Author: Lynn Sweet

  • Obama calls Hu

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    For Immediate Release April 1, 2010

    Readout of the President’s Call with President Hu of China

    Tonight, President Obama spoke with President Hu of China for about an hour. President Obama welcomed the decision by President Hu to attend the upcoming Nuclear Security Summit which will be an important opportunity for them to address their shared interest in stopping nuclear proliferation and protecting against nuclear terrorism. They also discussed the importance of developing a positive bilateral relationship. President Obama underscored the importance of working together to ensure that Iran lives up to its international obligations. He also emphasized the importance of the United States and China along with other major economies implementing the G20 commitments designed to produce balanced and sustainable growth.

    ###

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 2, 2010. To Charlotte, N.C.

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    April 1, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

    FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 2010

    In the morning, the President will travel to Charlotte, North Carolina, where he will deliver remarks on jobs and the economy and host a discussion with workers at Celgard, LLC – A Polypore Company. The President will use the visit to the advanced battery technology manufacturer, which is now hiring and expanding its operation through a Recovery Act grant, to point to the economic progress made since he took office and continue his push for Congress to build on that progress by acting on his additional job creation proposals. This event is open press.

    The President will return to Washington, DC in the afternoon.

    In-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: CBS

    Print: Financial Times

    Radio: VOA

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: CBS

    Print: Wall Street Journal

    Radio: NPR

    EDT

    8:30AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    9:45AM THE PRESIDENT departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Charlotte, North Carolina

    In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 9:00AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Call Time 8:45AM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

    11:05AM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Charlotte, North Carolina

    Charlotte Douglas International Airport

    Open Press

    11:45AM THE PRESIDENT tours the Celgard manufacturing facilities

    Celgard, LLC

    Travel Pool Coverage

    11:55AM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks on jobs and the economy and hosts discussion with workers

    Celgard, LLC

    Open Press

    1:40PM THE PRESIDENT departs Charlotte, North Carolina en route Andrews Air Force Base

    Charlotte Douglas International Airport

    Open Press

    2:45PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at Andrews Air Force Base

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage

    In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 1:00PM – Briefing Room)

    ##

  • Obama raises millions at Boston DNC fund raisers. Pool report, transcript

    Pool report, transcript……

    First some background on the two fund-raising events.
    According to a Democratic source, the DNC is expecting to raise $2.5 million from both.
    The first was a standing-room only reception at the State Room in Boston. About 800 people in attendance. Ticket prices ranged from $200 to $1,000.
    The second event was a dinner at the Boston Opera House. Ticket price: $30,400 per couple. A total of 150 people were in attendance.
    At the State Room event, potus was preceded by DNC chair Tim Kaine and Mass. Gov. Deval Patrick.
    Patrick, in his introduction, said Democrats can “stand up straight” after passing “the most sweeping reform of healthcare in the history of this country.”
    “That is something to be proud of,” the governor said.
    Obama got a raucous welcome when he stepped to the lectern.
    “Keep smiling!” someone shouted from the crowd.
    “I can’t help it,” potus said.
    He took note of various members of the Mass. congressional delegation and others in the audience, including Vicki Kennedy.
    Talking about the passage of healthcare, he said, “we did what our friend Teddy would have done. We kept up the fight. … We finally passed comprehensive healthcare reform in America.”
    The audience clapped and potus added: “As Joe Biden said, who has a way with words ….”
    The crowd began to laugh. “He said it’s a big deal.”
    Potus chided pundits who’ve questioned certain unpopular decisions, such as the bailout of financial institutions.
    “Pundits in Washington kept saying, ‘What’s he doing?’ …. Doesn’t he know it will make him vulnerable?’ Well, yes. Turns out I’ve got pollsters, too. We usually know what’s going to be unpopular before the newspapers do. But I also knew that if you govern by pundits and polls, then you lose sight of why you got into public service in the first place. … ”
    Potus rattled off what he described as major achievements, from the new arms control treaty with Russia to substantial investments in clean energy.
    But he conceded the political culture in Washington still needs work.
    “Even though we’ve had some success overcoming political gridlock, we haven’t had as much success in changing political gridlock. We have to admit that. I want to change the tone in Washington. It hasn’t changed. Not yet.”
    He added:
    “We’re going to have to change our politics. For all our efforts, change can’t come fast enough for so many Americans. They look at Washington and see a city that’s just obsessed with red versus blue … And everyday is election day. There are stories right now, ‘We polled Obama in 2012!’ I’m not joking. People writing entire columns …”’
    We’re holding now at the Opera House, a beautiful venue with tables arranged on the stage, beneath soft blue lighting.

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _________________________________________________________________________________________________

    For Immediate Release April 1, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT

    AT DNC DINNER

    Boston Opera House

    Boston, Massachusetts

    8:55 P.M. EDT

    THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody! Have a seat, have a seat. (Applause.) Thank you. Thank you. (Applause.) Please, everybody be seated.

    Let me just begin by acknowledging some great friends. First of all, somebody who I consider one of the finest governors in the country, and somebody who I know you guys are going to reelect — Governor Deval Patrick is in the house. (Applause.)

    To the Massachusetts congressional delegation — I see Ed Markey here, but I want to — I know I saw Congressman Delahunt and Capuano earlier. They have shown such courage and have stuck to it in some very difficult circumstances, and are consistently showing the kind of leadership we need. We now got Barney Frank who is about to make sure that we’ve got financial regulatory reform, which is going to be so critical. (Applause.) So to your congressional delegation, please give them a big round of applause — and Ed Markey in particular. (Applause.)

    To my dear friend who has been a constant source of inspiration — Vicki Kennedy is here, and I want everybody to give her a big round of applause. (Applause.) And to all of you who co-chaired this elegant event — I assure you I will not break out into song. (Laughter.)

    I want to thank Tim Kaine for not only the generous introduction, not only for being an extraordinary governor of the Commonwealth of Virginia, but also now being one of the best leaders of our party that we’ve ever had. Some of you may know Tim Kaine was the first person, the first elected official outside of Illinois, to endorse me when I announced my presidential race — (applause) — on the steps of the old capitol of the Confederacy, in Richmond, in February of 2007, where most people couldn’t pronounce my name. And there was no political gain for him in doing it. He just stepped out because he thought it was the right thing to do. And that’s the kind of person that Tim Kaine has always been. He is decent; he is smart; he is principled. And to have somebody like that leading our party makes me feel better and it should make you feel a lot better, too. So, thank you. (Applause.)

    Very quickly, I want to say obviously that our hearts go out to all the families who’ve been affected by the recent flooding throughout New England. I was at the emergency center where Deval walked me through the steps that are being taken coordinating state, local, and federal resources. We hope that the worst is behind us, but it’s at moments like this where leadership is tested. And as usual, Deval has passed with flying colors.

    It’s also at moments like this — I spoke to a larger group before I came here — that we are reminded of the value of government. There is this notion afoot that somehow it’s cool to be cynical about government. And then you go into this emergency center and you see these extraordinarily dedicated people working 24 hours a day, seven days a week, just to help others. And they’re not making a lot of money doing it. But they’re dedicated, they care, and it’s a reminder that we are not just individuals out there pursuing our own self-interest — we’re also a community, we’re also neighbors, we’re also friends. And those values that we care so deeply about, they need to express themselves through our government as well.

    And so it’s something that is worth remembering. And I want to thank all the local and state officials who’ve been working so diligently, as well as our federal officials for doing what’s so important. (Applause.)

    Most of you are dear friends. I have known you through good times and tough times. The event right before we came here was held — Deval, what’s the name of that place?

    GOVERNOR PATRICK: The State Room.

    THE PRESIDENT: The State Room. This room holds a special place in my heart because this is the room where I appeared before a whole bunch of supporters here in Boston the day after I lost the New Hampshire primary. You remember that? A bunch of you guys remember that. Marianne was there; a whole bunch of folks were there.

    Most of the folks who were our supporters in Boston had gone up to New Hampshire to trudge around and knock on doors and help to organize for the primary. And everybody had been on this euphoria coming out of Iowa. Remember, Jane? Everybody thought, oh, my goodness, this is — you know, everybody was talking about McCain already, and measuring the drapes. (Laughter.)

    And although everybody worked hard, nobody took it for granted, I do think that there was just sort of a giddiness that was unhealthy in New Hampshire, which was punctured very quickly. And so one minute everybody was full of glee and the next moment everybody was looking down. And New Hampshire was where I made the speech talking about, “yes, we can,” that ended up winning a Grammy for Will.i.am — (laughter) — I didn’t get a share of this. (Laughter.)

    But I remember going to that room and saying to folks, you know, I know this sounds like revisionist history, I know it sounds like I’m just trying to put some spin on something. I won’t lie to you — I would have preferred to have won — but, I said, I actually think in the long run this will be a good thing. And the reason I said that was because running for President is such an incredible honor, and the task you are setting for yourself in being President is so profound that it shouldn’t be easy. You shouldn’t glide into that job.

    The American people expect, rightly, that their President will have been tested. And the reason is is because they’re tested all the time. They’re tested when they lose their job. They’re tested when they’re trying to scramble to put together enough savings to send their kids to college. They’re tested when somebody in the family gets sick and it turns out that the insurance doesn’t cover everything that they’re doing. They’re tested in all sorts of ways that aren’t always easy to anticipate.

    And so the least they can expect is that somebody who has the audacity and the megalomania to run for President is going to — is going to be put through the paces. And folks want to see, well, we’re not going to just hand this to you, we want to see that you can bounce back. We want to see that you have the resilience and the determination to help guide this country through what folks at that time knew was going to be a very difficult period for our country.

    And so it was fascinating to me to be back in that room with many of the same supporters, because it was a reminder of what this past year-and-a-half has been about.

    A lot of people have asked, why is it you seem so calm? And what I’ve tried to say often — and a lot of times this gets discounted in the press — is that the experience of having traveled throughout this country; having learned the stories of ordinary folks who are doing extraordinary things in their communities, in their neighborhoods; having met all the people who put so much energy and effort into our campaign; having seen the ups and downs and having seen how Washington was always the last to get what was going on, always the last to get the news — what that told me was that if we were willing to not do what was expedient, and not do what was convenient, and not try to govern based on the polls today or tomorrow or the next day, but rather based on a vision for how we can rebuild this country in a way that works for everybody — if we are focused on making sure that there are ladders of opportunity for people to continue to strive and achieve the American Dream and that that’s accessible to all, not just some — if we kept our eye on what sort of future do we want for our kids and our grandkids so that 20 years from now and 30 years from now people look back on this generation the way we look back on the Greatest Generation and say to ourselves, boy, they made some tough decisions, they got through some tough times, but, look, we now have a clean energy economy; look, our schools are revitalized; look, our health care system works for every single American — imagine how tough that was and how much resistance they met from the special interests, but they were still willing to do it — if that was how we governed, then I figure that the politics would take care of itself.

    And if it didn’t, then we could still stand tall and still look at ourselves in the mirror and say, you know what, this was worth it. This is why we worked so hard to get here.

    That’s what this last year has been about. And I want you to know now that’s what this next year will be about. And that’s what the year after that will be about. Because we’ve got a lot of work to do. When we signed up — and I say “we” because all of you guys were early investors. Many of you didn’t just write a check but you bled this stuff, and many of you over the last year have had to answer aggravated e-mails from people, or political advice — I’m sure you get those e-mails — “Please tell the President that if he just” — (laughter.) Right? I know. I get them, too. (Laughter.) We should expect that it’s going to continue to be hard.

    These November elections, as Tim said, will be hard — partly because this country is still divided, and after 2006 and 2008 we hit a very high watermark in terms of Democratic representation in Congress and governorships and we’re in the midst of what is still a very difficult time. And we’ve got more work to do — we are not finished.

    We have to have an energy policy that works for the future. (Applause.) We don’t have an option. We can pretend like we’ve got an option, and we can resort to simplification and say, well, you know what, if we just open up drilling everywhere and have no regulatory oversight whatsoever, that somehow it’s all going to work itself out. Or we can simplify it by saying that — by denying the fact that it’s going to take some time for us to get up to full capacity on clean energy and we need some breakout technologies in order to make that full transition. So we can play politics with this and take comfort in our own certainties. But the truth of the matter is this is a big, complicated task and it’s going to require us to work really hard.

    And there is going to be a lot of resistance from a whole range of special interests. And there are going to be legitimate geographical differences that exist when it comes to energy policy. And so we’re going to have to work that through.

    And when it comes to education, my Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, I think is doing an extraordinary job. (Applause.) And one of the things that has not gotten much attention is the way that we have started to bridge some of the traditional differences between the left and the right and said, yes, we want standards and we want reform; and, yes, we need more resources as well; and, yes, everybody is going to have to change — parents and teachers and students and principals and elected officials and communities. But slowly we are making progress in that direction.

    And one of the unsung aspects of last week was me — or this week, in fact, was me being able to sign legislation that really puts higher education into the hands of every single young person that is committed to excelling in this country in a way that hasn’t been done in years. (Applause.)

    But it’s still going to be hard. We’re not going to change the schools overnight. We have fallen behind on too many measures and it’s going to require us to keep moving.

    And we’re going to have to continue to work on health care. I know people may not want to hear that, but what we’ve done is we’ve enshrined a principle that every single person in this country should not be bankrupt when they get sick; that every child who’s got a preexisting condition, they can get health care; that small businesses who want to do the right thing by their employees, that they’re going to have the capacity to provide health insurance at reasonable rates.

    So we’ve set up a structure and it is a good structure and a sensible structure. And we are going down the path of reducing costs. But there are a lot of decision-makers in a $2 trillion health care system. There are doctors and hospitals and nurses and physician assistants and there are those of us as consumers. And that process of making the system work smarter and better so that we’re all leading healthier lives, and that the states and federal governments aren’t bankrupted — that’s going to take a lot of work. It’s going to be an ongoing project.

    And that’s all just on the domestic side. And we’ve got challenges in terms of bringing about peace in the Middle East. And we’ve got challenges in dealing with nuclear proliferation. And we’ve got challenges in making sure that we complete getting our troops out of Iraq and that we complete our mission in Afghanistan — and the extraordinary sacrifices that young men and women are making there as we speak, that they know they are supported not only by the resources they need but also by a smart strategy in diplomacy and all the elements of American power that go into keeping America safe and secure.

    All these things are going to require a steadfast attitude. And they’re going to require that all of us occasionally stand up to the immediate winds that are blowing out there. But I’m so confident that we can achieve it. I’m so confident we can get it done. And part of the reason I’m confident is because we’ve traveled this path before and we’ve got it done before — not because of me, but because all of you have been willing to stick with this process.

    And I think that over time, I just have so much faith and confidence in the American people and their ability even when they’re anxious, even when they’re scared, even when they’re uncertain, to ultimately have an instinct about what is right — not just right for them individually, not just right for them in the here and now, but what’s right for them over the long term; what’s right for the country over the long term; what’s right for the next generation and not just for the next election.

    And that’s a hard sense to maintain in this political environment. Some of you saw the speech I gave up in Portland. I started joking about imagine if the Washington press corps were on a farm, and you till the soil, and they would say, “Look, the soil is all broken up, something is wrong.” (Laughter.) And then you’d put the seeds in and cover it up, and the next day they’d have the cameras there and “Nothing is growing!” (Laughter.) It’s — there are no crops. We’re going to starve. (Laughter.)

    That’s just the nature of the environment that we’re in right now. But we’ve got to keep the long view. That’s our task. That’s what this project has always been about. When you helped me get elected President, that wasn’t the end. That was the beginning. That wasn’t the hard part; that was the easy part. This is the hard part. But this is also the worthy part.

    A lot of people win elections. But I’ll tell you, the day that we passed health care in the House — you know, I had been in the Roosevelt Room watching it with my team, and I invited everybody up to the residence to celebrate that evening. And we were out on the Truman Balcony looking at the Washington Monument and, beyond that, the Jefferson Monument. And I looked around and I saw these incredible people, most of them a lot younger than me, who had just poured their heart and soul into this effort — and you could see the sense on their part that somehow, some way, working together they had put their shoulders against the wheel of history and moved it in a more just and a more fair direction.

    What incredible satisfaction that was — because not only did I know that it was going to be helping all those people who write me letters and talk about all the things that they’re burdened with in their lives; it also told me that all those people, all those young people on my balcony, they’re going to believe once again that you can change the country for the better. (Applause.)

    That’s the great gift that all of you have given in this process. That’s what your support means. That’s what I’m going to ask you to continue in the weeks and months and years to come, as fellow travelers in this effort for us to perfect our union.

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

    END 9:18 P.M. EDT

  • Obama pitches new health law in Portland, Maine. Transcript

    Office of the Press Secretary
    _____________________________________________________________________________________________
    For Immediate Release April 1, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
    ON HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM

    Portland Expo
    Portland, Maine

    3:17 P.M. EDT

    THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Portland! (Applause.) Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you, Portland.

    AUDIENCE: Yes we can! Yes we can! Yes we can!

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you, everybody. Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you, everybody.

    Well, what a wonderful — I guess when the sun comes out around here, everybody gets pretty excited. (Applause.)

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: I love you!

    THE PRESIDENT: I love you back. (Applause.)

    Now, I have to say, the last time I was in Maine was before the caucuses. (Applause.) It was a little cooler here — (laughter) — as I recall. But it is wonderful to be back. There are some people I want to say a few nice things about.

    First of all, we could not have a better Small Business Administrator than your own neighbor, Karen Mills. And so please give her a huge round of applause. (Applause.) She’s doing a great job. I think she has more than a few folks from Maine on her staff. She’s kind of stocked them all over the place. And everybody is doing a great job over at the SBA. I want to thank —

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: Thank you!

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. (Applause.) I want to thank one of the finest governors in the country, John Baldacci, who is here. (Applause.) Thank you, John. Where is he? There he is right there. Thank you. (Applause.)

    Your outstanding mayor Nick Mavodones is here. (Applause.) And we’ve got two great champions from Maine whose tireless efforts have helped working families all across this state and all across this country — Congresswoman Chellie Pingree and Congressman Mike Michaud. (Applause.)

    All right, it is good to be back in Maine. (Applause.) And I want everybody to remember, when I came here during the campaign, I made a promise. And it wasn’t a promise about any particular issue. It was a promise that our government would once again be responsive to the needs and aspirations of working families, of America’s middle class. It was a promise that Washington would concern itself not just with the next election, but with the next generation of Americans. (Applause.)

    Now, keeping that promise is even more critical now, at a time when so many families and so many small business owners are still struggling here in Maine and all across the country. Every time I visit with workers in a factory, or families in a diner; every time I sit down and read letters from Americans across the country, I see and hear the same questions. Folks are asking, “How am I going to find a job when I’ve only known one skill my entire lifetime and I just got laid off and I’m in my fifties? How am I going to retire when I keep spending my savings just to get by, or trying to make sure that my kid can go to college and tuition keeps on going up? How am I going to make it when I’m stretched to the limits on my mortgage and on my bills?” Those are the questions that I hear.

    And I want you to know we are working every single day to spur job creation and to turn this economy around. That’s why we worked so hard over the last year to lift one of the biggest burdens facing middle-class families and small business owners, and that is the crushing cost of health care right here in America. (Applause.)

    And Mainers, I want you to know that last week, after a year of debate and a century of trying, health insurance reform became the law of the land — last week. (Applause.) Last week.

    AUDIENCE: Yes we did! Yes we did! Yes we did!

    THE PRESIDENT: Yes we did. Because of folks like Chellie and Mike, it happened. (Applause.) Because of people like you, it happened. It happened because people had the courage to stand up at town hall meetings and talk about how insurance companies were denying their families coverage because of a preexisting condition. It happened because folks wrote letters about how premiums have gone up 50 or 70 or 100 percent, in some cases, and it was forcing them to give up their insurance. It happened because countless small business owners and families and doctors shared stories about a health care system that was working better for the insurance industry than it did for American people.

    And when the special interests sent an army of lobbyists to Congress and blanketed the airwaves with millions of dollars in negative ads, all of you mobilized and organized and you refused to give up. And when the pundits were obsessed over what the polls were saying and who was up and who was down, and what would this mean for Democrats or Republicans, you never lost sight of what was right and what was wrong. (Applause.) You knew it wasn’t about the fortunes of one party, it was about the future of our country. (Applause.) And today, Portland, because of what you did, the future looks stronger and more hopeful than it has in some time.

    Now, over the last year, there’s been a lot of misinformation spread about health reform. There’s been a lot of fear-mongering, a lot of overheated rhetoric. You turned on the news, you’d see that those same folks who were hollering about it before it passed, they’re still hollering, about how the world will end because we passed this bill. (Laughter.) This is not an exaggeration. John Boehner called the passage of this bill —

    AUDIENCE: Booo!

    THE PRESIDENT: — no need to — we don’t need to boo, I just want to give the facts — called this passage of this bill “Armageddon.” You had others who said this is the end of freedom as we know it.

    So after I signed the bill, I looked around. (Laughter and applause.) I looked up at the sky to see if asteroids were coming. (Laughter.) I looked at the ground to see if cracks had opened up in the earth. You know what, it turned out it was a pretty nice day. (Laughter and applause.) Birds were still chirping. Folks were strolling down the street. Nobody had lost their doctor. Nobody had pulled the plug on Granny. (Laughter.) Nobody was being dragged away to be forced into some government-run health care plan.

    But the thing is, though, you have to love some of the pundits in Washington. Every single day since I signed the reform law, there’s been another poll or headline that said “Nation still divided on health care reform. Polls haven’t changed yet.” Well, yeah. It just happened last week. (Laughter and applause.) It’s only been a week. (Applause.)

    Can you imagine if some of these reporters were working on a farm? (Laughter.) You planted some seeds, and they came out the next day, and they looked, and nothing’s happened! (Laughter and applause.) There’s no crop! We’re going to starve! Oh, no! (Applause.) It’s a disaster! (Laughter.)

    It’s been a week, folks. (Laughter.) So before we find out if people like health care reform, we should wait to see what happens when we actually put it into place. Just a thought. (Applause.)

    Now, look, this reform is not going to solve every problem with our health care system. It is a huge, complicated piece of business — a couple of trillion dollars, thousands of people affected, thousands of people working in the industry. It’s not going to bring down the cost of health care overnight. We’re going to have to make some adjustments along the way. But it represents enormous progress. It enshrines the principle that every American should have the security of decent care; and that nobody should go bankrupt because they’ve got a kid who’s sick with a preexisting condition — (applause) — that small businesses shouldn’t be burdened because they want to do the right thing by their employee. So now that this bill is finally law and all the folks who have been playing politics will finally have to confront the reality of what this reform is, they’re also going to have to confront the reality of what it isn’t.

    They’ll have to finally acknowledge that this isn’t a government takeover of our health care system. They’ll see that if Americans like their doctor, they will keep their doctor. And if you like your insurance plan, you will keep it. No one will be able to take that away from you. It hasn’t happened yet. It won’t happen in the future.

    What this reform represents is basically a middle-of-the-road solution to a very serious problem. It’s not single-payer. Some people wanted that, I understood that, but that is not — (applause) — see? But — so it’s not that. But it’s also not what the Republicans were advocating for, which is essentially that you completely deregulate the insurance industry, you let them run wild, and that somehow you are going to benefit. That was their theory. It was called the “foxes guarding the chicken coop” health care plan. (Applause.)

    So it’s not the plan that some on the left supported in the past. It’s not what some on the right supported, but it is a commonsense plan. This reform incorporates ideas from both Democrats and Republicans — including, by the way, a number of ideas from your senator and somebody I consider a friend, Olympia Snowe, who spent many hours meeting with me on this bill. (Applause.)

    And what this reform does is it builds on the system of private health insurance that we’ve already got, so that if you have insurance, this reform will make it more secure and more affordable. If you can’t afford insurance or if you’ve been denied coverage, you’re finally going to be able to get it. And over time, costs will come down for families, businesses, and the federal government, reducing our deficit by more than $1 trillion over the next two decades. That’s what this reform will do. (Applause.)

    Now, Portland, it will take about four years to implement this entire plan, because we’ve got to do it responsibly, we need to get it right. But there’s also a set of reforms that will take effect this year. So I just want to — I want everybody to understand what’s going to happen this year.

    Starting this year, millions of small business owners are going to be eligible for a tax credit that will help them cover the cost of insurance for their employees. (Applause.) And let me talk about — let me talk about what this means for a small business owner like Bill Milliken. (Applause.) Bill, stand up. (Applause.) That’s Bill right there. (Applause.) Now, I want to give a little plug to Bill here. (Laughter.) Bill owns Market House Coffee and the Maine Beer and Beverage Corporation, both here, right here in Portland. (Applause.) In exchange for this publicity, I hope that I’m going to get some samples of the beer. (Laughter and applause.) Okay. He nodded in the affirmative. (Laughter.)

    Now, he wants to give his part-time employees health insurance and he wants to give them more hours, but he can’t do both, he can’t afford to do both. So this tax credit will make it easier for an employer like Bill who wants to do the right thing by his workers.

    Starting now, small business owners like Bill will have the security of knowing that they can qualify for a tax credit that covers up to 35 percent, over a third of what they pay for their employees’ health insurance. And starting now — (applause) — starting now, small business owners that provide health care for their workers can sit down at the end of the week, they can look at their expenses, and they can begin calculating how much money they’re going to save. And for small business owners who don’t currently provide health insurance, they’re going to be able to factor in this new benefit when they’re deciding to do so.

    Now, it won’t solve all our problems, but it means that employees that work for Bill have a better chance of keeping their health care or getting health care. And if they’re already getting health care, it means Bill has got some extra money. That means he might hire that extra worker, right? (Applause.)

    So this health care tax credit is pro-jobs, it’s pro-business, and it starts this year. (Applause.) This month, we’re going to be — this month we’re going to be sending out details on how to apply for this credit to millions of small businesses across the county, but if you want to learn about it today, we’re going to put all the facts on our Web site, www.whitehouse.gov. ; All right? So that happens this year.

    Here’s what else happens this year. Tens of thousands of uninsured Americans with preexisting conditions, and parents whose children have a preexisting condition, will finally be able to purchase the coverage that they need. That happens this year. (Applause.)

    So last week, I met a man named David Gallagher, whose daughter Lauren had written me a letter last year. When Lauren’s mom lost her job, their entire family lost their health insurance. When they tried to get new insurance, David was denied coverage because he once had a complication-free hernia surgery, but the insurance companies wanted to weed him out. They figured, well, the guy has been sick before; we don’t want to have to cover him, we don’t want to bear that risk. So Lauren has been worried sick about what would happen if her father became ill or injured. Now, because of this reform, David Gallagher can finally have access to health insurance again. That begins this year. That starts this year. (Applause.)

    So that’s just one of the insurance reforms that starts this year. Here’s what else happens: Insurance companies won’t be able to drop people’s coverage when they get sick; or place lifetime limits or restrictive annual limits on the amount of care they can receive. (Applause.)

    Now, this isn’t some abstract concept. There was a story in a local paper this week about a woman named Theresa D’Andrea. And Theresa’s husband —

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: D’Andrea.

    THE PRESIDENT: D’Andrea, excuse me. Thank you. Where is she? Are you up there? Stand up. Stand up, Theresa. (Applause.) Now, Theresa’s husband passed away recently from cancer, and before he died, he hit the lifetime cap on his insurance. As a result, Theresa has not only had to cope with the loss of her husband, but with $60,000 in medical bills — and this is after she’s already spent all of their retirement savings on medical care. Now, because of this reform, a situation like Theresa’s won’t happen again in the United States of America. And that’s going to start this year. And we’re inspired by stories like yours. (Applause.)

    Starting this year, all new insurance plans will be required to offer free preventive care. And starting this year — this may interest some of you here — if you are a young person who doesn’t have insurance or doesn’t have a job that offers insurance, you’re going to be able to stay on your parents’ insurance policy until you’re 26 years old, starting this year. Starting this year. (Applause.) So now —

    AUDIENCE MEMBER: Thank you.

    THE PRESIDENT: You’re welcome. (Laughter.) Thank Chellie and Mike. They voted for it. Thank them. (Applause.)

    This year, seniors who fall into the coverage gap known as the doughnut hole — some seniors probably know about that — they’re going to receive $250 to help pay for prescriptions, and that’s just the first step, because what we’re going to be doing is over the next several years closing that gap completely. And I want seniors to know — (applause) — I want seniors to know despite some of the stuff that’s been said out there, these reforms don’t cut into your guaranteed benefits. What they do is eliminate co-payments and deductibles for preventive care, like check-ups and mammograms. You will be getting those for free now. (Applause.)

    This is why AARP supported this bill — because it’s good for seniors. It’s the right thing to do. (Applause.) It’s good for young people. It’s the right thing to do. (Applause.) It’s good for people who’ve hit these lifetime limits. It’s good for people with preexisting conditions. All that — all that happens this year.

    And then, by 2014, each state will set up what we’re calling a health insurance exchange, but it’s basically just a competitive marketplace where uninsured people and small businesses, who right now are out there on their own trying to negotiate with insurance companies, they can now be part of a big pool — millions of people coming together, leveraging their purchasing power, which is going to lower their rates. They’ll get a better deal.

    Walmart, the reason they are able to give you low prices is because they buy and they tell their suppliers, we’re the biggest — we’re a 800-pound gorilla when it comes to whatever product you’re talking about, so you’ve got to give better prices. Well, the same thing is true when it comes to the insurance markets. So everybody who can be part of this pool is going to get a better deal than they would otherwise get.

    And by the way, members of Congress are going to be part of this pool. So you know it’s going to be good because they’re going to have to use it themselves for their own families. (Applause.)

    So that’ll happen in the next few years. And when this exchange is up and running, millions of people are also going to get tax breaks to help them afford coverage. So even though this pool will give you lower rates, you’ll get a better deal, some folks still can’t afford it. So we’re going to give you tax credits to help you afford it. And that adds up to the largest middle-class tax cut in health care in history. That’s what this bill is about. (Applause.)

    So think about it. So think about it. That’s what this is about. We’re setting up a pool using the private market to give people a better deal. We’re giving tax breaks to working people — some of them working two, three jobs who still can’t get insurance — we’re going to give them some help. We’re going to give small businesses help so that they can help their workers and improve their bottom line. And we’ve got a whole bunch of insurance reforms so people like Theresa aren’t going to be disadvantaged and taken advantage of when they need it most. That’s what this bill is. And it’s paid for. And it saves on our deficits. (Applause.)

    Now, this is what everybody has been hollering about as the end of freedom. (Laughter.) And now that it’s passed, they’re already promising, we’re going to repeal it.

    AUDIENCE: Boo!

    THE PRESIDENT: They’re going to run on a platform of repeal in November. And my attitude is, go for it. You try to repeal it. (Applause.)

    I want these members of Congress to come out of Washington, come here to Maine, and tell Mr. Milliken there, you know what, we’re going to take away your tax credits, essentially raise your taxes. If you want to — if they want to do that, be my guest.

    If they want to look at Lauren Gallagher in the eye and tell her they plan to take away her father’s ability to get health insurance, that’s their right. If they want to go tell Theresa that once again you could face a lifetime of debt if you lose a family member, they can run on that platform.

    If they want to have a fight, I welcome that fight, because I don’t believe the American people are going to put the insurance industry back in the driver’s seat. I’m happy to have that argument. (Applause.) I’m happy to have that argument.

    Now, in fairness — and I want to be scrupulously fair — some of them have now said, well, we want to repeal and replace this bill with our brand of insurance reform. But when you poke and prod and you ask them, well, what is it exactly you’re going to replace it with, it turns out they want to deregulate the insurance market. We’ve already been there. We know what that’s like. We’re not going back. We’re not going backwards. This country is ready to move forwards. Portland, Maine, is ready to move forward. (Applause.)

    And while we’re talking about moving forward, I just want to mention one thing. Kind of lost in the shuffle of all this health care debate is the fact that part of the bill that we signed, that I signed this week, is going to provide an additional $68 billion that used to go to banks and financial services companies, and that’s now going to go to the student loan program to expand Pell Grants and to make sure that college is affordable for every young person in America. (Applause.) And I want to know, do they want to repeal that as well, because I’m happy to have that discussion. (Applause.)

    Now, $68 billion — $68 billion — was going to banks and financial institutions. We’ve just taken that money from the banks, from the financial institutions, doubling Pell Grants, making sure that — making sure that young people, if you’ve got debt when you go out of college — and I know I did so you probably do, too — that you will never have to pay more than 10 percent of your income in repayments — (applause) — so that you’re not going broke because you decide to get a college education that makes our economy stronger, that makes America stronger. If they want to repeal that, too, we can have that discussion. (Applause.)

    The road to this victory has been long. It has been — it has been difficult. And it’s absolutely true that because health care is such a complicated issue, a lot of people got worried. A lot of people got scared. And the misinformation seeped in. And then the process was ugly and everybody was arguing and there was all kinds of stuff going on in the Senate and the House, and everybody just said, ah, this looks like a mess.

    I understand that. That’s part of our democracy. This is a — democracy is a messy business. It is the worst form of government except for all the other ones that have been tried. (Laughter and applause.) That’s what Winston Churchill said. That’s what Winston Churchill said — he’s absolutely right. It can be frustrating sometimes, but ultimately that’s what makes our country so great, is because everybody is able to voice their opinions; everybody is able to get out there and organize. (Applause.) And you’re free to call your President an idiot. (Laughter.)

    AUDIENCE: Booo!

    THE PRESIDENT: No, that’s a wonderful thing. As I was driving by, people were waving. Everybody was clapping. And then one guy’s like “Eh.” (Laughter.) He saw me through the window, too, going, “Eh.” (Laughter.) I thought, that’s a great thing about the country. (Applause.)

    Look, but I want everybody to learn the lesson from this debate. In reaching this milestone, it doesn’t represent the end of all our problems. We still have jobs to create and deficits to reduce. We still have children to educate. We still face enormous challenges in this country. Jobs haven’t been returning fast enough, despite everything that we’re doing. The economy is growing again, but people still haven’t been hired back as fast as they need to. Small businesses are still having trouble getting credit out there. So there are all kinds of issues we’re going to have to work on.

    But what this fight has taught us about ourselves and about this country — it’s bigger than any one issue. It reminds us that change is never easy, but it’s always possible. It reminds us that in the United States of America, we still have the power to shape our own destiny. And it reminds us that we, as a people, don’t shrink from a challenge. We don’t shirk our responsibilities. We embrace challenges. (Applause.) We don’t fear the future. We shape the future. That’s what we do. That’s who we are. That’s what you’re about. That’s why you’re here. That’s why I ran for President of the United States of America. That’s what makes us the United States of America. (Applause.)

    Thank you, Portland. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. (Applause.)

    END 3:51 P.M. EDT

  • Durbin hosting export conference in Chicago with top Obama trade chiefs: Locke, Kirk, Hochberg, Mills

    Below, from Durbin……

    CHICAGO – U.S. Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) will host an export promotion forum designed to support job retention and growth among Illinois’ small and medium-sized businesses. The forum will highlight government resources available to businesses interested in expanding export sales into new markets.

    Durbin will be joined by U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke, U.S. Small Business Administrator Karen Mills, U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, and the Export Import Bank of the U.S. Chairman and President Fred Hochberg, who will each discuss how their department or agency can assist small businesses in increasing exports.

    Forum topics will include: identifying target markets and business partners, trade finance, export credit insurance, export working capital loans, and breaking down barriers to exports. Durbin will discuss his proposal to increase funding for export promotion agencies such as the SBA, Department of Commerce, USTR, and the Ex-Im Bank so that small businesses have stronger technical support when they try to expand overseas. The bill is expected to be debated when the Senate reconvenes in mid-April.

    DATE: MONDAY, APRIL 5

    TIME: 10:00 AM to 10:50 AM
    (Remarks / audience Q&A with Durbin, Locke, Mills, Kirk and Hochberg)

    11:00 AM
    (Department/agency representatives discuss resources available to businesses, and four local small businesses share their export success stories)

    LOCATION: Gleacher Center at the University of Chicago
    6th Floor Executive Dining Room
    450 N. Cityfront Plaza Drive
    Chicago, IL
    -30-

  • Dem Mayor Cory Booker, GOP former Sen. Bill Frist join Michelle Obama anti obesity drive

    Updated with full transcript

    Transcript of full call – now including remarks of SENATOR BILL FRIST,MAYOR CORY BOOKER, AND DR. JIM GAVIN:

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the First Lady
    ___________________________________________________________
    Internal Transcript April 1, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY, SENATOR BILL FRIST,
    MAYOR CORY BOOKER, AND DR. JIM GAVIN
    AT FOUNDATION CHAIR ANNOUNCEMENT CONFERENCE CALL

    Via telephone

    11:02 A.M. EDT

    MRS. OBAMA: Well, good morning, everyone. This is Mrs. Obama. It’s good to have you all on the line. Thank you so much for joining us as we take another very important step forward in the work to address America’s childhood obesity crisis. This is a very exciting step for us.

    As all of you know, nearly two months ago we launched this magnificent campaign, “Let’s Move.” The nationwide goal of the effort, as all of you know, is to rally this country around a single and very ambitious goal, and that’s to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation so that children born today will grow up at a healthy weight.

    And with this initiative, we’ve issued a call to action for the nation. We said let’s move in so many ways. We said let’s move to give parents the information that they need to make good decisions for their kids’ health. We said let’s move to get healthier food into our schools. Let’s move to get more supermarkets into underserved areas, so that every single American in this country has access to fresh and nutritious foods. And we’ve also said let’s move to help our kids be more physically active — not just in school but outside of school as well.

    But we were also clear from the very beginning when we launched this effort that the solution to this problem isn’t going to come from Washington. I have had the pleasure of talking to a number of experts around this issue, and not a single one of them has said that the answer to this problem is for the federal government to tell people what to do. This is going to take all of us getting involved.

    It’s going to require a non-partisan effort because there’s nothing partisan about this issue. There’s nothing Democratic or Republican about wanting our kids to lead active and healthy lives. And there’s really nothing liberal or conservative about wanting to reduce the billions of health care dollars we spend each year treating obesity-related conditions.

    Ultimately, this solution is going to be about families and communities making manageable, commonsense changes that fit with their budgets that fit with their needs and their individual goals.

    But we all have to play a role in making this happen. Families can’t do this alone, which is why we’re bringing together governors, and mayors, and parents, and educators, and doctors, and businesses, community groups, all of us. And I’ve spoken to almost all of these groups over the last month asking them to come together to tackle this challenge once and for all.

    And that’s why a new foundation that we’ve created along with this movement — the Partnership for Healthy America — is going to be so critical to these efforts. And I’m very proud of the work that’s been done to pull this foundation together.

    The Foundation is going to serve as an independent, non-partisan player that’ll mobilize the private sector, foundations, government officials, the media and others around the goals of the “Let’s Move” campaign.

    The Foundation will seek truly meaningful commitments from all of these players, and will do something very critical — and that is measure the success of these efforts and hold us all accountable.

    The Foundation is going to also connect potential partners from the public, private and non-profit sectors, working to support the best, the most innovative programs in our communities — and working to replicate these success stories all across the country. And that’s really the key to this. As I’ve traveled around, we have many of the answers already at our fingertips. If you go into states and cities across this country, many are already working to bring their local solutions to this problem. We need to highlight and elevate those successes. This Foundation is going to be critical in playing a role in that. So it’s very exciting.

    I have agreed to serve as the honorary chair of this Foundation. And today, I am pleased and very proud to announce that two incredibly outstanding individuals — Mayor Cory Booker and Senator Bill Frist — have agreed to serve as the Foundation’s honorary vice chairs.

    As all of you know, Senator Frist and Mayor Booker are both distinguished public servants who are passionately committed to the health and well-being of not just our young people but this country.

    Over the past four years, Mayor Booker has made tremendous strides transforming the city of Newark. He’s done work to increase affordable housing, doing a fabulous job of reducing crime in the city, renovating the parks, playgrounds and recreation centers to provide safe places for children in the city to be active. And he’s committed to making Newark a model for what a city can do to address childhood obesity.

    So I’m so happy to have Mayor Booker with us. I’m thrilled that he’s agreed to bring the kind of energy, that contagious energy that he has, to focus on this issue and lead this new Foundation.

    In addition to being a renowned heart surgeon and lung transplant surgeon, Senator Frist served, as you all know, as the Senate Majority Leader from 2003 to 2007.

    Since he left the Senate, he’s devoted himself to health and humanitarian efforts around the world, leading medical mission trips to Africa and founding an organization called Hope Through Healing Hands to improve health care in developing nations.

    In the Senate, he took the lead in sponsoring legislation to address childhood obesity, and I am truly delighted that he’s agreed to bring his passion and expertise to this Foundation.

    I also want to recognize the diverse and talented group of advocates, business leaders, dedicated philanthropists who have come together to serve on the board of this Foundation.

    Specifically, I’d like to thank the Board’s Chair, James Gavin, for offering his strong leadership to ensure that this Foundation attracts the kind of commitments that are going to be essential to reach our goals.

    And I also want to end by thanking the extraordinary organizations that have come together to organize the fund, and fund this new Foundation. We would not be here if it weren’t for these organizations, and they include the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the California Endowment, Kaiser Permanente, Nemours, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Brookings Institute, and the Alliance for a Healthier Generation.

    This is a phenomenal group of organizations, people, of leaders that represent all of America. I am thrilled that all of you have come together to support this effort. This is why I’m confident that we can move the mark on this issue, because this effort and this issue means so much that we’ve just been able to bring together a group of individuals that has been working on this issue for decades, that understands these challenges in a very powerful way, and will have the commitment and the passion that we need to move this issue forward.

    So I am grateful, truly grateful, to all of you — not just for being on this call, but for taking the time that it’s going to require to get us to our goals.

    So with that, it is now my pleasure to turn this meeting over to Senator Frist. Senator Frist, I know you’re there. Thank you, it’s good to have you onboard. I’m very excited.

    SENATOR FRIST: Well, thank you, Mrs. Obama, and I just, with everybody on the phone, want to thank you and really applaud you for your vision, for your leadership, your commitment, and your demonstrated understanding that this is a solvable problem and that we can do this and we can end this epidemic within a generation.

    It’s an issue that was not an issue in my early childhood years, so it is generational in the way it’s been created, to where it is a true epidemic today. But also it is a solvable problem, and we can do so, just as you outlined, through partnerships, working together.

    And it’s an honor for me to join you and Mayor Booker and Jim Gavin as leaders on this initiative, an initiative that has been important to me. As you mentioned, as a heart surgeon, when I’ve dedicated my professional healing aspects of my life to dealing with heart disease, which has a direct causal relationship to obesity, and as a former public official and current public health advocate, this is a huge problem to individuals, their individual lives, to children, and to our health care system broadly in terms of the costs that it imposes.

    It is reversible. We know that obesity is associated with more chronic conditions than smoking or excessive drinking. Data suggests that health care costs of obese adults exceed the health care costs by other healthier people by 91 percent — almost a doubling in health care costs; clearly an issue, as we look ahead in terms of health care costs and the impact they have on individuals and the fiscal state of our country.

    The obese patients consume more health care resources, and we see this across the entire continuum of health care, from hospitals to ambulatory care centers to pharmacists.

    The problem is increasing, so it’s not a static problem. So our first goal is going to be flatten it out and then eliminate it over a generation. The United States is expected to spend over $340 billion on health care costs attributable to obesity just 10 years from now — 10 years from today. That’s a cost of about $1,425 per person — four times what it is today. Today it’s about $361.

    Just by holding the current rate of obesity steady, we can save $55 billion in projected health care costs, much of which could be passed along to the American taxpayer, or invested in other aspects of quality of life issues.

    And lastly I just thought I’d mention — because this — and I say this as a physician, as someone who has dealt regularly with obesity in my own practice — this is an issue about individuals, as well — maybe even predominantly individuals; their dignity, the stigma, the self-esteem, the prejudice that’s associated with being overweight today.

    You know, I made this whole fight against childhood obesity a priority, as the First Lady mentioned, during my days in the Senate, championing such legislation as the Childhood Obesity Reduction Act. And I think, as the First Lady says, this is not going to predominantly be a government solution. It’s going to be partnerships with businesses and families and parents and children and philanthropists and organizations and foundations all working together.

    I’ve extended my work in the Senate, since I’ve been out of the Senate, and focusing on kids — more recently through efforts to provide simple things like athletic shoes to children in Tennessee and indeed in the developing world.

    So the challenge is achievable, but only through this broad-based participation. And as I think both Mayor Booker and I demonstrate on the surface, it’s something we all know that it is no one political party or sector that can solve this problem.

    It’s important that this issue not get swept up in all the partisan politics of Washington. The fact that Mayor Booker and I are outside of Washington mean in part our responsibility to join the First Lady as we get the message out across the country. But it is clearly a target that we all strive together and address in these partnerships in working in public and private sectors together. We need to get out of Washington, take this message to people all across the country. And both Mayor Booker and I have expressed our willingness not just to be names on the masthead, even though we’re called honorary vice chairs of the partnership, but to be on the ground to work it, to travel, to give voice, to study it, and to work with the Foundation.

    So I enthusiastically join the First Lady and the partnership and this cause, and I truly believe that together we can end this epidemic within a generation.

    So thank you, Mrs. Obama, and I will turn it over to Mayor Booker.

    MAYOR BOOKER: Hey. It’s so fantastic to be on this call, and I’m deeply grateful for my partner who just spoke, Senator Frist, who has been an inspiration to me on many levels for quite some time. Dr. Gavin, who will speak next, is just, again, is a great relationship for me personally to make through this partnership. And exciting things are going to happen by, I believe, the leadership that we’re bringing together.

    But more importantly, we can’t lose focus about what this is about. This is about young people. This is about our families. It’s about our neighborhoods. It’s about our communities. Those are the fundamental building blocks for America. And what we are seeing here on the local level, what we all know, is that this is an epidemic problem within our nation, and we see it in urban areas in particular.

    And it’s very difficult, as I deal with many children every day, to see the impact that obesity has on self-esteem, self-confidence, the kids’ prides in themselves, kids’ love of themselves. And I tell you, I know more than anything that if our children don’t love themselves, don’t have pride in themselves, we can’t ask them to love their neighborhoods, their communities, their cities, or for their nation.

    And we see that not only is it hurting those seminal parts of our very being and our soul, but it means decreased academic performance, it means a loss of productivity. We even see connections between obesity and violence.

    And so we know ultimately that it’s about our children, but as the great American writer James Baldwin said, children are never good at listening to their elders, but they never fail to imitate them. And so we as adults within communities and within families and neighborhoods and cities really have to start setting examples, being the role model, doing more — but empowering. This is not about finger pointing to what families aren’t doing; it’s about creating strong communities that nurture the kind of outcomes and habits and cultural norms that we can indeed enjoy and celebrate and create what’s important.

    And so we know in Newark and in cities all across America that there are families that don’t let their children play because there’s no safe places to play, no green spaces to play. They want to keep their kids in the house for the basic human need of security. We also know that there are no healthy food options for many families, either at the schools that they send their kids to, or no healthy options even because they don’t have access to supermarkets or places with even green vegetables.

    Now, these are challenges and problems, but we also know that all around America there are activists and innovators and concerned citizens who are trying to find solutions, and indeed showing and demonstrating ways to make a difference.

    Here in Newark we’re trying to do it in many different ways, not only by working in partnership with the private sector in building parks, but also creating fun activities that get people out of their homes into the communities. Last year we started a triathlon that was about getting people to bike ride to all the city’s different recreation centers so that they could rediscover those gyms that we actually already have in our community. We’re experimenting with urban gardens and many other things.

    And that to me is the beauty of our nation. We have islands of excellence everywhere in America, and what this partnership is about is growing those islands of excellence into hemispheres of hope. I was taught by my mother that African wisdom that spider webs united could tie up a lion. And this is why I’m just so honored and humbled that the First Lady would choose to involve me in this because she — by doing this call to our country’s consciousness, to our country’s awareness for our country to come together, she really is weaving together a lot of those great leaders and activists and foundations and businesses to try to create truly a unified nation around the issues that we all indeed agree upon, which is the welfare and future of our children.

    So I’m looking forward to celebrating the success of our efforts to be not just honorary but ornery at times in trying to push hard to get change to happen. I’m looking forward to joining with other leaders, and the First Lady has already done a great job at shining the light on many of my partner mayors around the country, whether it’s Chip Johnson from Hernando, Mississippi, or Joseph Curtatone from Somerville, Massachusetts. We’re going to really be making a clarion call to people all around this country to come together.

    And the beautiful thing about this is by finding those innovations that are going on in other neighborhoods, I’m a big believer and I know from my parents’ upbringing that real social change in America around any issue always happens from the grassroots up. And by shining the light of the First Lady and our national partners and players on those local activities, we not only will be able to celebrate them but we will be able to study them, learn from them, figure out how to grow them.

    So I just want to again thank the (inaudible) of coming together, the vision of our First Lady. This is something that we can do, that we must do, and I believe with this auspicious start that we will do. Thank you.

    DR. GAVIN: This is Jim Gavin. And on behalf of the Partnership for a Healthier America Board of Directors, I want to thank the First Lady, Senator Frist, and Mayor Booker for the important support that they bring to this partnership. We are honored to have this commitment and their leadership from these very special individuals as we chart a new course for this private/public effort.

    By setting the first national target for childhood obesity, the First Lady has taken an important step to move the nation towards addressing one of the greatest dangers facing our children today.

    Now, along with our honorary chair and vice chairs from whom you’ve heard, we are also pleased to publicly present the first board of directors of the partnership. The board is a diverse and powerful group of stakeholders who are committed to providing real leadership on this issue.

    Now, the partnership has been organized by the collective vision of the organization that has already been mentioned by the First Lady in her remarks. You can expect to be hearing a lot from this new organization as we begin to mobilize for action around this important initiative.

    With the First Lady’s support, we are at a (inaudible) to address these challenges from childhood obesity. Now, many of us have been fighting the battle against childhood obesity for decades. But some in our country are just (inaudible) to the seriousness of this obesity epidemic where one in three of our children are overweight or obese.

    The rates of childhood obesity have doubled in the last 10 years, has increased fourfold in the last 40 years, and as many as one in every three of our children will develop diabetes or high blood pressure in their lifetime. It’s a very serious issue.

    With the “Let’s Move” and the grassroots pressures that are emerging, large corporations, non-profits and public institutions are feeling the pressure to respond to the crisis.

    Now, our goal is to complement and accelerate efforts that are already underway across America to address the important issues. In addition to the work of cities like Newark, state governments as well have enacted legislation or implemented programs to improve the nutritional quality of the lunches and snacks provided in schools and in childcare settings, or to strengthen physical education class. Other private sector and private foundation initiatives have focused on comprehensive multi-step approaches and environmental factors that make neighborhoods more conducive to healthy eating and regular physical activity.

    There are a lot of community intervention, such as those funded by the Healthy Eating Active Living Convergence Partnership, that includes increasing access to park, sidewalks and fresh groceries, including (inaudible) and educating caretakers of children about nutrition.

    As a doable, independent, nonpartisan foundation, the Partnership for a Healthier America — PHA, as we will refer to it in shorthand — will (inaudible) in the large ecosystem of communities, state, and nationally based efforts in that it will focus not only on identifying the solutions to this challenge, but also on creating new norms across all sectors and levels of our society.

    PHA does not seek to compete with (inaudible) or grant-making foundations who are doing important work of their own around these issues, but rather will serve to facilitate partnerships with meaningful and scalable programs at the community, state and national levels and lift up and help scale and replicate their success. It will do so by convening private, public and non-profit sector members to facilitate meaningful and substantial commitments and hold them accountable by measuring their impact.

    Now, as you heard from the First Lady, we have given ourselves an aggressive mandate and we expect to meet it. Over the next year, and throughout the lifetime of the foundation, you can expect us to negotiate directly with those organizations and individuals most equipped to bring measurable impact to the First Lady’s target, even some CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, national bank leaders, and the leading non-profits.

    But we also want to celebrate local community heroes and grassroots leaders whose innovating solutions simply lack the resources needed to reach scale. We look forward to hosting our first annual meeting with the First Lady towards the beginning of next year to take stock of our progress and recognize those that have stepped up to this cause, while at the same time encouraging those who haven’t yet joined us to do so in this mission.

    Now, we want to encourage that you get more information and updates on our progress by visiting our Web site, www.ahealthieramerica.org. ; That’s www.ahealthieramerica.org. ; I’d like to thank all of you for your participation in this exchange today, for your help and for your interest in this critically important health issue for our nation. Thank you and goodbye.

    END 11:28 A.M. EDT

  • Sebelius briefing on new health law; “not intended” for press

    Updated Thursday afternoon….

    Here’s the link for the Health and Human Services health reform website, with FAQ’s and a webcast from Secretary Sebelius.

    Below, e-mail sent from the White House…..

    Join a White House Conference Call on Health Insurance Reform TODAY, Thursday, April 1 at 5:00 PM EST
    Dear Friend,

    The White House Office of Public Engagement is pleased to invite you to a call with Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius to discuss the legislation recently signed by the President on Health Insurance Reform. The conference call will be held TODAY, Thursday, April 1, at 5:00 PM Eastern Standard Time (EST).

    We encourage you to dial in a few minutes early to ensure participation in the entire call.

    We also ask that you extend this invitation to your members and leaders throughout your community and across the country.

    Please note: This call is for background information only and not intended for press purposes.

    WHO: Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius and staff from the White House Office of Health Reform and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

    WHAT: White House Briefing Call on Health Insurance Reform

    WHEN: Thursday, April 1, 2010, 5:00 PM EST

    HOW: Please call (800) 230-1951 and ask the operator for the “Health Care Call”

    About NMAC
    The National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC) builds leadership within communities of color to address challenges of HIV/AIDS. Since 1987, NMAC has advanced this mission through a variety of programs and services, including: a public policy education program, national and regional training conferences, a treatment and research program, numerous publications and a website: http://www.nmac.org/ . Today, NMAC is an association of AIDS service organizations providing valuable information to community-based organizations, hospitals, clinics and other groups assisting individuals and families affected by the AIDS epidemic. NMAC’s advocacy efforts are funded through private funders and donors only.

    For more information, call NMAC directly at (202) 483-NMAC (6622) or [email protected] . Visit the agency online at http://www.nmac.org/ , as well as on http://www.facebook.com/ and on http://www.wikipedia.com/ . Pictures and video clips from past NMAC events are available from MyPhotoAlbum.com (nmacpics.myphotoalbum.com/ ), and http://www.youtube.com/ , respectively.

  • Michelle Obama talks about breastfeeding Sasha, interviewing at U of Chicago

    WASHINGTON–First Lady Michelle Obama, speaking Wednesday at a White House conference on workplace flexibility, recalled the day she interviewed for a job as an executive at the University of Chicago Medical Center–and how she breastfeed her daughter.

    The mother of a newborn, Sasha, now eight years old, Mrs Obama could not find a babysitter so she took her baby along to the meeting.

    Mrs. Obama: “In fact, in the last job I had before coming to the White House — I remember this clearly — I was on maternity leave with Sasha, still trying to figure out what to do with my life, and I got a call for an interview for this position, a senior position at the hospitals. And I thought, okay, here we go. So I had to scramble to look for babysitting, and couldn’t find one.

    “So what did I do? I packed up that little infant, and I put her in the stroller, and I brought her with me. And I prayed that her presence wouldn’t be an automatic disqualifier. And it was fortunate for me that, number one, she slept through the entire interview. And I was still breastfeeding — if that’s not too much information. And I got the job.”

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the First Lady
    ___________________________________________________________
    For Immediate Release March 31, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY
    AT A WORKPLACE FLEXIBILITY CONFERENCE

    South Court Auditorium
    Eisenhower Executive Office Building

    1:34 P.M. EDT

    MRS. OBAMA: Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you, everyone. (Applause.) Thanks so much, everyone. (Applause.) Please rest. You’re working hard enough as it is.

    Well, hello, everyone, and welcome to the White House, sort of. We’re across the street, but it’s good to have you all here.

    I want to thank Valerie for that very kind introduction, for her outstanding work not just on this issue but on so many others; her friendship and support. And I also want to thank her staff again who have done just a phenomenal job in organizing this conference and bringing us all together. This is just a wonderful way to spend an afternoon on an important issue.

    I’d also like to thank all of the outstanding members of this administration who are here for taking the time to be here today.

    And I want to thank everyone who has joined us to share their ideas and expertise on this critically important topic. Thank you for taking the time.

    As Valerie said, we’ve come here today to have a conversation about workplace flexibility: an important part of balancing our responsibilities as employees, as breadwinners, mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, husbands and wives.

    It’s an issue that many folks have struggled with for so many years, and one that we as a society just hasn’t really quite figured out yet.

    And as the parents of two beautiful young daughters, it is an issue that is particularly important to me and my husband, as you know. As Valerie said, I’ve talked about this so often.

    And it is true, in our current life, we are incredibly blessed. We have amazing resources and support systems here at the White House that I could have never imagined. Number one of them is having Grandmother living upstairs. (Laughter.) We all need one of those. So can you figure that out? (Laughter.)

    But we didn’t always live in the White House. And for many years before coming to Washington, I was a working mother, doing my best to juggle the demands of my job with the needs of my family, with a husband who has crazy ideas. (Laughter.)

    And as I’ve said before, I consider myself, as many of us in this room do, as a 120-percenter, which means that if I’m not doing something at 120 percent, I feel like I’m failing. And I know you all can relate to that. So while I did the best that I could at work and at home, I felt like I wasn’t keeping up with either one of them enough.

    And I was lucky — I had understanding bosses, I had very accommodating jobs. In fact, in the last job I had before coming to the White House — I remember this clearly — I was on maternity leave with Sasha, still trying to figure out what to do with my life, and I got a call for an interview for this position, a senior position at the hospitals. And I thought, okay, here we go. So I had to scramble to look for babysitting, and couldn’t find one. So what did I do? I packed up that little infant, and I put her in the stroller, and I brought her with me. And I prayed that her presence wouldn’t be an automatic disqualifier. And it was fortunate for me that, number one, she slept through the entire interview. (Laughter.) And I was still breastfeeding — if that’s not too much information. (Laughter.) And I got the job.

    But I know that I was lucky, number one. I was interviewing with the president that had just had a child himself and was very understanding and open-minded. But I know that most folks are nowhere near as lucky as I was. Particularly right now with the job market the way it is, many folks can’t afford to be picky about the jobs that they take. Many folks don’t have access to any kind of family leave policies whatsoever. No flexible working arrangements. Many people don’t even have a paid sick day. So they are struggling — struggling every day to find affordable childcare; or someone to look after an aging parent, which is becoming more the issue; scrambling to make things work when the usual arrangements fall through. All of us have been through that.

    So they spend a lot of time hoping and praying that everything will work out just perfectly. I remember those days, just the delicate balance of perfection. And as all the parents in this room know, it’s never perfect — ever.

    But here’s the thing: As we all know here today, it just doesn’t have to be that way, doesn’t have to be that hard. And that’s something that I learned for myself, not just as an employee but as a manager, when I discovered that the more flexibility that I gave to my staff to be good parents, and I valued that, the happier my staff was likely to be and the greater chance they were to stay and not leave, because they knew they might not find the same kind of flexibility somewhere else.

    So it’s something that many of the companies here today have discovered, very fortunately, that flexible policies actually make employees more, not less, productive — because as you all know, instead of spending time worrying about what’s happening at home, your employees have the support and the peace of mind that they desperately need to concentrate on their work.

    You all are pioneering the innovative ideas and the best practices to make balancing work and family life easier for your employees and better for your bottom lines.

    You’re doing so much — providing discounts on childcare — important; setting up scholarship programs to help pay for college — amazing.

    Many of you are offering compressed work weeks, you’re offering generous leave time, and mentoring programs that connect new parents or caregivers with folks who’ve been through it before.

    And you’re giving employees the right to even approach you and have an open and honest conversation about how to create a more flexible schedule. That is critical.

    So here in the federal government, we’re trying to follow your lead, putting our money where our mouth is to adopt more of those best practices — from expanding telework access to providing emergency childcare and more affordable day care.

    And that’s why this administration supports the Healthy Families Act, which would let millions more working Americans earn up to seven days a year of paid sick time to care for themselves and their families. Doesn’t seem like a lot, but it’s important.

    These are just a few of the examples of what we’re going to be talking about today. And I’m looking forward to hearing more of the many ideas, the ways that you’re figuring out how to make this issue work for your employees.

    We are excited today to learn about your ideas, your best practices, what many of you have done to support your employees and to boost your bottom line at the same time.

    So with that, I want to again thank you all. I want to thank you for the work that you’ve done in your companies to set the tone. I want to thank you for taking the time to share your ideas with us today.

    So now my work is done. I can now turn it over to Claire and the panel, and you guys will figure this all out. (Laughter.)

    MS. SHIPMAN: Forty-five minutes. (Laughter.)

    MRS. OBAMA: That’s right, 45 minutes. Shorter than health care, right?

    MS. SHIPMAN: A little. (Laughter.)

    MRS. OBAMA: Thanks so much. (Applause.)

    END 1:40 P.M. EDT

  • The Obama 2010 White House Passover Seder menu

    Seder 2010.jpg(White House photo)The White House 2010 Seder. From right to left, Jen Psaki, deputy communications chief; President Obama, Lisa Kohnke, deputy director of White House advance, Eric Lesser, assistant to White House senior advisor David Axelrod; his mother, Joan Lesser, and Joanna Cohen, step-daughter of Susan Sher, chief of staff for First Lady Michelle Obama and White House liaison to the Jewish community.

    WASHINGTON–It’s Passover, and President Obama hosted his second White House seder. I wrote about the 2009 White House seder here. My report with details on the 2010 seder is here.

    The White House chefs included the traditional foods for the seder, using recipes submitted from Obama staffers and their families.

    Gefilte Fish
    Charoses
    Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls
    Braised Beef Brisket
    Chicken Roast
    Sweet Potato-Carrot Tzimmes
    Carrot Souffle
    Kugel
    Spring Asparagus
    Flourless Chocolate Cake
    Golden Apricot Cake
    Brown Sugar Macaroons

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 1, 2010. Fund-raising in Boston

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    March 31, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 2010

    In the morning, the President will receive the Presidential Daily Briefing and meet with senior advisors in the Oval Office. These meetings are closed press.

    In the afternoon, the President will travel to Portland, Maine, where he will deliver remarks at the Portland Expo Center on how the historic health insurance reform bill he signed into law will end the worst practices of insurance companies, immediately begin to bring down costs for families and small businesses, and expand coverage to 32 million Americans who are currently uninsured. This event is open press.

    The President will then travel to Boston, Massachusetts, where he will deliver remarks at a DNC fundraising reception at the State House and at a DNC fundraising dinner at the Boston Opera House. There will be travel pool coverage of the President’s remarks at both events.

    The President will return to Washington, DC at night.

    In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: ABC
    Print: Essence
    Radio: Talk Radio

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: ABC
    Print: Tribune
    Radio: CBS

    EDT

    9:30AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    9:30AM THE PRESIDENT receives the Presidential Daily Briefing
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    1:20PM THE PRESIDENT departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Portsmouth, New Hampshire
    In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 12:30PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Call Time 12:00PM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

    2:35PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Portsmouth, New Hampshire
    Pease Air National Guard Base
    Open Press

    3:05PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Portland, Maine
    Portland International Jetport
    Open Press

    3:25PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks on health insurance reform
    Portland Expo Center
    Open Press

    4:55PM THE PRESIDENT departs Portland, Maine en route Boston, Massachusetts
    Portland International Jetport
    Open Press

    5:40PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Boston, Massachusetts
    Logan Boston International Airport
    Travel Pool Coverage

    6:05PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at DNC fundraising reception
    State Room
    Travel Pool Coverage

    8:05PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at DNC fundraising dinner
    Boston Opera House
    Travel Pool Coverage

    8:45PM THE PRESIDENT departs Boston, Massachusetts en route Andrews Air Force Base
    Logan Boston International Airport
    Open Press

    10:05PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at Andrews Air Force Base
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage
    In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 8:15PM – Briefing Room)

    Briefing Schedule

    Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton will gaggle aboard Air Force One

    ##

  • Biden in Peoria with LaHood, Durbin

    Pool report…

    Vice President Joe Biden visit Peoria, Illinois March 31, 2010

    Accompanied by U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill.
    Keynote speaker for 16th annual Partners in Peace Celebration sponsored by The Center for Prevention of Abuse at Peoria Civic Center. His visit was significant because he wrote the landmark 1994 Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). The measure led to creation of the Peoria County Family Justice Center in October 2004.
    Democratic Chairman Billy Halstead said Biden’s appearance prove Peoria’s importance on the national map, also noting President Barack Obama’s visit last year.
    “The president comes one year, the vice president the next and we’re still a long ways from election. It’s not like they’re stumping for votes. I think it’s huge,” Halstead said, noting how the general public was invited to attend the event. “He’s not only coming to our city, but he’s coming here for a very important issue he feels deeply about.”
    After departing the Civic Center, Biden made an unscheduled shop at George’s Shoeshine, a favorite stop of Secretary LaHood’s and local downtown institution. Owner George Manias, in his 63rd year of shining shoes, refused to accept payment for the five-minute shoeshine service that thrust his otherwise quiet business into the national spotlight — again.
    In his shop, Manias boasts pictures with President Barack Obama, who stopped for a shine in 2009 and former presidents George W. Bush, Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford, all of whom stopped at the shop at one point or another.
    “It was exciting, because I never thought he would stop by my shop. He’s a real nice man. He talks just like an ordinary person, a nice guy,” Manias said following Biden’s visit.
    A second unscheduled shop took place at The Spotted Cow ice cream joint and cafe in Central Peoria, where owners Frank and Donna Abdnour renamed their homemade chocolate chip ice cream “Chip off the Old Biden” in his honor.
    At that location, vice president Biden, Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood and U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin sat with several small business owners and workers in the Peoria area.
    One of those people was David Hill, who, with the help of Workforce Network funded by Recovery Act investments, has been able to transition his management experience into a retail grocery management position with The Kroger Company. Biden noted situations similar to Hill’s are taking place throughout the country.
    Peoria resident Duane Greer took a guess Biden would visit Spotted Cow and managed to snag a front-row seat in the comfy cafe before the vice president arrived. “We live in the same neighborhood as Abdnour’s and I’m driving around here and I start seeing a lot of guys in black suits and dark vehicles I knew something was going on. So we walked down here from our house to have some lunch.”

    Karen McDonald
    Political reporter
    Journal Star

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, March 31, 2010. Oil drilling speech, Cesar Chavez

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    March 30, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

    WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 2010

    In the morning, the President will receive the Presidential Daily Briefing in the Oval Office. This briefing is closed press.

    Later, the President will deliver remarks on energy security at Joint Base Andrews Naval Air Facility Washington. This event is open press.

    In the afternoon, the President will meet with the family of civil rights legend Cesar Chavez on what would have been his 83rd birthday, as well as leaders of the United Farm Workers (UFW) that Chavez co-founded. The President will then sign a proclamation designating March 31, 2010 as Cesar Chavez Day. The meeting is closed press.

    Later, the President will deliver remarks at the closing session of the Forum for Workplace Flexibility in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. This event is pooled press.

    The Forum for Workplace Flexibility is an opportunity for the President and First Lady to discuss the importance of creating workplace practices that allow America’s working men and women to meet the demands of their jobs without sacrificing the needs of their families. Small business owners, business leaders, policy experts, workers and labor leaders will join senior administration officials to share their ideas and strategies for making the workplace more flexible for American workers and families. The First Lady will deliver remarks at the opening session.

    The forum will have five breakout sessions focused on best practices and why this is a priority for the American workplace and workforce. The opening and closing sessions, as well as all five breakout sessions, will be streamed live on www.WhiteHouse.gov/live. In addition, much of the event will be streamed to Facebook and Ustream, and the White House will include comments taken through these social networks in the feedback collected through the forum.

    In-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: NBC

    Print: Ebony

    Radio: SRN

    EDT

    9:30AM Pool Call Time

    9:30AM THE PRESIDENT receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    11:05AM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks on energy security

    Joint Base Andrews Naval Air Facility Washington

    Open Press (Travel Pool Gather Time 10:15AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    2:40PM THE PRESIDENT meets with the Chavez family and signs a proclamation in honor of Cesar Chavez Day

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    4:30PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at closing session of the Forum for Workplace Flexibility

    EEOB South Court Auditorium

    Pooled Press (Final Gather 4:00PM – Stakeout Location)

    Briefing Schedule

    12:30PM Daily Press Briefing

    ##

  • Obama-Sarkozy summit at the White House. Carla, Michelle meet again.

    WASHINGTON– President Obama and French President Sarkozy are meeting at the White House today and dine tonight at the White House with their spouses, First Lady Michelle Obama and Carla Bruni Sarkozy.

    On Tuesday here, the Sarkozys visited Ben’s Chili Bowl, a famous local diner.

    The two couples have met several times in the past year, in Europe and in the U.S. And Sarkozy, when he was mulling a presidential run in 2006, called on a freshman up and coming Senator–Barack Obama of Illinois– his Hart Senate Office Building. Obama was welcomed by Sarkozy at the French presidential palace during his campaign European swing in July, 2008 and Sarkozy gushed all over him. But since Obama has been president, the relationship has not always been that smooth. At a Tuesday afternoon pres conference at the White House, Sarkozy said there is a lot of “trust” between the two nations.

    First Lady Michelle Obama and Carla Sarkozy at G20 summit in Pittsburgh in September here.

    Obama, Sarkozy–is one of them checking out a girl last July? Click here.

    The Obamas and Sarkozys in France last June here.

    The Obamas and Sarkozys in Germany last April here.

  • After MLK killed, Mayor Richard J. Daley tells LBJ, “We’re in trouble” Listen to tapes here

    Updated….

    On April 6, 1968, President Lyndon Baines Johnson ordered federal troops to Chicago to halt violence that broke out in the city in the wake of the April 4, 1968 assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis.

    By April 7 in Chicago–Palm Sunday, 1968–11 people were dead with more than 500 injured and 3,000 arrested.

    Some 5,000 federal troops arrived after Johnson talked twice to the late Mayor Richard J. Daley, the father of the current mayor. Two newly transcribed tapes–done by the University of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs Presidential Recordings Program–reveal the appeal Daley made to Johnson for help on the afternoon of April 6. The first conversation was for three minutes starting at 5:19 p.m. The second was just a minute starting at 5:35 p.m.

    Here’s an excerpt of the conversation:

    Hear the audio

    The Johnson conversations in the wake of the King murder show “as the streets erupted in Washington, DC., Chicago, Detroit, and Boston, Johnson struggled to provide local officials with the federal resources they needed to help restore peace to their cities,” the U of Virginia presidential recordings program found.

    “We’re in trouble. We need some help,” Daley said to Johnson.

    The two are obviously familiar. Johnson calls Daley “Dick.” Johnson keeps mispronouncing the name of the Illinois governor–Gov. Samuel Shapiro. Daley calls Attorney General Ramsey Clark “Ramsey.”

    Johnson and Daley talk briefly about the procedure that Shapiro and Ramsey need to follow to get troops to Chicago quickly.

    Johnson asks Daley how many he wants.

    “At least 3,000,” Daley said.

    Johnson replies, “Yeah, well, you better say 5 (,000.)”

    To hear the complete “We’re in trouble” conversation, click here.

    To hear the second tape, “They’re on the way,” click here.

    To hear the third tape, from April 19, 1968–where Johnson chastises Daley for delaying in asking for federal troops, click here.

    Below, the transcript of the “We’re in trouble” conversation Johnson had with Daley.

    Operator: There you are.
    President Johnson: Hello?
    Richard Daley: Mr. President?
    President Johnson: Yes, Dick ?
    Daley: We’re in trouble. We need some help.
    President Johnson: Yes. I was afraid of that.
    Daley: Yes. It’s starting to break down in different places.
    President Johnson: Yeah.
    Daley: And we just met with our people, and they felt that we should try to get some federal assistance. I’ve talked to [Illinois] Governor [Samuel H.] Shapiro, and he’s ready to do anything and everything, so we needed help as soon as we can get it.
    President Johnson: All right. First thing you ought to do is talk to the Attorney General [Ramsey Clark∇] and see what kind of finding his legislature’s got to make. In the meantime, we’ll–I’ve talked to the Attorney General. I told him I’d call early this morning and told you, because they have to move from California, you see?
    Daley: Yeah.
    President Johnson: They won’t do any good tonight.
    Daley: Mm-hmm. Well, we–
    President Johnson: That’s why–
    Daley: –hope to get them in tonight if we can.
    President Johnson: Well–
    Daley: Where is Ramsey tonight?
    President Johnson: He’s right here at the Department of Justice, and I’ll switch you over there now, and you can talk to him. But the Governor has to–[unclear comment by Daley] You know the finding they have to make? [Unclear comment by Daley] They have to make a finding in the state that you’ve used all your [National] Guard, that you’ve used all your facilities, that you’re unable to take care of the situation–
    Daley: Yeah.
    President Johnson: –and therefore, you ask for federal troops.
    Daley: Yeah.
    President Johnson: Then he has to make a finding for the President. The President has to issue an order. That is to keep a President from doing it except for at the instance [sic: insistence] of local officials.
    Daley: I see.
    President Johnson: [with Daley acknowledging] That’s what I anticipated this morning, and I knew dark was coming, and I knew if we thought we’d rather have them, they ought to be moving.
    Daley: Well, these fellows kept saying to you, you know, which they will, but now this–we had a meeting [unclear]–
    President Johnson: That’s what they did to me yesterday and I just cried.
    Daley: Yeah.
    President Johnson: I chewed–I ate my fingernails off and I finally ordered the men on my own while a mayor couldn’t make up his mind. And we got them in, but they got big headlines here. Here’s the–“Too Little, Too Late?”
    Daley: Yeah.
    President Johnson: “Long Stretches of the Capital Laid to Waste. What it Cost: 690 Injured, 299 Fires.” So, what we’ll do is we’ll–we will have Governor Shapiro call Ramsey and I’ll have Ramsey alert to the call. He’ll be waiting for it.
    Daley: All right.
    President Johnson: Just tell him to call the White House, and they’ll connect him. That’s number–
    Daley: I see.
    President Johnson: Just tell him to ask for the White House in Washington. They’ll connect him. He’ll tell him exactly what kind of wire to send. He’ll–ask him to dictate it–
    Daley: Yeah.
    President Johnson: And then, in the meantime, I’ll see where he can find the troops and how many. Do you know how many they want?
    Daley: At least 3,000.
    President Johnson: Yeah, well, you better say 5[,000].
    Daley: Yeah. I think we need 5[,000].
    President Johnson: I would tell him–
    Daley: Fine.
    President Johnson: –what you’re do, and we’ll be right back to you, Dick.
    Daley: I’ll have Shapiro call Ramsey–
    President Johnson: That’s right.
    Daley: –through the White House.
    President Johnson: That’s right. Thanks.
    Daley: Thanks, Mr. President–
    President Johnson: Right.

  • Quinn, Simon campaign schedule March 30, 2010

    Quinn for Illinois Public Campaign Schedule for Tuesday, March 30, 2010

    At 10 a.m., Lt. Gov. Nominee Sheila Simon will have coffee and discuss issues important to young women with a small group of University of Illinois-Chicago students including her daughter, Reilly Knop, at UIC Student Center East, 750 S. Halsted St., Chicago.

    At 12 p.m., Ald. Toni Preckwinkle will join Gov. Quinn and Lt. Gov. Nominee Sheila Simon for lunch at Mannys Cafeteria and Delicatessen, 1141 S. Jefferson St.

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, March 30, 2010. Meeting, dinner with Sarkozy (and Carla, Michelle)

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    March 29, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

    TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 2010

    In the morning, the President and the Vice President will receive the Presidential Daily Briefing and the Economic Daily Briefing in the Oval Office. These briefings are closed press.

    Later, the President will deliver remarks and sign the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 at Northern Virginia Community College in Alexandria, Virginia. The President will be introduced by Dr. Jill Biden, a lifelong teacher and current instructor at Northern Virginia Community College. This event is open press.

    In the afternoon, the President will meet with senior advisors in the Oval Office. The President will then have lunch with the Vice President in the Private Dining Room. The President and the Vice President will also meet with Secretary of Defense Gates in the Oval Office. These meetings are closed press.

    Later, the President and the Vice President will meet with President Sarkozy of France in the Oval Office. This meeting is closed press. The President and President Sarkozy will then hold a joint press availability in the Rose Garden. This event is open press.

    In the evening, the President and the First Lady will host a private dinner for President Sarkozy and Mrs. Bruni-Sarkozy in the Private Residence. This dinner is closed press.

    In-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: FOX

    Print: Dallas Morning News

    Radio: NPR

    EDT

    9:30AM Pool Call Time

    9:30AM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    10:00AM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT receive the Economic Daily Briefing

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    11:05AM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks and signs the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010

    Northern Virginia Community College

    Open Press (Travel Pool Gather Time 10:30AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    12:00PM THE PRESIDENT meets with senior advisors

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    12:20PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT have lunch

    Private Dining Room

    Closed Press

    2:45PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT meet with Secretary of Defense Gates

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    3:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT meet with President Sarkozy of France

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    4:45PM THE PRESIDENT and President Sarkozy hold joint press availability

    Rose Garden (Rain site: East Room)

    Open Press (Pre-set 3:30PM – Final Gather 4:15PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    6:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY host dinner for President Sarkozy and Mrs. Bruni-Sarkozy

    Private Residence

    Closed Press

    Briefing Schedule

    2:15PM Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs

    ##

  • Michelle Obama White House garden 2010 planting Wednesday

    below, from the White House…..

    March 31…
    Later that day, at 4:00 PM, the First Lady will host the Spring Garden Planting in the White House Kitchen Garden, where she will be joined by Secretaries Vilsack and Sebelius as well as the President of the National Gardening Association. Students from Bancroft and Hollin Meadows Elementary Schools will also participate.

  • Obama to throw first pitch at Nationals-Phillies game Monday, April 5, 2010

    below, release from the Nationals….

    PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA TO THROW CEREMONIAL FIRST PITCH

    WHEN WASHINGTON NATIONALS HOST

    NL CHAMPION PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES ON OPENING DAY

    Fans are encouraged to arrive early to witness the historic event that marks

    the 100th anniversary of the first presidential pitch on the opening day of baseball season

    March 29, 2010 (Washington, DC) – President of the United States Barack Obama will throw the ceremonial first pitch at Nationals Park in Washington D.C. prior to the 2010 season opener between the Washington Nationals and the defending National League Champion Philadelphia Phillies on Monday, April 5 at 1:05 p.m.

    “Opening Day of the baseball season is a special event for our country and its importance has been reinforced by the 100-year history of Presidential participation,” said Baseball Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig, who will be in attendance for the historic First Pitch. “I am proud that President Obama will continue the long Presidential tradition of throwing out the first pitch of Opening Day in Washington D.C.”

    Obama’s appearance will mark the 100th anniversary of the first time a U.S. President threw an Opening Day first pitch and the 48th time a President has done so in Washington, D.C. On April 14, 1910, William Howard Taft began the tradition before the Washington Senators went on to defeat the Philadelphia Athletics 3-0 behind a one-hit, complete game shutout by Hall of Fame pitcher Walter Johnson.

    Therefore it’s only fitting that 100 years later, Washington once again faces their neighbors to the north in a highly-anticipated Opening Day showdown. This year, the Nationals made various changes during the offseason, adding plenty of new faces to the roster including Catcher Ivan “Pudge” Rodriguez, Pitchers Brian Bruney, Matt Capps and Jason Marquis, and Second Baseman Adam Kennedy. These and other new additions will join Nationals veterans Adam Dunn, Ryan Zimmerman and John Lannan, who will take the mound against Philadelphia Phillies Pitcher Roy Halladay following pregame ceremonies that begin at 12:30 p.m.

    “Across the country, Opening Day is a celebration of the return of hometown baseball and the glorious days of Spring,” said Nationals Managing Principal Owner Theodore N. Lerner. “It’s a time of renewed hope and optimism for fans everywhere. The Lerner and Nationals family are honored that President Obama will mark that moment with us at the home of the national pastime in the nation’s capital.”

    Although individual tickets are no longer available, the club is offering 400 seats in sections 401 and 402 for only $5 starting at 10:00am on game day at Nationals Park Main Box Office. Due to enhanced security and an anticipated sold out crowd, fans are encouraged to arrive early and enjoy pregame festivities which include live music and kid’s activities.

    FAN PROMOTIONS & ENTERTAINMENT

    The first 20,000 fans to enter the ballpark will receive a replica batting practice hat presented by GEICO
    The enhanced Miller Lite Scoreboard Walk will host Miller Lite Party Nights on Opening Day and Thursday, Friday and Saturday game days throughout the season featuring:
    o $5 beer specials (for the first 2.5 hours after gates open)

    o Pregame entertainment featuring bands (Fridays) and DJ’s (Thursdays and Saturdays)

    o Opportunities to play shuffleboard, corn hole, ring toss and various other games

    o Special guest appearances by celebrity bartenders

    Half Street festivities will include balloons, sidewalk art and a live band
    Concourse entertainment will include a DJ performing at CF Plaza in the NatMobile, balloon artists, face painters and more
    The Nat Pack will throw T-shirts to fans throughout the opening ceremonies and the game

  • New Quinn-Simon ticket six-city Illinois fly-around Monday

    PLEASE NOTE– ALL EVENTS HAVE BEEN MOVED ONE HOUR LATER

    MEDIA ADVISORY

    For Immediate Release:

    March 29, 2010

    WHO: GOVERNOR PAT QUINN

    DEMOCRATIC LT. GOV. NOMINEE SHEILA SIMON

    WHAT: STATEWIDE FLY-AROUND TO KICK OFF

    THE 2010 ILLINOIS DEMOCRATIC GUBERNATORIAL CAMPAIGN

    WHEN: MONDAY, MARCH 29, 2010

    Governor Quinn and Sheila Simon will appear in six Illinois cities on Monday, March 29, to kick off the campaign and introduce residents to the lieutenant governor nominee. Doors open 30 minutes before events begin.

    Events are scheduled at the following times and locations:

    11:15 AM: Rockford International Airport, 60 Airport Drive, Rockford

    12:45 PM: Quad City International Airport, 2200 69th Avenue, Moline

    2:40 PM: Student Union, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 1401 W. Green St., Urbana

    4:25 PM: St. Louis Downtown Airport, 1680 Sauget Industrial Pkwy., Cahokia

    6:25 PM: Shryock Auditorium, Southern Illinois University, 1050 S. Normal Ave., Carbondale

  • Obama back from Afghanistan. AF1 touchdown at Andrews

    From the pool report….

    Air Force One touched down at 8:50am DC time. President Obama exited 10mins later in light drizzle. Motorcade departed.