The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on Jobs in Solar Energy

Solar Array
Hill Air Force Base
Salt Lake City, Utah

11:00 A.M. MDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, good morning, everybody.  It is wonderful to be in the beautiful state of Utah.  And I want to thank General Buhler and Colonel Jolly, and everyone here at Hill Air Force Base, one of the most outstanding facilities that we have. 

Every single day, your work keeps our Air Force ready to meet the many threats that are out there -- threats like ISIL, the work that we're doing in Iraq.  You support our troops, our humanitarian missions around the world, and you keep the American people safe.  And so to all of our folks in uniform and the civilians who support them, I want to say thank you for the incredible work that you do every single day.  And I think the American people want you to know how much they appreciate it as well.  

I just had the opportunity to take a look at the solar installation on this base, and to meet with some of your outstanding representatives, including Senator Orrin Hatch and Congressman Rob Bishop, Mayor Ralph Becker, who’s doing outstanding work, and leaders in the solar industry as well as our community college system, who were talking about Salt Lake City’s commitment to renewable energy, its impact on jobs, its impact on business, and its impact on the environment and climate change. 

Since I took office, solar electricity has gone up twentyfold.  And our investments in renewable energy and energy efficiency haven’t just helped to cut carbon pollution, they’ve made us more energy independent.  And they’ve helped us create a steady stream of high-wage, good-paying, middle-class jobs.

This morning, we learned that our businesses created another 129,000 new jobs in March.  And that adds up to 3 million jobs over the past year, more than 12 million new jobs over the past five years -- and that's the longest stretch of private sector job creation on record.  But we've got to be relentless in our work to grow the economy and create good jobs. 

Parts of the globe have seen their economies weaken.  Europe has had a weaker economy; Asia has been slowing down.  We have had the strongest economy, but we're impacted by what happens around the world.  And that's why we have to redouble our efforts to make sure that we're competitive, to make sure that we're taking the steps that are needed for us to be successful.

And I think everybody here at Hill understands that one of the most important aspects of national security is strong economic security.  We can't maintain the best military that the world has ever known unless we also have an economy that's humming.  And a lot of our men and women in uniform at some point are going to transition into civilian life, and we want to make sure that after they’ve fought for our freedom that they’ve got jobs to come home to.  And that means that, working together -- not only the private sector has to work, but government has to work to take the steps that we know will grow our economy.  And I'm hoping that, working with Congress, we can get some things done this year. 

Rebuilding our infrastructure all across the country -- those are jobs that can't be exported, and not only does it put people to work right now, it makes us competitive over the long term because businesses are going to locate where they’ve got topnotch infrastructure.

Investing in education and job training to boost growth right here in the United States -- because, again, businesses will locate where they’ve got a trained workforce. 

Making sure that we are passing trade promotion authority.  Orrin Hatch is working very hard on that.  Utah is one of the leading exporting states in the country, and part of the reason that this state has been so successful.  And we're very grateful that Senator Hatch is working with Senator Wyden to make sure that we can get that deal done.

And what I'm doing here today is to highlight the fact that the solar industry is actually adding jobs 10 times faster than the rest of the economy.  They’re paying good jobs -- they’re good-paying jobs that are helping folks enter into the middle class.  And today what we're going to try to do is to build on the progress that’s already been made. 

I'm announcing a new goal to train 75,000 workers to enter the solar industry by 2020.  As part of this, we’re creating what we’re calling a “Solar Ready Vets” program that’s modeled after some successful pilot initiatives that have already been established over the last several years.  It's going to train transitioning military personnel for careers in this growing industry at 10 bases -- including right here at Hill.

And as part of this effort, we’re also going to work with states to enable more veterans to use the Post-9/11 GI Bill for solar job training.  And it’s one of the many steps that we’re taking to help nearly 700,000 veterans and military spouses get a job.  In fact, about 30 percent of the federal workforce is now made up of veterans.  I’ve said it before, and I think employers are starting to catch on, if you really want to get the job done, hire a veteran. 

So Hill is leading by example.  It is getting about 20 percent -- maybe a little higher than that -- of its overall energy through renewable energy sources, including this installation.  DOD -- Department of Defense -- our military across the board, is becoming more and more efficient because that saves money.  And it means that we’ve got more money for personnel, for training, for equipment, for making sure our fighting forces are able to get the job done. 

What is true for DOD has to be true for the entire country.  And it's going to provide enormous prospects for jobs and careers for a whole lot of folks out there, if, we continue to make this investment. 

So we’ve got to lead by example -- invest in the future; train our workers for good, new jobs in the clean-energy economy.  That’s how we’re going to keep our economy growing, and that’s how we’re going to create new jobs and create more opportunity for the American people. 

We’re also, as a byproduct of that, going to make this country safer and we’re going to make the planet more secure.  We’re going to make sure that the environment that we’re passing on, and the incredible beauty of this remarkable state is passed on to future generations as well.

So thank you very much, all of you, for the great work you’re doing.  And thank you to the state of Utah for your wonderful hospitality.  I was telling the Governor yesterday as we were riding from the airport that I'm going to make sure that I come back next time where I don’t have to do so much work and I can visit some of these amazing national parks here, and have a chance to visit with some of the wonderful people here in the great state of Utah. 

Thank you very much, everybody.  (Applause.) 

END
11:08 A.M. MDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta

This afternoon, President Obama spoke by phone with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta to express his and the First Lady’s condolences and those of the American people for the lives lost during the heinous terrorist attack in Garissa, Kenya.  The President emphasized his support for the government and people of Kenya as they stand united in the face of these despicable acts.  He reiterated that he looks forward to meeting with President Kenyatta again in Nairobi in July, when the two leaders will discuss how to strengthen counterterrorism cooperation and continue to work together to build a safer and more prosperous future for Kenya and the broader region. 

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Gaggle with the Principal Deputy Press Secretary en route Andrews Air Force Base

Aboard Air Force One
En Route Andrews Air Force Base

11:46 A.M. MDT

MR. SCHULTZ:  Good afternoon.  Welcome aboard Air Force One on our flight back from Hill Air Force Base, where the President did announce a goal of training 75,000 people to enter the solar workforce by 2020, some of whom will be veterans. 

As you know, the President also announced a new Solar Ready Vets program led by the Department of Energy, in partnership with the Department of Defense.  This program will train military personnel to enter the solar industry at 10 military bases across the country, including Hill Air Force Base.

Lastly, the Department of Veterans Affairs is committed to working with the Department of Energy and state approving agencies to achieve approval for GI Bill funding for DOE Solar Ready Vets initiative.  Over time, we believe this approval will enable more veterans across the country to use their GI benefits to participate in this job-driven training program through local community colleges. 

And it’s important to us that programs like DOE Solar Ready Vets helps achieve our climate goals, creating jobs, bolstering energy security, cutting carbon pollution, and combatting climate change.

With that, I’m happy to take your questions.

Q    On Iran, I saw yesterday where the President spoke with Speaker Boehner.  Has he spoken with other members of Congress since the framework agreement was announced?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes, Darlene, the President is speaking with all four leaders of Congress.

Q    Is speaking or has spoken to?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Nice catch.  We are in touch with all four members.  I will do my best to check to see if all four have been completed.  But it is the President’s aim to speak with all four.

But I should also make clear that our outreach to Congress on this is not restricted to just the President.  The Vice President has been making calls.  Denis McDonough has been making calls.  Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken has been making calls.  National Security Advisor Susan Rice, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, and a whole host of other White House and senior administration officials.

Q    And on the calls, are they making a certain ask of the members and the leadership of just examine it more, come in for more briefings, or hold off on any more sanctions legislation or any other action?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think the most important thing we can do in the sort of immediate aftermath of the deal being reached is make sure they feel like they’re getting the information they need.  Obviously this was just sort of set 24 hours ago.  So the contours of those calls are an initial reach-out to make sure they’re getting their questions answered, and then also to set out more detailed briefings down the road to the extent that that’s something that members are looking for.

Q    Is the President hoping to talk to all four congressional leaders today?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes.

Q    Eric, President Rouhani of Iran is casting this deal as a new relationship with the world.  Does the White House see it that way?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I understand that the Iranians are in a spot where they need to sell this deal to the population there.  For us, this was a deal about Iran’s nuclear program -- full stop.  That’s what the negotiations were about.  That’s what the international community came together, along with the United States, to reach.  And for us, that was the parameters of this deal.

Q    Do you see it, though, as an opening for a new relationship between Iran and the rest of the world?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think the concerns we have with Iran outside of the nuclear program remain just as vibrant as they were yesterday as they are today.

Q    And separately, Prime Minister Netanyahu has called for a “right to exist” clause for Israel in the final agreement.  Is that something that the United States would support?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Jeff, I haven’t seen that request.  I do know that Prime Minister Netanyahu’s concerns about this deal have been raised many times for the past year and a half, I believe.  Similar concerns raised when the initial Joint Plan of Action was announced.  So we understand his position, and the President believes -- the President would never sign on to a deal that he felt was a threat to the state of Israel.  That was one of his guiding posts on this, and so that’s our position.

Q    In the course of these talks, the White House and others have said that the Americans were on the sidelines discussing with the Iranians about the missing American in Iran. To what extent has this new framework deal affected that?  And is there any progress on that particular individual?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Yes.  As we’ve said, Jeff, those concerns were raised on the sidelines of these negotiations.  Again, these negotiations were principally about Iran’s nuclear program.  But like your earlier question, we continue to have serious concerns about Iran, including possible support of terrorism, including destabilizing the region, but also Americans detained there. 

And, as we do every time we meet, we will continue to call on Iran to immediately release detained U.S. citizens so that all can be returned to their families as soon as possible.  We have raised these cases repeatedly with Iranian officials and will continue to do so until they are all home.

Q    But that is not -- that wasn’t and isn’t now a prerequisite for this deal going through?

MR. SCHULTZ:  That’s right, Jeff.  We have been very clear that our discussions with Iran are about their nuclear program.  But our concern about getting these folks home remains in place.

Q    There’s been some already obviously negative reaction from Republican lawmakers to the Iranian deal.  I think one senator was even quoted as saying it was akin to a deal Neville Chamberlain might have made -- or not even Neville Chamberlain would have made this.  Do you have any reaction to that?  And does it give the White House any more pause that it will be harder to bring Republicans on board for this?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Dave, I did see some ratcheted up rhetoric on the fringes, but I actually think that most of the response here we found reassuring.  We have found that both Republicans and Democrats alike have shown a thoughtful response.  They want to take a look at the details.  That’s something that we appreciate.

I’d also -- we have found heartening the response from both scientists and a lot of the experts, that if you speak to analysts and objective folks who have studied these issues, studied the technical details, the science, the energy, I think that they feel very comfortable with this deal. 

And I should also tell you that that was one of the directives that the President cast upon these negotiations, which is he would not accept a deal unless he was reassured by the scientists that this would end Iran’s pathway to a nuclear weapon.  And that’s what we were able to accomplish.

Q    Eric, Senator Corker says he’s going to go ahead and continue markup of his bill.  Has the President spoken to Senator Corker?  Does he plan to?  And what’s his response to that?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I know that Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken spoke with Chairman Corker within the past 24 hours -- I think it was yesterday -- and I can tell you they had a good conversation.  We remain in very close touch with Chairman Corker.  He said he wanted to take a good, long look at the details here.  And we’re going to make sure that he and all of his congressional colleagues have a chance to do so. 

Q    I know the President has talked about bringing Gulf leaders to Camp David.  Would he consider either separately bringing congressional leaders there for some sort of special detente?  And also would he invite them as part of the meeting with the other world leaders?

MR. SCHULTZ:  That’s a good question, David.  I know that our consultations with Congress remain frequent and robust.  I don’t have any events to announce to you at this time.  And I'm not quite sure the interplay between what that event at Camp David will look like and the engagement of Congress.

Q    Can you talk about why the President called Prime Minister Netanyahu last after so many other world leaders, and talk about sort of the way the calls were organized?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Toluse, I would not read too much into the ordering of the calls.  Sometimes that has to do with who we can get ahold of and when and how.  So the President is continuing to make calls on this flight as well, and I'm going to try and do my best to read those out to you as soon as we can.

Q    And can you say if the call with Prime Minster Netanyahu -- was it only about the Iran deal?  Did he also talk about some of the things that he talked about last month, about the comments about the two-state solution, the U.N. Security Council?  Did any of that come up?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t have a detailed readout of the call beyond what we were able to release yesterday.  I believe the call primarily focused on the deal with Iran.

Q    Can you characterize the call?  Was it contentious at all? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think I would tell you that the arguments that the Prime Minister makes in public are mirrored in what he makes in private.  The good news is, the same arguments that the President made at the Rose Garden yesterday and has been making for a while now are also what he makes in private on these foreign leader calls. 

Q    Was it a longer call than the other calls to the other world leaders in terms of how much detail they went into?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I know -- I don’t have the clock in and clock out of that call. 

Q    Can I ask about another big foreign policy initiative of this administration?  The President met with -- or certainly talked with Senator Hatch today and mentioned in his brief remarks the push for TPA and TPP, the fast-tracking on trade.  And I’m wondering if you all are confident that Senator Wyden and Senator Hatch will come to an agreement on the fast track legislation shortly after Congress gets back and will start that process with an actual bill.  And did the President talk about that directly with Senator Hatch, and does he -- will the President be speaking more about that later this month?

MR. SCHULTZ:  You’re right, David, that is a priority for this administration.  And you’re also right that Senator Hatch has been a key player in this.  We appreciate the earnest efforts that he’s put forth.  I don’t have a specific timeline for you on this, but as you said, the President does believe that high-standards trade agreements that put American workers first can level the playing field for our businesses and help raise standards when it comes to environmental and labor protections.

The only way we’re going to get that deal done is if Republicans work with Democrats to get trade promotion legislation across the finish line.  We do call on Congress to do that.

Q    Right, but you’re not saying that -- you don’t have any guarantee it’s going to happen this month in terms of that fast track bill getting started?

MR. SCHULTZ:  The last thing I would do is ever guarantee Congress is going to do anything.

Q    When the President speaks with Leader McConnell, might he use that conversation to raise Loretta Lynch’s stalled nomination?

MR. SCHULTZ:  It’s hard for me to read out the President’s private calls after they take place.  It’s even harder for me to do that before they take place.

Q    Any reaction to -- I think Senator Ron Kirk came out in favor of Loretta Lynch recently.  Is there any reaction to that?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Senator Mark Kirk.  You’re right, I did see that.  I think Senator Kirk joins a growing list of Democrats and Republicans who support Loretta Lynch.  She has been a -- we still haven’t found any substantive objection to her nomination, and so that’s why we redouble our call for the Senate to confirm her shortly.

Q    Eric, the Governor of Utah said he spoke to the President about several matters last night in the motorcade.  One of them was a public lands initiative in Utah where essentially they’re trying to take away some of the control of the federal government in that process of setting aside wilderness areas and national monuments.  And so what was the President’s reaction to that?  Does he have any feedback on that and where that stands? 

MR. SCHULTZ:  David, I’m going to admit I did not speak to the President about his conversation with the Governor.  I know they did speak for about half an hour in the motorcade ride from the airport to the hotel.  But I don’t have any details of that to read out.  If I can, I’m happy to circle back with you.

Q    Eric, do you have a sense of the dates yet for the Camp David summit with the Arab leaders?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I don’t.  I think we are still working with all of those heads of states to nail down a time that works for everyone.

Q    And more --

Q    Any update -- I’m sorry, go ahead.

Q    I was going to say, more broadly on Iran, what’s the mood like right now in the White House?  What is the President feeling overall about how this has worked out?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I think, Jeff, the President feels good.  The President feels that, thanks to the tireless effort of our negotiators in Switzerland, of course, led by Secretary Kerry, but joined by a robust team of the best negotiators in the world, that we were able to strike a historic deal, one that will eliminate Iran’s path to a nuclear weapon, and one that is an issue that has been -- the President has been focused on.

Back I think -- if you’ll remember, this was something that was talked about back in 2007 in the campaign, how to do this.  And we feel good, but make no mistake about it, there’s a lot more work to do.  Nailing down those details between now and June will take a lot of work.  And the President wants to make sure that the team over in Switzerland gets back home, gets some rest, but then gets back to work in short order.

Q    You’ve said all along that the best scenario was a 50/50 chance of a deal getting done.  Has that changed now that we’ve actually gotten the political agreement on a framework?  The President said yesterday that nothing is agreed to until everything is agreed to, so could this still sort of break apart over the next few months?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Toluse, we defied the odds.  The 50/50 odds I believe were described to -- getting to the point of the end of March, which was our self-imposed deadline for establishing the political framework.  So I am not going to be in a position to ascribe the odds to get to June.  But I do think there’s a lot of work to be done, but we are confident that we can get those details in place.

Q    On another topic, there have been some calls for Senator Menendez to resign.  Is the President going to weigh in on that?  Does he have an opinion on whether he should stick around or resign?

MR. SCHULTZ:  I'm going to refer you to the Department of Justice on any ongoing cases.

Q    I was wondering about Yemen.  There have been some developments there in the past couple of days since the last time there was a briefing.  Does the U.S. still consider Hadi the legitimate ruler there?  Or who is running the country now?

MR. SCHULTZ:  Thank you, Darlene.  And as you noted, there have been some developments -- one very unfortunate one, which includes the assault yesterday, I believe, reportedly by AQAP, which led to a prison break, as well as a bank robbery.  We do remain highly concerned about the terrorist threat that AQAP poses to Yemen, the region, and potentially the homeland.  And we're going to continue to monitor terrorist threats emanating from Yemen and have the capabilities postured in the area to address them.

Q    Is the al Shabaab massacre in Kenya this week give the President any pause about going to Kenya this year?

MR. SCHULTZ:  David, I hope you saw our statement yesterday on that.  We extend -- we condemn in the strongest possible terms the terrorist attack, and we extend our deep condolences to the families and all the loved ones killed in this heinous attack, which reportedly included the targeted of Christian students.

But, no, we don't believe that this will impact the President’s travel there later this year.  We feel very confident in the security precautions that will be in place when the President travels.

Q    There were some protesters at the White House yesterday.  They were calling for some -- there are normally -- but they were calling for the President to sign an executive order on campaign finance that would require federal contractors to display and say who they're donating to in terms of political contributions.  What does the President think about that?  Would he move forward on that type of an executive order?

Q    Toluse, I don't have any new executive orders to announce for you today or to preview for you.  I can tell you that this is an issue that's important to the President.  As you may recall, I believe it was two or three years ago now, there was a legislative proposal called the DISCLOSE Act, which would have increased the transparency for a lot of the groups you're talking about.  Unfortunately, it was blocked by congressional Republicans.  But the President would absolutely like to see that bill signed into law.

I have a week ahead, yes.  On Monday, the President and the First Family will participate in the annual White House Easter Egg Roll -- one of our favorites.  The event will feature live music, sports courts, cooking stations, storytelling, and Easter egg rolling.

On Tuesday, the President will host an Easter Prayer Breakfast at the White House.  The Vice President will also attend.

On Wednesday, the President will depart the White House en route to Jamaica. 

On Thursday, the President will hold a bilateral meeting with the Jamaican Prime Minister and participate in a meeting with the Caribbean Community leaders.  The President will also participate in a town hall with young leaders.  That evening the President will depart Jamaica en route to Panama.

On Friday, the President will hold a bilateral meeting with the Panamanian President Juan Carlos Varela and participate in the Summit of the Americas CEO Forum.  I believe that evening the President will attend the Summit of the Americas Opening Ceremonies.

And on Saturday, the President will attend the official Summit of the Americas events.  The President will participate in a press conference before departing Panama en route Washington, D.C.

Q    Is the bilat with the Panamanian President the only one that’s locked in right now?

MR. SCHULTZ:  We’ll let you know if we have updates to that schedule on that trip.

Q    You mentioned earlier (inaudible) can you tell us who those are going to be to?

MR. SCHULTZ:  As soon as they're completed. 

Thank you.

END
12:04 P.M. MDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement from the President on Passover

Michelle and I send our warmest greetings to all those celebrating Passover in the United States, in the State of Israel, and throughout the world.

Tonight, for the seventh year, I’ll hold a Seder in the White House, and we’ll join millions of Jewish families as we retell one of humanity’s great stories of liberation.  The Exodus was neither easy nor quick.  The Israelites’ journey to freedom required them to choose faith over fear and courage over complacency.  Above all, it required the works of an awesome God, who led them out of bondage with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm.

The story of the Exodus – the signs and wonders that appeared when hope seemed lost, the Jewish people’s abiding belief that they would one day reach the Promised Land –  has inspired countless generations over the years.  It inspired Jewish families to hold fast to their faith, even during times of terrible persecution.  It inspired young Civil Rights leaders as they marched across an Alabama bridge in search of their own Promised Land, half a century ago.

And it continues to inspire us today.  Tonight, my family will read the passage of the Haggadah that declares we must see ourselves as though we personally were liberated from Egypt.  The Exodus reminds us that progress has always come slow and the future has always been uncertain, but it also reminds there is always reason for hope.

Like the Israelites who Moses led out of slavery long ago, it is up to us to never lose faith in the better day that lies ahead.  In our own country, we can continue our march toward a more perfect union.  Around the world, we can seek to extend the miracles of freedom and peace, prosperity and security, to more of God’s creation.  And together, we can continue the hard but awesome work of tikkun olam, and do our part to repair the world.

From my family to yours, Chag Sameach.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Statement by the Press Secretary on the Visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands

President Obama will host Their Royal Highnesses King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima of the Netherlands for a meeting in the Oval Office on June 1, 2015. The King and Queen will on June 1-3 make their first visit to the United States since ascending to the throne. They are scheduled to visit Grand Rapids, Michigan and Chicago, Illinois in addition to Washington, DC. Their visit reinforces the strong and enduring ties between the United States and the Netherlands that reach back more than 400 years. The King and Queen were last hosted at the White House as the Crown Prince and Princess on September 11, 2009.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

FACT SHEET: Administration Announces Actions To Drive Growth In Solar Energy And Train Workers For Clean-Energy Jobs

The President is committed to addressing climate change and creating jobs by spurring the deployment of clean sources of energy. Since President Obama took office, solar electricity generation has increased 20 fold, doubling last year alone – just as the cost of solar has continued to fall as a result of investments in research and manufacturing innovation. The solar industry is adding jobs 10 times faster than the rest of the economy, creating a source of good paying American employment. To continue progress, the Administration is announcing actions to drive growth in the solar industry while also supporting our veterans.

Today’s announcements build on the strong progress made under President Obama to curb the emissions that are driving climate change and lead on the international stage. They will help set the U.S. on a path to achieve our target to cut net greenhouse gas emissions 26-28% below 2005 levels by 2025, which we submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) earlier this week.

To continue to reduce carbon pollution and create good paying American jobs, the President is announcing the following actions at Hill Air Force Base today:

  • Training 75,000 Solar Workers: The Department of Energy (DOE) is announcing a goal to train 75,000 people to enter the solar workforce by 2020, some of whom will be veterans. This is an increase from the previous goal of training 50,000 solar workers by 2020 announced in May 2014. The new goal builds on the tremendous progress of DOE’s SunShot Initiative’s Solar Instructor Training Network, which includes 400 partnering community colleges across the country and has trained more than 1,000 certified solar instructors and nearly 30,000 students nationwide in the last five years.
  • Launching a Solar Ready Vets Program: DOE, in partnership with the Department of Defense (DOD), is launching a Solar Ready Vets program at 10 military bases across the country, including at Hill Air Force Base in Utah, which has already taken leadership by installing solar panels onsite. The program also includes participation from Camp Pendleton in California, Fort Carson in Colorado, and Naval Station Norfolk in Virginia, all which announced pilot initiatives earlier this year and are serving as a model for the Solar Ready Vets program.
  • The Solar Ready Vets program will train transitioning military service personnel to enter the solar workforce by joining with SunShot’s Solar Instructor Training Network and leveraging the DOD’s Skillbridge transition authority authorized by Congress in 2012. Consistent with the Vice-President’s job-driven training agenda, the program is based on the specific needs of high-growth solar employers, is tailored to build on the technician skills that veterans have acquired through their service, and incorporates work-based learning strategies. Service members will learn how to size and install solar panels, connect electricity to the grid, and interpret and comply with local building codes. This accelerated training will prepare them for careers in the solar industry as installers, sales representatives, system inspectors, and other solar-related occupations.
  • Utilizing the GI Bill for Solar Workforce Training: The Department of Veterans Affairs is committing to working with DOE and State Approving Agencies to achieve approval for GI Bill funding for DOE’s Solar Ready Vets initiative. Over time, this approval will enable more veterans across the country to use their GI Bill benefits to participate in this job-driven training program through local community colleges, where they will quickly learn the skills needed for good-paying jobs in the solar industry. Adding Solar Ready Vets will expand the existing network of programs providing service members and veterans opportunities to gain skills to enter the solar workforce through their GI Bill.
  • Educating Veterans and Service Members about Opportunities to Gain Solar Workforce Training:  The Department of Labor (DOL), will work with DOD to ensure that transitioning service members are made aware of solar workforce training programs available to them in their last months of military service.  In addition, to better serve unemployed veterans, DOL will partner with state workforce agencies and American Job Centers to better inform unemployed veterans about the opportunity to participate in available solar trainings. The Department of Labor in partnership with the Departments of Energy, Defense, and Veterans Affairs, is committed to facilitating a range of job and career opportunities for our transitioning service members and veterans.

Today’s Announcements Build On Progress To Deploy Solar Energy

Last year, the U.S. installed as much solar every three weeks as we did in all of 2008. In 2013 alone, the price of commercial and residential solar declined by more than 12 percent. This is driving more and more Americans to install solar panels at their homes and businesses, and is supporting tens of thousands of solar jobs across the country. With President Obama’s leadership, the Administration has already taken a number of actions to promote investment in and to deploy solar energy across the country. Examples of this progress in the last year alone include:

  • This week, the U.S. Army broke ground on a large-scale, 15 megawatt solar project at Fort Detrick in Maryland, enough to power nearly 2,500 homes for a year. This follows the recent unveiling of an 18 MW solar array at Fort Huachuca in Arizona, and the announcement of three 30 MW solar arrays planned for installations in Georgia. With these projects and more, DOD – the largest energy user in the Federal Government -- is making significant progress toward its target of deploying 3 gigawatts of renewable energy on its installations by 2025.   The Department plans to continue aggressively deploying renewable energy projects throughout this year: the Navy is aiming to contract 500 MW of renewable energy projects during 2015, the Air Force has more than 160 MW under development, and the Army plans to double its current capacity by deploying at least 75 MW of renewable electricity.
  • In March 2015, the President doubled down on his commitment to lead by example across the Federal Government to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change and invest in renewable energy, directing agencies to reduce their GHG emissions by 40 percent by 2025 and increase the share of renewable energy consumption to 30 percent. Since the President took office, Federal agencies have cut their emissions by 17 percent – the equivalent of taking 1.8 million cars off the road for one year -- and tripled the share of electricity coming from renewable sources.
  • In February 2015, the White House and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) hosted a roundtable with leaders from the finance and philanthropic communities to discuss opportunities to enhance solar financing for affordable housing.
  • In January 2015, HUD Secretary Castro, and Governor Brown of California announced a number of actions to expand financing for energy efficiency and solar energy in multifamily housing, including a California Multifamily Property-Assessed Clean Energy (PACE) Pilot and DOE funding to empower communities to deploy solar, which sets us on a track to reach the President’s goal of installing 100 megawatts of renewable energy across federally subsidized housing by 2020.
  • Last year, the Administration announced more than 350 private and public sector commitments to deploy more than 885 megawatts of solar—enough to power more than 130,000 homes—and cut energy waste in more than 1.4 billion square feet of buildings throughout the nation.  The President’s executive actions included investing $68 million in renewable energy and energy efficiency projects in rural areas, supporting funding for clean energy and energy efficiency for affordable housing, strengthening building codes, and harnessing national service and volunteerism to tackle climate change. 
  • The Department of the Interior (DOI) is making progress towards achieving the Climate Action Plan goal of permitting enough renewable energy projects on public lands by 2020 to power more than 6 million homes.  Since President Obama took office, DOI has permitted 52 utility-scale renewable energy projects – including 29 solar projects – with a total capacity of over 14,000 megawatts.  If built as planned, these projects would provide more than 21,000 jobs and power more than 4 million homes.
  • In October 2014, the White House launched the Climate Action Champion competition, to identify and recognize local climate leaders and to provide targeted Federal support to help those communities further raise their ambitions. Following a competitive process led by the DOE, in December 2014, 16 Climate Action Champions, covering over 158 communities across the U.S., were selected by DOE due to their outstanding leadership in climate action, their initiation of constructive and replicable programs that often jointly address the challenges of climate mitigation and adaptation, their collaboration with their own communities, and their awareness that a changing climate requires decisive action, including Boston, MA; Dubuque, IA; Knoxville, TN, Minneapolis, MN, Montpelier, VT; Oberlin, OH; Portland, OR; Salt Lake City, UT; San Francisco, CA; Seattle, WA; Mid-America Regional Council; Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; Sonoma County, CA; Southeast Florida Regional Climate Change Compact; Blue Lake Rancheria Tribe (CA); Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians (MI).
  • Salt Lake City, one of the Climate Action Champions, is spearheading solar development in Utah, including a 1 megawatt solar farm and a state-of-the art net-zero public safety building. The combined impact of these projects will reduce CO2 emissions Salt Lake City’s from municipal operations by three million pounds per year. To further decrease emissions, Salt Lake City just announced it will join the President’s Better Building Challenge today, committing to improve the energy efficiency of 1.6 million square feet of public and private buildings across the city over the next decade.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Remarks by the President on TechHire Initiative

InDatus Solutions

Louisville, Kentucky

6:15 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody!  Hello!  (Applause.)  Please, please, have a seat.  Have a seat.  Well, first of all, sorry I'm late.  (Laughter.)  I had a couple things I had to do. (Laughter.)  And obviously, when you're the President, you’ve got -- national security always take top priority.  But I wanted to make sure that I still made it.  And I'm so grateful that all of you were willing to come back and in welcoming me in this way.

It is great to be back in Louisville.  It is great to be here at InDatus.  This is such a spiffy-looking company, I'm thinking about remodeling at the White House.  (Laughter.)  Everything is so hip and cool and guys with, like, cool beards are -- (laughter) -- typing stuff.  And it just looks wonderful.

But the reason I'm here is not just because it looks hip and cool, but because what’s happening here is essential to America, and we want to lift it up and we want people to see what’s possible in developing the kind of innovation and job creation here in the 21st century, knowing that we can succeed.  This company and the network that's been developed here in Louisville are helping to prepare people of all ages for the higher-paying, in-demand jobs of the future.  And we need to get more of that done.   

I want to thank David for the introduction and his graciousness in hosting us.  There are other folks that I want to acknowledge because they have been great friends and are doing a tremendous job on behalf of their constituencies -- your outstanding Governor Steve Beshear is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman John Yarmuth is here.  (Applause.)  Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer, who not only gave me a Slugger, but also a really big suitcase full of bourbon.  (Laughter and applause.)  I mean, it's a really big case.  (Laughter.)  And the man who served as mayor before him who now works with me at the White House, doing outstanding work with mayors and governors and county officials all across the country -- my dear friend, Jerry Abramson.  (Applause.)  Where’s Jerry?  There he is back there.  (Applause.) 

So, over the past five years, our businesses have created 12 million new jobs -- over 12 million new jobs.  Right now, America has more open jobs than at any point since 2001.  And more than half a million openings are in tech -- nearly 2,000 here in Louisville alone.  Tech jobs pay one-and-a-half times the average private sector wage.  So they’re great pathways to the middle class.  And what’s more, a highly trained workforce is vital for America’s long-term global economic leadership.  It attracts more entrepreneurship; it attracts investors from overseas because they’re looking for an outstanding workforce.  

And that’s the idea behind a new initiative of ours that we're calling TechHire.  It's a pretty simple concept.  It brings employers and local governments together to support innovative job training programs -- like online classes, coding boot camps, community college courses designed by local employers.

Eastern Kentucky is a TechHire Community.  So is Louisville. More than 20 employers have joined it so far, including InDatus. You’re mentoring students at Code Louisville and you’ve pledged to hire their graduates.  And that’s what smart training looks like -- faster, cheaper, innovative, providing new pathways -- less conventional pathways, in some cases -- for careers in tech. 

And my administration is proud to be investing in Code Louisville, because we want more places to follow Kentucky’s example.  We should invest in what works -- apprenticeships that give on-the-job training, gives them industry credentials that let anybody who can do the job get the job, whether they’re self-taught or have a degree.  And the budget that I sent to Congress includes these priorities.  Today, we’re going to unveil workforce reforms that do the same. 

And just to give you a specific example -- I hope he doesn’t mind.  Maybe he’s here, or maybe he’s still back somewhere.  The reason I remember this guy is because his name is Ben Cool --which is a really cool name.  (Laughter.)  I mean, I kind of wish my name was Ben Cool.  (Laughter.)  Ben doesn’t have a college degree, but because of the work that's done is open-source, Ben essentially was able to teach himself.  And because InDatus recognizes that not all talent goes through conventional pathways, it was able to set up a structure whereby Ben could show what he knew, how well he could do it, and InDatus was able to hire him and now they’ve got an outstanding coder and somebody who’s providing enormous value to the company -- which might have been missed had it not been for these kinds of different pathways.

And then I just heard a story -- if I'm not mistaken, Ben, you had a friend who came here and started working in -- what -- customer service?

BEN:  Yes.

THE PRESIDENT:  Also didn’t have a degree in computer science or coding, but then he ended up taking an hour class a couple hours a week, teaching himself, getting trained, and now he’s doing coding as well.  So that's the idea here, is that there are a lot of different pathways that we create so that more and more people can get trained in the jobs of the future, and we're not restricting ourselves to one narrow path.

And we're making sure that everybody has opportunity and everybody has a shot.  And we're investing in the job training and apprenticeships and on-the-job training and online training that it's going to take to make sure that anybody can access a good job if they’re willing to work hard and apply themselves and focus. 

Now, this doesn’t cost huge amounts of money, but it does cost some money to do it right and to do it well.  And that's why it's reflected in my budget, for us to put more money into job training, apprenticeships, and these kinds of public-private partnerships that we're talking about.  And there’s going to be a big debate coming up around the budget. 

Republicans in Congress have put forward their budget and it provides tax cuts to folks like me and folks who are doing pretty darn well, but it would cut right now job training for 2.2 million people, including 28,800 right here in Kentucky.  And that's just not the right way for us to plan in terms of long-term growth and stability.

Our economy has been growing.  We've got momentum, but that momentum can stall.  Because the economies in Europe are weak, the economies in Asia are weak, the dollar is becoming stronger because a lot of people want to park their money here.  They think it's safer.  They’re investing here more.  But that makes our exports more expensive.  And so we've got to stay hungry.  We can't just sit back and assume that growth continues at the kind of pace that we need to give opportunity for all the young people of the future.

And that's why this is so important.  So we can't prioritize tax cuts for folks at the very top and sacrifice the kinds of job-training efforts and apprenticeships that our young people are going to need.  (Applause.)

So, in case you think I'm exaggerating, I mean, one of the laws that my friends on the other side of the aisle are trying to pass right now is a new, deficit-busting tax cut for a fraction of the top one-tenth of 1 percent -- that’s fewer than 50 people here in Kentucky who would, on average, get a couple million dollars in tax breaks.  For that amount of money, we can provide thousands of people the kind of training they need.  And that’s just not the way that we're going to build an economy that strengthens our middle class and provides ladders for people getting into the middle class.

Our economy has grown since the crisis, but when you look at what’s happened, middle-class folks, their wages, their incomes just haven't gone up that much.  And a lot of folks are still struggling to get by.  And our economy works best when everybody has a stake and everybody is getting ahead.  (Applause.)  When that happens, we all do well.  And by the way, when that happens, businesses do well, because they have more customers.  And our economy grows best from the bottom up and the middle out, not from the top down.  And we've got to keep that in mind as we go forward.

But let me again just congratulate InDatus for the outstanding work that they’re doing.  I want to congratulate the Mayor and the Governor, and all the folks who are participating in making sure that TechHire gets off the ground, not just here in Louisville but across the state and across the country.  For all the young people who are -- especially the really young ones -- make sure to study math and science, because you guys are going to be our future.  We're very, very proud of you. 

And once again, thanks for being so patient with me, despite the delays.  Thank you very much.  (Applause.)  

END
6:26 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Background Press Call on the Iran Framework Negotiations

Via Conference Call

4:17 P.M. EDT

MS. MEEHAN:  Thank you very much, everybody.  This is Bernadette.  Welcome, and thanks for joining us for this press call on the P5+1 nuclear negotiations with Iran.

This call will be on background, attributable to senior administration officials.  There is no embargo on this call.  All of you have heard from the President today, from Secretary Kerry. So what we thought we would do is, instead of laying down on top of that, we would just open it up for questions, because we know there’s a lot of interest and a lot of questions out there. 

Q    Thanks for doing the call.  On page three of the factsheet you state that Iran will be required to grant access to the IAEA to investigate suspicious sites, et cetera, anywhere in the country.  Is it correct under (inaudible) those so called challenge inspections, one.  And two, is there any explicit agreement on the speed with which Iran would have to permit such inspections?  In other words, I'm trying to get at whether you have any detailed agreements on the speed with which IAEA inspectors could actually get to any site in the country that they wanted to, so that Iran could not cover things up before their arrival.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Hi.  Okay, so, indeed, of course the most important thing will be the additional protocol which Iran will undertake provisionally, virtually at the start of a joint comprehensive plan of action.  And that will provide access in ways that has not been available in Iran in any particular time in the past.

But in addition, we also are working on putting together a mechanism to ensure access at those points where, in fact, there is a disagreement about whether someone should be able to -- whether the IAEA should be able to get access into a site.  We think we have a mechanism that can help achieve that.  Because one of the most important things about this agreement is inspections and transparency.  As both the President and the Secretary said, there are four pathways to fissile material for a nuclear weapon, and the covert pathway is obviously a quite critical one to shut down.  And we can, later on, go through all of the other transparency mechanisms that are in place.

But when it comes to inspections, the AP (additional protocol) is crucial.  Obviously we also will have the same inspection regime that we’ve had during the Joint Plan of Action with daily access to Fordow and Natanz, monthly access to Arak, to uranium mines and mills, production plants, et cetera.  So all of these pieces will help us to understand the fidelity that we need in the field. 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  The only thing I’d add is related to the ability to detect a covert path in a potential site is the fact that the inspections do cover the full supply chain of the Iranian nuclear program, as my colleague described.

That will allow us to have the ability to detect any accounting that doesn’t add up.  So, for instance, it provides you with a much greater ability than we’ve had before to determine if materials are being diverted because we're going to be looking across the supply chain of that program, which would also inform our ability to uncover any covert site that would need to be inspected.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I might just add that, for example, on that case of the -- like uranium mines, milling, actually following the material, that's a 25-year commitment.

Q    Hi, thanks so much for doing the call.  And before we get into some of the details, I’m wondering any of you -- particularly the Energy Department senior administration official -- if you could give us a sense of some of the background of how this all came together, how close you might have been to walking away, and what you think going forward might be the most difficult areas so that you can sell this to Congress.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’ll just try to be brief on that.  Of course, I just joined these discussions about five weeks ago when who became my counterpart, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization in Iran, Salehi, joined. 

And look, the issues were tough.  There’s no question about it.  After all, we were putting some very, very tight constraints -- requiring some very tight constraints on everything from deployed centrifuges, blocking any deployment of advanced centrifuges for a decade, to some constraints on their R&D, which are, again, quite significant, and all kept us to our objective expressed as this breakout time of a year -- of at least a year for 10 years.  Frankly, it goes a bit beyond that. 

And then, of course, ultimately, in that parameter, there will be a so-called soft landing as they hopefully earn their way back with trust and confidence in the international community.  Although even then, with enhanced transparency measures, that will go on for quite some time.

Now, that covers up what are a lot of very specific issues that, frankly, each one required kind of going to the mat for quite often.  But Mr. Salehi, I want to credit him.  He was very professional, very results-oriented.  And we worked through them, and I think eventually we came to a place where I think we have a very, very good situation in terms of our key objective, confidence that they will not be pursuing a weapon and timely detection if they are.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’d just add, Chris, that the President, when we approached March 31st, he was able to have several videoconferences that he set over the last several weeks with the negotiating team.  And it was clear at that point that we could see the outlines of a framework, but there were some very difficult details that had to be resolved.  And for the President to be able to have Secretary Kerry on the screen going through in detail what the outlines of a framework could be, as well as Secretary Moniz go through in very technical detail how these pieces fit together and how we could see our way toward solutions, even though the talks are very difficult, the President expressed full confidence because he had, again, such confidence in his team to keep these negotiations going for the additional days. 

And so I think in terms of how the President viewed this, having the breadth of expertise that we had on the ground in Switzerland, having Wendy Sherman, who has been in the middle of these Iran discussions for years, even predating this current round, and having that combination of Secretary Moniz’s technical capacity, as well as Secretary Kerry’s very entrepreneurial and tireless diplomacy, he felt that it was worth the investment of time.  And I think the direction was to get this done if we can meet our bottom lines.  And, frankly, in the ensuing days I think our team either did not sleep or slept an hour or two each night, because really it was just a matter of nailing down some very difficult issues.

But again I just point out the President’s confidence in his negotiating team is what has been the key part of how he has supported this process for many months, and also why he had confidence that even when there was a lot of scrutiny on how long this was going in Switzerland, he knew that the team out there would not take a bad deal and, in fact, was coming up with creative ways of securing a good deal.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I’ll just give you one little piece of color -- actually it gives you a flavor, the last tough issue on the R&D program.  I will just say that we basically closed that out at 6:00 a.m. this morning.  And that's not because we got up early.  (Laughter.) 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Right.  And indeed, along with that color, we have what we call the small team, which Secretary Kerry leads, of course, and myself and Rob Malley, and Helga Schmid, who’s the deputy for the European Union, and then bring in expertise as we need with Minister Zarif and his small group across the table.  And we started at 9:00 p.m. -- I guess it's now the night before last, or something like that, and went until 6:00 a.m. in the morning.  And in the middle of that, Dr. Salehi and Dr. Moniz came and joined.  And people came in and out of that as we took up one issue after another of very hard, very tough, very difficult and concentrated negotiations.

Q    Thanks very much, guys.  Appreciate it.  I wonder if you could give us a little bit more -- maybe back here -- about the President, his involvement in this.  Take us inside the room just a little bit, and then were there moments where he was brought specific ideas and said, no, that's not acceptable?  Were there moments where he suggested ways to get through some of these sticking points?  How did he -- what role did he play from back in Washington?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, I'll start, and some of my colleagues who were in sessions with the President.  But first of all, he has been meeting regularly with the negotiating team.  We've had a number of Situation Room meetings when they return from discussions and before they go out for discussions over the course of the last couple of months when this really picked up in intensity.  So he was able to review with the team the outcome of the latest round and the outstanding issues where we needed to figure out a way through.

And then before the team would go out to the talks, he had the opportunity to see them and to essentially go through what the plan was for achieving a resolution on certain issues.  And then he was also able to have a number of videoconferences over the course of the last couple months with the negotiating team to get an update at critical moments in the negotiation when we were trying to find solutions to these difficult issues.

Last night, for instance, the negotiating team and Secretary Kerry were keeping Susan Rice and the President’s team here at the White House constantly updated.  The President was on the phone around midnight with Susan Rice and some of the President’s national security team to go through some of the final issues, and then, again, make sure that the negotiating team had the understanding about what the bottom lines were for the President, and that the President also had an understanding of what types of solutions were being pursued in the discussions.

I guess the one thing I'd say is the President has made clear in a number of these recent sessions that he prioritizes the transparency and inspections portion of the deal, given the fact that it is ultimately the best possible way to prevent a covert pathway to a weapon, which is widely seen as the most likely way in which Iran would pursue a weapon.  So he’s gone through in great and exhaustive detail what the nature of those inspections are, what the means are to prevent different ways in which Iran might pursue a covert path.  So that's an area that, for instance, he prioritized it in these discussions.

But I don't know if --

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  If I may add, because I've been through that probably as long as, if not longer than anybody.  The President impresses this team every single day.  We talked to all of our colleagues from the other countries and their Presidents and their foreign ministers certainly are focused and see this as a high priority, but I daresay no one has put in the time, no one has learned materiel, no one has been as analytical or as decisive and clear about what the priorities are, what the objectives of this negotiation, clear about the negotiating space, clear about the kind of deal we had to get to ensure we’d shut down these pathways -- it’s really been quite remarkable.

And everybody who is sitting in those Situation Room meetings, or on a SVTC screen knows that the President is going to know almost as much as anybody in the room -- maybe not as much as Dr. Moniz when it comes to centrifuge technology -- but nonetheless, it has really been incredibly impressive.  And when I talk to my colleagues and tell them the time, the attention and the clarity with which the President has gone about this, it is quite impressive.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  First of all, I associate myself with my colleague’s comments, but I would add one other thing.  First of all, I think I can speak for John Kerry, as well, that I don't think either of us ever felt that we were lacking guidance from the President in terms of the various issues.  (Laughter.)  

But I think a very important thing which the President directly put forward that helped shape how we thought about the issues was he really came forward and said, don't think about this a deal of X years.  It is a layered, phased deal that has multiple provisions in a structured way over multiple time scales, including essentially forever.  So John Kerry made that point in his remarks.  There were 10-year, 15-year, 20- to 25-year, and some, if you like, permanent provisions.  And that's why I think it comes across I think as a very interesting kind of integrated deal that will satisfy some of Iran’s requirements, but certainly meets our requirements over a very, very long time frame.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  The last thing I’d just say, Peter, hearing my colleague is that the other thing the President was focused on -- particularly after Secretary Moniz became involved and the issues became highly technical -- was ensuring that we were drawing on the scientific expertise of Dr. Moniz and the associated experts within the U.S. government so that we were looking at these problems in different ways.

And there’s both the politics set of issues and the political framework, but also the desire to make sure that there’s a clear scientific case for the approach that we're taking.  And so that was an issue that was discussed at some length in more than one session.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  And I would just add to my colleague’s comments, yes, okay, I got involved directly five weeks ago, as I said.  However, I really want to emphasize that the Department of Energy and our national laboratory folks, working with others in the National Security Council, State, Department of Defense, have been involved since the beginning in creating kind of technical solutions, analyzing technical proposals that could serve as the foundation for a negotiated position.  So I do want to emphasize it’s not just parachuting in the last five weeks.  It was a long-term effort in what I have found a very rewarding multiagency approach to this.

Q    Hi, thank you.  I wanted to talk a little bit about the policy that you mentioned.  The President spoke about how he was going to speak with the leaders this afternoon, and he also kind of said in no uncertain terms what would happen if Congress killed the deal, as he said.  What is your approach to them going to be?  Senator Corker has reiterated that he plans on bringing his bill up as soon as Congress gets back.  Is your goal at this point to prevent that bill from coming up?  Are you going to try to peel enough people away from it so it’s veto-proof?  What approach are you going to take?

And secondarily, I just wanted to ask you about a tweet that Foreign Minister Zarif just put out where he was a little bit critical of the factsheets that were put out.  He said, there was no need to spin using factsheets so early on.  And the statement that he made and that the EU representative made were pretty general, followed up by a lot of specifics in your factsheet.  And I wondered if the issuance of those specifics was part of the agreement that you made, or if you just went ahead and did it yourselves?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: So let me take those in order, and then my colleagues may want to weigh in.  First of all, with respect to Congress, our principal objective over the course of the last year and a half almost since we finalized the Joint Plan of Action has been to give our negotiators the time and space to get a deal.  And that involved ensuring that there were not new sanctions passed during the time of the negotiation that would have derailed the process.  And in the context of the Corker bill that ensured -- that involved the President making very clear that we need to give our negotiating team the space to get a deal, and then have a discussion with Congress about the best way for them to exercise an oversight role.

In that context, the President has made clear he would veto new sanctions legislation during the negotiation, and he made clear he would veto the existing Corker legislation during negotiation.  The legislation also has a range of provisions that go beyond an up or down vote, as well.  And again, we think it’s best for members of Congress to take a look at the framework and then give the space to negotiate the final details between now and June.

All of that said, as the President noted today we have a great deal of respect for the role that Congress has played over the year in Iran policy.  There’s a lot of bipartisan interest.  The sanctions regime was built in part with congressional involvement, combined with our diplomacy.  And we do believe that it’s important for Congress to play an oversight role as we continue these negotiations and finalize a deal.

And so in the first instance, we will be briefing very extensively members of Congress.  The President is calling the leadership today.  But we're also making calls to many different members of Congress.  We’ve been in very regular touch with many dozens of members of Congress over the course of the last several days already.  And again, going forward, now that we have this framework, we’ll be able to brief in greater detail the type of deal that we're aiming to finalize in June. 

And again, we're open to discussions with Congress about how it plays an oversight role as we finalize that deal.  Certainly, Congress will have to take a vote during the duration of the agreement in order to lift sanctions.  And again, in the intervening period between now and June, we look forward to consultations with Congress on how they can provide oversight.

I’d note that Senator Corker put out a statement today making clear his intention to take a hard look at these details. And we’re certainly going to be reaching out to Senator Corker and going through with him what’s in the framework and again finding constructive ways for Congress to engage.

What would not be constructive is legislative action that essentially undercuts our ability to get the deal done and that is disruptive to the negotiations.  That's been our case all along here:  Wait and see what the deal is and then we can determine the best way to continue to engage Congress as it plays its oversight role, but do not do something that could derail the negotiation and leave the United States getting blamed for the collapse of talks in a manner that would deny us this opportunity to resolve the issue diplomatically, and also potentially undercut the international cooperation that's necessary for the sanctions regime.

With respect to Foreign Minister Zarif, the one thing I’d say is if you look at the statement from the EU and Iran that Foreign Minister Mogherini and Foreign Minister Zarif read, it addresses the different elements of the framework.  And essentially what our factsheet does is provide a number of the details that underpin those elements. 

So the discussions of the Arak reaction and of enrichment and of transparency and of sanctions, these are all addressed in the statement.  And what we're doing is providing the details that underpin the framework that was referenced by Foreign Minister Mogherini and Foreign Minister Zarif. 

And in any negotiation, obviously, there are issues that are of particular importance to different parties to the negotiation, and I’m sure Foreign Minister Zarif will represent that this is a deal that will enable Iran the ability to access peaceful nuclear energy and he will describe that.  We will describe why this is a deal that in that context cuts off Iran’s pathways to a nuclear weapon and has the type of transparency and inspections that can allow us to verify that Iran cannot pursue a nuclear weapon.  So we're obviously approaching this challenge with different national objectives, but it's the same deal that will accomplish those objectives.

But I don't know if my colleagues --

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I think it probably gives people a chance to ask questions.

Q    Can you just spell out a little bit kind of the tick-tock of this?  I mean, there was a moment yesterday when it seemed like the whole thing was collapsing, and then suddenly things were back in play.  Was that an illusion borne out by an exhausted press corps?  Or was there really something that has seemed not to be happening and then there was suddenly an agreement?  And how much of this had to do with signals coming from Tehran?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Let me give you a sense of, if I can, what these negotiations are like besides incredibly tough and incredibly difficult with a lot of moving pieces and a lot of moving people.  And of course, it's multilateral.  There are six countries plus the European Union -- seven -- and Iran.  So it's incredibly complex negotiations.  And of course, to ensure that all those pathways to nuclear fissile material is shut down, there are many pieces.  You all have heard me in the past talk about a Rubic’s Cube or a jigsaw puzzle.  You have all of the pieces in front of you; you’ve got to find a way for them to fit together and just click in in the right way.  Otherwise, you lose your objectives, whether that's a one-year breakout timeline, or ensuring that in fact you’ve got the transparency measures in place.  And so you look at all of those elements -- it becomes an incredibly complex negotiation.

The other thing I've always said is you can get to 98 percent of where you want to go, and you cannot get that last 2 percent that makes the deal work.  And so one of the things that happened over the last days, because we knew we were coming down to March 31st, because there was a lot of pressure on everyone, was to -- we had a lot of up and down moments.  We had a moment of hope, and about an hour later you wondered whether you were going to be getting on an airplane the next moment.

There’s a lot of brinkmanship that everybody plays at this point in a negotiation.  This effort has been going on for over 12 years in one form or another.  As I've also said, if it was easy it would have happened already.  So people get tense.  People do get exhausted.  That plays into it.  We're getting messages from Washington; my partners are getting messages from around the world; Iran is obviously getting messages from Tehran.

We joke a little bit that we negotiate with ourselves because we sit and we think about strategies and tactics, how to approach a particular problem, how it fits into the bigger picture.  We negotiate obviously interagency and the U.S. government; we negotiate with the P5+1 partners; we negotiate with other countries around the world who have an intense interest and national security interest in this negotiation.  We obviously negotiate with Capitol Hill who also has a great interest in this.  And then, occasionally, we negotiate with Iran. 

And I say that only a little bit tongue-in-cheek because you have to keep all those pieces moving simultaneously. It's why we have such an extraordinary team.  And that team reaches not only Treasury and our intelligence community and, of course, DOE, without whom we couldn't work, the White House, every single agency in the U.S. government, our Defense Department, but our embassies all over the world because there are countries all who have an interest in what’s going to be the price of oil, or whether there’s going to be increased conflict in the world.  And all of that pressure comes to bear on this negotiation.

So it is very much an up and down road.  I would say that yesterday and then today there were moments that we thought it was going to come together and then our hopes were dashed.  And it was through the technical creativity of Secretary Moniz, of our incredible team of experts who are here -- Dr. Jim Timbie, who leads our expert team on a regular basis, and the fine folks like Paul Irwin and Chris Backemeyer, who are here with me, but we have a tremendous team backed up by literally hundreds of people in the United States who work on this project.

So it's very tough, very complex, very much up and down.  We've had moments where we said maybe -- very directly to Iran -- maybe you just can't get there, we can't find the place and we aren't going to be able to make it happen.  Secretary Kerry has noted a couple of rounds ago -- I was here -- no, I guess I was in Geneva at that point -- and he was in London, and I was negotiating with my counterparts, and we weren't getting to where I thought we needed to go.  Secretary Kerry thought, and I completely agreed, he should sit in London and see if we could get in the ballpark of where we needed to go before he arrived.

So we think of ways to approach this in every way we possibly can.  Dr. Moniz is looking at my favorite little device, which is what I call the whiteboard exercise, because this is so complex, and trying to make sure that we and Iran were seeing the picture in the same way, putting all the elements up on a whiteboard, so it's become what we call our whiteboard chart, which everybody carries around with us so that we make sure that all the pieces that had to be addressed, all of the instructions and mandates that the President had given to us, that we didn’t miss a piece.

We created punch lists to make sure we didn’t find a problem last minute that was going to tank the negotiations.  And throughout this process we are constantly consulting with every other member of the P5+1.  They’re bringing expert ideas; we have to validate those ideas back home.  We have to validate them with other countries.  So it is without a doubt the most complex negotiation that I've ever been part of.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  And the only other thing, very quickly, Fred, is that we were getting close each of the last several nights.  Each of the last several days there was a moment in the day when we thought it was possible that an agreement would be concluded that night.  And that creates an anticipation.  And then when there’s an issue that arises that can't be closed out, there’s inevitably a letdown factor that filters out around the negotiations.

And so I think as we got progressively closer each night, the expectations went up each night.  And that made the perception of the failure to reach a deal more evident by folks who were watching closely.

Q    I had a question about the President said in the Rose Garden that success is not guaranteed on June 30th.  And I guess I'm wondering what, besides Congress who you clearly think could derail success, what else do you think threatens success?  Is it Iran?  Is it allies in the region?  Do you believe that the Supreme Leader has signed off on this deal?  Do you have any insight into where that stands?

And secondly, could you give us a little bit more detail on the color?  When did the President finally sign off on this deal? What was he doing this morning?  Obviously he was making a number of calls, but can you tell us what’s on the pizza, as they say?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  So I'll just take the second question first.  As I said, the President, on the 31st in that secure videoconference, had a good understanding of what the remaining issues were and gave I think broad guidance to the negotiating team.  Then there were a number of times over the course of the last several days when he has been on the phone directly with Secretary Kerry, or when Susan Rice would update the President based on her conversations with Secretary Kerry. 

Yesterday afternoon, I believe, the President spoke to Secretary Kerry and got a good understanding of how close we were and what the final issues were.  But they weren't closed out.  And then last night, as I said, Susan Rice was able to update him at around midnight.  He was in his residence, took that call to provide some final guidance on what would be necessary to get this done.  And his direction was, people know what my bottom lines are and I have trust in the negotiating team out there that by the time I wake up they could come back and have this closed out.

Then this morning, after working all night here in support of the team in Switzerland, the President got the full update in his Presidential Daily Briefing this morning around 10 o’clock about the final contours of what the deal was.  At that point, he communicated that he was certainly comfortable with the deal that was coming together.  And so at that point, essentially, he had signed off on what was going to become the framework.  And then before the final plenary among the ministers, the President received word that this was indeed going to be closed out.

Today the President called, in order, Prime Minister Cameron, then Chancellor Merkel, and then President Hollande.  He thought it was very important to speak to our close allies in the negotiation to take stock of what had been accomplished and to reiterate that we're going to need to stay coordinated going forward. 

Then he spoke to King Salman of Saudi Arabia.  He extended an invitation to the leaders of the GCC to come to Camp David this spring in what will be a very important summit meeting. 

It relates somewhat to your first question, Carol, which is that we do understand that our partners in the region, the Gulf countries and of course, our close friend and ally, Israel, have very profound concerns about Iran’s policies in the region in support of terrorism, its destabilizing activities.  And I think the President wants to make very clear in his engagement, including at the summit with the GCC countries, that we have the commitment of the security of our partners and we're going to be discussing with them ways that we can reaffirm that commitment.

He will be speaking to Prime Minister Netanyahu today.  And while of course, they’ve publicly differed on this negotiation, and before, the finalization of the Joint Plan of Action in November of 2013, the security commitment to Israel is ironclad. And so he'll also be discussing not just the deal but how do we continue to enhance our security cooperation as the new Israeli government is formed.

He’s speaking to the leaders of Congress today, and he'll, I'm sure, be speaking to additional foreign counterparts going forward.

So, look, there’s no foreign policy issue that he’s spent more time on in terms of over the last several weeks.  I'd say over the course of his presidency other than the war in Afghanistan and terrorism, Iran is an issue that he’s spent more time on than any other issue.  The first negotiation that he had on this started in 2009, so he’s very familiar with the Iranian nuclear program and all the different elements.  So, again, he approaches it from that perspective.

On your first question, I'll leave it to my counterparts.  The only thing I'd just say is that we recognize we have a framework that lays out what the parameters of a deal will be.  That's hugely important because we know what the objectives are; we know what has been agreed to that can lead to an implementation of a deal.  But there are very important technical details that have to be filled in between now and the end of June.

It took extraordinary political will to get to where we are today and it will take more political will from all the parties to close this out by the end of June.  So we operate under the principle that nothing is agreed to until everything is agreed in terms of the details.  And there certainly will be more negotiations to come. 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I would just add a couple of other elements.  Obviously the context in which this is happening in terms of events in the world doesn’t enter the room, necessarily, but certainly shapes the environment for these negotiations.  And so there were times when you all asked me when we were first imposing sanctions on Russia because of Ukraine whether, in fact -- how did things go with my Russian counterpart.  And actually we stayed very focused in the negotiating room.  And that has been true at other points of stress or tension with our other partners.

And likewise, as my colleague was pointing out, the calls of reassurance and connection that the President was making, particularly into the Gulf today, concerns about what’s happening more broadly that Secretary Kerry spoke to in his remarks this evening, most definitely, although they don't come into the negotiating room per se, they do set a context.  And events can obviously threaten a negotiation.  We've been fortunate to be able to keep it outside, but there is no doubt, and we've said in the margins of these meetings there is talk about what is going on, and the concern, the anxiety, the pressure that that creates legitimately about what we're doing, how we're doing it, and what the results are going to be.

I would also say that we all tend to think of Iran as a sort of one-person country, that whatever the Supreme Leader says goes.  Actually, Iran has politics -- not quite like our politics, but they have politics.  They have hard-liners, they have people who want to see the deal gone.  They have the IRGC force interests that has probably done pretty well during the sanctions regime.  They have people who have made money because of the sanctions regime on the black market.  They have the politics of their people who would like to be able to afford things and have a future for their kids.  And those politics come into the negotiating space that Iran has, just as our politics --which are quite different and obviously transparent and open and democratic -- in ways every single day.

Sometimes they get used tactically and may not be quite what we're told they are.  But there is no doubt that Javad Zarif will have to sell this deal just like we will.  And his task is not simple and a given, nor is ours.  This is very complicated.  A lot of this is hard to talk about to the American people.  Obviously, I thought the President and the Secretary did a terrific job beginning that conversation -- or continuing, actually, continuing that conversation with the American people. But this is tough stuff to put your mind around, and most people just want to make sure that they stay safe.

So that's what they’re looking at.  That's what we're looking at here.  That is what the President is looking at.

Q    How soon will sanctions against Iran be lifted?

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, sanctions don't get lifted -- let me let my colleagues take up that question. 

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  I think one of the things Secretary Kerry actually said today in his press conference -- one of the core principles of sanctions we will be working out as we proceed through the coming months is kind of the scheduling.  But the main principle is that we'll be matching our sanctions with the completion of all of Iran’s major nuclear steps.  So, in other words, like the Secretary said, they can do it as fast as they want, and it's in fact in our interests if they do it as fast as they can and get their breakout timeline extended as quickly as possible.

We could, of course, respond just as quickly and provide sanctions relief.  But the real important thing is that we link it up to the major components that make out their breakout timeline.

SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  The scheme on the U.S. sanctions side is exactly as my colleague was describing where we've been provided with guidance from the start that sanctions relief would have to be proportionate and only upon verified steps by the Iranians -- that the relief would only come when the steps that they had taken were commensurate with the relief that we were offering and that it be reversible.

Those have been our principles from the start and those have been fully held up in the framework.  So what we're going to see in the coming weeks and months after the details are worked out is steps by Iran to be confirmed by the IAEA and sanctions relief coming upon the heels of that.

MS. MEEHAN:  Thank you very much, everyone, for doing this call.  I know the team out in Switzerland is quite exhausted, so thanks for bearing with us.  This concludes the call.  As a reminder, this was on background attributable to senior administration officials.

Thanks, and have a great night.

END
5:05 P.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

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

President Obama called Prime Minister Netanyahu today from Air Force One to discuss the political framework reached between the P5+1, the EU, and Iran on a Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action regarding Iran’s nuclear program.  The President emphasized that, while nothing is agreed until everything is, the framework represents significant progress towards a lasting, comprehensive solution that cuts off all of Iran’s pathways to a bomb and verifiably ensures the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program going forward.  He underscored that progress on the nuclear issue in no way diminishes our concerns with respect to Iran’s sponsorship of terrorism and threats towards Israel and emphasized that the United States remains steadfast in our commitment to the security of Israel.   The President told the Prime Minister that he has directed his national security team to increase consultations with the new Israeli government about how we can further strengthen our long-term security cooperation with Israel and remain vigilant in countering Iran’s threats.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

Readout of the President’s Call With King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud of Saudi Arabia

The President called King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud of Saudi Arabia today to discuss the political framework reached between the P5+1, the EU, and Iran on a Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action regarding Iran’s nuclear program.  The President reiterated that the months ahead will be used to finalize the technical details for a lasting, comprehensive solution that effectively cuts off all of Iran’s pathways to a bomb and verifiably ensures the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program.  He emphasized that the nuclear understanding between the P5+1 and Iran will not in any way lessen U.S. concern about Iran’s destabilizing activities in the region.  The leaders agreed to increase consultations and remain vigilant in countering this threat.  As part of this effort, the President invited the King and Gulf Cooperation Council leaders to Camp David this spring to continue consultations.  The President and King Salman reaffirmed the enduring friendship between the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.