The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Weekly Address: Expanding Opportunity – It’s Time for Congressional Republicans to Do Their Part

WASHINGTON, DC — In this week’s address, the President recapped his visits with folks who have written him letters about their own American stories -- their successes and struggles. While Congressional Republicans are blocking meaningful measures that would strengthen the middle class, the President continues looking for ways to grow the economy and expand opportunity for more hardworking Americans. The President again urged Congress to join him, as they were elected to do, in working on behalf of everyday Americans – including those the President spent time with this week – by investing in our infrastructure to support American jobs, and ensuring that the Highway Trust Fund does not expire.   

The audio of the address and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 a.m. ET, July 12, 2014.

Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
July 12, 2014

Hi, everybody.  This week, I spent some time in Colorado and Texas, talking with people about what’s going on in their lives. 

One of them was Elizabeth Cooper, who’ll be a college junior this fall.  She wrote to tell me something I hear often: how hard it is for middle-class families like hers to afford college.  And she shared something I know many of you feel when you wonder what’s going on in Washington.  She said she feels “not significant enough to be addressed, not poor enough for people to worry [about], and not rich enough to be cared about.”

I ran for President to fight for Americans just like Elizabeth – people who work hard, do everything right, and just want a chance to build a decent life for themselves and their families.

And after the worst economic crisis in generations, our businesses have now created nearly 10 million new jobs over the past 52 months.  The unemployment rate has fallen to its lowest point since 2008.  By almost every measure, our economy is better off than it was five years ago.

But while we’ve created more jobs at this point of the year than any year since 1999, too many families barely earn what they did in 1999.  It’s harder to pay for college, save, or retire, because people’s wages and incomes have not gone up.  Nearly all the gains of the recovery are going to the very top – and aren’t making a difference in your lives. 

And I believe America does better when the middle class does better.  And I’ve laid out an opportunity agenda to create jobs, train workers, educate our kids, and make sure hard work actually pays off.

These are the things we should be doing to grow the middle class and help folks work their way into the middle class.  And it’s pretty uncontroversial stuff. I hope we can work together on it.  And I’m always willing to compromise if folks have other ideas or if it advances generally the interests of working Americans.

But so far this year, Republicans in Congress have blocked every serious idea to strengthen the middle class.  Lifting the minimum wage, fair pay, student loan reform – they’ve said no to all of it.  And that’s when I’ve acted this year to help working Americans on my own– when Congress won’t act. 

I’ve taken actions to attract new jobs, lift workers’ wages, help students pay off their loans, and more.  And the Republican plan right now is not to do some of this work with me – instead, it’s to sue me.  That’s actually what they’re spending their time on.  It’s a political stunt that’s going to waste months of America’s time.  And by the way, they’re going to pay for it using your hard-earned tax dollars.

I have a better idea: do something, Congress.  Do anything to help working Americans.  Join the rest of the country. Join me, I'm looking forward to working with you.

You know, on Tuesday, I met with Carolyn Reed and her husband David, who own six Silver Mine Sub shops in Colorado.  Two days later, they announced they’re giving their hourly employees a raise to ten dollars and ten cents an hour. 

They’re not waiting for Congress.  Carolyn said, “We are happy to be a part of what I hope will be a growing voluntary trend in increased wages.”

Carolyn and Americans like her all across the country are happy to do their part.  Congress now needs to step up and do its part.  And next week, I’ll travel to a couple of job sites to talk about how Democrats and Republicans can work together to grow the economy and protect nearly 700,000 jobs by passing a highway bill by the end of the summer.

I’m here because hardworking Americans like Elizabeth and Carolyn.  That’s something I’ll never forget – it's something I’ll never stop fighting for.  Thanks, and have a great weekend.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Daily Briefing by the Press Secretary, 07/11/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:04 P.M. EDT

MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Glad to see you all on this Friday.  I'll do a couple of quick announcements at the top before we get to questions.

I want to begin first with a quick note about an action that was just taken that is an important step toward fulfilling the President’s ConnectED goal of transforming teaching and learning through expanded access to broadband wireless and digital learning tools in America’s classrooms.

When the President first unveiled his ConnectED initiative a little over a year ago less than 30 percent of our schools reported having the high-speed broadband that they needed, and even fewer had access to wireless in the classrooms to make it truly valuable to the learning environment.  Just a few minutes ago, the FCC voted to modernize the E-Rate program, a step that will expand access to these tools for schools and students across the country. 

Today’s action by the FCC answers the President’s 2014 State of the Union call for a down payment on his ConnectED vision by updating this program and using some of the savings generated to provide a $2 billion investment that will connect an additional 20 million students to high-speed WiFi over the next two years.  We commend the FCC on this important vote and for their continued commitment to increasing vital school and library Internet connectivity, which we believe will help more students get a great education, train them for the jobs of the future, and continue to build a more competitive U.S. economy. 

While more work will be needed to meet the President’s goal of connecting 99 percent of students and their classrooms and libraries over the next four years and ensure that connectivity is put to immediate use enriching classrooms and empowering teachers, today’s step is a major -- or today’s vote is a major step along that path.

And secondly, I want to offer my congratulations to your own Jeff Mason, who I think earlier this week was announced as -- was elected to the Correspondents Association Board and he'll be serving as president in a couple years.  Is that right?

MR. MASON:  Thank you very much. 

MR. EARNEST:  So congratulations.  I know -- (applause.)  Yes, applause I think is in order, which is great. 

Your colleague, Todd Gillman, from the Dallas Morning News, was also elected, and I understand that Doug Mills was also reelected to the board.  So I look forward to working with all of you. 

I think as with all arrivals, there are some departures as well, so I want to also acknowledge the outstanding service of outgoing president Steve Thomma and April Ryan who are departing the board this week.  (Applause.)  Let the record reflect that their contributions should be acknowledged.  There she is.  Better late than never. 

Q    I thought you were going to congratulate LeBron.  (Laughter.)

MR. EARNEST:  We may get to that.  We'll see. 

Nedra.

Q    Thank you.  Congressman Rogers is saying that the House will not pass the President’s border spending request and that it's too large.  Are you looking at making any adjustments or trying to work out some compromise with Republicans on this?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, you heard from the President when he spoke on Wednesday indicate an openness to working with Republicans to ensure that the administration has the necessary resources to deal with this urgent humanitarian situation. 

If you look at the funding request that this administration has put forward, it includes many of the priorities that Republicans themselves have identified.  First of all, it includes a significant investment in border security, assets that can be used to continue the efforts to secure the border.  It also includes some resources to ensure that those adults who are detained with children at the border -- or apprehended at the border can be detained in a way that is in line with some basic humanitarian standards.  It also includes some money through HHS to ensure that the detention of some of the children who are apprehended does not pose a threat to public health, ensuring that there are immunizations and other basic medical care can be rendered where necessary to, again, ensure the protection of public health.

So all of these things are included -- along with some other things -- are included in the appropriations request that we've put forward.  Republicans have indicated that they share the administration’s assessment about the priorities that need to be addressed, and we're open to working with Democrats and Republicans in Congress to get this done.  The thing that I would point out, though, is that the President has moved quickly to be very clear about what specifically needs to be funded and we would like to see Republicans back up their rhetoric with the kind of urgent action that this situation merits.

Q    Could a lower amount be sufficient, even if not ideal, to deal with this problem?  And can you give us a sense if the President personally is getting involved in any negotiations at this point?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I'm not in a position to negotiate line-item figures or the propriety of specific funding levels.  I'll leave that to the experts.  We have put forward what we think is a pretty common-sense proposal to address the needs that are evident, but we're open to a conversation with Republicans if they have some other suggestions.

But again, I think the question really here is the time frame -- are Republicans going to act with a sense of urgency.  Their rhetoric certainly indicates they’re feeling a sense of urgency.  I think the question is if they’re willing to back up that rhetoric with some action.

Q    And the President -- is he making calls or scheduled any meetings at this point?

MR. EARNEST:  I don't know of any specific conversations that the President has personally had on this issue, but I know that there have been a number of conversations between White House officials and congressional officials about the details of this funding request that we've put forward.

Mr. President-elect. 

Q    Thank you, Josh.  A question about Israel.  This is the fourth day of Israeli airstrikes on Gaza, killing 11 more Palestinians, which has brought the death toll up to 96.  Is there anything more the United States can do to stop this violence?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jeff, as you’ll note, the President telephoned Prime Minister Netanyahu from Air Force One yesterday afternoon and reiterated the United States’ strong condemnation of continuing rocket fire into Israel by Hamas and other terrorist organizations in Gaza.  The President, in that telephone call, also did something that we have done several times publicly, which is reaffirm Israel’s right to defend itself against these attacks.  That said, we also condemn the attacks this morning that were launched from Lebanon.

In the course of that telephone call, the President also expressed his concern about the risk associated with further escalation and emphasized the need for all sides in this dispute to do everything they can to protect the lives of civilians and restore calm.

It is evident that civilians have been killed, including children.  That's tragic, and we offer our condolences to the families.

Q    Anything more that the United States can do to make it stop?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as you noted -- I assume you noted in the readout, the other thing the President communicated to Prime Minister Netanyahu was a willingness on the part of the United States to try to play a role in facilitating de-escalation of the violence there.  So there are a number of relationships the United States has that we are willing to leverage in the region to try to bring about an end to the rocket fire that's originating in Gaza and, as we saw this morning, in Lebanon.  And we're interested in taking the kinds of steps that we did about a year and a half ago, in November of 2012, to facilitate a ceasefire and to try to get the situation back on the path of de-escalation. 

Q    Okay.  On a separate issue, is the White House concerned about financial stability in Portugal after the sort of eruption of problems with their largest bank there?

MR. EARNEST:  I've seen the reports about some of the instability that was reported in this one particular financial institution in Portugal.  I don't have any specifics to share with you from here, but I'd refer you to the experts over at Treasury who may be able to give you an assessment about any risk that may pose to Portugal’s economy or even to the global financial system.  But I can tell you that we're aware of the reports and monitoring the situation.

Q    And lastly, does the President have a favorite in the World Cup game on Sunday?  (Laughter.)  And might it be wise for Germany to be that favorite -- (laughter) -- considering what’s going on -- 

MR. EARNEST:  That is a very clever way to ask that question.  (Laughter.)  I appreciate that.  I have not had a chance to speak to the President about the World Cup final.  I know that he watched with some interest the semi-final games earlier this week while we were on the airplane.  Both of them were conveniently timed so that at least part of the game was broadcast while we were in the air.  I don't yet know whether or not the President is going to watch the World Cup final on Sunday, but if he does we'll try to let you know.

Move around a little bit.  Justin. 

Q    I'll ask you a sports one.  Since you mentioned it, the President is a big NBA fan.  I wonder if he has any reaction to LeBron deciding to go back to Cleveland.

MR. EARNEST:  I didn’t speak to him personally about it.  I know that the President is a big fan of LeBron’s.  I think that he, like many of us, even those of us who are not quite as avid NBA fans -- that the President is a fan of somebody that has demonstrated such tremendous skill and athleticism on the court and the President enjoys watching him play.

The President also has had an opportunity to meet him personally a few times and the President does consider him to be a fine young man who carries himself with the kind of professionalism that is really pretty impressive to see.  The fact that he’s made this decision I think is a testament to the kinds of values that he has incorporated into his life and that he says that he’s interested in instilling in his children.  So I think it's a pretty powerful statement about the value of a place that you consider home.

Q    And then a little more seriously, I guess, Darrell Issa has subpoenaed Dave Simas to appear --

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, I'm not sure that's very serious.

Q    But I'm wondering if you guys are planning to both respond to the subpoena and if you guys have taken any steps -- he’s been really kind of -- for a few months on reopening the political office and the possibility of Hatch Act violations that happened during the Bush administration -- so if you guys have taken any steps since reopening the political office to prevent those sorts of things from happening?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Justin, I can tell you that, as you know, based on the frequency of conversations that we've had about this topic here and in other places, that we've been pretty forthcoming in describing the role of the Office of Political Strategy and Outreach. 

In responding to questions from reporters and from Congress, we've explained that the office operates in full compliance with the Hatch Act, and to date, there’s not even any suggestion let alone evidence that we've deviated from the requirements of the Hatch Act.  In fact, the Office of Special Counsel recognized in its 2011 report the propriety of having an office in the White House to provide the President with information about the current political environment and political issues nationwide.  So I'd encourage you to check out that report if you're as interested in this topic as Darrell Issa apparently is. 

We have provided substantial information to Congress and we're going to continue to cooperate with Congress to demonstrate our continued compliance with the Hatch Act.  And the fact is that there’s not really any evidence to indicate that there’s a reason for Mr. Simas to appear before Congress.  But for years there have been efforts between members of Congress and the White House to resolve these kinds of differences and to allow the legislative branch to perform the necessary function of oversight.  So we're going to continue our dialogue with Congress and do our best to make sure that they’re getting the kind of information and answers that they need when it comes to this matter.

But again, I just want to remind you and everyone else who’s covering this that there’s not even a shred of evidence to indicate any cause for concern. 

Q    -- right now, or --

MR. EARNEST:  As you point out, while the news release was probably issued a few hours ago, we only recently received the subpoena, so we're still reviewing it.

Q    How confident is the President now after his call with Prime Minister Netanyahu that Israel will not resort to a ground incursion in Gaza?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the United States has indicated on many occasions that Israel has a right to self-defense.  And right now, many of the citizens of Israel are subject to a barrage of rockets that are being launched from Gaza and reports of a rocket being launched this morning from Lebanon.  So we are going to continue to encourage both sides to pay maximum attention to the well-being of civilians and to do everything possible to try to restore calm.  But at the same time, the Israelis have a right to defend themselves against these atrocious rocket attacks that we're seeing with increasing frequency.

Q    What steps has the President taken so far to initiate that proposal for a ceasefire with Hamas?  Has he talked to any other countries in the region?  Because the United States really doesn’t have direct contact with Hamas.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don't have a lot of conversations to read you in on at this point.  The White House is engaged in this effort, though -- the administration is engaged in this effort, I should say.  In addition to the President’s call with the Prime Minister just yesterday, there have been a number of calls over the last several days between the Secretary of State and the Israeli Prime Minister.  The White House Coordinator for the Middle East Region at the National Security Council, Phil Gordon, has been in the region for a few days and he’s been hosting meetings with both the Israelis and the Palestinians. 

So there has been a robust engagement on the part of the administration on this issue.  And we’re going to continue to do what we can to try to facilitate a de-escalation in the conflict and violence that seems to be moving in the wrong direction right now.

Cheryl.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  And I know last night you called the Republican lawsuit against the President a “stunt.”  But have your lawyers looked over the papers and is there any legal merit to what they’re charging?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t know what documentation has been forwarded by House Republicans. 

Q    There is a draft by the committee. 

MR. EARNEST:  Is there a draft?  Well, I will say that we’ve been pretty clear about what our stance is, and that was the case with the statement that we issued last night, as well.  It is our view that this is nothing more than a taxpayer-funded political stunt.  And it certainly doesn’t reflect the priorities that so many Americans across the country would like to see their elected leaders in Washington focused on. 

This President is determined to do everything within his power, within the confines of the law, to expand economic opportunity for the middle class.  That is the focal point of his domestic policy agenda, and it will continue to be the focal point of his efforts moving forward. 

If there’s an opportunity for us to work with Congress to further that goal, we will not hesitate to work in collaborative fashion to get that done.  But so far, we’ve seen Congress -- and in particular, congressional Republicans -- do very little to advance that agenda.  In fact, they seem to be engaged in an effort to block all progress that would benefit middle-class families.  That’s unfortunate.  But the President is not going to allow that to block him from doing everything within his power to expand economic opportunity for middle-class families all across the country.

Jessica.

Q    On Iraq, what has been the White House response to the Kurdish exodus from the Iraqi government yesterday, in particular because it doesn’t necessarily support what you’re trying to encourage them to do, which is a unity government?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as you know, Jessica, the Vice President has been engaged in a pretty rigorous stint of telephone diplomacy over the last several weeks.  There have been a number of calls to Kurdish leaders, including Mr. Barzani, that we have read out to you.  So the Vice President is engaged in a variety of conversations on this topic.

It continues to be the view of the United States that Iraq’s political leaders should come together and unify that country in the face of the threat that is posed by ISIS.  And that will continue to be the message that we send not just publicly, but also privately in the ongoing conversations. 

Q    -- had any contacts since the walkout yesterday?

MR. EARNEST:  Not that I’m aware of, but we can check on that for you. 

Q    And has there been any contact between the White House and Ahmed Chalabi?

MR. EARNEST:  Again, not that I’m aware of, but it’s hard for me to be -- you asked that question in a very broad way.  So I certainly don’t have a conversation that I’m in a position to read out from here. 

Let’s move around a little bit.  Michelle.

Q    I’m not sure if I really heard the answer to Cheryl’s question about -- is the White House making any statement at all on the possible legal merits of that lawsuit or --

MR. EARNEST:  That’s assuming there are some. 

Q    Okay.  Was that the statement?  (Laughter.)  Or the likelihood of it going forward?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the likelihood of it going forward will depend in large part on the strategy that’s conceived of by the taxpayer-funded lawyers who are working for House Republicans as they pursue this matter. 

The fact of the matter is this President is determined to do everything within his power to make progress for middle-class families.  That includes implementing the Affordable Care Act in a way that maximizes the benefit to businesses and employees and middle-class families all across the country.

So we feel very confident about the decision that’s been made along those lines, and we continue to be very disappointed by the fact that Republicans seem more interested in a taxpayer-funded lawsuit than they do in the success of the Affordable Care Act.

Q    There have been some complaints out there that the White House has backed away from -- on the supplemental request
-- backed away from wanting more discretion for DHS.  Is that true in any way?

MR. EARNEST:  No.

Q    Okay, got it.  And on German spying, it was in May when Chancellor Merkel was here in the Rose Garden.  And the President really kind of presented it in a personal way, talking about their close friendship, saying that it pained him personally that there had been a rift.  And now, this has happened.  Can you give us a sense of the President’s thoughts on what has happened now and what could repair this relationship?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Michelle, let me start by saying that allies with sophisticated intelligence agencies like the United States and Germany understand with some degree of detail exactly what those intelligence relationships and activities entail.  Any differences that we have are most effectively resolved through established private channels, not through the media.  These private channels include regular discussions between intelligence officials, diplomatic officials, and national security officials from those two countries.  So pursuing that dialogue through those channels is exactly what we’re doing. 

And it’s why I’m not in a position to speak with all of you about reports of our purported intelligence activities.  As I’ve said for the last couple of days, this administration and this President strongly values the national security relationship between the United States and Germany.  That relationship -- that includes extensive sharing of intelligence -- is critical to the national security of the United States, and it’s critical to the national security of Germany that that relationship and that intelligence-sharing is ongoing. 

But as for reports of disagreements about some of those activities, those disagreements, as they have been in the past, will be resolved through established private channels. 

Q    And those discussions that are ongoing, can you say whether they have helped over the last few days in any way?  Has there been progress over the last few days?

MR. EARNEST:  It would be difficult for me to describe those conversations as private if I were talking about them with you, so I’m going to keep them private.

Q    I think it was the Foreign Minister or someone in Germany said that the President is in contact with Chancellor Merkel.  We don’t know of any phone call, but can you say that that is true, that there is contact between them?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think that it’s fair for you to understand that there is regular contact between senior American national security officials and senior German national security officials.  The President spoke to the German Chancellor as recently as a week ago, or maybe it was eight days ago. 

Q    This didn’t come up, did it?

MR. EARNEST:  No.  As I think I’ve mentioned a couple of times, this phone call occurred the day before these reports surfaced.  So they have not spoken since then, but the communication between this administration and our German counterparts is ongoing.

Mark.

Q    Yes, Josh, back to the Mideast.  Prime Minister Netanyahu just a little while ago said -- rejected outside pressure.  He said, Israel is not going to -- that this operation is going to continue until its goals are reached.  It doesn’t sound like he’s very interested in any outside help reaching a ceasefire right now.

MR. EARNEST:   Well, again, his level of interest I would -- questions about his level of interest I’d direct to his office.  The fact is Israel is an ally of the United States and we have an unshakeable bond with that country and we are committed to their security.  And that’s only one reason that we freely recognize their right to defend themselves.  Citizens in that country are currently subject to intermittent rocket launches, so it’s understandable that the political leadership of that country would want to do everything that they could to protect their citizens.  That’s certainly within their rights. 

What we are urging is we’re urging some restraint.  We’re urging a strong consideration of the well-being of innocent civilians on both sides.  And we’re offering the assistance of the United States to try to facilitate a ceasefire that we believe is in the best interests of both sides.

Q    But you’re offering that -- you want it to happen now, or are you just willing to wait until whenever the Israelis think they’re ready for it?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, our concern is that as violence continues it only puts at risk the lives of many innocent civilians, again, on both sides of this issue.  So the sooner we can get a ceasefire in place, the better it will be for both sides.  But again, ultimately, it is the responsibility of Israel’s elected leaders to act in support of the defense of that country and it’s up to them to make the decisions that they believe are in the best interests of Israel’s national security.

Mike.

Q    Just a follow-up on all of that, on Israel.  Can you be a little bit more specific about what “facilitate” means in the context of the United States being willing to facilitate a ceasefire?  And, specifically, does the President intend to send Secretary Kerry as early as next week to the Middle East to try to do it at his level, as opposed to some of the folks you mentioned before?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Mike, we’ve encountered a similar situation as recently as a year and a half ago.  Back in November of 2012, there was a similar dynamic at play where there were terrorist elements in Gaza launching rockets into Israel and the United States used our relationship with countries in the region -- including Egypt and Turkey and others -- to bring both sides to the table and create an environment where a ceasefire could be declared and enforced.  So we’re looking to do something similar.

Again, each situation is unique.  I’m not in a position to sort of list out all of the countries that would be involved.  But there are countries that have been historically involved in this effort.  And we believe that it continues to be in the interest of the United States, it continues to be in the interest of the Israelis and Palestinians, and it continues to be in the interest of countries throughout the region for us to de-escalate this conflict and put in place a ceasefire.

Q    And Secretary Kerry?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any update in terms of his travel.  I know that right now he is in Afghanistan and headed to Vienna in the next day or two.  But anything beyond that I’m not aware of.

Roger.

Q    Thank you.  Staying with Israel, you made a couple of references to November of 2012, the ceasefire and stuff like that.  The actions today, how does that compare with a year and a half ago?  Is today more serious than -- as viewed by the White House?

MR. EARNEST:  I think it’s difficult for me to make that assessment.  I think what I would conclude is that our concerns are going to be serious anytime you see so many innocent civilians who are in harm’s way.  And, frankly, right now that’s what we’re seeing on both sides. 

So the key here is for both sides to do what they can to take maximum concern for the safety of those innocent civilians. We certainly condemn the rocket fire that we’ve seen from Gaza, and that would be a good start to putting in place the kind of ceasefire that would de-escalate the situation and pull some civilians out of harm’s way.

Q    Neither side seems to be listening.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, we’re certainly concerned that, as I think I mentioned earlier, the violence that we hope will be de-escalated soon doesn’t seem to be moving in the right direction right now.  We’re concerned about that, and we’re concerned principally because there are so many civilians who are in harm’s way in this situation.  And we’re hopeful that both sides will do what they can to ensure for the safety of those civilians. 

But, again, we condemn this rocket fire that we’re seeing.  That is a danger to so many Israeli civilians.  And that would be an important step in trying to de-escalate this conflict. 

Major.

Q    Josh, would you acknowledge that this situation with Germany has gotten worse during the week?  Even though you have tried with as inoffensive language and opaque language as possible to keep it at a low level, it has gotten progressively worse all week? 

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t think --

Q    The station chief being asked to leave and rearrangements of scheduled meetings and, as you indicated before, public discussion of things you’d rather keep in private channels -- I mean, it’s gotten off the rails this week, has it not?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there is a strong and enduring relationship between the United States and Germany when it comes to our national security and intelligence sharing.  That relationship continues.  It’s an important part of ensuring for the stability and security of this country and our interests and allies around the globe.  It’s an important part of the German national security and their interest and allies around the globe as well.  So that relationship is continuing, despite any reported differences.

Q    It's stressed.

MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?

Q    It’s stressed.  It’s been subjected to some strain this week, would you not at least acknowledge that?

MR. EARNEST:  I would acknowledge that I’ve read many of the reports you may be referring to.  And that is the reason that there have been conversations between -- through our established private channels -- between intel officials and diplomatic officials from both countries.  And it’s our desire to see this situation resolved appropriately and in a way that is consistent with both countries’ commitment to that relationship.

Q    Is there any sense within the administration the Germans are overreacting?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think I would just sort of just point to what I said at the beginning, which is that --

Q    -- all countries spy on each other.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think to be slightly more precise, I think I said that countries with sophisticated intelligence agencies, like both the United States and Germany, understand what intelligence relationships and activities entail.  And when differences of opinion --

Q    -- should translate that as --

MR. EARNEST:  -- or when concerns arise, that there is a benefit to establishing -- not establishing, but resolving those differences through private, secure channels and not by trying to resolve them through the media.

Q    While the President was in Texas, Governor Perry again made his pitch for a thousand National Guard forces on the border.  I talked to him afterwards.  He said not only would that increase security -- he acknowledged the fact that these unaccompanied minors are being apprehended.  He doesn’t dispute what the President says about that, but says as a symbol and as a means of telling Central American leaders and parents there if the National Guard, augmented by Border Patrol and state troopers in Texas, are all there it would send a visual message throughout Central: America don’t even get near the border, because you’re not going to get across in the first place.  He’s not arguing that in a sort of hostile way, he thinks.  He thinks that’s actually a genuine solution that ought to be seriously considered.  What’s your reaction?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, he’s entitled to his view.  He’s the longest-serving governor of the state of Texas in Texas history. He is the governor of a state that has the longest border with Mexico.  I think the simple question that I would ask -- he’s entitled to that point of view.  I guess the question I would ask is what would be better, a thousand National Guard troops, or 20,000 Border Patrol agents? 

For the symbolic reasons that he says are paramount in this circumstance, it seems to me that the 20,000 Border Patrol agents would be a better option -- which is why, if this is his genuine view, I would expect him to be an enthusiastic advocate for common-sense immigration reform.  Passing common-sense immigration reform along the lines of what passed the Senate with bipartisan support would add 20,000 officers to the border.  So even if it’s only for purely symbolic reasons, as Governor Perry says, that seems like a pretty good path. 

And so we would like to see Governor Perry join the fight.  You saw some pretty persuasive advocacy from Bill Gates and Sheldon Adelson today in The New York Times, in the op-ed -- I think Warren Buffett signed it as well -- indicating the common-sense benefits of comprehensive immigration reform.  They didn’t highlight the symbolic value of deploying additional resources to the border, but they chronicled what I think are a lot of the economic benefits to this country.  Presumably, a lot of those economic benefits would be enjoyed by communities in Texas that aren't far from the border.

So there are a whole host of reasons to support common-sense immigration reform.  If Governor Perry has settled on a new one, we welcome his support.

Q    But you know and would acknowledge, Josh, that those 20,000 wouldn't be there anytime soon.  They would be legislated, authorized, appropriated and trained and deployed over a substantial period of time.  I believe there window in the legislation was 10 years.  His point is something needs to be done visually now and also a way that secures the border to reduce the incentive, real or unreal, imagined or -- in Central America that if you cross you have a good chance of being able to stay.  Can you address that?  His contention is something needs to be done immediately, and you would acknowledge the bipartisan legislation passed by the Senate would not do that immediately.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, no, but what it would do is it would be an enduring solution.  Sending a thousand National Guardsmen to the border is not an enduring solution.  That is almost, by definition, temporary.  So, again, if we're into symbols here and if symbolism is what we're looking for, then the best symbol that we could send is to authorize the deployment of 20,000 additional law enforcement officials to the border.

Keep in mind this is on top of the historic investment that has already been made under this President’s watch on the border. There are more resources and boots on the ground along the border than at any other time in our nation’s history.  So, again, a permanent solution is one that would have extraordinary economic benefits, as highlighted by Warren Buffett and Sheldon Adelson and Bill Gates this morning.  If there is symbolic value that Governor Perry sees, then we certainly would welcome him getting on board and making that case.

Q    Can I follow that, Josh?

MR. EARNEST:  Jon.

Q    On the border -- in congressional testimony yesterday, Secretary Jeh Johnson said that the number of unaccompanied minors crossing could reach 90,000 by the end of the fiscal year. That would suggest absolutely no slowing of the flow.  The President has been out now for over a week urging families in Central America not to send their kids; other officials have.  You’ve had an effort on this, a vocal effort on this.  Have you seen any indication that any of it is working to slow the flow of unaccompanied minors crossing the border illegally?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jon, I'm not in a position to talk about sort of the day-to-day numbers that we're seeing, but --

Q    You must know the daily numbers, though, right?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I've gotten some briefings about some of the metrics of these things.  Obviously this is a complicated thing to tabulate, right?  We're talking about a large sector of our border with Mexico.  And there are efforts obviously on a 24-hour basis to apprehend people as they come across the border. 

What we're focused on right now is making sure that people understand the risk that they are subjecting their children to if they decide to send them on this journey.  They are often transported by criminal networks.  That's one of the things the President sought in his supplemental -- or in conjunction with or at the same time as the supplemental request is additional authority to crack down on some of these criminal networks.  The facts are clear about the risk that these children are facing when they try to make this trip.

Q    I understand, but I asked very specifically, are you seeing -- you don't need to give me specific numbers -- are you seeing any indication that anything that you are doing right now has had any impact in bringing [down] this flow of illegal immigration across the border?

MR. EARNEST:  I think what I would say is to assess that impact we shouldn’t just be looking at the day-to-day numbers, we should be looking at the longer-term trend.  And the fact is, as you point out --

Q    Which is bad, right?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think right now what we're seeing is a situation where there has been a spike.  What are we going to see in the weeks ahead?  I don't know.  We're certainly doing everything that we can right now to try to stem that flow.  What we would like to see are additional resources from Congress so we can maximize the effort that's necessary to stem this flow and to try to both apprehend those who are at the border, detain those who are apprehended in a humanitarian fashion, but also to address some of the root causes of this illegal migration.

Q    And on the German spy matter, I understand clearly there’s very little you're able to say about this -- can you at least confirm for me that Germany has said that they are expelling the CIA station chief -- the U.S. CIA station chief in Germany?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I've seen those reports so --

Q    I mean, I've seen the reports, too.  I'm just asking can you confirm that Germany is expelling the CIA station chief?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, when you're asking me specific questions about a specific CIA official, it's going to be difficult for me to talk about that in any environment, let alone here on live television.  But I will say this.  I will say this.  The United States understands the importance of this issue and, as a matter of course, respects the German government’s wishes regarding the accreditation and presence of U.S. diplomats in Germany.

Q    Okay, so --

MR. EARNEST:  The point is this is obviously --

Q    That was interesting, but no mention of intelligence.  Let’s take CIA out of it.  Can you acknowledge, given your respect for the German government’s ability to accredit diplomats, will you acknowledge that Germany has expelled the top intelligence official at the embassy in Berlin?

MR. EARNEST:  I'm not going to be in a position to comment on --

Q    They’ve done this publicly.  They’ve announced it publicly.

MR. EARNEST:  Again, it's their responsibility to provide for the accreditation and presence of U.S. diplomats in Germany. But in terms of the whereabouts or activities of individual diplomats or intelligence officials, I'm just not in a position to comment from here.

Q    Can you acknowledge that there is a CIA station chief in Germany?

MR. EARNEST:  I'm not going to be in a position to talk about our intelligence activities.  And I think that's for good reason.

April.

Q    Just one more on Israel. 

MR. EARNEST:  I just want to give somebody else a chance.

Q    Okay.  On the issue of a potential ground invasion of Gaza, has the administration said pointblank to the Israelis that that would be a bad idea?

MR. EARNEST:  What this administration has done is we have delivered essentially a two-pronged message -- the first is, acknowledging the right of Israel’s political leaders to provide for the defense of that country and its citizens.  That's their right.  At the same time, we are urging leaders on both sides to account for the safety and security of innocent civilians on both sides and to leave open a channel, leave open an opportunity for a ceasefire to be negotiated. 

April.

Q    Josh, I have one domestic subject that has been in the news recently -- gun violence, the rash of gun violence in Chicago and other cities.  Could you talk to me about the President’s thoughts about what’s been happening in Chicago, particularly, and around the nation as -- we're not hearing much as it relates to gun control reform or something going on trying to get a handle on what’s happening.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, April, you’re right that we do see with all too tragic frequency the continued gun violence in communities all across the country.  We were in Texas earlier this week where there was a high-profile incident outside Houston, where an individual killed six or seven people in a home using a firearm.  That’s just an incident of gun violence that got a lot of attention.  As you point out, there are communities across the country that are wracked by gun violence on a daily basis.  In fact, those kinds of episodes of violence are so frequent that they don’t make the news very often.

This kind of gun violence is tragic, and the President has said on many occasions that he believes that there are some common-sense steps that we can take to reduce gun violence.  I don’t think there’s any single law that could be passed that would reduce every single element of it.  But there are some common-sense things that we can do to keep guns out of the hands of criminals, to keep guns out of the hands of those who shouldn’t have them, while fully respecting the Second Amendment rights that the President of the United States believes in and that so many Americans across the country hold dear. 

So there are some common-sense things that we can do.  The President is going to continue to make the case that we should do them.  But ultimately, I think the only way we’re going to get over this hump and convince Congress to, again, take the kinds of steps that are supported by the vast majority of Americans, even the kinds of steps that are supported by a majority of gun owners and a majority of Republicans, is going to be for people to make their voices heard to make it clear to members of Congress that how they vote on some of these issues will have an impact on the voting decisions that are made by average citizens when it comes to hire a member of Congress to represent them.

Q    People have been making their voices heard, but there seems to be a stumbling block when it comes to the gun lobby and the situation about the right to bear arms.  What do you say to that other side who says I have a right to feel that I can walk in a community or be able to just not have a fear of being shot?  There are two sides to this equation.  What do you say to those people who are fearful as the gun lobby, the powerful gun lobby has prevented any kind of changes to the gun laws from happening?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what I would say is that there are some common-sense steps that we have identified and that others have identified that could be taken to reduce incidents of gun violence.  Those steps are common sense because they would do the kinds of things that everybody agrees, which is that -- or just about everybody agrees -- that there are sort of established guidelines for people that we believe shouldn’t have access to firearms.  Criminals would be one good example of that.  At the same time, we could implement those rules in a way that respects the right of law-abiding Americans to exercise their Second Amendment rights. 

So there are some common-sense steps that we can take.  And, again, the obstacle here is Congress, because there is a President who is a strong advocate for these kinds of policies. 

The President has made this case to members of Congress, but what will ultimately be required will be members of the general public contacting their individual members of Congress and making a statement to them about what their views are and making it clear to these members of Congress that their job is going to be dependent on how they vote on these issues.

Isaac.

Q    You say the President has been making a case, but he hasn’t been speaking about gun control openly.  I mean, it hasn’t been part of his speeches that he has made.  Will he be talking about it more?  Will that be added into the things that he talks about over the coming weeks and months as he is traveling the country?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t think that there is any doubt about what the President’s views are on this topic, and I think that when the President has the opportunity to talk about this issue, he does so I think with a lot of conviction and with a lot of clarity. 

Q    But he had the opportunity -- I mean, he had the opportunity yesterday to talk about it in Texas if he wanted to, and he’s chosen not to.  Can you explain the logic for not having it be something that he’s talked about publicly except when asked?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not sure that’s a fair assessment of the President’s public statements.  But the President yesterday was speaking at an event on the economy where he was highlighting his commitment to acting on his own where necessary and with Congress where possible to make progress in support of middle-class families.  There are a lot of common-sense economic policies that the President has put forward that Congress is also blocking.  Yesterday the President chose in his remarks to highlight those.  But the President feels strongly about some of the common-sense measures that Republicans have blocked related to gun safety as well.

Chris.

Q    Let me ask you a little bit more to clarify about the 2008 law -- because you have said, going back to the border issue, that the White House is open to finding ways -- more efficient ways to enforcing the law.  And Nancy Pelosi has said that it’s not a deal-breaker, some of the Republican proposals that would change the law.  Is the White House open to that?  And can you talk specifically to the kinds of things the White House would be willing to look at that you think would improve the situation on the border?

MR. EARNEST:  As it relates to that specific law?

Q    Yes.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, what we have said is -- I think Mara asked about this a little bit earlier this week, and the thing that I was trying to explain to her is that what we’re focused on here are the results.  And the end result that we would like to see is for those individuals who have gone through the immigration system and after going through those immigration proceedings have been found to not have a legitimate claim to remain in this country, we would like to see those individuals removed and repatriated efficiently.  Right now, the law presents some obstacles to that. 

And what we have said in terms of the easiest way to solve this problem is that Congress should give greater authority and discretion to the Secretary of Homeland Security as he implements the law.  That is to say that he can more efficiently and more quickly remove and repatriate those individuals that the immigration courts have found to not have a legal basis for remaining here.

Q    So if that’s what you’re focused on, let me just ask you about what Senator Pat Leahy said.  He says he’s opposed to amending the law if it’s part of this negotiation for the emergency spending.  In fact, he says if we follow the law, we’re going to get due process -- he doesn’t see any reason for those two things to be tied.  Can you give us the White House position on that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there are a couple of things that we know that are preventing the efficient application of the law.  The first is the bottleneck that has been created in the immigration court system -- that we’ve seen such a large influx of cases that the current system is bogged down.  So one of the things that we’ve asked for are additional resources that could be used by -- I think it’s through the Department of Justice -- that additional judges and ICE prosecutors through DHS and asylum officials could be deployed to expand the bandwidth of the immigration system so that we can more quickly and efficiently process the legitimate claims where they exist, but also consider the claims of those who ultimately are found to not have a legal basis for remaining in this country; that making that system work more quickly is an important part of dealing with this difficult humanitarian situation. 

From there, what we would like to see is greater discretion be given to the Secretary of Homeland Security so that he could exercise it and more efficiently remove those individuals that weren’t found to have a legal basis for humanitarian relief in this country.

So there are a number of causes that we’re trying to address here.  One of these is related to resources in the immigration court system; the other is related to the ability of the Secretary of Homeland Security to remove those individuals who are found to not have a legal basis for remaining in the country.

Go ahead, Chris.

Q    I’m just not sure of the answer to the question to what Pat Leahy said, a response specifically about Pat Leahy.  He says he opposes amending the law through this emergency spending bill.

MR. EARNEST:  Right.  And what I’m saying is that there are a couple of legal legislative mechanisms that could be used.  What we’re focused on is the ultimate goal, and that ultimate goal would be the efficient removal of those individuals who are found, after going through due process, are found to not have a legitimate legal basis to remaining in the country.  And if that means changing the 2008 law, if it means giving greater authority to the Secretary of Homeland Security, if it requires passing some other law, we’re focused on the end results.  And if the end result reflects the principles that I have laid out, then I would anticipate we’d be in a position to support it. 

But that’s the nature of the kinds of conversations that are ongoing between the administration and Capitol Hill as we work through getting the resources and authority that are necessary to deal with this problem.

Unfortunately, what we’ve seen is we’ve seen Republicans spouting a lot of rhetoric on television saying that this is an urgent problem that needs to get solved right away, but leaders in -- and the House Republicans saying that they hope to get to it later this month.  That’s certainly not consistent with the spirit of urgency that this administration is acting with to deal with this problem.

Wendell.

Q    You’ve said that the 2008 law makes it difficult to deal with this problem, but is it not also true that the 2012 DACA executive order contributed greatly to this problem since the child migration doubled that year, that fiscal year, doubled the following fiscal year, and is on track to double in the current one?  Either misrepresentation or a misunderstanding of the DACA executive order, but certainly it seems to have played a part.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think Governor Perry would disagree with that assessment.  What Governor Perry said was that we saw this problem before the President even moved on the deferred action that you’re referring to.  So I think what’s evident is that this is a problem with a lot of different causes, and that’s why you’re seeing a whole-of-government approach to dealing with these challenges.  That includes everything from trying to deal with this problem at the source through conversations with the leaders of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, to providing additional resources to law enforcement so that they can better handle the influx of individuals who are being apprehended on the border.  And that includes adding to the resources available to the immigration court system to consider and process these claims.
 
We have asked for additional authority to crack down on the criminal networks and human trafficking organizations that are obviously playing an important role to making this problem such a dangerous one.  So there is a lot that this government -- that this administration is focused on to address this situation.  Again, what we’d really like to see is a similar sense of urgency from Congress.  Right now, all they’re saying is that they hope to get to this later this month.  I guess they’re more focused on lawsuits than on actually trying to solve problems.

Q    I’d also characterize this as parents in Central America essentially trying to get their kids out of a high-crime situation.  But how much is this caused by people in this country, perhaps illegally, sending for their children since they’d be more likely to afford the costs than those parents in Central America?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what we’ve made clear to parents in this country and parents in Central America is that they should not send their kids on that journey.  There are a couple of reasons for that.  One is that that journey, even if they’re not making that journey in the company of a criminal, is very dangerous.  We’re talking about -- I’ve seen reports that a lot of kids are stowing away in trucks or on the tops of trains.  Ultimately, that also includes a trip that is a long walk through the desert.  And there are tragic consequences for making these kinds of dangerous decisions and dangerous trips.

Q    The danger is obvious.  But do you know how much it’s parents calling for their kids versus parents pushing them?

MR. EARNEST:  It’s hard for me to make that assessment from here.  Suffice it to say that’s why we’re trying to send a message to parents in both locations to be very clear about the fact that they should not send their kids on this dangerous journey, and that even if they were to not take the advice of the U.S. government and to send their kids on this journey, and they’re apprehended at the border, that if those kids are not found to have a legal basis for remaining in the country, that they’re going to be sent back.

Q    And on the situation in Germany, the Foreign Minister says he wants to reinvigorate the U.S.-German relationship “on an honest basis.”  Those are his words.  Does the U.S. have a role in that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the U.S. is committed to the strong partnership that exists between our two countries.  And I said a couple of times now that it is our view that a strong, cooperative partnership with Germany, when it comes to national security and intelligence matters, is critical to our own national security.

Q    So is that a yes?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, it’s an expression of commitment on the part of this administration and on the part of this country to protecting and strengthening the ongoing relationship with Germany as it relates to wide range of national security and intelligence matters.

Q    I’ll take it as a yes.

MR. EARNEST:  Mark.

Q    Josh, on the Middle East, is it not something of a contradictory statement to defend Israel’s right to defend itself and at the same time call for restraint?

MR. EARNEST:  No, that’s not a contradiction.  I think it’s a reflection of how complicated the situation is.  But this is a situation that we’ve been dealing with for some time and, frankly, that a couple of generations of U.S. leaders have been dealing with.  These are complicated times.  And there is no doubt that the United States stands with Israel as they confront these threats, but at the same time we also have a concern for the well-being of innocent civilians on both sides.  That’s why we believe it’s in the interest of both sides to seek a cease-fire that would de-escalate the conflict and take so many innocent civilians out of harm’s way.

Q    Is there a point at which the U.S. might deem the Israeli self-defense as going too far?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not going to -- I wouldn’t speculate about sort of future activities on the part of the United States or on the part of Israel.  Suffice it to say we’re going to continue to urge both sides to take maximum restraint when it comes to the well-being of innocent civilians.  And the easiest way to do that would be to broker a cease-fire from both sides.

Let me just say that it’s important for us to recognize that there are innocent Israeli civilians who are subject to a barrage of rocket fire, almost around the clock according to news reports and to some of your colleagues who are in that region and reporting from there.

So our concern for civilians is urgent at this point, and that reflects the kinds of conversations that senior U.S. officials have had with leaders on both sides of this issue.

Q    And one question on photo ops.  Did President Obama really mean it when he said, I have no interest in photo ops?

MR. EARNEST:  His view is that solving problems is most important, and solving problems is what somebody who’s exhibiting leadership is focused on.  And that’s what the President was doing when he was in Dallas on Wednesday.  It’s also what the President has been doing over the last several weeks.  He has made the decision to shift resources from the interior to the border.  He has put forward this specific line-item request for resources from Congress that could address this urgent problem.  He sought greater authority for the Secretary of Homeland Security to repatriate those individuals that don’t have a legal basis for remaining in the country.  He sought greater authority from Congress to crack down on the human trafficking networks that are fomenting so much of this problem.

These are concrete steps that the President has taken.  They may not make for attractive pictures, but they are concrete steps that are critical to addressing this issue.  I think this stands in pretty stark contrast to the approach that’s taken by some folks on the other side of this debate.  What we see on the other side are individuals that are so concerned about photo ops that they’re not really paying attention to any solutions; they’re certainly not contributing to them.  How many Republicans have we seen go on cable television and profess their commitment to increasing border security?  I would humbly suggest to them that being photographed talking about strengthening border security is a lot less important than actually placing a vote on a piece of legislation that would do exactly that.  And I think that’s the point the President was making. 

Q    But he’s not pained about every photo op that he does, right?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think if he did it would disappoint a lot of people in this room who are pretty interested in capturing the President.

Q    Well, aren’t photo ops the lifeblood of presidential public relations?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, there’s no doubt that a presidential appearance somewhere sends a very important message about the President’s priorities.  In some cases, it sends a very important message about the country’s priorities. 

The best example -- I was thinking about this a little earlier today.  The best example I could think of was, it was about a month ago that the President traveled to Warsaw, Poland. And he got off the plane, and the first thing he did was he walked over to an adjacent airplane hangar where there were two American F-16s parked in front of television cameras.  And the President stood in front of those two airplanes alongside some military and Polish military personnel, and alongside the leader of Poland, and articulated this administration’s and this country’s commitment to the Article 5 mutual defense aspect of the NATO treaty. 

That is clearly a photo op, but it is part of solving a problem.  It sends a very clear message to the people of Poland, to our NATO allies, and to Russia about what our intentions actually are.

So, again, the point that the President was making on Wednesday is that this is about priorities.  And when you prioritize photo ops ahead of solutions to actual problems, you’re not really accomplishing very much.  But when you are focused on problems and occasionally using photo ops to confront these problems, that’s what real leadership is all about. 

Stephen. 

Q    Over the last year, Chancellor Merkel has had to deal with the strain of anti-Americanism in German politics.  Surely, the White House must be concerned that the latest tension makes it more difficult for her to do things the United States would like to do.  For example, she had to stick her neck out to get tougher sanctions -- to win support for tougher sanctions on Russia over Ukraine.  So how concerned is the White House that this incident will kind of have a broader effect in U.S.-German relations?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m sure that Chancellor Merkel has a very effective spokesperson who can make the case for why she makes the kinds of decisions that she does.  That won’t prevent me, however, from speculating that she didn’t join the international effort to impose economic costs on Russia as a favor to anyone in this country.  She made the decision to join that effort because she believed that it’s in the best interest of Germany and its citizens and its interests in Europe and around the world.

The reason that there is a strong, ongoing national security and intelligence-sharing relationship between the United States and Germany is not because Chancellor Merkel is doing a favor for anybody in this country.  She is doing that and she is committed to that relationship as strongly as President Obama is because it’s in the best interest of the country that she was elected to lead. 

The President has found Chancellor Merkel to be a very effective partner, precisely because she is somebody who is able to identify the interests of her country and place them first, but can act in a collective, cooperative spirit to advance the kind of agenda that’s in the best interest of her country as well.  So she’s proven to be a very effective leader, and the President is fond of her not just personally, but because of the professionalism that she deploys in the conduct of her job.

Q    Based on what you said earlier, would it be fair to interpret your words as saying the U.S. believes that Germany has perhaps done too much -- or spent too much time trying to resolve this issue through the media and not private channels?

MR. EARNEST:  I’ll leave the interpretation up to you.  But I will just repeat that it is our view that allies with sophisticated intelligence agencies are aware of the activities and relationships that are included.  And when differences arise we’re committed to resolving those differences through the established private channels.  We don’t believe that trying to resolve them through the media is appropriate.

Q    Could you just -- I’m going back to the health care lawsuit for a minute.  Could you just tell us a little bit about the President’s response?  When did he find out and what was his initial sort of a personal response?  Because it’s sort of a little bit of a personal thing here?  And also, you indicated you weren’t sure if some of the paperwork had been filed.  As a lawyer, I would assume the President would want to read it or has read it.  Do you have any answer to that?

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t know whether or not he has read it.  Again, I’m still unclear exactly what paperwork has been presented.  Again, I think the President was pretty clear of his -- well, let me say it this way.  If, in fact, some of the paperwork related to the lawsuit has been made public, his view on this has not changed from when he talked about it yesterday in Austin.

Q    Can you just tell us when he found out about it -- last night or yesterday afternoon?

MR. EARNEST:  He found out about it yesterday afternoon, soon after Republicans made it public. 

Q    Any particular response, besides --

MR. EARNEST:  From him personally, no, I haven’t seen one.

All right, who else here?  Chris.

Q    Thanks, Josh.  Questions on the Employment Non-Discrimination Act.  A number of LGBT groups withdrew support from the bill this week because of this religious exemption.  In fact, the National Gay [and Lesbian] Task Force now opposes the bill.  The President has stated support for ENDA numerous times, but is he aware of the concerns expressed by these groups?  And would he consider vetoing it if it came to his desk with the current religious exemption?

MR. EARNEST:  Chris, the President has long supported an inclusive ENDA, and we continue to believe that Congress needs to pass federal legislation that protects LGBT Americans from employment discrimination.  The President has talked often about his opposition to any sorts of policies or views that discriminate against individuals because of who they are or the color of their skin, their name or who they love.  And that is a principle that the President believes should be enshrined into federal law, in this case through an inclusive ENDA.
 
We’re certainly aware of the ongoing conversations about ENDA and look forward to working with lawmakers and advocates to achieve this important goal. 

Q    Is he concerned about the religious exemption of ENDA, and would that prompt him to veto legislation?

MR. EARNEST:  No, we continue to support ENDA legislation. 

Q    But would the President welcome a narrowing of the exemption in the bill?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think I’ve been pretty clear about what our position is.  I know that advocates have changed their position on this, and we’re certainly aware of their change in position, but this administration has not changed ours.

Q    Following the withdrawal of support of the bill from these groups, does the White House realistically see any chance of ENDA passing this year, or is the legislation dead?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, when we talked about the fact that the President was considering an ENDA EO a few weeks ago, we noted that it had passed through the Senate with bipartisan support but was stuck in the House.  We noted that there was the prospects in the House, like so many other pieces of common-sense, worthwhile legislation have hit a dead end there, unfortunately, because of the obstruction of congressional Republicans.

So I would acknowledge, as I did a few weeks ago, that the prospects for passing it through the House are not very good.  And that’s unfortunate.  That’s why the President -- that’s one of the reasons the President is considering doing something using his executive authority. 

Q    Amid this controversy, a number of groups, including the Human Rights Campaign, have endorsed the idea of a more comprehensive bill that in addition to employment would cover public accommodations, housing and credit.  Would the President support such legislation? 

MR. EARNEST:  We’d consider it, Chris.  But I’m not personally familiar with it.

Q    And, finally, one last question?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes.

Q    With the objections to the religious exemption in ENDA on the table, are you in a position now to rule out the possibility of a similar religious exemption appearing in the planned executive order barring anti-LGBT discrimination among federal contractors?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not prepared at this point to talk about any of the contents of any executive order that the President may sign.

Victoria, I’ll give you the last one.  Then, we’ll do a week ahead.

Q    About three-quarters of members of the House of Representatives wrote to the President yesterday, saying that they want to be involved in and have input into any lifting of sanctions on Iran because they were involved in putting the sanctions on Iran.  What is the President’s position on that?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as of right now, I think that’s putting the cart before the horse.  What we are currently engaged in is working through the P5-plus-1 process in pursuit of ensuring that Iran does not acquire a nuclear weapon.  The international community has significant concerns about Iran’s development of certain nuclear capabilities.  And we’ve made some progress in the form of constructive conversations with the Iranians and other members of the international community to try to resolve those differences. 

There is, as you point out, a looming deadline later this month for resolving some of those differences and there continues to be substantial differences, but we’re working through them.  As I think I mentioned earlier, Secretary of State John Kerry is headed to Vienna in the next day or two to try and move that process along.  But this is an important priority. 

As I mentioned earlier -- or maybe I didn’t mention earlier, but I should have mentioned earlier -- is that this administration does believe that Congress has been an important partner in this effort; that it’s because of the unprecedented sanctions regime that’s been implemented, in close consultation with our partners, that’s what ultimately brought Iran to the table.  And we have had some constructive discussions with them about this, but substantial differences remain.  And we’re working through those differences and are going to do our best to work through those differences in advance of the July 20th deadline.

Q    My understanding is he is partly going because there’s a real logjam in the talks in Vienna.  He is going with the other foreign ministers to try and break through on that, and they’ve got the deadline looming on the 20th.  If they don’t reach that deadline, what’s the next step?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the goal of the Secretary of State’s trip is go gauge the extent of Iran’s willingness to commit to credible and verifiable steps that would back up its public statements about the peaceful nature of its nuclear program.  As we have said consistently, if Iran’s intentions are entirely peaceful as they claim they are, it shouldn’t be a hard proposition to prove. 

So the Secretary of State will see if progress can be made on the issues where significant gaps remain, and assess Iran’s willingness to make a set of critical choices at the negotiating table. 

Q    And if progress can’t be made?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, the reason he is going there is to try to make some progress.

Q    And if it can’t be made?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, let’s not prejudge the outcome here.  We’re focused on making some substantial progress here.  And there’s a lot of work to do, and the Secretary of State is headed there to try to make some progress. 

Let’s do the week ahead.

Q    Press conference?

MR. EARNEST:  There’s no press conference on the week ahead.

On Monday, the President will participate in an ambassador credentialing ceremony in the Oval Office.  Many of you have heard about this event before.  The President will receive the credentials from foreign ambassadors recently posted in Washington.  The presentation of credentials is a traditional ceremony that marks the formal beginning of an ambassador’s service in Washington.  That evening, the President will host an Iftar dinner, celebrating Ramadan at the White House. 

On Tuesday, the President will visit the Northern Virginia area to deliver remarks on the economy.  We’ll have additional details about that trip either over the weekend or at the very beginning of next week. 

On Wednesday, the President will attend meetings at the White House.

On Thursday, the President will travel to New York City to attend a DNC roundtable.  We’ll have more details about the President’s trip to New York next week. 

Q    Any other activities on that Thursday?

MR. EARNEST:  That trip is still coming together, so we may have some additional activities to tell you about. 

And then, on Friday, the President will be back here at the White House participating in meetings.

Q    He returns to Washington Thursday?

MR. EARNEST:  Yes, Thursday night. 

I hope you all have a terrific summer weekend.

END  
2:12 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces Presidential Delegation to Georgia to Attend the Funeral Service of Former Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze

President Barack Obama today announced the designation of a Presidential Delegation to Tbilisi, Georgia to attend the Funeral Service of Former Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze on July 13.    

The Honorable James A. Baker, III, former Secretary of State, will lead the delegation.

Members of the Presidential Delegation:

The Honorable Richard B. Norland, U.S. Ambassador to Georgia, Department of State

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Memorandum -- Delegation of Authority Pursuant to Section 4 of the Support for United States-Republic of Korea Civil Nuclear Cooperation Act

July 11, 2014

MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF STATE

SUBJECT: Delegation of Authority Pursuant to Section 4 of the Support for United States-Republic of Korea Civil Nuclear Cooperation Act

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, including section 301 of title 3, United States Code, I hereby delegate to the Secretary of State the reporting functions conferred upon the President by section 4 of the Support for United States-Republic of Korea Civil Nuclear Cooperation Act (Public Law 113-81).

You are authorized and directed to publish this memorandum in the Federal Register.

 

BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the Vice President's Call with Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades

Vice President Joe Biden spoke today with Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades to discuss bilateral relations and other issues. President Anastasiades informed the Vice President about the latest discussions on a comprehensive settlement and the Vice President reaffirmed the United States' strong support for a settlement to reunify Cyprus as a bi-zonal, bi-communal federation with political equality. The two leaders also discussed the crisis in Ukraine, and the Vice President underscored the need to impose costs on Russia if it continued on its current path and failed to actively support a ceasefire, a roadmap for peace talks, the release of hostages, an Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) border monitoring mission, and a halt to the transfer of heavy weapons and equipment to the separatists.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces New Partnership with the Private Sector to Strengthen America’s Small Businesses; Renews the Federal Government’s QuickPay Initiative

As a part of his Year of Action, the President is using the power of his pen and phone wherever he can on behalf of the American people to create jobs and help hard-working Americans get ahead. Today, the President will announce the creation of SupplierPay, a new partnership with the private sector to strengthen small businesses by increasing their working capital, so they can grow their businesses and hire more workers. 

To launch SupplierPay, the President is bringing together 26 companies – both large and small – that have committed to the initiative.  For the larger companies, joining SupplierPay demonstrates a recognition that a healthy supply chain is good for business.  For the small business suppliers, benefiting from SupplierPay means having more capital to invest in new opportunities, new equipment, and new hiring.

President Obama, Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, National Economic Council Director Jeff Zients, and Small Business Administrator Maria Contreras-Sweet will host a meeting at the White House today with these businesses and their suppliers to discuss what more can be done to strengthen small businesses, building on the successes of the QuickPay program.

SupplierPay builds on the success of the Federal Government’s QuickPay initiative, which President Obama launched in 2011. QuickPay requires federal agencies to expedite payments to small business contractors with the goal of paying within 15 days.  As a result of QuickPay, we have already seen well over $1 billion in cost savings for small businesses since 2011, leading to greater investment and job creation. SupplierPay is the private sector’s equivalent, where companies have committed to pay small suppliers faster or help them get access to lower cost capital.

Also today, the President is renewing QuickPay for federal small business subcontractors, where the government pays its large contractors faster and, in return, requires them to pay their small business subcontractors faster. QuickPay for small business subcontractors, which began in 2012, was only available temporarily for many small business subcontractors.  Today’s announcement means faster payment for all small business subcontractors and even more business opportunities, more investment in small businesses, and more hiring.

The following companies have signed on to SupplierPay:

Apple Lockheed Martin
AT&T Milliken
Authentix Molina Healthcare
Cardinal Health Nissan
Coca-Cola PG&E
CVS Philips
Ericsson  Rolls Royce
FedEx Rothschild North America
Honda Salesforce 
IBM Textura
Intuit    Toyota 
Johnson & Johnson  Walgreens
Kelly Services Westinghouse Electric Company
 

QuickPay and SupplierPay:  Growing our Small Businesses

  • The President’s QuickPay initiative has strengthened small contractors working with Federal Government, cutting in half the time it takes to get paid, reaching 172,000 small businesses, covering $220 billion in contract awards, and generating well over $1 billion for small businesses – freeing up capital to invest and hire new workers.
  • By renewing QuickPay for small business subcontractors, the initiative can expand its impact as large federal contractors pay their small suppliers even faster. 
  • The SupplierPay initiative builds off this successful model as large private sector companies are committing to pay small suppliers faster or help them get access to lower cost capital.  

 

 

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND:

Small business play a vital role in the American economy – employing half of our country's workforce, creating nearly two out of every three new American jobs, and often being the source of the next great American innovation.  

Small businesses were disproportionately impacted by the Great Recession, losing 40 percent more jobs than the rest of the private sector combined. When the President took office small business credit markets were effectively frozen. Today, trends are moving in the right direction; according to a recent survey, small business confidence is near the highest levels since the fall of 2007 and small businesses are back to creating two of out of every three net new jobs.

Small business capital access has been an area of focus for this Administration, starting with the Recovery Act in 2009, the Small Business Jobs Act in 2010 and the JOBS Act in 2012. Collectively, this legislation has been instrumental in driving improvement from the depths of the recession. The Administration has achieved record SBA small business lending volumes and recent Federal Reserve Small Business surveys indicate improved access to financing. Yet, more can be donetoo many small businesses still struggle to access the capital they need:

  • A 2014 Pepperdine and D&B study reported that 66 percent of small businesses found it “difficult to raise new business financing.”
  • Capital access challenges are magnified by the fact that small businesses are waiting longer to get paid for their products and services.  According to different estimates, small business invoices go unpaid for 55-60 days on average and payments “past due” are increasing. As a result, small businesses are spending unnecessary funds to cover cash flow issues caused by late payments. These are funds that could be otherwise spent on growing their business and creating new jobs. 

SupplierPay Case Studies:

Company Commitment: Intuit

  • By signing onto the White House’s Small Business Supplier Financing Pledge, Intuit commits to taking active steps to lower the working capital costs of its small business suppliers.
  • 10 percent of Intuit’s suppliers are small businesses – approximately 315 companies. Most of its small business suppliers are creative agencies, product development partners and marketing services firms, including many that are women-owned, minority-owned, or veteran-owned.
  • In 2009, when the economy was down and the impact was especially hard on small businesses, Intuit temporarily changed payment terms to pay its small business suppliers more quickly. Since then, the accelerated payment terms were adjusted back as the economy started recovering.
  • In support of the White House’s pledge, Intuit is making a permanent change to its payment term policy to accelerate the payment terms for its small business suppliers who will now be paid within 10 days. This will help those small businesses get the cash they need faster.
 

Company and Small Business Supplier Case Study:
Molina Healthcare and March Vision Care

  • Molina Healthcare’s commitment to SupplierPay and the White House’s Small Business Supplier Financing Pledge is an outgrowth of the company’s experience working with March Vision Care, one of its small business suppliers.
  • In 2005, Glen March and his wife Cabrini started March Vision Care, a minority and woman owned business, with the idea of providing vision care plans primarily to Medicaid participants.  March Vision was able to land Molina as its first customer, but struggled to access financing as they were turned down by banks and investors.
  • Molina recognized Glen and Cabrini’s potential and provided seed capital directly to them as a new supplier.
  • Today, March Vision Care has grown to over 100 employees, contracts with several healthcare providers and members in 18 states and the District of Columbia. 
  • In response to the President’s call to action, Molina is expanding its commitment to its small business suppliers, and in addition to providing favorable working capital, will be creating a seed investment fund to back the launch of other small business suppliers.
 

Company and Small Business Supplier Case Study:
Apple and Metal Impact

  • Metal Impact, in Elk Grove Village, Illinois is a small supplier working with Apple as part of its domestic manufacturing initiative for the Mac Pro. Metal Impact provides components to the cylindrical aluminum enclosure and is one part of Apple’s $100 million Mac Pro Project, which relies on component and equipment suppliers from 23 states.
  • This partnership represents 18 new jobs and millions of dollars in revenue to Metal Impact.
  • Building the Mac Pro would not have been possible without the manufacturing expertise of dozens of U.S. small businesses, and Apple is supporting the White House’s commitment to ensuring that small businesses get paid faster and have reasonable financing rates so they can continue to hire and grow.
 

Impact of the QuickPay Initiative:

QuickPay Has Delivered Meaningful Results: QuickPay has accelerated more than $220 billion in payments to federal contractors and generated savings well over $1 billion for small suppliers, increasing growth and jobs.  When businesses get paid faster, their financial footing gets stronger. And with nearly $90 billion each year in federal contracts going to small businesses, cutting in half the time it takes for them to receive payment is a powerful way to help businesses make the decision to go ahead and buy another piece of equipment or hire another worker.

Examples of QuickPay’s Impact

The ELOCEN Group

  • The ELOCEN Group offers consulting services in construction management, interior design, information technology, and facilities/logistics.  ELOCEN’s work has totaled over 40 million square feet in new construction and renovation space managed. 
  • “QuickPay has had an incredible impact on the ELOCEN Group.  It has resulted in more working capital, a greater number of satisfied subcontractors and a more profitable overall bottom line for the company.” Necole Parker, CEO of The Elocen Group

Sarakki Associates, Inc.

  • Sarakki Associates Inc. is a multi-disciplinary engineering firm that specializes and provides services to local, State and Federal Governments in Systems Engineering, Information Technology, Border Crossing System, and Intelligent Transportation Systems. SAI started as sole proprietor in 1995 and was incorporated in 2001.
  • “Our company has been a prime contractor to the Federal Government for the past eight years and has experienced firsthand the difference QuickPay has made on the business.  It has improved our bottom line by reducing the cost of doing business and has allowed the company to pay our subcontractors faster.  I no longer have to dip into my personal savings when managing cash flow.”
 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the Press Secretary

It is disappointing that Speaker Boehner and Congressional Republicans have decided to waste time and taxpayer dollars on a political stunt. At a time when Washington should be working to expand economic opportunities for the middle class, Republican leaders in Congress are playing Washington politics rather than working with the President on behalf of hardworking Americans. As the President said today, he is doing his job – lawsuit or not – and it’s time Republicans in Congress did theirs.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

President Obama Announces More Key Administration Posts

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Barack Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

·         Craig B. Allen - Ambassador to Brunei Darussalam, Department of State

·         Sharon Block – Member, National Labor Relations Board

·         Richard M. Mills, Jr. – Ambassador to the Republic of Armenia, Department of State

·         Joseph Nimmich – Deputy Administrator of Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of Homeland Security

·         Anne E. Rung – Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy, Office of Management and Budget

·         Alissa M. Starzak  – General Counsel of the Army, Department of Defense  

·         John Francis Tefft - Ambassador to the Russian Federation, Department of State

President Obama also announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key Administration posts:

·         Charles Benton – Member, National Museum and Library Services Board

·         Robert Langer – Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science

·         Lillian M. Lowery – Member, President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans

·         Anne Ashmore-Hudson  – Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

·         Steven M. Goldman  – Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

·         Dale LeFebvre  – Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

·         Anita Lin  – Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

President Obama said, “I am grateful that these impressive individuals have chosen to dedicate their talents to serving the American people at this important time for our country.  I look forward to working with them in the months and years ahead.”

President Obama announced his intent to nominate the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Craig B. Allen, Nominee for Ambassador to Brunei Darussalam, Department of State

Craig B. Allen, a career member of the Foreign Commercial Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, is the Deputy Assistant Secretary for China at the Department of Commerce, a position he has held since 2012.  Mr. Allen served in the Department of Commerce as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Asia from 2010 to 2012, Senior Commercial Officer at the U.S. Consulate in Johannesburg, South Africa from 2006 to 2010, and Senior Commercial Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, China from 2003 to 2006.  From 2000 to 2002, he served as Commercial Officer at the National Center for the Asia-Pacific Economic Corporation.  Mr. Allen was Deputy Senior Commercial Officer and Commercial Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo, Japan from 1995 to 2000, Commercial Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, China from 1992 to 1995, and Commercial Officer at the American Institute in Taiwan in Taipei, Taiwan from 1988 to 1992.  He was a Presidential Management Intern at the Department of Commerce from 1985 to 1988.  Mr. Allen worked in the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment from 1983 to 1985 and taught English in Japan and Taiwan from 1979 to 1983.  Mr. Allen received a B.A. from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and an M.S. from Georgetown University.

Sharon Block, Nominee for Member, National Labor Relations Board

Sharon Block is Senior Counselor in the Office of the Secretary at the Department of Labor (DOL), a position she has held since August 2013.  She served as a Member of the National Labor Relations Board from 2012 to 2013.  She was Deputy Assistant Secretary for Congressional and Intergovernmental Affairs at DOL from 2009 to 2012.  Ms. Block was Senior Labor and Employment Counsel for the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, where she worked for Senator Edward M. Kennedy from 2007 to 2009.  She was Special Assistant in the Office of the General Counsel at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission from 2006 to 2007.  Ms. Block previously served at the National Labor Relations Board as senior attorney to Chairman Robert Battista from 2003 to 2006 and as an attorney in the NLRB’s appellate court branch from 1996 to 2003.  From 1994 to 1996, she was Assistant General Counsel at the National Endowment for the Humanities, and from 1991 to 1993, she was an associate at Steptoe & Johnson.  Ms. Block received a B.A. from Columbia University and a J.D. from Georgetown University Law Center.

Richard M. Mills, Jr., Nominee for Ambassador to the Republic of Armenia, Department of State

Richard M. Mills, Jr., a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Counselor, most recently served as the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon from 2012 to 2014.  He was Deputy Chief of Mission and Charge d’Affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Valetta, Malta from 2010 to 2012.  Mr. Mills served as Senior Democracy Advisor at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq from 2009 to 2010, Political Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in London, England from 2006 to 2009, and Energy Attaché and Acting Economic Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from 2005 to 2006.  Mr. Mills served as Deputy Political Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan from 2003 to 2004, Political Officer at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations in New York from 2001 to 2003, Economic Counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Dublin, Ireland from 1999 to 2001, and Line Director in the Executive Secretariat at the Department of State from 1996 to 1998.  He has also served in the Office of Legislative Affairs at the U.S. Consulate in Saint Petersburg, Russia, at the Bureau of Soviet Union Affairs and at the U.S. Embassy in Paris, France.  Prior to his Foreign Service career, Mr. Mills was an Associate Attorney at Duncan, Allen and Mitchell and also at Wickwire, Gavin and Gibbs.  Mr. Mills received a B.A. from Georgetown University, a J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law, and an M.S. from the National Defense University.

Joseph Nimmich, Nominee for Deputy Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Department of Homeland Security

Joseph L. Nimmich is the Associate Administrator for Response and Recovery at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, a position he has held since 2013.  From 2011 to 2013, Mr. Nimmich was the Director of Maritime Surveillance and Security at Raytheon Corporation.  He was a Member of the Senior Leadership Team at the Applied Research Lab at Pennsylvania State University from 2010 to 2011.  From 1977 to 2010, Mr. Nimmich served in the United States Coast Guard, attaining the rank of Rear Admiral.  From 2009 to 2010, he served as Commander of the First Coast Guard District.  Mr. Nimmich was the Director of the Joint Interagency Task Force South at the Department of Defense from 2007 to 2009 and from 2005 to 2007, he served as Assistant Commandant for Policy and Planning.  From 2003 to 2005, Mr. Nimmich served as the Deputy Chief of Staff of the Coast Guard after serving as Commander of the Coast Guard Group - Key West from 2000 to 2003.  Mr. Nimmich received a B.A. from the Coast Guard Academy and an M.B.A. from the Stern School of Business at New York University.

Anne E. Rung, Nominee for Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy, Office of Management and Budget

Anne E. Rung is currently a Senior Advisor in the Office of Management and Budget.  Previously, she served at the General Services Administration (GSA) in various positions, most recently as the Associate Administrator of Governmentwide Policy.  Prior to GSA, Ms. Rung was the Senior Director of Administration at the U.S. Department of Commerce from 2010 to 2012.  She served in various positions at the Pennsylvania Department of General Services from 2003 to 2010, including Deputy Secretary for Administration and Chief of Staff.  Ms. Rung was Congressional Director of the Democratic Leadership Council from 1997 to 2003.  Earlier in her career, she was Policy Director for Joe Kohn for Attorney General, Legislative Assistant for U.S. Representative Thomas M. Foglietta, and an associate at Cassidy & Associates.  She began her career in 1989 as a Legislative Aide for the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary.  Ms. Rung received a B.A. from Pennsylvania State University and an M.Sc. from the London School of Economics and Political Science.

Alissa M. Starzak, Nominee for General Counsel of the Army, Department of Defense

Alissa M. Starzak is currently Deputy General Counsel (Legislation) at the Department of Defense, a position she has served in since 2011.  From 2007 to 2011, Ms. Starzak served as Counsel and as a Professional Staff Member on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.  Ms. Starzak served as an Assistant General Counsel at the Central Intelligence Agency from 2005 to 2007.  Earlier in her career, she was an Associate at O’Melveny & Myers and a Law Clerk for The Honorable Judge E. Grady Jolly on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Ms. Starzak received a B.A. from Amherst College and a J.D. from The University of Chicago Law School.

John Francis Tefft, Nominee for Ambassador to the Russian Federation, Department of State

John Francis Tefft, a career member of the Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, is the Executive Director of the RAND Business Leaders Forum at the RAND Corporation, a position he has held since 2013.  Mr. Tefft served as the U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine from 2009 to 2013 and as the U.S. Ambassador to Georgia from 2005 to 2009.  From 2004 to 2005, Mr. Tefft served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for European and Eurasian Affairs in the Department of State.  From 2003 to 2004, Mr. Tefft served as an International Affairs Advisor at the National War College and previously served as the U.S. Ambassador to Lithuania from 2000 to 2003.  From 1996 to 1999, Mr. Tefft was the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, Russia.  He was the Director of the Office of Northern European Affairs at the Department of State from 1992 to 1994.  Mr. Tefft served as the Deputy Director of the Office of Soviet Union Affairs/Office of Commonwealth of Independent States from 1989 to 1992 and served as Counselor for Political-Military Affairs at the U.S. Embassy in Rome, Italy from 1986 to 1989.  From 1983 to 1986, he was a Political Officer in the Office of Soviet Union Affairs.  Mr. Tefft was a Pearson Fellow in the Office of Congressman Howard Wolpe from 1982 to 1983.  Earlier in his career, Mr. Tefft was also a Political Officer at the U.S. Embassy in Budapest, Hungary; a Special Assistant in the Washington office of the U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations; a Political Officer in the Office of United Nations Political Affairs; an Operations Officer in the Operations Center; and a Vice Consul at the U.S. Consulate General in Jerusalem.  Mr. Tefft served in the U.S. Army Reserve from 1971 to 1974.  Mr. Tefft received a B.A. from Marquette University and an M.A. from Georgetown University.

President Obama announced his intent to appoint the following individuals to key Administration posts:

Charles Benton, Appointee for Member, National Museum and Library Services Board

Charles Benton is Chairman and CEO of the Benton Foundation, a position he has held since 1981.  He was first appointed to the National Museum and Library Services Board in 2012.  In 1978, Mr. Benton served as Chairman of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science and Chairman of the first White House Conference on Library and Information Services in 1979.  Mr. Benton served as Member of the Presidential Advisory Committee on the Public Interest Obligations of Digital Television Broadcasters from 1997 to 1998 and on the Consumer Advisory Committee of the FCC from 2005 to 2010.  He was President of the Encyclopedia Britannica Education Corporation from 1996 to 1997 and Films Inc. from 1968 to 1977.  Mr. Benton is Chairman of Public Media Inc. and Chairman Emeritus of the Partnership for a Connected Illinois.  He serves on the boards of the National Foundation for the Preservation of Film and The Educational Development Center.  He is a Lifetime Trustee of the Field Museum of National History in Chicago.  Mr. Benton received a B.A. from Yale University.

Dr. Robert Langer, Appointee for Member, President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science

Dr. Robert Langer is the David H. Koch Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), a position he has held since 2009.  He was first appointed to the President’s Committee on the National Medal of Science in 2011.  Dr. Langer has been a Professor at MIT since 1977, including as an Institute Professor from 2005 to 2009 and the Kenneth J. Germeshausen Professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering from 1988 to 2005.  He is the recipient of a number of awards and recognitions, including the 2014 Kyoto Prize, the 2011 National Medal of Technology, the 2008 Millennium Prize, the 2006 National Medal of Science, and the 1998 Lemelson-MIT Prize.  Dr. Langer received a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Cornell University and an Sc.D. in Chemical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Dr. Lillian M. Lowery, Appointee for Member, President’s Advisory Council on Financial Capability for Young Americans

Dr. Lillian M. Lowery is currently the Maryland State Superintendent of Schools, a position she has held since she was appointed by Governor Martin O’Malley and the Maryland State Board of Education in 2012. Dr. Lowery served as the Delaware State Secretary of Education from 2009 to 2012.  Between 2006 and 2009, Dr. Lowery was the Superintendent of the Christina School District in Wilmington.  She was the Assistant Superintendent of Cluster VII for Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia from 2004 to 2006.  She also served for two years as an Area Administrator for Fort Wayne Community Schools in Fort Wayne, Indiana.  Earlier in her career, Dr. Lowery spent seven years as a school building administrator and taught middle and high school English for seventeen years in school districts in Virginia and North Carolina.  Dr. Lowery has held leadership positions on the Board of Directors for a number of youth and education-related organizations, including the Boys and Girls Club of America and Stop Child Abuse and Neglect (SCAN).  She is an alumnus of the Broad Foundation’s Superintendents Academy.  Dr. Lowery received a B.A. from North Carolina Central University, an M.A. from the University of North Carolina-Charlotte, and an Ed.D. from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Dr. Anne Ashmore-Hudson, Appointee for Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Dr. Anne Ashmore-Hudson is the Chair Emeritus of the District of Columbia Commission on the Arts and Humanities.  She consulted for a cultural arts program for the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development from 2009 to 2013.  Previously, Dr. Ashmore-Hudson was a Senior Research Fellow at the E. Franklin Frazier Institute for Social Research at Howard University from 2000 to 2003 and a Fellow at the Du Bois Institute at Harvard University from 1985 to 1987.  In 1984, Dr. Ashmore-Hudson founded and became President of Urban Psychological Services, a position she held until 1992.  She served as the Public Member of the State Department Senior Foreign Services Selection Board and the United States Information Agency Selection Board.  Dr. Ashmore-Hudson served on the boards of the The Washington Ballet, Sasha Bruce Youthworks, the Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology, the United Way of Massachusetts, and the Roxbury Community College Foundation.  She also served as the President of the Potomac chapter of Links Inc.  Dr. Ashmore-Hudson received a B.A. from Spelman College, an M.S. from Simmons College School of Social Work, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley.

Steven M. Goldman, Appointee for Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Steven M. Goldman is a partner at the law firm Kramer, Levin, Naftalis & Frankel LLP, where he has practiced law since 2009.  From 2006 to 2009, Mr. Goldman served as the State of New Jersey’s Department of Banking and Insurance Commissioner, having been appointed by Governor Jon S. Corzine.  He was Senior Partner at the law firm of Sills, Cummis, & Gross from 1984 to 2006.  Mr. Goldman is Chair of the Operations and Finance Committee and Assistant Treasurer of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center and a member of the Board of Managers of Theatre Square Development Company.  He is on the Dean’s Board of Advisors for The George Washington University Law School.  He is a member of the U.S. Trust Northeast Client Advisory Council, the Economic Club of New York, and the Lotos Club.  Mr. Goldman received an A.B. from Boston University, a J.D. from The George Washington University Law School, and an LL.M. in Taxation from New York University School of Law.

Dale LeFebvre, Appointee for Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Dale LeFebvre is the founder and Chairman of 3.5.7.11, a holding and investment company, a position he has held since 2008.  He was a Managing Partner at the AIC Caribbean Fund from 2006 to 2009 and the Pharos Capital Group from 1999 to 2006.  Mr. LeFebvre was a consultant at McKinsey and Company from 1993 to 1995.  He is a 2006 Henry Crown Fellow and a member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network.  He has served on the Board of the National Urban League and is now a Board Member Emeritus.  Mr. LeFebvre received a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School. 

Anita Lin, Appointee for Member, Advisory Committee on the Arts for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Anita Lin is the Director Emeritus of the Ballet Western Reserve and a member of the Chautauqua Institution's Music Director Search Committee for their Symphony's Principal Conductor.  She previously served as the Artistic Director and Executive Director of the Ballet Western Reserve from 1982 to 2007.  Ms. Lin danced with the New Orleans Ballet Company from 1981 to 1982 and studied the Royal Academy of Dance Technique in London in 1980.  She also danced for the Cincinnati Ballet Company from 1977 to 1980, and was the principal dancer with the University of Louisville Preparatory Dance Company from 1973 to 1977.  Ms. Lin received a B.F.A. from University of Cincinnati.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel

President Obama and Prime Minister Netanyahu spoke today by phone.  The President reiterated the United States’ strong condemnation of continuing rocket fire into Israel by Hamas and other terrorist organizations in Gaza and reaffirmed Israel’s right to defend itself against these attacks.  The President expressed concern about the risk of further escalation and emphasized the need for all sides to do everything they can to protect the lives of civilians and restore calm.  The United States remains prepared to facilitate a cessation of hostilities, including a return to the November 2012 ceasefire agreement. 

The President once again expressed condolences to the people of Israel on the kidnapping and murder of teenagers Gilad Shaar, Eyal Yifrach, and Naftali Fraenkel, who was an American and Israeli citizen, and urged that the perpetrators be brought to justice.  The two leaders also discussed the situation in East Jerusalem and the West Bank.  The President welcomed the arrest of suspects in the abduction and murder of Palestinian teenager Muhammad Abu Khdeir and expressed appreciation for the Prime Minister’s determination to see that they be brought to justice.  He expressed concern about the beating and detention of teenage American citizen Tariq Khdeir and acknowledged Israel’s efforts to resolve this case.  The two leaders discussed the P5+1 negotiations with Iran and the President reiterated that the United States will not accept any agreement that does not ensure that Iran's nuclear program is for exclusively peaceful purposes.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Gaggle by the Press Secretary Josh Earnest in Austin, Texas, 07/10/14

Austin, Texas

10:26 A.M. CDT

MR. EARNEST:  Let me just do a little thing at the top and then we’ll get to your questions.  In a couple hours, the President will deliver remarks at the Paramount Theater here in Austin where he’ll be introduced by Kinsey Button, a young woman from -- a college student here in Austin, who like some of the other folks that the President spent time with this week, wrote him a letter about her middle-class family’s struggle to get ahead.  The President will also give folks an update on the progress we have made in taking action to expand opportunity for families like Kinsey’s over the past six months.

In January, the President said that 2014 would be a year of action, and in the first six months of this year, he’s signed more than 40, 4-0, executive actions to support workers, strengthen middle-class families, and expand our economy.  Those actions include steps to create new manufacturing jobs, support workplace flexibility and equal pay, cut carbon pollution, and make student loans more affordable for borrowers to repay. 

We’ve seen many folks outside of Washington stepping up to do their part -- from governors and state legislators and even companies that have raised the minimum wage to the tech sector that’s committed resources to help expand digital learning for more of our classrooms.  Yet time and time again, despite all this action from states across the country, Democrats and Republicans, and from private sector business leaders, Republicans in Congress continue to block votes on key issues in favor of wasting time and taxpayer dollars on political stunts like suing the President for doing his job. 

But they won’t stop the President from doing everything in his power to keep expanding opportunity for all Americans.  And he has said many times that he is happy to work with Congress if they’re willing, but he won’t wait for them if they aren’t. 
Kinsey and the other letter-writers that he has met this year are a reminder that concrete steps taken by the President can and will benefit middle-class families all across the country.

You’ll hear more from the President on that today.  But with that, I’m happy to take your questions.

Q    Josh, Germany is expelling the CIA Station Chief over these spying allegations.  And I know you guys have been reluctant to talk about this because it’s an intelligence matter, but some of the frustration in Germany seems to be over the fact that the U.S. is taking sort of a nonchalant approach to this.  So I’m hoping you can provide us some kind of reaction in response to this decision from the Germans.

MR. EARNEST:  Well, Julie, it’s precisely because we do take these intelligence matters and reports related to purported intelligence matters into our broader national security very seriously that I’m not in a position to comment on them.  Again, any sort of comment on any purported intelligence activity would place at risk U.S. assets, U.S. personnel, and the United States’ national security.  So I’m just not in a position to comment on it.

We do continue to be in touch with the Germans at a variety of levels, including through law enforcement, diplomatic, and even intelligence channels.  We’re in touch because we recognize the value and the strong partnership that exists between the United States and Germany.  That partnership covers a variety of issues, including national security and intelligence-sharing matters.  So we value --

Q    This is a pretty extraordinary step for the Germans to take -- to expel the CIA Station Chief from Germany. 

MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I’m not in a position to talk about any intelligence matters, including some of these reports. As we discussed in the context of the President’s trip to Afghanistan a couple of months ago, even matters related to the activities of intelligence officials even in leadership positions in countries overseas, I’m just not in a position to talk about from here.

So, again, I don’t want you to come away from this exchange thinking that we take this matter lightly.  The strength of our national security relationship with Germany is important to American national security.  It’s also important to the national security of the Germans.  That’s why we have this open dialogue with them in a variety of channels to resolve this situation appropriately.  But when it comes to the specifics of these reports about purported intelligence matters, I’m just not in a position to comment on them in settings like this.

Q    You’ve been saying over and over again that U.S. and German cooperation has been strong.  Are you still able to say that in light of today’s developments? 

MR. EARNEST:  I’m still able to say that there is an important, functioning national security relationship and intelligence-sharing relationship between the United States and Germany.  And the reason that that relationship persists is because it is so important to the national security of Germany and to the national security of the United States.

Q    Has the President talked to Angela Merkel or have any plans to, to try to smooth things over?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, as you know, they spoke last week before the German law enforcement officials made the announcement of the arrest that I’ve read about in reports.  Those reports emerged the day after the President spoke to the German Chancellor.  I don’t have any update in terms of the President’s schedule about future calls with the German Chancellor, but they speak pretty frequently.  But I don’t have any calls to tell you about right now.

Q    Can you say that he hasn’t called her? 

MR. EARNEST:  I don’t know of any calls that they’ve had in the last couple of days, since the last call that we read out at the end of last week.

Q    So since then there haven’t been any --

MR. EARNEST:  I’m saying that I don’t know of any.

Q    If there is a call, will you read out?

MR. EARNEST:  I can’t guarantee that we’ll read out every call that the President does, even with the German Chancellor, but we have often read out those calls.  And, again, if we’re in a position to do that about a future call that, again, I don’t even know is scheduled, then we’ll try to do that.

Q    And are you able to say whether there would be any tit-for-tat reaction on our part to this move by the Germans?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not in a position to offer any reaction, either in terms of articulating our position or previewing any actions that we may or may not take.

Questions on other topics?

Q    Well, on the supplemental, is the President open to negotiating over the size and scope of the border request?

MR. EARNEST:  The President has articulated -- and I think he did when he spoke to you last night -- a willingness to work with Republicans on this request.  I think it’s important to recognize, however, that the request that was put together by this administration and sent up to Congress earlier this week does reflect a lot of the priorities that Republican members of Congress have themselves articulated.  So everything from funding to ensure that public health concerns are addressed, to additional resources on the border, to additional immigration enforcement resources in the form of immigration judges and ICE prosecutors -- all of these were things that Republicans say should be used to address the urgent situation on the border -- all of these things are included as line items in the proposal that this administration has put forward to congress. 

And I think that is why you’ve heard the President yesterday say that we can solve this problem if there are people on Capitol Hill and the Republican Party who are actually interested in solving the problem.  If they’re interested in just talking about the problem and trying to capitalize on what they may perceive to be a political advantage, that’s going to make this pretty hard to solve.  But if there is a willingness to set aside partisan differences and focus on specific solutions to problems that everybody agrees exists, then we should be able to get that done. And the President said if Congress is ready to act quickly the President would be willing to sign it is as early as today.

Q    And in the worst case scenario that, say, this doesn’t make it, do you have enough resources to sort of muddle through? What is your plan if it doesn’t work?

MR. EARNEST:  Well, right now there have been some steps that the President has been able to take to address this situation.  There are already resources that have been moved from the interior to the border.  The Deputy Attorney General who was on the border yesterday talked about the tangible impact of some of those steps.  The administration has been in close touch with Central American leaders to try to stem the tide of this migration at the source.  So there are a number of things that can be done and we’re working through them already, but I think everybody acknowledges that this is a serious problem and that additional resources would contribute in an important way to addressing it.

So, again, if Republicans are actually interested in solving this problem, there is a very specific step that they can take today to back up that talk with action.  But, again, if they’re much more interested in playing politics and dragging their feet even on a common-sense proposal, that’s going to make this problem a lot harder to solve.

Q    Is it right that HHS is now having to, like, raid the Refugee Resettlement Fund in order to pay for some of the costs it’s incurring to house and care for the young migrants from Central America?

MR. EARNEST:  I’m not aware of sort of how they’ve been able to meet their obligations.

Q    More generally, are you shifting resources from other needs in order to meet this?  I mean, it’s not -- you don’t have infinite resources.

MR. EARNEST:  That’s true, and I think there is a concern that that could happen.  It’s difficult for me to say from here whether or not that has already happened.  I’m sure HHS officials could explain to you how they’re mobilizing the resources that have already been mobilized and what impact that has on their other activities.  But there is a clear and urgent need here.  We’ve put forward a very specific line-item proposal for what additional resources are needed and how much money those additional resources would cost, and we’ve asked Congress to act on it. 

Q    House Republicans are working on their own proposal to revise the 2008 law.  Are you amenable to some of the things that they’re discussing, or are you not wanting to revise the law in the way that they’re talking about?

MR. EARNEST:  I think as a general matter we’re certainly open to discussions about ways that law enforcement officials can better enforce the law -- that is to say, how can this law be enforced in a more efficient way.  Right now, what we’re seeing is a backlog in the immigration court system that, in some cases, leads to a very long delay in claims being adjudicated.  We’re also seeing a delay in repatriating those individuals whose claims have already been adjudicated in a way that determines they have no basis, legal basis for remaining in the country.  But there are a couple other ideas that we’re trying to address and we’re willing to work with Congress to find solutions to them. 

We’ve put forward this idea that the Secretary of Homeland Security should be able to exercise some additional discretion in enforcing that law, but if there are other people that have other ideas for how to make the process of enforcing the law more efficient, we’re certainly open to those discussions.

Q    Josh, on Ukraine, there’s been some criticism from the Hill that the sanctions are a paper tiger because there have been threats of further action but no further action taken.  How do you respond to that criticism?

MR. EARNEST:  I think I would respond to them in a couple of different ways.  The first is that our goal throughout this crisis has been to support a democratic Ukraine that is stable, secure both politically and economically, and able to determine its own future.  So even as we work toward a sustainable, bilateral ceasefire, and urge Russia to deescalate and cease support for the separatists, we shouldn’t forget that our ultimate goal is not just a temporary halt to violence.  We want Russia to stop destabilizing its neighbor and allow the people of Ukraine to come together to make their own decisions about their country’s future through the political process. 

And, frankly, in the view of the United States, the more we let the Russian-backed separatists and Russia draw out the crisis, the more vulnerable Ukraine will become.  The fact is the protracted conflict in the east is not compatible -- and when I say the east, I mean eastern Ukraine -- is not compatible with our efforts to support a more secure, stable, and democratic Ukraine.  That would be a situation that’s not in the best interest of Ukraine, it’s not in the best interest of Europe, and it’s not in the best interest of Russia.

So let me say one more thing about this, which is that we’re working in a coordinated fashion with our European partners because it’s our belief that the cost of inaction now only increases the cost of what we might need to do in the future should Ukraine fail due to Russia’s continued efforts to destabilize the country.

Now, many of those efforts, as you point out, have related to our efforts to impose economic costs on Russia.  The fact is that sanctions and the uncertainty that they have created in the Russian economy have had an impact.  And as those sanctions increase it’s not just that the costs will increase, it’s that Russia’s ability to mitigate those costs will be affected in a negative way for the Russians. 

If you just look at the IMF’s economic analysis, they’ve said that the concern about possible escalation of sanctions has increased the uncertainty of doing business in Russia and is having a chilling effect on investment there.  That’s one tangible way we can sort of evaluate the impact of sanctions. 
The IMF, in the context of that analysis, has actually downgraded Russia’s growth outlook to 0.2 percent this year.  That stands in pretty stark contrast to previous IMF forecasts, which as recent as February were projecting 2 percent growth. 

The other thing that we have seen is reports of a pretty significant capital flight from Russia and, again, that is the result of the economic isolation that Russia has experienced as a result of the sanctions that have been imposed by the United States in coordination with our allies in Western Europe.

Q    Josh, I think some of the criticism from the Hill and other places is that when we were in Brussels in June, you guys set a fairly firm deadline on additional sanctions if Russia didn’t meet certain conditions.  They haven’t met those conditions.  That deadline passed and there’s no sign that sanctions are coming.  So doesn’t that send a message to Russia that these threats might just be empty?

MR. EARNEST:  No, it doesn’t.  I think it sends a signal to them that they should be concerned about the fact that continued efforts on the part of the Russians to destabilize the situation in Ukraine will lead to greater economic isolation and increased economic costs.

The United States, in concert with our allies, stands prepared to act, if necessary.  And it’s important to understand the goal that we’re pursuing here.  We’re not just pursuing a temporary halt to the violence -- although we’d certainly welcome that.  We want to make sure that Russia understands that the United States and the international community will not stand by as they continue to try to destabilize the political situation and the economy in Ukraine. 

And this is the resolute view of the international community and it’s why the prospect of sanctions remains on the table.  And it’s why, as recently as earlier this week, the President had a telephone conversation with the President of France to discuss this issue; he was talking to the German Chancellor at the end of last week about this issue.  So the prospect of additional economic costs being posed onto Russia is something that remains very much on the table.

Q    Do you guys have anything on these reports about Chinese hackers tapping into U.S. government personnel files, or trying to?

MR. EARNEST:  Only that I would suggest that you reach out to OPM and DHS regarding the incident.  DHS, as you know, is responsible for a lot of the monitoring of the cybersecurity threats.  As those two agencies have said, as soon as they learned of a possible intrusion, they took steps to assess and mitigate that intrusion -- I think they have said -- but if they haven’t, I’ll say it -- for the incident that you’re referencing, we have no reason to believe that personally identifiable information was compromised. 

But, again, this is part of a -- we have systems in place to deal with these kinds of threats and intrusions, and I know that those systems responded to this incident. 

Thanks, everybody.

END
10:45 A.M. CDT