The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by the Press Secretary, 10/15/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

 

Please see below for a correction, marked with asterisks.

**Secretary Hagel ordered a comprehensive review of the Military Health System, which is now complete.  He will continue to monitor our progress at making improvements to it. 

 

2:34 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Thank you for joining us today.  We will go straight to the questions.  The President, as many of you know, is convening a meeting this afternoon at 3:30 p.m. in the Cabinet Room with members of his team who are responsible for responding to the Ebola diagnosis in Texas.  So I'm actually manifested for that meeting, so I need to leave here about 3:25 p.m.  Would be a little embarrassing to walk in late. 

Q    Are you going?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, so I don't want to be late. 

So, with that, Darlene, do you want to get us started?

Q    Thank you.  Can you give us any more details on the meeting that you said you're going to?  What does the President want to get out of it?  Who are some of the people who are participating?  And does this in any way affect the travel that's on the schedule for tomorrow?

MR. EARNEST:  Darlene, the President is convening members of his team who have been responsible for responding to the Ebola situation in this country.  The President wants to do that because he wants to make sure that all of the needed resources of the federal government are being deployed to deal with this specific situation. 

We'll have a full manifest of those who are participating in the meeting for you.  At the conclusion of the meeting you’ll have the opportunity to hear directly from the President himself about what decisions were made in the course of that meeting. 

At this point, I don't have any changes to tomorrow’s schedule to announce.  We're obviously operating at a pretty dynamic environment right now, so we'll do our best to keep you updated.  If there is something that requires a change in the President’s schedule then we'll definitely let you know. 

Q    Can you explain why he thought it was necessary to cancel both trips, both stops in New Jersey and Connecticut, to stay here and have this meeting?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, obviously, we have a second diagnosis of Ebola.  Again, this is a health care worker who was working to treat the patient at Texas Presbyterian Hospital, the first individual who had been diagnosed with Ebola in this country.  So that indicates the seriousness of this situation.  And the President believed that it was important to convene the senior members of his team who are responsible for coordinating this response, and the President was not able to host that meeting and travel at the same time. 

And what we have always indicated is that the President of the United States is President wherever he goes, and that's true 24/7.  But what’s also true is if the President determines that it's necessary for him to return to the White House to fulfill his responsibilities as the leader of the country and as the Commander-in-Chief, then he'll alter his schedule accordingly.  And the decision that we made about today’s schedule is consistent with that guiding principle.

Q    I know this question was asked yesterday; I wanted to ask it again today.  Does the President and the White House -- is there continued confidence in Dr. Frieden to lead the CDC at this time?  And also, is the administration now going to rethink the idea of appointing someone to be an Ebola czar, given this new urgency?

MR. EARNEST:   The answer to your first question is yes.  Throughout this process and throughout this response -- dating all the way back to March, I might add -- this administration has been guided by the science, by our medical experts who have experience in dealing with Ebola outbreaks.  For almost four decades now, the global health community, led by the United States, has been dealing with Ebola outbreaks in Africa, and as we are dealing with a public health situation in this country, we continue to be guided by the advice of medical experts and scientists who have knowledge in this field and can use that knowledge to protect the American people.

As it relates to a so-called Ebola czar, I'll reiterate what we've said in the past on this, which is that we have designated very clear lines of responsibility in terms of which agencies are responsible for which aspects of this response.  We've got CDC and USAID personnel who are operating in West Africa to work with those local governments to try to meet the urgent humanitarian public health needs in those countries.  You have a Department of Defense that is responding to the orders of the President of the United States to set up enhanced logistical capacity so that the international community can benefit from improved logistics as they seek to move equipment and personnel into the region to try to confront this outbreak. 

You’ve got Department of Homeland Security staffers that are responsible for securing our transportation infrastructure and monitoring individuals who are entering this country at ports of entry across the map.  And then, in addition to that, you have HHS and CDC officials who are responsible for coordinating with state and local public health authorities to ensure that the American public is safe.  And there are clear lines of authority for each of those sets of responsibilities.

At the same time, you have the President’s chief Homeland Security Advisor, Lisa Monaco, working here at the White House who is responsible for integrating the efforts of all of the agencies and making sure that they have access to the information and resources that they need to do their job. 

All of that said, we have said on a number of occasions that if additional resources or if additional staffing is necessary to augment the response, then we won't hesitate to consider it.  But at this point, the lines of authority are clear and the person responsible for coordinating those efforts here at the White House continues to do that work well.

Steve.

Q    So it sounds like you're not inclined to appoint a czar.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, there are clear lines of responsibility that are in place.  There is an individual here at the White House, highly competent individual, Lisa Monaco, the President’s Homeland Security Advisor, who is responsible for integrating that response.  But, again, if we determine that additional resources or additional staffing or additional expertise is needed to augment this response, then we won't hesitate to take advantage of it.

Q    Is the President wanting to know how this health care worker was able to get on a commercial plane?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there are a number of things that we're eager to know.  The first is -- and this is the subject of an investigation by CDC officials -- is to determine exactly how this virus was transmitted from the so-called index patient in Dallas to at least two of the health care workers who were treating him.  That is the focal point of an investigation that the CDC is expediting, at the direct order of the President of the United States.

The other thing that the CDC is reviewing are the protocols that were in place to protect the health of the health care workers who were treating this patient.  It's not clear exactly what protocols were in place and how those protocols were implemented, and the CDC wants to try to get to the bottom of that so that they can offer advice to medical professionals and hospital administrators and others across the country about the protocols that are needed to ensure that their health care workers remains safe. 

What the CDC is also doing, and they’re expending significant resources to do this, is to do contact tracing of the two health care workers that have contracted the virus.  And that involves, as it sounds, tracing the contacts these individuals had after they got sick.  And so you saw the news release from CDC and from one of the domestic airlines today indicating that they were contacting passengers who were on the same flight as this individual to make sure that they are educated about the risk to which they were exposed. 

Now, what our medical experts tell us is that that risk is quite low.  But it is important for people to have access to that information so that they can get the facts about what sort of risk they’re facing -- again, that risk is low -- and what steps should be taken if necessary in the unlikely event that they do start to display some symptoms.

Q    Yesterday the President said that an Ebola epidemic in the United States is highly unlikely.  Is that statement still operative today?

MR. EARNEST:  It is true.  It's guided by the science.  That's what our experts say.  Our experts say that because the way that Ebola is transmitted is very clear and it is something that is not likely to happen in the United States.  Let’s walk through what that is.  Ebola is not like the flu.  Ebola is not transmitted through the air.  Ebola is not transmitted though the food that we eat in this country and it's not transmitted through the water that we drink in this country.  The only way that an individual can get Ebola is by coming into close contact with the bodily fluids of an individual that is already exhibiting symptoms of Ebola.

That's why, in this case, tragically, we've seen two health care workers that obviously were in very close contact with the index Ebola patient contract this virus.  How exactly that transmission occurred is something that remains under investigation.  But the risk to which they were exposed was elevated by the fact that they were in close contact with this patient trying to meet that person’s medical needs.

Mark.

Q    Can I follow up?

MR. EARNEST:  Sure.

Q    The President used the word “epidemic.”  Yesterday he used the word “outbreak” as something that's exceedingly -- chances are exceedingly low.  Isn't what we've had in Dallas now an outbreak?  We've had multiple transmissions.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think there is a medical professional who could probably give you a specific definition of what actually constitutes an outbreak.  My layman’s understanding that I think the vast majority of the American public would agree with is that we're talking about a situation in which two health care workers who were treating an individual with Ebola contracted the virus.  We are -- the CDC, our medical experts, are conducting an investigation to determine how that transmission occurred.  But that is different than images that are conjured up with an outbreak, where you have individuals who are basically in public transmitting the virus.  That is something that we think on a large scale is exceedingly unlikely.

Q    WHO definition of an outbreak says that it's something that is an occurrence in excess of what normally would be expected in a defined community.  And it also can be the case where a disease has long been absent from a population.  That may also constitute an outbreak.  It really sounds like, even if it's not large-scale, it's an outbreak.  So I guess I wonder if that calls into question some of the reassurance that we've heard in this room.

MR. EARNEST:  No, I don't think it does, Mark, simply because what we're talking about here is a situation where there were health care workers who came into direct contact with an Ebola patient who did, tragically, contract the disease.  We are very focused on making sure that those individuals get the treatment that is necessary, and our thoughts and prayers are with them and their families as they fight this terrible virus.  But that is wholly different than, for example, the situation that we see in West Africa, where, tragically, you're seeing people who live in the same household be passing the virus from one to another, or we're seeing as the result of unsafe burial practices that individuals are contracting the virus from corpses.

Again, that is a tragic occurrence.  It is an indication of the poor medical infrastructure that exists in those countries.  And that is something that poses a much broader risk to the population in West Africa.  That's why the President has devoted significant resources from the federal government to combat that outbreak.  But that is obviously a far cry from the situation that exists in Dallas right now.

Jon.

Q    Josh, you said that the President still has confidence in the Director of the CDC.  Let me ask you a broader question.  You were pretty strong in defending the federal government’s response to this yesterday.  Now, given what we've learned about another case in Dallas and the fact that that individual was able to -- did fly on a plane while she was supposed to be monitored, how would you -- would you still say that the federal government’s response to this situation has been successful, has been up to the President’s own standards?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I'll say a couple of things about that. The first is Dr. Frieden, the Director of the CDC, himself has said that it is unacceptable that even one health care worker was exposed to this virus while they were providing medical treatment to this patient.  So that is an indication that there were shortcomings, and that is something that is being thoroughly investigated by the Centers for Disease Control and other medical experts.

That investigation obviously will also now expand to cover the second health care worker that has now been diagnosed with Ebola.  So that is a clear indication that -- well, let me say there is a second thing that Dr. Frieden also said, was that I believe it was earlier this week he noted that knowing what he knows now about the situation in the hospital, he indicated that he regretted not sending a team of experts to that hospital sooner to assist the hospital as they responded to this specific diagnosis. 

So what you are seeing from the federal government, however, is the kind of tenacious response that reflects evolving circumstances.  So Dr. Frieden indicated that he would send a whole team of experts earlier this week after observing that he believed they should have been there sooner.  What you are seeing is after this diagnosis you are seeing stepped-up monitoring by health officials in Texas of other health care workers that were responsible for treating the index Ebola patient.  So this is a response that indicates a commitment to protect the health and safety of the American public.

There are other ways in which this has happened as well.  We have adapted to circumstances by beefing up airport screenings, for example -- that at the end of last week, you’ll recall that we announced new screening measures that would go into place at five airports across the country.  These are airports that cover essentially 95 percent of the arrivals of travelers that started out in West Africa.  Those improved or strengthened screening measures are indicative of our commitment to constantly evaluating our policies and, where possible, putting in place measures that would strengthen them.

Q    So why do so many Americans feel, first of all, that there’s a real risk of an epidemic in this country and that the federal government is not doing enough to stop it?  I mean, in the latest poll -- ABC-Washington Post -- two-thirds of Americans think the federal government is just not doing enough on this.  Are they wrong?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say this about that.  It sounds to me that a significant portion of the American population agrees with Dr. Frieden that even one transmission of the Ebola virus to one health care worker in this country is something that is unacceptable and something that won't be tolerated and something that has prompted a review of protocols and a careful investigation of how that transmission exactly occurred.

What people can continue to be confident in is the priority attention that this issue is receiving across the federal government and here in the White House.  I think that's evident by the fact that the President is convening some of the top-ranking officials in his administration to discuss that response.

But again, what I would urge people to do -- I think the other thing that is motivating the answer to that question is something related to fear.  This is a deadly, terrible disease, and it is wreaking havoc in West Africa.  It’s having a debilitating effect on the population there.  And it’s genuinely tragic.  At the same time, because of the way that that virus is transmitted, because of the modern medical infrastructure that exists in this country, the risk of a similar outbreak like that in this country is exceedingly low.  That’s what our medical experts tell us, and that is advice that we continue to follow.

However, the administration continues to pursue the kind of tenacious response that will both protect the American public here at home, but also do what is necessary to completely eliminate the risk to the American public from the Ebola virus, and that’s to stop this outbreak at the source.

Q    And then just two quick ones.  Still no consideration of a travel ban from the affected countries in Africa?

MR. EARNEST:  That’s something that is not on the table at this point.  And again, the reason for that -- just in case people haven't heard the previous answer that I’ve given to this question, it’s important for people to understand exactly why that’s the case.  Shutting down travel to that area of the world would prevent the expeditious flow of personnel and equipment into the region.  And the only way for us to stop this outbreak and to eliminate any risk from Ebola to the American public is to stop this outbreak at the source.

So we are mobilizing significant resources to make sure that supplies and personnel can get to the affected region and start meeting the needs of the affected region to that we can stop the outbreak there.  And that’s why right now the travel ban is not on the table.

Q    Okay.  And the President cancelled political travel today, obviously, to do this meeting.  Does he plan to cancel further political travel?  Is the President going to continue his campaign schedule going forward despite the situation, or is this just kind of a one-day thing?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jon, we’ll evaluate it on a daily basis. This is obviously a dynamic situation.  If necessary, I have no doubt that the President will postpone his political travel to attend to important priorities here.  But whether a change in tomorrow’s schedule is required, we just don’t know that yet, and when we do we’ll let you know.

Major.

Q    Josh, a couple of months ago, when the Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, the President carried on with his campaign schedule.  A member of the staff said, “Abrupt changes to his [the President’s] schedule can have the unintended consequence of unduly alarming the American people or creating a false sense of crisis.”  Did you do that today?

MR. EARNEST:  No, Major.  What drives these kinds of decisions are the President’s responsibilities.  And you’ll recall -- I don’t remember if you traveled on that trip with us to Delaware and New York, but over the course of that trip I think the President called five different world leaders while he was on the road, including President Poroshenko, including the leader of Malaysia, including the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, who -- that’s the nation that bore the brunt of that tragedy.  So the President was able to continue his schedule, that it did include some public -- that did include some political events, while also tending to his responsibilities as the Commander-in-Chief.

As it relates to today’s schedule, the schedule did need to be changed so that the President could fulfill his responsibilities as the leader of the country.  We’ll evaluate the schedule tomorrow based on his requirements, and if we need to make a change to his schedule so that he can do what’s necessary here at the White House, then we’ll change his schedule.  I don’t know yet whether that will be required.

Q    And is today’s meeting a decision meeting?  You had indicated at the top of your remarks that some decisions may very well be announced by the President.  Is that what makes this of such signature importance that he had to cancel the travel plans?

MR. EARNEST:  No, again, the reason that this meeting is important is because we’re talking about the senior members of his team who are responsible for dealing with what is a pretty urgent situation here in this country.

Q    But will there be new decisions or new methods announced after this meeting.  Is this meeting --

MR. EARNEST:  Frankly, Major, I don’t know the answer to that.  But if there are, the President will have the opportunity to discuss them with all of you at the conclusion of the meeting.

Q    Have there been additional meetings that the President or his senior staff have convened here in the last three or four days on Ebola that have not appeared on the public schedule?

MR. EARNEST:  The President has frequently been updated and briefed on this issue.  I don’t know if there have been any other formal meetings that have been convened, but I know that there have been a number of occasions in which the President has been updated on this situation.

Q    Following up on Jon’s line of question, can you understand that the public watching this story play out can have a genuine sense of either skepticism or possibly alarm because they hear, “we know how to deal with this; we are taking all the proper steps; all the precautions are being implemented,” and then yet someone who has it, doesn’t show symptoms, gets on a commercial aircraft, even though the exposure risk is minimal, everyone on that plane has now been in contact.  That creates at least a low level sense of alarm by everyone that was on that plane, everyone who knows a person on that plane, and everyone who remembers hearing just a couple of days ago, “well, that’s not going to happen, we’ve got this under control.”  Do you understand how the public is becoming less confident and possibly more alarmed as the story plays out?

MR. EARNEST:  People should continue to be confident in the response that was organized by the government in reaction to this specific situation.  The reason for that is simply that we have a modern medical infrastructure in place that, again, has not been flawless -- we pointed out why that was the case, that even one transmission to a health care worker is unacceptable -- people should take solace in the fact that, quite frankly, we know exactly how Ebola is transmitted.  It’s not transmitted through the air, it’s not transmitted through food or water, but only through close contact with the bodily fluids of an individual that have symptoms of Ebola.  But this is a deadly, graphic disease.

Q    But Dr. Frieden said this person should not have traveled.  That was a big mistake.  That looks to me, and I think it looks to most people evaluating this fairly, as sort of a gap in the system, that something that should have been communicated very tightly within the Texas Presbyterian community, hey, don’t get on a commercial aircraft, happened anyway.  Do you understand how that can create some degree of uncertainty among the public when trying to evaluate where the story is going and how tightly you have your arms wrapped around this situation?

MR. EARNEST:  Major, I can certainly understand the concern by the American public about this terrible disease.  It’s a deadly disease.  But it is a disease that we know -- whose outbreak we know how to contain here in this country.  And that’s what we’re very focused on -- from trying to meet the needs of the health care workers who have contracted the virus, to investigating how exactly that virus transmission occurred, to doing the necessary contact tracing to ensure that other individuals who may have come in contact with somebody who had the Ebola virus are aware of the risk that they face and are monitoring their own health.

Active monitoring has now been expanded to include all of the health care workers that came in contact with the index Ebola patient in this hospital in Dallas.  So there are a number of steps that we have taken, and I think that people can be encouraged that the federal government is demonstrating the kind of tenacious, adaptive response that’s required to dealing with what is understandably a pretty concerning situation.

Q    I guess my last question is, does the President want his response team to be more tenacious and more urgent, so stories and situations like this stop happening?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I can tell you that the President himself certainly feels a very strong sense of urgency about ensuring that his administration and the medical experts are mobilizing the kind of response that will ensure the safety and health of the broader American public.  That’s what the President expects.  It’s what the American people expect.  And I’m confident that will be discussed at today’s meeting.

Olivier.

Q    Josh, the President spoke today with the leaders of Japan, the U.K., France, Germany and Italy.  Ebola was part of the conversation in each of these conversations --

MR. EARNEST:   I don’t mean to interrupt you.  The conversation with the Prime Minister of Japan was separate from the conversations with the other leaders.

Q    It was.  I didn’t mean to imply they were all together. But he spoke to those leaders either together or separately, or however you want to put it.

MR. EARNEST:  There’s been intense interest in the modality with which the President communicates with world leaders since the very first day I did this briefing, so I’m cognizant of the importance of those kinds of details.

Q    I respect that and I appreciate it.  The President has said repeatedly now that he’s not satisfied with the global response in terms of stemming Ebola at the source.  So my question for you regarding these various conversations is whether he made any specific asks of these world leaders, or whether he is satisfied that they have fully stepped up to their responsibilities.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’ll say two things about that.  The first is, more than a month ago -- or I guess it was about a month ago -- the President made an announcement at the CDC headquarters in Atlanta that he was going to make a significant commitment of Department of Defense resources in Western Africa to put in place the logistical infrastructure that was needed to ramp up our response to the Ebola outbreak in that region of the world.  That continues to be a priority for his administration.

The President is receiving regular updates from the Department of Defense about their ongoing efforts to put in place that logistical capability.  The Department of Defense has tremendous expertise in this area.  And the reaction to that commitment has been an increase in resources and personnel that are being supplied by non-governmental organizations and from governments around the world.

We’ve been heartened by that response, and that is an indication of just how important it is for the United States to show leadership in a crisis situation like this.

Now, that said -- that all being said, the President does believe that we need to see more from the international community; that we have not seen a sufficient commitment of resources and personnel from other countries to dealing with this urgent situation in West Africa.  The stakes are high, and impact on the local population there is tragic.  And we need to see a more significant commitment of resources from countries around the world to dealing with this effort.

Q    At the risk of restating my question, did he make any specific asks of the world leaders today?  Or is he satisfied that the countries involved have met that challenge?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we’ll have a more detailed readout of the secure video teleconference that the President conducted today with those European leaders.  But as a general matter, I can tell you that the President did urge those world leaders to commit to make a more significant commitment to dealing with the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Justin.

Q    I wanted to circle back on the question about why the President is staying here in town today.  I know that you said it was necessary to respond to the outbreak, but I’m wondering why that is, especially since not only with the Malaysia Airline plane that went down, but everything from Ferguson to Egypt to the Fort Hood shooting, we’ve seen the President either maintain his political schedule or is vacation schedule.

MR. EARNEST:  Each of these situations we consider on a case-by-case basis, as you would expect.  In this situation, the President felt it was important to convene a meeting of the senior members of his administration who are responsible for responding to this particular incident.  And so the President is convening that meeting this afternoon.  And because of the meeting was this afternoon, the President had to postpone the political travel that he had already planned.  We do anticipate that the President will be able to reschedule this trip in advance of Election Day.

Q    And the reason that I ask -- I mean, presumably, Air Force One has got a phone, a video conference; he could do it while he was traveling, as he did in these other instances.  But we’re three weeks out in the midterm elections and this is obviously a story that’s come to dominate headlines.  And so I’m wondering if this was made out of any sort of political consideration.

MR. EARNEST:  It was not.

Q    And then, generally, I guess, can you evaluate how you guys see this politically?  I know that you’ve said repeatedly that politics don’t come into your decision of how to respond to the crisis, but obviously this is something that’s dominated every question of this briefing, and we’re in a political time.  so I’m wondering how you guys see this playing into the midterm election.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, to be candid with you, Justin, I try to consider my words carefully when I speak up here, and the fact is I haven't given any thought to the political consequences of this response.

Q    Have you not thought at all about the politics?

MR. EARNEST:  I haven't.  It’s been a very busy day here that’s been focused on making sure that we’re mobilizing an appropriate response to this urgent situation.  I’m sure there are many people who have considered the political ramifications of this response and of today’s decision to alter the schedule.  But the fact is that hasn’t crossed the minds of the President’s senior advisors here at the White House.

Move around.  Scott.

Q    Josh, Dr. Frieden said today that, going forward, the CDC would make sure that people who are at risk of having been exposed would not be getting on commercial airliners.  But when he was pressed on the authority for that, he said just that the CDC work with state and local officials.  And I’m curious, does the White House feel like that authority is clear, or do you need some extra powers?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, in terms of the powers that are necessary, I’d refer you back to the CDC.  They are the ones who are principally responsible for monitoring the health and, therefore, the movements of these individuals.  So I’d refer you to them for what they feel is necessary for them to do that successfully.

Q    It sounds a little vague.  I mean, it sounds like, well, we’re going to trust that the folks in Dallas are going to, and folks in Ohio are going to keep these folks off airplanes.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, Scott, I’d refer you to the CDC that’s principally responsible for this.  Let me just take this opportunity to remind you and everybody who’s watching that the risk that has been presented to those individuals who are on the airplane with the second health care worker earlier this week do not face a significant risk here.  In fact, the risk is, according to our medical professionals, rather low.

But what we will do, because of our -- as is guided by the tenacious response that you’ve seen, is contact these individuals, encourage them to contact the CDC to make sure that they are properly educated about the risk that they do face.  And in the unlikely event that any sort of health concerns should arise, that they have the available information about what they should do in response to that.

Mike.

Q    So I want to follow up Jon and Major a little bit.  There are crises that happen that are instantaneous, that the response then sort of starts on that day or that moment that the crisis happens -- an earthquake or a terrorist attack.  This is not one of those, right?  The presence of Ebola in the United States, starting with the first patient and proceeding through the other two, was something that was -- that could have been anticipated easily in the weeks and months before, as the Ebola situation in West Africa was playing out.

And so when you talk about the “tenacious response,” I guess I’m wondering if the President is angry, if you guys are frustrated, if there is a level of upset at the fact that each time another kind of moment in this crisis has played out since Ebola arrived here in the United States, the CDC has responded to it, but hasn’t anticipated it.

So the issue of flights of medical personnel, shouldn’t that have been talked about in meetings six weeks ago, and determined that what the policy of the CDC is going to be is that medical workers that might be infected by a patient are not going to be allowed to travel?  Shouldn’t that have been decided long before it ever arrived here?  Shouldn’t issues of transportation of materials or -- I mean, all the things that we’ve gone through, you’ve described being satisfied with the tenacious response after the things happened, but is that good enough for the President that these things weren’t anticipated and figured out ahead of time?

And is he frustrated that these scientists have repeatedly told him and you and the other people in this building, “we got this, we got it under control,” and then something happens and they say, “okay, well, now we’ve got in under control;,now we’re going to do something to respond to the thing that we now see is the case”?  I mean, all this feels like they should have anticipated this before, shouldn’t they?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say it -- there are a variety of ways I’m trying to think I can answer your question.

Q    It was a long question, I apologize.

MR. EARNEST:  But it’s an understandable one, so let me try to answer it in a couple of ways.  The first is, there are a number of things that the President is concerned about.  We’re talking about a deadly disease, and we’re talking about now two American health care workers who have contracted this disease in this country.  Now, they have done that when they were treating a patient with Ebola that had originally contracted the disease in West Africa, so the circumstances are important.  But yet the concern that the President has exists nonetheless.

The President is also concerned about making sure that we’re monitoring the health of the other health care workers who came into close contact with this individual patient, the index patient, as he’s often described.

What the CDC is also doing, and what the President is concerned about, is making sure that we do all the necessary contact tracing, particularly as it relates to those individuals who were also passengers on the plane from Cleveland to Dallas.  That is -- again, the risk to those passengers is low, but the President and everyone in the administration believes that it’s important for that contact tracing to take place.

The other thing the President is concerned about and focused on is making sure that health care professionals across the country are getting clear guidance from the Centers for Disease Control about what protocols they should put in place.  He wants to make sure that those health care professionals are appropriately aware of the need to be cognizant of the fact that

He wants to make sure that those health care professionals are appropriately aware of the need to be cognizant of the fact that there could be other Ebola patients that present themselves for treatment at health care facilities across the country.  He wants to make sure the health care professionals are getting guidance about how to handle that individual when they present themselves, how to diagnose Ebola, and then what protocol should be put in place from there. 

So that clear communication is something that the President is very focused on.  So I think it’s appropriate for you to describe the President as very concerned about this situation.  And that's why the President is urgently convening this meeting this afternoon to make sure that the response is commensurate with the level of concern that he feels.

At the same time, I think it’s also important to point out that there are a number of health care workers who were Americans who were conducting relief missions in West Africa who tragically contracted this virus who were then safely flown back to the United States, were treated in medical facilities in the United States, recovered from that illness, based on the sound medical treatment that they received in this country.  And to date, we do not yet know of any situations where a health care worker who was treating those individuals contracted the virus.

So the Director of the CDC has already indicated his concern that more experts were not deployed sooner to Dallas to help them deal with this Ebola diagnosis in their hospital.  But the fact is that there are multiple other patients who have been treated and recovered from the disease at other facilities in the United States where those health care workers, at least as far as we know now, weren’t put at risk of catching Ebola themselves. 

So there have been situations where the response and treatment of patients has been consistent with the expectations of the President and with the American people.  And the fact that that treatment was rendered in a way that did not ultimately pose a risk to those health care workers contracting Ebola I think is an indication that what our medical experts tell us about having the necessary knowledge to treat Ebola is correct. 

And we need to make sure that the necessary protocols are in place so that when -- and again, our medical experts tell us this too, there are likely to be more cases of Ebola -- what the President and what our administration is focused on is making sure that when those cases present themselves, that those patients get the treatment that they need to recover, that those patients can be treated in a way that doesn't put health care workers at a significantly elevated level of risk, and that we can ensure the safety of the broader public.  And that's hard work.

Dr. Frieden himself has said that fighting Ebola is hard.  But if you consider the wide range of the government’s response, there’s plenty of reason for people to feel confident about what we're doing.  But there is a reason that the President and people all across the country are concerned about this deadly disease.  And we're going to make sure that we're mobilizing the kind of response that is up to the expectations not just of the President but of the people he serves.

Q    Just one real quick follow-up.  I promise I won’t be long.  So is there a fear that by expressing that concern as criticism of CDC or of the government itself, that that undermines the need to keep public confidence high and not cause a panic?  Is that why the concern is not expressed as a criticism of the response so far?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what you’ve -- what’s evident I think from this President’s leadership style is that he’s focused on solving problems, that pointing fingers of blame will not be constructive here.  And that's why the President is focused on results.  And that's why the President is convening the meeting today with his team who is responsible for responding to this situation.

Jim.

Q    Josh, getting back to Lisa Monaco.  You said she’s overseeing the federal response on Ebola --

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I hate to be nitpicky here, but what she’s really doing is she’s coordinating the activities of all the government agencies who are themselves responsible for responding to specific areas of their own expertise.  So she’s not overseeing --

Q    So who’s in charge?  Who’s in charge?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, she’s not overseeing the construction of Ebola transmission units in West Africa.  The Department of Defense is responsible for that.

Q    I understand that, but who is in charge of --

MR. EARNEST:  She’s not responsible for coordinating --

Q    -- who is in charge of the overall response?

MR. EARNEST:  She’s not responsible for coordinating the activities of the international community as they interact with local governments in West Africa.  USAID is involved in that effort.  They have an area of expertise. 

Q    You understand my question --

MR. EARNEST:  She’s not diagnosing people in the field.  So the point is --

Q    I get you're interrupting me because you feel like you have a point to make.  But you understand my question.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the point that I have to make is directly relevant --

Q    You seem to be reluctant to say who’s in charge of the federal response to Ebola.

MR. EARNEST:  Jim, I think that I’m reciting very clearly to you who specifically is responsible for which activities when it comes to this government’s tenacious response to Ebola.  And that is the Department of Defense who is responsible for putting in place the logistical capacity in West Africa.  That's USAID that's trying to meet the needs of communities in West Africa so that we can stop this outbreak at the source.  We see CDC lending their expertise to West Africa to help local governments mobilize the resources that they need to stop this outbreak.  You’ve seen the Department of Homeland Security play their role in ensuring the safety of the American public, whether that's people traveling across the globe, or individuals who are attempting to enter this country.  You have the responsibility of HHS and CDC who are responsible for working with hospitals and doctors all across the country to treat Ebola patients if they materialize at their medical facilities.  So --

Q    There’s not one person in charge?

MR. EARNEST:  I think that there are individuals who are --

Q    Or is that the President?

MR. EARNEST:  There are individuals who are directly responsible for their line of responsibility.  And you have an individual here at the White House who is responsible for coordinating the actions of those government agencies to make sure that they are properly integrated.  I think that is a completely reasonable management structure.  And if it is determined that additional resources are needed to manage this response, then we won’t hesitate to add them.

Q    The only reason why I ask is because Lisa Monaco is also the Counterterrorism and Homeland Security Advisor.  With the threat posed by ISIS and various other terrorist groups around the world, it seems like she has a lot on her plate right now.

MR. EARNEST:  She does have a lot on her plate.

Q    She can do that and Ebola?

MR. EARNEST:  She is a highly capable individual who can fulfill her responsibilities in terms of coordinating the government’s response, the government agencies’ response to this Ebola situation, while at the same time ensuring that she is playing the role that she plays in protecting our homeland.

Q    And on Dr. Frieden, I mean he mentioned yesterday he said he wished he had done this sooner with the special teams that go in and supervise the treatment.  Today he said that this second patient is going to be transferred to the Emory Ebola experts.  That suggests that that precautionary step of having teams in place to supervise care may not be enough.  Do you think that what the CDC is recommending right now is a crystal-clear set of protocols when it comes to dealing with Ebola patients?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there are experts from the CDC who are on the ground in Dallas who are doing a variety of things.  One is they're offering some expertise about the treatment of those Ebola patients that are currently under the care of Texas Presbyterian Hospital.  You also have experts from the CDC who are nurses who are doing some peer-to-peer training when it comes to the use of personal protective equipment.  You have experts in infection control and experts in dealing with the Ebola virus itself who are advising hospital administrators and doctors there about treating these individual patients. 

You have CDC experts who are responsible for doing the contact tracing that is necessary, not just of the index patient himself and his family who he spent some time with before he was admitted to the hospital, but also doing the contact tracing that is related to the two health care workers that contracted the virus.  That's a pretty work-intensive effort.

Q    The administration said these patients can be treated in hospitals.  Now the second patient is going to Emory.  Isn't there an inconsistency there? 

MR. EARNEST:  Jim, I think what you're seeing is you’re seeing an adaptation in terms of the government’s response.  I just talked earlier about how the facility at Emory had successfully treated other health care workers who contracted the virus in West Africa.  Those individuals were treated.  They recovered and were released.  And that treatment was rendered without the health care workers themselves contracting the Ebola virus.  So that may be an indication that they have expertise that can be used and dedicated to this specific case.

But again, the treatment of these individuals is going to be guided by our medical experts and by the science.  I guess if you have additional questions about that I'd encourage you to reach out to CDC.

Q    You said that there were shortcomings and flaws with the response.  You acknowledge that.  Did the President register his frustration --

MR. EARNEST:  What I acknowledged is something that our medical experts themselves have acknowledged.

Q    You acknowledge that medical experts said that there are shortcomings and flaws.  Did the President tell Dr. Frieden he’s dissatisfied with that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think it's fair for you to assume that the President shares the view that the transmission of the Ebola virus to even one health care worker is something that is not acceptable.  The President does share that view.

Q    Josh, you said you have confidence in Dr. Frieden.  On the question of who is in charge, we notice on the morning television today it was not Dr. Frieden, it was Sylvia Burwell at HHS -- not Lisa Monaco.  And then the conference call that happened about an hour or so ago with Dr. Frieden, at the last minute it was, well, it's not going to be on camera with him anymore.  Sylvia Burwell at HHS is going to be on the call with him and she’s going to start it off.  Doesn’t that suggest that now she’s taking on a more hands-on role and yet another personm is involved at the top?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, Ed, a couple of times I’ve described the important role that HHS has to play in terms of protecting the American public here at home and communicating with public health officials across the country at the state and local level and also communicating with doctors and nurses, health care providers and hospital administrators.  So there’s been an important role for HHS to play in this response from the beginning; they have played that role.  And the Secretary of Health and Human Services has been actively engaged from the beginning.

Q    Okay, so the CDC today is saying it was improper for the health care worker to fly from Cleveland to Dallas Fort Worth.  Why is it still appropriate for the U.S. to allow people to fly into America from the hot zone?

MR. EARNEST:  Quite simply, Ed, because there are -- there is a multilayered screening protocol that’s in place to ensure that individuals that may have symptoms consistent with Ebola are not even able to board planes in West Africa.  As we’ve discussed, dozens of people have been denied boarding over the last few months because they are exhibiting symptoms consistent with Ebola.

There’s also a screening that’s in place on international flights to ensure that our flight crews are aware of what they should be looking for in terms of people exhibiting symptoms of Ebola.  And then there is also a layered screening -- a screening layer here in this country where we have CBP officers who are responsible for observing people who are reentering the country and subjecting those who have traveled in West Africa to additional screening to make sure that those individuals aren’t symptomatic.

Obviously, that multilayered screening approach does is not in place for domestic flights.  And that’s the difference.

Q    And I wonder if you can address nurses unions and just nurses around the country who are expressing alarm not just at health care workers being exposed, but they say that Mr. Duncan was in an emergency room at this hospital in Dallas for hours in an area with not just health care workers but citizens sitting there, and that waste -- once he was admitted in, waste was piling up.  The nurses were around this waste.  How concerned is the White House about that and how many more people could have been exposed, and why that just was not handled properly?  He was sitting in an open area for hours.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, but again, Ed, the thing that’s important for people to understand is to understand how the Ebola virus is transmitted.  The Ebola virus is not transmitted through the air, so people who breathe the same air as this individual when he was --

Q    -- come into contact with him when he’s in a public area and has Ebola.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, they have to come in contact with his bodily fluids in order to contract Ebola.  There are very clear guidelines for how this disease is contracted.  Now, that all being said, it’s the CDC’s responsibility to communicate clearly with hospitals and health care facilities across the country about the proper protocol for evaluating individuals that may have symptoms consistent with Ebola and for isolating those individuals that need to be isolated based on their travel history.

There’s also a protocol that the CDC has in place for rendering treatment to those individuals who have been diagnosed, who have tested positive for Ebola.  The CDC is reviewing those protocols.  They’re constantly assessing and reassessing those protocols.  And I mentioned earlier that one of the things that we are concerned about is making sure that the CDC is offering clear guidance to health care professionals across the country about what those protocols should be and how those protocols should be implemented.  And that continues to be a priority and it continues to be something that the President is worried about.

It’s evident in this particular situation in Dallas that there was -- that something unacceptable occurred; that we saw a health care worker contract the Ebola virus after treating somebody that had Ebola.  So there are some protocol changes that are being reviewed by CDC, and when those changes are determined to be necessary, CDC will make those announcements and communicate them clearly.

Q    One other topic so others can go.  The New York Times has a story about American troops being exposed to chemical weapons in Iraq.  I know that exposure, at least most of it, appears to have happened during the Bush administration, but the story is alleging that the Pentagon kept this secret from troops, from veterans, continuing into the Obama administration.  So I wanted you to address when President Obama was briefed on this first, and why this administration appears to have continued to keep this secret.

MR. EARNEST:  Ed, let me say a couple things about that.  The first is we’ve seen the reporting about U.S. military personnel and Iraqi exposure to chemicals related to Saddam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction programs.  Needless to say, we have the deepest concerns for these individuals.  The Department of Defense has indicated that they’re going to conduct a review of this specific situation.** There’s a full statement that I won’t read from here, but I’d refer you to the Department of Defense to get a better understanding of exactly how we’re responding to this particular situation.

I know that Secretary Hagel, who himself is a combat veteran and somebody who was wounded in combat while serving his country, so he obviously takes these kinds of issues very personally, and I’m confident that they will conduct the kind of detailed review that’s necessary.**

MR. SCHULTZ:  The President’s meeting is starting.

MR. EARNEST:  Okay.  Kristin, I’ll give you the last one and then I’d better run.

Q    Okay.  Does this underscore the need for a surgeon general to be installed?  And who should the American people be listening to right now?  And talk about the fact that we’re hearing from a number of different people and I think there is a confusion -- obviously we’re trying to get at the idea of who is in charge, but who should people be listening to right now?  President Obama is not out here answering our questions.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, you’ve heard a number of medical experts talk about the necessary protocols, about the low risk that faces the American public right now.  You’ve heard the President on a number of occasions talk about the need for a robust response in West Africa to deal with this outbreak at the source.  So there are a number of administration officials who have been talking about this publicly.  All of them are talking based on the guidance of our medical professionals.  They are all talking about how our response reflects our commitment to the safety and security of the American public, and how those principles are guided by the science.

Q    But the buck stops with the President, right?

MR. EARNEST:  No doubt.  That’s always true.  That’s always true. 

Thanks, everybody.  I’ve got to run to this other meeting.  Send me an e-mail and I’ll see what I can do to get you an answer.

END
3:25 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the Cabinet Meeting on the Domestic Response to Ebola

The President met with members of his Cabinet today to discuss the current Ebola cases in the United States and the aggressive measures the Administration is taking in response. The President’s advisors provided him with an update on the status of the contact tracing of the healthcare worker diagnosed today, as well as a synopsis of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) lessons learned from its ongoing investigation in Dallas. The President’s team detailed the new steps that have been taken—including the creation of CDC’s Ebola Response Teams, the surging of personnel and resources to Dallas, and an emphasis on increasing outreach and education to our nation’s healthcare workers as well as to the general public—to enhance our preparedness in Dallas and nationwide. The meeting also reviewed the additional domestic airport screening measures unveiled last week at New York’s Kennedy Airport and that will be implemented tomorrow at four additional airports: Newark’s Liberty, Chicago’s O’Hare, Atlanta’s Hartsfield, and northern Virginia’s Dulles. The President concluded the meeting by underscoring that the federal domestic response must move quickly and that contact tracing and monitoring must be undertaken more aggressively while we continue to tackle the virus at its source in West Africa.

Participants:

  • The Vice President
  • Chuck Hagel, Secretary of Defense
  • Eric Holder, Attorney General
  • Thomas Perez, Secretary of Labor
  • Penny Pritzker, Secretary of Commerce
  • Sylvia Burwell, Secretary of Health and Human Services
  • Ernest Moniz, Secretary of Energy
  • Robert McDonald, Secretary of Veterans Affairs
  • Jeh Johnson, Secretary of Homeland Security
  • General Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
  • Denis McDonough, Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff
  • Shaun Donovan, Director of the Office of Management and Budget
  • Amb. Samantha Power, Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations
  • John Podesta, Counselor to the President
  • Susan Rice, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs
  • Lisa Monaco, Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism
  • Dr. Thomas Frieden, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (via secure video teleconference)
  • Sarah Raskin, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury
  • Nancy Powell, Special Coordinator-Ebola

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko

President Obama spoke by phone this afternoon with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and discussed the need for all sides to fulfill their obligations under the Minsk Protocol of September 5 and Minsk Memorandum of September 19.  Both leaders agreed that the Asia-Europe Meeting in Milan on October 16-17 offers a good opportunity for leaders to press President Putin to abide by all aspects of the peace plan, including putting in place an effective mechanism for controlling and monitoring the border between Russia and eastern Ukraine.  Additionally, they discussed energy security, political and economic reform, and how best to work together with international financial institutions and bilateral partners to support Ukraine’s economy. The President also congratulated President Poroshenko on the recent passage of anti-corruption legislation in Ukraine’s parliament.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President After Meeting on the Government's Response to Ebola

Cabinet Room

 

5:26 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Well, obviously the news has been dominated by the diagnosis of a second health care worker in Dallas with Ebola. And in light of this second case, I thought it was very important for me to bring together our team, including our CDC Director, Tom Frieden, to hear directly from them in terms of how we are ramping up our efforts here.

Obviously, initially, we want to express concern for the two health workers who have been affected. Our nurses and our health care workers are absolutely vital to the health and wellbeing of our families. They sacrifice for us all the time, not just in this case but in the case of other illnesses that affect us. They are selfless, they work hard, they’re often underpaid. And so our thoughts and prayers are with them, and we have to make sure that we are doing everything we can to take care of them, even as they take care of us.

As a consequence, what we’ve been doing here today is reviewing exactly what we know about what’s happened in Dallas and how we’re going to make sure that something like this is not repeated and that we are monitoring, supervising, overseeing in a much more aggressive way exactly what has taken place in Dallas initially and making sure that the lessons learned are then transmitted to hospitals and clinics all across the country.

First of all, what I’ve directed the CDC to do is that as soon as somebody is diagnosed with Ebola, we want a rapid response team, a SWAT team, essentially, from the CDC to be on the ground as quickly as possible -- hopefully within 24 hours -- so that they are taking the local hospital step by step through exactly what needs to be done and making sure that all the protocols are properly observed; that the use of protective equipment is done effectively; that disposal of that protective equipment is done properly.

The key thing to understand about this disease is that these protocols work. We know that because they’ve been used for decades now in Ebola cases around the world, including the cases that were treated in Emory and in Nebraska. So if they’re done properly, they work. But we have to make sure that, understandably, certain local hospitals that may not have that experience are walked through that process as carefully as possible and we’re going to make sure that this rapid response team can do that.

In addition, we are reviewing every step of what’s happened since Mr. Duncan was initially brought in to the hospital in Dallas so that we understand exactly where some of the problems may have occurred, and doing a thorough canvass and inventory of all the workers who had contact with Mr. Duncan, including those who engaged in some of the testing that took place. We are now communicating all these various lessons to hospitals, clinics, first-responders around the country. And obviously given all the attention that this has received, we’re going to make sure that that provision of information is constant, ongoing, and being updated on a real-time basis.

In addition, we are working very carefully with the Mayor of Dallas, the Governor of Texas and others to make sure that in the event any other cases arise from these health workers, that they are properly cared for in a way that is consistent with public safety.

I know that people are concerned about the fact that the second health care worker had traveled. Here’s what we know about Ebola: That it is not like the flu. It is not airborne. The only way that a person can contract Ebola is by coming into direct contact with the bodily fluids of somebody who is showing symptoms. In other words, if they don’t have symptoms, they’re not contagious.

What we are able to do, however, is to do what’s called contact tracing, so that anybody who may have had contact with someone -- even if it was incidental contact, even if they weren’t showing symptoms -- being able to identify who those individuals are and make sure that they are then being monitored in a way that allows us to make certain that the disease does not spread further. And that’s currently taking place in a very aggressive process conducted by the CDC, HHS, and the rest of our teams.

I want to use myself as an example just so that people have a sense of the science here. I shook hands with, hugged, and kissed not the doctors, but a couple of the nurses at Emory because of the valiant work that they did in treating one of the patients. They followed the protocols, they knew what they were doing, and I felt perfectly safe doing so.

And so this is not a situation in which, like a flu, the risks of a rapid spread of the disease are imminent. If we do these protocols properly, if we follow the steps, if we get the information out, then the likelihood of widespread Ebola outbreaks in this country are very, very low.

But I think what we’ve all learned over the last several weeks is that folks here in this country, and a lot of non-specialized hospitals and clinics, don’t have that much experience dealing with these issues. And so we’re going to have to push out this information as aggressively as possible, and that’s the instructions that I’ve provided to my team.

Just a couple other points. We are going to be monitoring carefully the health status of the other health care workers in Dallas. And obviously they’re concerned. We understand that many of them are scared. And we are going to make sure that we’re on the ground 24/7 to provide them the kind of support, information, and assurances that they need to get through this particular challenge.

And finally, we’re also going to be continually examining screening processes at airports. We’re making sure that in the event that we have additional cases that involve the need for transporting those patients to specialized hospitals, that those teams are in place and those facilities are in place. And we will make sure that on a day-to-day basis we provide the public with all the information they need and any updates about what has happened not just in Dallas but what has been done across the country.

I’ll end with this point: We are going to have to make sure that we do not lose sight of the importance of the international response to what is taking place in West Africa. I am absolutely confident that we can prevent a serious outbreak of the disease here in the United States, but it becomes more difficult to do so if this epidemic of Ebola rages out of control in West Africa. If it does, then it will spread globally in an age of frequent travel and the kind of constant interactions that people have across borders.

And so it is very important for us to understand that the investment we make in helping Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea deal with this problem is an investment in our own public health. This is not simply charity -- although obviously it’s important that America takes the lead in the humanitarian crisis that's taking place there -- but it is also probably the single most important thing that we can do to prevent a more serious Ebola outbreak in this country is making sure that we get what is a raging epidemic right now in West Africa under control.

So for that reason last night I had a call with Prime Minister Abe of Japan to solicit greater support for the international effort. This morning I spoke with Chancellor Merkel of Germany, Prime Minister Renzi of Italy, President Hollande of France, as well as David Cameron, the Prime Minister of Great Britain to make sure that we are coordinating our efforts and that we are putting in a lot more resources than, so far at least, the international community has put into this process.

So bottom line in terms of the public: I want people to understand that the dangers of you contracting Ebola, the dangers of a serious outbreak are extraordinarily low. But we are taking this very seriously at the highest levels of government. And we are going to be able to manage this particular situation, but we have to look towards the future. And if we are not responding internationally in an effective way, and if we do not set up the kind of preparedness and training in our public health infrastructure here in the United States, not just for this outbreak, but for future outbreaks, then we could have problems.

So, in the meantime, I want everybody to be thinking about and praying for the two health workers that have gotten sick. Those who also treated this patient with compassion and care, we just want to say thank you to them. And we are going to be doing everything we can to make sure that they're properly cared for.

Okay, thank you very much.

END
5:37 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan on of the Display of the Ghazir Rug in the White House Visitor Center

On November 18-23, the White House Visitor Center will show an exhibit entitled: “Thank you to the United States: Three Gifts to Presidents in Gratitude for American Generosity Abroad.” Among those gifts displayed will be the Ghazir Rug.  The rug, also known as the “Armenian Orphan Rug,” was presented to President Coolidge in 1925 in recognition of the humanitarian assistance rendered by the American people to displaced Armenian orphans.

The rug is made to characterize the Garden of Eden, contains 4 million knots and took 18 months to complete.  The rug measures 11.5 feet by 19 feet and is in excellent condition. It was removed with President Coolidge’s personal possessions when he left office in 1929 but was returned to the White House as a gift from his family in 1982. The rug has only been displayed twice since then, and is a reminder of the close relationship between the people of Armenia and the United States.

The other two items in the exhibit are a Sèvres vase commissioned by “Young People of France” that is believed to have been sent to President Hoover in 1930 in appreciation for feeding children in post-World War I France, and Flowering Branches in Lucite which were sent to President Obama in recognition of American support of the people of Japan after the devastating earthquake and tsunami in 2010.

The White House Visitor Center is located at 1450 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW. The center is free and open to the public from 7:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. daily. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President's Video Conference with British Prime Minister David Cameron, French President François Hollande, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi

Today, the President participated in a video conference with his counterparts Prime Minister David Cameron of the United Kingdom, President François Hollande of France, Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, and Prime Minister Matteo Renzi of Italy.  The group discussed the international response to the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, including steps that are being taken to counter the spread of the disease.  The President stressed the need for a faster and more robust international response to the Ebola epidemic, and underscored the need to increase assistance and international contributions for Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea.  The leaders agreed to work together to enlist greater support from more countries and to coordinate their efforts on the ground.  President Obama made clear that the world must marshal the finances as well as the international personnel required to bend the curve of the epidemic, noting that it constitutes a human tragedy as well as a threat to international security.

On ISIL, the group reviewed coalition efforts to date in the campaign to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL in Iraq and Syria, including stemming the flow of foreign fighters and building the capabilities of the Iraqi Security Forces and the moderate Syrian opposition.  The President stressed that the military dimension of the campaign is just one aspect of the broader effort to counter ISIL.  He noted the importance of countering ISIL propaganda, and our ongoing efforts to put forward an affirmative vision that contrasts with ISIL’s violent and hateful ideology. The leaders also agreed that the coalition will continue to coordinate in order to counter sources of ISIL funding. 

On Ukraine, the leaders discussed the need for Russia to fulfill all of its obligations under the Minsk agreements.  Additionally, they discussed efforts to work alongside international financial institutions to support Ukraine’s economy.  

The President looks forward to continuing his conversations with his counterparts.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe

President Obama spoke yesterday evening with Prime Minister Abe of Japan to discuss cooperation in confronting the Ebola epidemic, their shared vision for the Trans Pacific Partnership, and the security situation in Northeast Asia. President Obama thanked Prime Minister Abe for the important contributions Japan has made to the Ebola response effort and encouraged him to consider additional commitments.  The two leaders agreed that the international community urgently needs to do more to address this health security emergency, by providing personnel, supplies, and funds in support of the effort.  President Obama and Prime Minister Abe agreed on the economic and strategic importance of the Trans Pacific Partnership, and the President stressed the need to be bold in order to achieve their shared vision of a more prosperous and integrated Asia-Pacific region.  The two leaders discussed regional dynamics in Northeast Asia. The President reaffirmed that our alliances remain the cornerstone of our engagement with the region, and underscored the importance of enhancing communication and cooperation among U.S. allies in Northeast Asia in order to ensure stable relations over the long-term.  

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

FACT SHEET: Getting Long-Term Unemployed Americans Back to Work

In January, President Obama issued a three-part call to action – to employers, to communities across the country, and to federal agencies – to help Americans who are ready to work find jobs, and to help more of the long-term unemployed get back to work.  That included unveiling a set of “best practices” being taken by leading employers – including over 80 of the nation’s largest companies – around recruiting and hiring the long-term unemployed, to remove some of the barriers that make it harder for them to navigate the hiring process.

Today, building on the President’s call to action, the White House is providing an update on progress since January and additional steps—taken in conjunction with businesses, non-profit leaders, governors and mayors and federal agencies—to help ensure that Americans still looking for work have a fair shot, and American businesses benefit as a result.

Since December, the long-term unemployment rate has fallen from 2.5 percent to 1.9 percent. The number of long-term unemployed – those unemployed more than 6 months – has fallen by 900,000. This decline accounts for around 90 percent of the total drop in unemployment in the past 10 months. But there is still work left to do. As more jobs are created, it is critical that Americans with skills, experience, and a desire to work have every opportunity to get back to work to maximize the full potential of our talent pool.

Today, the White House is announcing:

  • $170 Million in DOL Grants to Support Partnerships that Connect the Long-Term Unemployed to Work. Secretary of Labor Thomas Perez is announcing 23 grants from the Department of Labor’s H-1B funds – totaling $170 million – for programs in 20 states and Puerto Rico to help the long-term unemployed return to the workforce. Grants were awarded to partnerships between non-profits, local government, and employers to train and match long-term unemployed job seekers for in-demand jobs.
  • Progress on Business Efforts to Improve Recruiting and Hiring of Long-Term Unemployed. In January, the Administration announced a call to action for businesses to adopt best practices for hiring the long term unemployed and over 300 businesses – including 80 of the nation’s largest companies – announced they were adopting these best practices for hiring and recruiting the long-term unemployed to ensure that these candidates receive a fair shot during the hiring process. Today, the Vice President, the Director of the National Economic Council, and the Secretary of Labor are meeting with the Chief Human Resource Officers of many of these leading companies who have found innovative ways to better integrate applications from the long-term unemployed into their hiring process.  Deloitte Consulting and Rockefeller Foundation are also releasing handbooks, created in consultation with HR departments in many companies, which can be used by employers and long-term unemployed job seekers to return a greater number of people to the workforce.
  • Ensuring Federal Hiring Process Gives Long-Term Unemployed Job Applicants a Fair Shot. Following up on a Presidential Memorandum issued in January, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is issuing guidance to Federal agencies to ensure that individuals who are unemployed or have faced financial difficulties because of circumstances like job loss receive fair treatment and consideration for employment by Federal agencies. 

$170 Million for Ready to Work Partnership Grants

In January, the President announced that the Department of Labor would make existing funds available to help expand successful partnerships among employers, non-profit organizations, and our public workforce system to provide long-term unemployed job seekers with the range of services, training, and access they need to fill jobs in demand by employers.

Today, the Secretary of Labor is announcing 23 grants from the Department of Labor’s H1-B funds – totaling $170 million – for programs in 20 states and Puerto Rico to support the hiring of long-term unemployed workers. All of the partnerships funded today include the following key features:

  • Employer Engagement and Support in Training Program Design – Including Many Commitments to Consider Hiring Qualified Participants. Training programs funded by these grants address the skills and competencies needed by employers and high-growth industries, leading to the employment of qualified participants. Many projects include commitments from employers to hire and/or interview program participants that complete work-based training programs.
  • Reemployment Services Tailored to Match Long-Term Unemployed Workers’ Individual Needs for Hiring Success.  Each grantee has committed that at least 85 percent of the individuals served will be long-term unemployed. Each grantee will conduct a comprehensive, up-front assessment of an individual’s needs and skills, resulting in customized interventions including intensive coaching and other short-term services, short-term training, or longer-term training leading to a degree or certificate.
  • Work-based Training That Enables Earning While Learning Through Models Such as On-the-Job Training (OJT), Paid Work Experience, Paid Internships and Registered Apprenticeships. All projects will incorporate some form of work-based learning. Fifteen will use formal “on-the-job” training arrangements in which public dollars help subsidize training costs. 

Examples of winning partnerships include:

  • San Francisco Jewish Vocational Services Tech Start. Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) worked closely with local companies, including eBay/PayPal, Entelo, Evolv, Zynga, Charles Schwab, and Twitter to develop a training model built on in-demand technology skills, skills demonstrations, networking, and deep employer engagement. JVS will assess long-term unemployed individuals and offer three different career tracks – a five-week intensive job search boot camp, for those who need to refresh their job search skills, repackage themselves, and accelerate their job-seeking activities; a four-six month training program for those whose relevant experience can be reinvigorated with an in-demand technical skill like Salesforce Administration or Full Stack Web Development; and a longer-term (1-2 year) training program in fields like Network Security.
  • Anne Arundel Workforce Development Corporation – Matching Older Job Seekers to Jobs in Information Technology and Bioscience.  The project will focus on strong outreach to the unemployed as well as a central partnership with the AARP Foundation to reach out to individuals over 50 years of age through their BACK TO WORK 50+ initiative. AARP Foundation will offer co-branded marketing, a toll-free number, and a trained professional call center to reach older workers experiencing long-term unemployment or who have dropped out of the labor force. Individuals will be placed and retrained in information technology and bioscience fields working with employer partners like Assevero Security Consulting, Dunbar Cybersecurity, University of Maryland, and Johns Hopkins University.
  • City of Denver – IT and Advanced Manufacturing. Denver’s program will focus on placing and training the unemployed in information technology and advanced manufacturing fields using a sector approach that convenes employers within these fields to co-design training programs. As an example employer partner, Lockheed Martin has committed to provide work-based learning opportunities, interview program participants for job openings, and hire qualified participants who complete the program. 
  • Philadelphia District 1199C Training and Upgrading Fund for In-Demand Jobs in Community Health.  District 1199C, a well-established job training organization in Philadelphia, will add to its healthcare training program by establishing a new Community Health Worker Registered Apprenticeship with local employers including Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Nationwide Healthcare Services, and several local nursing homes. The new apprenticeship program will help to standardize the skills needed for community health care workers across a number of employers, making it clearer what individuals need to do to get these jobs. 

Progress on Best Practices to Recruit and Hire the Long-Term Unemployed

Lack of opportunities for long-term unemployed Americans is a missed opportunity for employers. The long-term unemployed have slightly higher education and experience than the short-term unemployed, yet evidence exists that they struggle to get a fair shot in the hiring process. Multiple studies show that long-term unemployed applicants are only half as likely to be considered for hiring compared to others with identical education and experience, even though evidence demonstrates that they perform just as well on the job. 

In January, the Administration engaged with America’s leading businesses to develop best practices for hiring and recruiting the long-term unemployed to ensure that these candidates receive a fair shot during the hiring process. Over 80 of the nation’s largest businesses have signed on, including 20 members of the Fortune 50, as well as over 200 small- and medium-sized businesses. Since then, many of them have made meaningful changes in recruiting practices.

Today, the Vice President, the Director of the National Economic Council, and the Secretary of Labor are meeting with the Chief Human Resource Officers of many of these companies. At the roundtable, participants will discuss the improvements their companies have made to their job advertising, screening of candidates, and hiring practices to eliminate barriers to hiring the long-term unemployed

  • Announcing Progress in Implementing Best Practices for Recruiting and Hiring the Long-Term Unemployed: Many employers who signed the Best Practices Pledge in January are reporting that applying these best practices has led to progress in opening doors to hire the long-term unemployed. Employers have done so through changing their hiring practices, working with local partners to train long-term unemployed job seekers, and supporting job seekers in accessing broad community support. These practices not only support unemployed Americans in getting back to work, but enable the employers implementing them to improve their talent pipelines.
    • Frontier adopts innovative video interviewing techniques. Frontier has hired over 250 long-term unemployed people since January 2014, representing about 20 percent of Frontier’s hires. The company was able to increase its hiring of long-term unemployed applicants by 17 percent after it began video interviewing, which helps to remove biases against the unemployed that may arise from relying on resumes alone.
    • Comcast pilots alternative hiring approaches. Comcast has been piloting a program that hires on a competency-based model for customer-facing roles.  The process now relies less on a resume, or recent work experience, and instead looks almost entirely at the behavioral attributes that will make someone successful in a role, which has opened up a wider talent pool.  As a result, Comcast has new hire classes with 10 percent of hires coming from the unemployed. The payoff is not only a more diverse pool of talented candidates, but also a closer fit on the interpersonal and life-skills that are critical to success but also don’t always show up directly on a resume or application.
    • KPMG launches extensive outreach to recruit long-term unemployed. Although the national unemployment rate is 3.4 percent in the accounting industry, through their outreach and recruiting efforts, KPMG was able to hire approximately 300 individuals from the long-term unemployed population, nearly 10 percent of their total hires for fiscal year 2014. 
    • True Blue partners with Skills for Chicagoland’s Future. True Blue, a large staffing provider, has hired 105 unemployed workers into full-time jobs in their Chicago recruiting center in partnership with Skills for Chicagoland’s Future, a non-profit that obtains employer commitments to hire the long-term unemployed and finds qualified candidates.
  • Commitment of Leaders in Business Community to Spread Recruiting and Hiring Best Practices to Employers Nationwide, in Partnership with Non-Profits and Philanthropy.  Deloitte and the Rockefeller Foundation are announcing the first results of their work to capture those best practices in an easy-to-use tool for any employer’s HR department to implement companies’ practices, and a handbook for long-term unemployed job seekers to improve their job search success.  Businesses have begun to pilot these tools and practices and have committed to work together to share them with other employers.  Non-profits that touch millions of job seekers across the country have committed to make them available.

    These initial employer launch partners receive over 10 million job applications annually, and they will invite the business community to join them.

    • Employer Guide to Recruit and Hire Long-Term Unemployed. Rockefeller Foundation and Deloitte Consulting created their guide with the input of about 100 White House Best Practice signatories. Deloitte/Rockefeller’s Guide to Recruiting and Hiring the Long-Term Unemployed aims to provide a structured guide for companies to self-assess their current practices and practical tools to help employers at every level – from CEOs and Chief Human Resource Officers to recruiters and hiring managers – to tap into the full potential of job seekers who have been unemployed for 6 months or more.
    • Job Seeker Handbook.  Based on consultation with leading non-profits that are helping the unemployed get back to work, Deloitte/Rockefeller’s New Guide, New Destinations handbook has a set of interactive tools and workbooks that job seekers can use to search for jobs, understand and build on their strengths, explain their employment gaps, and refresh their skills during their period of unemployment.
    • Commitment to Spread Long-Term Unemployed Hiring Best Practices Nationwide. After piloting the use of these employer and job seeker handbooks in Minneapolis and Chicago, Deloitte, Rockefeller, and their initial employer launch partners – AT&T, Bank of America, CVS, Prudential, Sodexo, US Bank, and Wells Fargo – are making a commitment to work together with other engaged institutions to:
      • Assess and improve effectiveness of talent sourcing practices in identifying strong candidates regardless of employment status.
      • Work with talent channels that include the long-term unemployed.
      • Support growth of proven approaches to helping the long-term unemployed get back to work, such as non-profit employer partnerships, and effective American Job Center programs.
      • Contribute to job seekers’ understanding of how to navigate the job search process by providing feedback and coaching to applicants at multiple points in the recruiting and hiring process.
      • Share their success stories and best practices with peer companies including suppliers and customers.
    • Non-Profit Partnerships to Distribute Deloitte/Rockefeller Handbooks and Spread Best Practices.
      • AARP are adding elements of the handbook to its guide “7 Smart Strategies for Workers 50+” distributed to 5,000 older workers across the country and distribute the employer handbook through its online employer resource center.
      •  Goodwill will host a webinar for all its members on the handbooks and publicize them on its websites that have reach with over 30,000 job seekers.
      • Skills for Chicagoland’s Future, with support of the Aspen Institute's Skills for America's Future, is releasing a full toolkit of resources for organizations creating, incubating, or redefining an existing intermediary to a demand-driven business intermediary that matches training and hiring approaches for the long-term unemployed to local business needs. The playbook can be found at www.SCFplaybook.com

Policies to Ensure Federal Government Gives Long-Term Unemployed Jobseekers a Fair Shot 

In January, President Obama signed a Presidential Memorandum to ensure that individuals who are unemployed or have faced financial difficulties through no fault of their own receive fair treatment and consideration for employment by Federal agencies.   Federal agencies have already taken steps to review their recruiting and hiring practices accordingly. Today, as the Memorandum directed, the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) is issuing guidance to assist agencies in implementing the policy established in the Memorandum.  OPM’s guidance includes explanations and examples, as well as strategies for recruitment and ensuring that there are no undue obstacles during the hiring process. 

  • In addition, OPM created a “mythbuster” on federal hiring policies, making clear that people who have had gaps in employment and faced financial difficulties through no fault of their own will have a fair shot at obtaining Federal employment. The mythbuster will be linked to job postings on USAJOBS.
  • OPM is also providing agencies with model training and updated guidance on complying with the Fair Credit Reporting Act when applicants’ credit reports are reviewed as part of agencies’ determination as to whether an applicant is suitable for employment.  

The Department of Labor has also issued guidance to the workforce system about non-discrimination obligations based on unemployment status and credit history, as well as a notice to the workforce system and employers about the Deloitte/Rockefeller Handbooks and other resources for helping the long-term unemployed return to work. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President After Meeting with Chiefs of Defense

Joint Base Andrews

3:31 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, good afternoon, everybody.  I want to thank Chairman Dempsey for bringing us here together to review coalition operations to degrade and to ultimately destroy ISIL.  I want to thank General Austin of Central Command, and General Votel, down at the end, of Special Operations Command for their outstanding leadership as well.

At this stage, some 60 nations are contributing to this coalition, including more than 20 coalition members who are represented here today -- among them, Iraq, Arab nations, Turkey, NATO Allies, and partners from the world.  So this is an operation that involves the world against ISIL.

So far, we’ve seen some important successes:  Stopping ISIL’s advance on Erbil.  Saving many civilians from a massacre on Mount Sinjar.  Retaking the Mosul Dam.  Destroying ISIL targets and fighters across Iraq and Syria. 

Obviously, at this point, we’re also focused on the fighting that is taking place in Iraq’s Anbar Province, and we’re deeply concerned about the situation in and around the Syrian town of Kobani, which underscores the threat that ISIL poses in both Iraq and Syria.  And coalition airstrikes will continue in both these areas.

One of the things that has emerged from the discussions, both before I came and during my visit here, is that this is going to be a long-term campaign.  There are not quick fixes involved.  We’re still at the early stages.  As with any military effort, there will be days of progress and there are going to be periods of setback. 

But our coalition is united behind this long-term effort.  Our nations agree that ISIL poses a significant threat to the people of Iraq and Syria.  It poses a threat to surrounding countries.  And because of the numbers of foreign fighters that are being attracted, and the chaos that ISIL was creating in the region, ultimately it will pose a threat beyond the Middle East, including to the United States, Europe, and far-flung countries like Australia that have already seen terrorist networks trying to infiltrate and impact population centers on the other side of the world.

So we are united in our goal to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL so that it’s no longer a threat to Iraq, to the region, or the international community.  But one of the things that’s also been emphasized here today is this is not simply a military campaign.  This is not a classic army in which we defeat them on the battlefield and then they ultimately surrender.  What we’re also fighting is an ideological strain of extremism that has taken root in too many parts of the region.  We are dealing with sectarianism and political divisions that for too long have been a primary political, organizational rallying point in the region.  We’re dealing with economic deprivation and lack of opportunity among too many young people in the region.

And so one of the interesting things to hear from our military leadership is the recognition that this cannot simply be a military campaign.  This has to be a campaign that includes all the dimensions of our power.  We have to do a better job of communicating an alternative vision for those who are currently attracted to the fighting inside Iraq and Syria.  It is going to be absolutely critical to make sure that the political inclusion that Prime Minister Abadi of Iraq is committed to is actually translated into real progress.  It’s going to require us developing and strengthening a moderate opposition inside of Syria that is in a position then to bring about the kind of legitimacy and sound governance for all people inside of Syria.

And so, in addition to denying ISIL safe haven in Iraq and Syria, in addition to stopping foreign fighters, in addition to the intelligence gathering and airstrikes and ground campaigns that may be developed by the Iraqi security forces, we’re also going to have to pay attention to communications.  We’re going to have to pay attention to how all the countries in the region begin to cooperate in rooting out this cancer.  And we’re going to have to continue to deliver on the humanitarian assistance of all the populations that have been affected.  And we have three countries here -- Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey -- who obviously are bearing an extraordinary burden from the displaced persons not just recently over the last few months, but for several years now as a consequence of the civil war in Syria.  That all plays a part in this campaign.

But I want to thank all the nations who are represented here in what is a growing coalition.  I’m encouraged by the unanimity of viewpoints and the commitment of the countries involved to make sure that we’re making steady progress.

Before I close, I do want to say something about another topic that’s obviously attracted a lot of attention, and that is the situation with Ebola.  We have made enormous strides in just a few short weeks in standing up a U.S. military operation in Western Africa that can start building the kind of transport lines and supply lines to get workers, supplies, medicine, equipment into Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.  And a number of the countries who are represented here are really stepping up and doing what’s necessary in order for us to contain this epidemic.

But as I’ve said before, and I’m going to keep on repeating until we start seeing more progress, the world as a whole is not doing enough.  There are a number of countries that have capacity that have not yet stepped up.  Those that have stepped up, all of us are going to have to do more -- because unless we contain this at the source, this is going to continue to pose a threat to individual countries at a time when there’s no place that’s more than a couple of air flights away.  And the transmission of this disease obviously directly threats all our populations. 

In addition, we have not only a humanitarian crisis in West Africa that threatens hundreds of thousands of lives, but we also have the secondary effects of destabilization, economically and politically, that could lead to more severe problems down the road.

So everybody is going to have to do more than they’re doing right now.  And I am reaching out directly to heads of state and government who, I believe, have the capacities to do more.  I spoke yesterday with Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who agrees that everybody has to do more.  And I can assure everybody that the United States will continue to do its part.

With respect to Ebola here in the United States, we are surging resources into Dallas to examine what exactly has happened that ended up infecting the nurse there.  Obviously, our thoughts and prayers are with her and all the courageous health care workers around the country who put themselves in challenging situations in treating this disease.  We are going to make sure that all the lessons learned from Dallas are then applied to hospitals and health centers around the country.

As I’ve said before, we have a public health infrastructure and systems and support that make an epidemic here highly unlikely.  But obviously one case is too many, and we’ve got to keep on doing everything we can, particularly to protect our health care workers because they’re on the front lines in battling this disease.  And we’ve also now instituted some additional screening measures, starting at JFK Airport, that will then apply to a number of other airports where we know the bulk of travelers that may have come in contact with Ebola would be coming through.  We’re confident that we’re going to be able to put those in place in the days ahead.

But in the meantime, our thoughts and prayers are with the nurse, who, like so many nurses and health care workers around the country, day in, day out do what they need to do, sometimes at some risk to themselves, in order to provide the kind of care that we all depend on.  We need to eliminate those risks for them, and we’re confident that we can build the protocols and make sure that they are observed carefully to avoid additional repeats of what’s happened in Dallas. 

But we’re going to be as vigilant as we need to be in order to make sure that this disease is properly contained.  The best way for us to do that, though, is also to make sure and understand that what happens in West Africa has an impact here in the United States and in all the other countries that are represented here.

So thank you very much, everybody.  Thank you.

END
3:41 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 10/14/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:56 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Nice to see you all.  Hope you all had a nice weekend.  Let me do a quick announcement at the top, Julie, and then we’ll get to your questions, okay?

Over the past few weeks, the President has been talking about our economy’s progress and his vision for continuing to build on that foundation by creating good jobs and ensuring that every American who works hard has a fair shot at getting ahead.

On Thursday, at Rhode Island College, the President will continue this focus by talking about the importance of pursuing policies that help women succeed.  This is not a new focus for us, as you know.  Ensuring the economic strength, the strength of our economy for women, has been a top priority for the President throughout this administration and a key part of his Year of Action agenda for 2014.  The President will discuss these efforts and what additional common-sense steps we could take to strengthen our economy by expanding opportunity for women and for all Americans. 

We’ll have more on this in the days ahead, but something to look forward to on Thursday.

Julie, do you want to start us off with questions?

Q    Thanks, Josh.  Turkey is part of this meeting that the President is having today with foreign defense chiefs on the fight against the Islamic State group.  But there are media reports out of Turkey that the Turks have launched strikes against Kurdish rebels, rebels that are aligned with the Kurds fighting the Islamic State in Kobani.  And I’m wondering if at this point the administration thinks that Turkey is being more unhelpful than helpful in this fight against the Islamic State?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say a couple of things about that.  I mean, obviously Turkey is a close ally of the United States -- they’re in NATO -- and we coordinate with Turkey on a wide range of issues.  Over the course of the last several weeks, the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, even John Allen who’s principally responsible for the diplomatic effort to integrate different countries into the coalition, have been in touch with senior leaders in Turkey about the role they can play in this effort.

As a result of the conversations that General Allen had with his Turkish counterparts, I think -- I believe it was just the end of last week, Turkey did announce their willingness to host a training-and-equipping operation on Turkish soil as we build up the capacity of Syrian opposition fighters to take the fight on the ground to ISIL in Syria.  We certainly welcome that commitment and that show of support by the people in the nation of Turkey. 

Previously, based on our earlier conversations, Turkey had made commitments that will be important in stemming the flow of foreign fighters to Syria.  Turkey can also play a role in cracking down on oil smuggling.  As you know, the sale of oil in the black market has been an important way that ISIL has financed their operations.  So shutting down oil smuggling is a key component of our strategy to shut off the supply of financing to ISIL for their operations.

And of course, Turkey has -- as much as anyone else -- provided for the humanitarian needs of those Syrians who are fleeing the terrible violence in their country.  And we’ve seen that there are -- I believe that there are now more than a million refugees fleeing the conflict in Syria who have fled to Turkey.  And Turkey, with the support of the international community, has been trying to meet the humanitarian needs of these individuals. 

So there’s no doubt that Turkey has a lot at stake in resolving this conflict, and we are pleased to be working with them. 

Now, let me just also say that there is a Department of Defense planning team that’s on the ground today in Turkey, working with them to operationalize on their commitment to set up this training-and-equipping operation for Syrian fighters in Turkey.  And I would anticipate that in the weeks and months ahead, not only will we continue to be in touch with them on operationalizing on the commitments that they’ve already made, but also having ongoing discussions with them about additional commitments they could make to support this broad international coalition.

Q    But despite everything you said, there are other signs that Turkey isn’t being helpful.  I can’t imagine that you see the strikes today against the Kurds as being helpful.  And there’s also confusion over whether there actually is an agreement with the U.S. and Turkey to use bases in Turkey to launch attacks.  Can you offer any clarity on that?

MR. EARNEST:  That is an issue -- this issue of military bases in Turkey is an issue that continues to be discussed between American officials and Turkish officials.

Q    So at this point there is no formal agreement on that front?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think that might be obvious from the public comments from both sides.  But this is something that we continue to discuss with them.

Q    And if I could just move on to Ebola.  The CDC says that it has not established the exact number of health workers that were treating the patient in Dallas who died from Ebola.  And I’m just wondering how that is possible.  Wouldn’t that have been one of the first things you would have done, is had the CDC take inventory of all the people who came into contact with this man?

MR. EARNEST:  The CDC is working on an investigation to determine how exactly this transmission of Ebola occurred at the hospital in Texas.  This is the result of an order that the President gave in the context of the meeting that he convened on Sunday.  He ordered the CDC to expedite their investigation of how this specific transmission occurred.

What the CDC is also doing is they are also conducting a broader review of the infection control procedures that were in place at this Texas hospital, including the use of personal protective equipment.  And this will be part of the ongoing investigation to what’s happening there.

In terms of the status of that investigation, in terms of how many people they’ve identified, I’d refer you to the CDC on that.

Q    But they’re saying that they don’t have this exact tally, and I’m just wondering -- we keep hearing from officials about the urgency of this and how there’s no room for error, and then we’re told that there’s not an exact count of the number of health workers that were in contact with this man, health workers who presumably are treating other patients, who are going home to their families and having contact with other people.  How should the public feel about when they hear on the one hand that there’s urgency, and then on the other hand that we don’t exactly know how many people came in contact with this patient?

MR. EARNEST:  Sure.  I’m glad you asked the question that way, because it is important for people to understand the context here.  The thing that the CDC has been doing is they have asked the individuals who were in contact with what’s described as the “index patient” in Texas to -- they are actively monitoring their health conditions.  And the reason that that’s important is -- by actively monitoring their health, they’re taking their temperature.  The reason that’s important is because individuals are only contagious with Ebola if they are exhibiting symptoms of Ebola.  That is why we continue to be confident that based on the medical infrastructure that we have in place in this country, that the risk of an Ebola outbreak in America is exceedingly low. 

But at the same time, it’s important for us to put in place the necessary protocols to ensure that when Ebola cases do materialize, that health care workers can do the brave and courageous work that they already do to try to meet the needs of these individuals that have been stricken with Ebola, without putting themselves at great risk.  And it is clear that more needs to be known about what exactly happened in this Texas hospital, and that’s why you’re seeing the CDC conduct this investigation into this apparent incident, the transmission incident, but also looking more broadly at what sort of infection control procedures were in place to give additional advice to hospitals across the country about dealing with these circumstances.

Roberta.

Q    I want to ask about Kobani.  And CENTCOM announced that there were 21 airstrikes on Islamic State targets in the past two days.  And I’m wondering if this represents a significant increase in U.S. airpower for this city.  Is this some kind of strategic shift into trying to prevent it from falling into the hands of Islamic State?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, for a number of days, maybe even more than a week now, there have been coalition airstrikes against ISIL targets in that region of Syria.  Bu the broader strategy that the President has laid out has not changed; that our broader goal here is to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL.  And the goal -- the reason that goal has been laid out is because the President believes it is a core principle that we cannot allow extremist organizations or individuals access to a safe haven.  And that essentially is what Syria was on the verge of becoming for them -- that because of the power vacuum that has been created by the ongoing violence in Syria, there was concern about ISIL establishing a safe haven in Syria and using a safe haven like that to carry out attacks against the West or even the United States.

So you have seen the President put in place this strategy for dealing with that, and that involves marshaling this international coalition of 60-some odd countries that are participating.  And we’re seeing airstrikes conducted by the United States and our coalition partners in Syria, in pursuit of that broader goal.  But yes, as you point out, we’ve also seen airstrikes in this region of Syria.  That reflects a continuation of our broader strategy, not a change in it.

Q    So we shouldn’t read anything special or of significance into the fact that there were so many strikes on one location in a short period of time?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think there are -- I mean, what the Department of Defense can give you more detail on is the fact that there are a large number of strikes taking place across Syria in pursuit of our broader goal.

Q    Is there any indication of how badly Islamic State targets were hit in this series of strikes -- how successful the series of strikes were?

MR. EARNEST:  I’d refer you to the Department of Defense for that assessment.  They’re the ones that are responsible for carrying out these strikes.

The other thing that I should mention, Roberta, that is worth remembering -- and I’ve mentioned this once before, so I’ll keep this short -- there are limitations to, based on the strategy that we’ve laid, that the kind of success that we enjoy in Iraq in avoiding -- or at least certain -- in Iraq, the United States and our coalition partners took airstrikes in support of Iraqi security forces to avoid humanitarian disasters in places like Sinjar Mountain and the village of Amerli.  These were situations -- or these were scenarios in which ISIL fighters had essentially cornered racial and ethnic minorities in these areas, vowing to essentially carry out a genocide against them.

We’re seeing a similar situation in Kobani, where ISIL fighters are marshaled around this one specific city, vowing to carry out acts of violence against the citizens there.  The difference is that there were Iraqi security forces on the ground in Sinjar Mountain -- around Sinjar Mountain and around the village of Amerli that could end that siege; that these airstrikes were conducted in support of ground operations that were executed by Iraqi security forces. 

Those kinds of ground forces don’t exist in Syria right now.  We don’t have elements of the moderate opposition who can take the fight to ISIL on the ground.  That will necessarily limit the kind of impact we can have on a situation like the one that we’re seeing in Kobani.

Now, airstrikes will have an impact, but that impact is constrained by the fact that there aren’t forces on the ground that can follow up on those airstrikes to end that siege.

Roberta, did you have anything else?

Q    No.

MR. EARNEST:  Okay.  We’ll move around.  Justin.

Q    I wanted to ask, I guess, more generally about Ebola and what’s going on with ISIS, and whether you guys are at all concerned that -- in both cases you’ve asked for more time, more time to train ground troops in Syria, more time to investigate what’s going on with Ebola.  But ahead of midterm elections, we’re seeing the President’s approval ratings, especially issues of confidence in the administration falling.  So I’m wondering if these challenges create a -- or if these issues create a political challenge for you guys to present confidence in an administrative ability for the President when you guys seem to think that you need more time on both those issues.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Justin, again, as somebody who is a close observer of the political process, I would anticipate that you would view these kinds of issues through that lens.  That’s not the way that we view it here at the White House.  The sense of urgency that we feel about these individual circumstances is driven by the significant stakes involved.  Ensuring that we can deny ISIL fighters a safe haven in Syria is a core national security priority.  The strategy that we have laid out to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL is a core component of our efforts to protect the American people around the globe and here at home. 

So it shouldn’t be a surprise that’s a top priority.  And the fact that in just a matter of a few weeks here the President assembled a significant international coalition to take the fight to ISIL in Iraq and in Syria, and to carry out hundreds of -- or at least more than a hundred airstrikes against ISIL targets in Iraq and in Syria, is an indication that the President has moved quickly with the broader international coalition, consistent with our strategy to protect the American people.  I think that speaks well of his leadership.  I’ll leave it to you to assess the political implications of the President’s successful execution of that strategy so far.

As it relates to Ebola, again, I think the concern that people have across the country about this is understandable.  We’re talking about a deadly disease.  But what we have seen is we’ve seen the U.S. government and our scientific experts act quickly to ensure that American interests are protected.  The President, about a month ago, appeared at the CDC and announced that he was sending a contingent of Department of Defense personnel to leverage their logistical expertise to try to confront the outbreak of Ebola at the source in West Africa. 

We know, based on our previous history of dealing with these kinds of outbreaks over the last four decades or so, that the only way to eliminate the Ebola risk to the American public is to stop the outbreak at its source, and that’s what we’re working to do.  In addition to that, we’re obviously taking the necessary precautions here to contain an outbreak in the United States.  We continue to believe that risk of that is exceedingly low because of the way that Ebola is transmitted and of the modern medical infrastructure that we have in this country.

Again, I think that reflects a prompt response from this administration to dealing with this threat.  But again, I’ll leave it to all of you to assess what sort of impact that will have on an election that’s still three or four weeks away.

Q    Sure.  But, I guess, the question is that there’s frustration that, I guess, despite those efforts or despite the plan that you guys have laid out maybe to us, that that doesn’t seem to be helping the President on either of those issues politically.  And I also wonder if that at all is leading you guys to reconsider your strategy towards the President’s campaign-related activities.  We’ve seen him only once or twice now get on stage with a candidate; I know there’s a couple more this week. 

But unlike 2010, when the President was with vulnerable Democrats in swing districts, we haven't seen the President go out and make either the case for his policies or the case for why vulnerable Democrats in key races should be reelected.  So I’m wondering kind of your reaction to both of those.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, the thing that we’re focused on are our core national security priorities and the health and safety of the American people.  And those things I think we would all agree are far more important than politics -- even when we’re talking about an important election like the one that’s coming up.  So that really is where we’re focused right now.

As time allows, the President will take advantage of the opportunity to make the case in support of those candidates, particularly Democrats, who are supportive of policies that benefit middle-class families across the country.  Those are where the President’s priorities lie, and to the extent that the President can be helpful to candidates who share those priorities, the President will look forward to an opportunity to do so.

Major.

Q    So at Andrews, is the meeting with the defense chiefs to develop a new strategy, or streamline the one you currently have?

MR. EARNEST:  The meeting that is being convened at Andrews Air Force Base later today is with about 21 of the U.S.’s partners in this broader international coalition against ISIL.  Those who are participating in the meeting are at the chief-of-defense level.  This is something I’ve only learned in the last couple of days.  These are, essentially, the international counterparts to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.  So again, these are the military leaders of the militaries who are participating in this broader international coalition.

This is a meeting that Chairman Dempsey convened here in this country.  It will last for a couple of days.  The President will participate in one meeting of this broader series of meetings.  And this is all part of the effort to continue to integrate our broader strategy and to ensure that the military capabilities or our partners is integrated and effectuated in pursuit of this operation.

Q    Integrated and effectuated.  Are you sticking with the same strategy?  You believe it’s working?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes.  And we’re in the early days of the execution of that strategy, but certainly the early evidence indicates that this strategy is succeeding. 

Q     Because there are -- and I don’t need to tell you this -- several analysts who look at Kobani, if it falls, it will be the third city on the Syrian-Turkish border to do so.  Anbar is now 80 percent controlled by ISIS.  They are 15 miles away from Baghdad.  If you take that outer perimeter from Baghdad and go east, it’s an area of control of about 350 miles.  That doesn’t read to many analysts like success.  Why does it look like success to this administration?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I can cite -- we’ve gone to this a few times before, that there are specific episodes where the use of military force has succeeded in beating back an ISIL advance, or stopping the siege of a vulnerable humanitarian target.  We have seen that our strikes have had an impact on targets in Syria, that the ability of ISIL to command and control their forces has been affected by the airstrikes. 

At the same time, I don’t think anybody has sought to leave you or anyone else with the impression that these kinds of airstrikes were going to dramatically reverse the situation on the battlefield overnight.  They won’t.  We’ve been pretty candid about the fact that this is a longer-term proposition, and it’s predicated on something that necessarily does take a long time, which is building up the capacity and capability of forces on the ground to take the fight to ISIL.  The President has made a strategic decision that there will not be American boots on the ground, in a combat role, taking the fight to ISIL. 

But what we can do is we can build up the capacity of Iraq security forces, and we can build up the capacity of Syrian opposition fighters to take the fight to ISIL.  That is a core component of this strategy.  And until that aspect of the strategy is ramped up, that is a necessary component of the strategy that will allow us to see more significant results on the battlefield.  But the aspects of the strategy that have been implemented so far have been characterized by having an impact on ISIL in a negative way for them.

Q    To follow up on Roberta’s question, does the President regard Kobani as strategically significant and worthy of defense?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, in terms of our broader strategy, our broader strategy is to ensure that ISIL cannot operate in a virtual safe haven in Syria.  And so to the extent that ISIL is trying to carve out a safe haven in Syria in the midst of all this violence, we want to take airstrikes that can degrade their ability to do exactly that.  That, ultimately, at some point, is going to require some forces on the ground who can take the fight to them.

More broadly, we have sought, where possible, to try to avoid humanitarian -- terrible humanitarian situations from occurring.  So I talked about the situations at Sinjar Mountain and Amerli in Iraq.  Our capability to do that in Syria is limited by the fact that we don’t have ground forces that can follow up on coalition airstrikes.  So --

Q    But what Roberta is getting at is that we should not interpret the increased volume of airstrikes in and around Kobani as a strategic decision on behalf of this government and its coalition to protect it at all costs; that it is so strategically important that you don’t want it to fall, and therefore that is why the airstrikes have stepped up in number and ferocity.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, of course we don’t want the town to fall.  We are very concerned, as we’ve said many times, about the citizens who live there and the citizens who are threatened by ISIL.  Again, the fact that they are encroaching on this city and seeking to take it over is just further evidence that ISIL is an extremist organization that is willing to perpetrate terrible acts of violence that are worthy of global condemnation.

So we certainly do not want the town to fall.  At the same time, our capacity to prevent that town from falling is limited by the fact that airstrikes can only do so much.  Airstrikes can have an effect and have an impact, and they already have, but they are made more effective when there is a ground force that can take the fight to ISIL in the aftermath of those kinds of airstrikes.  That ground force doesn’t yet exist, but is a ground force that we are actively working to ramp up our assistance to and setting up training-and-equipping operations in Saudi Arabia and Turkey, where we can provide additional training and expand the capacity of Syrian opposition fighters so that after they’re trained and after they’re equipped, they can be used -- or they can go and fight ISIL in their own country, and they can do so with the strong backing of coalition airstrikes in a way that will make them, we think, more effective.

Q    On Ebola, in this briefing room, on October the 3rd, Lisa Monaco said, “I want to emphasize that the United States is prepared to deal with this crisis both at home and in the region.  Every Ebola outbreak over the past 40 years has been stopped.  We know how to do this, and we will do it again.  With America’s leadership, I am confident, and President Obama is confident, [that] this epidemic will also be stopped.”  Do you believe that was -- considering what has happened since October 3rd -- a regrettable bit of over-confidence?

MR. EARNEST:  Not at all.  That continues to be true to this day.

Q    Everything that’s happened since then is consistent with the United States being able to handle and deal with this --

MR. EARNEST:  Absolutely.

Q    -- in a way that reassures the American public?

MR. EARNEST:  Absolutely.  What the CDC is doing is that they are working, consistent with the advice of our medical experts, to investigate exactly what happened in terms of the transmission of Ebola at that Dallas hospital.  They’re reviewing infection control procedures, including the use of personal protection equipment.  They are ensuring that hospitals and health care workers all across the country know and are actually following the protocols that are in place.  And the President has directed the CDC to examine what more the CDC and their experts can do to support hospitals who are currently treating Ebola patients.

That’s one of the reasons that this additional team of experts from the CDC went to the Dallas hospital over the weekend, is to assist -- to ramp up their assistance to the doctors who are treating this health care worker who did contract the virus.

But again, because of all of this -- because of the leveraging of these assets, we continue to believe that the risk of an Ebola outbreak here in the United States is exceedingly low.

Q    Does the President need an Ebola czar?

MR. EARNEST:  At this point, we have a structure in place in which the CDC and HHS are responsible for the efforts to contain Ebola here in this country.  They’re working closely with health care professionals all across the country to ensure that protocols are in place and they’re properly educated about what to do in the unlikely event that they’re presented with an Ebola case. 

We’ve got DOD and USAID and even CDC personnel that are on the ground in West Africa to try to attack this outbreak at the source.  They’re all performing different functions, but they’re all critical to the success of attacking this outbreak in West Africa.  That is the only way that we’ll entirely eliminate the risk to the American people, is by stopping this outbreak at the source.

And then you’ve also seen the Department of Homeland Security and their work with their partners to put in place these screening measures both in West Africa, in the midst of a transportation system, and five airports in this country, to also protect the American public.

So there are a lot of agencies that are involved.  Lisa Monaco is the President’s Homeland Security Advisor, and she is the one that from here at the White House continues to play the role of coordinating the efforts of all of those agencies.  But ultimately, each of those agencies understands exactly what they’re responsible for, and they have experts in this field that can ensure that the American people remain safe.

Q    So the President does not need one?

MR. EARNEST:  At this point, we have a very clear line of responsibility, and that’s what we’ve been using so far.

Viqueira.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  You’ve repeatedly said -- in Mount Sinjar, the Mosul Dam, the fight for Amerli -- that there are individual battles in the service of a larger cause of a goal, strategic goal to degrade and destroy ISIL.  But there doesn’t seem to be a lot of evidence on the battlefield that ISIL is being degraded or destroyed.  What evidence can you provided that the campaign is effective?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what I’d do is I’d refer you to the Department of Defense.  They’re conducting battle damage assessments of the airstrikes, and they have periodically conducted briefings to talk about the results of those airstrikes.

Q    I mean, they’re sweeping through Anbar Province.  They’re miles from the Baghdad airport, not to mention what’s going on in Syria.  Aside from the individual number of airstrikes -- we’re dazzled by 700 sorties and numbers like that -- but what hard evidence can you provide that people can see that the strategy is effective?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, for a tactical assessment of the airstrikes, I’d refer you to the Department of Defense.  They’re the ones that -- again, they’ve conducted briefings a couple of times with maps, walking through exactly what the targets were and what impact the strikes had on those specific targets.  So they can give you that broader assessment.

The thing that I’ll tell you in terms of our broader strategy is that the President has been candid from the outset that this is a longer-term proposition and that it’s going to require, ultimately, an effective fighting force on the ground.  And the President has determined that it’s not in the best interest of the United States for us to send American troops in a combat role on the ground in these countries. 

So we’re going to build up the capacity of local fighters to take the fight to ISIL on the ground in their own countries, and that’s the proper role for us to play.

Q    On that point, you’ve mentioned there’s a difference between Syria and Iraq in that regard; there’s no force on the ground in Syria, at least not yet.  Yet there is a force on the ground in Iraq and they’re losing.  Can you trust the Iraqi army to take this fight to ISIL?  That is a pillar of the strategy. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we certainly do believe that the Iraqi security forces, by working closely with the United States through our joint operation centers, by working closely with Kurdish security forces, which they have on a number of occasions, can be an effective fighting force.  We certainly do anticipate that they will continue to be more effective as they have a central government in Baghdad that reflects the will of all the people that essentially is uniting the country politically to confront the threat that’s posed by ISIL.  That will ultimately steel the will of Iraqi security forces to fight ISIL. 

But there’s no doubt that there’s more that needs to be done.  One of the things the United States has done in the last few months is ramp up our assistance to Iraqi security force as well, to make sure they have the equipment and training that they need.  And yes, there is more work that needs to be done.  And we are confident though that over time, that as we improve the capacity and capability of Iraq security forces, and as we back them up with coalition airstrikes, that they will be more effective on the battlefield.

Q    Finally, as ISIL gets closer to Baghdad, is there a risk of inflamed sectarian tensions, and in further involvement from Iran in backing Shia militias to defend what is a majority Shia city?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, in this region of the world I think that we’re always concerned about the risk of sectarian tensions and what impact that could have on a broader political equation.

But in this case, we continue to have confidence in the leadership of Prime Minister Abadi who has demonstrated a commitment to governing in a way that reflects the unity of the nation of Iraq, that he has succeeded -- at least in the early days of his tenure -- in uniting the country of Iraq, and particularly the diverse populations of that nation.  But that is a track record that you build up over time.  And we have been pleased by the initial indications and by the initial decisions and comments that he had made, but that is a track record, again, that he’ll have to establish over some time.  And that political effort will be very important to ensuring that in the midst of this turmoil and chaos, that Iraq doesn’t fall apart once again along sectarian lines.

Ed.

Q    On Mike’s question, when we were told that this Iraqi base was taken over yesterday by ISIS, there were about 400 Iraqi security forces there and they were told to go into retreat.  So how can you suggest you have confidence in the Iraqi military if they’re in retreat in a key battle?

MR. EARNEST:  Because there are a number of places where we have successfully partnered with Iraqi security forces to take the fight to ISIL.

Q    This is in the last 24 hours -- they went into retreat.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I recognize that you’re choosing one example -- and it’s a relevant one -- but there are also relevant examples from earlier this summer to indicate that Iraq security forces, by partnering with the United States, was successful in countering the threat from ISIL.

So again, this is going to be a longer-term proposition -- there’s no doubt about that.  And we’re going to continue to work closely with Iraqi security forces to build up their capability so that they can do a better job on the battlefield against ISIL fighters.

Q    Are we winning?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?

Q    Are we winning?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, we’re talking about a coalition of 60 nations that are working closely with Iraqi security forces and working to build up Syrian opposition fighters, and there is no doubt that we can point to the success in the early days of this strategy.

Q    So we’re winning?

MR. EARNEST:  I mean, when you say “we” we’re talking about a coalition of 60 nations --

Q    That’s why I said “we.”

MR. EARNEST:  -- working closely with Iraq to successfully implement. 

Q    So we’re winning?

MR. EARNEST:  And yes, we are succeeding in this effort.

Q    Okay.  Because Eugene Robinson in The Washington Post today had a column saying, “It’s not too soon to state the obvious: At this point, the war against the Islamic State can be seen only as failing.”  He went on to say, “I’m not sure whether the President and his aides are guilty of optimism or self-delusion.”  How do you react to that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I can understand the sense of urgency that Mr. Robinson and others may have about dealing with this threat.  I assure you that it’s a sense of urgency that the President himself feels, and I think it’s one that he’s conveyed at this podium and in other settings over the last several months.

That’s why you’ve seen the administration move out quickly to build this broad international coalition and to move aggressively in carrying out airstrikes that have had an effect against ISIL targets both in Iraq and in Syria. 

Q    The last one on this and I want to go to another topic.  But if the President feels the same urgency, to Major’s earlier question, why -- it didn’t seem like you suggested there was going to be a change in strategy.  Why is today’s meeting not about at least adjusting the strategy?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we’re always refining the strategy.  But the fact is, the broader strategy that we have put in place for degrading and ultimately destroying ISIL is making important progress.  There’s a whole lot more work to be done.  This is a longer-term proposition, as the President has been saying for several weeks now.  And the President is determined to ensure that we’re pursuing the kind of strategy that will protect the American people and our interests around the globe, and that’s exactly what we’re doing.

Q    On the midterms, what does it say that a Democratic Senate candidate, like Alison Grimes, won’t say whether or not she even voted for the President?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t know.  I’ve seen some of the news reports about her campaign, but I don’t know.  I mean, I’ll tell you that I voted for the President.  (Laughter.)

Q    Why wouldn’t a Senate candidate say, I voted for him?  A Democrat -- why wouldn’t a Democrat?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, you’d have to ask her and her campaign.

Q    And last one.  I know Mark Knoller and others have asked you about this, and I wasn’t sure if you were going to add it as an addendum -- it was asked last week here at the briefing.  You said you were going to look into what the costs are for the President in terms of taxpayers -- how much it costs taxpayers when the President uses Air Force One and other resources to do campaign fundraising?  Do you have any idea what those costs are?  And can you get them?

MR. EARNEST:  I can look into that.  What I can certainly do is give you a sense of what our policies are and how and whether they’re consistent with previous administrations.

Q    Well, we know that the cost was split.  But I guess, what is it it?  A million dollars?  It is $10 million?  It is a hundred -- I understand it was a 50/50 split with the DNC, the procedures, if there’s some official business or a campaign.  But that doesn’t really tell the American people how much does it cost them.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, we’ll look into this and see if we can provide some information.

Q    Do you have a timeframe?  Because midterms are coming up.  (Laughter.) 

Q    Sometime in the next three weeks?

MR. EARNEST:  Yeah, exactly.  (Laughter.)  Look, I don’t --

Q    It’s a serious question, though.  I understand that you think we’re pressing you, but how much does it cost?  It’s a simple --

MR. EARNEST:  Okay, well, I don’t have the information in front of me.  I’ll get back to you.

Chris.

Q    Well, to follow up on that, we know that the President is going to be with Governor Malloy, but is there a sense at this point with the clock ticking about how much more we’ll see him with candidates, particularly Democratic gubernatorial and Senate candidates in these closing weeks?

     MR. EARNEST:  I do anticipate that the President will make some additional campaign appearances beyond the event that’s been announced for later this week -- I believe it’s Wednesday or Thursday -- Wednesday, tomorrow.  We’ll have some campaign events in which the President will be speaking, in addition to the one that is already taking place tomorrow.

     Q    It’s not just Alison Grimes who is distancing herself.  There are campaign ads from Natalie Tennant, Mark Begich, Mark Pryor, Joe Garcia have all distanced themselves from the President.  Is this disappointing to him?

     MR. EARNEST:  No, the President is pleased on the record that he has amassed in his six years -- almost six years in office.  That from ensuring that we could recover from the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression to putting in place the policies that were critical to the success and rebuilding and renaissance of the American auto industry, the President shepherded over the process that reformed our health care system in a way that is paying dividends for small businesses and middle-class families all across the country. 

     On the President’s watch, we’ve seen the greatest reform of our financial system since the Great Depression in a way that has significantly enhanced protections for consumers.  So if you take a look at the President’s record, the President is pleased with the success that he has had on behalf of the American people and pursuing the kinds of values that he wants.

     Q    So since he has a strong case to make, is he disappointed he is not out there more?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, the President obviously has got a few things on his plate these days, but the President is looking forward to the opportunity to campaign with other candidates in advance of the midterms.

Q    And, again, tying this into what else is going on and the questions raised by people like Gene Robinson about the effectiveness about ISIS, questions that are being raised about the response to Ebola, I mean, repeated assurances that American hospitals can safely treat Ebola and, of course, we know a nurse in Dallas was infected.  There’s a large set of examples in the New York Times today about Emory University and some of the problems that they have had in Atlanta.  Does this raise -- do these raise questions of competency in government? 

MR. EARNEST:  I’m surprised that you raised the Emory example, because this is an example of a medical facility that did safely treat and help at least two patients recover from Ebola.  So I think that’s actually a pretty good indication that the American people can have confidence --

Q    They faced a series of problems that were unanticipated, including --

MR. EARNEST:  Unanticipated.  But yet, Chris, this is the thing -- we’ve got to be focused on the results.  The fact that problems occur when we’re dealing with a deadly disease shouldn’t be a surprise to anybody.  The question is how do you respond to them.  And what you saw at Emory was you saw that two patients recovered from Ebola, thanks to the life-saving treatment they got from American doctors with the support of the federal government.  And what you’re seeing is a response in Dallas to ensure that the safety of this one health care worker who put her life on the line to try to treat one Ebola patient -- that is what makes America, America.  There’s no other country in the world that is taking the kind of efforts that we are to confront this outbreak at the source.  But yet, what you are seeing is that our involvement in that effort is galvanizing the international community to contribute more assets to dealing with that. 

And all of that is in pursuit of -- I mean, as I said, I started out this briefing by saying that the risks of an outbreak -- of an Ebola outbreak in the United States is exceedingly low.  But the fact is, we are ensuring that the United States continues to be a force for good in the world, so you’re seeing the significant commitment of resources in West Africa.  You’re also seeing a commitment on behalf of the United States, on behalf of this President, to ensure that we drive down the risk of an Ebola outbreak to zero.  And the only way we can do that is to attack this outbreak at its source.  And that’s why you’re seeing the United States make the most significant commitment to that.

This is something that, by the way, the United States government has been focused on since this outbreak occurred back in March.  So we’re not driven by the headlines here.  We’re not driven by the midterm elections.  What we’re driven by are results, and that’s what we’re focused on.

Q    Well, where are those results -- the WHO figures today that 70 percent is now the mortality rate and that the number of new cases could reach 10,000 per week by December?

MR. EARNEST:  That’s true, Chris.  You’re citing the problems again.  And these are significant problems.  And that’s what the administration is focused on.

Q    But you’re saying results, and you’re saying the importance is what happens at the source.  What’s happening at the source is that there’s a 70 percent mortality rate.

MR. EARNEST:  What’s happening at the source is that there’s a significant problem, and the United States of America is doing more than anybody else to confront it.

J.C.

Q    I want to follow up a little bit on that in terms of the global aspect.  Unfortunately, Mr. Duncan was the first to succumb to the Ebola virus here in the United States.  A little bit of geography: He got on a plane in Monrovia, in Liberia; he flew to Brussels, got on a plane to Brussels and flew to Dulles, right, close by across the river in Virginia. 

It is, to some, very comforting that the President was on the phone yesterday with President Hollande of France.  In Europe, there are many gateway cities that take individuals from the continent of Africa, they go through Belgium, they go through the Netherlands, France, U.K. and Germany.  Each of those leaders in those countries have a specific protocol -- some less stringent, some more stringent than others. 

Will the President be consulting with, discussing with other leaders -- as he has with President Hollande, including Chancellor Merkel who has put more strict protocols in place, and Prime Minister Cameron -- as to a coordinated effort as to the screening process of individuals who go through those gateways cities in Europe and come to the United States, and who are not so easily detected when they go through that particular process?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say a couple things about that, J.C.  The first is, all indications are that the index patient, the one who unfortunately did succumb to this disease last week, was asymptomatic when he was traveling.  So this is somebody who would not have been contagious, even though he had Ebola.  He would not have been contagious and did not pose a risk to the broader traveling public.  That’s the first thing.

The second thing is there are screening measures in place to protect cities around the world that start in West Africa.  That there is a training regimen that Mr. Shear’s colleague, Helene Cooper, wrote about over the weekend.  She talked about how many times her temperature was taken on the ground in West Africa before she was allowed to leave.  And that is indicative of the protocols that are currently in place under the supervision of international experts, including the CDC, to ensure the safety of the traveling public and to ensure that -- or at least minimize the risk of Ebola spreading.  So that’s the second thing.

The third thing is it’s the responsibility of all of these European leaders to decide for themselves what sort of protocols they want to have upon arrival in their countries.  But, fourth, there is a protocol for travelers who are arriving in this country -- that those individuals are screened once again, and we just announced at the end of last week some additional screening protocols that would be in place for those travelers who did originate or recently travel from countries in West Africa where there is an Ebola outbreak.

Q    May I just follow up?

MR. EARNEST:  Sure.

Q    And I don’t mean to -- well, I do actually mean it, so I’m going to say it.  (Laughter.)

MR. EARNEST:  You can belabor it, it’s fine.

Q    Just a tiny bit.  It is also a known fact that many individuals have dual passports.  Many individuals who come from Europe and may stay in those key cities for a length of time may not have particular instances where they have -- they’re presenting with a fever.  Others can take ibuprofen or other anti-inflammatories and lower the fever, get on the plane, and get to America where some, possibly, may think they’re going to get help.  So that’s just something else that is out there and in the discussion.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I can’t speak to the medical veracity of what you’re describing, but the fact is we’ve had an outbreak for seven or eight months now, and the number of travelers who have gone through the system is obviously very small in terms of who made it to the United States.  That’s because of the protocols that are already in place on the ground in West Africa and on the ground here in the United States.  So we’ve got protocols in place.

I mean, the other statistic that I’ve seen is that there are dozens of people who have been denied boarding an aircraft in West Africa because they had a fever.  So that is an indication that these screening measures that take place before anybody gets on an airplane are having an effect.

Jon.

Q    Josh, a couple quick ones.  One on Ebola.  Your statement on the President’s meeting yesterday referred to a “surge in personnel and other resources to Dallas.”  How many people are going to Dallas as a part of that surge?

MR. EARNEST:  I believe that so far there’s been a commitment of a team of individuals from CDC.  I’d refer you to CDC in terms of the number of individuals. 

Q    Because my understanding is it was nine people.  Is that what you consider a surge?  I’m just trying to get our terminology down. 

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, what we are focused on is ensuring that we have the necessary experts in place.  And that builds on the experts who are already on the ground in Dallas.  And one of the things the President did ask the CDC to focus on is to examine what additional resources and additional personnel they can mobilize to support hospitals that are treating Ebola patients.

     Q    Okay.  And on another issue, the enrollment period for Obamacare is going to be the beginning of November 15th.  That’s when people will find out how much of a premium increase they face.

     MR. EARNEST:  Or decrease.

     Q    Or decrease.  Why is it that last year October 1st was the date, now it’s November 15th?  Why is it that people have to wait until after the election to find out how much of a premium increase or decrease or whatever?

     MR. EARNEST:  Again, I know that you are a very keen observer of the political process in this country, as you should be, particularly when we have such an important election coming up.  But so many of the important policy decisions that are made in this administration and in this White House are driven by something other than politics.  And so I’d refer you to the Department of Health and Human Services for deadlines they’re establishing.

     Q    But doesn’t this look like something -- I mean, could people be forgiven for thinking this looks like a political move?  I mean, people will not find out how much they’re going to have to pay for their health insurance until after the election, whereas last year they found out on October 1st.  I mean, doesn’t it seem a little bit convenient that now people will have to wait until about 10, 11 days after the election to find out how much their insurance is going to cost?

     MR. EARNEST:  Again, Jon, this date for the beginning of the enrollment period was something that was determined months if not years ago.

     Q    Well, we knew exactly when this election was going to be a long time ago as well.

     MR. EARNEST:  (Laughter.)  It clearly had been circled on your calendar for --

     Q    November 4th, right.

     MR. EARNEST:  It was not circled on the calendar of the experts at the Department of Health and Human Services who are working on this rollout. 

     Q    Okay.  And then just one last one.  Coming back very briefly to the Democratic candidate for Senate in Kentucky.  This is the Democratic Party’s top hope for knocking off an incumbent Republican -- Alison Grimes. 

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, my guess is there are probably some Democratic candidates out there who would quibble with that distinction.

     Q    I’m not sure about that.  But, Josh --

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I will.  (Laughter.)

     Q    You boldly said you voted for the President.  Now, I assume that was in 2008 and 2012?  Twice?

     MR. EARNEST:  I’ve been a longtime supporter.  (Laughter.) 

     Q    Do you believe you have violated the sanctity of the ballot box by telling us who you voted for?  (Laughter.)  Have you broken any constitutional privilege?

     MR. EARNEST:  I’ll leave that for you guys to decide.

     Jim.

     Q    You were saying that the key decisions made by this administration are not driven by politics, but you are delaying the nomination of a new Attorney General until after the midterms for political reasons, isn’t that true?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t’ have any personnel announcements to make at this time.  There is an ongoing personnel -- there is an ongoing process here at the White House to determine who the right person is to lead the Department of Justice over the next two years or so with the remainder of the President’s tenure in office.

     Q    But that was delayed for political reasons primarily?

     MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?

     Q    That was delayed primarily for political decisions.

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I don’t have any announcements to make for you in terms of the timing.  I would anticipate that it will take a little bit of time for the work to be done to determine who the right person is for that important task.  I also would anticipate that the Senate will act quickly and in bipartisan fashion to confirm that person.

     Q    And on getting back to Ebola.  What is the President’s preference:  that people who contract Ebola just go to their neighborhood hospital, or should these people ultimately be treated at biocontainment centers, the CDC’s specialized biocontainment centers?  Should people with Ebola just be treated at any hospital in the U.S. when you might have hospitals with varying standards around the U.S.?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, what I’d do is I would refer to the Centers for Disease Control, who can give you the best sort of assessment medically of what kind of treatment individuals can get.  What I have heard our medical experts indicate is that they do have confidence that many hospitals across the country, if not all of them, do have the modern infrastructure in place to diagnose and isolate individuals that they suspect may have Ebola.  And what they have -- what the President has asked the CDC to do is to figure out what more they can do to support hospitals who find themselves in that situation.

     Now, fortunately, at this point, we’ve only found one hospital that’s been in that situation.  But there certainly is the chance, even the likelihood, that there may be additional cases.  And we want to make sure that we have the protocols in place -- that those protocols have been accurately communicated to hospitals across the country, and that hospitals are actually following those protocols.  That’s a priority. 

     But, again, what the President has also asked the CDC to do is to figure out what more they can do to support hospitals that find themselves in a situation like that.

     Q    And I know you said that the campaign against ISIS is in its early days but that you feel like the strategy is working.  If the President sees that perhaps he’s not getting the desired results out of this air campaign, is he willing to escalate the air campaign against ISIS?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, that would be the kind of recommendation that I think would come from his military planners at the Department of Defense.  So the President meets with them regularly, he regularly gets updates on the status of the ongoing campaign, and I’m confident that the President would want to reserve that option for himself.  But, again, that would be contingent on the kind of advice that he gets from our military planners and something that he would consult with our partners in the coalition on as well.

     Q    And just finally on the midterms.  Can you just answer the general question that seems to be lingering out there that the White House is hiding the President from the campaign trail during this midterm cycle?  He only has a select few events that have been announced so far.  I know you’ve heard that assessment.  What do you make of that assessment?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the first thing that I would observe is the President has been focused on some pretty core national security priorities in the last several weeks.  And that is always going to come first when you’re the Commander-in-Chief of the United States -- at least it always comes first for this Commander-in-Chief.  I’ll let other Commanders-in-Chief decide -- make their own assessments about that, but this President certainly believes that national security priorities come first.

     But the President has also demonstrated an ability on many occasions to do -- to handle more than one priority at a time.  And that’s why I would anticipate that in the weeks ahead you will see the President out doing what he can to support Democratic candidates up and down the ballot in states all across the country.

     Q    Will he appear with a Senate candidate between now and Election Day?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I don’t have any scheduling announcements to make.  There are a number of Senate candidates who have already appeared publicly with the President in a variety of settings.  But in terms of our schedule and the weeks ahead in advance of the election, stay tuned.

     Mike.

     Q    So back to Ebola and Dr. Frieden.  Given the events of the last few days and the perception among some that the CDC has been kind of racing to catch up to events on the ground in Dallas and at the airports with the additional screening, does the President and the White House continue to have confidence that Dr. Frieden is both the right person to lead the CDC at this time but also the right person to be the public face of the response for the administration?

     MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think that there are a lot of people who have been involved in this effort to respond to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa and to respond to the isolated cases that we’ve seen in this country.

     Q    He’s doing the daily briefings every single day.  He’s the principal.

     MR. EARNEST:  He’s doing a lot of that.  I’ve seen Dr. Fauci from the NIH participate in a lot of briefings.  Lisa Monaco convened a briefing here at the White House.  This obviously is a prominent setting, as all of you can attest.  We’ve seen the Department of Defense talk publicly about their role.  Administrator Raj Shah has talked frequently in public about the role that they’re playing.

     So I think what I would describe as the -- in the context of this response are the many faces of members of the administration who are mobilizing assets in support of this important priority.  What we’re going to do is we’re going to be guided by the best scientific advice that we have, and we certainly are going to work closely with experts in other countries.  There are non-governmental organizations, like Doctors Without Borders, that have some expertise in this.  We’re going to continue to work closely with them as we design a response that both addresses the need to confront this outbreak at the source while also ensuring that protocols here in the United States are in place to keep the American people safe and healthy.

     Q    But can you specifically talk about Dr. Frieden?  Does he retain the President’s confidence and is he the right person?

     MR. EARNEST:  He does, and Dr. Frieden is a preeminent physician, somebody that has a lot of experience not just in the medical profession but also in the field of public health.  And he is somebody who in the last few months here has been working almost around the clock to ensure that our response is commensurate with the challenge that is posed here.  And the challenge that's posed is significant, as Chris was walking through the outbreak in Africa is distressing.  And the lack of a medical infrastructure in that country means that there are thousands of people who have died and thousands more who are suffering.

And that is tragic, it’s sad, but it’s also something that we are concerned about because of the more broader, destabilizing impact it could have on the region and because of the risk -- although it’s quite minimal -- that this poses to Americans around the globe.  So the United States is going to play the role that we have played many times, which is leading the international community to respond to an urgent international incident, and Dr. Frieden is playing a very important role in all that.

Q    And just one last clarification.  You had talked I think maybe in answer to Major about -- when you said that government doesn’t need a czar because there are clear lines of responsibility. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t think I used exactly those words, but I did indicate that there are specific lines of responsibility in terms of who’s responsible for carrying out specific objectives in this.

Q    Right.  So who’s in charge?  Like, who does -- you listed all those people -- Raj Shah and the military and the CDC and the NSC and all the different pieces.  Who ultimately do you see in this who is leading the effort and who’s responsible for making sure that all the different pieces are doing what they should be doing?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the interagency coordination effort is something that is being monitored and run -- very capably, I might add -- by Lisa Monaco, who is --

Q    So she’s --

MR. EARNEST:  She’s the President’s Homeland Security Advisor.  But again --

Q    So you would consider her to be the person that’s responsible for the effort globally?

MR. EARNEST:  She is the one that is responsible for coordinating among the varied -- the multifaceted effort that is currently underway by this administration; that we’ve got CDC, Department of Defense, and USAID playing their own very specific structured roles --

Q    And they all report to her, too?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, but again, they’re all playing their very specific structured roles on the ground in West Africa.  You have the CDC and HHS, and even some components of DHS who are responsible for various lines of effort here in this country.

And so they are all principally responsible for fulfilling their own task.  Ensuring that all of their efforts are integrated and coordinated is the responsibility of the President’s Homeland Security Advisor, Lisa Monaco.

Scott.

Q    Josh, just to clarify that.  When we got briefed last week, it was explained that CDC and NIH work as advisors, but they’re still going through the state and local public health officials, right?  You have not nationalized this response?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, that’s correct, that there is still a very important role for state and local health authorities to play in all of this.  There obviously is an important role for medical professionals in communities all across the country and in hospitals across the country to play in all of this to ensure that protocols are updated and followed.

So again, this is a multifaceted effort that’s underway to ensure the safety and health of the American people.  And this is a difficult challenge, but one that our experts are guiding and are dedicated to succeeding in.

April.

Q    Josh, since the latest case of Ebola in Texas was discovered, is there 100 percent certainty that you’re getting still to the White House from health officials to include the CDC, as to how this disease is spread?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, are you talking about this in this one specific case in Dallas? 

Q    I mean, but this one specific case in Dallas could basically translate into other cases, as well.  Is there still a certainty as to how this disease is spread?  Because people were saying that you couldn’t -- after a certain period of time, you couldn’t live and what have you.  And they’re still trying to figure out how she contracted this disease.

MR. EARNEST:  Yes.  I think it’s important not to conflate the two, so let me separate these two things out.

The first is, the CDC is conducting an investigation to determine how the transmission occurred -- how was the virus transmitted from this Ebola patient into the system of this one health care worker who was working heroically to try to save his life.  And that is something that the CDC is still trying to figure out.  And what they’re going to do is they’re going to interview her, the patient; they’re going to interview the -- when I say the patient, I mean the health care worker who is now a patient -- they’re going to interview her colleagues and her coworkers who are also treating this individual.  They’re going to review all the protocols that were going to -- in place -- that were in place.  They’re going to review how all the protocols were implemented, and they’re going to try to determine how this individual, this health care worker contracted the disease.

Now, separate from that, it is very clear how the Ebola virus is spread.  It’s not spread through the air.  It’s not spread through the food and water here in the United States.  It is spread through close contact with the bodily fluids of an individual that is -- has symptoms of Ebola.  That is why we see so many cases involving health care workers, because it’s obvious that it’s health care workers who are, again, because of their courageous service, that they’ve put themselves in a position in which they’re coming into close contact with the bodily fluids of an individual that they know is sick.

They know they’re handling hazardous materials, but yet they put themselves at risk to try to meet the needs of this individual.  And I think that is -- it’s laudable, it’s heroic.  We want to make sure that health care workers -- nurses and doctors -- can do that in a way that doesn’t put themselves at significant risk.

Q    And two other questions.  And as you were saying, the President has a lot on his plate.  The White House put out some papers, emails about what they’re doing when it comes to the Nigerian girls.  What has been the problem, as this administration is trying to help, in the global effort to find the Nigerian girls?  Is it corruption in the Nigerian government, as many throughout Washington would like to say, or have been saying?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, April, the United States, since the month of April, has assisted the Nigerian government in its efforts to locate the abducted girls, and our broader partnership to confront Boko Haram is longstanding. 

As we mark the solemn six-month anniversary of the girls’ abduction, we continue to undertake concerted, effective and responsible actions to ensure the safe return of those kidnapped by Boko Haram, including through on-the-ground technical assistance, expanded intelligence sharing, the effective use of sanctions, and broader engagement with the group.

In May, the United States, as you know, dispatched a multidisciplinary team to Abuja to advise the Nigerians on how to secure the safe return of those kidnapped, encourage a comprehensive approach to address insecurity, and establish a capacity to respond more effectively in the future.  These officials provided guidance to the Nigerian government on conducting a comprehensive response to Boko Haram that protects civilian populations and respects human rights.

Let me add one more thing to that, which is that the team that’s on the ground includes civilian humanitarian experts, U.S. military personnel, law enforcement advisors and investigators, as well as experts in hostage negotiations, strategic communications, civilian security and intelligence.

The reason I went through that is because I wanted to make sure that people understood the kind of commitment that the United States had made to assist the Nigerian government as they try to find these girls.

Q    Is Nigerian corruption some of the problem as to why these girls cannot been found?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, you probably have to talk to somebody who is a better analyst of the Nigerian government to draw that assessment.

Q    All right.  And lastly, on Ferguson -- Ferguson has expanded to a certain extent into St. Louis.  What is the White House doing?  How are they watching the situation?  What are they doing as it relates to this powder keg resulting from the young -- the 18-year-old boy being shot to death by a police officer who has yet to be charged in this incident?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I know that there is -- you’re talking about the most recent incident, I assume?

Q    Yes, St. Louis, which is different, but it’s still kind of extending into that.

MR. EARNEST:  It is.  And I’m hesitant to talk in much detail about that because there is an ongoing law enforcement investigation into that specific incident.  But this is something that is on the radar screen of the White House.

The Department of Justice, in the context of the earlier incident earlier this summer has been working closely with state and local officials to respond to the concerns that have been raised in the community.  And those efforts continue.

Q    Does the White House believe that either the lack of a Surgeon General in place or budget cuts at the NIH and CDC have hurt the government’s response, or in any way materially impacted it?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, I mean, as it relates to the Surgeon General, the President did nominate a highly qualified individual to that post quite some time ago, and we do believe that that person should be confirmed.  In terms of what role the Surgeon General would play in this specific response, I guess what I would say about that is it’s hard to imagine it would hurt, and that we would only benefit from a scenario where we had a dedicated public health professional who was involved in helping us communicate with hospitals and medical professionals all across the country to ensure that these protocols -- the proper protocols were in place and closely followed.

As it relates to funding, we’ve talked many times about the impact that sequestration and other tight budget caps have had on a range of critical health care programs.  That said, this administration continues to be focused on ensuring a focused and coordinated Ebola response both in West Africa and here in the United States.  There are some more statistics I can give you that relate to the efforts of this administration to try to ramp up funding, as we have for a number of years, to those programs within the CDC that are related to prevention and public health.

Q    So you’re saying that -- are you not -- it doesn’t sound like you’re saying whether it would have helped or hurt.  Lots of money has been cut; it’s becoming an issue where even Democrats are using it in ads against Republicans.  Does the White House think it would have had a different -- or would have benefitted if that money had not been cut?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let me say it this way:  I think that what we can all agree is that the role that the CDC plays in preventing the outbreak of disease is critically important to the country, to our citizens, and to our broader economy.  And those are programs and those are efforts that are worth investing in.  And it certainly is disappointing that Republicans, at least to this point, haven’t shared that commitment to investing in those kinds of critically important programs. 

Q    -- on funding, please?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, we’ll move it around.

Q    -- Ebola and Malaria.

MR. EARNEST:  We’ll get you something.  Thanks, everybody.  Have a good day.

END
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