The White House

Office of the Vice President

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

 

The Vice President met this morning with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in New York. The Vice President welcomed our expanding global partnership, including Japan's contributions to strengthen peacekeeping efforts, address the threat posed by Ebola, and support the fight against ISIL by assisting refugees and other displaced persons in the Middle East. The Vice President welcomed Japan’s September 24 decision to impose sanctions targeting Russia’s financial and defense sectors. The Vice President and the Prime Minister agreed on the strategic and economic importance of the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the need to resolve outstanding bilateral issues in Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations, including on agriculture and automobiles, as soon as possible. The Vice President underscored continued U.S. support for Japan's efforts to improve relations with the Republic of Korea and China.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Opening Remarks by the Vice President at the UN Summit on Peacekeeping Operations

The United Nations
New York, New York

10:43 A.M. EDT

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Welcome.  And welcome to my co-hosts -- the Secretary General, the President of Rwanda, the Prime Minister of Bangladesh, the Prime Minister of Japan, and the Prime Minister of Pakistan, and all the assembled leaders, ministers, ambassadors and distinguished guests.  And as we say in the body I used to work in, the United States Senate, if you could excuse the point of personal privilege, I’d like to welcome my colleague, Senator Coons, who represents my home constituency.  So I want to be able to go back home.  (Laughter.)

We meet at a moment when the demand for international peacekeeping has never been greater.  In one generation, U.N. peacekeeping has grown tenfold, to about 120,000 men and women deployed around the world.

And as the nature of conflict and combatants has evolved --  to include sophisticated non-state actors as well as traditional armies -— the instruments of peacekeeping have evolved as well.

Today, we ask peacekeepers to protect civilians in South Sudan and the Central African Republic; to prevent sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo; and to help with the peace process in Mali, amid deadly attacks by extremists -— even as we continue to monitor longstanding ceasefires on three continents.

When we ask them to do more than ever, that is the peacekeepers, in even more difficult and more dangerous environments, we owe them more.  The result is that peacekeeping is under greater strain than it ever has been.  And I should say -- and I’m sure I speak for everyone -- we are grateful for the burdens peacekeepers have carried, and we honor the sacrifices that they have made.

But, today, we gather to offer more than just words of support.  Together, our nations are here to offer resources, troops, police, and more for these missions.  We have to meet the peacekeeping challenges today.  We also have to look ahead what they're going to be tomorrow; and we have to do it together.  

The United States will do its part.  Last month, President Obama launched the African Peacekeeping Rapid Response Partnership, a new commitment of $110 million dollars per year for the next three to five years to help six African partners build their capacity to rapidly -- and I emphasize rapidly --deploy peacekeepers in emerging crises.  Because rapid deployment, if done rapidly, can save tens of thousands of lives.

We thank the growing coalition, including several leaders here today, who are joining us in support of this initiative.  We think they share the same view, and we thank them for their contributions.

We also will review U.S. contributions to peacekeeping, as well, to assess gaps that the United States is uniquely positioned to fill, like base camps we are building and helping the U.N. build for peacekeepers in the Central African Republic; to better share the U.S. military’s knowledge of confronting asymmetric threats; and to help the U.N. deploy advanced technology.

And we’ll continue to offer support during cases as we did -- crises, I should say, as we did after the Haiti earthquake, and as we will be doing in Liberia to help contain the Ebola outbreak.  

We are already making contributions, all of us.  But we can and should do more together, and we can do it, in our view, more effectively.  That’s why the United States, Mr. Secretary General, welcomes the comprehensive review of peacekeeping operations that you have put forward.

This is a chance not only to make commitments, but to think strategically together about future peacekeeping needs and related missions.  My guess is -- and I’ve been in this business a long time -- had we met in the same fora 20 years ago, no one would be anticipating the type -- have anticipated the type of peacekeeping operations from non-state actors that we’re engaged with.  So when I say think strategically, we have to think ahead, as well.

And as to what kind of missions are going to be required in the future; what will be required to deploy them -- these missions -- rapidly and ensure they perform effectively; working in partnership with the African Union, NATO, and the European Union, and other organizations, we can do that.  And we owe the United Nations our best and boldest thinking.

So the truth is the very fact that peacekeeping exists, that men and women sometimes from halfway around the world risk their lives to protect peace on the fault lines of conflict is one of the great achievements of this international system.  Working together I’m confident we can strengthen that system and meet the challenges ahead.

And with that, let me now turn to His Excellency, the Secretary General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon.

END
10:50 A.M. EDT

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of the Vice President's Meeting with President Erdogan of Turkey

Vice President Biden met today with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan about bilateral relations and the threat posed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL). The Vice President thanked Turkey for hosting and providing humanitarian aid to large numbers of refugees from Iraq and Syria. The two leaders discussed the urgent need to build a broad-based coalition to defeat ISIL through a variety of means, including military actions, efforts to stop terrorist financing, countering flows of foreign fighters into the region, and delegitimizing ISIL's extremist ideology. The Vice President and President Erdogan agreed that ISIL was a regional threat and therefore required a regional strategy to be defeated. The two leaders also pledged to work together to provide humanitarian relief to refugees and internally displaced persons in the region.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of the Vice President’s Meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi

Vice President Biden met today with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi. They discussed political, diplomatic, and security developments in Iraq. The Prime Minister discussed his government's national program and commitment to address longstanding political disputes as part of an effort to enlist all of Iraq’s communities as partners in the fight against ISIL. The Vice President made clear the United States’ strong support for Iraq’s security and respect for its sovereignty, consistent with the Strategic Framework Agreement. 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by Dr. Jill Biden at the Institute for Career Development’s 2014 National Conference

Hi, everyone.  It is wonderful to be here with you in New Orleans.

Thank you Pete for that kind introduction, and it is great to see you again.  As Pete said, we first met two years ago when I toured Ivy Tech Community College in Indiana.

It is an honor to be invited here today by Tom Snyder, President of Ivy Tech, and Leo Gerard, President of the Steelworkers—they have both been such good friends to Joe and me.

I also want to congratulate Al Long for organizing the Institute for Career Development’s 20th National Conference—this conference is an incredible tribute to Lynn Williams’ lifelong efforts to build a better world.  So, thank you Al for all of your hard work.

I am honored to be here with all of you to discuss such an important topic—ensuring American workers have the education they need to secure good paying jobs to support their families.

This is an important topic for all workers, no matter what country you live in.  I just returned from a trip to Switzerland where I spoke at an international conference on higher education and job-training programs and I had the opportunity to tour a manufacturing plant that invests in quality job-training.  I learned that we all share the same challenges and opportunities.  And leaders from all across the world are trying to figure out how to best prepare workers for the intense competition of the 21st century economy. 

Equipping American workers with the skills they need to succeed in the global economy, is a top priority for President Obama and my husband Joe, the Vice President.

But I am not a politician.  I am not a researcher or an education policy expert.  I am an English professor.  I have taught in community colleges for 20 years, and still teach full-time at a community college near Washington, DC.  Education is my passion.

People sometimes ask why I choose to teach at a community college.  The answer is simple:  It is the students.  I love being in the classroom and seeing the difference I can make in the lives of my students.  My goal is to always give them confidence in their own abilities—because I know that confidence will carry them well beyond my classroom, in whatever they do.

In my classes, I find single parents who come to school in the evening, weary from a long day, yet eager to create a brighter future for their children.  I have taught veterans who return to the classroom to complete their higher education as they look to transition to civilian careers.  And I have seen workers who have gone as far as they can in their jobs—get the skills they need to reach the next level in their fields.

I know what happens in community college classrooms.  It is extraordinary.  I see it over and over because the students are so committed to furthering their education—they know it is the key to a better life for themselves and their families.

Community colleges lead the way in preparing graduates in the fields of green technology, healthcare, teaching, and information technology some of the fastest growing fields in America and the rest of the world.  In fact, half of the nurses in America are trained in community colleges.

I have always said that community colleges are one of America’s best-kept secrets.  They give people the tools they need to grow in a career they love.

Two years ago, I headed out on a community-college-to-career bus tour to learn more about innovative public-private workforce partnerships led by community colleges to train students for jobs that match the needs of employers in the region.  In two days, we traveled 800 miles through seven cities in five states, visiting some amazing, talented students, teachers and local leaders.  And at every stop, what I saw was exciting and inspiring.

Rather than tell you about the road trip, I want to show it to you.

[VIDEO]

Since then, I have continued to visit colleges across the United States to lift up these incredible programs and the people whose lives they change with our new Labor Secretary.

At one of the stops, I had the opportunity to visit Ivy Tech to learn more about the great partnership between the school and the steel industry.  That is where I met Janice and Kevin, both of whom were part of the Steelworker for the Future program.

Janice lost her job in 2008 during the worst recession since the great depression.  It was a challenging time for a lot of Americans, but Janice did not give up hope.  She went back to school, earned a degree in industrial technology, and was hired by U.S. Steel even before graduating from Ivy Tech.

Kevin went back to school at the age of 39.  He enrolled at Ivy Tech, did an internship with ArcelorMittal, and where upon graduation he was immediately hired full time as a maintenance mechanic.

I was also impressed by an enterprising senior at Whiting High School, named Benjamin who was part of the High School Steelworker Program, which gives high school students the chance to receive college credits for classes they take in industrial technology.  Benjamin earned 38 credits from Ivy Tech before graduating high school, and he was well on his way to realizing his goal of becoming a chemical engineer.

Whether it is workers like Janice and Kevin returning to the classroom to retool their skills for the jobs of today, or aspiring students like Benjamin who are receiving hands-on experience for the jobs of tomorrow, the training they receive at Ivy Tech is exactly what we need to replicate around the country to build the best-educated, most competitive workforce in the world.

The Obama-Biden Administration is doing its part to expand job-driven training programs so students and workers can acquire the education and skills they need to move into jobs that already exist in their communities.  By the end of this year, we will have invested nearly $2 billion into strengthening the partnership between community colleges, employers and the public workforce system to create pipelines of skilled workers.  Building those partnerships is essential to growing the economy, strengthening the workforce, and creating opportunities for working class families in the 21st century economy.

This all goes back to the fundamental belief of this administration—if you are ready to work, you should be able to find a job that fits your skills, or get trained with the skills you need for a better job.

It all starts with you.  You have been doing this for 25 years and you are the best at what you do.  But Lynn Williams would be the first to say, there is more work to be done—and there is always more work to be done.

We must break down common misconceptions, and shine a brighter light on what modern job-training education looks like.  We must lift up successful programs—like those offered through the Institute for Career Development—to match Americans who are ready to learn new skills, and who are ready to work, with good jobs that need to be filled right now.  Career pathway programs work for Steelworkers, and they can work for millions of more Americans. 

There is tremendous opportunity in what you are doing—not just for our students and for our workers—but for our country.  We all reap the benefits when our citizens are well-educated and well-trained.  It means that our economies are more vibrant and the future is brighter.

Thank you.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of Vice President Biden’s Call with Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos

Vice President Biden spoke today with Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos to review efforts to strengthen bilateral trade ties and increase regional cooperation on matters like energy and security. The Vice President and President Santos continued their active dialogue on regional issues, and discussed Colombia’s potential role in international peacekeeping operations. The Vice President also reaffirmed unwavering U.S. support for the Colombian government’s efforts to negotiate a lasting and just peace with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. 

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of the Vice President's Call with Polish Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz

Vice President Joe Biden spoke today with Polish Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz. The Vice President congratulated Prime Minister Kopacz on her government’s swearing in and pledged to continue close consultation on a range of bilateral and global issues. The Vice President underscored that Poland is one of the United States’ closest allies and thanked Prime Minister Kopacz for Poland’s contributions to international security, and for its leadership on the crisis in Ukraine. He also underscored the need to further strengthen bilateral commercial relations, and noted that Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker would be leading a delegation of the President’s Export Council to Poland on September 28-30.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Readout of the Vice President's Call with Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk

Vice President Joe Biden spoke with Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk today to congratulate him on Ukraine’s ratification of its Association Agreement with the European Union. The Vice President also congratulated the Prime Minister on the passage of laws on Amnesty and Special Status for parts of the Ukrainian regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, in keeping with the ceasefire protocol agreed to by Russia and Ukraine in Minsk on September 5, 2014. Finally, the Vice President and Prime Minister agreed that Russia and its separatist proxies now needed to immediately implement in full the twelve points of the Minsk Agreement, including the removal of all Russian troops from Ukraine and the creation of a security area in the border regions of Ukraine and the Russian Federation.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by Dr. Jill Biden at the International Congress on Vocational and Professional Education and Training

Winterthur, Switzerland

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

 

Hi, everyone!  Thank you Beatrice for that warm introduction. 

It is so great to be here with Ambassador Suzi LeVine—we are so grateful for her service here in Switzerland.

I am pleased to be joined by the United States Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor Eric Seleznow.

I am honored to be here with all of you at this international conference to discuss such an important topic—ensuring that students and workers have the skills they need to secure good jobs and succeed in the global economy. 

This is a top priority for President Obama and my husband Joe, the Vice President of the United States.

But I am not a politician.  I am not a researcher or an education policy expert.  I am an English professor.  I have taught in community colleges for 20 years, and still teach full-time at a community college near Washington, DC.  Education is my passion.

People sometimes ask why I choose to teach at a community college.  The answer is simple:  It is the students. 

I love being in the classroom and seeing the difference I can make in the lives of my students.  My goal is always to give them confidence in their own abilities—because I know that confidence will carry them well beyond my classroom, in whatever they do.

In my classes, I find single parents who come to school in the evening, weary from a long day, yet eager to create a brighter future for their children.

I have taught veterans who return to the classroom to complete their higher education as they look to transition to civilian careers.

And I have seen workers who have gone as far as they can in their jobs—get the skills they need to reach the next level in their fields.

I know what happens in community college classrooms.  It is extraordinary.

I see it over and over because the students are so committed to furthering their education—they know it is the key to a better life for themselves and their families.

Community colleges are as the name suggests—higher education institutions that are uniquely able to address the needs of their communities.  They are a place where students can get the skills and education they need to succeed, and get a good-paying job to support their families.

In the United States there are almost 1,200 community colleges.  They serve almost 12 million students, or nearly half of all U.S undergraduate students.

Community colleges lead the way in preparing graduates in the fields of green technology, healthcare, teaching, and information technology some of the fastest growing fields in America and the rest of the world.

In fact, half of the nurses in America are trained in community colleges.  

Quite simply, these schools are providing students with an opportunity to learn the skills they need to compete in the global economy.

Two years ago, I headed out on a community-college-to-career bus tour to learn more about innovative public-private workforce partnerships led by community colleges to train students for jobs that match the needs of employers in the region.

In two days, we traveled 800 miles—or nearly 1,300 kilometers—through seven cities in five states, visiting some amazing, talented students, teachers and local leaders. 

Rather than tell you about the road trip, I want to show it to you.

[SHOW VIDEO]

Since then, I have continued to tour the United States with Secretary of Labor Tom Perez.

I have always said that community colleges are one of America’s best-kept secrets.  They help people get good-paying jobs, and give them the tools they need to grow in a career they love. 

Today, more than 800 schools in the United States are using an innovative career training program to align curriculum with the needs of employers.

This gives students the opportunity to learn the skills they need to move into jobs that already exist in their communities.

The Obama-Biden Administration is doing its part to bolster the program and spur new partnerships.  By the end of this year, we will have invested nearly $2 billion into strengthening the linkage between community colleges and employers to create pipelines of skilled workers. 

As the U.S. economy continues to grow, and global competition intensifies, community colleges will become even more crucial to American prosperity. 

That is why in January of this year, President Obama asked my husband Joe to lead a review of the job-training programs in the United States.

What he found is that matching ready-to-work employees to in-demand jobs works best when employers partner with educators to define needed skills, shape training programs, and invest in apprenticeships and on-the-job training.

As a result, the Administration is now taking action to make our job-training programs more effective.

And, more businesses and education systems in the U.S. are teaming up to replicate successful training strategies.

One of those strategies is increasing the opportunity for apprenticeships.

Yesterday, I had the opportunity to visit the Bühler plant in Uzwil to see firsthand the Swiss apprenticeship program.

I was impressed to learn that nearly 80 percent of apprentices continue to work at Bühler after their training, and that other companies in the region are able to take advantage of the program, creating an eco-system of high quality skilled workers.

As we look to improve job-training education in the United States, we will put a greater emphasis on apprenticeships.  They are a tried-and-true workforce development global strategy.

State governments and education professionals in the United States are already learning lessons from the unique Swiss model.

For example, the California State Senate has developed a new program called the Career Pathways Trust—a $250 million competitive grant program to encourage more partnerships between schools and the private sector.

In the United States, we have 375,000 Registered Apprentices.  We need to add 2.5 million more next year to compete with Great Britain and 7 million more to compete with Germany. 

To get anywhere near those numbers, we need to do a better job of breaking down some common misconceptions, and shine a brighter light on what modern apprenticeships look like.

Consequently, we created the Registered Apprenticeship College Consortium—a partnership among community colleges and employers that makes it possible for apprentices to transfer college credits they earn to any community college in the consortium.

Over 30 colleges and 500 apprenticeship programs have applied to join.

And this fall, we are making an historic investment of 100 million dollars to scale up programs that work, and to create new opportunities for companies to adopt this tried-and-true strategy.

Apprenticeships provide a career pathway for workers, setting them on an upward trajectory for life, and they are a great return-on-investment for employers.

They also demonstrate the benefit of sharing best practices to better prepare our students for the jobs of today and tomorrow.  That is exactly what all of you are doing here.

No matter what country you live in, young people are trying to figure out where they fit into the intense competition of the global economy.  And leaders are trying to figure out how to prepare the next generation for the jobs of tomorrow.

As President Obama has said, “In a 21st century economy where the most valuable skill you can sell is your knowledge, education is the single best bet we can make.”

We all reap the benefits when our citizens are well-educated and well-trained.  It means that our economies are more vibrant and the future is brighter. 

Thank you.

The White House

Office of the Vice President

Dr. Jill Biden Arrives in Zurich, Switzerland

Dr. Jill Biden has arrived in Zurich, Switzerland. During her two-day visit, Dr. Biden will travel to Uzwil, to tour Bühler, a company with a global apprenticeship program, including apprenticeships in the U.S., where she will have the chance to see an integrated program in practice, and talk with apprentices to learn about their experiences. This event at 4 PM CET is open press.

Dr. Biden will then travel to Winterthur, Switzerland to deliver a keynote address at the International Congress on Vocational and Professional Education and Training. Dr. Biden’s remarks will highlight the Obama-Biden Administration’s commitment to higher education and job-training programs to ensure American workers have the skills they need to succeed in the global economy. This event Tuesday, at 9:30 AM CET, is open to pre-registered, credentialed press.