Author: Serkadis

  • Gartman: Commodity Markets Are Looking Very Strong, But There’s An Insane Amount Of Corn Out There

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    Today, analyst Dennis Gartman discussing the current mini-boom in commodities.

    While the falling dollar is one factor driving prices up, Gartman notes that there is an abundance of corn available. Lots of corn. And it must be sold as soon as possible.

    COMMODITY MARKETS ARE STRONGER EVERYWHERE… with prices rising as the dollar weakens; however, just as we see the dollar’s weakness noted above as corrective rather than bearish, we see the strength in the commodity markets in the same light. Given the severity of the recent weakness, a bounce is not only overdue, it is almost necessary, in order to restore health to the market. After all, the DJ/UBS Index has fallen from 145 to 129 in the course of the past four weeks, breaking a well defined upward sloping trend line extending back into March of last year in the process. Indices such as this do not fall 11% in such a short period of time without bouncing.

    Turning then to the non-metals, we note firstly that lumber has gone “limit up” two days in a row. Perhaps this is nothing at all. Perhaps it is simply a short squeeze in the lumber pit; or perhaps there was some change in the myriad US/Canadian lumber agreements that we know nothing about; or perhaps this is the lumber market’s signal that the housing market is indeed turning for the better. We are open to suggestions, noting only this market’s strength and wondering aloud what is to come of it.

    Moving on to the grains, weakness still prevails and corn continues to be under the impetus of the still fresh-in-our-memory USDA crop report of nearly a month ago. Perhaps most importantly for the corn market, however, is the fact that so much of the corn crop was gathered in far too swiftly and was brought in “out of condition” and may soon go out of condition entirely. This corn must be sold, and it must be sold quickly. Farmers really have little choice. It is sell now, or sell nothing. They’ll take now rather than nothing. How much corn there is to be sold in this instance is open to debate but it is somewhere between 200-500 million bushels. Once this corn is sold, then perhaps corn prices will find a base, but until then there is substantive overhead supply and prices will likely trend lower still, on into the next round of USDA crop reports next month.

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  • For Developers: Kanzi – a cross platform development environment with OpenGL support

    Kanzi™ is a complete solution for design and deployment of advanced graphical user interfaces. It sports a complete toolchain to take products from design stages to target devices. Kanzi solution is technologically scalable from mobile and embedded devices to automotive applications. As a platform independent solution, Kanzi offers easy portability and rapid production cycle.

    Key advantage of the Kanzi solution is "design-once, deploy everywhere" cross-platform support for the leading mobile operating systems, including Android, Blackberry, Linux, Maemo, Moblin, iPhone OS, Palm Web OS, Symbian OS, and Windows Mobile. Kanzi solution is build on top of industry standard OpenGL ES graphics API.

    In terms of designer’s work flow, Kanzi provides the missing link between today’s leading 3D graphics content creation tools, such as 3DS Max, Maya and XSI on the one hand, and cell phones on the other hand. Artists can easily export their designs from these software packages to Kanzi SDK using COLLADA data format. Designers then rapidly compose the actual user interface application and apply all 3D graphics effects within the Kanzi SDK itself. The tool features a desktop runtime of the Kanzi engine to bring a real-time view of the final application at the desktop. This feature eliminates the need to continuously build the project to target device during development in order to inspect it. Therefore, design cycle shortens substantially while the designer is better able to realize her vision.

    Kanzi runtime can be integrated to a wide variety of target devices, even those with different operating systems and hardware architectures. Applications made with Kanzi SDK will execute properly in all these devices, thus giving greater return on investment for the application developer.

    Kanzi features a unified pipeline for OpenGL ES 2.0 and OpenGL ES 1.x based 3D graphics. The engine supports real-time streaming of data, texture and fragment shaders, multi-texturing and dynamic lighting. There is also a versatile animation framework supporting key frame animations, such as vertex, object and bone based animations.

    Rightware will demonstrate a Mobile App Store application running in various mobile devices at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona from February 15th through February 18th. Mobile App Store is designed and implemented using Kanzi user interface solution that enables designers to quickly have their applications running in different target devices.

    Read more about the Kanzi platform here.

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  • Message from the President on NASA’s Day of Remembrance

    01.29.10 01:00 PM

    For more than a half-century, NASA has explored our final frontier and transformed humankind’s understanding of our planet and its place in the universe. These extraordinary achievements have required great sacrifice.

    On this Day of Remembrance, we pause to reflect on the Apollo 1, Challenger and Columbia crews, as well as others who lost their lives supporting NASA’s mission of exploration and study of the earth, the planets and the stars. All of humanity has benefited from their courage and devotion.

    We mourn their loss while celebrating their spirit of discovery. May their sacrifice be an inspiration as we continue our nation’s work to explore our universe.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Vice President Biden, Secretary Duncan Host Conference Calls with Governors, Mayors a

    01.29.10 02:02 PM

    Earlier today, the Vice President and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan hosted two conference calls with governors, mayors, and a county official from across the country to discuss implementation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

    The following elected officials participated:

    GOVERNORS:

    Governor Charlie Crist (R-FL)Governor Dave Freudenthal (D-WY)Governor Bob Riley (R-AL)Governor Bill Ritter (D-CO)MAYORS & COUNTY OFFICIALS:

    Mayor Greg Ballard (R-Indianapolis, IN)Mayor Cory Booker (D- Newark, NJ)Mayor David Cicilline (D-Providence, RI)Mayor John DeStefano (D-New Haven, CT)County Commissioner Lenny Eliason (D-Athens County, OH)

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Bills Signed Today

    01.29.10 03:38 PM

    On Friday, January 29, 2010, the President signed into law:

    H.R. 1817, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 116 North West Street in Somerville, Tennessee, as the “John S. Wilder Post Office Building,”

    H.R. 2877, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 76 Brookside Avenue in Chester, New York, as the “1st Lieutenant Louis Allen Post Office,”

    H.R. 3072, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 9810 Halls Ferry Road in St. Louis, Missouri, as the “Coach Jodie Bailey Post Office Building,”

    H.R. 3319, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 440 South Gulling Street in Portola, California, as the “Army Specialist Jeremiah Paul McCleery Post Office Building,”

    H.R. 3539, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 427 Harrison Avenue in Harrison, New Jersey, as the “Patricia D. McGinty-Juhl Post Office Building,”

    H.R. 3667, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 16555 Springs Street in White Springs, Florida, as the “Clyde L. Hillhouse Post Office Building,”

    H.R. 3767, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 170 North Main Street in Smithfield, Utah, as the “W. Hazen Hillyard Post Office Building,”

    H.R. 3788, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 3900 Darrow Road in Stow, Ohio, as the “Corporal Joseph A. Tomci Post Office Building;” and

    H.R. 4508, which extends the authorizations of certain Small Business Administration programs until April 30, 2010.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • President Obama Sets Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Target for Federal Operations

    01.29.10 06:27 AM

    Target to Drive Energy Cost Reductions in Federal Operations, Creating Clean Energy Jobs

    WASHINGTON, DC – President Barack Obama today announced that the Federal Government will reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution by 28 percent by 2020. Reducing and reporting GHG pollution, as called for in Executive Order 13514 on Federal Sustainability, will ensure that the Federal Government leads by example in building the clean energy economy. Actions taken under this Executive Order will spur clean energy investments that create new private-sector jobs, drive long-term savings, build local market capacity, and foster innovation and entrepreneurship in clean energy industries.

    As the single largest energy consumer in the U.S. economy, the Federal Government spent more than $24.5 billion on electricity and fuel in 2008 alone. Achieving the Federal GHG pollution reduction target will reduce Federal energy use by the equivalent of 646 trillion BTUs, equal to 205 million barrels of oil, and taking 17 million cars off the road for one year. This is also equivalent to a cumulative total of $8 to $11 billion in avoided energy costs through 2020.

    “As the largest energy consumer in the United States, we have a responsibility to American citizens to reduce our energy use and become more efficient,” said President Obama. “Our goal is to lower costs, reduce pollution, and shift Federal energy expenses away from oil and towards local, clean energy.”

    Federal Departments and Agencies will achieve greenhouse gas pollution reductions by measuring their current energy and fuel use, becoming more energy efficient and shifting to clean energy sources like solar, wind and geothermal. Examples of agency actions that are underway are available on the White House Council on Environmental Quality website and can be found at www.whitehouse.gov/ceq.

    On October 5, 2009, President Obama signed Executive Order 13514 on Federal Sustainability, setting measureable environmental performance goals for Federal Agencies. Each Federal Agency was required to submit a 2020 GHG pollution reduction target from its estimated 2008 baseline to the White House Council on Environmental Quality and to the Director of the Office of Management and Budget by January 4, 2010. The Federal target announced today is the aggregate of 35 Federal Agency self-reported targets.

    Greenhouse gas emissions serve as a useful metric to measure the effectiveness of agency energy and fuel efficiency efforts as well as renewable energy investments. Agencies are already taking actions that will contribute towards achieving their targets, such as installing solar arrays at military installations, tapping landfills for renewable energy, putting energy management systems in Federal buildings, and replacing older vehicles with more fuel efficient hybrid models.

    As a next step, the Office of Management and Budget will validate and score each agency’s sustainability plan, assuring a long-term return on investment to the American taxpayer. To ensure accountability, annual progress will be measured and reported online to the public.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • OP-ED by Vice President Joe Biden in Today’s Wall Street Journal

    01.29.10 07:38 AM

    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
    The President’s Nuclear Vision
    We Will Spend What is Necessary to Maintain the Safety, Security and Effectiveness of Our Weapons

    By JOE BIDEN
    January 29, 2010

    The United States faces no greater threat than the spread of nuclear weapons. That is why, last April in Prague, President Obama laid out a comprehensive agenda to reverse their spread, and to pursue the peace and security of a world without them. He understands that this ultimate goal will not be reached quickly. But by acting on a number of fronts, we can ensure our security, strengthen the global nonproliferation regime, and keep vulnerable nuclear material out of terrorist hands.

    For as long as nuclear weapons are required to defend our country and our allies, we will maintain a safe, secure and effective nuclear arsenal. The president’s Prague vision is central to this administration’s efforts to protect the American people—and that is why we are increasing investments in our nuclear arsenal and infrastructure in this year’s budget and beyond.

    Among the many challenges our administration inherited was the slow but steady decline in support for our nuclear stockpile and infrastructure, and for our highly trained nuclear work force. The stockpile, infrastructure and work force played a critical and evolving role in every stage of our nuclear experience, from the Manhattan Project to the present day. Once charged with developing ever more powerful weapons, they have had a new mission in the 18 years since we stopped conducting nuclear tests. That is to maintain the strength of the nuclear arsenal.

    For almost a decade, our laboratories and facilities have been underfunded and undervalued. The consequences of this neglect—like the growing shortage of skilled nuclear scientists and engineers and the aging of critical facilities—have largely escaped public notice. Last year, the Strategic Posture Commission led by former Defense Secretaries William Perry and James Schlesinger warned that our nuclear complex requires urgent attention. We agree.

    The budget we will submit to Congress on Monday both reverses this decline and enables us to implement the president’s nuclear-security agenda. These goals are intertwined. The same skilled nuclear experts who maintain our arsenal play a key role in guaranteeing our country’s security now and for the future. State-of-the art facilities, and highly trained and motivated people, allow us to maintain our arsenal without testing. They will help meet the president’s goal of securing vulnerable nuclear materials world-wide in the coming years, and enable us to track and thwart nuclear trafficking, verify weapons reductions, and to develop tomorrow’s cutting-edge technologies for our security and prosperity.

    To achieve these goals, our budget devotes $7 billion for maintaining our nuclear-weapons stockpile and complex, and for related efforts. This commitment is $600 million more than Congress approved last year. And over the next five years we intend to boost funding for these important activities by more than $5 billion. Even in a time of tough budget decisions, these are investments we must make for our security. We are committed to working with Congress to ensure these budget increases are approved.

    This investment is long overdue. It will strengthen our ability to recruit, train and retain the skilled people we need to maintain our nuclear capabilities. It will support the work of our nuclear labs, a national treasure that we must and will sustain. Many of our facilities date back to World War II, and, given the safety and environmental challenges they present, cannot be sustained much longer. Increased funding now will eventually enable considerable savings on both security and maintenance. It also will allow us to clean up and close down production facilities we no longer need.

    Our budget request is just one of several closely related and equally important initiatives giving life to the president’s Prague agenda. Others include completing the New START agreement with Russia, releasing the Nuclear Posture Review on March 1, holding the Nuclear Security Summit in April, and pursuing ratification and entry into force of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.

    We will by these initiatives seek to strengthen an emerging bipartisan consensus on how best to secure our nation. These steps will strengthen the nonproliferation regime, which is vital to holding nations like North Korea and Iran accountable when they break the rules, and deterring others from trying to do so.

    Reflecting this consensus, Sen. John McCain has joined the president in endorsing a world without nuclear weapons—a goal that was articulated by President Ronald Reagan, who in 1984 said these weapons must be "banished from the face of the Earth." This consensus was inspired by four of our most eminent statesmen—Messrs. Henry Kissinger, William Perry, Sam Nunn and George P. Shultz.

    Some critics will argue that we should not constrain our nuclear efforts in any way. Others will assert that retaining a robust deterrent is at odds with our nonproliferation agenda. These four leaders last week in these pages argued compellingly that "maintaining high confidence in our nuclear arsenal is critical as the numbers of these weapons goes down. It is also consistent with and necessary for U.S. leadership in nonproliferation, risk reduction and arms reduction goals."

    This shared commitment serves our security. No nation can secure itself by disarming unilaterally, but as long as nuclear weapons exist, all nations remain ever on the brink of destruction. As President Obama said in Prague, "We cannot succeed in this endeavor alone, but we can lead it, we can start it."

    Mr. Biden is vice president of the United States.

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Presidential Memorandum — Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future

    01.29.10 09:50 AM

    MEMORANDUM FOR THE SECRETARY OF ENERGY

    SUBJECT: Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future

    Expanding our Nation’s capacity to generate clean nuclear energy is crucial to our ability to combat climate change, enhance energy security, and increase economic prosperity. My Administration is undertaking substantial steps to expand the safe, secure, and responsible use of nuclear energy. These efforts are critical to accomplishing many of my Administration’s most significant goals.

    An important part of a sound, comprehensive, and long-term domestic nuclear energy strategy is a well-considered policy for managing used nuclear fuel and other aspects of the back end of the nuclear fuel cycle. Yet the Nation’s approach, developed more than 20 years ago, to managing materials derived from nuclear activities, including nuclear fuel and nuclear waste, has not proven effective. Fortunately, over the past two decades scientists and engineers in our country and abroad have learned a great deal about effective strategies for managing nuclear material. My Administration is committed to using this advanced knowledge to meet the Government’s obligation to dispose of our Nation’s used nuclear material.

    Accordingly, I request that you establish a Blue Ribbon Commission on America’s Nuclear Future (Commission) and appoint its members. Those members should include recognized representatives and experts from a range of disciplines and with a range of perspectives, and may include participation of appropriate Federal officials. The Commission’s business should be conducted in an open and transparent manner.

    The Commission should conduct a comprehensive review of policies for managing the back end of the nuclear fuel cycle, including all alternatives for the storage, processing, and disposal of civilian and defense used nuclear fuel and nuclear waste. This review should include an evaluation of advanced fuel cycle technologies that would optimize energy recovery, resource utilization, and the minimization of materials derived from nuclear activities in a manner consistent with U.S. nonproliferation goals.

    In performing its functions, the Commission should consider a broad range of technological and policy alternatives, and should analyze the scientific, environmental, budgetary, economic, financial, and management issues, among others, surrounding each alternative it considers. Where appropriate, the Commission may also identify potential statutory changes.

    The Commission should provide an interim report to you within 18 months of the date of this memorandum, and that report should be made available for public comment. The Commission should provide a final report to you within 24 months of the date of this memorandum. The Department of Energy shall provide funding and administrative support for the Commission, as you determine appropriate, so that it can complete its functions within these time periods. Additionally, all executive departments and agencies shall provide such information and assistance to the Commission as you or the Commission may request for purposes of carrying out the Commission’s functions, to the extent permitted by law. Nothing in this memorandum shall be construed to require the disclosure of classified, proprietary, law enforcement sensitive, or other information protected under governing law. This memorandum shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations. This memorandum is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

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

    BARACK OBAMA

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Remarks by the President at GOP House Issues Conference

    01.29.10 12:59 PM

    12:10 P.M. EST

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Please, everybody be seated. Thank you. Thank you, John, for the gracious introduction. To Mike and Eric, thank you for hosting me. Thank you to all of you for receiving me. It is wonderful to be here. I want to also acknowledge Mark Strand, president of the Congressional Institute. To all the family members who are here and who have to put up with us for an elective office each and every day, thank you, because I know that’s tough. (Applause.)

    I very much am appreciative of not only the tone of your introduction, John, but also the invitation that you extended to me. You know what they say, "Keep your friends close, but visit the Republican Caucus every few months." (Laughter.)

    Part of the reason I accepted your invitation to come here was because I wanted to speak with all of you, and not just to all of you. So I’m looking forward to taking your questions and having a real conversation in a few moments. And I hope that the conversation we begin here doesn’t end here; that we can continue our dialogue in the days ahead. It’s important to me that we do so. It’s important to you, I think, that we do so. But most importantly, it’s important to the American people that we do so.

    I’ve said this before, but I’m a big believer not just in the value of a loyal opposition, but in its necessity. Having differences of opinion, having a real debate about matters of domestic policy and national security — and that’s not something that’s only good for our country, it’s absolutely essential. It’s only through the process of disagreement and debate that bad ideas get tossed out and good ideas get refined and made better. And that kind of vigorous back and forth — that imperfect but well-founded process, messy as it often is — is at the heart of our democracy. That’s what makes us the greatest nation in the world.

    So, yes, I want you to challenge my ideas, and I guarantee you that after reading this I may challenge a few of yours. (Laughter.) I want you to stand up for your beliefs, and knowing this caucus, I have no doubt that you will. I want us to have a constructive debate. The only thing I don’t want — and here I am listening to the American people, and I think they don’t want either — is for Washington to continue being so Washington-like. I know folks, when we’re in town there, spend a lot of time reading the polls and looking at focus groups and interpreting which party has the upper hand in November and in 2012 and so on and so on and so on. That’s their obsession.

    And I’m not a pundit. I’m just a President, so take it for what it’s worth. But I don’t believe that the American people want us to focus on our job security. They want us to focus on their job security. (Applause.) I don’t think they want more gridlock. I don’t think they want more partisanship. I don’t think they want more obstruction. They didn’t send us to Washington to fight each other in some sort of political steel-cage match to see who comes out alive. That’s not what they want. They sent us to Washington to work together, to get things done, and to solve the problems that they’re grappling with every single day.

    And I think your constituents would want to know that despite the fact it doesn’t get a lot of attention, you and I have actually worked together on a number of occasions. There have been times where we’ve acted in a bipartisan fashion. And I want to thank you and your Democratic colleagues for reaching across the aisle. There has been, for example, broad support for putting in the troops necessary in Afghanistan to deny al Qaeda safe haven, to break the Taliban’s momentum, and to train Afghan security forces. There’s been broad support for disrupting, dismantling, and defeating al Qaeda. And I know that we’re all united in our admiration of our troops. (Applause.)

    So it may be useful for the international audience right now to understand — and certainly for our enemies to have no doubt — whatever divisions and differences may exist in Washington, the United States of America stands as one to defend our country. (Applause.)

    It’s that same spirit of bipartisanship that made it possible for me to sign a defense contracting reform bill that was cosponsored by Senator McCain and members of Congress here today. We’ve stood together on behalf of our nation’s veterans. Together we passed the largest increase in the VA’s budget in more than 30 years and supported essential veterans’ health care reforms to provide better access and medical care for those who serve in uniform.

    Some of you also joined Democrats in supporting a Credit Card Bill of Rights and in extending unemployment compensation to Americans who are out of work. Some of you joined us in stopping tobacco companies from targeting kids, expanding opportunities for young people to serve our country, and helping responsible homeowners stay in their homes.

    So we have a track record of working together. It is possible. But, as John, you mentioned, on some very big things, we’ve seen party-line votes that, I’m just going to be honest, were disappointing. Let’s start with our efforts to jumpstart the economy last winter, when we were losing 700,000 jobs a month. Our financial system teetered on the brink of collapse and the threat of a second Great Depression loomed large. I didn’t understand then, and I still don’t understand, why we got opposition in this caucus for almost $300 billion in badly needed tax cuts for the American people, or COBRA coverage to help Americans who’ve lost jobs in this recession to keep the health insurance that they desperately needed, or opposition to putting Americans to work laying broadband and rebuilding roads and bridges and breaking ground on new construction projects.

    There was an interesting headline in CNN today: "Americans disapprove of stimulus, but like every policy in it." And there was a poll that showed that if you broke it down into its component parts, 80 percent approved of the tax cuts, 80 percent approved of the infrastructure, 80 percent approved of the assistance to the unemployed.

    Well, that’s what the Recovery Act was. And let’s face it, some of you have been at the ribbon-cuttings for some of these important projects in your communities. Now, I understand some of you had some philosophical differences perhaps on the just the concept of government spending, but, as I recall, opposition was declared before we had a chance to actually meet and exchange ideas. And I saw that as a missed opportunity.

    Now, I am happy to report this morning that we saw another sign that our economy is moving in the right direction. The latest GDP numbers show that our economy is growing by almost 6 percent — that’s the most since 2003. To put that in perspective, this time last year, we weren’t seeing positive job growth; we were seeing the economy shrink by about 6 percent.

    So you’ve seen a 12 percent reversal during the course of this year. This turnaround is the biggest in nearly three decades — and it didn’t happen by accident. It happened — as economists, conservative and liberal, will attest — because of some of the steps that we took.

    And by the way, you mentioned a Web site out here, John — if you want to look at what’s going on, on the Recovery Act, you can look on recovery.gov — a Web site, by the way, that was Eric Cantor’s idea.

    Now, here’s the point. These are serious times, and what’s required by all of us — Democrats and Republicans — is to do what’s right for our country, even if it’s not always what’s best for our politics. I know it may be heresy to say this, but there are things more important than good poll numbers. And on this no one can accuse me of not living by my principles. (Laughter.) A middle class that’s back on its feet, an economy that lifts everybody up, an America that’s ascendant in the world — that’s more important than winning an election. Our future shouldn’t be shaped by what’s best for our politics; our politics should be shaped by what’s best for our future.

    But no matter what’s happened in the past, the important thing for all of us is to move forward together. We have some issues right in front of us on which I believe we should agree, because as successful as we’ve been in spurring new economic growth, everybody understands that job growth has been lagging. Some of that’s predictable. Every economist will say jobs are a lagging indicator, but that’s no consolation for the folks who are out there suffering right now. And since 7 million Americans have lost their jobs in this recession, we’ve got to do everything we can to accelerate it.

    So, today, in line with what I stated at the State of the Union, I’ve proposed a new jobs tax credit for small business. And here’s how it would work. Employers would get a tax credit of up to $5,000 for every employee they add in 2010. They’d get a tax break for increases in wages, as well. So, if you raise wages for employees making under $100,000, we’d refund part of your payroll tax for every dollar you increase those wages faster than inflation. It’s a simple concept. It’s easy to understand. It would cut taxes for more than 1 million small businesses.

    So I hope you join me. Let’s get this done. I want to eliminate the capital gains tax for small business investment, and take some of the bailout money the Wall Street banks have returned and use it to help community banks start lending to small businesses again. So join me. I am confident that we can do this together for the American people. And there’s nothing in that proposal that runs contrary to the ideological predispositions of this caucus. The question is: What’s going to keep us from getting this done?

    I’ve proposed a modest fee on the nation’s largest banks and financial institutions to fully recover for taxpayers’ money that they provided to the financial sector when it was teetering on the brink of collapse. And it’s designed to discourage them from taking reckless risks in the future. If you listen to the American people, John, they’ll tell you they want their money back. Let’s do this together, Republicans and Democrats.

    I propose that we close tax loopholes that reward companies for shipping American jobs overseas, and instead give companies greater incentive to create jobs right here at home — right here at home. Surely, that’s something that we can do together, Republicans and Democrats.

    We know that we’ve got a major fiscal challenge in reining in deficits that have been growing for a decade, and threaten our future. That’s why I’ve proposed a three-year freeze in discretionary spending other than what we need for national security. That’s something we should do together that’s consistent with a lot of the talk both in Democratic caucuses and Republican caucuses. We can’t blink when it’s time to actually do the job.

    At this point, we know that the budget surpluses of the ’90s occurred in part because of the pay-as-you-go law, which said that, well, you should pay as you go and live within our means, just like families do every day. Twenty-four of you voted for that, and I appreciate it. And we were able to pass it in the Senate yesterday.

    But the idea of a bipartisan fiscal commission to confront the deficits in the long term died in the Senate the other day. So I’m going to establish such a commission by executive order and I hope that you participate, fully and genuinely, in that effort, because if we’re going to actually deal with our deficit and debt, everybody here knows that we’re going to have to do it together, Republican and Democrat. No single party is going to make the tough choices involved on its own. It’s going to require all of us doing what’s right for the American people.

    And as I said in the State of the Union speech, there’s not just a deficit of dollars in Washington, there is a deficit of trust. So I hope you’ll support my proposal to make all congressional earmarks public before they come to a vote. And let’s require lobbyists who exercise such influence to publicly disclose all their contacts on behalf of their clients, whether they are contacts with my administration or contacts with Congress. Let’s do the people’s business in the bright light of day, together, Republicans and Democrats.

    I know how bitter and contentious the issue of health insurance reform has become. And I will eagerly look at the ideas and better solutions on the health care front. If anyone here truly believes our health insurance system is working well for people, I respect your right to say so, but I just don’t agree. And neither would millions of Americans with preexisting conditions who can’t get coverage today or find out that they lose their insurance just as they’re getting seriously ill. That’s exactly when you need insurance. And for too many people, they’re not getting it. I don’t think a system is working when small businesses are gouged and 15,000 Americans are losing coverage every single day; when premiums have doubled and out-of-pocket costs have exploded and they’re poised to do so again.

    I mean, to be fair, the status quo is working for the insurance industry, but it’s not working for the American people. It’s not working for our federal budget. It needs to change.

    This is a big problem, and all of us are called on to solve it. And that’s why, from the start, I sought out and supported ideas from Republicans. I even talked about an issue that has been a holy grail for a lot of you, which was tort reform, and said that I’d be willing to work together as part of a comprehensive package to deal with it. I just didn’t get a lot of nibbles.

    Creating a high-risk pool for uninsured folks with preexisting conditions, that wasn’t my idea, it was Senator McCain’s. And I supported it, and it got incorporated into our approach. Allowing insurance companies to sell coverage across state lines to add choice and competition and bring down costs for businesses and consumers — that’s an idea that some of you I suspect included in this better solutions; that’s an idea that was incorporated into our package. And I support it, provided that we do it hand in hand with broader reforms that protect benefits and protect patients and protect the American people.

    A number of you have suggested creating pools where self-employed and small businesses could buy insurance. That was a good idea. I embraced it. Some of you supported efforts to provide insurance to children and let kids remain covered on their parents’ insurance until they’re 25 or 26. I supported that. That’s part of our package. I supported a number of other ideas, from incentivizing wellness to creating an affordable catastrophic insurance option for young people that came from Republicans like Mike Enzi and Olympia Snowe in the Senate, and I’m sure from some of you as well. So when you say I ought to be willing to accept Republican ideas on health care, let’s be clear: I have.

    Bipartisanship — not for its own sake but to solve problems — that’s what our constituents, the American people, need from us right now. All of us then have a choice to make. We have to choose whether we’re going to be politicians first or partners for progress; whether we’re going to put success at the polls ahead of the lasting success we can achieve together for America. Just think about it for a while. We don’t have to put it up for a vote today.

    Let me close by saying this. I was not elected by Democrats or Republicans, but by the American people. That’s especially true because the fastest growing group of Americans are independents. That should tell us both something. I’m ready and eager to work with anyone who is willing to proceed in a spirit of goodwill. But understand, if we can’t break free from partisan gridlock, if we can’t move past a politics of "no," if resistance supplants constructive debate, I still have to meet my responsibilities as President. I’ve got to act for the greater good –- because that, too, is a commitment that I have made. And that’s — that, too, is what the American people sent me to Washington to do.

    So I am optimistic. I know many of you individually. And the irony, I think, of our political climate right now is that, compared to other countries, the differences between the two major parties on most issues is not as big as it’s represented. But we’ve gotten caught up in the political game in a way that’s just not healthy. It’s dividing our country in ways that are preventing us from meeting the challenges of the 21st century. I’m hopeful that the conversation we have today can help reverse that.

    So thank you very much. Thank you, John. (Applause.) Now I’d like to open it up for questions.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: The President has agreed to take questions and members would be encouraged to raise your hand while you remain in your seat. (Laughter.) The chair will take the prerogative to make the first remarks.

    Mr. President, welcome back to the House Republican Conference.

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: [Off microphone.] We are pleased to have you return. (Inaudible) a year ago — House Republicans said then we would make you two promises. Number one, that most of the people in this room and their families would pray for you and your beautiful family just about every day for the next four years. And I want to assure you we’re keeping that promise.

    THE PRESIDENT: I appreciate that.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: [off microphone] Number two, our pledge to you, Mr. President, was that door is always open. And we hope the (inaudible) of our invitation that we (inaudible).

    Mr. President, several of us in this conference yesterday on the way into Baltimore stopped by the Salvation Army homeless facility here in Baltimore. I met a little boy, an African American boy, in the 8th grade, named David Carter, Jr. When he heard that I would be seeing you today his eyes lit up like I had never seen. And I told him that if he wrote you a letter I’d give it to you, and I have.

    But I had a conversation with little David, Jr. and David, Sr. His family has been struggling with the economy.

    [On microphone.] His dad said words to me, Mr. President, that I’ll never forget. About my age and he said — he said, Congressman, it’s not like it was when we were coming up. He said, there’s just no jobs.

    Now, last year about the time you met with us, unemployment was 7.5 percent in this country. Your administration, and your party in Congress, told us that we’d have to borrow more than $700 billion to pay for a so-called stimulus bill. It was a piecemeal list of projects and boutique tax cuts, all of which was — we were told — had to be passed or unemployment would go to 8 percent, as your administration said. Well, unemployment is 10 percent now, as you well know, Mr. President; here in Baltimore it’s considerably higher.

    Now, Republicans offered a stimulus bill at the same time. It cost half as much as the Democratic proposal in Congress, and using your economic analyst models, it would have created twice the jobs at half the cost. It essentially was across-the-board tax relief, Mr. President.

    Now we know you’ve come to Baltimore today and you’ve raised this tax credit, which was last promoted by President Jimmy Carter. But the first question I would pose to you, very respectfully, Mr. President, is would you be willing to consider embracing — in the name of little David Carter, Jr. and his dad, in the name of every struggling family in this country — the kind of across-the-board tax relief that Republicans have advocated, that President Kennedy advocated, that President Reagan advocated and that has always been the means of stimulating broad-based economic growth?

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, there was a lot packed into that question. (Laughter.) First of all, let me say I already promised that I’ll be writing back to that young man and his family, and I appreciate you passing on the letter.

    Q Thank you.

    THE PRESIDENT: But let’s talk about just the jobs environment generally. You’re absolutely right that when I was sworn in the hope was that unemployment would remain around 8 [percent], or in the 8 percent range. That was just based on the estimates made by both conservative and liberal economists, because at that point not all the data had trickled in.

    We had lost 650,000 jobs in December. I’m assuming you’re not faulting my policies for that. We had lost, it turns out, 700,000 jobs in January, the month I was sworn in. I’m assuming it wasn’t my administration’s policies that accounted for that. We lost another 650,000 jobs the subsequent month, before any of my policies had gone into effect. So I’m assuming that wasn’t as a consequence of our policies; that doesn’t reflect the failure of the Recovery Act. The point being that what ended up happening was that the job losses from this recession proved to be much more severe — in the first quarter of last year going into the second quarter of last year — than anybody anticipated.

    So I mean, I think we can score political points on the basis of the fact that we underestimated how severe the job losses were going to be. But those job losses took place before any stimulus, whether it was the ones that you guys have proposed or the ones that we proposed, could have ever taken into effect. Now, that’s just the fact, Mike, and I don’t think anybody would dispute that. You could not find an economist who would dispute that.

    Now, at the same time, as I mentioned, most economists — Republican and Democrat, liberal and conservative — would say that had it not been for the stimulus package that we passed, things would be much worse. Now, they didn’t fill a 7 million hole in the number of people who were unemployed. They probably account for about 2 million, which means we still have 5 million folks in there that we’ve still got to deal with. That’s a lot of people.

    The package that we put together at the beginning of the year, the truth is, should have reflected — and I believe reflected what most of you would say are common sense things. This notion that this was a radical package is just not true. A third of them were tax cuts, and they weren’t — when you say they were "boutique" tax cuts, Mike, 95 percent of working Americans got tax cuts, small businesses got tax cuts, large businesses got help in terms of their depreciation schedules. I mean, it was a pretty conventional list of tax cuts. A third of it was stabilizing state budgets.

    There is not a single person in here who, had it not been for what was in the stimulus package, wouldn’t be going home to more teachers laid off, more firefighters laid off, more cops laid off. A big chunk of it was unemployment insurance and COBRA, just making sure that people had some floor beneath them, and, by the way, making sure that there was enough money in their pockets that businesses had some customers.

    You take those two things out, that accounts for the majority of the stimulus package. Are there people in this room who think that was a bad idea? A portion of it was dealing with the AMT, the alternative minimum tax — not a proposal of mine; that’s not a consequence of my policies that we have a tax system where we keep on putting off a potential tax hike that is embedded in the budget that we have to fix each year. That cost about $70 billion.

    And then the last portion of it was infrastructure which, as I said, a lot of you have gone to appear at ribbon-cuttings for the same projects that you voted against.

    Now, I say all this not to re-litigate the past, but it’s simply to state that the component parts of the Recovery Act are consistent with what many of you say are important things to do — rebuilding our infrastructure, tax cuts for families and businesses, and making sure that we were providing states and individuals some support when the roof was caving in.

    And the notion that I would somehow resist doing something that cost half as much but would produce twice as many jobs — why would I resist that? I wouldn’t. I mean, that’s my point, is that — I am not an ideologue. I’m not. It doesn’t make sense if somebody could tell me you could do this cheaper and get increased results that I wouldn’t say, great. The problem is, I couldn’t find credible economists who would back up the claims that you just made.

    Now, we can — here’s what I know going forward, though. I mean, we’re talking — we were talking about the past. We can talk about this going forward. I have looked at every idea out there in terms of accelerating job growth to match the economic growth that’s already taken place. The jobs credit that I’m discussing right now is one that a lot of people think would be the most cost-effective way for encouraging people to pick up their hiring.

    There may be other ideas that you guys have; I am happy to look at them and I’m happy to embrace them. I suspect I will embrace some of them. Some of them I’ve already embraced.

    But the question I think we’re going to have to ask ourselves is, as we move forward, are we going to be examining each of these issues based on what’s good for the country, what the evidence tells us, or are we going to be trying to position ourselves so that come November we’re able to say, "The other party, it’s their fault." If we take the latter approach then we’re probably not going to get much agreement. If we take the former, I suspect there’s going to be a lot of overlap. All right?

    Q Mr. President, will you consider supporting across-the-board tax relief, as President Kennedy did?

    THE PRESIDENT: Here’s what I’m going to do, Mike. What I’m going to do is I’m going to take a look at what you guys are proposing. And the reason I say this, before you say, "Okay," I think is important to know — what you may consider across-the-board tax cuts could be, for example, greater tax cuts for people who are making a billion dollars. I may not agree to a tax cut for Warren Buffet. You may be calling for an across-the-board tax cut for the banking industry right now. I may not agree to that.

    So I think that we’ve got to look at what specific proposals you’re putting forward, and — this is the last point I’ll make — if you’re calling for just across-the-board tax cuts, and then on the other hand saying that we’re somehow going to balance our budget, I’m going to want to take a look at your math and see how that works, because the issue of deficit and debt is another area where there has been a tendency for some inconsistent statements. How’s that? All right?

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: Thank you. Mr. President, first off, thanks for agreeing to accept our invitation here. It is a real pleasure and honor to have you with us here today.

    THE PRESIDENT: Good to see you. Is this your crew right here, by the way?

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: It is. This is my daughter Liza, my son Charlie and Sam, and this is my wife Janna.

    THE PRESIDENT: Hey, guys.

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: Say hi, everybody. (Laughter.) I serve as a ranking member of the budget committee, so I’m going to talk a little budget if you don’t mind. The spending bills that you’ve signed into law, the domestic discretionary spending has been increased by 84 percent. You now want to freeze spending at this elevated beginning next year. This means that total spending in your budget would grow at 3/100ths of 1 percent less than otherwise. I would simply submit that we could do more and start now.

    You’ve also said that you want to take a scalpel to the budget and go through it line by line. We want to give you that scalpel. I have a proposal with my home state senator, Russ Feingold, bipartisan proposal, to create a constitutional version of the line-item veto. (Applause.) Problem is, we can’t even get a vote on the proposal.

    So my question is, why not start freezing spending now, and would you support a line-item veto in helping us get a vote on it in the House?

    THE PRESIDENT: Let me respond to the two specific questions, but I want to just push back a little bit on the underlying premise about us increasing spending by 84 percent.

    Now, look, I talked to Peter Orszag right before I came here, because I suspected I’d be hearing this — I’d be hearing this argument. The fact of the matter is, is that most of the increases in this year’s budget, this past year’s budget, were not as a consequence of policies that we initiated but instead were built in as a consequence of the automatic stabilizers that kick in because of this enormous recession.

    So the increase in the budget for this past year was actually predicted before I was even sworn into office and had initiated any policies. Whoever was in there, Paul — and I don’t think you’ll dispute that — whoever was in there would have seen those same increases because of, on the one hand, huge drops in revenue, but at the same time people were hurting and needed help. And a lot of these things happened automatically.

    Now, the reason that I’m not proposing the discretionary freeze take into effect this year — we prepared a budget for 2010, it’s now going forward — is, again, I am just listening to the consensus among people who know the economy best. And what they will say is that if you either increase taxes or significantly lowered spending when the economy remains somewhat fragile, that that would have a destimulative effect and potentially you’d see a lot of folks losing business, more folks potentially losing jobs. That would be a mistake when the economy has not fully taken off. That’s why I’ve proposed to do it for the next fiscal year. So that’s point number two.

    With respect to the line-item veto, I actually — I think there’s not a President out there that wouldn’t love to have it. And I think that this is an area where we can have a serious conversation. I know it is a bipartisan proposal by you and Russ Feingold. I don’t like being held up with big bills that have stuff in them that are wasteful but I’ve got to sign because it’s a defense authorization bill and I’ve got to make sure that our troops are getting the funding that they need.

    I will tell you, I would love for Congress itself to show discipline on both sides of the aisle. I think one thing that you have to acknowledge, Paul, because you study this stuff and take it pretty seriously, that the earmarks problem is not unique to one party and you end up getting a lot of pushback when you start going after specific projects of any one of you in your districts, because wasteful spending is usually spent somehow outside of your district. Have you noticed that? The spending in your district tends to seem pretty sensible.

    So I would love to see more restraint within Congress. I’d like to work on the earmarks reforms that I mentioned in terms of putting earmarks online, because I think sunshine is the best disinfectant. But I am willing to have a serious conversation on the line-item veto issue.

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: I’d like to walk you through that, because we have a version we think is constitutional.

    THE PRESIDENT: Let me take a look at it.

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: I would simply say that automatic stabilizer spending is mandatory spending. The discretionary spending, the bills that Congress signs that you sign into law, that has increased 84 percent.

    THE PRESIDENT: We’ll have a longer debate on the budget numbers, all right?

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Shelley Moore Capito, West Virginia.

    CONGRESSWOMAN CAPITO: Thank you, Mr. President, for joining us here today. As you said in the State of the Union address on Wednesday, jobs and the economy are number one. And I think everyone in this room, certainly I, agree with you on that.

    I represent the state of West Virginia. We’re resource-rich. We have a lot of coal and a lot of natural gas. But our — my miners and the folks who are working and those who are unemployed are very concerned about some of your policies in these areas: cap and trade, an aggressive EPA, and the looming prospect of higher taxes. In our minds, these are job-killing policies. So I’m asking you if you would be willing to re-look at some of these policies, with a high unemployment and the unsure economy that we have now, to assure West Virginians that you’re listening.

    THE PRESIDENT: Look, I listen all the time, including to your governor, who’s somebody who I enjoyed working with a lot before the campaign and now that I’m President. And I know that West Virginia struggles with unemployment, and I know how important coal is to West Virginia and a lot of the natural resources there. That’s part of the reason why I’ve said that we need a comprehensive energy policy that sets us up for a long-term future.

    For example, nobody has been a bigger promoter of clean coal technology than I am. Testament to that, I ended up being in a whole bunch of advertisements that you guys saw all the time about investing in ways for us to burn coal more cleanly.

    I’ve said that I’m a promoter of nuclear energy, something that I think over the last three decades has been subject to a lot of partisan wrangling and ideological wrangling. I don’t think it makes sense. I think that that has to be part of our energy mix. I’ve said that I am supportive — and I said this two nights ago at the State of the Union — that I am in favor of increased production.

    So if you look at the ideas that this caucus has, again with respect to energy, I’m for a lot of what you said you are for.

    The one thing that I’ve also said, though, and here we have a serious disagreement and my hope is we can work through these disagreements — there’s going to be an effort on the Senate side to do so on a bipartisan basis — is that we have to plan for the future.

    And the future is that clean energy — cleaner forms of energy are going to be increasingly important, because even if folks are still skeptical in some cases about climate change in our politics and in Congress, the world is not skeptical about it. If we’re going to be after some of these big markets, they’re going to be looking to see, is the United States the one that’s developing clean coal technology? Is the United States developing our natural gas resources in the most effective way? Is the United States the one that is going to lead in electric cars? Because if we’re not leading, those other countries are going to be leading.

    So what I want to do is work with West Virginia to figure out how we can seize that future. But to do that, that means there’s going to have to be some transition. We can’t operate the coal industry in the United States as if we’re still in the 1920s or the 1930s or the 1950s. We’ve got to be thinking what does that industry look like in the next hundred years. And it’s going to be different. And that means there’s going to be some transition. And that’s where I think a well-thought-through policy of incentivizing the new while recognizing that there’s going to be a transition process — and we’re not just suddenly putting the old out of business right away — that has to be something that both Republicans and Democrats should be able to embrace.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Jason Chaffetz, Utah.

    CONGRESSMAN CHAFFETZ: Thank you, Mr. President. It’s truly an honor.

    THE PRESIDENT: Great to be here.

    CONGRESSMAN CHAFFETZ: And I appreciate you being here.

    I’m one of 22 House freshmen. We didn’t create this mess, but we are here to help clean it up. You talked a lot about this deficit of trust. There’s some things that have happened that I would appreciate your perspective on, because I can look you in the eye and tell you we have not been obstructionists. Democrats have the House and Senate and the presidency. And when you stood up before the American people multiple times and said you would broadcast the health care debates on C-SPAN, you didn’t. And I was disappointed, and I think a lot of Americans were disappointed.

    You said you weren’t going to allow lobbyists in the senior-most positions within your administration, and yet you did. I applauded you when you said it — and disappointed when you didn’t.

    You said you’d go line by line through the health care debate — or through the health care bill. And there were six of us, including Dr. Phil Roe, who sent you a letter and said, "We would like to take you up on the offer; we’d like to come." We never heard a letter, we never got a call. We were never involved in any of those discussions.

    And when you said in the House of Representatives that you were going to tackle earmarks — in fact, you didn’t want to have any earmarks in any of your bills — I jumped up out of my seat and applauded you. But it didn’t happen.

    More importantly, I want to talk about moving forward, but if we could address —

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, how about —

    CONGRESSMAN CHAFFETZ: — I would certainly appreciate it.

    THE PRESIDENT: That was a long list, so — (laughter) — let me respond.

    Look, the truth of the matter is that if you look at the health care process — just over the course of the year — overwhelmingly the majority of it actually was on C-SPAN, because it was taking place in congressional hearings in which you guys were participating. I mean, how many committees were there that helped to shape this bill? Countless hearings took place.

    Now, I kicked it off, by the way, with a meeting with many of you, including your key leadership. What is true, there’s no doubt about it, is that once it got through the committee process and there were now a series of meetings taking place all over the Capitol trying to figure out how to get the thing together — that was a messy process. And I take responsibility for not having structured it in a way where it was all taking place in one place that could be filmed. How to do that logistically would not have been as easy as it sounds, because you’re shuttling back and forth between the House, the Senate, different offices, et cetera, different legislators. But I think it’s a legitimate criticism. So on that one, I take responsibility.

    With respect to earmarks, we didn’t have earmarks in the Recovery Act. We didn’t get a lot of credit for it, but there were no earmarks in that. I was confronted at the beginning of my term with an omnibus package that did have a lot of earmarks from Republicans and Democrats, and a lot of people in this chamber. And the question was whether I was going to have a big budget fight, at a time when I was still trying to figure out whether or not the financial system was melting down and we had to make a whole bunch of emergency decisions about the economy. So what I said was let’s keep them to a minimum, but I couldn’t excise them all.

    Now, the challenge I guess I would have for you as a freshman, is what are you doing inside your caucus to make sure that I’m not the only guy who is responsible for this stuff, so that we’re working together, because this is going to be a process?

    When we talk about earmarks, I think all of us are willing to acknowledge that some of them are perfectly defensible, good projects; it’s just they haven’t gone through the regular appropriations process in the full light of day. So one place to start is to make sure that they are at least transparent, that everybody knows what’s there before we move forward.

    In terms of lobbyists, I can stand here unequivocally and say that there has not been an administration who was tougher on making sure that lobbyists weren’t participating in the administration than any administration that’s come before us.

    Now, what we did was, if there were lobbyists who were on boards and commissions that were carryovers and their term hadn’t been completed, we didn’t kick them off. We simply said that moving forward any time a new slot opens, they’re being replaced.

    So we’ve actually been very consistent in making sure that we are eliminating the impact of lobbyists, day in, day out, on how this administration operates. There have been a handful of waivers where somebody is highly skilled — for example, a doctor who ran Tobacco-Free Kids technically is a registered lobbyist; on the other end, has more experience than anybody in figuring out how kids don’t get hooked on cigarettes.

    So there have been a couple of instances like that, but generally we’ve been very consistent on that front.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee.

    CONGRESSMAN BLACKBURN: Thank you, Mr. President, and thank you for acknowledging that we have ideas on health care because, indeed, we do have ideas, we have plans, we have over 50 bills, we have lots of amendments that would bring health care ideas to the forefront. We would — we’ve got plans to lower cost, to change purchasing models, address medical liability, insurance accountability, chronic and preexisting conditions, and access to affordable care for those with those conditions, insurance portability, expanded access — but not doing it with creating more government, more bureaucracy, and more cost for the American taxpayer.

    And we look forward to sharing those ideas with you. We want to work with you on health reform and making certain that we do it in an affordable, cost-effective way that is going to reduce bureaucracy, reduce government interference, and reduce costs to individuals and to taxpayers. And if those good ideas aren’t making it to you, maybe it’s the House Democrat leadership that is an impediment instead of a conduit.

    But we’re concerned also that there are some lessons learned from public option health care plans that maybe are not being heeded. And certainly in my state of Tennessee, we were the test case for public option health care in 1994, and our Democrat government has even cautioned that maybe our experiences there would provide some lessons learned that should be heeded, and would provide guidance for us to go forward. And as you said, what we should be doing is tossing old ideas out, bad ideas out, and moving forward in refining good ideas. And certainly we would welcome that opportunity.

    So my question to you is, when will we look forward to starting anew and sitting down with you to put all of these ideas on the table, to look at these lessons learned, to benefit from that experience, and to produce a product that is going to reduce government interference, reduce cost, and be fair to the American taxpayer? (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Actually, I’ve gotten many of your ideas. I’ve taken a look at them, even before I was handed this. Some of the ideas we have embraced in our package. Some of them are embraced with caveats. So let me give you an example.

    I think one of the proposals that has been focused on by the Republicans as a way to reduce costs is allowing insurance companies to sell across state lines. We actually include that as part of our approach. But the caveat is, we’ve got to do so with some minimum standards, because otherwise what happens is that you could have insurance companies circumvent a whole bunch of state regulations about basic benefits or what have you, making sure that a woman is able to get mammograms as part of preventive care, for example. Part of what could happen is insurance companies could go into states and cherry-pick and just get those who are healthiest and leave behind those who are least healthy, which would raise everybody’s premiums who weren’t healthy, right?

    So it’s not that many of these ideas aren’t workable, but we have to refine them to make sure that they don’t just end up worsening the situation for folks rather than making it better.

    Now, what I said at the State of the Union is what I still believe: If you can show me — and if I get confirmation from health care experts, people who know the system and how it works, including doctors and nurses — ways of reducing people’s premiums; covering those who do not have insurance; making it more affordable for small businesses; having insurance reforms that ensure people have insurance even when they’ve got preexisting conditions, that their coverage is not dropped just because they’re sick, that young people right out of college or as they’re entering in the workforce can still get health insurance — if those component parts are things that you care about and want to do, I’m game. And I’ve got — and I’ve got a lot of these ideas.

    The last thing I will say, though — let me say this about health care and the health care debate, because I think it also bears on a whole lot of other issues. If you look at the package that we’ve presented — and there’s some stray cats and dogs that got in there that we were eliminating, we were in the process of eliminating. For example, we said from the start that it was going to be important for us to be consistent in saying to people if you can have your — if you want to keep the health insurance you got, you can keep it, that you’re not going to have anybody getting in between you and your doctor in your decision making. And I think that some of the provisions that got snuck in might have violated that pledge.

    And so we were in the process of scrubbing this and making sure that it’s tight. But at its core, if you look at the basic proposal that we’ve put forward: it has an exchange so that businesses and the self-employed can buy into a pool and can get bargaining power the same way big companies do; the insurance reforms that I’ve already discussed, making sure that there’s choice and competition for those who don’t have health insurance. The component parts of this thing are pretty similar to what Howard Baker, Bob Dole, and Tom Daschle proposed at the beginning of this debate last year.

    Now, you may not agree with Bob Dole and Howard Baker, and, certainly you don’t agree with Tom Daschle on much, but that’s not a radical bunch. But if you were to listen to the debate and, frankly, how some of you went after this bill, you’d think that this thing was some Bolshevik plot. No, I mean, that’s how you guys — (applause) — that’s how you guys presented it.

    And so I’m thinking to myself, well, how is it that a plan that is pretty centrist — no, look, I mean, I’m just saying, I know you guys disagree, but if you look at the facts of this bill, most independent observers would say this is actually what many Republicans — is similar to what many Republicans proposed to Bill Clinton when he was doing his debate on health care.

    So all I’m saying is, we’ve got to close the gap a little bit between the rhetoric and the reality. I’m not suggesting that we’re going to agree on everything, whether it’s on health care or energy or what have you, but if the way these issues are being presented by the Republicans is that this is some wild-eyed plot to impose huge government in every aspect of our lives, what happens is you guys then don’t have a lot of room to negotiate with me.

    I mean, the fact of the matter is, is that many of you, if you voted with the administration on something, are politically vulnerable in your own base, in your own party. You’ve given yourselves very little room to work in a bipartisan fashion because what you’ve been telling your constituents is, this guy is doing all kinds of crazy stuff that’s going to destroy America.

    And I would just say that we have to think about tone. It’s not just on your side, by the way — it’s on our side, as well. This is part of what’s happened in our politics, where we demonize the other side so much that when it comes to actually getting things done, it becomes tough to do.

    Mike.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Dr. Tom Price from Georgia, and then we’ll have one more after that if your time permits, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: You know, I’m having fun. (Laughter.)

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Okay.

    THE PRESIDENT: This is great. (Applause.)

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: So are we.

    CONGRESSMAN PRICE: Mr. President, thank you. I want to stick on the general topic of health care, but ask a very specific question. You have repeatedly said, most recently at the State of the Union, that Republicans have offered no ideas and no solutions. In spite of the fact —

    THE PRESIDENT: I don’t think I said that. What I said was, within the context of health care — I remember that speech pretty well, it was only two days ago — (laughter) — I said I welcome ideas that you might provide. I didn’t say that you haven’t provided ideas. I said I welcome those ideas that you’ll provide.

    CONGRESSMAN PRICE: Mr. President, multiple times, from your administration, there have come statements that Republicans have no ideas and no solutions. In spite of the fact that we’ve offered, as demonstrated today, positive solutions to all of the challenges we face, including energy and the economy and health care, specifically in the area of health care — this bill, H.R.3400, that has more co-sponsors than any health care bill in the House, is a bill that would provide health coverage for all Americans; would correct the significant insurance challenges of affordability and preexisting; would solve the lawsuit abuse issue, which isn’t addressed significantly in the other proposals that went through the House and the Senate; would write into law that medical decisions are made between patients and families and doctors; and does all of that without raising taxes by a penny.

    But my specific question is, what should we tell our constituents who know that Republicans have offered positive solutions to the challenges that Americans face and yet continue to hear out of the administration that we’ve offered nothing?

    THE PRESIDENT: Tom, look, I have to say that on the — let’s just take the health care debate. And it’s probably not constructive for us to try to debate a particular bill — this isn’t the venue to do it. But if you say, "We can offer coverage for all Americans, and it won’t cost a penny," that’s just not true. You can’t structure a bill where suddenly 30 million people have coverage, and it costs nothing. If —

    CONGRESSMAN PRICE: Mr. President, can I — and I understand that we’re not interested in debating this bill, but what should we tell our constituents who know that we’ve offered these solutions and yet hear from the administration that we have offered nothing.

    THE PRESIDENT: Let me — I’m using this as a specific example, so let me answer your question. You asked a question; I want to answer it.

    It’s not enough if you say, for example, that we’ve offered a health care plan and I look up — this is just under the section that you’ve just provided me, or the book that you just provided me — summary of GOP health care reform bill: The GOP plan will lower health care premiums for American families and small businesses, addressing America’s number-one priority for health reform. I mean, that’s an idea that we all embrace. But specifically it’s got to work. I mean, there’s got to be a mechanism in these plans that I can go to an independent health care expert and say, is this something that will actually work, or is it boilerplate?

    If I’m told, for example, that the solution to dealing with health care costs is tort reform, something that I’ve said I am willing to work with you on, but the CBO or other experts say to me, at best, this could reduce health care costs relative to where they’re growing by a couple of percentage points, or save $5 billion a year, that’s what we can score it at, and it will not bend the cost curve long term or reduce premiums significantly — then you can’t make the claim that that’s the only thing that we have to do. If we’re going to do multi-state insurance so that people can go across state lines, I’ve got to be able to go to an independent health care expert, Republican or Democrat, who can tell me that this won’t result in cherry-picking of the healthiest going to some and the least healthy being worse off.

    So I am absolutely committed to working with you on these issues, but it can’t just be political assertions that aren’t substantiated when it comes to the actual details of policy. Because otherwise, we’re going to be selling the American people a bill of goods. I mean, the easiest thing for me to do on the health care debate would have been to tell people that what you’re going to get is guaranteed health insurance, lower your costs, all the insurance reforms; we’re going to lower the costs of Medicare and Medicaid and it won’t cost anybody anything. That’s great politics, it’s just not true.

    So there’s got to be some test of realism in any of these proposals, mine included. I’ve got to hold myself accountable, and guaranteed the American people will hold themselves — will hold me accountable if what I’m selling doesn’t actually deliver.

    CONGRESSMAN PRICE: Mr. President, a point of clarification, what’s in the Better Solutions book are all the legislative proposals that were offered —

    THE PRESIDENT: I understand that. I’ve actually read your bills.

    CONGRESSMAN PRICE: — throughout 2009.

    THE PRESIDENT: I understand.

    CONGRESSMAN PRICE: And so, rest assured the summary document you received is backed up by precisely the kind of detailed legislation that Speaker Pelosi and your administration have been busy ignoring for 12 months.

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, Mike — well, hold on, hold on a second. No, no, no, no. Hold on a second, guys. (Applause.)

    You know, Mike, I’ve read your legislation. I mean, I take a look at this stuff — and the good ideas we take. But here’s — here’s the thing — here’s the thing that I guess all of us have to be mindful of, it can’t be all or nothing, one way or the other. And what I mean by that is this: If we put together a stimulus package in which a third of it are tax cuts that normally you guys would support, and support for states and the unemployed, and helping people stay on COBRA that your governors certainly would support — Democrat or a Republican; and then you’ve got some infrastructure, and maybe there’s some things in there that you don’t like in terms of infrastructure, or you think the bill should have been $500 billion instead of $700 billion or there’s this provision or that provision that you don’t like. If there’s uniform opposition because the Republican caucus doesn’t get 100 percent or 80 percent of what you want, then it’s going to be hard to get a deal done. That’s because that’s not how democracy works.

    So my hope would be that we can look at some of these component parts of what we’re doing and maybe we break some of them up on different policy issues. So if the good congressman from Utah has a particular issue on lobbying reform that he wants to work with us on, we may not able to agree on a comprehensive package on everything but there may be some component parts that we can work on.

    You may not support our overall jobs package, but if you look at the tax credit that we’re proposing for small businesses right now, it is consistent with a lot of what you guys have said in the past. And just the fact that it’s my administration that’s proposing it shouldn’t prevent you from supporting it. That’s my point.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Thank you, Mr. President. Peter Roskam from the great state of Illinois.

    THE PRESIDENT: Oh, Peter is an old friend of mine.

    CONGRESSMAN ROSKAM: Hey, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: Peter and I have had many debates.

    CONGRESMAN ROSKAM: Well, this won’t be one. Mr. President, I heard echoes today of the state senator that I served with in Springfield and there was an attribute and a characteristic that you had that I think served you well there. You took on some very controversial subjects — death penalty reform — you and I —

    THE PRESIDENT: Sure. We worked on it together.

    CONGRESSMAN ROSKAM: — negotiated on. You took on ethics reform. You took on some big things. One of the keys was you rolled your sleeves up, you worked with the other party, and ultimately you were able to make the deal. Now, here’s an observation.

    Over the past year, in my view, that attribute hasn’t been in full bloom. And by that I mean, you’ve gotten this subtext of House Republicans that sincerely want to come and be a part of this national conversation toward solutions, but they’ve really been stiff-armed by Speaker Pelosi. Now, I know you’re not in charge of that chamber, but there really is this dynamic of, frankly, being shut out. When John Boehner and Eric Cantor presented last February to you some substantive job creation, our stimulus alternative, the attack machine began to marginalize Eric — and we can all look at the articles — as "Mr. No," and there was this pretty dark story, ultimately, that wasn’t productive and wasn’t within this sort of framework that you’re articulating today.

    So here’s the question. Moving forward, I think all of us want to hit the reset button on 2009. How do we move forward? And on the job creation piece in particular, you mentioned Colombia, you mentioned Panama, you mentioned South Korea. Are you willing to work with us, for example, to make sure those FTAs get called, that’s no-cost job creation? And ultimately, as you’re interacting with world leaders, that’s got to put more arrows in your quiver, and that’s a very, very powerful tool for us. But the obstacle is, frankly, the politics within the Democratic caucus?

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, Peter and I did work together effectively on a whole host of issues. One of our former colleagues is right now running for governor, on the Republican side, in Illinois. In the Republican primary, of course, they’re running ads of him saying nice things about me. Poor guy. (Laughter.)

    Although that’s one of the points that I made earlier. I mean, we’ve got to be careful about what we say about each other sometimes, because it boxes us in in ways that makes it difficult for us to work together, because our constituents start believing us. They don’t know sometimes this is just politics what you guys — or folks on my side do sometimes.

    So just a tone of civility instead of slash and burn would be helpful. The problem we have sometimes is a media that responds only to slash-and-burn-style politics. You don’t get a lot of credit if I say, "You know, I think Paul Ryan is a pretty sincere guy and has a beautiful family." Nobody is going to run that in the newspapers.

    Q (Inaudible.) (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: And by the way, in case he’s going to get a Republican challenge, I didn’t mean it. (Laughter.) Don’t want to hurt you, man. (Laughter.)

    But on the specifics, I think both sides can take some blame for a sour climate on Capitol Hill. What I can do maybe to help is to try to bring Republican and Democratic leadership together on a more regular basis with me. That’s, I think, a failure on my part, is to try to foster better communications even if there’s disagreement. And I will try to see if we can do more of that this year. That’s on the sort of the general issue.

    On the specific issue of trade, you’re right, there are conflicts within and fissures within the Democratic Party. I suspect there are probably going to be some fissures within the Republican Party, as well. I mean, you know, if you went to some of your constituencies, they’d be pretty suspicious about it, new trade agreements, because the suspicion is somehow they’re all one way.

    So part of what we’ve been trying to do is to make sure that we’re getting the enforcement side of this tight, make sure that if we’ve got a trade agreement with China or other countries, that they are abiding with it — they’re not stealing our intellectual property or making sure that their non-tariff barriers are lowered even as ours are opened up. And my hope is, is that we can move forward with some of these trade agreements having built some confidence — not just among particular constituency groups, but among the American people — that trade is going to be reciprocal; that it’s not just going to be a one-way street.

    You are absolutely right though, Peter, when you say, for example, South Korea is a great ally of ours. I mean, when I visited there, there is no country that is more committed to friendship on a whole range of fronts than South Korea. What is also true is that the European Union is about to sign a trade agreement with South Korea, which means right at the moment when they start opening up their markets, the Europeans might get in there before we do.

    So we’ve got to make sure that we seize these opportunities. I will be talking more about trade this year. It’s going to have to be trade that combines opening their markets with an enforcement mechanism, as well as just opening up our markets. I think that’s something that all of us would agree on. Let’s see if we can execute it over the next several years. All right, is that it?

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Jeb Hensarling, Texas. And that will be it, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: Jim [sic] is going to wrap things up?

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Yes, sir.

    THE PRESIDENT: All right.

    CONGRESSMAN HENSARLING: Jeb, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: How are you?

    CONGRESSMAN HENSARLING: I’m doing well. Mr. President, a year ago I had an opportunity to speak to you about the national debt. And something that you and I have in common is we both have small children.

    THE PRESIDENT: Absolutely.

    CONGRESSMAN HENSARLING: And I left that conversation really feeling your sincere commitment to ensuring that our children, our nation’s children, do not inherit an unconscionable debt. We know that under current law, that government — the cost of government is due to grow from 20 percent of our economy to 40 percent of our economy, right about the time our children are leaving college and getting that first job.

    Mr. President, shortly after that conversation a year ago, the Republicans proposed a budget that ensured that government did not grow beyond the historical standard of 20 percent of GDP. It was a budget that actually froze immediately non-defense discretionary spending. It spent $5 trillion less than ultimately what was enacted into law, and unfortunately, I believe that budget was ignored. And since that budget was ignored, what were the old annual deficits under Republicans have now become the monthly deficits under Democrats. The national debt has increased 30 percent.

    Now, Mr. President, I know you believe — and I understand the argument, and I respect the view that the spending is necessary due to the recession; many of us believe, frankly, it’s part of the problem, not part of the solution. But I understand and I respect your view. But this is what I don’t understand, Mr. President. After that discussion, your administration proposed a budget that would triple the national debt over the next 10 years — surely you don’t believe 10 years from now we will still be mired in this recession — and propose new entitlement spending and move the cost of government to almost 24.5 percent of the economy.

    Now, very soon, Mr. President, you’re due to submit a new budget. And my question is —

    THE PRESIDENT: Jeb, I know there’s a question in there somewhere, because you’re making a whole bunch of assertions, half of which I disagree with, and I’m having to sit here listening to them. At some point I know you’re going to let me answer. All right.

    CONGRESSMAN HENSARLING: That’s the question. You are soon to submit a new budget, Mr. President. Will that new budget, like your old budget, triple the national debt and continue to take us down the path of increasing the cost of government to almost 25 percent of our economy? That’s the question, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: Jeb, with all due respect, I’ve just got to take this last question as an example of how it’s very hard to have the kind of bipartisan work that we’re going to do, because the whole question was structured as a talking point for running a campaign.

    Now, look, let’s talk about the budget once again, because I’ll go through it with you line by line. The fact of the matter is, is that when we came into office, the deficit was $1.3 trillion. — $1.3 [trillion.] So when you say that suddenly I’ve got a monthly budget that is higher than the — a monthly deficit that’s higher than the annual deficit left by the Republicans, that’s factually just not true, and you know it’s not true.

    And what is true is that we came in already with a $1.3 trillion deficit before I had passed any law. What is true is we came in with $8 trillion worth of debt over the next decade — had nothing to do with anything that we had done. It had to do with the fact that in 2000 when there was a budget surplus of $200 billion, you had a Republican administration and a Republican Congress, and we had two tax cuts that weren’t paid for.

    You had a prescription drug plan — the biggest entitlement plan, by the way, in several decades — that was passed without it being paid for. You had two wars that were done through supplementals. And then you had $3 trillion projected because of the lost revenue of this recession. That’s $8 trillion.

    Now, we increased it by a trillion dollars because of the spending that we had to make on the stimulus. I am happy to have any independent fact-checker out there take a look at your presentation versus mine in terms of the accuracy of what I just said.

    Now, going forward, here’s the deal. I think, Paul, for example, head of the budget committee, has looked at the budget and has made a serious proposal. I’ve read it. I can tell you what’s in it. And there are some ideas in there that I would agree with, but there are some ideas that we should have a healthy debate about because I don’t agree with them.

    The major driver of our long-term liabilities, everybody here knows, is Medicare and Medicaid and our health care spending. Nothing comes close. Social Security we could probably fix the same way Tip O’Neill and Ronald Reagan sat down together and they could figure something out. That is manageable. Medicare and Medicaid — massive problem down the road. That’s where — that’s going to be what our children have to worry about.

    Now, Paul’s approach — and I want to be careful not simplifying this, because I know you’ve got a lot of detail in your plan — but if I understand it correctly, would say we’re going to provide vouchers of some sort for current Medicare recipients at the current level —

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: No.

    THE PRESIDENT: No?

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: People 55 and above —

    THE PRESIDENT: Fifty-five and — well, no, I understand. I mean, there’s a grandfathering in, but just for future beneficiaries, right? That’s why I said I didn’t want to — I want to make sure that I’m not being unfair to your proposal, but I just want to point out that I’ve read it. And the basic idea would be that at some point we hold Medicare cost per recipient constant as a way of making sure that that doesn’t go way out of whack, and I’m sure there are some details that —

    CONGRESSMAN RYAN: We drew it as a blend of inflation and health inflation, the point of our plan is — because Medicare, as you know, is a $38 trillion unfunded liability — it has to be reform for younger generations because it won’t exist because it’s going bankrupt. And the premise of our idea is, look, why not give people the same kind of health care plan we here have in Congress? That’s the kind of reform we’re proposing for Medicare. (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: No, I understand. Right, right. Well, look, as I said before, this is an entirely legitimate proposal. The problem is twofold: One is that depending on how it’s structured, if recipients are suddenly getting a plan that has their reimbursement rates going like this, but health care costs are still going up like that, then over time the way we’re saving money is essentially by capping what they’re getting relative to their costs.

    Now, I just want to point out — and this brings me to the second problem — when we made a very modest proposal as part of our package, our health care reform package, to eliminate the subsidies going to insurance companies for Medicare Advantage, we were attacked across the board, by many on your aisle, for slashing Medicare. You remember? We’re going to start cutting benefits for seniors. That was the story that was perpetrated out there — scared the dickens out of a lot of seniors.

    No, no, but here’s my point. If the main question is going to be what do we do about Medicare costs, any proposal that Paul makes will be painted, factually, from the perspective of those who disagree with it, as cutting benefits over the long term. Paul, I don’t think you disagree with that, that there is a political vulnerability to doing anything that tinkers with Medicare. And that’s probably the biggest savings that are obtained through Paul’s plan.

    And I raise that not because we shouldn’t have a series discussion about it. I raise that because we’re not going to be able to do anything about any of these entitlements if what we do is characterized, whatever proposals are put out there, as, well, you know, that’s — the other party is being irresponsible; the other party is trying to hurt our senior citizens; that the other party is doing X, Y, Z.

    That’s why I say if we’re going to frame these debates in ways that allow us to solve them, then we can’t start off by figuring out, A, who’s to blame; B, how can we make the American people afraid of the other side. And unfortunately, that’s how our politics works right now. And that’s how a lot of our discussion works. That’s how we start off — every time somebody speaks in Congress, the first thing they do, they stand up and all the talking points — I see Frank Luntz up here sitting in the front. He’s already polled it, and he said, you know, the way you’re really going to — I’ve done a focus group and the way we’re going to really box in Obama on this one or make Pelosi look bad on that one — I know, I like Frank, we’ve had conversations between Frank and I. But that’s how we operate. It’s all tactics, and it’s not solving problems.

    And so the question is, at what point can we have a serious conversation about Medicare and its long-term liability, or a serious question about — a serious conversation about Social Security, or a serious conversation about budget and debt in which we’re not simply trying to position ourselves politically. That’s what I’m committed to doing. We won’t agree all the time in getting it done, but I’m committed to doing it.

    CONGRESSMAN PENCE: Take one more?

    THE PRESIDENT: You know, I’ve already gone over time. But I’ll be happy to take your question, Congressman, offline. You can give me a call. All right, thank you, everybody. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. Thank you, everybody. (Applause.)

    END 1:32 P.M. EST

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • State of the Union Townhall Response with Steve Moore

    02.02.10 06:44 AM

    Join Americans for Prosperity New Hampshire for a townhall event with The Wall Street Journal’s Steve Moore to respond to President Obama’s speech in Nashua. Get past the spin and rhetoric and learn about the challenges facing the country from health care to the debt.

    Register here for the free event below:

    Date: Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010
    Time: Doors Open at 3:30pm – the event starts at 4:00pm
    Location: Marriott Courtyard Nashua (2200 Southwood Drive)

    read more

    http://www.americansforprosperity.or…se-steve-moore

  • State of the Union, Voice of the People – Watch it Tonight

    02.02.10 06:58 AM

    Catch AFP President Tim Phillips as he joins other conservative leaders for a special live Webcast tonight, Feb. 2!

    What: "State of the Union: Voice of the People" — a conservative response to the president
    Where: Webcast on http://tvtownhall.com/ (broadcast live from Family Research Council)
    Who: Herman Cain, host, with leaders from the Media Research Center, Family Research Council, Concerned Women for America, FreedomWorks, AFP, Institute for Liberty, Tea Party Patriots
    When: Tuesday, Feb. 2, 8 p.m. ET — live Webcast

    read more

    http://www.americansforprosperity.or…tch-it-tonight

  • Obama’s Secret Climate Slush Fund

    02.02.10 07:06 AM

    President Obama and Budget Direct Peter Orszag have thrown transparency out the window and created a black box for taxes and spending on climate change hidden inside their 2011 budget.

    February 02, 2010
    By Phil Kerpen – FOXNews.com

    The big news in last year’s budget release was the revelation that the Obama administration planned to use cap-and-trade to raise $646 billion dollars over ten years to finance its big spending programs. At the time I wrote here in the Fox Forum that estimate was a lowball of what actually constituted the biggest tax increase in U.S. history, something White House economist Jason Furman later admitted when he revealed the real revenue would likely be triple the official estimate. So the first thing I checked in this year’s budget was how much revenue was expected from the cap-and-trade energy tax, to which the president reiterated his commitment in his State of the Union address last week. The surprising answer is the budget actually has, literally, a blank line for the cap-and-trade tax. A black box. A slush fund. A secret budget-within-the-budget. Talk about a lack of transparency.

    Read the rest at FOX Forum.

    Listen to a related 2-minute KerpenCast here.

    http://www.americansforprosperity.or…ate-slush-fund

  • Gaggle by Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton aboard Air Force One en route Tampa, Flo

    01.28.10 10:04 AM

    11:35 A.M. EST

    MR. BURTON: So, for starters, let me tell you a little bit about Florida. Upon arrival, Governor Crist, Mayors Dyer and Iorio and Senator Bill Nelson and Alex Sink will all meet us. The President will visit a hangar where crewmembers are doing work on a KC-135 Stratotanker. That’s a plane that’s used to refill other planes that are in the air that have been flying missions to and from Haiti.

    After that we’ll go to the town hall. That event will have about 3,000 people. The tickets were handed out by the White House and by the university. It was free and open to the public. There’s also some groups in the area who received some of the tickets.

    On Air Force One right now are Congresswomen Castor and Wasserman-Schultz and Congressmen Grayson and Meek. And just wanted to let you know that tomorrow the President will travel to Baltimore. As you know he’s speaking to the Republican House Caucus, where he’ll hit on some of the things that he talked about in the State of the Union, but he’ll also visit a small business and lay out a program, the details of which will be described in a conference call this afternoon later today. And the conference call, we’ll work with the schedule of the folks who are traveling on this trip.

    Q Can you give us any details about the program at all?

    MR. BURTON: Nope. Not at this point.

    Q Is the meeting with Republicans — how is that going to be covered? Is that going to be pool? Is it closed press? What is it?

    MR. BURTON: I’m not a hundred percent sure. So I will let you know when we hit the ground.

    Q Bill, Mayor Bloomberg in New York has expressed concern, in fact, reversed his position, on having the trial of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in Lower Manhattan. Is the White House reconsidering this? And is the White House given any pause given the change of support in New York for this?

    MR. BURTON: Well, let me start by saying that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is a murderous thug who has admitted to crimes — who has admitted to some of the most heinous crimes ever committed against our country. And the President is committed to seeing that he’s brought to justice.

    Now, he agrees with the Attorney General’s opinion that — in November — that he and others can be litigated successfully and securely in the United States of America, just like others have, like Richard Reid. Currently our federal jails hold hundreds of convicted terrorists, and the President’s opinion has not changed on that.

    Q Has he spoken to the mayor about this, or has the mayor reached out to the White House? And is the President open to advising his Attorney General to change policy?

    MR. BURTON: Well, on the specifics of the trial and prosecutors and location, I would refer you to the Department of Justice.

    Q Bill, a couple of State of the Union questions. The President made a clear call to reach out to Republicans; some of the reaction back has not been so friendly. Leader Boehner said that the President offered more "job-killing policies." Does the President — what’s his reaction to the reaction he’s getting? And does he think Republicans genuinely want to work with him?

    MR. BURTON: The President’s view is that his door is open. If Republicans have ideas, if they’ve got thoughts on how they think that we can create jobs, how we can get this economy moving, how we can reform health care, he’s open to that.

    Now, I think the President also believes that what the American people sent him and members of Congress to do was to work together in order to take on some of these big challenges and actually make progress on these important issues.

    So nobody thought that change was going to happen overnight, or that one speech or that one year in the presidency was going to melt away all the partisanship and gridlock in Washington. But we’re chipping away at it piece by piece, and the President is committed to making progress because that’s what the American people expect him to do.

    Q Bill, how are we supposed to read into the length of time it took the President to get to health care last night?

    MR. BURTON: Nothing.

    Q No?

    MR. BURTON: The President — in the speech last night, what the President did was lay out some of the serious challenges that face our nation, some of his top priorities. And that means creating jobs, getting the economy going again, but also reforming health care.

    Now, there’s been a lot of talk about who’s up, who’s down, what’s in, what’s out, as a result of what folks on Capitol Hill are saying or what happened in the special election in Massachusetts, but none of the reasons that the President took on health care — the rising costs, the insurance reforms that so desperately need to be done — changed just because of that election or what folks are saying.

    So the President remains committed to making progress on health care reform, and I wouldn’t over-read its placement in the speech.

    Q What’s the White House response to Iran’s execution of these two people linked to the pro-democracy protest?

    MR. BURTON: Well, I will say that the U.S. strongly condemns these unjust executions. We see it as a low point in the Islamic Republic’s unjust and ruthless crackdown of peaceful dissent. Murdering political prisoners who are exercising their universal rights will not bring the respect and legitimacy the Islamic Republic seeks. It will only serve to further isolate Iran’s government in the world and from its people.

    Q Would the President support requiring shareholder approval before a company could spend money on ads, like in reference to the Supreme Court decision?

    MR. BURTON: There are a series of reforms that the President is looking at and talking to members of Congress about. I don’t want to get into the specifics of the negotiations and what those are, but campaign finance reform has become a lot more important in the course of the last couple of weeks and the President and his team are focused on it.

    Q What’s the President’s reaction to Justice Alito’s reaction to his speech?

    MR. BURTON: Well, this issue is something that many have serious concerns about. It’s something that Justice Ginsburg brought up in her oral arguments. It’s something that Justice Stevens wrote about in his dissent. It’s an issue that the Court could have specifically addressed in its findings, but they didn’t. And the American people deserve the right to know that foreign corporations cannot interfere with American elections.

    So this is another one of the issues that the President is looking at in terms of campaign finance reform. In terms of the specific reaction to Justice Alito, one of the great things about our democracy is that powerful members of the government at high levels can disagree in public and in private. This is one of those cases. But the President is no less committed to seeing this reform.

    Q Bill, on jobs, he called for getting a jobs bill to his desk very quickly. What’s going on in the Senate, and what role is the White House playing in getting that jobs bill done in the Senate?

    MR. BURTON: The President made pretty clear last night that this was a high priority for him. So you can bet that Phil Schiliro and Shawn Maher and his team of folks are working very hard to get some of his ideas that he laid out in his December Brookings speech into that Senate bill.

    Nobody thinks that we’re necessarily going to get every single good idea that the President has into one bill, and we’ll continue to work with the Senate and the House in coming weeks in order to get more measures through, like on small businesses, that the President laid out, and other things.

    Q What about the fact that there was very little mentioned in the speech last night about national security and foreign policy? I mean, I know that there was some, but there’s also some criticism that it just wasn’t enough.

    MR. BURTON: Well, you know, when I woke up this morning, I opened up the papers and I saw some people said that some things weren’t talked about enough, some things were talked about too much, the speech was too long, the speech was this in comparison to that. I just think that different folks have different opinions of what should be in and what should be out.

    It should be obvious to everyone who observes the President that national security is critically important to him. He wakes up every morning wondering what he can do to keep the American people safe, what we can do to improve our systems of securing Americans here at home and all around the world. He laid out some very specific issues in terms of Iran. He talked about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He talked about some of the global threats that we face.

    So he laid out what he thought was appropriate to talk about and continues to work on the issues that he thinks are important.

    Q Bill, what was the White House’s thinking about not getting more prescriptive on the issue of health care? He challenged the Congress to get the job done, but didn’t get specific about how he wants it to get done. What was the White House thinking behind going that route?

    MR. BURTON: Well, what the President has done is laid out his principles, what he thinks is the best way forward in terms of getting costs under control, in terms of getting insurance reforms in place. And his team of folks is working with the House and the Senate in order to find the best path forward, and those talks continue.

    Q Can you talk about how high-speed rail will compare to, like, Northeast Corridor, just the regular rail? How much time will it save passengers? Do you have any data on that?

    MR. BURTON: Well, I don’t have any specific data on the time that it saves, necessarily. But just as a little preview of what the Vice President will be talking about a little bit today when he introduces the President: This is an $8 billion program to states for a nationwide high-speed inner-city rail system. The program creates tens of thousands of jobs and is the largest investment in infrastructure since the Interstate Highway System was created.

    In short, it’ll create jobs, it’ll use cleaner energy, it will help to stop the need to widen highways, like the I-4 and others all over the country, and it will get people where they want to go faster.

    Q Why the joint appearance with the Vice President? Bringing out the big guns for a light-rail announcement? What’s the thinking?

    MR. BURTON: This is a huge program. It’s going to create tens of thousands of jobs. And as you know, the Vice President has been tasked with making sure that the Recovery Act is working smoothly and creating the jobs that it needs to create, helping the economy the way that it needs to. So this is a big announcement, and so the President and the Vice President decided to come out and do it together.

    Q Is President Obama planning on hugging Charlie Crist? (Laughter.)

    MR. BURTON: I haven’t talked to him about the specific greeting, but we look forward to seeing all the Florida officials who will be there when we get on the ground.

    Q Do we know what the delay was in leaving this morning?

    MR. BURTON: It just is one of those deals where Rahm wanted to speak to the President and everything sort of slowed down a little bit.

    Q Did Rahm get fired?

    MR. BURTON: This is awkward, but, yes, I’m announcing right now that — (laughter.) No.

    Thank you, guys.

    END
    11:46 A.M. EST

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Remarks by the First Lady at Event on Surgeon General’s Report

    01.28.10 01:05 PM

    1:36 P.M. EST

    MRS. OBAMA: As you know, from last night, I get embarrassed when people stand up and clap for me. (Laughter.) I don’t really know what to do.
    (Laughter.) Do I wave, do I — it’s like, please, just sit down, everyone. (Laughter.)

    Good afternoon. I’m thrilled to be here on the floor. (Laughter.) It’s a great floor. It’s kind of a warm floor, but it’s a good floor.

    Let me begin by thanking the new First Lady in the room, Maureen McDonnell. We are going to have a great time working together. She is already very engaged and supportive of these initiatives. And since she’s so close I am counting on her to work alongside on some of these issues. We’re going to see you in a month at the governors gala, whatever they call it, so be ready to dance. (Laughter.) And welcome aboard.

    MRS. McDONNELL: (Inaudible) — practice.

    MRS. OBAMA: A little practice, absolutely.

    Congressman Moran, again I want to thank you for all your work in this area. I look forward to working with you. Our staffs are already talking about some things that you’ve been working on for a very long time, so we’re grateful for your leadership and concern and focus.

    Mayor Euille, again you have been a host to me in your great city, and you’ve done wonderful work in this area. I had a terrific time addressing the National Conference of Mayors, and I got a very good response from your colleagues. I know that the mayors in this country stand ready to work on this issue. They are seeing the effects of what everyone on this floor has talked about, in terms of childhood obesity, and they’re ready to make some changes.

    Also, Dr. Palfrey, it is an honor for us to have you with us. As I’ve shared before, it was through our relationship with our pediatrician that we even began as a family to start thinking about these issues.
    And it’s our pediatricians and our medical community that are going to work side by side with families throughout the country. So we’re grateful for your support. I know that this is not a new issue for you, and I hope that our attention to it makes your job a little bit easier.

    I also want to thank all the folks at the Y for all you’re doing — Neil Nicoll, for your work as the national leader. But I know you know as a national leader the real work happens on the ground at these fine facilities all throughout the country. The Y has been a leader in ensuring that families and communities all over this country have access to places to play. Your mobile physical unit, your PhD unit, that came to the South Lawn helped me debut my hula-hooping skills. (Laughter.)

    But I think the Ys are showing that they are thinking towards the next stage, you know. The room that we were in is the next generation of what Ys can be. The mobile unit is something that I didn’t grow up with, but you’re keeping up with the changes in cultures and communities in a way that is going to make a huge impact to the work that we have to do in our nation.

    And finally I want to thank my buddy in crime, Secretary Sebelius, for her tremendous leadership and her tremendous friendship. We’re glad that you moved out of assisted living. (Laughter.) I know it’s hard — I know, I know, I’ll work on him. (Laughter.) But you can come over for dinner or something. (Laughter.) From your work with the CDC to the FDA, the Department of Health and Human Services is clearly at the forefront of addressing some of our greatest health issues, and it’s going to take their continued commitment. These grants that are coming out, we’ve been working with your department in getting them done. Your staff has been tremendous in moving very quickly on getting that money out, and I’m anxious to see what all that hard work leads to. So we are grateful not just to you but all of the thousands of people in your agency who make us all look very good.

    And finally I want to commend our new Surgeon General Dr. Benjamin who I finally got to meet. (Laughter.) Three months on the job and we’re already making you crazy, right? (Laughter.) But you’re doing a terrific job just jumping right in. The report is not only timely but it’s right on point. And your perspective, your new way of looking at this issue, is refreshing, and again it’s right on point. It’s presenting both the dangers of inaction, and a vision for health for this country. It’s an incredible step in a long journey that we’ll have to take. So we want to thank you for your important work.

    So as we’ve seen, the surge in obesity in this country is nothing short of a public health crisis, and it’s threatening our children, it’s threatening our families, and more importantly it’s threatening the future of this nation. Higher rates of obesity are directly linked, as you’ve heard, to higher rates of chronic illnesses like heart disease and cancer and diabetes. Even though type 2 diabetes is rare among young people, more than three quarters of those who have it are obese.

    In fact, the health consequences are so severe that as the Secretary said, medical experts have warned that our children are on track to be less healthy than we are. And there’s never been a generation of young people who are on track to be healthier than their parents — or less healthy than their parents.

    And truly, if we’re really honest with ourselves, it’s not hard to understand how this happens. I’ve tried to track this through my own life.

    In some cases, it’s access. Parents have told me — I’ve seen it myself
    — that they would love nothing more than to feed their kids more healthy foods, but if you don’t live anywhere near a place that sells fresh produce, it’s very hard to accomplish that goal.

    In other cases, the issue is just convenience. At the end of a long day
    — and more and more families are experiencing these long days with two parents working and busy schedules — you just get home and you’re tired and you pick up the phone and you order a pizza, or you go to that drive-thru. It’s just easier. Our modern-day life makes it very difficult for us to sit down and prepare that meal.

    And a lot of times it’s affordability. In these tough economic times, buying healthy foods unfortunately feels like a luxury for too many families. They just can’t afford it. We’ve seen stories, we’ve heard stories, of people who know that buying that large gallon of juice is cheaper than buying a gallon of milk. They can’t afford to make different choices.

    And then at schools and in our communities, oftentimes it’s budget cuts that make it more difficult. Recess and PE are gone for many kids in communities all across this country. Parks and playgrounds and after-school sports are few and far between in too many neighborhoods.

    And for most people, the cause is really a combination of all of these things. It’s no one particular thing. It’s everything cobbled together.

    And let’s face it: There are really just too many pressures on parents today.

    And I understand those pressures. I talk about this all the time. It’s easy to live healthy when you live in the White House and you have staff and people who are cooking for you and making sure that it’s balanced and colorful, because I had a hard time doing it before I lived in the White House, and that wasn’t so long ago. Barack and I were like any working couple. I was a working mom with a husband that was busy, so many times I was the one balancing that load and wrestling with many of those challenges. And there were plenty of times, I tell you, that you’d come home tired, you don’t want to hear the kids fuss, and popping something in the microwave or picking up a burger was just heaven. It was a Godsend.

    But we were fortunate enough to have a pediatrician, as I’ve mentioned, that kind of waved the red flag for me, as a mother, and basically cautioned me that I had to take a look at my own children’s BMI. Now, we went to our pediatrician all the time. I thought my kids were perfect — they are and always will be — (laughter) — but he warned that he was concerned that something was getting off balance, because fortunately he was a pediatrician that worked predominantly in an African American urban community, and he knew these trends existed, and he was watching very closely in his client population, his patient population.

    So again, in my eyes, my children were perfect. I didn’t see the changes. And that’s also part of the problem, or part of the challenge.
    It’s often hard to see changes in your own kids when you’re living with them day in and day out. As parents, we all know and will readily acknowledge broadly that kids in general — we will say we know they don’t eat right — right? — and we know they don’t get as much exercise as they should, generally. But we often simply don’t realize that those kids are our kids, and our kids could be in danger of becoming obese.
    We always think that only happens to someone else’s kid — and I was in that position. We all want desperately to make the best choices for our kids, but in this climate it’s hard to know what’s the right thing to do anymore.

    So even though I wasn’t exactly sure at that time what I was supposed to do with this information about my children’s BMI, I knew that I had to do something; that I had to lead our family to a different way.

    But the beauty was that for me over the course of a few months we started making really minor changes. And I share this story because the changes were so minor.

    We did things like, you know, limit TV time. My kids were already fairly active, but, you know, we cut TV time out during the week, and that helped increase activity, because they were just running up and down the stairs annoying me more. (Laughter.)

    We paid more attention to portion size. Didn’t make a big deal out of it, but just sort of said, listen to when you’re hungry, and when you’re full, stop.

    We reduced our intake of sugary drinks and instead encouraged our kids to drink more water. I just put water bottles in the lunch during the week, or we had low-fat milk. Again, didn’t make a big deal out of it
    — just made the change.

    We put more fruits and vegetables in our diets, again, trying to make for a colorful palate, but you’d slip some grapes in at breakfast time, and throw in an apple at lunch, and pester them about whether they actually ate the apple. (Laughter.) And then you try to balance it out with something at dinner time.

    I mean, it was really very minor stuff. But these small changes resulted in some really significant improvements. And I didn’t know it would. It was so significant that the next time we visited our pediatrician, he was amazed. He looked over the girls’ charts and he said, "What on Earth are you doing?" And I said, "Really, not much, not much." And that’s the good news that we want to share with families, particularly for kids: Small changes can lead to big results. They’re not destined to this fate, and they’re not really in control what goes into their mouths, usually.

    So we know what has led to the obesity epidemic, you know. We know inside — I mean, we’re still learning — but we kind of know. And we know what we need to do to solve it. We just have to make the commitment to do it. We really — each and every one of us needs to make that commitment. We need to provide parents with better nutritional information so that they can make better choices. We need to give our kids healthier options at school, where many kids are getting most of their meals. We need to make sure they’re spending less time in front of the TV and playing videogames, and more time exercising and having fun and doing the work of children, which is play.

    But we also know that the solution can’t come from government alone.
    That’s something that we just have to remind ourselves. And for many, that’s a great relief. Everyone has to be willing to do their part to solve this problem, and everyone has to work together to turn this pattern around.

    And that’s exactly what we hope to do through an administration-wide initiative on child obesity that I’m going to be launching in the next couple of weeks, along with a number of important partners.

    We’re going to be bringing the federal government together, those resources in partnerships with business, non-profit and the foundation communities, all of whom are thrilled to be a part of this endeavor.
    It’s just been refreshing to see so many people recognizing that this is the time to step up and make some changes.

    We’re going to do a number of things — again, some of them small things. We want to create what we’re calling more healthy schools. And these are schools that are offering more nutritious meal options during the day. They’re providing nutritional information to children as part of the curriculum, and they’re ensuring that children are getting the increased exercise that we know that they need.

    But we also have to focus on increasing the amount of exercise outside of school, and no place — like the Y knows that we need to make these changes.

    We need to make healthy food options more affordable and accessible.
    And that’s going to be probably one of the toughest things that we need to do. And we need to do this in all communities: urban, rural, everywhere. People have to have the information, they have to have access in order to make healthy choices. There is nothing more frustrating that will frustrate a parent more than to say that you’ve got to buy more fruits and vegetables — but to still see the cost out of kilter and see those goals out of reach.

    So these are just some of the things that we hope to do through this initiative. But what we know is that we have to be ambitious; that the approach has to be ambitious. It can’t just be lockstep. It’s got to be something meaningful and powerful.

    And the other thing that I will say — and say again and again and again
    — this won’t be easy. So let’s begin with that. (Laughter.) This will not be easy and it won’t happen overnight. And it won’t happen simply because the First Lady has made it her priority. That in and of itself is not going to be enough. It’s going to take all of us. Thank God it’s not going to be solely up to me. (Laughter.) But it’s going to take all of us — parents, schools, communities — working together for a very long time, over a sustained period of time. Over generations of children will need to keep doing this.

    But I have every confidence, based on the level of energy that I’ve seen, based on the willingness of people to deal with this issue across party lines, the willingness of the business community to be a part of the solution. Every sign that we’ve seen over the course of moving to this rollout has been nothing but positive.

    And of course parents are ready and willing. We all want to make the best choices for our children. We just need to know how. And if we continue to do that, if we work with our physicians, if we work with our Surgeon General, if we’ve got the government, the federal government, working together, businesses ready to make the sacrifices, then we can tackle this problem. And we can do something really important for our kids. We can hand them the future that we know they’re going to need to be successful.

    So I am excited. And I look forward to working with all of you over the next years to make this not just a dream but to make this movement a reality.

    So thank you all for the work that you’ve done so far. And we have a lot more work to do. So thank you so much. (Applause.)

    END
    1:54 P.M. EST

    White House.gov Press Office Feed

  • Remarks by the President and the Vice President at Town Hall Meeting in Tampa, Florid

    01.28.10 01:40 PM

    1:14 P.M. EST

    THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you all very, very much. Thank you all very much. It’s amazing the crowds I draw. (Laughter.) It’s great to be with you all today. And I really hope you all got to hear the President’s speech last night. (Applause.) Wasn’t it good? I think the President laid out with clarity and power what we’ve done, what we’re going to do, and how we’re committed to getting it done. (Applause.)

    He laid out a clear and ambitious plan — a plan that flows from our core principles, the principles we ran on, our core mission that we said we were going to attend to when we took office a year ago. And that was very simple: to restore the middle class in America. (Applause.)

    Look, because of the President’s bold leadership, we weathered the most ferocious economic storm this nation has seen since the Great Depression, keeping us from sliding into a depression, as some leading economists suggested. The President from the outset has understood that it’s all about jobs, but there’s a lot of business to attend to just to keep us from sliding off the edge.

    Well, ladies and gentlemen, the President knows one other thing. In a sense, it’s more than about jobs. A job is more than a paycheck. It’s about dignity and it’s about respect. And too many people have lost it. (Applause.)

    Ladies and gentlemen, President Obama understands that the longest walk a mother or father can make is a trip up a short flight of stairs to their child’s bedroom to say, "Honey, I’m sorry, you’re not going to be able to stay at Stewart Middle School next year, or you can’t play on West Tampa’s Little League team next year, honey. We’re going to have to move because daddy or mommy lost their job, or because the bank said we can’t keep our house."

    My dad made that walk when I was a kid in our home in Scranton, Pennsylvania. I remember vividly my father walking up the stairs and I sitting on the end of the bed with my sister, Valerie, the only one old enough to understand what he was talking about. He said, "I’m sorry, honey, but I’m going to have to move."

    The first thought I had was, God, they’re getting divorced — literally. That’s what worried me. He said, "I’ve got to move, honey. You and Val are going to stay here with Mom and Jimmy and you’re going to stay here with Grandpa, because Dad has to move to Delaware. I’ll be back. It will take about a year, but I’ll come back and forth. But we’re going to be okay."

    Wasn’t until I got older I realized how hard that must have been for my father to make that walk; how hard it must have been for him to go into the kitchen before that walk and say to his father-in-law, "Ambrose, can you do me a favor? Can you keep my family? Can Jean and the kids stay here with you? I’ll try to do it as quick as I can. But there’s no jobs."

    Ladies and gentlemen, too many Floridians have had to make that walk over the last two years. And the President and I understand. We understand. And we’re determined to make sure that every hardworking Floridian, every hardworking American, is able to walk into his child’s room and say, "Honey, it’s going to be okay." (Applause.) That’s what this is all about. That’s what this is all about.

    As you heard last night, that’s why we’re putting in place the policies that will enable us to reduce the debt we inherited and deal with the spending required to keep us from falling off the cliff this year. And during the process, you heard him say how we are reordering our country’s priorities. We’re investing in health care, education, energy information, technology, health technology — (applause) — electric vehicles and batteries, investments that will help us build a new economy for the 21st century — investments that will allow us to lead in the 21st century as we did in the 20th.

    Ladies and gentlemen, we’re determined to restore America to its rightful place at the leading edge of innovation, with bold ideas that will create jobs immediately and serve as the foundation, a new platform — (applause) — a new platform to build this economy on that will serve not just our immediate needs but future generations; ideas like wind power, solar energy, a smart grid, broadband — (applause) — and high-speed rail. And that’s why we’re here today. (Applause.)

    Having made over 7,900 round trips, literally, on Amtrak, 250 miles a day, I am very familiar with rail. (Laughter.) And today you have no idea how pleased I am to talk about the announcement that we made yesterday awarding — in total, nationwide — nearly $8 billion from the Recovery Act, funding to move us in the direction of developing a high-speed rail service in 13 travel corridors covering 31 states all across this country. (Applause.)

    Ladies and gentlemen, these investments — these investments have several goals: first, to improve existing rail lines to make train service faster, more reliable; two, to pull cars off the road, reducing congestion, cutting pollution, and increasing productivity; and three, to begin to develop new corridors for high-speed trains that will go from 169 to 230 miles an hour. (Applause.)

    Ladies and gentlemen, like a corridor, right here from Tampa to Orlando — (applause) — so you’ll be able to get on a train here to Orlando in less than an hour, without battling traffic and congestion, arrive at your destination. Ladies and gentlemen, this single investment is not going to solve all our transportation issues overnight. Instead, with more than $55 billion of proposals from 50 states all across the country, we’re providing $8 billion in seed money. And today’s awards provide only initial funding for the rail system. Like Tampa and Orlando route, more funding is going to come in the future as progress is made.

    We have committed to another $5 billion in funding over the next five years. It’s a down payment on a truly national program that’s going to reshape the way we travel. It will change the way which we go from place to place, change the ways we work and live, and will connect communities to each other in a way that in the past was impossible. Just like the Interstate Highway structure did back in the mid-’50s, it will have far-reaching consequences.

    Let me ask you a question: How can we, the leading nation in the world, be in a position where China, Spain, France — and name all the other countries who have rail systems that are far superior to ours?

    Ladies and gentlemen, it’s about time we move. But this time — but this time, we’re not only going to be providing a better way to transport; we’re going to be taking cars off of congested highways, reducing carbon emissions, and saving billions of dollars in human productivity lost just sitting in traffic jams, as studies point out.

    Most important, we’re creating jobs — good jobs. (Applause.) Construction jobs. Manufacturing jobs. And we’re going to be creating them right now. We’re going to spur economic development in the future and we’re making our communities more livable all in the process.

    And ladies and gentlemen, it’s now my pleasure to introduce the man who’s leading us in this new era of adventure, the President of the United States of America. (Applause.) President Barack Obama. (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, everybody. Hello, Tampa! (Applause.) Thank you so much. Thank you, everybody. It’s great to see you. All right, everybody just make yourselves comfortable. We’re going to be here for a little bit. (Applause.) Thank you. Thank you.

    We’ve got — we’ve got some special guests that I want to make sure we acknowledge. Florida CFO Alex Sink is in the house. (Applause.) Representative Kathy Castor, your representative. (Applause.) Representative Alan Grayson. (Applause.) Representative Kendrick Meek. (Applause.) Representative Debbie Wasserman-Schultz. (Applause.) Your own mayor, Pam Iorio. (Applause.) The mayor of Orlando, Buddy Dyer. (Applause.) The president of University of Tampa, Ronald Vaughn. (Applause.)

    And two very special — two very special guests, Brian C. Smithey and Roger J. Picard. I want you guys to know who these folks are. They are members of the FEMA Florida Task Force Team 2 Canine Search Specialists. They went down to Haiti and worked 26-hour-long shifts, staying with victims until they were rescued. The Florida Task Force Team saved seven lives. Brian worked at a school where his dog, Powder, found a young adult female buried in the rubble three to four days. So these are the kinds of heroes that make America proud, and I want everybody to give them a big round of applause. Stand up. Stand up. (Applause.) Thank you.

    And I haven’t spotted him in the crowd yet, but I’ve got to do this — even though I know you all are upset that he took all that success to the Colts — (applause) — he made his name here in Tampa. (Applause.) And he’s not just a great coach, but he’s just a model individual and leader, we’re very proud to have him in the house, Coach Tony Dungy. (Applause.)

    Any of you want some analysis about the upcoming Super Bowl, Coach is free to give — no, I’m just — it’s good to see you, Coach.

    All right. Now, first of all let me say it’s good to be back in the Sunshine State. (Applause.) It is especially good to be back in January. (Laughter.) And it’s always nice to get out of Washington — it is — and spend a little time with the people who sent me to Washington. (Applause.)

    Now, last night I spoke with you about where we’ve been over the past year and where I believe we need to go. And I said what all of you know from your own lives: These are difficult times; these are challenging times for our country.

    In the last two years, we’ve gone through the deepest recession since the Great Depression. Think about that. A big chunk of the people here — certainly the younger people here — have never even seen a recession; they don’t even — it doesn’t register on their minds. This is by far the toughest thing that the country has gone through economically since the 1930s.

    And Tampa, like so many communities across our country, has felt the lash of shuttered businesses and lost jobs and home foreclosures and vanished or dwindling savings. And this storm came at the end of what some call a lost decade — because what happened between 2000 and now, it was a decade in which paychecks shrank and jobs barely grew, and the costs of everything from health care to college education went up. Irresponsibility from Wall Street to Washington left good, responsible Americans who did everything right still struggling in ways they never imagined.

    Joe and I took office in the middle of this raging storm. We ran for office, the highest office, because we had been hearing stories like this day in, day out, for years, even before the financial crisis hit. So we’re not going to rest until we rebuild an economy in which hard work and responsibility are rewarded, and businesses are hiring again, and wages are growing again, and the middle class can get its legs underneath it again. (Applause.) We will not rest until we build an economy that’s ready for America’s future.

    Now, to do that, the first thing we had to do was break the back of this recession. And that required some tough, in some cases unpopular but unnecessary — all which were necessary steps. I mean — I mentioned this last night — none of us wanted to have to stabilize the banking sector, particularly since they helped create this mess. (Applause.) But, as I explained last night, if we hadn’t, the financial system literally could have melted down and that would have taken our entire economy and millions more families and businesses with it.

    But because of the steps we’ve taken, now the markets have stabilized. The economy is growing again. (Applause.) The worst of the storm has passed. But I think all of you understand the devastation remains. One in 10 Americans still can’t find work. That’s why creating jobs has to be our number one priority in 2010. (Applause.)

    The true engines of job creation here in America are America’s businesses. And there are several steps we can take to help them expand and hire new workers. Last night I proposed taking $30 billion of the money that went to Wall Street banks but have now been repaid and use it to help community banks give small businesses the credit they need to stay afloat. (Applause.) That will help. I also proposed a new tax credit for more than 1 million small businesses that hire new workers or raise wages. And while we’re at it, I believe that we should eliminate all capital gains taxes on small business investment, and provide a tax incentive for all businesses to invest in new plants and equipment. (Applause.)

    As Joe mentioned, we’re going to put more Americans to work rebuilding our infrastructure, and building our infrastructure of the future. I mean, it’s important to repave our roads; it’s important to repair our bridges so that they’re safe. But we want to start looking deep into the 21st century — (applause) — and we want to say to ourselves, there is no reason why other countries can build high-speed rail lines and we can’t. (Applause.) And that’s what’s about to happen right here in Tampa — we are going to start building a new high-speed rail line — (applause) — right here in Tampa, building for the future, putting people to work. (Applause.)

    I’m excited. I’m going to come back down here and ride it. (Laughter and applause.) Joe and I — you all have a date. When that thing is all set up, we’ll come down here and check it out. (Laughter.)

    And by the way, this high-speed rail line is being funded by the Recovery Act. (Applause.) And one other thing we can start doing for jobs here in America that I mentioned last night — I talked about this all through the campaign. We put this proposal in our budget, we keep on getting resistance, but we are going to keep on pushing to end tax breaks for companies that ship our jobs overseas and give those tax breaks to companies that create jobs right here in the United States of America. (Applause.) It’s the right thing to do. It’s the right thing to do. It’s the right thing to do. (Applause.)

    Now, I have to say this: The steps that I just mentioned will help accelerate job growth in an economy that is already beginning to grow, but the steps we take alone won’t make up for the 7 million jobs we lost over the last two years. I mean, keep in mind, when we were sworn into office, that December we had lost 650,000 jobs. January, as we were being sworn in, we lost 700,000 jobs; February, 650,000 jobs. So before we could even put in place the Recovery Act, you had already seen millions of jobs lost. That’s a deep hole that we’re going to have to fill. And the only way to do that is to lay a new foundation for long-term economic growth and finally address the struggles that middle-class families have been grappling with for years.

    Now, Florida, that’s why Joe and I asked for the chance to serve as your President and Vice President. (Applause.) Look, we didn’t seek this office to push our problems off or take the easy road through the next election. We ran to solve problems — problems that had been nagging at America for decades. We want to solve them for the next generation. We ran to get the tough stuff done. (Applause.) So as I mentioned last night, I make no apology for trying to fix stuff that’s hard, because — (applause) — I’ll be honest with you — I’ll be honest with you, Joe and I are both pretty smart politicians, we’ve been at this a while. (Laughter.) The easiest way to keep your poll numbers high is to say nothing and to do nothing that offends anybody. (Applause.) That’s true. No, no, no, you just wave, smile and — (laughter.) That’s how you do it.

    The minute you actually start doing something, somebody is going to disagree with you. (Applause.) But that’s what I promised. Some of you remember the campaign. I said I wasn’t just going to tell you what you want to hear, I was going to tell you what you need to hear. (Applause.) So none of this is new. There’s nothing that we have talked about since we entered the White House that we didn’t talk about during the campaign. And so long as we have the privilege of serving you, we will not stop fighting for your future, no matter how many lumps we’ve got to take to get it done. (Applause.)

    I do also have to just mention — I’m going to mention — you know I love you in the media, but I will mention this little aspect of our media. Our friends with the pads and the pencils — last week I went to Ohio and I started saying what I’m saying now, which is, I’m going to fight for your future. And they got all worked up. They got worked up last week. They said, is he trying to change his message; is he trying to get more populist; is this a strategy that he’s pursuing to boost this, that and the other; is this something new?

    I just had to do a little rewind here of how we ran our grassroots campaign — (applause) — because I’ve got some news. I’ve got some news of my own here. I’ve been fighting for working folks my entire adult life. (Applause.) That’s why I entered public service — to fight for folks in Chicago. That’s why I ran for the state Senate. That’s why I ran for the U.S. Senate. That’s why I ran for President — to fight for people here in Tampa, and people here in Florida, and to fight for people all across the United States of America. (Applause.)

    I seem to remember coming to Tampa two weeks before the election — (applause) — and you know what I said? This is a quote, people can check — I’m sure it was reported in the newspapers. I said, "Change never comes without a fight." (Applause.) That was true then. It’s true now. Change never comes without a fight, Florida. So I won’t stop fighting; I know you won’t, either.

    We’re not going to stop fighting to give our kids a world-class education, to make college more affordable, to make sure that by 2020 we have the highest rate of college attendance of any country in the world. (Applause.) So we proposed that graduates should only pay 10 percent of their income to pay back their student loans. (Applause.) Students like that. (Applause.) And what I’ve said is we’ll forgive student loan debt after 20 years — but after 10 if you choose a career in public service. Because if you decide you want to be a teacher — (applause) — if you decide you want to be a cop, if you’re not making huge amounts of money we don’t want to discourage you from that because of the cost of college. And by the way, I’ve been there and Michelle has been there — it took us 10 full years to pay off Michelle’s student loans, 15 to pay mine off. (Laughter.) So I’ve been there. And our belief, and I think your belief, is in the United States of America nobody should go broke because they chose to go to college. We want everybody to go to college, and we don’t want them going broke doing it. (Applause.)

    We won’t stop fighting to spark innovation and ignite a clean energy economy where America’s workers are building solar panels and wind towers and cutting-edge batteries for automobiles — because the nation that leads the clean energy revolution will be the nation that leads the global economy. (Applause.) And, as I said last night, other countries aren’t waiting. They want those jobs. China wants those jobs. Germany wants those jobs. They are going after them hard, making the investments required.

    We’re not going to stop fighting to give every American a fair shake. The first bill I signed into law was making sure that there was equal pay for equal work for women — the Lilly Ledbetter Act — (applause) — because I think you should be paid the same for doing the same work. That’s just fair. (Applause.) And by the way, men, you should have been standing up clapping for that because — (laughter) — because most families today are depending on two paychecks, not one, to get by. (Applause.)

    We’re not going to stop fighting to protect the American consumer. That’s why I signed a Credit Card Bill of Rights into law to protect you from surprise charges and retroactive rate hikes and other unfair rules. That’s why I’m fighting for a tough consumer financial protection agency to protect you against things like hidden fees that can make an ATM withdrawal cost 30 bucks. (Applause.)

    I just want to be clear here, for the benefit of my friends in the back. (Laughter.) We need a strong financial sector. Without it, businesses can’t get capital to grow and create jobs. Families can’t finance a home loan or education. So we want a healthy financial sector. And there are folks all across the country working in banks who are doing great service to their community. But we also need some rules of the road for Wall Street, so that reckless decisions made by a few don’t take our economy over the side. (Applause.) That’s common sense. There’s nothing radical about that. In fact, the banks should want it because it would create greater stability in the system.

    And, yes, we will not stop fighting for a health care system that works for the American people, not just for the insurance industry. (Applause.) We won’t stop. We want a system where you can’t be denied care if you have a preexisting condition. (Applause.) You can’t get thrown off your insurance right at the time when you get seriously ill. We want a system where small businesses can get insurance at a price they can afford. (Applause.)

    Nobody pays more than small businesses and individuals who are self-employed in the insurance market, because they’ve got no leverage. We want to change that by allowing them to be able to set up a pool. We want to make sure that people who don’t have coverage can find an affordable choice in a competitive marketplace. (Applause.) We want a system in which seniors don’t have these huge gaps in their Medicare prescription drug coverage — (applause) — and where Medicare itself is on a sounder financial footing. Those are the things that we’re fighting for.

    And I’m not going to stop on that, because it’s the right thing to do, and by the way, if you are serious about reducing our deficit and debt you cannot accomplish it without reforming our health care system, because that’s what’s gobbling up more federal dollars than anything else. (Applause.) I don’t understand folks who say they don’t want to see government spending out of control, and then are fighting reforms that the Congressional Budget Office says would cut a trillion dollars off our deficit over the next two decades. (Applause.) Those aren’t my numbers.

    Now, we’re never going to stop fighting to cut waste and abuse in Washington. We do have to rein in deficits that have been accumulating for too long. Families across the country are tightening their belts and making tough decisions. It’s time for the federal government to do the same. And that’s why I proposed specific steps last night to bring the deficit down. And I’m grateful that the Senate just passed, as we were flying down here to Florida, a rule called pay-as-you-go, or PAYGO, that was a big reason we had record surpluses in the 1990s instead of the record deficits that were handed to me when I ran — walked into office.

    Look, it’s a very simply concept, this PAYGO. It basically just says you got to pay as you go. (Laughter.) It’s sort of how you live. At least after you cut up those credit cards. (Laughter.) Basically, you want to start a new program? Start a new program. But you’ve got to end an old one that pays for it. If you want to cut taxes, great, cut taxes. But you’ve got to figure out how to fill the revenue that results when you lose that tax revenue. So the idea is just honest accounting. That’s what’s needed.

    Let me say one more word about health care. I just got to — I’m gnawing on this bone a little bit. (Laughter.) I know that the longer the process worked through on a complicated issue like this, the uglier it looked. You know, there’s — and it doesn’t help when you’ve got the insurance industry spending several hundred million dollars advertising against it, but — but after a while, people didn’t know what to think. And you started asking yourselves, what’s in it for me?

    And as I said last night, I take my share of the blame for not explaining our approach more clearly. But this problem is not going to go away. The tough stories I read in letters at night, they’re not stopping. I’m not going to walk away from these efforts. And I won’t walk away from you. (Applause.) And I don’t think Congress should walk away, either. We are going to keep working to get this done. And I hope we can get some Republicans to join Democrats in understanding the urgency of the problem. (Applause.)

    On every one of these issues my door remains open to good ideas from both parties. I want the Republicans off the sidelines. I want them working with us to solve problems facing working families — not to score points. I want a partnership. What we can’t do, though — here’s what I’m not open to. I don’t want gridlock on issue after issue after issue when there’s so many urgent problems to solve. (Applause.) And I don’t want an attitude, "If Obama loses, then we win." I mean, that can’t be a platform. (Applause.) Even if you disagree with me on some specific issues, all of us should be rooting for each other. (Applause.) All of us should be working for America moving forward and solving problems.

    So that, you know, "you lose, I win" mentality, that mindset may be good for short-term politics, but it’s not a mindset that’s equal to these times. (Applause.) It’s not worthy of you. What you deserve is for all of us, Democrats and Republicans, to work through our differences, overcome our politics, do what is hard, do what is necessary to advance the American Dream and keep it alive for our time and for all time. (Applause.)

    We have come through a tough year, and a tough decade. But a new year is here and a new decade is stretching before us. Opportunities are there for the taking: every business owner working on the innovation of tomorrow; every student reaching for a better future; every ready — everyone ready to roll up their sleeves and play their part in rebuilding America.

    Yes, we can. (Applause.) We don’t back down. We don’t quit. We are Americans. And today, here with all of you, I have never been more hopeful about our future than I am right now. I am confident that we can make this happen and move this country forward.

    Thank you very much, Tampa. I love you guys. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. (Applause.)

    All right, I’ve got — everybody relax again. Everybody relax. (Laughter.) I’ve got time for a few questions. I’m going to take off my jacket here, just because — (applause.) Joe, are you going to hold my coat?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT: You answer all the tough questions. I’ll hold the coat. (Laughter.)

    THE PRESIDENT: I know there may be some tough questions here, so — all right, here are the only rules to this. I’m going to try to get in about five, six questions. I will — so I’m not going to be able to get to everybody. I apologize in advance. To make sure that it’s fair, we’re going to go girl, boy, girl, boy. (Laughter.) All right? So I’m going to call on a young lady first, and then I’m going to call on a gentleman, and we’re just going to keep on going down the line, and we’ll get through as many as we can.

    All right, everybody is pointing in this — this young woman in the red here, so we’ll start with you. And if you don’t mind, introduce yourself. Wait for the microphone. A microphone will be coming up and — all right.

    Q Hello, Mr. President. My name is Layla (phonetic), I’m a student at the University of South Florida. (Applause.)

    AUDIENCE: Booo!

    THE PRESIDENT: Hey, Layla. Uh-oh. Uh-oh. Come on, we can all get along here. (Laughter.) Tampa, behave yourselves.

    Q First of all, I’d like to say that I did work on your campaign. I think it’s great what you did for the community because you involved us as the youth to understand the grassroots movement and what impact it can make.

    THE PRESIDENT: That’s great. Thank you.

    Q My question is, last night in your State of the Union address you spoke of America’s support for human rights. Then why have we not condemned Israel and Egypt’s human rights violations against the occupied Palestinian people and yet we continue to support financially with billions of dollars coming from our tax dollars?

    AUDIENCE: Booo!

    THE PRESIDENT: Okay, now, everybody has got to be courteous, everybody is answering the question.

    Let me just talk about the Middle East generally. Look — all right, everybody, come on, come on, hold on. Hold on one second, I’ve got to answer my question first, sir. Okay. I know you got — what, you got some beads on — are those New Orleans beads? Okay.

    Look, look, look, the Middle East is obviously an issue that has plagued the region for centuries. And it’s an issue that elicits a lot of passions, as you heard.

    Here’s my view. Israel is one of our strongest allies. It has — (applause.) Let me just play this out. It is a vibrant democracy. It shares links with us in all sorts of ways. It is critical for us and I will never waver from ensuring Israel’s security and helping them secure themselves in what is a very hostile region. (Applause.) So I make no apologies for that.

    What is also true is that the plight of the Palestinians is something that we have to pay attention to, because it is not good for our security and it is not good for Israel’s security if you’ve got millions of individuals who feel hopeless, who don’t have an opportunity to get an education or get a job or what have you.

    Now, the history of there is long and I don’t have time to go through the grievances of both sides in the issue. What I have said and what we did from the beginning when I came into office is to say we are seeking a two-state solution in which Israel and the Palestinians can live side by side in peace and security. (Applause.) In order to do that both sides are going to have to make compromises. (Applause.)

    As a first step, the Palestinians have to unequivocally renounce violence and recognize Israel. (Applause.) And Israel has to acknowledge legitimate grievances and interests of the Palestinians. We know what a solution could look like in the region, but here’s the problem that we’re confronting right now, is that both in Israel and within the Palestinian Territories, the politics are difficult; they’re divided. The Israel government came in based on the support of a lot of folks who don’t want to make a lot of concessions. I think Prime Minister Netanyahu is actually making some effort to try to move a little bit further than his coalition wants him to go. On the other hand, President Abbas of the Palestinian Authority, who I think genuinely wants peace, has to deal with Hamas, an organization that has not recognized Israel and has not disavowed violence.

    And so we are working to try to strengthen the ability of both parties to sit down across the table and to begin serious negotiations. And I think that it’s important when we’re talking about this issue to make sure that we don’t just knee-jerk, use language that is inflammatory or in some fashion discourages the possibility of negotiation. We’ve got to recognize that both the Palestinian people and Israelis have legitimate aspirations and they can be best served if the United States is helping them understand each other, as opposed to demonizing each other.

    All right. (Applause.) Okay. All right. It’s a gentleman’s turn. It’s a gentleman’s turn. This gentleman here — I’m going to go on the other side of the room. The gentleman in the yellow tie.

    Q Bill Segal, Orange County Commissioner. Welcome, Mr. President. What’s the decision matrix going to look like for high-speed rail? How are we going to decide who gets what? And when is the announcement going to be made?

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, I probably should have Mr. Biden talk about this because he has been working diligently overseeing the Recovery Act. Let me make a general point about high-speed rail as well as the way the infrastructure is being moved through the Recovery Act.

    General point number one is that making an investment in infrastructure is a two-fer, because it creates jobs immediately and it lays the foundation for a vibrant economy in the future. So it’s one of our best investments. But it’s expensive. We’ve got a couple of trillion dollars’ worth of infrastructure repairs just on our old infrastructure, our existing infrastructure — our roads, our bridges. People remember what happened to the bridge up in Minneapolis that just buckled and collapsed. Well, unfortunately, we’ve got a lot of aging infrastructure. Some of it is not as visible as bridges, some of it is water systems, pipes underground that essentially were built back in the 1930s — in some cases even older than that. So we’re going to have to make a commitment to our long-term infrastructure.

    And one of the things that we’re hoping to do is as we make more investments in infrastructure under my administration that we start figuring out ways that we can take some of the politics out of infrastructure — and what I mean by that is right now a lot of decisions are made about projects based on who’s got the most powerful congressman or senator. And what we’re hoping to do is at least some of the decision-making based a little bit more on what are the engineering plans that determine this is the best project to go forward.

    And one way of doing that is to create what’s called an infrastructure bank where at least a certain amount of infrastructure money, particularly for new projects, would be guided by some clear criteria, a lot of transparency, engineers and urban planners and city planners involved in the process so that we can also get some regional planning. Because part of what happens when politics is involved in transportation is that the commissioner over here may not have the same ideas, the mayor over here may not have the same idea as the senator over there — except they all represent a similar region. And so you get a whole bunch of traffic systems that don’t work and aren’t efficient and don’t serve commuters very well at all. So that’s the kind of general direction that we’d like to move to.

    The second point I would make is that if we’re going to be making investments in infrastructure anyway, we can’t just look backwards, we’ve got to look forward. I mean, how many people here have been on one of these high-speed trains? When you were traveling outside the country, unfortunately, for the most part. I mean, those things are fast, they are smooth. You don’t have to take off your shoes. (Laughter.) Right? Check to see if you’re wearing the socks with no holes in them.

    Why is it we don’t have those? Now, part of it is we’re a very big country, we’re not as densely populated as some countries in Europe and Asia — and let’s face it, we just love our cars. We love our cars. We don’t love gas prices, but we love our cars.

    Q What about gas prices?

    THE PRESIDENT: But — well, what about gas prices, right? (Laughter.) I’ll talk about that in a second, but — no, you know what? I’ll talk about it now.

    Even if — and I mentioned last night we have to increase production on oil, we have to increase production on natural gas, because we’re not going to be able to get all our clean energy up and running quickly enough to meet all of our economic growth needs. But even if we are increasing production we’ve got to get started now decreasing our use and making our economy more efficient. (Applause.)

    And so that’s why we need to invest in infrastructure like high-speed rail that will allow us to choose the option of taking the train. (Applause.) And if more and more facilities like that are available that’s going to be good, as I said, for the economy of the region and it’s going to be good for individual lifestyles because people aren’t going to be stuck in traffic for two hours. It’ll increase productivity. People will get to work on time a lot faster. They’ll be less aggravated. Right?

    Now, Joe, in terms of the high-speed rail here, do you have something specific to say?

    THE VICE PRESIDENT: I’ll make it real simple. Think of the Interstate Highway System in the ’50s. What you did is you pick the portions where you could begin to build where there was the most likely to have the heaviest traffic, so that people would use it the most, and then just build that out.

    What we did is we picked — the Department of Transportation picked the Orlando-Tampa route, Tampa-Orlando, because you were most ready, your plans were the most advanced — (applause) — and the objective is it’s not just going to be here, it’s all the way — going to come around all the way heading up going down to Miami as well. (Applause.) That’s why we picked California. California, Mr. President, there’s over a $2 billion investment because they had plans, they’re ready to go.

    And I might add, they’re both Republican governors — so we didn’t pick this based on politics. I mean this sincerely. (Applause.) So we’re picking the places that make the most sense, have the highest density, are ready to go. And there’s been $55 billion worth of requests coming from the states. The good news about that, Mr. President, is we’re also funding, with some of the money, planning efforts, because some of the plans aren’t complete enough.

    And lastly, Mr. President, we are making a big difference with a portion of this money — over a billion dollars of the $8 billion — on taking railroads, for example, from Richmond to Washington, that go 65 miles an hour. By getting that up to 110 miles an hour you take a whole lot of cars off the highway, it becomes economically reasonable to do it. So we’re taking corridors that in fact exist where we can increase the mileage enough that it can make a difference on congestion.

    And I’ll point out one thing: I-95 — and you all know I-95 on the other side of the state — I-95 going all the way up at Marway (phonetic) in the congested areas cost $22 million per lane to build per mile. You can build this railroad for less than $2 million in that. (Applause.) So it makes sense. It’s where it works. And we’re going to have to build it out. (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Good. Let me just say — let me just say, by the way, give a compliment to Vice President Biden. He and his team have overseen the Recovery Act. You have not seen scandal break out on a huge endeavor. You know, people complain a lot about how government works and wastes money, et cetera. The truth is, is that if you look at how the recovery dollars have been spent, they have been spent the way they were promised. And there’s complete transparency, so you guys can go on the White House Web site and look at every single project that has been awarded a Recovery Act grant, every single one, and scrutinize them. You know who the contractors are, you know who’s doing the work, you know when it’s supposed to be finished. So you can check out all this stuff and you will be able to monitor how the high-speed rail project here is operating just by going to our Web site.

    All right, it’s a young lady’s turn. All right. Let me — it’s a woman’s turn, so — all right, how about — she’s jumping up and down right here. There we go.

    Q Wow.

    THE PRESIDENT: All right, but you can’t blow your whistle, though. All right. (Laughter.)

    Q President Obama, my name is Rashonda Williams (phonetic). I’m from Kissimmee, Florida. I don’t know if Ms. Tchen has given you the poem that I wrote you.

    THE PRESIDENT: Not yet.

    Q Ask Ms. Tchen. She came to the Center for Drug-Free Living over in Orlando.

    THE PRESIDENT: Okay.

    Q And I wrote a poem for you winning the presidency; I printed it up and put it on a nice background. But my question is — and I told her to give it to you.

    THE PRESIDENT: Okay, I’ll be looking for it.

    Q So you ask Miss Tina for that. My question is, my brothers are in and out of jail, with the drugs, the selling of the drugs. And a lot of them can’t get jobs coming out. So the only thing they know is to go back to what they — what they’re used to, because of their felonies. My brother is 27; he has 33 felonies — drug felonies, mind you. So what I’m saying is, is there anything that could be put into motion that can get these guys, coming from prison, get in a system where they can get hired and get their self-esteem built back up so that they don’t have to go back out to the street to sell drugs? (Applause.) Because if they don’t hire them, all they’re going to do is continue to sell the drugs. So we need some kind of company that can teach these gentlemen coming out some kind of trade that will keep them from going back out and selling these drugs.

    THE PRESIDENT: Okay, well, first of all, I look forward to reading your poem.

    Look, we’ve got a great challenge in particularly our inner-city communities. But, actually, if you go to rural communities in the Midwest right now, they may be selling different drugs but you’re seeing some of the same patterns.

    Joe and I were campaigning in Iowa, and you’d go into small towns where you wouldn’t think there would ever be a problem with the drug trade, and the methamphetamine trade was identical to the crack trade in the big cities — same patterns of young people getting drawn in.

    So a couple of things have to happen to deal with this problem. Number one, the single most important thing we can do is to make sure that our very young children are getting a healthy start in life and that their parents, or parent, or caregiver, have the support that’s necessary so that they can stay on a straight path of success in school, because if young people — if their minds are active and they’re doing well in school, they are less likely to fall prey to either using drugs or deciding to deal in drugs. (Applause.)

    And that’s why I mentioned yesterday — I mentioned yesterday the single best anti-poverty program around is a world-class education. (Applause.) That’s why we’re going to invest in early childhood education. That’s why we are reforming and pushing states and communities to reform how education works.

    And by the way, we’ve gotten into trouble sometimes not just from conservatives but sometimes from liberals because we’re trying to shake up low-performing schools. People say, well, why don’t you just give them more money? And my attitude is, you know what? We can give more money to schools — that’s important — small class sizes, better classrooms, all those things I care deeply about. But that money will not make a dime’s bit of difference if we’re not also reforming how kids are learning — (applause) — making sure that our teachers know their subject matter, and that they know the best ways to teach; making sure that parents are staying on top of kids and instilling a sense of excellence and performance in those youth.

    So that — I want to make that point first, because, frankly, it would be so much easier to work with your brother, if he hadn’t gone to jail in the first place, to get a job. Thirty-three felonies is a lot. I mean, that’s a long rap sheet, which means that it’s very — I’m just being realistic. If I’m a business owner, and I’m saying to myself, right now the unemployment rate is 10 percent, so there are a whole lot of folks who have never been to jail who are looking for a job — it’s hard for me to say, I’ll choose the guy who went to jail instead of the person who never went to jail and has been laid off.

    Now, having said that, what is also true — what you say is exactly right, that if we can’t break the cycle, then all we’re doing is just churning folks in a revolving door — through the jail system, back on the streets, back to dealing drugs, back to — and this is part of my faith, my religious faith, but you don’t have to be religious to, I think, believe in the idea of redemption, that people can get a second chance, that people can change. (Applause.)

    So one of the things that we’ve done is, actually Vice President Biden, myself, some Republicans — Sam Brownback, for example, of Kansas — have worked together to promote what we call the Second Chance Act, which links ex-offenders with programs that can provide them with skills, that can provide them with opportunities to get some work experience, and then can essentially certify that they are ready for the workplace; and then trying to encourage private sector companies to hire some of these ex-offenders.

    The program is not as well funded as I would like. We’d like to see if we can do more with it. It has to be done in a partnership with state and local communities. But I do think it’s something that ends up being actually wise for taxpayers because every prisoner is costing us about $16,000, $18,000, $20,000, and every one of us are paying for it. So if we can find programs that work, breaking that cycle, ultimately that can be a good investment for taxpayers all across the country. (Applause.)

    All right. All right, it’s a man’s turn. I’m going to call on that big guy right there with a little hair. (Laughter.) Since the microphone is right next to him.

    Q Thank you. My name is Steve Gordon. I’m from Clearwater. And I manufacture — I own a small company, environmental company. I manufacture the Instant-Off water-saving device that fits on any faucet worldwide. I’m frustrated because I can create 500 jobs; I’ve gone to the banks, I can’t get a loan. And I speak for all businesses in the United States. (Applause.) We are tired of dealing with banks. And I don’t understand — and this is my question for you, is that I know you care, I know you’re trying. And I appreciate the pledge of $30 billion to small businesses. But lending it to the banks to lend to us is not the answer. It’s just not.

    What I suggest, and the question is, why can’t you use the SBA just like you lent directly to Wall Street, you lent directly to the automakers, you lent directly to the banks — why can’t the government make small businesses available directly to us? (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, this is a good question. Look, first of all, you should be aware that we have increased SBA loans during the course of this year by 70 percent in some cases. So some of the key programs for businesses like yours we have massively increased their lending. And by the way, we’ve waived some of the fees and red tape that are associated with you getting a loan from the SBA.

    Now, it’s not enough. Just — I know you’re shaking your head here. I understand it’s not enough because you still want a loan. So — but you need to — I just want you to know, it’s not like we haven’t thought of why don’t we use the SBA. We have. The challenge that we’ve got is, is that even SBA loans are generally run not by the SBA; the SBA essentially works with local banks, community banks, neighborhood banks, to process the loan. And essentially the SBA underwrites the loan.

    And so the SBA does not have the infrastructure to go all across the country in every region and process loans to small businesses directly because they don’t have enough people. Somebody yelled, "Why not?" The SBA doesn’t have the staff to do it.

    Keep in mind, a small business loan of any sort, or a large business loan of any sort requires some sense of, all right, what’s the business plan, what are your projected earnings, et cetera, et cetera. And somebody has got to do that. Now, if the SBA were to suddenly take over that entire function we’d have to stand up a massive bureaucracy — a huge one. And we’d have to train all those people and it would take too long, and you’d be frustrated — why is it that this big government agency can’t seem to run anything?

    So what we’ve decided to do instead is to take $30 billion that was repaid by the banks and make that available under criteria that will encourage small banks to give those loans to you. And if we do that effectively, we can potentially get that money out the door more quickly.

    But I am absolutely sympathetic to what you’re saying because I’m hearing it everywhere I go. And I — that’s why I mentioned it last night in my speech. You’ve got a lot of small business owners who are ready to grow, ready to hire, but they just can’t get financing. So we’re going to use the SBA as one tool; this $30 billion is going to help. Ultimately, though, the vast majority of small businesses, their loans are going to come from the private sector. And we’ve got to get the private sector to think differently.

    What happened here was that everybody was making loans without thinking of the risk at all. They were just sending out money out the door; that’s how a lot of overdevelopment happened here in Florida, it happened in Nevada, it happened in California — because people were just saying, you know what, we’re making money, we’re not going to ask a lot of questions. Suddenly the bottom falls out. And the pendulum has shifted too far in the other direction so that even if you’ve got a good business plan, you’ve got a good model and you’re making profits and a good product, now banks are reluctant to lend at all.

    And what we’re trying to do is to encourage them to get that happy medium where they’re not taking such exorbitant risks that they threaten the entire system, but they’re also open to enough risk that America’s dynamic free enterprise system is actually able to work.

    One role — one aspect of this is also getting regulators who oversee the banks — which aren’t under my supervision; these are independent bank regulators — getting them to at least take a closer look at their policies, because a lot of bankers will tell you they want to loan you the money but they’re worried about — they suffered all these losses because of some of the mortgage stuff going belly up. So what they’ll tell you is, I’ve got a bank regulator breathing down my neck making sure that I’m keeping my capital levels high enough. And we’re going to have to make some adjustments there. But that’s not something the administration can do directly. We can just encourage these independent regulators to take a closer look at it.

    I’m confident you’re going to succeed, though. And you can give maybe Reggie Love here your business card so we can find out about your terrific business. (Applause.)

    All right, I’ve got time only for — I’ve only got time — I’ve only got time for two more questions. This young lady right here, she’s been standing here a very long time.

    Q First, my 15-year-old son, Zach Cartwright (phonetic), wanted me to tell you that he is a big supporter of yours.

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, tell Zach thank you so much.

    Q Many families are having to withdraw money from their 401(k)s. Once this occurs, in addition to taxes there’s a 10 percent penalty assessed. Since the withdrawals are taking place due to hardship, families don’t always have the money to pay the 10 percent and the penalties. The interest then accrues until the day full payment is made. The IRS recently made headlines after giving tax breaks to Citigroup. Several months ago people with offshore accounts were given amnesty. My question is, why is the IRS coming after the middle class, creating more stress for us? (Applause.) And what is your plan to help resolve this? And if Congress is unable to deal with the issue directly impacting the middle class, I’m happy to contribute my ideas. (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, this is something that actually I personally experienced — this was several years ago. Michelle and I had some family emergencies — this was when I was still working in a law firm. I had a small retirement account set up and I ended up having to withdraw it and pay that 10 percent penalty, and it was no fun. But it was what we had to do. And fortunately we were young enough where we could absorb that hit. A lot of families aren’t in that position, if they’ve got a nest egg, to suddenly have to — it’s bad enough having to draw it down, but then also to have to pay taxes on top of it is really tough.

    Now, the reason that policy is in place, obviously, is because you’re getting that money tax-free, the idea being that you’re going to actually use it for retirement. And then if you’re spending it early, before retirement, then you can imagine that a lot of people could potentially game the system by using these accounts to avoid taxes. So I just want to show a little sympathy here for those who are trying to enforce the law — they’re not mean-spirited, they’re just trying to — they’re working with the system that was set up.

    I think you are raising a legitimate point, though. And if I’m not mistaken we actually started looking at this, Joe, in our administration — was to take a look at are there circumstances — and the specific thing that we were thinking about was medical emergencies — where people should not be penalized for it. And I think that issuing blanket amnesties in all circumstances may not be possible. But taking a look at certain narrow categories of emergencies in which these penalties could be waived is something that we have discussed and I think we could explore. All right? (Applause.)

    Okay. All right. I got one more — okay, everybody is pointing at this young man, so I’m going to call on this guy right here. I think that’s all his sisters were all pointing at him. They’re like, "Oh, call on my brother." (Laughter.)

    Q All right, I’m Hector and I’m a student at UT. (Applause.) And my question is, last night you talked about repealing "don’t ask, don’t tell," and my question is what are you doing now to put in motion so that same-sex couples and homosexuals are treated as equal citizens of the United States, i.e., same-sex marriages and the thousand-plus benefits that heterosexual couples enjoy after marriage? (Applause.)

    THE PRESIDENT: Look, as I said last night, my belief is, is that a basic principle in our Constitution is that if you’re obeying the law, if you’re following the rules, that you should be treated the same, regardless of who you are. (Applause.) I think that principle applies to gay and lesbian couples. So at the federal level, one of the things that we’re trying to do is to make sure that partnerships are recognized for purposes of benefits so that hospital visitation, for example, is something that is permitted; that Social Security benefits or pension benefits or others, that same-sex couples are recognized in all those circumstances.

    I think that we’ve got to — we actually have an opportunity of passing a law that’s been introduced in Congress right now, and my hope is this year we can get it done, just for federal employees and federal workers. A lot of companies, on their own, some of the best-run companies have adopted these same practices. I think it’s the right thing to do and it makes sense for us to take a leadership role in ensuring that people are treated the same. (Applause.)

    Look, if you are — regardless of your personal opinions, the notion that somebody who’s working really hard for 30 years can’t take their death benefits and transfer them to the person that they love the most in the world and who has supported them all their lives, that just doesn’t seem fair. It doesn’t seem right. (Applause.) And I think it’s the right thing to do.

    Okay, look, guys — listen, everybody. I’ve got to take off.

    AUDIENCE: No!

    THE PRESIDENT: Wait, wait. But I warned you guys I couldn’t answer every question. Let me just say in closing — let me just say this in closing. (Applause.) Let me say this in closing — hold on a second, hold on a second, hold on, hold on a second.

    I want to say this. Look, we’ve gone through a very difficult year. But I have great optimism that we have begun to dig ourselves out of this hole. In order for us to do it successfully, we’re going to have to work together, we’re going to have to listen to each other, we’re going to have to be respectful of each other.

    So I want to end on mentioning something that I talked about last night. You know, our political dialogue in this country has always been noisy and messy because we come from different places, we’ve got different ideas, different beliefs. I understand all that. But we’re all Americans. We all should anticipate that the other person, even if they disagree with us, has the best of intentions. We don’t have to call them names. We don’t have to demonize them. And that’s true whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, whether you are a conservative or a liberal, or an independent — being respectful and listening to other people’s point of views, and understanding that most of these issues are complicated.

    Look, let me take the example of health care. Part of the reason why it’s so easy to scare people about health care, even if they don’t like it the way it is now, is because you’ve got doctors, you’ve got nurses, you’ve got hospitals, you’ve got insurance systems, you’ve got Medicaid, you’ve got Medicare, you’ve got the VA system — all these systems constitute several trillion dollars, one-sixth of our economy. Even if you come up with a great plan that lowers premiums and creates greater competition and ensures freedom for you to choose your doctor and is bringing down the deficit — all the things that I’ve claimed — and prevents insurance companies from abusing customers — even if we do all that, there’s going to be somebody out there in a $2 trillion system who’s unhappy with something. Right?

    So they’ll complain, well, you know, I’m a medical device manufacturer and if you reform the system that might force me to change how I sell my products; or there’s going to be a doctor who says, well, you know what, right now I get charged this way and if you change how Medicare reimburses, then I might have to change my billing system and that’s going to cost me a few thousand dollars and I don’t like that.

    The reason I’m pointing this out is if we’re going to do big things on energy, or health care, or infrastructure, then we’re going to have some differences. We’ve got to work them through. Nothing that human beings do will be perfect. But we shouldn’t sort of assume that the other side is either heartless and doesn’t care about sick people, or is some socialist communist who’s trying to take over the health care system, or — you know, we start getting into these caricatures of each other. They’re so damaging. And, frankly, the political parties and the media haven’t been helping. They’ve been making it worse. (Applause.)

    I want to dial some of that back. Let’s start thinking of each other as Americans first, figuring out how we can help one another, figuring out how we can move this country forward. I’m confident we’ll do great.

    Thank you, everybody. God bless you. Thank you. (Applause.)

    END
    2:36 P.M. EST

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  • Statement by the President on the Confirmation of Ben Bernanke as Chairman of the Fed

    01.28.10 03:51 PM

    "I am gratified by the Senate’s broad bipartisan vote to confirm Ben Bernanke for another term as Chairman of the Federal Reserve. As the nation continues to face the consequences of the worst recession in a generation, Ben Bernanke has provided wisdom and steady leadership in the midst of the financial and economic crisis. While the worst of the storm has passed, its devastation remains and we have a lot of work to do to rebuild our economy. I congratulate him on his confirmation and look forward to working with him in the days ahead."

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  • President Obama to Propose New Small Business Jobs and Wages Tax Cut

    01.28.10 05:00 PM

    New jobs proposal will create jobs, cut taxes for small businesses

    WASHINGTON, DC – Tomorrow in Baltimore, Maryland, President Obama will announce details of the Small Business Jobs and Wages Tax Cut, one of his new proposals to create good jobs in America. In last night’s State of the Union Address, President Obama outlined a series of ways he will fight to create good paying jobs and continue our economic recovery.

    One of these proposals, the Small Business Jobs and Wages Tax Cut, will put more Americans back to work by giving businesses – particularly small business – a tax cut for new hiring. The new proposal will also provide tax incentives for businesses to expand wages for their employees.

    Through the Small Business Jobs and Wages Tax Cut:

    Businesses will receive a $5,000 tax credit for every net new employee that they employ in 2010. The total amount of the credit for any one firm will be capped at $500,000, to ensure that the majority of the benefit is targeted at small businesses. Start –ups will be eligible for half of the tax credit.Small businesses that increase wages or hours for their existing employees will be reimbursed for the Social Security payroll taxes they pay on real increases in their payrolls. This bonus would be based on Social Security payrolls, so it would not apply to wage increases above the current taxable maximum of $106,800.Firms will be able to claim the credit on a quarterly basis, which gets money out to businesses quickly and provides and early incentive to hire and increase payrolls. Fact sheet is attached.

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  • Statement by Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Christina Romer on the Advance

    01.29.10 06:47 AM

    The statement below was posted on www.WhiteHouse.gov by the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors Christina Romer in response to the advance estimate of GDP for the Fourth Quarter of 2009. The statement can also be viewed HERE.

    On the Advance Estimate of GDP for the Fourth Quarter of 2009

    Posted by Christina Romer on January 29, 2010 at 09:30 AM EST

    Today’s GDP report is the most positive news to date on the economy. The data show that the total output of the U.S. economy increased strongly in the fourth quarter of 2009. Real GDP (that is, GDP adjusted for inflation) increased at an annual rate of 5.7 percent. The change from the first quarter of 2009, when GDP fell at an annual rate of 6.4 percent, is truly extraordinary; indeed, the three-quarter swing in growth rates was the largest since 1981.

    While positive GDP growth is a necessary first step for job growth, our focus must remain on getting Americans back to work. That GDP rose strongly in the fourth quarter of last year while employment fell and the workweek increased only slightly emphasizes the need for policy actions designed to help spur private sector job creation. The President is announcing today the specifics of his plan for a small business jobs and wages tax cut. This policy is designed to encourage businesses to respond to rising demand and output by taking the plunge and hiring new workers again.

    Part of the rapid growth in real GDP was due to a substantial rise in inventory investment. This inventory bounce, though likely to be transitory, is a normal part of healthy recoveries. As firms’ confidence in the future increases, their desire to run down inventories wanes. This change in behavior is often a powerful force for growth early in a recovery. Other components of GDP also rose strongly: business investment in equipment and software rose at an annual rate of 13 percent and residential investment rose at a 6 percent rate. And consumer spending rose at a rate of 2 percent. This broad-based rise in GDP was surely fueled in part by the tax cuts and investment spending in the Recovery Act and other rescue actions, but some appears to be the result of private sector demand returning.

    As always, it is important not to read too much into a single report, positive or negative. There will surely be bumps in the road ahead, and we will need to continue to take responsible actions to ensure that the recovery is as smooth and robust as possible. Nonetheless, today’s report is a welcome piece of encouraging news.

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  • Remarks by the President on a Jobs Tax Credit in Baltimore, Maryland

    01.29.10 09:05 AM

    11:21 A.M. EST

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, everybody. Thank you so much. I’ve got a couple of introductions that I want to make very quickly.

    First, I want to thank Terry and his family for greeting me here today. And I want to thank Terry and Joe for giving us a tour of Chesapeake Machine Company. In addition we’ve got Secretary Ray LaHood, Secretary of Transportation — where is he? Ray, way in the back — he’s waving. We’ve got your governor, Martin O’Malley, in the house. (Applause.) We’ve got, I believe, your outstanding senator, Barbara Mikulski. (Applause.) A couple of great members of Congress, Congressman John Sarbanes — (applause) — and Congressman Elijah Cummings. (Applause.) And we’ve got council president Stephanie Rawlings Blake, your next mayor of Baltimore. (Applause.)

    Now, I was thrilled to get the tour. First of all, I just like getting out of the White House; and then I like tooling around companies that are actually making stuff. And I want to tell you all I’m very impressed with the work that you do. And, you know, I have to say that when you get out of Washington and you come here it’s nice to see a functioning, well-oiled machine — that’s a nice change of pace from what we see sometimes up in Washington.

    As we stand here today, our country is still reeling from a recession that’s as tough, as deep and as dire as anything that we’ve known for generations. And I don’t need to tell you a lot of families are hurting out there; businesses are struggling; one in 10 Americans can’t find work. So I know that during these tough times, folks at this company feel relatively lucky to be working — even when the work is hard and the days are long, because everybody knows that there’s somebody out there who’s not as fortunate — a friend or a neighbor, maybe even a husband or a wife.

    But even in the face of these challenges, we have reason to remain hopeful. As I was listening to Terry and Joe talk about some of the business opportunities that are out there for solar panel construction and high-speed rail construction, the great work that they’re doing on behalf of our troops as part of a contract — all those things are going to be making a difference. And it points to the possibilities of sustainable growth.

    And the fact is we’re standing in a very different place than we were just a year ago. Just last year, businesses were cutting 700,000 jobs per month. The markets were plummeting. Many people feared another Great Depression. Today, we’ve stopped the flood of job losses, we’ve stabilized the financial system, and we can safely say that we’ve avoided that looming depression.

    This morning we received a report that affirms our progress — and the swift and aggressive actions that made it possible. We learned that the economy grew over the past three months at a rate of 5.7 percent. Now, just to give you a sense of perspective there, that’s the fastest economic growth in six years, and it’s a stark improvement over the rapid and terrible decline that we were experiencing one year ago.

    Earlier this week, I spoke to Congress and the American people about the steps that we took to pull us out of this nosedive. Through the Recovery Act, we cut taxes for 95 percent of working families. You guys may not have noticed it in your paychecks, but each month it’s a little bit bigger because of those tax cuts that we put in. Two million families just in this state of Maryland have benefited.

    We cut taxes for college students and first-time homebuyers and small businesses. We made health insurance cheaper through COBRA. So some of you know friends or family members who’ve lost their jobs but they kept their health insurance because COBRA was 65 percent cheaper than it would have otherwise been. And we extended unemployment insurance for folks who have lost their jobs, including more than 200,000 people here in Maryland. We’ve created and saved 2 million jobs. That’s 2 million teachers and firefighters, police officers, builders, manufacturing workers, and others who are on the job today because of some of the steps that we took.

    Now, I’ve got to admit, not all the steps we took were great politics. You know, I talked about this a little bit at my State of the Union. If you were going to list the hundred most popular things that I have done as President, being married to Michelle Obama is number one. Bailing out banks and rescuing failing auto companies doesn’t make the list. Those things weren’t popular. But I didn’t run for President just to do what was popular. I ran for President to do what was right for the country.

    In the midst of a really bad recession and the possibility of financial meltdown, preventing the collapse of our banks and with it the access to lending and credit — and preventing hundreds of thousands of job losses that would have followed the collapse of two of our major automakers — that was the right thing to do. It was the right thing to do; it was the necessary thing to do. It might have not been popular, and I sure didn’t like doing it, but it was the right thing to do. And as bad as the damage has been in this recession, without those actions the damage could have been far more extensive.

    Now, even though the storms of the past two years are starting to lessen, the wreckage that’s been left behind remains. While the Recovery Act has created and saved 2 million jobs, this recession has cost us 7 million jobs. So there’s still a big gap — still a big hole that we have to fill. And it represents a terrible human tragedy, as families are thrown into hardship and uncertainty. But the good news is, today’s report means that we’re increasing GDP, we’re increasing economic growth. That means businesses are going to start to see more customers, and hopefully even here at Chesapeake you might start seeing enough orders that you start needing to hire that extra shift. That could make a big difference.

    Now, in the meantime, though, there are a lot of folks who are still out of work and what they’re saying is, when am I going to get some help, when am I going to get some relief? For these folks, a good job is the only good news that matters.

    And that’s why when I spoke to the nation earlier this week; I called on Congress to pass a jobs bill without delay. And this jobs bill should start where most new jobs do, in America’s small businesses — companies like this one.

    Today, I’m proposing what I believe is the best way to cut taxes while promoting hiring by small businesses: through a tax credit for companies that add workers or increase salaries this year. Now is the perfect time for this kind of incentive because the economy is growing, but businesses are still hesitant to start hiring again. The economy is growing, but job growth is lagging. Companies are recovering but not yet taking that next step and taking on somebody full time. And while businesses will always be the engines of job creation in this country, government can create the conditions for those businesses to expand and hire more workers.

    So here’s how the tax credit would work. Employers, like Terry, would get a tax credit of up to $5,000 for each and every employee that they add in 2010, and you would get a tax break for increases in salaries as well. So if you raise wages for employees making under $100,000, we’d refund your payroll taxes for every dollar that you increase those wages faster than inflation.

    So this is a simple, easy to understand mechanism that will cut taxes for more than 1 million small businesses. It’ll give them an incentive to hire more people and a little bit of extra money to pay higher wages, to expand work hours, or invest in their company. And in order to get this incentive working quickly, employers would actually be able to receive this money every quarter, as opposed to waiting a whole year to see it benefit their taxes. So the Chesapeake Machine Company is a perfect example. I understand, Terry, that you may be thinking about hiring a couple of new workers this year. Well, this tax credit could help you do it and it would mean $5,000 per worker that you hire.

    Now, it’s true that in some instances this tax credit will go to businesses that were going to hire folks anyway. But then, it simply becomes a tax cut for small businesses that will spur investment and expansion. And that’s a good thing, too. And that’s why this type of tax cut is considered by economists — who rarely agree on anything — to be one of the most cost-effective ways of accelerating job growth, especially because we will include provisions to prevent people from gaming the system. So, for example, you won’t get a tax credit for doubling your workforce while cutting the hours of each worker in half. We’re not going to let you game the system to take advantage of the tax credit, unless you’re doing right by your workers.

    Now, finally, this is only one part of the jobs package that I’ve proposed. I’m also calling for additional investments in infrastructure. We were just talking, Terry and I were — and Joe — we were just talking about the fact that part of their business right now has to do with rail lines and doing some work for Amtrak. We were just talking about the fact that part of it has to do with solar companies. Well, we want to increase our investment in clean energy.

    All of this is going to create jobs in the short term, while helping our economy in the long run. And I’ve proposed taking some of the money that went to the big banks on Wall Street to help bolster the financial system and give it to smaller community banks that lend to small businesses like Chesapeake, because too many companies that I’m seeing out there still can’t find affordable credit.

    The House of Representatives has passed a jobs bill that includes some of these proposals. I expect the Senate to do the same. I’m open to any good ideas from Democrats or Republicans. In fact, several members of Congress have proposed tax breaks for businesses similar to what I’ve proposed, and I’m looking forward to working with them. The key thing is it’s time to put America back to work.

    We’ve had two very tough years. And while these proposals will create jobs all across America, we’ve got a long way to go to make up for the millions of jobs that we lost in this recession. And I don’t have to tell folks in Baltimore that even before this recession hit, the middle class was facing real hardships: stagnant incomes, rising costs, growing economic security [sic]. So rebuilding this economy and rebuilding — and rebuilding it stronger than before — will take time and it’s going to take hard work and vigilance.

    But I know we can do it. You don’t need to look any further than the folks here at this company. In one form or another, people have been working and building right here for nearly a century — starting back when Terry’s grandfather was calling the shots.

    In good times and bad, through storms and still waters, men like you have gotten up and women like you have gotten up and gone to work and put in long days and headed home. You’re a little tired, but you’re glad for the opportunity to make a living, while helping this country become the most productive, innovative economy in the world. Small businesses have powered our economy in the past. They are fostering our recovery today. I have no doubt if we support you that small businesses like this one will lead us to more prosperous days ahead.

    So thanks for all the great work you do. Thanks for hosting me. I know you guys probably had to fuss a little bit to get ready for us. But I can tell you, from my perspective at least, it was a great visit. I appreciate everything you do. Good luck. (Applause.)

    END
    11:34 A.M. EST

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  • Statement by President Obama on Earned Income Tax Credit Awareness Day

    01.29.10 01:18 PM

    During these difficult economic times, America’s working families are struggling to make ends meet and they deserve relief — especially during tax season. The Earned Income Tax Credit gives millions of working families the break they need, and thanks to the Recovery Act, more Americans will qualify for an even larger credit than ever before. The Recovery Act expanded the Earned Income Tax Credit for larger families struggling to get by and cut the marriage penalty that millions of families face. But too many Americans are not aware that they qualify for the credit, so I urge people to visit www.irs.gov, where you can also learn more about other tax breaks available for working Americans this year.

    ###

    On average, one in four eligible taxpayers fails to claim EITC. Today, we’ll continue to spread the word about the credit and if you are eligible. Nationally, community organizations sponsor 12,000 free tax help sites, staffed by IRS-trained volunteers. The IRS itself will have Saturday service tomorrow (Jan. 30) as well as two Saturdays in February at selected sites to help EITC taxpayers. To learn more about these resources, please visit www.irs.gov. In addition, IRS hosts Free File, a free software service that lets you prepare and e-file your federal tax return. See www.irs.gov/freefile for details.

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