The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President Honoring Jimmie Johnson and Hendrick Motorsports Team Members for 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship

3:03 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  Please have a seat.  And welcome to the White House.  Welcome to all of you and, most of all, it’s great to welcome back the six-time NASCAR Sprint Champion, Mr. Jimmie Johnson.  Give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

We’ve got some big NASCAR fans here today, including some members of Congress.  And I want to recognize Rick Hendrick, the owner of Hendrick Motorsports; crew chief, Chad Knaus, as well as Brian France and the entire NASCAR community.

Now, everybody knows I’m a Chicago guy and usually when we do these sports events I make some crack about how the football is not as good as the ’85 Bears or the basketball team is not as good as the Bulls, but today I can’t really say anything because Jimmie Johnson is pretty much the Michael Jordan of NASCAR.  (Laughter.)  Like Mike, Jimmie has won six championships in eight years.  He won a few titles, took a two-year break, decided, you know what, it’s not that interesting, and then got back to winning again.  And now opposing drivers are saying things like, unfortunately, we’re driving during the Jimmie Johnson era.  He’s the best there ever was.

So these days, we’ve got a lot of kids all across the country who want to be like Jimmie, and why shouldn’t they?  He is the only driver to make the Chase all 10 years it has been in existence.  He won his Six Pack faster than anybody in NASCAR history.  This season, he is chasing his seventh title, which would tie him with Dale Earnhardt and “The King,” Richard Petty, for the most ever.  And as Chad once said, he can do things with a race car that most mortals cannot.  And Chad should know, because he has been Jimmie’s crew chief for 13 years.  And while sometimes the two might sounds like an old married couple -- (laughter) -- sniping at each other over the radio, Jimmie knows that without Chad and Rick and the entire team at Hendrick Motorsports, he would be just another mortal making left turns.  And that’s why Jimmie brought along the over-the-wall guys from his pit crew to share in today’s celebration.

I will say, by the way, I love watching the pit crew.  I don’t know how you all do it, but it is amazing.  And to see the teamwork and athleticism, it’s just remarkable.  And that’s the kind of teamwork and leadership that has made Jimmie a champ not only on the racetrack but off it. 

Since 2006, the Jimmie Johnson Foundation has donated almost $7 million toward grants and resources for public schools and charities like Ronald McDonald House and Habitat for Humanity.  He is running a Wellness Challenge to encourage his fans to get healthy and get in shape, which Michelle is very happy about.  He met some of our brave wounded warriors before this event, and obviously is grateful for their sacrifice. 

And this spring, Jimmie joined in the Ban Bossy campaign to help encourage leadership among young girls.  Jimmie caught some flak, I understand, for doing it but he is the father of two girls, and he understands how important it is for us to lift up our young women and make sure that they know they can do the same stuff that any boy can.  So as somebody who is accustomed to being criticized once in a while, I just want to give you some advice:  Keep at it.  (Laughter.)

MR. JOHNSON:  Thank you. 

THE PRESIDENT:  Do what you think is right, and you’re right on this one.

For Jimmie, it also means giving back to his community, being a good husband to his gorgeous wife, Chani, and his daughters, Evie and Lydia, and, of course, dominating the track.  And this year he is back at it -- he has already got more wins than any other driver, so maybe we should just make it easier on everybody, give the #48 car a permanent White House pass.  (Laughter.)  Don’t take my parking spot.  (Laughter.)

MR. JOHNSON:  Yes, sir.  (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT:  And no burnouts in the Portico.  (Laughter.)  So I just want to say to the entire team, to Hendrick Motorsports, to Chad, to the pit crew, most of all, to Jimmie Johnson, congratulations.  Keep up the great work.  (Applause.)

END
3:08 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of Meetings Between Senior Administration Officials and Business Leaders on Climate Change

Yesterday, Counselor John Podesta, Secretary Jack Lew, NOAA Administrator Kathy Sullivan, FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate, and Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy John Holdren met with a group of Insurance and Re-Insurance Industry leaders to discuss the economic consequences of increasingly frequent and severe extreme weather.   The discussion centered around opportunities to share data between the federal government and the insurance industry to better communicate and reduce risks to policyholders, communities, and taxpayers.  Participants also discussed the importance of public education about uninsured risk and the need for more insurable investments that take climate risk into account, and agreed to find ways to collaborate to create broader community resilience to strengthen our neighborhoods and businesses.    

Today, Lew, Podesta, Holdren, Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett, Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, CEA Chair Furman and other senior White House staff met with a coalition of leaders who put out a new report, Risky Business, that details the systemic risk of climate change to our economy.  The report brings attention to the importance of public and private sector action to make carbon pollution reduction a priority, and to take steps to prepare communities to deal with the impacts that we’re already facing.  There was agreement that the government and industry alike must take additional steps to quantify and publicize the economic risks associated with a changing climate, including continued commitment to making the best scientific data available to help government officials, communities, and business leaders assess and plan for those risks.

Insurance and Re-Insurance Attendees included:

Franklin Nutter, President, Reinsurance Association of America
Julie Rochman, President, Institute for Business and Home Safety Mike Foley, CEO, Zurich North America
Tom Wilson, Chairman, President and CEO, Allstate
Christopher Swift, CEO Elect, The Hartford
Michael Tipsord, Vice Chair and Chief Operating Officer, State Farm
Tony Kuczinski, CEO, Munich Re
Kevin O’Donnell, President and CEO, RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd

Franklin "Tad" Montross, Chairman, President and CEO, General Reinsurance Corporation
Joseph Gunset, General Counsel, Lloyd's America

“Risky Business” Attendees included:

Henry Cisneros, Former HUD Secretary
Tom Steyer, Fmr. Senior Manager, Farrallon Capital Management
Greg Page, CEO of Cargill
Kate Gordon, Executive Director of the Risky Business Project
Trevor Houser, Rhodium Group
Matt James, Next Generation

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

PROGRESS REPORT: President Obama’s Climate Action Plan

Today – one year after the President laid out his comprehensive Climate Action Plan – the White House released a new report detailing progress towards cutting carbon pollution and protecting our communities and public health.

In the year since the President’s speech at Georgetown University, the Administration has announced new efficiency standards, permitted renewable energy projects on public lands, and proposed carbon pollution standards for new and existing power plants. Alongside state, tribal, local, and private sector partners, the Administration is taking steps to make our communities more resilient to the effects of severe weather and is working with other countries to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases internationally. In fact, when fully implemented, the policies put forward just in the past year since the President’s Plan was released will:

  • Cut nearly 3 billion tons of carbon pollution between 2020 and 2025, an amount equivalent to taking more than 600 million cars off the road for a year;
  • Enable the development of 8,100 megawatts of wind, solar, and geothermal energy, enough to power nearly 2 million homes;
  • Train more than 50,000 workers to enter the solar industry;
  • Save consumers more than $60 billion on their energy bills through 2030;
  • Improve the energy efficiency of more than 1 billion square feet of city buildings, schools, multifamily housing complexes, and business across the country, an area the size of 17,000 football fields; and
  • Protect the health of vulnerable Americans, including children and the elderly, by preventing 150,000 asthma attacks and up to 3,300 heart attacks. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President at the President's Cup Reception

East Room

7:01 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Thank you, everybody.  Well, welcome to the White House.  And thank you, Mr. Commissioner, for the introduction.  I am joined by two of my favorite golf partners, the Vice President, Joe Biden, and the Speaker of the House, John Boehner.  In each instance, they have to give me strokes.  My good friend, former Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, is with us as well.  Where’s Ray?  He was back here somewhere.  Well, okay.  He probably went out because it’s a nice day to play, and we should actually be outside.  (Laughter.)  

Let me make a couple of observations.  First of all, I’m not used to seeing these guys in suits.  Spieth told me that this is the first suit he’s ever bought.  (Laughter.)  I’m pointing out Jordan now because they might card him later at the reception.  (Laughter.)  We’ve got some outstanding players, both on the American team and the international team.  We’ve got extraordinary veterans like Ernie Els and Tiger Woods.  We’ve got rookies like Jordan.  We’ve got last year’s team captains -- Fred Couples from the United States, and Nick Price for the world.  We’ve got next year’s captains -- Jay Haas for the Americans, and Nick Price for the world.  

Now, last year was the second time I’d been honorary chairman of the President’s Cup.  The United States won both times.  I’m just saying.  (Laughter.)  As much as I’d like to take all the credit, the truth is that the U.S. has now beaten the international team in five straight tournaments.  Any comment on that, Joe?  Okay, I didn’t think so.  (Laughter.)   

I do want to give the international team credit for keeping things interesting.  After two days of match play, the U.S. led by only a point.  And for those of you at home who don’t exactly follow international team golf, that means it was close.  But on the morning of day three, the Americans won four of five matches.  And on Sunday, Tiger clinched the victory for the third straight President’s Cup.  So we are extraordinarily proud of our President’s Cup team.  We hope our World Cup team takes a page out of their playbook when they take on Germany this Thursday. 

I want folks from the international team [to know] that we didn’t just invite them to rub it in.  We want to say thank you to both teams and to the PGA Tour, because as was already pointed out by the Commissioner, the money raised by the President’s Cup goes to charities chosen by the players.   Last year, you raised more than $5 million, which was a new record. 

It happens that philanthropy is a second job for many of these players.  Ernie’s “Els for Autism” foundation just broke ground on a new children’s education center in Florida.  And I was mentioning to Ernie that families who have an autistic child couldn’t be more thankful for the work that his foundation does, and the education and awareness that it’s brought about.  Zach Johnson, with his foundation, supports a free clinic in Zach’s hometown of Cedar Rapids, Iowa.  Through the “Blessings in a Backpack” program, Jason Dufner and his wife, Amanda, help make sure the kids in their home state of Alabama have enough to eat.  The Tiger Woods Foundation creates learning centers and scholarships to help low-income young people succeed in school.  And they’re holding a tournament in Maryland this Thursday, and Tiger is getting back to the course early in order to host it in person.  So the list goes on. 

All of these guys are giving back to their respective communities.  And we want to thank them for being such outstanding ambassadors for golf, who use their success not just on the course, but also to support worthy causes off the course.  I want to congratulate Team USA on another big win.  Best of luck as you defend the title in South Korea next year.  

And I want to thank Phil Mickelson for giving me an excellent tip on my sand game, because I’m pretty sure I can shave at least two or three strokes if I can just get out of the darn sand.  (Laughter.) 

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Absolutely.  I’m confident that’s true, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT:  You sure?

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I’m positive.

THE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  Thank you very much, everybody.  Congratulations to the two outstanding teams.  Appreciate it.  (Applause.) 

END               
7:05 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

FACT SHEET: Advancing The Human Rights Of LGBT Persons Globally

On June 24, 2014, the White House hosted the first-ever Global Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Human Rights Forum, bringing together the faith community, private sector, philanthropy, HIV and other health advocates, LGBT activists from around the world, and the broader human rights community to discuss how to work together with the U.S. government and others to promote respect for the human rights of LGBT individuals around the world.   Participants discussed, among other topics, how to counter legislation that impinges on the rights of LGBT persons, the increasing enforcement in some countries of discriminatory laws that have been dormant for some time, and other threats to LGBT individuals globally.  

The Forum is part of the U.S. government’s ongoing efforts to use diplomacy and assistance to promote and protect the human rights of LGBT persons around the world.  These efforts, which are governed by the landmark Presidential Memorandum of December 2011 on “International Initiatives to Advance the Human Rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Persons,” also include the following:

Combating Criminalization of LGBT Status or Conduct Abroad

  • Country Engagement:  The United States regularly engages with host governments and civil society in countries that have discriminatory laws or are considering legislation that would criminalize consensual same-sex conduct between adults.  We press to discourage passage wherever possible, and in cases where laws are on the books, to protect LGBT individuals from violence and discrimination that often accompany the enactment and enforcement of such legislation. 
  • Reporting:  We report on violence and discrimination in countries that criminalize same-sex conduct through focused discussion of LGBT issues in the annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, and we ensure U.S. citizens are aware of discriminatory laws and practices through the Bureau of Consular Affairs’ Country Specific Information (CSI).

Protecting Human Rights and Advancing Nondiscrimination through Diplomatic and Pubic Engagement and Foreign Assistance

The United States supports programs that advance human rights and democracy for all; protect human rights defenders; train LGBT leaders to participate more effectively in democratic processes; and improve documentation of human rights violations and abuses.

  • Programming and Partnerships:  The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has expanded its investments, including through the LGBT Global Development Partnership, totaling, for July 2012 to December 2013, approximately $11 million in stand-alone programs.  Funding has built the capacity of local NGOs and LGBT leaders, provided health solutions, and supported victims of violence.  In addition, through a groundbreaking partnership with the National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce, USAID will enhance LGBT entrepreneurship and the growth of LGBT-led enterprises in up to six developing countries.  The Department of State-led Global Equality Fund is a multi-stakeholder initiative including governments, private foundations, and corporations that has provided more than $12 million since its launch in 2011 to promote and protect the human rights of LGBT persons in over 50 countries worldwide. 
  • Research and Learning to Guide LGBT Assistance Programs:  Improved understanding of the local political, legal and socio-economic realities of LGBT communities is necessary to design assistance programs that are effective and sustainable.  USAID funds multiple initiatives to assess the status of LGBT communities worldwide.
  • Examining the rights of LGBT persons in Vetting for U.S. Assistance:  The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) examines human rights, including the human rights of LGBT persons, through its Civil Liberties indicator, which is used as one of the criteria to determine country eligibility for MCC assistance. In situations where concerns for the interests of LGBT individuals are identified during due diligence on a proposed project, MCC integrates these concerns into its social and gender assessment and oversight. 
  • Access to Health Services:  The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) works with national governments and civil society to help build environments that enable access to HIV prevention, care, and treatment without discrimination based on gender identity or sexual orientation. 
  • Trade and Investment:  Departments and agencies – from the Department of Commerce to the Export-Import Bank of the United States – raise concerns with economic and commercial actors about the effect on the business climate of laws, regulations, and practices that discriminate against LGBT persons.  Several U.S. trade agreements include opportunities for cooperative engagement between Parties to address labor-related concerns, including employment discrimination, which provides a mechanism for the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) to discuss concerns related to employment discrimination of LGBT persons. 
  • Public Engagement:  In Washington and at embassies and consulates abroad, departments and agencies use public statements, public events, and public outreach to governments and civil society to demonstrate support for LGBT persons. 

Responding to Human Rights Abuses of LGBT Persons Abroad 

We recognize the importance of acting quickly and effectively in countries where the rights of LGBT persons are at risk and have developed a rapid response mechanism to address situations of concern and persons at risk.

  • Rapid Response Mechanism:  Each of our embassies and consulates provide prompt human rights reporting on situations of concern.  When a crisis emerges, an interagency task force is formed to coordinate with key stakeholders, including partner nations and civil society representatives. 
  • Preventing and Responding to Violence and Discrimination:  The State Department – in collaboration with U.S.-based law enforcement organizations – trains law enforcement officers from other nations on the unique challenges and approaches to investigating, responding to, and preventing hate crimes.  In 2014, the State Department sponsored counter hate crimes training for law enforcement officials from Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, and Mexico.  In addition, State supports a Violent Crimes Task Force in Honduras that investigates and supports the prosecution of LGBT-related homicide cases. 

Protecting Vulnerable LGBT Refugees and Asylum Seekers

The United States is committed to identifying protection gaps for LGBT refugees and asylum seekers and developing targeted interventions to address those gaps.

  • Training and Capacity-Building:  The Department of State has developed and completed training for Department staff and resettlement partners overseas and continues to engage with government and international organizations to promote protection of and assistance to LGBT refugees.  The State Department also funds the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other non-governmental and international organization partners to develop training materials focused on LGBT refugees and asylum seekers and strengthen institutional capacity to address their unique needs. At the Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Customs and Immigration Service’s Refugee, Asylum, and International Operations Directorate trains refugee and asylum officers using a comprehensive module on LGBT issues. 
  • Programming: The State Department has supported non-governmental partners to conduct research and pilot new programs to support LGBT refugees and asylum seekers in urban areas, and has also provided targeted assistance to partners working to provide safe shelter and services for LGBT survivors of gender-based violence.
  • Humanitarian Diplomacy:  We raise, on an on-going basis, the needs of LGBT refugees with host governments and the United Nations.  The State Department annually communicates information to all U.S. embassies about the U.S. refugee resettlement process, including as it relates to LGBT applicants.
  • Assessing Risk:  Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) designed a new Risk Classification Assessment instrument that directs ICE officers to consider special vulnerabilities when making custody and classification decisions, including whether a person may be at risk due to sexual orientation or gender identity.  The 2011 Performance-Based National Detention Standards requires that sexual orientation or gender identity be considered as a potential special vulnerability requiring particular consideration in housing a detainee.

Engaging International Organizations in the Fight against LGBT Discrimination

The United States partners with a diverse group of countries to advocate for the human rights of LGBT persons at the United Nations and in other multilateral fora.

  • Coordination:  At the United Nations, the United States is part of the fifteen-member New York LGBT core group and the Geneva-based Group of Friends that coordinates on LGBT issues.  We regularly raise LGBT issues in meetings with UN counterparts and have advocated for LGBT-related recommendations as part of the UN’s Universal Periodic Review process. 
  • Human Rights Engagement:  We co-sponsored and supported passage of the first-ever Human Rights Council resolution addressing the issue of violence toward LGBT persons, have consistently spoken in support of these issues through statements from the floor, and have used our convening power to bring countries and civil society together at a variety of meetings and events. 
  • Health Engagement:  With the support of the United States, for the first time the World Health Organization has begun discussions on the negative repercussions of stigma, discrimination, and other barriers to care for LGBT persons in the health system as a whole.  Our efforts resulted in a groundbreaking Pan-American Health Organization resolution on LGBT health in 2013, which emphasized that equal access to care is a health issue and called on countries to collect data on access to health care and health facilities for their LGBT population. 
  • Multinational Development Bank (MDB) Engagement:  The Treasury Department encourages the MDBs to strengthen attention to LGBT issues in their human resources policies, and to protect the human rights of LGBT persons and advance social inclusion and non-discrimination through MDBs’ projects, including, for example, studies to measure the economic cost of discrimination against LGBT persons, and steps to ensure that LGBT persons can access projects’ benefits without being exposed to harm. 

Strengthening U.S. Government Capacity

Through training, working groups, the development of personnel and external policies, and other mechanisms, department and agencies have redoubled their efforts to advance the human rights of LGBT persons.  Such efforts include Peace Corps beginning in June 2013 to accept applications from same-sex couples to serve together abroad as Volunteers; USAID releasing its first LGBT Vision for Action; and the State Department developing an LGBT Toolkit to guide engagement at embassies globally and in Washington.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 6/24/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:00 P.M. EDT
 
MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  Everybody seems deep in thought today.  Got a couple of things I want to do here at the top before we get started, and then we’ll go to your questions.
 
The first is on a topic that you may not have previously been following but I wanted to raise with this group.  Right now there are 48 nominees for ambassador that are pending, and 26 who are waiting on the floor and eligible for confirmation by the full Senate.  The majority of those who are waiting are career Foreign Service officers. 
 
These nominees have been waiting an average of 262 days, and these delays are simply unacceptable.  It’s time Republicans in the Senate ended their obstruction and allowed these qualified individuals to do their important work protecting American interests around the world.
 
In fact, there are currently 70 -- seven-zero -- nominees to positions impacting our national security, including officials at the Department of Defense, the State Department and other foreign-focused agencies pending in the Senate.  Unfortunately, because of partisan delays by Senate Republicans, these qualified nominees to critical national security posts have been forced to put their lives on hold and wait indefinitely to be confirmed.
 
We urge Republicans in the Senate to stop playing political games and let these individuals get to work on behalf of the American people.  Fielding a full team abroad is not a partisan priority, it’s an American necessity. 
 
And the second piece of news that I have this afternoon is that earlier this morning, the President placed a telephone call to Prime Minister David Cameron.  The two leaders consulted principally on the current situation in Ukraine.  They also had a brief discussion about the situation in Iraq.  And we’ll have a more detailed readout of that telephone call later this afternoon.
 
So with that business out of the way, Darlene, do you want get us started?
 
Q    Sure, thank you.  Couple of questions on Ukraine.  The Russian President said today that the ceasefire there should be extended, coupled with talks between the government and the rebels.  I was wondering if the administration sees that as -- sees Putin as being genuine when he says that, or is this another situation where you see his words and actions there to be -- a disconnect between what he’s saying and what he does?
 
MR. EARNEST:  That’s a good question.  We do, as we have in the past, welcome any Russian steps to end the crisis in Ukraine, including President Putin’s request to the Duma to revoke a resolution authorizing the use of Russian military forces in Ukraine.  We also welcome the separatists’ acceptance of the ceasefire and call on them to abide by it.  And we certainly are supportive of any comments from President Putin about the value of a ceasefire agreement.
 
That said, in the coming days, it’s words, not just actions  -- I’m sorry -- it’s actions, not just words, that will be critical.  And this is what the President conveyed to President Putin in their telephone call yesterday.
 
The United States remains concerned about the continued presence of Russian forces along the border and prepositioned heavy weaponry that we believe is intended for separatists.  Moving these forces away from the border, ceasing support for separatists, and calling on separatists to continue to abide by the ceasefire and disarm would send a clear signal that Russia is interested in a diplomatic settlement resulting in stability in eastern Ukraine.
 
Again, there is an opportunity for President Putin and Russia to play a constructive role in de-escalating the situation in the eastern Ukraine.  And the constructive role that they can play involves more than just words, it involves tangible actions.  There’s an opportunity for President Putin to take these actions and support the de-escalation of the crisis.
 
Q    And if he takes these actions, and if the rebels do enter into talks with the Ukrainian government, does the administration still see the need for additional sanctions against Russia?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, the goal of sanctions was to accomplish a couple of things.  The first is to further isolate the Russians and to put pressure on them to take the kind of action that would be conducive to de-escalating tensions in the neighboring country of Ukraine. 

Obviously, if we started to see a change in the behavior of the Russian government and we saw some concrete steps along the lines that we’ve been calling for, for some time -- ending support for the separatists, making sure that materiel and weapons wasn’t being provided to the separatists -- that that would be a positive development and it would make additional sanctions less likely.
 
But again, what we’re focused here on is not just the words of the Russian President, though we welcome them; what we’re focused on are the actions.
 
Jeff.
 
Q    Josh, to follow up on yesterday’s question about the Ex-Im Bank, the Wall Street Journal reported about some potential corruption there.  Is that something the White House is looking into and concerned about?  And how are you advocating for this on the Hill with that now in the background? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’ll say two things about that.  The first is I know that the Export-Import Bank has issued a statement saying that they have zero tolerance for waste, fraud and abuse.  I can assure you that the President of the United States has zero tolerance for waste, fraud and abuse.  I know that the Ex-Im Bank is working with the inspector general, and they take very seriously reports like these.  For additional information about the status of that investigation or for any steps they may be taking over at Ex-Im, I’d refer you to the press office over there.
 
In terms of the Ex-Im Bank’s overall mission, however, I think the numbers speak for themselves -- that what we see at the Export-Import Bank is a tangible and important contribution to the U.S. economy.  The President has spent a lot of time over the course of this year talking about expanding economic opportunity being the focal point of his domestic policy agenda.  And the efforts of the folks at the Export-Import Bank to support American businesses as they seek to expand their businesses overseas is important.  It makes a tangible contribution to our economy.  It makes a tangible contribution to job creation. 
 
Over the last five years, the bank has supported 1.2 million jobs in the United States across a range of sectors, including 200,000 jobs last year alone.  There’s also important support provided by the Ex-Im Bank to American small businesses -- about 3,400 American small business transactions were supported by the Ex-Im Bank in 2013.  So expanding and strengthening the U.S. economy is a top priority of the President’s, and he does not think that it would be a smart policy decision to start withdrawing support from those institutions that play such an important role in supporting our economy.
 
I would point out that President Reagan had some similar comments, had a similar view to this President back in 1986, when he signed legislation extending the life of the Ex-Im Bank.  I’d also point out that there are a couple of other individuals who are not well known as Obama supporters, who have articulated their strong support for the mission of the Ex-Im Bank and have encouraged Congress to take bipartisan action to reauthorize it. 
 
Let me just read a short quote here from Tom Donohue, who is the President and CEO of the United States Chamber of Commerce, and Jay Timmons, who’s the President and CEO of the National Association of Manufacturers.  They said, “If Ex-Im is not reauthorized, products of all shapes and sizes, from planes to medical equipment, will still be purchased overseas.  They just will not be produced in the U.S. [and not] by American workers.”
 
So the stakes here are pretty high.  There is bipartisan agreement that there is a tangible contribution that Ex-Im is making to the American economy and to American job creation.  And there is bipartisan agreement that it needs to be reauthorized.  And we are hopeful that Congress will do what they’ve done many times in the past, and that is support the reauthorization of the Ex-Im Bank in bipartisan fashion.

Q    Does it make it harder to press for that when you’ve got reports about fraud?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think the short answer to that is no -- simply because, as I mentioned earlier, the numbers speak for themselves.  The tangible impact that the Ex-Im Bank has on our economy and job creation is reason enough for Congress to act in bipartisan fashion, again, as they have many times, to reauthorize the bank.
 
Q    All right.  And one other topic.  Senior White House and administration officials are meeting tomorrow with Tom Steyer, among others, about a climate change report.  Do you have any misgivings about bringing in a very top and influential political donor to the White House?  And do you think that the Keystone pipeline will come up during those conversations?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I have no misgivings about the individuals who are participating in that meeting.  Their political activities notwithstanding, the administration is committed to making progress in addressing the causes of climate change and reducing carbon pollution.  That’s something that Mr. Steyer has obviously well-known views on, but there are a lot of other people with well-known views on this that the White House is consulting.

I’d point out that --
 
Q    Not worth billions of dollars, though, right?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, there are a number of insurance executives who are here to talk to White House staff today about this very topic.  I would anticipate that many of them -- although I don’t know this personally -- I would assume that many of them have a pretty active political interest, and I would assume that many of their political interests may not align perfectly with the administration’s agenda.
 
So the point is we’re talking to people from a variety of political perspectives.  I think the thing that they have in common is they’re concerned that failure to address the causes of climate change and the failure to take tangible steps to reduce carbon pollution would have a terrible impact on our country and a terrible impact on our economy.  Again, that is something that is -- that is a view that’s held by Democrats and Republicans alike, and this administration is willing to work with Democrats and Republicans alike to try to make progress on those goals.
 
Let’s move around the room a little bit.  Cheryl.
 
Q    Thanks.  Following on climate change, though, yesterday the Supreme Court dealt the EPA a setback on regulations.  What new actions is this administration proposing or thinking about in terms of climate change?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Cheryl, I have to say that I don’t think I agree with that analysis.  And I think that Chief Justice -- not Chief Justice -- I just gave him a promotion -- Justice Scalia articulated this a little bit differently.  I had the quote in my book here yesterday.  But he basically made the point that over the course of the case the EPA was sort of discussing their authority to regulate -- 86 percent of their regulatory authority was in question before the Court, and 83 percent of that regulatory authority was upheld by the Court. 
 
So we actually see this as a pretty good ratification of the authority that’s vested in the EPA to take the kinds of commonsense steps that are clearly in the best interest of our country and that are clearly in the best interest of our economy.  The President has talked about this at length.  And I think because he has identified this as a priority for his second term, you can anticipate that he’s going to continue to be pushing members of his administration to take the necessary action to prepare our country for the consequences of climate change.
 
It is the view of this administration, and certainly the view of the President, that that can be done in a way that’s actually good for the economy.  And what we’d be doing is focusing on those areas where we can both make our country more resilient, where we can reduce carbon pollution, but also strengthen our economy and look for opportunities to capitalize on growth industries.  There are countries around the globe that are going to be grappling with the effects of climate change, and there’s an opportunity for our country to play a leading role in terms of capitalizing on new industries related to improved efficiency, but also related to renewable energy.
 
Stephen.
 
Q    Did the President ask President Putin yesterday to seek this revocation of the Duma’s authority to go to Ukraine as part of the steps he wants to see for the situation to be de-escalated?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Stephen, I’m not in a position to offer you a more specific readout of that telephone conversation than you’ve already seen.  But we’ve been pretty candid I think over the last several weeks about the concrete steps that we would like to see President Putin take to de-escalate the situation in eastern Ukraine. 
 
We welcome the step that was taken as it relates to the Duma today.  But there are some additional concrete steps that we would like to see them take as it relates to pulling forces from the border, moving some of that heavy weaponry away so that it can’t be transferred into the hands of separatists.  There are some tangible steps -- and while we welcome those words and those symbolic measures that are taken, what we’re most focused on right now are concrete steps that Russia can take to support the ceasefire agreement.
 
Q    The State Department yesterday said there were some tanks that appear to be getting ready to be moved across the border into eastern Ukraine.  Today, there was a helicopter shot down by rebels, killing a number of Ukrainian soldiers.  Does that sort of indicate to the White House that perhaps this may be more window dressing than actual progress?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think that is why we are reserving judgment and trying to make clear that the proper way to evaluate the posture that’s adopted by President Putin is to closely examine the actions that are taken by the Russians and the Russian military.
 
We welcome the positive words, but what’s critical right now are the actions that are taken by the Russian government to de-escalate the situation.  And that involves moving some of that heavy weaponry that you’ve referenced, Stephen, and making sure that some of that materiel is not transferred into the hands of separatists so that they can perpetrate additional violence like shooting down helicopters.
 
Mr. Viqueira.
 
Q    Thank you, Mr. Earnest.  When Secretary Kerry was recently in Cairo, he indicated nothing to worry about -- the Apache helicopters that the Egyptians want, they’re on the way.  The Secretary has certified that Egypt is moving towards democracy, freeing up some $570 million in aid that was held in advance.  The $1.5 billion that they get every year appears to be going forward.  What leverage -- is it all’s well that ends well with Egypt?  I mean, what leverage does the administration have when they’re trying to -- when you are trying to move Egypt towards, for example, freeing jailed journalists and other impingements on democracy within Egypt?
 
MR. EARNEST:  That’s a good question.  There’s one aspect of your question that I do want to clarify for you, though.
 
When we announced earlier this year the resumption of some assistance to Egypt, it was predicated on the certification of two things.  The first is that Egypt was sustaining their strategic relationship with the United States, and that Egypt was fulfilling the obligations under the treaty that Egypt has with Israel.  And by certifying those two things, that allowed assistance to be reinstated to a couple of things.  The first is -- and it’s about $572 million in assistance.  Those are directed toward two things.  One is support that benefits directly the Egyptian people.  So these are humanitarian items like health and education support, and private-sector development. 
 
The second area of support that that reinstated was security assistance that’s related to the United States core national security interest.  So this included assistance to the Egyptian military to assist them in securing Egypt’s borders, supporting ongoing counterterrorism and anti-proliferation efforts, and helping them to ensure security more broadly in the Sinai Peninsula. 
 
Q    So what’s left of the whole deck?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Good question.  There is additional assistance that remains on hold because Egypt has yet to meet the requirements for reinstatement, including taking steps to ensure a democratic transition.
 
So in your question you noted that Secretary Kerry had certified, according to congressional requirements, that Egypt had met the standard as it relates to fulfilling basic principles of democracy.  The Secretary has not certified to that standard, and that is why there is some assistance that has been withheld.
 
So the question then is, what would we like to see the Egyptian government do.  And, quite frankly, it’s directly related to those principles of democracy that we referred to earlier.  Unfortunately, recent developments indicate that Egypt has not taken the kinds of steps that we would like to see toward adopting widely accepted principles of respect for basic human rights and other democratic principles that we hold dear in this country.
 
But as we continue to evaluate the ongoing situation in Egypt and what impact that should have on the assistance that’s provided to Egypt, we’ll continue to consult closely with Congress. 
 
Justin.
 
Q    Since you brought up ambassadors, I just wanted to get you to respond to the charge that’s come from Capitol Hill that the reason there’s been delays has been that the administration has kind of forwarded political donors as nominees at a pace that exceeds both the Clinton and Bush administrations.  And we’ve also seen kind of lackluster performances by people like the ambassador nominee to Norway, George Tsunis, that people like Amy Klobuchar and Al Franken have asked you guys to pull back.  So I’m wondering -- you kind of blame Republican obstructionism.  The rebuttal is, of course, that you’re sending up unqualified political nominees, and how you kind of grapple with that.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’d say several things about that.  First of all, of the 26 who are pending on the Senate floor right now, 16 of them are career Foreign Service officers.  So the objections that you’ve raised don’t explain their obstruction to those 16 career Foreign Service officers.
 
In terms of the other nominees that the President has appointed to these positions, we’ve got full confidence in their ability to do these jobs.  I think it is short-sighted to automatically rule out nominees that aren’t career Foreign Service officers.  If that were the case, that means that Caroline Kennedy would not be serving as the ambassador to Japan.  I think most people, even some Republicans, would agree that she’s doing a pretty good job over there.   
 
The President has also appointed people like Jon Huntsman, the former Republican Governor of Utah, to an important ambassador post in China.  Again, he is not a career Foreign Service officer.  But, again, Democrats and Republicans would agree that he did an able job of representing our country’s interests in China.
 
Zeke.
 
Q    Thanks, Josh.  In 2011, when the President said that the U.S. was leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq, was his assessment wrong at the time of what the situation was on the ground, or was he perhaps sugarcoating the situation on the ground because he wasn’t able to leave that residual force?
 
MR. EARNEST:  No.  I think what’s happened over the course of the last three years is we’ve seen the circumstances on the ground change; that so much of the sacrifice that was made principally by American servicemen and women in uniform was to create an opportunity for the Iraqi people to seize a democratic future.  And what we have seen is leadership, political leadership in Iraq that has not done a very good job of capitalizing on that opportunity and unifying that country around an inclusive governing agenda. 
 
So that’s why we’ve spent a lot of time over the last couple of years urging Prime Minister Maliki and other political leaders in Iraq to pursue a more inclusive agenda.  To confront the existential threat that’s posed by ISIL, the nation of Iraq needs to be unified.  And there needs to be a sense among every citizen in Iraq -- including those in the Shia community and the Sunni community and the Kurd community -- feeling of an investment in the success and stability of that country that the responsibility for unifying that country starts at the top.  And that’s why this administration will continue to support political leaders in Iraq who are seeking to build an inclusive political agenda in that country.
 
Q    With regards to those comments, would the President like to revise or extend them?  I mean, was he wrong about the stability of that country if it didn’t last even two and a half years, or if these political problems existed even a couple years ago?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Zeke, I think that anybody who has been looking at this situation would acknowledge that the circumstances on the ground have changed, and the necessary steps that are required by the Iraqi political leadership have not been taken to confront those changes.  And that poses a very severe challenge to the nation of Iraq.  And it’s going to require all of the political leaders of the various communities of Iraq coming together, putting the interest of that unified country first to confront that threat.  It is still an open question about whether or not the political leadership of that country is going to choose that path.  But the future of a unified Iraq depends upon it.
 
Q    And just to follow up on Jim’s question yesterday -- is it acceptable for the Obama administration, for any sort of partition to be at the outcome of this reconciliation process, if there is one politically, or even if it is the White House insisting on a unified Iraq as the outcome here?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, it is clearly the policy of this administration and this country that a unified Iraq is the one that is in the best position to confront this existential threat from ISIL.
 
Q    But is the alternative acceptable?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, this will have to be a decision that’s made by the Iraqi people, but it is the clear policy of this country that we feel like the best way to confront this threat is through a unified Iraq.  That is going to require an investment in a political agenda that gives every Iraqi a stake in that country’s future and that country’s prosperity.  It’s also going to require an investment in security forces that reflects that diversity of the country. 
 
Again, that security force will be stronger if it reflects the diversity of the country -- again, because if the security force is put in place to defend the security of everybody in that country, that they’re going to need a security force that’s composed of individuals from the various communities of that country.  And so those are the kinds of investments that this administration has been pushing Iraq’s political leadership to invoke.
 
Bill.
 
Q    Secretary Kerry said this morning that to have a U.S. aircraft bomb in Iraq before the formation of a new government would be completely wasted.  Yesterday, he said that the administration would not have to wait for a new government in order to strike.  What has changed?  Is it now a precondition of U.S. help from the air that there be a new Iraqi government?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think there was a -- the context in which he made those comments was important.  What Secretary Kerry was talking about is something that I referred to yesterday.  Somebody asked if the President was willing to sort of keep open the option on the table to consider military action in Syria to confront the threat that’s posed by ISIL.  What this President has made clear is a willingness to act unilaterally anywhere in the world to protect our national security interests.  That is something that is true in places like Yemen, in Somalia, even in --

Q    Specifically about Iraq.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Right.  But even most recently in Libya.  So when it comes to protecting our core national security interests, the President is willing to use the strongest, most powerful military in the history of the world to protect our national security interests.
 
Now, separately is a different question, which is a question that’s related to -- is the President willing to use American military might to stabilize the security situation in Iraq to provide a little room for the Iraqi political leadership to get their act together?
 
And what we’ve been very clear about, and what the President himself was very clear about when he spoke in front of the helicopter 10 days ago was that to take any sort of direct military action along those lines in pursuit of that goal, we would need to see a clear commitment from Iraq’s political leaders to the pursuit of an inclusive governing agenda.  Because again --
 
Q    Does that mean it has to be a newcomer?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Because, again, the success of this situation, the successful confrontation of the threat that’s posed by ISIL will require a unified Iraq, and that’s going to require a government that is pursuing an inclusive governing agenda.

Q    So you’re basically saying that what Secretary Kerry said this morning is correct -- that there wouldn’t be U.S. airstrikes before there’s a new government in Iraq.
 
MR. EARNEST:  What I’m saying is that the President, when he talked about this 10 days ago, was very clear about what criteria he will use in making decisions about the use of our military to protect our national security interests and to support efforts to form and build an inclusive Iraqi government.
 
Q    So you’re not endorsing what Secretary Kerry said.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what I’m trying to do is be very clear about what our position is and what the policy as articulated by the President is.  And I don’t -- I’m not sure that Secretary -- in fact, I’m confident that Secretary Kerry’s comments don’t differ from that at all.
 
Jon.
 
Q    And just to briefly follow up on Zeke’s question about the comments in 2011, I’d like to focus on what the President said just this past November when Maliki was here.  In the Oval Office, the President praised Maliki for taking steps in this commitment to “ensuring a strong, prosperous, inclusive and democratic Iraq,” and spoke about how he had done much to bring together the Sunnis, the Kurdish and Shia.  Did the President misjudge Maliki?  I mean, that was not -- this was just November.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I haven’t looked at the exact comments from the President at that time.  I think the President’s goal in those comments was to encourage the pursuit of a governing agenda that reflects the diversity of the country.  That was the goal of the President’s comments when they were sitting in the Oval Office, and that’s the goal of the comments expressed by other senior administration officials in terms of encouraging Iraq’s political leadership to pursue the kind of agenda and governing style that reflects the diversity of that country.
 
Q    And can I ask you -- again, just to follow up on questions you had last week about the flow of children coming over the border with Mexico.  You were asked, and a number of other officials across the administration have been asked, how many of those that have been caught have been released with a promise to appeal -- you know, appear back in court?  And you didn’t have that number then; I’m wondering do you have that number now.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have that number in front of me, Jon.
 
Q    And why don’t you have that number?  It’s been asked everywhere. And it’s a number the administration has, right?  It’s not that you don’t have it, it’s that you don’t want to release it, right?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t have it actually, Jon.  DHS may have it.  But let me just stipulate something:  Without knowing what that number is and without having seen it, I think we can all stipulate that that number is too high.  And that’s why you have seen an investment -- a surge, in fact -- of resources by this administration to try to address what is a large and growing problem along our southern border.
 
That’s why the -- we’ve seen an investment of additional judges and asylum officers and ICE attorneys deployed to try to more efficiently and rapidly process these cases.  And where necessary, we’re opening up additional facilities where adults and adults that are traveling with children can be detained.  In conjunction with the opening of those detention facilities are, again, additional ICE officers and immigration judges who can process these cases quickly, so that if it is determined that these individuals should be removed, that they will be removed promptly as well.
 
Q    In the interest of transparency, can you get that number for us?  People have been asking for quite some time.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I understand -- I think your interest in this is understandable.  I don’t have the numbers, but I will stipulate that the number is larger than any of us in this room would like to see.  And what we’re focused on is dealing with what is a number that is too big.
 
Q    And in terms of the reason for the flow, Cecilia Muñoz said that it was increasing violence in Central America.  But today, Jeh Johnson was asked if there had been any measurable increase in violence in Central America in the last two years, and he said he couldn’t say there was.  So are you still saying that that is the reason?  Or is the reason, as you had suggested last week, what you called a “disinformation campaign” by smugglers who say that they can -- the children are fine, once they get here they have permission to be here?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think I’d make the case to you that those things aren’t mutually exclusive; that there are a lot of people who are trapped in terrible violent situations in Central America, and therefore are a little desperate to try to get out of that situation, or desperate about the safety of their children.  And so it makes them easy targets for criminal syndicates and other individuals with bad intentions to propagate misinformation that gives them false hope about what kind of sanctuary they can receive in the United States.
 
The fact of the matter is, people who appear at the southern border expecting to be taken in are mistaken.
 
Q    But are they mistaken?  I mean, it’s not U.S. policy to send these children back, is it? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sure.
 
Q    So we’re deporting these children, unaccompanied children back to Central America?
 
MR. EARNEST:  The policy is complicated.  If the children are from Mexico, yes, that’s exactly what happens. 
 
Q    Central America, we’re talking, is most of this flow, right? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, it’s certainly some of the flow, but you asked me about children who show up at the southern border unaccompanied.  Yes, some of them are immediately returned.  Others are detained and returned.  So they go through the immigration process just like everyone else.  But there are professional accommodations that are required when we’re talking about children who show up at the southern border without an adult, without a parent nearby. 
 
So there is a process that we put in place.  FEMA is coordinating the response to this effort to make sure that resources that are marshalled from DHS and HHS are in place to handle the situation, what at its root is a humanitarian situation, but also in a way that is in strict compliance with the law.  This administration has demonstrated its commitment to enforcing the law, and that’s exactly what we’re doing.
 
Q    And I suppose you don’t have that number of how many have been deported back to Central America.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I do not have that number.  Again, I would stipulate that that number as well is higher than we would like to see, and that’s why you’re seeing sort of a stepped-up deployment of resources to deal with it. 
 
Jim.
 
Q    I’d like to jump to the IRS.  The Commissioner, John Koskinen, he’s been testifying up on Capitol Hill.  And one thing that he testified I wanted to ask you about.  He said that he didn’t know about the lost emails of Lois Lerner until April.  But then, of course, the IRS did not inform Congress until June.  Is that an acceptable level of transparency, do you think -- two months that the Commissioner of the IRS knew about these lost emails, but yet Congress wasn’t told until June?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, I can’t account for that timeline, so I’d encourage you to direct that question to the IRS.  I guess the one thing that does seem obvious --
 
Q    No, what I’m asking is whether that is acceptable to this White House, for two months to go by.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think there’s a question that’s begged though by your construction, which is what would Congress have done had they known about it in April or May or whenever the Commissioner first learned about it.  The fact of the matter is that there’s not anything that is tangibly different about this situation right now.  So this administration --
 
Q    If there’s no harm in releasing the information, why wasn’t that information passed along?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well again, Jim, as I mentioned, you should check with the IRS about this.  But the fact of the matter is our commitment to cooperating with legitimate congressional oversight -- and in some cases, illegitimate congressional oversight -- is pretty well documented.  But I’ll go through it again, because it’s pretty entertaining. 
 
Q    Are you saying Darrell Issa’s oversight is illegitimate here?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m saying that there are legitimate questions that can be raised about the partisan motivation of some of those who are conducting oversight in this circumstance.  The fact of the matter is there have been 17 congressional hearings into this matter -- two in the last 17 hours and three in the last 24 hours.  So they’ve had as many congressional investigations into this in the last 24 hours as I’ve had meals.  That seems like a lot.  Thirty interviews with IRS employees, 50 written congressional requests, 750,000 pages of documents.  After all of that, after three long congressional hearings in the last 24 hours, zero -- that’s the other key number here, zero -- zero evidence to substantiate any of the partisan Republican claims about this matter.
 
Q    The problem here though, Josh, is that you have a key figure in this controversy --
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think you and I might have different ideas about what the problem is.
 
Q    But the problem is --
 
MR. EARNEST:  Because I think the problem is that despite all of this, we have seen an unwillingness --
 
Q    Right, but doesn’t that sound like the dog ate my homework?  When you have two years of missing emails, it just -- on the face of it, it doesn’t sound credible. 
 
MR. EARNEST:  I guess if you listen solely to the arguments that are offered up by Republicans, you might have reason to question their credibility.  I agree with that.  Because the fact of the matter is that, despite the failure of the hard drive, as has been well-chronicled, the fact of the matter is 24,000 emails from that time period have been reconstructed and produced to Congress, again, because of our commitment to cooperating with congressional oversight in this matter.  That’s what we’ve been focused on. 
 
So, again, I understand why your eyebrows are raised when you see Republicans on Capitol Hill suggesting that there are two years of missing emails.  It’s not true.  A large chunk of those emails have already been provided to Republicans in Congress.  So when they say that, it is an indication I think that they’re becoming increasingly desperate to try to substantiate the conspiracy theories that they’ve been propagating for some time now. 
 
But again, the key number here is zero -- zero evidence to support the claims that are made by Republicans in this matter.
 
Q    And the President is comfortable with the level of disclosure and --
 
MR. EARNEST:  Again, for all the reasons that I cited -- 13 months of congressional hearings, 17 including three in the last 24 hours.  I think that our record of cooperation on this is probably something you’re tired of hearing about right now.  But again, it’s so long --
 
Q    I’m just asking the question -- but the White House is also comfortable with the people at TIGTA looking into the missing emails?  Do you think that’s appropriate?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think TIGTA is the inspector general and they’re independent.  So I wouldn’t render a judgment on their activities, and I don’t think it would be appropriate for me to.  And they’re independent.
 
Mr. Nakamura.
 
Q    I just want to follow up on Jon’s questions about immigration.  The Associated Press today reported that the Homeland Security Department and the White House have -- and I quote from the story -- so far dodged the answer to the question about how many minors have received notices to appear and actually showed up, and “so far dodged the answer on at least seven occasions over two weeks, alternately saying they did not know the figure or did not have it immediately at hand.”  The Associated Press concludes from that in this story, “This is how it looks when the image-conscious Obama administration doesn’t want to reveal politically sensitive information that could influence an important policy debate.”  How would you respond to that?  Is that accurate, that you’re concerned those numbers would inflame the situation at a time you’re trying to get immigration reform going?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think what I would indicate, David, is that we would stipulate to the fact that the numbers that you’re seeking are higher than anyone would like them to be.  And so the real question for this administration, and I think before the American people when they consider the reaction of their government, is what are they doing about numbers that are bigger than they should be?  And in this case, we have taken a number of steps to surge resources to try to address this problem, both in a way that reflects the humanitarian situation that is having a negative effect on some otherwise innocent children, but also in a way that reflects our nation’s commitment to being a nations of laws.
 
This administration is committed to enforcing the law, and that’s why you’ve seen the steps taken that we have.  I think the one additional thing here that’s also important to recognize is we’re also taking some additional steps to try to address this problem at its root.  The Vice President took a trip to Central America and met with leaders of Central American countries just last week to make sure that those countries, the leaders of those countries were doing the things that were required of them to safeguard their population.
 
The Vice President also announced on that trip some additional steps that the United States could take to support those countries as they try to reduce the violence and address other measures related to citizen security, but also to make sure that people are aware of the facts.  And that fact is that showing up unannounced at the southern border with the United States will not gain you legal entry into this country.
 
Q    If I could just follow up on one thing.  It looks like Speaker Boehner’s office has announced a working group of seven Republicans to inform, what he says, inform House leadership about this situation on the border because “the President has failed to take the necessary steps to address the crisis.”  Is that an appropriate response by House Republicans because the White House would like to seem real engaged in this?  Or do you worry that this kind of working group with seven Republicans would potentially complicate U.S. response by politicizing it?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m not sure where that announcement was made.  Your mention of it is the first I’ve heard of it, so I wouldn’t pass judgment on it from here without having reviewed it more carefully.
 
If there are Republicans who do want to play a constructive role in addressing what is a complicated and difficult policy challenge, we certainly would welcome their constructive contributions to those efforts.
 
Christi.
 
Q    Can I follow on that? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sure.
 
Q    Thank you.  On the review that Jeh Johnson was doing before the delay that the President requested, is he continuing -- was it his plan to continue doing that review over the summer?  And if so, has this gotten -- has this interrupted the review that he was doing of humane practices and deportation roles?
 
MR. EARNEST:  It’s my understanding that that review is still ongoing, but I would encourage you to check with the Department of Homeland Security for an update.  I don’t know if they’ll be able to provide you with one, but they’d be in a better position to do so than I am. 
 
Q    And can you also say if the White House has seen any signs that Republicans are using the window of opportunity that the President was hoping they would do -- would maybe do this summer?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sadly, no.  Alexis.
 
Q    I want to go back to Bill’s question just to clarify on Iraq.  In terms of the trigger -- what would trigger potential air strikes -- I didn’t quite understand the President when he was speaking to say that he was segregating the two things -- a long-term, more inclusive government and the potential to try to deal with the crisis with air strikes.  So can I just clarify -- is the President saying that he would not use them under any circumstances unless the Iraqi government moves forward and shows some signs?  Or would he use them to defend Baghdad or to defend the embassy?  It wasn’t my understanding that that’s what he was trying to convey.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m not going to be in a position to sort of prejudge what he may or may not conclude.  I would encourage you to go back and take a look at his comments that he delivered, I guess it was a week ago Friday.  I think that he was pretty clear in suggesting that there is not going to be a military solution to the instability that we see in Iraq right now.  What’s going to be required is a political solution that unites the country to face a threat that’s posed by ISIL.  And what may assist that effort is military support from the United States that would stabilize the security situation and give that government a little bit more room to act and unify the country.
 
But what the President I think was pretty clear about is his view that because political action will be required in terms of unifying the country, we’ll need to see a commitment along those lines before a decision is made about direct military action or other increases in our support for that government.
 
Q    So is it too much to say it’s conditional -- the President has conveyed to the Iraq government it’s conditional because they have obviously made a formal request for military intervention, air strikes?  Is that going too far to say that the President has conveyed to them it’s conditional?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, I don’t want to read out any sort of detail -- in a detailed manner any private conversations that this administration has had with our counterparts in Iraq.  But again, I would encourage you to take a look at the President’s remarks from a week ago Friday, and I think he was pretty specific about what he had in mind.
 
Peter.
 
Q    Josh, you mentioned the stepped-up deployment of resources to the border.  Could that at any point include National Guard troops, as some of the Republicans have been calling for, including in today’s hearing with Secretary Johnson?
 
MR. EARNEST:  If I said that, I may have been a little imprecise.  I think what I was trying to suggest is that resources had been mobilized to deal with the problem at the border.  In some cases, these detention centers are being opened up in other communities a little bit away from the border, but they’re all rooted in trying to deal with the problem at the border.
 
Q    What are the prospects for the National Guard becoming involved in this?
 
MR. EARNEST:  The President has made a historic commitment to deploying resources to secure our border.  That is both in the form of technology and in the form of personnel.  And I think one thing that’s particularly ironic among some Republicans on Capitol Hill who are suggesting that additional resources should be deployed to the border -- in many cases, those are the same congressional Republicans who are blocking commonsense immigration reform legislation passed by the Senate that -- wait for it -- included a historic commitment of resources to the United States border.
 
So if we really wanted to solve this problem, one good way to do it would be for those Republicans to get on board and do what so many Republicans did in the United States Senate, which is support commonsense immigration reform that wouldn’t just secure our border, but would actually do good things for our economy, would reduce the deficit, and finally deal with an immigration system that everyone agrees is broken.
 
Q    So you’re ruling out the use of the National Guard in this immediate crisis?
 
MR. EARNEST:  What I’m suggesting is that there has already been a historic commitment of resources to the border, and if there are Republicans in Congress who are focused on increasing resources along the border, that they should jump on board the bandwagon and support the passage of comprehensive immigration reform.
 
Ann.
 
Q    Thank you.  According to a video that the White House has posted online, the President is going to travel around this summer and start visiting some of the people who have written him.  Is this because he doesn’t think he really understands what’s going on in people’s lives?  (Laughter.)  Or is he just going a little stir crazy in his last couple of years in Washington?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, Ann, one of the things -- I think somebody asked me -- Tamara, I think you may have asked me a little bit about this yesterday --
 
Q    I might have.
 
MR. EARNEST:  -- as I recall.  One of the things that the President believes is important is making sure that he is paying careful attention to the way that people all across the country are dealing with so many of the challenges that are facing working families right now.  That’s one of the reasons that the White House hosted the first-ever Working Families Summit here in Washington.
 
But the President is also interested in getting outside of Washington, D.C. and spending time with Americans in their day-to-day routines, and talking to them about the challenges that are confronting their family, their small business or their communities more broadly. 
 
And so this is one way for the President to break out of that presidential bubble that so many other Presidents have talked about.
 
Q    Is he going to go to their homes?  Go with them to the office? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  We’ll have some more details about the President’s activities on Thursday.  But it’s something that --
 
Q    This isn’t a one-time thing?  He’s going to do this repeatedly?
 
MR. EARNEST:  That’s right.  That’s right.  And I think that the President’s efforts to spend time walking in the shoes of average Americans will take some different forms. 
 
In the case of the Minnesota trip here, though, I think there is some -- let’s see, I thought I had some more information -- he’s going to do a town hall meeting, and he’s going to spend some time meeting with Rebecca’s family.  Rebecca is the woman from Minnesota who had written the President that letter.
 
So this will be an opportunity for him to talk to Rebecca, to talk to her family, to talk to people in her community about the range of challenges that they’re facing.  And this will hopefully be an opportunity for the President to get some additional insight into the challenges that those families are confronting on a regular basis, but also get some insight into how those families are benefitting from some of the policies, or would benefit from some of the policies that the President and his administration have proposed.
 
Let me move around a little bit.  Jared.
 
Q    Josh, talking about the diplomatic note -- I mean, assurances that the President got from the Iraqi government, is the bar for assurance lower because the United States government is unsure what state the Iraqi government might be in if and when they ever need to prosecute American troops?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Let me pull this up here.  Jared, the President has made clear that we need to address the status of any military personnel sent into Iraq in response to the Iraqi government’s request for assistance to address the crisis. 
 
So Iraq has provided the exchange of acceptable assurances on the issue of protections for these personnel via the exchange of diplomatic note.  Specifically, Iraq has committed itself to providing protections for our personnel equivalent to those provided to personnel who were in the country before the crisis.  And we believe, the President believes that those protections are adequate to the short-term assessment and adviser mission that our troops will be performing.
 
Q    So the fact that there's a lower bar is only because of the size and scope of the mission?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think what we’re seeing now is a situation that’s different in character and in kind than we saw in 2011.  And those differences are that we’re dealing with a rather urgent situation when it comes to the threat that’s posed by ISIL. 
 
The number of military personnel that we’re talking about is on a much smaller scale.  It’s a small number of advisers that we’re discussing here.  There’s been a clear request from the Iraqi government, and as a result of that dynamic, those three things -- the emergency situation, the small number of advisers and the request from the Iraqi government -- we’ve received the appropriate assurances from them.
 
Q    And when we’re talking about responses to the emergency, we’ve seen Secretary Kerry there, we’ve seen other reaching out.  Would a leader-to-leader call at this point give too much credibility to a Maliki government that might not be there much longer?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t want to speculate on any calls that the President hasn’t made at this point, but we’ll keep you updated as best we can on calls.
 
Q    I’m asking -- it’s actually about the optics.  So whether or not they’ve been made or not is irrelevant to whether or not they’re being talked about and whether you’ve shown them.  That’s what’s the question.  So the fact that we haven’t heard about them is substantive for the question.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Okay, then maybe I don’t understand the question.
 
Q    If you aren’t showing us the calls, is it because you don’t want us to know that the President is talking with a leader who might not be around?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I see.  That’s a clever way of asking the question.  Why don’t I just say this:  I’m not aware of any conversations that have taken place in recent days from the President and Prime Minister Maliki.  But there have been a number of -- at least two that I can recall at the top of my head here -- from the Vice President to Prime Minister Maliki in the last few days.
 
Let’s see -- Luis.
 
Q    On the case of Meriam Ibrahim, the Sudanese woman who was sentenced to hang for apostasy -- she was released, but then we have reports that she and her family were arrested at the airport while trying to leave the country.  That family includes her husband, who is a U.S. citizen, and there are reports that they were trying to head to the United States.  Is the administration following this case, and is it concerned about it?
MR. EARNEST:  The administration is following the case quite closely.  In fact, just Secretary Kerry himself said just yesterday that we welcome the decision by the Sudanese appeals court to order her release. 
 
This case has rightly drawn the attention of the world and has been of deep concern to this administration and to people all across the globe.  We’ve seen the troubling reports of her re-arrest, but are not in a position to confirm them at this point.  We urge the government of Sudan in the strongest terms to ensure her freedom and, more broadly, to respect its citizens’ inherent right to the freedom of religion.
 
Yes.
 
Q    Thank you, Josh.  I want to go back to the President’s conversation yesterday.  When the President makes this call, is his purpose more to convey something to the Russian President or to maybe get some information in order to learn something?  Does he feel as if he is making progress on both of those fronts; that he understands -- in line with what Ann was asking about the President understanding the situation in his own country -- does he feel that he has a complete understanding of what’s going on in Ukraine, for instance, and especially the grievances, the legitimate grievances of the people in the east and the south of that country?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think you and I may have a different assessment about the legitimacy of some of those grievances, to put it mildly.  But I will say this -- that the President has spoken many times to President Putin, and the President himself has talked about the business-like nature of the conversations that those two leaders have.  The President certainly respects the legitimate interests that Russia has in the region, but the President is also concerned about making sure that everybody respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of independent nations.
 
So there has been a pretty open channel of communication between President Obama and President Putin in relation to this issue, but also a range of other issues as well.  So whether it’s talking about Ukraine on the phone yesterday or having the opportunity to visit about this in person when they were both in Normandy a few weeks ago, the President is interested in having an open and business-like dialogue with President Putin. 
 
And there’s no doubt that in certain situations that there is a difference of opinion when it comes to some I think what are pretty basic facts to others around the globe who might have a more impartial view.  But that doesn’t -- and I think this is an important part of the relationship between the United States and Russia -- it doesn’t inhibit cooperation on other important national security priorities that both countries share.  One great example of that is the success of the OPCW effort to remove the declared chemical weapons arsenal of the Assad regime.  That would not have happened without the cooperation and support of the Russian government and other countries in the international community.  So that’s an indication that despite the differences of opinion we may have about Ukraine, that the robust relationship between the United States and Russia isn’t just good for our two countries, it’s good for the world.
 
Q    Thank you, Josh.  And on a slightly less weighty matter, did the World Cup come up in the conversation?  (Laughter.)  Did President Putin congratulate President Obama on the amazing, amazing performance by the American team in the World Cup?  Unfortunately, I can’t say the same about my side.  (Laughter.)  But does he watch those performances?  Did he watch the match with Portugal?  Does he intend to watch the match with Germany?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I have not spoken to the President about the soccer match.  I know that he is aware of the outcome and is very proud of a couple of strong performances by the U.S. men’s national team.  And I don’t know if he’ll have a chance to watch the Germany game or not.  I think that we’re scheduled to be on the road that day.  But I know that the President is very proud of the performance of the team so far and is optimistic about their continued success.
 
Chris, I’m going to give you the last one.
 
Q    Thanks, Josh.  On the planned executive order that the President is planning to sign barring LGBT discrimination by federal contractors, not a lot of information is known either about its scope or the timing either for the signing or implementation.
 
MR. EARNEST:  That would be a first.
 
Q    Yes.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Right?  It seems like you’ve known quite a bit about this all along.
 
Q    Well, I don’t know anything, that’s why I’m asking you about it. 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Okay.
 
Q    So when asked, there was a lot of concern about a possibility of a religious exemption being placed in the executive order.  Could you rule out the possibility that a religious exemption will be within the executive order?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Unfortunately, I’m not in a position from here to give you any greater insight about the contents of what an executive order like this might include.  But this is something that the President’s team is drafting.  And once they have finished the drafting of that and are ready for the President to sign it, we’ll be able to talk to you in a little bit more detail about what’s actually included in there and what the consequences are for the President’s signature.
 
Q    Is the White House waiting for the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on the Hobby Lobby case before settling on a final form of this executive order?
 
MR. EARNEST:  It’s my understanding that there is an ongoing process as it relates to the drafting of an executive order that would take the kinds of steps the President has talked about quite a bit.  But at this point, I don’t have any update for you in terms of the content or the timing of that executive order.
 
Q    Why is the White House announcing that the President is going to sign this executive order at this time when that could have happened at any time over the course of the five and a half years of the administration?
 
(Audience member faints).
 
MR. EARNEST:  Everyone okay?  Why don’t we wrap it up and we’ll bring some water out here.
 
END
1:57 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with Prime Minister Cameron of the United Kingdom

The President spoke today with Prime Minister Cameron of the United Kingdom to consult about the crisis in Ukraine.  The leaders welcomed the news that separatists have agreed to implement the ceasefire declared unilaterally by President Poroshenko.  They re-emphasized the need for Russia to stop the flow of weapons and militants across the border and to use its influence over separatist groups to encourage them to take immediate concrete steps to implement President Poroshenko’s peace plan.  They agreed that should Russia fail to take these immediate steps to deescalate the situation in eastern Ukraine, the United States and the European Union would work to implement additional coordinated measures to impose costs on Russia.  The leaders also discussed the situation in Iraq and the threat posed by ISIL.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice at the White House Forum on Global LGBT Human Rights

It’s great to be here, and particularly great to see such a wonderful collection of faith leaders, human rights activists, private sector representatives and colleagues in government all in one place.  Protecting and upholding human rights, especially for our lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender brothers and sisters, is work to which we all are called, so thank you, thank you so much for joining us here today. 

The inexhaustible pursuit of equality, the drive to expand opportunity, the unshakeable conviction that human dignity and human rights are the natural endowment of all humankind—these are qualities that are fundamental to our American character.  For many Americans, they are also essential to our personal story.  I would not be standing here today if those who came before me had not pried open doors that had long been shut to people who look like me.  So, I feel a responsibility and a personal passion to help others enjoy the same opportunities that I have been blessed to receive.  It’s what drives me as a public servant and as a mother, because I do not want my children, or anyone else’s, to have their life choices limited by how they look, who they worship, or whom they love.

Universal human rights are not bestowed by governments or powerful majorities, they are God’s gift and the birth right of all people.  They belong to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender men and women as surely as they belong to anyone in the human family.  As President Obama has said so eloquently, “If we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.” 

It offends our common humanity when men or women anywhere in the world are beaten or abused, or when individuals anywhere have their rights restricted because of who they are.  And, it doesn’t just harm those who are targeted.  It rends the bonds that knit society together.  Trust recedes; suspicion spreads.  Entire countries are deprived of vital contributions from citizens in minority groups. 

We know this to be true because we’ve seen in our own history—we’ve seen how much is gained by widening the circle of inclusion.  This year, Americans celebrate the 60th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, where we acknowledged that separate can never be equal.  And it’s the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act, which brought us closer to full equality before the law.  This year also marks 45 years since the Stonewall riots.  All these anniversaries remind us how far the United States has come, and how change never happens without passionate people willing to sacrifice for what’s right.   

Unfortunately, in too many places, being gay or transgender is enough to make someone the target of slurs, torments, and violence.  We all know the names of Harvey Milk, Eric Lembembe, David Kato, and too many other brave advocates who refused to hide or be silenced, and who have been ostracized or killed for their work.  In many places, allies and supporters of the LGBT community are also penalized.  New laws in Uganda and Nigeria incite the fear of arrest and detention for those who provide health services or defend basic legal rights in court.  In addition to the pernicious so-called “propaganda” law already on the books, proposed legislation in Russia would allow the government to take children away from their gay parents.  There are almost 80 countries—eight-zero— countries in this world where discrimination against LGBT citizens is enshrined in law, and that number threatens to grow.  In seven countries—eight, if Brunei continues on its path—same-sex acts are punishable by death. 

So protecting our LGBT brothers and sisters is among the most challenging human rights issues we face.  Prejudice has deep roots, and the laws limiting gay rights frequently enjoy strong popular support.  Abuse is often encouraged by custom and by local authorities who look the other way, or worse.  But cultural differences do not excuse human rights violations.  They do not justify criminal behavior.  Governments are responsible for protecting the rights of all citizens, and it is incumbent upon the state, and upon each of us, to foster tolerance and reverse the tide of discrimination. 

That’s why the Obama administration has worked so hard to do better here at home.  For much of our history, we were not even close to living up to our own ideals.  While more work remains to ensure that the rights of all Americans are unassailable, under President Obama’s leadership, we’ve secured important victories.  Our service members no longer need to hide who they love in order to serve the country they love.  LGBT federal employees and their families now enjoy the same benefits as their coworkers, including, as of last week, the protections of the Family and Medical Leave Act.  Law enforcement officials now have the tools to prosecute violent acts motivated by someone’s sexual orientation or gender identity, and to prosecute them as the hate crimes that they are.  And, President Obama directed the Justice Department to stop defending the Defense of Marriage Act, because it was unconstitutional.  Nearly one year ago, the Supreme Court agreed.  What a great day that was for America.

We’re also seeing public attitudes evolve with breathtaking speed, because proud members of the LGBT movement—including so many of you—have worked to replace fear with familiarity and vitriol with respect.  When you share quiet moments with your friends and families, your church members and coworkers, you seed mutual understanding.  When a pro-basketball player, or an NFL draft pick, or a high school principal comes out—when a transgender woman is on the cover of TIME magazine—young people all over the country see that they can live their lives openly, with dignity, and achieve great things.  As a result, today in 19 states and the District of Columbia, marriage equality is the law of the land.  And, last week, the Presbyterian Church overwhelmingly voted to allow their ministers to officiate these ceremonies.  So as we all know, political and social progress indeed go hand in hand. 

America’s support for LGBT rights is not just a national cause but it’s also a global enterprise.  President Obama has specifically directed that American diplomacy and American assistance promote and protect the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender men and women, all around the world.  He has pressed this message to the leaders of countries where gay rights are under threat—as he did, for example, in Senegal last year—and personally conveyed support to local civil society groups that defend those rights.  We’ve made it clear that the United States will respond appropriately when nations target their own citizens.  Last week, we unveiled additional actions in response to Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act, including restricting entry to the United States for individual human rights abusers, and cancelling and adjusting certain programs and activities, including a military exercise.

Through the Global Equality Fund and the LGBT Global Development Partnership, the United States is working with government and private sector partners to advance equality and human rights protections worldwide.  The Fund provides emergency assistance to activists in more than 50 countries.  Now, we’re launching new efforts to help civil society build partnerships with local faith communities, business leaders, and health care providers to enhance protections for LGBT rights.  And, thanks to a new partnership between the National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce and USAID, we will provide business development training and build new networks to help economically empower the LGBT community. 

We’re also working tirelessly in international institutions to bolster the norms protecting rights.  During my four and a half years at the United Nations, the U.S. joined the LGBT core group.  We worked to pass the first Human Rights Council resolution focused solely on the human rights of LGBT people.  And, we fought to broaden other UN resolutions to expressly cover LGBT persons.  When some countries worked hard, and succeeded, in stripping language on sexual orientation and gender identity from a resolution condemning extrajudicial killings, we battled back, we restored the language, and when that resolution went to the full General Assembly, we won.  

The United States government will continue to beat back barriers and speak out on behalf of the rights of all people, the world over.  We do this both because it’s our moral obligation, and because it’s in our national interests.  Nations that protect human rights are more stable, more peaceful, and more prosperous partners for the United States.  But, to achieve lasting global change, we need everyone’s shoulder at the wheel.  That’s what today is about, finding new ways for all of us to push forward together.  With more voices to enrich and amplify the message—the message that gay rights are straight-up human rights—we can open many more minds. 

So, take this opportunity amongst yourselves to build new connections.  Look for ways to strengthen your networks, both with LGBT groups at home and with communities working overseas.  Let’s challenge ourselves not just to talk about how difficult the mission ahead of us is, but to make concrete commitments that will bring us closer to our goal.      

For the faith community, how can we reinforce to religious groups that God loves all the children of his creation equally?  For the human rights community, how can we help activists work together to advance social justice for everyone?  Because, if you care about equal rights for women or ethnic or religious minorities, you should care about LGBT human rights too.  It’s all the same.  And for the private sector, how can we make the strongest case that protecting rights is good business?  These are the questions that I hope we’ll continue to work together to answer. 

Because when I listen to my own children and to the young people I’m privileged to meet with, I am filled with hope—hope that tomorrow will indeed get better for all people of the world, whether they live in Peoria or Peshawar.  And I have no doubt that future generations will wonder why anyone ever sought to criminalize love or condemn another human for being true to him or herself. 

Change will come.  It’s already coming.  We have achieved so much.  And, working together, we can be assured that the future belongs to those who stand up for freedom and human dignity.  So let’s recommit to doing everything we can to reach the day when love—all love—is met only with celebration, when all of our brothers and sisters encounter only equal opportunity and acceptance, and when all rights are just simply human rights—sacred and inviolable.  Thank you all so much for being here with us.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Presidential Memorandum -- Delegation of Reporting Functions Specified in Section 1206(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014

MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF STATE

SUBJECT: Delegation of Reporting Functions Specified in Section 1206(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014

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 1206(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2014 (Public Law 113-66).

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

 BARACK OBAMA

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, 6/23/2014

James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

12:40 P.M. EDT
 
MR. EARNEST:  Good afternoon, everybody.  It’s nice to see you all.  I hope you had a wonderful weekend.  I have a few things I want to run through at the top, so if you’ll indulge me here a little bit. 
 
The first is I want to talk just a little bit about the White House Working Families Summit that’s taking place across town here.  In about an hour, the President will deliver remarks at the first-ever White House Summit on Working Families.  In his remarks today, the President will announce new, concrete actions that he will take using his pen to expand flexible workplace options that will better support the needs of working families.
 
As you know, he has also used his pen to mobilize -- used his phone, pardon me, to mobilize a very diverse group of stakeholders to elevate this national conversation, including businesses, economists, labor leaders, legislators, advocates, and the media -- because if we’re serious about changing our culture here, we recognize that all of you have a big role to play. 
 
Now, recognizing that, as the graphics behind me show, today’s workforce is changing and we have to make sure our workforce workplace policies keep up, and recognizing that we all have a role to play from the federal government policymakers to the private sector and ordinary citizens. 
 
That’s why today, as the President announces his own actions to help both working families and businesses succeed, you will also hear him lift up the best practices of companies that are already showing how innovative workplace policies can be good for their employees and their business’s bottom line.  Companies like JetBlue, which offers flexible work arrangements for their customer service representatives; Google, which offers paid-leave policies for any primary care giver; and the Gap, which recently announced it will raise wages for all of its employees.  So we’re looking forward to talking about these and other solutions over the course of the day today.
 
I have two other matters that I want to talk to you about before we get started, both of them foreign policy related. 
 
Today, the international maritime task force completed its extraordinary mission of removing the final 8 percent of declared chemical weapons precursors from Syria.  We congratulate the UN-OPCW joint mission and the entire international coalition for their unprecedented work in removing more than 1,000 tons of declared chemical weapons materials from Syria. 
 
The world will never forget the loss of more than 1,400 innocent Syrians senselessly killed with chemical weapons on August 21st, 2013.  There is no starker reminder that for almost 100 years, the international community has deemed the use of these weapons to be far beyond the bounds of acceptable conduct.  The removal of these materials sends a clear message that the use of these abhorrent weapons has consequences and will not be tolerated by the international community. 
 
While our work is not finished to ensure the complete elimination of Syria’s chemical weapons program, this is an important milestone in the international community’s commitment to respond to the use of chemical weapons by removing the Syrian regime’s stockpiles. 
 
In addition to the removal of all declared chemicals, the OPCW has also verified the destruction of declared production, mixing, and filling equipment.  The OPCW has also verified the destruction of all declared chemical weapons delivery vehicles, including missile warheads and aerial bombs. 
 
In the coming weeks, the United States will begin destruction of a large amount of Syria’s chemical weapons precursors aboard the Cape Ray.  This will be done in the safest, most environmentally sound manner.  It’s an unprecedented mission deploying unique American capabilities to destroy the most dangerous elements of the Syrian arsenal.  This will ensure that they will never be used against the Syrian people or against the United States, our allies, our partners in the region or beyond.
 
We continue to strongly oppose the Assad regime’s appalling violations of human rights and will continue to work with our friends and partners, including the moderate opposition in Syria, to support efforts to assist the Syrian people and bring about a transition to a government that is responsive to their aspirations.
 
Finally, I wanted to read one additional statement about a situation in Egypt.  The United States strongly condemns the verdicts rendered against three Al Jazeera journalists and 15 other defendants today in Egypt.  The prosecution of journalists for reporting information that does not coincide with the government of Egypt’s narrative flouts the most basic standards of media freedom and represents a blow to democratic progress in Egypt. 
 
As we have said many times before, democracy is about more than elections.  True democracy requires thriving democratic institutions, including a vibrant free press that is empowered to hold the government accountable to the people.  Perhaps most disturbing in this verdict comes as part of a succession of prosecutions and verdicts that are fundamentally incompatible with the basic precepts of human rights and democratic governance.  These include the prosecution of peaceful protestors and critics of the government in a series of summary death sentences in trials that failed to achieve even a semblance of due process. 
 
It should be emphasized that the victims in these cases are not just the defendants and journalism more broadly, but the Egyptian people, who have courageously asserted their demands for the fundamental freedoms to which all are entitled.  We call on the Egyptian government to pardon these individuals or commute their sentences so that they can be released immediately, and grant clemency for all politically motivated sentences, starting with the other defendants in this trial.
 
We strongly urge President el-Sisi in the spirit of his pledge to review all human rights legislation to provide the protections for free expression and assembly, as well as the fair trial safeguards that are required by Egypt’s international obligations.  The United States will continue to stand with the Egyptian people as they seek to realize the rights for which they have long struggled.
 
So I apologize for the long wind-up, but some important news I wanted to start off with today.  So with that, Julie, do you want to start with the questions?
 
Q    Yes.  Thanks, Josh.  I actually want to go back to the Syria chemical weapons situation.  I know that the administration sees this as a policy victory, but I’m wondering if that’s tempered at all given the fact that even if you’ve gotten all of the known chemical weapons out of Syria, that policy has done virtually nothing to stop the civil war there, and that conflict is bleeding over into Iraq. 
 
MR. EARNEST:  I guess the short answer to your question is yes, that we remain very concerned about the situation in Syria.  What’s notable about this announcement today is that for a long time, the Assad regime in Syria was one of the more conspicuous violators of the widely accepted notion across the globe that chemical weapons have no place, particularly when they’re being used against civilians as they were last August.
 
The fact that Syria has now declared that they have chemical weapons, signed the treaty, and has cooperated with the international community to dispose of those declared chemical weapons is an important step, and there was some justified skepticism by people in this room and by other close observers of this situation about whether or not Syria would actually follow through -- and they did, thanks primarily, again, to the work of the international community to hold them to account, to follow through on this mission.  And the United States was able to bring some unique capabilities to bear to dispose of these chemicals.
 
Q    I guess my question is, is there any regret that when the chemical weapon attack happened last year that the option that the President went with was this plan, to get rid of the chemical weapons, and not something more broad that could have perhaps slowed the violence there and prevented ISIL from spilling over into Iraq?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, that would -- I think what I would say to that, Julie, is that the President has been carefully reviewing his options.  And I think we’ve been pretty honest about the fact that there has been a regular process underway here inside the administration to continually review our options for confronting Syria and for dealing with the terrible humanitarian and diplomatic situation there.
 
The fact of the matter is that there are not a lot of good options.  And this has been a difficult policy problem to confront.  But there are a number of things that we have done.  Certainly getting a handle and disposing of these declared chemical weapon stockpiles is an important step.  The United States continues to be the largest donor of humanitarian assistance to the region.  We’ve also spent quite a bit of time coordinating with our allies in the region to assist in the response to the violence in Syria.
 
We’ve been worried for some time about the destabilizing impact that the violence in that country could have throughout the region.  There’s no question that some of the violence that we’ve seen in Iraq in the last couple of weeks and the amount of territory that ISIL has taken over is an outgrowth of that instability.  This is something that we’ve been focused on for quite some time, but there’s a difference between being focused on it and actually having a solution to what is a -- I think everybody acknowledges, even our harshest critics acknowledge that this is a thorny problem to deal with, and that the answers here are neither easy nor obvious.
 
But there is a strategy in place that the President has deployed that is bearing some results.  And the elimination of these declared chemical stockpiles is an important step, primarily because -- and I just want to finish with this one thought -- our biggest -- among our biggest concerns with this stockpile that was maintained by the Assad regime was the possibility, even likelihood, of proliferation; that these weapons could fall in the hands of terrorist groups or other rogue nations, and that we could see them used against our partners or our allies or even, God forbid, the American people.
 
Because these declared weapons stockpiles have now been secured by the international community and disposed of by the United States, these weapons will never be used by anybody, and no one will be a victim of these weapons.  And that is an important step, and one we’re pleased to see.
 
Q    And just finally, you mentioned the territory that ISIL is taking over.  Over the weekend, they took three border crossings with Syria and with Jordan.  How concerning is that to the U.S.?  And while you have these military advisers going over there, are you worried that by the time they assess the strength of the Iraqi security forces, that ISIL’s gains could be so strong that they could be almost irreversible?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’ve seen the reports of the progress that was made by ISIL over the weekend.  We do continue to be concerned about the security situation in Iraq.  The President has laid out a strategy, as he did from this podium on Thursday, for dealing with this problem. 
 
At the root, though, this is a problem that’s going to be solved politically, and it’s going to require some very difficult choices to be made by Iraq’s political leaders.  And pursuing a political agenda that’s more inclusive that gives every Iraqi a stake in that country’s prosperity and future is the only way that the nation of Iraq can present a united front to the extremists there that don’t have the best of intentions. 
 
Roberta.
 
Q    Just following onto what you said about the political solution.  The Ayatollah said yesterday that he was critical of U.S. plans in Iraq, and I’m wondering how that -- if it’s a signal that Iran is unlikely to cooperate with U.S. efforts to find that political solution that the President has been talking about.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, Roberta, as Reuters and other news organizations have reported, there was a conversation on the sidelines of the P5-plus-1 meeting between American diplomats and their counterparts in Iran about the situation in Iraq.  I don't have any additional conversations to read out to you. 
 
I think I’d just remind you of the case that I made last week, that it is not in the interest of Iran for there to be a deteriorating security situation in a neighboring country.  So that presents what could be an opportunity for some common ground and for the United States to work with all of our partners in the region to try to resolve that security situation in the short term, and give the Iraqi political leadership a little room to make the kinds of difficult and politically courageous decisions that are required to unify that country so that the people of Iraq can meet that threat, can defeat that threat, and pursue an inclusive future that’s in the best interest of every citizen of that country.
 
Q    And just one domestic question.  Kevin McCarthy said yesterday that he opposes renewing the charter for the Ex-Im Bank, and I’m wondering what the White House is going to do to make the public case for renewal to counter that.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, the incoming Majority Leader is certainly entitled to his own opinion, but there are some important facts to consider that have important consequences for policy views like the one that he articulated.  The Ex-Im Bank helps American companies create and support jobs here at home at no cost to taxpayers and that helps us meet our export goals, which is why reauthorization of the Ex-Im Bank has historically enjoyed bipartisan support in the past. 
 
The benefits are clear -- these are important.  Over the last five years, the bank has supported 1.2 million jobs in the United States across a range of business sectors, including more than 200,000 in fiscal year 2013 alone. 
 
Additionally, Ex-Im Bank provides American small businesses the certainty and protection they need to enter new markets, grow their businesses, and create jobs here at home.  The bank last year, in 2013, approved 3,413 small business transactions -- that’s assistance that’s provided to American small businesses.
 
So the focal point of the President’s domestic policy-making agenda is on expanding economic opportunity for the middle class.  And one area of an important economic growth is our exports.  And anything we can do to help American businesses capitalize on opportunities that exist in overseas markets is something we want to make sure that we’re taking advantage of.  So the President strongly supports the funding for -- or the reauthorization of the Ex-Im Bank.  I know that this is something that the incoming Majority Leader has supported in the past, and it’s traditionally enjoyed strong bipartisan support.
 
As we were talking about this a little bit earlier here today at the White House, somebody pointed out to me that President Reagan himself in 1986 had something interesting to say.  He signed -- I thought it was interesting.  (Laughter.)  I’ll let you judge for yourself as I read it here. 
 
He signed a piece of legislation that extended the Bank’s charter for six years.  And he said that the reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank “sends an important signal to both our exporting community and foreign suppliers that American exporters will continue to be able to compete vigorously for business throughout the world.”  He went on to say, “This authority will give the United States needed leverage for use in negotiations to eliminate predatory financing practices whereby companies mix official export financing with concessional foreign aid in an effort to undercut bids on major overseas projects.”
 
So I can imagine that the incoming Majority Leader might discount a little bit what I have to say, but I’d be surprised if he discounted President Reagan’s view on this.
 
Q    So are we going to see the President and the White House really pushing hard for this publicly, making that case?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think I made a pretty good case right there, but, again, I’ll let you guys judge.
 
Bob.
 
Q    Josh, it’s been asked a number of times in this room -- last week, as a matter of fact, from Jay to the President to you -- about whether al-Maliki is the kind of person who is going to be able to build and rework the government and build a coalition.  But there’s a really practical question to all this now about whether or not there’d be even enough time if he suddenly becomes Mr. Coalition, will there be enough time -- does the U.S. believe there’s enough time for him to rebuild a government before it’s needed to -- for the U.S. to engage maybe in airstrikes or whatever?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I wouldn’t want to get ahead of any sort of future decisions that the President might have to make about future actions.  But it is our belief, as I’m standing here today and you’re asking me, there is time for this to get done, that there is a process that’s in place under the Iraqi constitution for a government to be formed. 
 
I know that there are a variety of leaders in Iraq who have signaled that the formation of that government should happen quickly because of a deteriorating security situation there, but also to make sure that we have -- or that the Iraqi people have inclusive political leadership.  And there is a process in place -- or a laid-out process by which this needs to happen, and we’re at a common-sense place in that process for these steps to be taken.  So what’s needed here is the political will from all of Iraq’s leaders to unify that country and help them meet the threat that they’re facing right now.
 
Let’s move around a little bit.  Jon.
 
Q    Can you clarify something -- when the President spoke in this room last week, he said the reason why troops weren’t left in Iraq was because they couldn’t work out an immunity agreement and we’d never send our troops anywhere where they don’t have a guarantee of immunity.  And over the weekend, a senior official traveling with Secretary Kerry told reporters that there still isn’t an immunity agreement for the troops, the 300 that the President has now decided to send over, that that is “still being worked out.”  So can you give us some clarification?  Is there immunity for the troops the President has now decided to send over to Iraq?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, suffice it to say that the Commander-in-Chief would not make a decision to put our men and women into harm’s way without getting some necessary assurances.  And what I can tell you is that we can confirm that Iraq has provided acceptable assurances on the issue of protections for these personnel via the exchange of diplomatic note.  Specifically, Iraq has committed itself to providing protections for our personnel equivalent to those provided to personnel who were in country before the crisis.  We believe these protections are adequate to the short-term assessment and advisor mission our troops will be performing.
 
Q    So it’s been worked out?  So it’s done, you’re satisfied?  We’re done?
 
MR. EARNEST:  There’s been an exchange of diplomatic notes that gives us the needed assurances.
 
Q    Okay.  I’d also like you to respond to something we heard from Ryan Crocker, of course, the former Ambassador to Iraq and to Afghanistan.  He said that this group, ISIS, is actually more formidable than al Qaeda was under bin Laden at the time of September 11th.  Do you agree with that assessment?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I don’t have a personal assessment to share.  I think the President was pretty clear when he spoke from this podium on Thursday about his concern about the potential for violence that ISIL has already demonstrated.  They have used some pretty terrible tactics.  There have been reports of massacres of some Iraqi troops.  So there is no doubt that this is a group that has some violent tendencies and it is the subject of some concern here.  That’s why the President has laid out a pretty specific strategy for trying to contain that threat and to deal with it, but it hinges on some important political steps that need to be taken by the Iraqi government.
 
Q    Well, there’s no question that they have some violent tendencies and they are problematic, but Crocker is suggesting --and others -- something much more:  that they now have access to resources that al Qaeda never had previously -- financial resources, access to weapons -- which suggest, some are saying, maybe the most formidable terrorist threat we’ve ever seen.  I mean, that sounds like something much more than what you just described -- violent tendencies.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Yes, I’m just not -- I’m not in a position to make that personal assessment, but I think that what you have seen from this administration, from this President is a response that’s commensurate with the threat that is posed by this group.  And it is -- I mean, I guess I would say that some of our strategy for dealing with this threat, Jon, is beefing up our intelligence resources to make sure that we are keeping a close eye on what’s happening over there and what that group is up to because of that threat that they may pose.
 
Q    Given that threat, does the President regret what he said to David Remnick in The New Yorker, talking about the al Qaeda affiliates being like the JV team and saying if you put on a Lakers jersey, it doesn’t mean you’re Kobe Bryant?  Does the President regret talking so cavalierly about the threat posed by groups like this, offshoots of al Qaeda?
 
MR. EARNEST:  He does not, and the reason for that is simple.
 
Q    This is not a JV team, though, right, I mean, what we’re seeing in Iraq?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think that there is an assessment underway to figure out exactly how significant of a threat they pose to the United States and our allies and interests not just in the region but around the world.  There is no doubt that the determination of core al Qaeda that had a safe haven along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border was determined to do terrible damage and perpetrate terrible violence against the American people and the United States.  That made them a significant threat.  The threat that is posed by these offshoot groups is a little different than that. 
 
The question I think that remains to be seen is, what do we need to do to make sure that we stay on top of them, to monitor their actions, to monitor their capabilities to ensure that we stay ahead of them?  And that is a very difficult challenge.  It’s a challenge that this President and this administration has devoted significant resources to and it’s something that future Presidents will have to confront as well.
 
Let’s move around a little bit.  J.C.
 
Q    There’s a lot of discussion about mission creep and, historically, when you talk about special forces, a lot of people go back to Vietnam and the administrations of Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson.  However this plays itself out, Josh, is America going to be going alone or would they have the support of their allies, especially in Europe?
 
MR. EARNEST:  This administration, the President, and Secretary Kerry, and others have been consulting intensively with our partners, both in the region and our allies around the world, as we confront this challenge.  Secretary Kerry is traveling in the region -- has been traveling in the region this weekend and we’ll be spending some time this week talking to other world leaders about how the United States can coordinate with other countries to meet this threat.
 
So the United States and this administration remains committed to working in multilateral fashion with our partners and allies to confront this challenge.  But there are certain capabilities that the United States possesses that will require international leadership, and the President is not at all shy about exercising that international influence and that international leadership where necessary to protect the interests of the United States of America.
 
Q    May I just follow up?
 
MR. EARNEST:  You may.
 
Q    When the time comes, will you let us know who the President has been speaking to in terms of his allies, his friends?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sure.
 
Q    Especially in Europe?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I can’t commit to reading out every single phone call that the President makes to his counterparts in our allied countries, but I can do my best to try to keep you up to speed as he’s making these -- having these conversations.
 
Q    Thank you, Josh.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Lalit.
 
Q    Thank you, Josh.  Greetings on your first day.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Thank you.
 
Q    In Afghanistan, one of the presidential candidates has almost withdrawn and he is not cooperating in the election commission.  By any chance, do you see this as an indication of mass fraud?  How do you see the elections coming up, and his future impact on Afghanistan?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Say the last part again.
 
Q    And his future impact on Afghanistan.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sure.  Well, this is something that we’re following pretty closely.  The United States urges both sides to remain engaged with the electoral institutions and avoid violence.  We would regret any moves to the contrary. 
 
Allegations of improper behavior and credible complaints should be investigated through proper channels.  There are established legal mechanisms for receiving, investigating, and adjudicating complaints, both in the provinces and in Kabul, with both commissions and at several stages in the process. 
 
We call upon the electoral institutions to ensure that all allegations of fraud brought to them are given careful and impartial review and adjudication.  In addition, dialogue between the candidates and the electoral bodies is essential, and we encourage direct discussions as soon as possible.
 
So there is a mechanism in place for the concerns that have been raised about the integrity of the election to be adjudicated.  And we’re encouraging both sides, both the two candidates and those who are allied with one of the two candidates, to pursue a disposition of these concerns through the well-established order, as dictated by Afghan tradition and the Afghan constitution.  That is the way for these disputes to be resolved.  And the United States will continue to stand beside the Afghan people as they work through the democratic processes.
 
As I can personally attest, the democratic process is sometimes pretty messy.  But the country will be well served by pursuing the concerns that have been raised through the established electoral institutions. 
 
Peter.
 
Q    Josh, can I follow up on Jon’s question?  You said that the protections offered by these diplomatic notes are adequate.  In 2011, the same sort of executive agreement was deemed inadequate by U.S. government lawyers, and that any immunity for troops had to go through parliament in order to be deemed sufficient to guarantee immunity for American troops.  So what’s the difference this time?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think it’s different in a couple of ways.  The first is that we’re dealing with an emergency situation.  That’s the first part.  And there is an urgent need for these advisers to be able to do their work on the ground in Iraq. 
 
There’s also a difference between the small number of advisers we’re talking about -- 300 or so -- and the few thousand troops that had been -- American troops that had been contemplated in terms of continuing to be in Iraq and pursuing both a counterterrorism mission as well as a training mission.
 
So given those differences, both in size but also in the environment in which they’re operating, the assurances that we’ve received are sufficient in the mind of this administration and in the mind of the Commander-In-Chief to assure their security as they do their work.
 
Q    In other words, there is a certain degree of risk involved, not having a parliamentary thing.  But the risk is deemed worth it, given that it’s a smaller number and that we have no -- we have little choice, in his view, to send somebody quickly?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think I’d say that the risk is materially different because of the emergent situation that we’re facing, and because of the smaller number.  I mean, the other part of it here that seems different is that we’ve gotten urgings and requests from the Maliki government to have these troops on the ground to assist them as they confront this threat.  Obviously, the dynamic was significantly different in 2011, where the Maliki administration was resisting additional American troops in Iraq. 
So that’s another difference there, too.
 
Q    But Maliki did agree in 2011 to sign what he’s called an “executive agreement,” providing the same sort of immunity you’re talking about.  But it was the U.S. side that decided that wasn’t sufficient; that the lawyers all thought that wasn’t strong enough; that under Iraqi law it had to go through parliament to actually be legal.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Right.  But, again, he was in a situation where he was responding to our -- sort of our stated policy of considering additional American troops being left behind there to conduct this counterterrorism and training mission.  It’s a little bit different now, where you have the Maliki government coming to the Obama administration and saying that they would like to see American troops there.  The fact that we’re also talking about a much smaller number I think is relevant as well.
 
Justin.
 
Q    I wanted to ask about paid family leave -- it was something that the President talked about in his weekend address, and said we’re one of only, like, three developed nations that don’t have it.  But what we haven’t heard from you guys is both specifics on how the President would like to see that paid for, and -- or how long he thinks that a paid family leave program should offer its benefits, and how he would pay for that.  So I’m wondering -- there’s been a suggestion that it would involve some sort of tax cut; it would be like a $20 billion program. So could you nail down for us like what your exact proposal for the paid family leave is, especially if it’s something that the President is touting both today and over the weekend?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Sure.  Thank you for the question, Justin, this is an important issue that we -- that the President feels very strongly about, even based on his own personal experience with some of these issues as a working father who spent some time serving in the state legislature in Springfield and even as a senator here in Washington -- had a young family that he was separated from for different periods of time.  And he was concerned about all of the strain that was added to his family because of his absence and because of the challenge of juggling his work responsibilities as well as his domestic responsibilities.  And it’s something that Mrs. Obama is also acutely aware of.  So this is an important issue.  And I appreciate you bringing it up. 
 
In terms of paid leave, which is just one aspect of the kinds of policy proposals that we’re talking about today, the goal of the summit has been to lift up some of these discussions.  There are a number of policies that have been put in place at the state level to encourage companies and make it easier for companies to offer paid leave to their employees.  The administration is supportive of those state-based efforts, and there are -- I understand there is even a component of our budget that was rolled out earlier this year that would fund, or at least help assist -- or at least assist these states as they provide these services to businesses.
 
What we’re also seeing -- and I mentioned this at the top -- that there are companies that are acting on their own to offer up these kinds of paid-leave policies to their employees.  They don’t just do that out of charity; they recognize that it’s good business.  They recognize that if they’re going to invest in their employees, if they’re going to be in a position where they are offering some assistance to their employees as they try to juggle the -- again, their obligations at home and their obligations at the workplace, that that’s going to inspire a lot of loyalty among those employees.
 
And what these companies have found is that there’s greater employee retention, there’s less turnover, and higher productivity among their workforce when they put in place these kinds of policies.
 
So my point is, is that there are a variety of solutions for confronting what is a pretty fundamental challenge for millions of American families out there.  There have been solutions that have been offered up by a range of states.  A number of companies, both large and small, have pursued some different options that are tailored to their employees’ needs. 
 
So the reason that we have not put forward one specific plan is that there -- right now, there are a lot of different ways for addressing this problem.  And what we want to do is we want to lift up the variety of these solutions and have a national conversation about how best to support working families as they do right by their families at home, but also continue to be highly productive workers that ensure the competitiveness of our broader economy.
 
Q    I mean, just kind of reading between the lines there, you don’t believe that there needs to be a federal law that would establish paid family leave?
 
MR. EARNEST:  No, we would certainly support a federal law.  And I know that the goals of those proposals that have been floated are in line with the kinds of goals that the President himself holds for our economy as well. 
 
And again, the only way in which the United States is unique on this front is that we’re essentially the only developed, modern economy that doesn’t have a paid-leave policy. 
 
Q    -- that type of proposal or policy?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think what’s important is for us to have a discussion as a country about what our priorities are, and to have -- and to provide an opportunity for businesses, large and small, for workers and advocates for workers, and political leaders to have a discussion about the best way to address this challenge.  And that’s exactly what’s happening today, and that’s a discussion that the President himself today is leading today.
 
Chris.  Congratulations on your first day, Chris.  It’s nice to see you here.
 
Q    Thank you.  You as well. 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Thank you.
 
Q    But to Justin’s point -- it does seem -- and beyond paid leave, there are a lot of other issues that are being raised today at this summit, but they seem to be largely aspirational.  And are there specific legislative proposals that are going to come out of this?  Are there specific ideas that actually could make it through Congress that could change some of these policies that are so difficult for working families today?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, the one thing I’ll stipulate, Chris, is that just because they may have some difficulty getting through Congress doesn’t mean they’re not good ideas.  There are a lot of good ideas that are being blocked in Congress right now. 
 
As it relates to some of the policies that are being discussed today, the President has put forward his own proposal for raising the minimum wage all across the country.  Right now, if you’re the head of a household of four people and you’re making minimum wage and working 40 hours a week, you’re trying to raise your family below the poverty line.  That is not a good reflection of the kind of appropriate balance that we want for people who are working hard, trying to put food on the table for their families, to be able to try to strike.  So the President has put forward his support for a federal minimum wage law. 
 
We’ve talked a lot about STEM education -- again, this is science, technology, engineering and math -- and expanding STEM education in our public schools all across the country.  Again, these are good-paying jobs that engineers and scientists and other people who have technological skills enjoy, and that by investing in STEM education we can make sure that our workforce is prepared to compete for and win when it comes to getting those jobs in the international marketplace.  So there are some specific policies we’ve put forward there. 
 
Let me just leave you with one last thing, which is they’re also going to talk quite a bit about childcare at the summit.  And one thing that the President strongly supports is universal pre-K; that every child in America should have access to a high-quality pre-kindergarten program.  There are a lot of Republican governors who support that idea but, again, for reasons that are difficult for me to explain, that’s also been blocked by Republicans in Congress.
 
Q    When you look at something, though, like the minimum wage, and you see the movement in the direction the President would like to see is largely happening at a local -- a city or a state level, I guess the question becomes, what legitimately comes out of this summit?  Does it become, for example, an issue in the election?  Is it something that Democrats will run on in the fall?  Is that the real hope here?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think the real hope here is to foster a conversation and to surface these ideas.  These are -- some of these things that we’re talking about here are the kinds of things that people all across the country talk about at their kitchen table -- wondering how they’re going to take their kids to soccer practice; What are they going to do if a parent gets sick?  How are they going to -- what are they going to do in their household if a woman is about to have a baby?  How are they going to divide up their responsibilities?  Is she going to get paid leave so that she can stay home and take care of that child in its first weeks of life?
 
So these are the kinds of discussions that are taking place all across the country at kitchen tables.  The President wants to surface this discussion -- we should be having these conversations in Washington, D.C.  And political leaders in both parties should be having these conversations.  Leaders in business, both large businesses and small businesses, should be having these conversations.  And that’s what we’re seeing today in the context of the summit.  And, frankly, I’m heartened by the fact that I’ve gotten two reporters with solid political reputations asking about this discussion.  (Laughter.) 
 
Ann.
 
Q    Thanks very much.  In Iraq, does the President believe that a new government and the 300 military advisers are enough and there is still time to do that?  Or does he believe it will eventually come to some additional U.S. military action?
 
MR. EARNEST:  This administration does believe that there is time for Iraq’s political leaders to make the necessary decisions that will unify the country to confront the terrorist threat, the extremist threat that they’re facing in Iraq right now.
 
Q    Despite the actions over the weekend and the additional territory they’ve taken?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Yes.  What we would like to see is prompt action, as dictated by the Iraqi constitution, to form a government that is inclusive, that will pursue an inclusive political agenda.  And by unifying the country, they can better confront the threat that’s posed by these extremists.
 
Q    And on the Working Families Summit, in the interest of --
 
MR. EARNEST:  Three in a row, Ann. 
 
Q    -- to protect family time, will your press office under your new management swear off of Sunday afternoon conference calls -- (laughter) -- where one reporter said she had to leave her child’s birthday party to do the conference call yesterday?
 
Q    Exactly.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, that certainly is not the kind of consequence that we would like to see, but I guess I would -- without knowing the exact details of that situation, I might hazard a guess that that might be the responsibility of that person’s employer to make the kinds of arrangements that would allow that reporter to find someone --
 
Q    That was not fair. 
 
Q    You will soon learn differently when you become a dad.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?
 
Q    You’ll soon learn differently when you become a dad.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Yes, I will. 
 
Q    And that reporter they’re talking about is right here.  (Laughter.) 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Mr. Nakamura.
 
Q    Josh, does the President and his top domestic advisors think that Kevin McCarthy supports comprehensive immigration reform? 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I think the person that’s most likely to have some insight into that is Mr. McCarthy himself, so I think you should ask him. 
 
Q    Let me follow up.  On Friday, I think, will be the one-year anniversary of the Senate-passed comprehensive immigration reform bill.  The White House has -- it’s been well reported, the President has asked Jeh Johnson to sort of delay a public announcement of his findings on this enforcement review of immigration policies until after the summer to give House Republicans a final sort of window that you’re hoping to sort of do some sort of legislation and support immigration reform.  We’re down to maybe four or five weeks left before they go on their August recess, and I’m wondering, how does the White House envision that looking?  What would you like to see by the recess?  A full comprehensive bill, completed in that short timeframe?  Some smaller legislation introduced more in committees that look like it could provide a path?  What are you looking for that you want to see before you end that window, maybe, and actually announce this review, the findings of the review?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, that’s a difficult thing to forecast, David, because it’s hard to know exactly what Congress is planning to do.  Unfortunately, right now I think the early indications are not very good for a lot of progress on this front.  This is -- as you point out, for a year, there has been a very clear template for House Republicans -- or for the House of Representatives to follow, but House Republicans at every turn have blocked any sort of progress that would track with the compromised proposal that was passed by the Senate.
 
That’s unfortunate for a variety of reasons.  One, clearly, is the enormous economic benefits that would be enjoyed by the United States of America if comprehensive immigration reform were passed.  Two, are the enormous benefits that the budget of the federal government would enjoy by significantly reducing our deficit if comprehensive immigration reform were to pass.
 
Three, there is broad agreement all across the country -- at least outside of Washington, D.C. -- that comprehensive immigration reform is the right thing to do for the country; that leaders of business, law enforcement, the labor movement, even faith communities have articulated their support for this compromised proposal that passed through the Senate.
 
So there’s a clear template for the House of Representatives to follow.  House Democrats are on board with that template even though -- and it’s important to note -- even though everybody acknowledged on both sides in the Senate that they didn’t get every single thing that they wanted in that bill.  But that’s the nature of compromise -- that there was enough in that compromised legislation for Democrats and Republicans to both support it.  And what we would like to see is, we would like to see the House take action in pursuit of that compromise.
 
Q    Luis Gutiérrez, one of the most vocal immigration supporters, as you know, has set July 4th as a deadline in his own mind for the House to take action, otherwise he thinks it’s over.  And other advocates are saying, why does the White House keep waiting?  If you’re going to announce some changes to immigration policy, do it now; you have people suffering from these policies, the President said he wants to make them more humane.  Why not take action?  When is the window ending?  Do you feel like it’s time now?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I’m not prepared to lay out a specific deadline today, but let me say a couple of things about that.  The first is, in the context of some of the high-stakes budget shenanigans we’ve seen over the last few years, we’ve seen, unfortunately to often around the holidays, that when House Republicans or the House of Representatives wants to act really quickly to pass something that the Senate has already passed, they can do it.
 
So I’m no expert when it comes to legislative maneuvering but, when necessary, Congress can act quickly.  And I think what I would say is that when it is clear that a piece of legislation is in the best interest of the country, the House can act quickly.  I think it is clear in this case that that is so.
 
You mentioned something else that I was going to try to comment on but I don’t remember what that was right now.  I’ll probably come back to it. 
 
Jim.
 
Q    I wanted to get an update on the internal reviews into the VA.  There is an Office of Special Counsel report, as you know, that came out that found veterans languishing in VA psychiatric facilities; one veteran at one facility was waiting for eight years for comprehensive evaluation.  What is the administration’s status update on the VA?  And will the President be moving soon to tap a new permanent Secretary there?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, Jim, as it relates to the letter, as the acting Secretary, Sloan Gibson, has said, we respect and welcome the letter and the insights from the Office of Special Counsel; that we’re concerned both about the substance of the allegations that were raised, but also concerned that there was a failure at the VA to be responsive to the whistleblower’s concerns.  That is an indication that there are some -- there are, as we have said, some significant changes that -- and reforms that need to be made at the Veterans Administration.
 
So what I can tell you is that we’ve accepted the letter.  The acting Secretary has indicated his support for the recommendations that were made by the Office of Special Counsel and is working to implement them.  As for permanent leadership at the Veterans Administration, this continues to be a priority.  The Deputy Chief of Staff at the White House, Rob Nabors, is still hard at work over at the VA, and there is an ongoing process to bring new leadership to the VA to implement some of these reforms and try to move forward in a way that makes us all feel confident that we’re living up to the commitment that’s been made to our nation’s veterans.
 
Q    And getting back to ISIS to sort of follow up on Ann’s question -- she talked about the gains that are being made by the ISIL fighters on the border with Syria and Iraq.  Obviously, it’s been a stated goal of that group to sort of erase that border and create more of a broader Islamic caliphate.  Is that kind of outcome something that this administration, that this President would accept?  Or does that start to get into the U.S. national security interest, the interest of the U.S. from a national security standpoint, to stop that from occurring?
 
MR. EARNEST:  That kind of instability would not be in the national security interest of the United States because it would -- it obviously would significantly infringe on the nation of Iraq, and there’s a need for that country to come together to unite around an inclusive political agenda that would allow them to confront this threat.
 
That kind of instability is not good for any of our partners or allies in the region, and so it’s something that we’re concerned about.  And that’s why we’re offering the support that we are to help the Iraqi government confront that threat.
 
Q    And in talking about a unified Iraq, a number of times during this briefing, Josh, I just want to ask you -- because back in 2006, the Vice President talked about an idea of splitting Iraq into three parts, essentially -- Kurdish, Sunni and Shiite.  Is that idea at all under consideration as something that could be a perhaps more viable solution to Iraq’s problems down the road?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, ultimately, Jim, what we believe here is that it’s going to be the responsibility of the Iraqi people to come together to determine their future, and to determine what they want their government and their country to look like.  So I’m not going to be in a position to offer a proposal for how they should draw up their map.
 
The most direct way for -- in the view of this administration -- for Iraq to confront the threat that they face from ISIL is to unite that country around a political agenda that gives every single citizen a stake in that country’s future and in that country’s success.  And by uniting that country, that’s the way that they can really confront this threat. 
 
And again, that is not just the view of this administration. I know that’s the view of some people inside Iraq, and it’s also the view of many people in the region.
 
Q    And maybe it’s a difficult question, but I mean, does a united Iraq at this point make any sense going down the road as the borders are drawn now?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, again --
 
Q    Maybe I already asked that.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, you sort of did.
 
Q    But it is -- I mean, the cover of TIME Magazine:  The End of Iraq.  I mean, this is not a new concept.
 
MR. EARNEST:  It’s not a new concept.  But I think that we have also seen the danger of trying to impose solutions from the outside about what anyone thinks is in the best interest of the Iraqi people.  It is the view of this administration that the best way for us to confront this challenge is to empower the Iraqi people to make the kinds of decisions that demonstrate their vested interest in the success of that country.  And that starts by having political leadership, elected political leadership, that ensures that the rights and interests and aspirations of every Iraqi citizen is incorporated into their governing agenda.  That’s not an easy thing to do.  I don’t want to paper over that.  But it is critical to the success of that country. 
 
Bill.
 
Q    But what makes you so sure -- and the administration -- that would work, given that, A, given the fact that the Prime Minister has done nothing, so far, despite all of the importunings from Washington and elsewhere?  And, B, even if there were to be an inclusive government in Iraq, you think that would satisfy ISIL -- which now controls enough of the country so that it may have its own plan -- why would they want to be included in an Iraqi government?  I mean, I think isn’t it time to look beyond this for a more broader, a more inclusive fix?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, I disagree with that for two reasons.  The first is I don’t think -- frankly, I don’t think they’ve really tried it.  I don’t think that we have seen the kind of effort that we would like to see from the current political leadership in Iraq.
 
Q    But even if you did --
 
MR. EARNEST:  So that’s why -- well, you’re sort of asking why would we even try, because they haven’t yet, would be the first thing.
 
The second thing is, I’m not contemplating --
 
Q    No, I’m asking what reason there is to believe that it would work, given the gains already made by ISIL and ISIL’s known intentions.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, they haven’t tried it yet so I’m not ready to sort of doom this effort to failure because they haven’t tried it.  The truth is they’ve pursued a different path that has too often sort of lapsed back into sectarian agendas that marginalize large portions of the Iraqi population.  That’s not the kind of governing agenda that’s going to unite the country to confront outside threats like those posed by ISIL.
 
Now, the second thing is, when I’m talking about unifying the country, I’m not talking -- and nobody in this administration is talking about incorporating ISIL into the governing structure of Iraq.  What we’re contemplating here is uniting the country so that they can defeat ISIL; that the extremist -- that the violent extremists are obviously not going to play a conducive role to bringing that country together.  They’re trying to tear it apart.  And in order to keep that country together, in order to keep some measure of stability, the country needs to come together across sectarian divisions to confront that threat.
 
That’s in the best interests of Kurds, it’s in the best interest of Sunnis, it’s in the best interests of Shias.  But, ultimately, it’s a decision that they have to make, it’s not a decision that can be imposed upon them from the outside.
 
Q    Has the President called Maliki?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I don’t have any telephone conversations to read out.  I would point out that Secretary Kerry, I believe, had a conversation with him today.
 
Q    How about el-Sisi?  Has he called him about these  sentences handed down?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I think there was a week -- not since the sentences were handed down, but I do believe that we read out a phone call from the President and President el-Sisi a couple of weeks ago.
 
Wendell.
 
Q    There’s another House committee hearing on the IRS’s tax exempt abuses, if you will.  Given that the former head of the program and a half dozen others’ hard drives have gone missing or have been found damaged, on what do you base your comment last week that there’s not a lot more to be discovered here?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I base it on the fact that there have been 13 months of multiple congressional investigations, including 15 congressional hearings, 30 interviews with IRS employees, 50 written congressional requests, 750,000 pages of documents, more than 67,000 emails from the IRS employee that’s attracted the most attention among Republicans -- and despite all of that, there is not a single shred of evidence to substantiate the Republican conspiracy theories that they continue to mysteriously talk about.
 
Q    And yet, two years’ worth of emails have mysteriously gone missing.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, that’s not quite accurate, right?  Twenty-four thousand of those emails have been produced to Congress.  So as I think I’ve mentioned on a previous occasion, this administration has repeatedly worked to coordinate and cooperate with legitimate oversight, and I think in this case, even with some illegitimate oversight, with politically motivated oversight, from House Republicans. 
 
There was an inspector general who conducted an investigation into this, and even he found and acknowledged that there was no evidence that they’ve been able to produce on this.  There have even been some House Republicans who have previously acknowledged that no evidence to substantiate these conspiracy theories has been produced.
 
So that’s why I have implored House Republicans to devote even a portion of their passion for this issue into creating jobs and putting in place the kinds of policies that we know are going to support the private sector and make our country stronger, and expand economic opportunity for the middle class.
 
Q    On another matter, the Center for Constitutional Rights today, having forced the release of the drone program’s foundation legal precedent, in any case, called that a gross -- I’m sorry -- they sharply criticized it.  Based on the fact that it took a court order to get that out, what do you base the transparency claims of the administration on?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, again, we had a very robust discussion with the groups that were interested in seeing this memo.  You know that many members of Congress have already had the opportunity to review it.  For reasons I don’t think that you’ll find surprising, there was a lot of national -- sensitive national security information in that memo, and there were concerns about just releasing it. 
 
But what the administration did was we worked through the legal system and those who were most interested in seeing it to produce a redacted document that protected national security interests while at the same time trying to live up to our commitment to transparency that the President has talked about quite a bit.  So I think in this case, I think even the groups that sharply criticized us would call this a win for transparency.
 
Tamara.
 
Q    Would the White House support a higher gasoline tax to shore up the Highway Trust Fund and pay for much-needed infrastructure improvements?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I believe that’s something that we’ve said a couple of times that we wouldn’t support.
 
Q    You would not?
 
MR. EARNEST:  Correct.
 
Q    Okay.  And in a not-so-serious question, it seems as though the bear is on the loose again.  The President walked with people to a Chipotle today, and --
 
MR. EARNEST:  So when the President walks that qualifies as a loose bear?
 
Q    I think so.  (Laughter.)  Well, he did call himself a loose bear a couple of times recently.
 
MR. EARNEST:  He did.  That’s true.
 
Q    And I’m wondering, is he feeling constricted in the bubble?  Is he trying to get energy from real people?  Does he need sunlight?  (Laughter.)  Is there something more going on here?
 
MR. EARNEST:   Well, I think -- “is there something more going on here” -- that’s an interesting way to ask that question.  Here’s what I would say about this -- I think the President, like many of his predecessors, has talked about the challenge that’s posed by the presidential bubble; that one of the things that this President misses the most is the ability to walk down the street and talk to people.  That’s particularly important to him because he is sitting in the Oval Office, right up that hallway, making the kinds of decisions that he knows have a substantial impact on the daily lives of Americans.  And he is looking for as many opportunities as he can to try to get some access and some insight into what are the challenges that people are facing, and what are the -- what’s the impact of the solutions that he is trying to move forward.
 
So there are a variety of ways this happens.  As you point out, the President likes to spend time walking down the street and shaking hands and talking to people, which he’s done on many occasions recently.  The President gets 10 letters a night, as has been well chronicled, from the correspondence department here at the White House, where they give him a good cross section of the kind of correspondence that he’s receiving from people all across the country. 
 
And all of this is part of an effort to give the President even greater insight into the reaction of the American people to the kinds of challenges that they’re facing in this country.  I think the Working Families Summit is a great example of how we’re trying to surface the kinds of conversations that are happening at kitchen tables all across the country, and raise the profile of those discussions, and to have those discussions here in Washington, D.C., among the elected leadership that there’s a lot of evidence to indicate that people all across the country feel too detached from Washington, D.C.; that they’re concerned that the political leaders in this country are not focused on the things that they’re focused on.
 
But I can assure you that this President wakes up every morning determined to go to work to find the kinds of solutions to the challenges that are faced by middle-class families.  That is something that has animated this President since he decided to run for President in the first place.  It was the focal point of his domestic policy agenda when he took office in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.  And even five and a half years into his presidency, he’s focused on combing through the list of policy proposals and implementing those that he feels would have the most beneficial impact on middle-class families all across the country.
 
So he’s eager to take advantage of every opportunity that he has to have conversations with people about those solutions.
 
Roger, I’m going to give you the last one.
 
Q    Thank you.  The Kremlin has put out a statement about a Putin-Obama call.  What can you say?
 
MR. EARNEST:  I did have something to say about that, so I’m glad you asked. 
 
The President spoke to President Putin and once again urged him to support peace instead of allowing the provision of arms and materiel across the border and continuing support for militants and separatists who are further destabilizing the situation in Ukraine.  Though we believe a diplomatic solution is still possible, Russia will face additional costs if we do not see concrete actions to deescalate the situation. 
 
We’ll have a more formal readout of the call later, but it was an opportunity --
 
Q    When did it take place?
 
MR. EARNEST:  -- just earlier this morning.  It was an opportunity for the President to reiterate some of the things that he has mentioned to President Putin in previous conversations that they had.  They had the opportunity to visit a little bit when they were in Normandy two or three weeks ago, and they’d had a number of phone conversations leading up to that trip to talk about trying to bring some stability to the situation in Ukraine.  And, again, the President reiterated that we would like to see Russia and President Putin personally use his influence to try to promote greater peace and stability in eastern Ukraine. 
 
Let me just close by saying that we are very supportive of President Poroshenko and his efforts to seek a peaceful resolution to the crisis.  I’d note that he has offered to grant amnesty to separatists within Ukraine and to provide safe passage back to Russia, to Russian militants in eastern Ukraine.  It’s clear that President Poroshenko is willing to go the extra mile here to try to resolve the situation and to restore some peace and security to the entire country that he governs.  What we need is some cooperation with President Putin and the Russians to make that a reality.
 
Thanks very much, everybody.  Have a good Monday. 
 
Q    That’s quite the showstopper.
 
Q    Another buried nugget of news.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, it took Roger’s nose for news to ask. 
 
Q    You said you didn’t have any calls to readout.
 
Q    That’s not true.
 
MR. EARNEST:  I’m sorry?
 
Q    You got asked earlier. 
 
MR. EARNEST:  Well, Alexis, you don’t have to get all exercised about this.
 
Q    Why not?
 
Q    She’s not getting exercised.
 
Q    That’s a reasonable question. 
 
Q    We asked you a question.  You should answer the question. 
 
MR. EARNEST:  I did.
 
Q    No, you didn’t.  You said you had no calls to read out.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Alexis, I was asked if the President had any conversations with world leaders about the situation of Iraq. 
 
Q    Oh, so maybe we should go around the map every day with you.
 
MR. EARNEST:  Thanks, everybody.
 
Q    Hey, Josh, did Carney leave you a note in the flak jacket?
 
MR. EARNEST:  We’ll talk about it tomorrow. 
 
END
1:42 P.M. EDT