed information -- the locations of safe houses for runaway slaves, or directions for a path towards freedom, buried in the coded language of divine lyrics.  They sang songs of liberation, if not for their bodies in this world, then for their souls in the next.

And over time, those spirituals blended with hymns and sacred songs to become the music of the black church.  In the decades after the Civil War, as free men and women streamed north in record numbers searching for a new life, they brought those tunes with them. 

But the gospel music we know today really started in the 1930s, when jazz musician, Thomas A. Dorsey, combined the sounds of the church he grew up in with the jazz and blues that he loved.  By the 1960s, gospel music had become central to the Civil Rights Movement -- not just through the political activism of legends like Mahalia Jackson and the Staple Singers, but through the songs themselves, from hymns like “Take My Hand, Precious Lord,” a favorite of Dr. King’s, to the anthem of the movement, “We Shall Overcome.”

Gospel music has evolved over time, but its heart stays true.  It still has an unmatched power to strike the deepest chord in all of us, touching people of all faiths and of no faith.  As Mahalia Jackson herself once said, “Blues are the songs of despair, but gospel songs are the songs of hope.” 

Hope that we might rise above our failures and disappointments.  Hope that we might receive His redemption.  Hope that, in lifting our voices together, we, too, might one day reach the Promised Land.

So tonight, we will hear from musicians who helped to shape this singular American art form, and musicians who are taking gospel to great new heights. 

And to get us started, I’d like to introduce an extraordinary singer, a woman who reaches millions with her music, and preaches to her flock from her North Carolina pulpit every Sunday. 

Please give it up for Reverend, Doctor, Pastor Shirley Caesar.  (Applause.)

END           
7:47 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by President Obama and Prime Minister Al-Abadi of Iraq after Bilateral Meeting

Oval Office

11:55 A.M. EDT

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  It is good to welcome once again Prime Minister Abadi to the United States and to the Oval Office.  Prime Minister Abadi, when he came into the office, was already facing significant challenges.  And obviously the incursions of ISIL, also known as Daesh, into Iraq pose not only a humanitarian threat, but a strategic threat to the country.

Thanks to his leadership, as well as the partnership and sacrifices made by over 60 members of an international coalition, we are making serious progress in pushing back ISIL out of Iraqi territory.  About a quarter of the territory fallen under Daesh control has been recovered.  Thousands of strikes have not only taken ISIL fighters off the war theater, but their infrastructure has been deteriorated and decayed.  And under Prime Minister Abadi’s leadership, the Iraqi security forces have been rebuilt and are getting reequipped, retrained and strategically deployed across the country.

Now, this is a long process, and in our discussions, Prime Minister Abadi made clear that success will not occur overnight. But what is clear is that we will be successful.  And part of that success is Prime Minister Abadi’s commitment to an inclusive government where Shia, Sunni and Kurds and all the peoples of Iraq are unified around that nation’s sovereignty and its ability to control its own destiny. 

And in a significant change from some past practices, I think both Sunni leaders and Kurdish leaders feel that they are heard in the halls of power, that they are participating in governance in Baghdad.  And although there is the natural back-and-forth that exists in any democracy, Prime Minister Abadi has kept true to his commitments to reach out to them and to respond to their concerns and to make sure that power is not solely concentrated within Baghdad, but also that there’s local governance that has the opportunity to respond to the specific needs of the people in those communities.

So we had an in-depth discussion about the ways in which we continue to partner together with the international coalition to push out foreign fighters who are encroaching on Iraqi territory and sovereignty and perpetrating terrible acts across the country.

We discussed how we can be supportive of the progress that's being made in shaping an inclusive governance agenda.  I emphasized that the United States’ prime interest is to defeat ISIL and to respect Iraqi sovereignty, and that will continue to be our policy.  And we discussed how we can be helpful in making sure that as security improves inside of Iraq that we're also paying attention to the economy of Iraq, the ways in which the country can not only maximize the efficiency of its oil resources but diversify its economy so that it presents more opportunities and jobs and prosperity for the Iraqi people.

And finally, I complimented the Prime Minister on the outreach that's taking place throughout the region so that countries that previously have been suspicious of Iraq or had not established the kinds of diplomatic relations that are necessary for good, neighborly relations I think are seeing that Prime Minister Abadi is, in fact, committed to all the people of Iraq. And he’s gained the respect of other leaders in the region.  That ultimately is also going to be extremely helpful in us defeating ISIL and allowing Iraq to move forward and fulfill the promise that its people represent.

And finally in recognition of the terrible hardships that so many Iraqis have gone through as a consequence of ISIL’s brutal activities and the displacements that have taken place, we are committing an additional $200 million in humanitarian aid to help stabilize communities, and to help those who have been displaced from their homes, have lost their jobs, have seen their property destroyed.  I think it’s very important for us to remember that this is not just an abstract issue, that there are individual families and children who have suffered as a consequence of ISIL’s activities.  And we need to make sure that we're paying attention to them, as well.

So, Mr. Prime Minister, thank you for your leadership and thank you for honoring the sacrifices that so many of the U.S. armed forces personnel, our men and women in uniform have made to ensure a sovereign Iraq to make its own decisions and shape its own destiny.  That is our primary goal, and we feel we have a strong partner in you.

PRIME MINISTER AL-ABADI:  (As interpreted.)  In the name of God the Merciful and the Compassionate, I would like to thank President Obama for this opportunity to be here so that we can enhance the bilateral relationship between our two countries, which is framed by the Strategic Partnership Agreement that has been ratified by the Iraqi Parliament and the U.N. and the U.S.  And it represents also -- and embodies the interest of both countries.

Mr. President, as you know, Iraq is today facing fierce attack by terrorists.  And this is not only undermining the security in the region but also in the world.  And so far, Iraq has managed to make great strides in this regard and to liberate a large part of its territory with support from the coalition but especially from the U.S.  And this has had the greatest impact.

I am certain, Mr. President, that the American people have made great sacrifices for the sake of Iraq, and the blood of its sons and daughters is mixed also with the blood of the Iraqis.  But I can assure you that these sacrifices will not go to waste. Iraq has made great strides in achieving democracy and establishing its sovereignty.  And now we have a very strong relationship against terrorism.

Today, Mr. President, in spite of the war that we are facing, there’s a real working democracy in Iraq.  We have political parties, we have a parliament, we have a national unity government that is unique in the region, and I can’t think of any other country in the region that has a similar government.  These are real successes, and they make all the sacrifices of the U.S. worthwhile.

Today, we are facing the challenge that is before us and we have to face it.  We are working together with countries in the region and with our neighboring countries, also with the international community and the U.S., so that we can face this evil.

Today, Daesh, or ISIL, is committing heinous crimes in Iraq. It’s killing the Iraqis and minorities and also desecrating holy places in Iraq.

Today, also, in this fierce war against ISIL, or Daesh, we still respect human rights and we make sure that they are well-respected. 

I have to admit that there are some violations -- human rights violations being committed by some criminal parties and outliers, but we have zero tolerance for any violations of human rights.  And when we manage to capture these people, we are bringing them before the judicial system and we punish them.  And, indeed, we have arrested many Iraqis who have been involved in this.  We are engaged in the war against Daesh, and the security forces and the Iraqis are all engaged in this effort. But, unfortunately, there are some criminal elements and some individuals -- it’s not an institutional approach; rather, it’s individuals.  So once we manage to capture them, we bring them to the judicial system and we try to prevent them from committing any transgressions.

We are also keen to bring all fighters under the control of the state and under the command of the commander of the armed forces.  We have tens of thousands of volunteers who have volunteered to defend their country and fight ISIL.  Unfortunately, some of them commit acts that harm the reputation of Iraq, but the general mobilization is not responsible for these crimes and these are also just individual instances of people who are trying to undermine the reputation of Iraq.

Mr. President, I want to thank you for your support for Iraq.  Whether it’s through training or the provision of weapons, or even the air cover that you have provided to the Iraqi security forces in their fight against ISIL, you have helped our forces in this national liberation war that it’s engaged in.

And I also want to thank you, Mr. President, for your emphasis on the importance of the Iraqi sovereignty.  This is a matter that is reflected in our dealings with U.S. officials in Iraq and through your own -- whether it’s through the military or U.S. officials there, they all exhibit serious commitment to Iraqi sovereignty, and I want to thank you for that.

I am aware that regional countries have their own interests and I respect these interests, but I also welcome any assistance that they would provide, and I would like to thank them also for any assistance they have provided.  However, we do not accept any intervention in Iraq or any transgression on Iraqi sovereignty.  This is a war that is fought with Iraqi blood with help from the coalition forces and regional countries.

Certainly the region is experiencing serious turmoil.  There are serious problems and numerous problems in the region.  We are hopeful that they will be resolved peacefully.  Iraq, for its part, does not intervene in other countries, and we hope that for their part they would also respect our sovereignty.  We also have to respect the humanitarian aspect of these wars and we hope that there would be more cooperation to minimize crises in the regions.

Iraq has paid dearly with the blood of its own sons and daughters for these wars and also for the factional wars that have raged in the region.  And we hope that the region will experience peace and that the specter of war would recede from this region, which has affected all aspects of life but also resulted in poor economic performance.  And also I believe that the absence of good governance has been one of the main reasons for these wars.

Mr. President, we have a common enemy in fighting terrorism, which is threatening Iraq, U.S. lives and the entire world.  But I’m certain that we will be able to defeat this enemy and minimize the losses that will be incurred as a result.  And this can be done through cooperation and respect for sovereignty.  And once again, I would like to thank you for this invitation to be here.

Q    Mr. President, in terms of Iran’s involvement in Iraq -- are you comfortable with the level of coordination that’s been going on with Iran, even if it’s through a third party?

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  This is something that we discussed extensively.  I think that, as I’ve said before and I will repeat, we expect Iran to have an important relationship with Iraq as a close neighbor.  And obviously the fact that Iraq is a Shia-majority country means that it will be influenced and have relations with Iran as well.  And at the point in which Daesh or ISIL was surging and the Iraqi government was still getting organized at that point, I think the mobilization of Shia militias was something that was understood to protect Baghdad or other critical areas. 

Once Prime Minister Abadi took power, once he reorganized the government and the security forces, once the coalition came in at the invitation of and in an agreement with a sovereign Iraqi government, then our expectation is from that point on, any foreign assistance that is helping to defeat ISIL has to go through the Iraqi government.  That’s how you respect Iraqi sovereignty. That’s how you recognize the democratic government that was hard-earned and is being upheld in the work that Prime Minister Abadi is doing in reaching out to all the various factions inside of Iraq.

And so I think Prime Minister Abadi’s position has been that he welcomes help, as you just heard, but it needs to be help that is not simply coordinated with the Iraqi government but ultimately is answerable to the Iraqi government and is funneled through the chain of command within the Iraqi government.  And that’s what we’ve been very careful to do.  I’ve made clear from the outset that ISIL was an enemy and we will make sure that they do not threaten the United States and we will go after them wherever they are.  But when we are working with a strong ally and partner like Iraq, it is very important for us to coordinate our activities so that the impression is not that the United States is somehow moving back into Iraq, but rather the United States is doing what’s ultimately best for the Iraqi people, even as we join in fighting a common enemy.

I realize I should have had a translation break there.  (Laughter.)  I feel bad for our translator.  (Laughter.)  Why don’t you go ahead and then maybe I’ll add something right at the end.

And that’s why Prime Minister Abadi’s clear statement, both inside of Iraq and to the world community, that it is important for all fighting forces to be under unified control of the Iraqi government is so important.  And I think it’s particularly significant that that view is shared among a wide range of political parties inside of Iraq and was echoed by Grand Ayatollah Sistani just recently.  It sends a clear message that ultimately Iraq is in control of its own destiny.  And part of that means that those who possess arms and have the ability to apply force and defend their country have to be under a single government. 

As Prime Minister Abadi mentioned, that's particularly important in order to ensure that the government is accountable for the actions of armed forces so that if there are criminal acts or sectarian retributions that are carried out, that ultimately Prime Minister Abadi is able to call those forces to account and to control them, to make sure that you don't have a backlash as consequence of the efforts to clear territory from ISIL’s control.

So our coordination I think has consistently improved over time as Prime Minister Abadi has gained greater control over Iraqi security forces.  As the training efforts and equipping efforts that we're engaged in continue to improve, coordinating how our air power can support and expand into a more effective Iraqi security force deployment is going to continue to be critical.  But none of this works unless there is a perception among all the parties involved -- Shia, Sunni, Kurd, and others inside of Iraq -- that this is an inclusive government that is listening to the voices of all the people and including them in decision-making.  And the fact that Prime Minister Abadi is doing that makes our job and the coalition’s job of coordination much easier.

Thank you very much.

Q    (Speaking Arabic.)

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Why don't we have the question translated?

Q    (As interpreted.)  She is asking questions about whether there will be support in the effort to liberate al Anbar and Mosul.

PRIME MINISTER AL-ABADI:  (As interpreted.)  Certainly part of the reason for this visit is to coordinate this important work.  This will be the last step, and to liberate the rest, the areas remaining under Daesh’s control, especially in Mosul, which ISIL considers to be its base and its capital and the capital of the so-called Islamic caliphate.  We have plans to liberate al Anbar and Ninewa and, of course, we need high-level coordination for this effort.  And we need support from the U.S. and the coalition forces and regional governments.  And President Obama and the U.S. administration have expressed full readiness to provide support for our security forces in our effort to liberate all of Iraq.

Q    But would you give them additional weapons, Mr. President, like Apache helicopters and drones and F-16 that the Prime Minister has been asking?  At least it’s been reported as asking.

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  I think this is why we are having this meeting to make sure that we are continually improving our coordination to make sure that Iraqi security forces are in a position to succeed in our common mission.

Okay?  Thank you so much, everybody.  Thank you. 

END
12:28 P.M. EDT    

The White House

Office of the First Lady

Remarks by the First Lady at the Gospel Music Student Workshop

East Room

11:04 A.M. EDT

MRS. OBAMA:  Well, looky here, look who we've got here.  How are you guys doing?

AUDIENCE:  Good.

MRS. OBAMA:  Are you excited?

AUDIENCE:  Yes!

MRS. OBAMA:  You a little nervous?

AUDIENCE:  Yes.  (Laughter.) 

MRS. OBAMA:  Okay, relax, shake it off.  (Laughter.)  Okay, you're just in the White House.  It happens all the time.  (Laughter.)   What have you all been doing since you got there?  Just waiting?  (Laughter.)  Didn’t you do something yesterday?  You shopped?  (Laughter.)  Walk -- a lot of walking?  That's good.  That's good.  Too much?  There’s no such thing as too much walking.  Let's Move -- you remember that?  (Laughter.)

Well, we're excited to have you here as we enjoy the latest edition of the White House Music Series.  Yay for us.  We're very excited.  (Applause.)   Today we are celebrating Gospel music.  And we have some wonderful singers and songwriters who are going to participate in this conversation.  We have Michelle Williams. (Applause.)  We have Lyle Lovette.  (Applause.)  We have Darlene Love.  (Applause.)  Rodney Crowell.  (Applause.)  And Rhiannon Giddens is here.  (Applause.) 

And to lead the discussion, my dear, dear friend, who is -- he is there for us through all of this -- Bob Santelli from the Grammy Museum.  Give Bob a hand.  (Applause.)

But most importantly, we have all of you.  You all are really the stars of this portion of the day.  This is my favorite part of the music, so, yes, give yourselves a hand.  Really.  (Applause.) 

We started doing these workshops because we work closely with the Grammy Museum.  They have a wonderful education and outreach initiative.  But you know we have this big concert tonight, and there are a lot of fancy people who are coming to see it.  They’re diplomats and rich people and -- (laughter) -- and they go in the East Room.  But we started thinking, well, when is there space for us to connect all these wonderful people to young people all across the country.  You all should have the opportunity to connect with some of these entertainers and artists that come and visit.

So, with the help of the Grammy Museum, we have always paired a workshop like this where we invite young people like you guys from all over the country to have an opportunity to talk about the music that we're focused on, to meet some of the artists that we get to hear from tonight.  Some of them do a little singing while they’re doing it.  So it's really one of the most important and one of the most exciting parts about the Music Series -- that we get to open this house up to you all.  And hopefully this experience feels special, because it's special for us.

We've got students here from Hawaii --

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Whoo!

MRS. OBAMA:  That's okay.  (Laughter.)  Shaka!  (Laughter.)  Let’s hear it!  Yes, hometown.

California.  (Applause.)  New York is here.  (Applause.)  Got a little Jersey in the house.  (Applause.)  Mississippi is here.  (Applause.)  Tennessee.  (Applause.)  And our backyard --- Maryland and Virginia.  (Applause.)  So, pretty good representation.

Now, over the past few years, we have discussed everything from country to soul to classical music here at these workshops. And I'm really thrilled that we're really focusing on Gospel.  It's something that I've wanted to do since we started, so we finally got it done.  Because this music, Gospel music, has really played such an important role in our country’s history.  It really has -- from the spirituals sung by slaves to the anthems that became the soundtrack of the Civil Rights Movement, and to the hymns that millions of Americans sing every single day in churches all across the country.

For so many of us, these songs are some of the very first melodies we ever hear.  That was certainly true for me.  I come from a very music-loving family.  My grandfather -- my maternal grandfather was a big, huge jazz collector from way back.  He used to wire his house for sound.  And he played jazz every single day, all day, 24/7.  And his sister, my Aunt Robbie, she was the director of the church choir, and so she taught piano lessons to a lot of the kids in the neighborhood.  And she taught those lessons in our home.  So I would hear music lessons every day.  My mother and some of her sisters were members of the church choir.

So those are some of the earliest memories for me of having exposure to music.  And it moved me so much that I wanted to start taking piano lessons at the age of 4.  I didn’t keep it up -- so I hope you all don’t follow my lead on that.  But it's important to me.  Gospel music is what fuels my love of music, in general. 

So I'm excited to be hosting this here.  And I know that for many folks across the country and around the world, there’s nothing like hearing a choir sing an old Gospel classic.  When you hear that music, it gets your feet tapping and your heart pumping.  It gets you ready and prepared to take in that sermon for the day.  It’s what helps connect us to God, to that Higher Power.  And for so many, when times are dark and when you’re struggling, Gospel music is that ray of hope and it gives you that strength.

And I know that that’s the role that Gospel music plays for so many -- because when you really think about it, we all are going to face some kind of struggle one day.  We all do.  No one on this stage is exempt from struggle.  We’re all up here because of some kind of struggle or dark thing we had to overcome.  And I hope that the folks up here will share some of their stories with you. 

But I’d like to take a moment just to share a bit of Darlene Love’s story right now, because Darlene got her first break back in 1962?  I may get dates wrong, but she sang the lead on the song called, “He’s a Rebel,” which was a song that went to the top of the charts.  But something that happened to her that happened to a lot of artists, a lot of African American artists, is that the producer released the record under someone else’s name.  And so nobody even knew that it was Darlene’s voice providing the power behind that song.

And even as Darlene went on to sing backup on some of the biggest hits in the ‘60s -- like “Chain Gang,” “Rockin’ Robin,” and “You’ve Lost that Lovin’ Feeling” -- her name remained completely unknown -- which is the case for many backup singers and great singers alike.  They were unknown voices.  And as the years passed, her career slowed down, and by the early ‘80s, she was completely out of music and she was cleaning houses.  She was cleaning homes and working at a dry cleaning shop to get by.

But one day, while she was cleaning someone else’s bathroom, Darlene said she heard one of her songs on the radio, and that’s when it hit her that she needed to get back to her passion -- that she had gone so far away from what she cared about and what moved her -- that song woke her up.

So she started singing again.  She started singing on a cruise ship.  And then she wrote her own album.  And slowly but surely, she started getting more and more recognition for all those classics.  And they did a beautiful documentary of backup singers that I hope you all will see if you haven’t seen it.  But Darlene is featured in that documentary, which highlights all the amazing backup singers that make the music of our day.   And now she is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, finally earning her place among the legends.  (Applause.)

Now, hopefully you go even further into your story for these young people.  But one thing, one line I want to use that she quoted -- she said about her journey -- she said, “Anytime I got knocked back, I just looked at that as a hurdle I had to get over.”

And I share that with you because I want you all to know that you all have to prepare yourselves for those hurdles.  That’s the main thing I want young people who come through this house to understand, is that life is inevitably filled with hurdles.  You are going to fail, and fail big, a lot.  But the best way to prepare yourself for recovering from that failure is to get your education.  And I say that everywhere I go because if there is anything you all need to be doing right now, it's taking your education seriously.

And seriously means that every day you show up strong.  You go to class.  You do your work.  You get the best grades you can get.  You graduate from high school.  And you have to do more.  You have to go to college or go to a junior college.  You have to.  The jobs of the future are going to require you to be prepared.  You’ve got to get some advanced training if you don’t do that.  There are many paths you can follow, but you’ve got to make that happen for yourselves.

So if you’re passionate about anything -- whether it’s music, or business, or medicine, or rocket science -- school is your pathway.  Education is your pathway.  If it's music, you’ve got to have a fallback plan.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:   That’s right.  (Laughter.)

MRS. OBAMA:  Having a fallback plan helps.

But don’t get discouraged when you hit those hurdles.  And I'm sure many of you have already felt like you’ve hit some hurdles already.  But we all have done it.  And the power is your ability to recover and to be resilient.  That’s what makes people great.  It's not that they’ve just glided through without any form of struggle.  The people who are successful are the people who can get back up when they’re knocked down.

So don’t be discouraged.  Just keep working hard.  It is all hard work, but it is absolutely worth it.

And I hope that you learn from the folks on this stage.  That’s why we wanted them here.  We wanted to talk about the genre, but we also hope that you walk away a little more inspired to be as great as you can be.  Because we’re counting on you.  The President, First Lady, we’re all counting on you to take over that baton and to be the leaders of tomorrow.  And you all can do it.

So use this time here wisely.  Relax.  Get comfortable.  Ask a lot of questions.  Do not be shy.  This is your home, and we are all here because we believe in you.  This is the best part of the day, so take advantage of it.  Okay?  Don’t be shy.  All right?

Now, I have to go, because they make me work all day long.  (Laughter.)  So I'm going to turn it over to Bob and to all our performers and our entertainers and songwriters.  And I hope you guys have a terrific time.  Thank you for being here.  Keep working hard.  We love you guys.  (Applause.)

END                     11:16 A.M. EDT  

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by President Obama at the First Plenary Session of the Summit of the Americas

ATLAPA Convention Center
Panama City, Panama

PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Let me begin by thanking President Varela and the Panamanian government for their leadership in hosting this 7th Summit of the Americas.  Mr. President, to you and the people of Panama City and all the people of Panama -- thank you for your extraordinary hospitality and your outstanding arrangements. 

I, too, want to express my thoughts and prayers are with the people of Chile as they’re managing through a very difficult time.  And I look forward to seeing President Bachelet at a future summit.

When I came to my first Summit of the Americas six years ago, I promised to begin a new chapter of engagement in this region.  I believed that our nations had to break free from the old arguments, the old grievances that had too often trapped us in the past; that we had a shared responsibility to look to the future and to think and act in fresh ways.  I pledged to build a new era of cooperation between our countries, as equal partners, based on mutual interest and mutual respect.  And I said that this new approach would be sustained throughout my presidency; it has, including during this past year.  I’ve met that commitment.

We come together at a historic time.  As has already been noted, the changes that I announced to U.S. policy toward Cuba mark the beginning of a new relationship between the people of the United States and the people of Cuba.  It will mean, as we’re already seeing, more Americans traveling to Cuba, more cultural exchanges, more commerce, more potential investment.  But most of all, it will mean more opportunity and resources for the Cuban people.  And we hope to be able to help on humanitarian projects, and provide more access to telecommunications and the Internet, and the free flow of information. 

We continue to make progress towards fulfilling our shared commitments to formally reestablish diplomatic relations, and I have called on Congress to begin working to lift the embargo that’s been in place for decades.  The point is, the United States will not be imprisoned by the past.  We’re looking to the future and to policies that improve the lives of the Cuban people and advance the interests of cooperation in the hemisphere.

This shift in U.S. policy represents a turning point for our entire region.  The fact that President Castro and I are both sitting here today marks a historic occasion.  This is the first time in more than half a century that all the nations of the Americas are meeting to address our future together.  I think it’s no secret -- and President Castro, I’m sure, would agree -- that there will continue to be significant differences between our two countries.  We will continue to speak out on behalf of universal values that we think are important.  I’m sure President Castro will continue to speak out on the issues he thinks are important.

But I firmly believe that if we can continue to move forward and seize this momentum in pursuit of mutual interests, then better relations between the United States and Cuba will create new opportunities for cooperation across our region -- for the security and prosperity and health and dignity of all our people.

Now, alongside our shift toward Cuba, the United States has deepened our engagement in the Americas across the board.  Since I took office, we’ve boosted U.S. exports and also U.S. imports from the rest of the hemisphere by over 50 percent.  And that supports millions of jobs in all of our countries.  I’ve proposed $1 billion to help the people of Central America strengthen governance, and improve security and help to spark more economic growth and, most importantly, provide new pathways for young people who too often see their only prospects an underground economy that too often leads to violence. 

We’re partnering with countries across the region to develop clean, more affordable and reliable energy that helps nations to combat the urgent threat of climate change, as President Rousseff already noted.  Our 100,000 Strong in the Americas initiative is working to bring 100,000 students from Latin America to the United States and 100,000 students from the United States to Latin America.  The new initiatives that I announced in Jamaica will help empower a new generation of young people across the Americas with the skills and job training that they need to compete in the global economy.

During the course of my meetings with CARICOM, as well as my meetings with SICA, as well as the discussions that I’ve had with many of you bilaterally, there have been additional ideas that we’re very interested in -- finding ways in which we can expand access to the Internet and broadband; how we can structure private-public partnerships to rebuild infrastructure across the region; and to expand our commercial ties in a broad-based and inclusive way.  Because I am firmly of the belief that we will only succeed if everybody benefits from the economic growth, not just a few at the top.

At home, I've taken executive actions to fix as much of our broken immigration system as I can, which includes trying to help people come out of the shadows so that they can live and work in a country that they call home.  And that includes hundreds of thousands of young people we call DREAMers, who have already received temporary relief.  And I’m remaining committed to working with our Congress on comprehensive immigration reform.

So the bottom line is this:  The United States is focused on the future.  We’re not caught up in ideology -- at least I’m not.  I’m interested in progress and I’m interested in results.  I’m not interested in theoretic arguments; I’m interested in actually delivering for people.  We are more deeply engaged across the region than we have been in decades.  And those of you have interacted with me know that if you bring an issue to my attention, I will do my best to try to address it.  I will not always be able to fix it right away, but I will do my best.

I believe the relationship between the United States and the Americas is as good as it has ever been.  I’m here today to work with you to build on this progress.  Let me just mention a few areas in which I think we can make more progress.

First, we will continue to uphold the Inter-American Democratic Charter, which states that “the peoples of the Americas have a right to democracy.”  I believe our governments, together, have an obligation to uphold the universal freedoms and rights of all our citizens.  I want to again commend President Varela and Panama for making civil society groups from across the region formal partners in this summit for the first time.  I believe the voices of our citizens must be heard.  And I believe going forward, civil society should be a permanent part of these summits.

Second, we have to focus on reigniting economic growth that can fuel progress further in those communities that have not been reached.  And that means making the Americas more competitive.  We still have work to do to harmonize regulations; encourage good governance and transparency that attracts investment; invest in infrastructure; address some of the challenges that we have with respect to energy.  The cost of energy in many communities -- in many countries, particularly in Central American and the Caribbean, are so high that it presents a great challenge to economic development, and we think that we can help particularly around clean energy issues.

We have to confront the injustice of economic inequality and poverty.  I think that collectively we are starting to identify what programs work and which programs do not work.  And we should put more money in those things that do work, and stop doing those things that don’t.  We don’t have money to waste because of too many young people out there with enormous needs.  I think President Varela is right to focus particularly on education and skills building.  And this is an agenda which we should all tackle collectively.

Third, we have to keep investing in the clean energy that creates jobs and combats climate change.  The United States is today leading this global effort, along with many of you.  And I should point out that America's carbon pollution is near its lowest level in almost two decades.  Across the Americas, I think we have the opportunity to expand our clean energy partnerships and increase our investments in renewables.

And finally, we have to stand firm for the security of our citizens.  We must continue to join with our partners across the region, especially in Central America, but also in the Caribbean, to promote an approach, a holistic approach that applies rule of law, respects human rights, but also tackles the narco-traffickers that devastate so many communities.  This is a shared responsibility.  And I’ve said before that the United States has a responsibility to reduce the demand for drugs and to reduce the flow of weapons south, even as we partner with you to go after the networks that can cause so much violence.

So, a new relationship with Cuba.  More trade and economic partnerships that reduce poverty and creates opportunity, particularly focusing on education.  Increased people-to-people exchanges.  More investment in our young people.  Clean energy that combats climate change.  Security cooperation to protect our citizens and our communities.  That’s the new chapter of engagement that the United States is pursuing across the Americas. 

I want to make one last comment addressing some of the points that President Correa raised and I’m sure will be raised by a few others during this discussion.  I always enjoy the history lessons that I receive when I’m here.  I’m a student of history, so I tend to actually be familiar with many of these episodes that have been mentioned.  I am the first one to acknowledge that America’s application of concern around human rights has not always been consistent.  And I’m certainly mindful that there are dark chapters in our own history in which we have not observed the principles and ideals upon which the country was founded. 

Just a few weeks ago, I was in Selma, Alabama celebrating the 50th anniversary of a march across a bridge that resulted in horrific violence.  And the reason I was there, and the reason it was a celebration, is because it was a triumph of human spirit in which ordinary people without resort to violence were able to overcome systematic segregation.  Their voices were heard, and our country changed.

America never makes a claim about being perfect.  We do make a claim about being open to change.  So I would just say that we can, I suppose, spend a lot of time talking about past grievances, and I suppose that it’s possible to use the United States as a handy excuse every so often for political problems that may be occurring domestically.  But that’s not going to bring progress.  That’s not going to solve the problems of children who can’t read, who don’t have enough to eat.  It’s not going to make our countries more productive or more competitive in a global economy. 

So I just want to make very clear that when we speak out on something like human rights, it’s not because we think we are perfect, but it is because we think the ideal of not jailing people if they disagree with you is the right ideal. 

Perhaps President Correa has more confidence than I do in distinguishing between bad press and good press.  There are a whole bunch of press that I think is bad, mainly because it criticizes me, but they continue to speak out in the United States because I don’t have confidence in a system in which one person is making that determination.  I think that if we believe in democracy it means that everybody has the chance to speak out and offer their opinions, and stand up for what they believe is right, and express their conscience, and pray as they would, and organize and assemble as they believe is appropriate -- as long as they’re not operating violently. 

So we will continue to speak out on those issues not because we’re interested in meddling, but because we know from our own history.  It’s precisely because we’re imperfect that we believe it’s appropriate for us to stand up.  When Dr. King was in jail, people outside the United States spoke up on his behalf.  And I would be betraying our history if I did not do the same. 

The Cold War has been over for a long time.  And I’m not interested in having battles that, frankly, started before I was born.  What I am interested in is solving problems, working with you.  That’s what the United States is interested in doing.  That’s why we’ve invested so much in our bilateral relationships, and that’s why I will continue to invest in creating the kind of spirit of equal partnership and mutual interest and mutual respect upon which I believe progress can advance.

Thank you very much.  (Applause.) 

END