Author: Lynn Sweet

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, May 19, 2010. Mexico State Dinner

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    May 18, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

    WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 2010

    In the morning, the President and the First Lady will welcome President Calderón of Mexico and Mrs. Zavala to the White House. The Vice President and Dr. Biden will also attend. The official arrival ceremony on the South Lawn is open press.

    The President will hold a bilateral meeting with President Calderón in the Oval Office. This meeting is closed press.

    Later, The President will hold a joint press conference with President Calderón in the Rose Garden. This is open to pre-credentialed press. The deadline to request media credentials has passed.

    In the afternoon, the President will meet with Ambassador to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Susman in the Oval Office. The President and the Vice President will later meet with Secretary of State Clinton in the Oval Office. These meetings are closed press.

    In the evening, the President and the First Lady will welcome President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala at the North Portico. This is open press. The President and the First Lady will then take the official photo with President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala on the Grand Staircase. This is pooled press.

    Later, the President and the First Lady will attend the State Dinner with President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala. The Vice President and Dr. Biden will also attend. The President and President Calderón will each give a toast. The toast remarks during the dinner are pooled press. Following the dinner, the President and the First Lady will attend the State Dinner Reception with President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala in the tent on the South Lawn. The reception is pooled press.

    **Please note that both events are currently outdoors and press coverage is subject to change depending on the weather.**

    Also tomorrow, Solicitor General Elena Kagan will travel to Capitol Hill to meet separately with Senator Feingold, Senator Kaufman, Senator Shaheen, Senator Ben Nelson, Senator Conrad, Senator McCaskill, and Senator Akaka.

    In-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: FOX

    Print: NY Daily News

    Radio: AP

    EDT

    8:30AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    9:30AM THE PRESIDENT, THE VICE PRESIDENT, THE FIRST LADY, and DR. BIDEN welcome President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala to the White House

    South Lawn

    Open Press (Pre-set 6:30AM – Final Gather 8:30AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    10:30AM THE PRESIDENT holds a bilateral meeting with President Calderón

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    10:55AM THE PRESIDENT holds an expanded bilateral meeting with President Calderón and Official U.S. and Official Mexican Delegations

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    11:50AM THE PRESIDENT and President Calderón hold a joint press conference

    Rose Garden

    Open Press (Pre-set 10:50AM – Final Gather 11:20AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    3:30PM THE PRESIDENT meets with Ambassador to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Lou Susman

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    4:15PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT meets with Secretary of State Clinton

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    6:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY welcome President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala

    North Portico

    Open Press (Pre-set 5:00PM – Final Gather 5:30PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    6:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY take official photo with President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala

    Grand Staircase

    Pooled Press (No pre-set, Final Call 6:10PM–North Doors of the Palm Room)

    7:10PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY attend the State Dinner with President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala; THE PRESIDENT and President Calderón will each deliver a toast

    East Room

    Pooled Press for toasts by President Obama and President Calderón (No pre-set, Final Call 6:40PM–North Doors of the Palm Room)

    8:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY attend the State Dinner Reception with President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala

    South Lawn

    Pooled Press (No Pre-set, Final Call 8:05PM–North doors of the Palm Room)

  • Specter loss in Pennsylvania; Rand Paul win in Kentucky

    WASHINGTON–Switching parties did not help Sen. Arlen Specter save his career; he was beat Tuesday in a Democratic primary by Rep. Joe Sestak. Rand Paul, Ron’s son, won in Kentucky.A roundup on the Tuesday primary contests over at Politics Daily.

  • Obama meets with almost all Jewish members of Congress

    Below, from the White House…

    Readout of the President’s meeting with Jewish members of the Democratic caucuses

    “The President met with Jewish members of the Democratic caucuses for approximately an hour and a half this afternoon to discuss a range of issues important to U.S. foreign policy. The conversation included an update on proximity talks and administration efforts to strengthen Israel’s security, including the Administration’s recent decision to provide Israel with an additional $205 million in funding for the Iron Dome missile defense system. They also discussed today’s announcement of a consensus P5+1 draft of an Iran sanctions resolution. The President and the Members had a wide ranging and productive exchange about their shared commitment to peace and security in Israel and the Middle East.”

    Here’s a list of members attending today’s meeting

    1. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.)
    2. Benjamin Cardin (D-Md.)
    3. Al Franken (D-Minn.)
    4. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.)
    5. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.)
    6. Herb Kohl (D-Wisc.)
    7. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.)
    8. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.)
    9. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.)
    10. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.)
    11. Gary Ackerman (D-N.Y.)
    12. John Adler (D-N.J.)
    13. Shelley Berkley (D-Nev.)
    14. Howard Berman (D-Calif.)
    15. Stephen Cohen (D-Tenn.)
    16. Ted Deutch (D-FL)
    17. Susan Davis (D-Calif.)
    18. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.)
    19. Barney Frank (D-Mass.)
    20. Jane Harman (D-Calif.)
    21. Paul Hodes (D-N.H.)
    22. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.)
    23. Steve Kagen (D-Wisc.)
    24. Ron Klein (D-Fla.)
    25. Sander Levin (D-Mich.)
    26. Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.)
    27. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.)
    28. Jared Polis (D-Colo.)
    29. Steve Rothman (D-N.J.)
    30. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.)
    31. Allyson Schwartz (D-Pa.)
    32. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.)
    33. Brad Sherman (D-Calif)
    34. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-Fla.)
    35. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.)
    36. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.)
    37. John Yarmuth (D-Ky.)

    ###

  • David Axelrod, Valerie Jarrett played role in Elena Kagan Supreme Court pick

    WASHINGTON—New details about who interviewed Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan before President Obama picked her emerged on Tuesday, with Chicagoans David Axelrod and Valerie Jarrett –White House senior advisors–playing a role in Kagan being picked.

    More information about the selection process was in an extensive questionnaire released Tuesday with the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    On April 7 Kagan–a former University of Chicago Law School professor– met White House senior advisor David Axelrod; on May 6 she met with Valerie Jarrett, also a senior advisor. Obama nominated her on May 9.

    She apparently did not meet with White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel.

    FOOTNOTE: Axelrod is a U. of C. grad; Jarrett is a former U. of C. board member.

  • Elena Kagan Supreme Court completed questionnaire just posted

    WASHINGTON—Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan’s answers to the Senate Judiciary Committee extensive background questionnaire were posted Tuesday afternoon.

    The documents include, according to the Committee:
    On May 13, 2010, the Committee released the questions included in the bipartisan Committee questionnaire. The responses were received on May 18, 2010.

    Committee Questionnaire

    Question 12A – Publications – Books, Articles, Reports, Letters to the Editor, Editorial Pieces, Other Published Materials
    Attachment 1
    Attachment 2
    Attachment 3
    Attachment 4
    Attachment 5
    Attachment 6
    Attachment 7
    Attachment 8
    Attachment 9
    Attachment 10
    Question 12B – Reports, Memoranda, Policy Statements, Minutes, Agendas, Other Materials
    Question 12C – Testimony, Official Statements, Other Communications
    Question 12D – Speeches, Remarks, Lectures, Panel Discussions, Conferences, Political Speeches, Symposia, Panels, Continuing Legal Education Events, Question and Answer Sessions
    Question 12E – Outlines and Notes from Speeches
    Question 12F – Interviews
    Question 12G – Reports, Memoranda, Policy Statements from Public Office
    Question 12H – Community-Wide Letters, Emails and Other Communications
    Question 12I – Letters, Pamphlets, Website Content, Articles, Other Materials

    BACKGROUND: “On Thursday, May 13, 2010, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Ranking Member Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) released the bipartisan questionnaire the Senate Judiciary Committee has asked Solicitor General Elena Kagan to complete in connection with her nomination to be an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.”

  • Luis Gutierrez calls for BP banned from federal oil drilling leases

    below, from Gutierrez…..

    Congressman Says BP Should Stand for “Banned Permanently” When It Comes To Profiting From U.S. Oil Drilling Leases

    Luis V. Gutierrez Pens Letter to Interior Secretary, Uses Floor Speech, Blog Post to Urge Colleagues to Join Him

    (Washington, DC) – U.S. Representative Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL) has written a letter to Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar demanding that future oil drilling leases be ruled out and current oil leases reexamined for the giant corporation BP. Rep. Gutierrez said that when it comes to profiting from American oil production and exploration, the U.S. government should consider BP to stand for “Banned Permanently.” Rep. Gutierrez is circulating the letter to his colleagues urging them to join him as signatories to the letter. He also used a speech before the U.S. House of Representatives and a blog article to publicize his effort.

    “We kick kids out of school, ban athletes from sports, and give people life sentences with fewer warnings than we have given BP and BP is responsible for much more serious and life-threatening catastrophes over the years,” said Rep. Gutierrez. “At some point the Congress and the American people have to stand up and say enough is enough, no more warnings, no more deaths, no more spills, you’re out of here, bye-bye.”

    Rep. Gutierrez said on the House floor today (at approximately 2:00 p.m. today):

    Almost a month into one of our worst manmade environmental and economic disasters and BP has worked harder to minimize public understanding and outrage than to minimize destruction to the Gulf of Mexico.

    Citing the company’s environmental and worker safety record in recent decades, the Congressman’s letter to Secretary of the Interior Salazar says, in part (full text here):

    Given this appalling record of misconduct and disregard, we ask that BP be banned permanently from receiving any future drilling leases. Their conduct at other operation sites indicates a blatant disregard for the lives of their workers, the preservation of the environment, and the millions of U.S. citizens who could be impacted by an environmental disaster.

    In a blog article posted at Huffington Post, the Congressman wrote:

    The President has used tough words and Secretary Salazar is pledging to get to the bottom of what happened and what BP can do now to clean up the disaster and compensate the families who lost loved ones or lost livelihoods due to BP’s mistakes. But I want to take this a step further: Prove to the American people you have changed your ways, BP, before we even consider another license from the American people to make astronomical profits from our oil.

    The Congressman said he would recruit signatories to his letter to Secretary Salazar throughout the week and then keep up pressure on the Secretary and the Obama Administration until he receives a satisfactory response.

    ###

  • Al Franken jokes with Elena Kagan: Did he play a lawyer on TV?

    WASHINGTON–Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan paid a courtesy call on Tuesday to Sen. Al Franken (D-Mn.), the former comic who joined the Senate just in time for the confirmation hearings of Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Franken used that to riff with Kagan during a photo op before their meeting on Tuesday.

    Sotomayor broke her ankle just after she was nominated, so Franken told Kagan,” So you’re doing much better than her.”

    He added, ” Yeah. Yeah. Doing much better than her.

    And it was very strange for me, because I had actually watched, I think, every confirmation hearing that had ever been televised, not the whole thing, just a little bit, you know. And so here I was going to be — so to me, it was, like, a really big deal, as I can imagine it’s, like, going to be a big deal for..”

    Said Kagan, “But now it’s sort of –“

    Franken said, “Now it’s just old hat. …. But also, I’m not a lawyer, as you might know.”

    Let’s pick up the transcript from here….

    MS. KAGAN: I didn’t know that, actually.

    SEN. FRANKEN: You didn’t?

    MS. KAGAN: I didn’t. You played one on TV.

    SEN. FRANKEN: I played one in a sketch. (Laughs.)

    SEN. KAGAN: (Laughs.)

    SEN. FRANKEN: But not in a — not even in a recurring series, you know.

    Q (Off mike.)

    STAFF: Thanks, guys, let’s go.

    SEN. FRANKEN: So, you know, my — (inaudible) — to ask questions almost as a proxy for people who aren’t lawyers.

    MS. KAGAN: Real people.

    SEN. FRANKEN: Huh?

    MS. KAGAN: Real people.

    SEN. FRANKEN: Real people.

    STAFF: Let’s go, guys.

    SEN. FRANKEN: And I kind of thought that the —

    STAFF: Guys?

  • Rick Bayless, Obama State Dinner guest chef not muzzled, Twittering from White House kitchen

    bayless+tweet.jpg

    WASHINGTON–While the White House press operation is trying to downplay the glamour aspect of the Wednesday State Dinner honoring Mexican President Felipe Calderon and his wife, Margarita Zavala and limit coverage, guest chef Rick Bayless, the Chicago cooking superstar, is so big the White House cannot muzzle him and force him into the background.

    Bayless is going around the White House communications team and twittering from the White House kitchen. This is his latest, filed Tuesday morning: “Thanks 2 the 100s of well wishers! Ready 4 day 2 n rather small White House kitchen. Chef was challenged by some ingred,but last arrive 2day”

    Bayless has so much clout, that the White House came to his Frontera Grill in Chicago for the sample dinner a few weeks ago–new Social Secretary Julianna Smoot, deputy Joe Reinstein, from Highland Park, and White House Chef Cristeta Comerford.

    The White House does not want any emphasis on the glitz associated with a State Dinner. In these hard economic times, I guess the thinking is that’s not the story and picture the p.r. folks prefer. Last year, when the Obamas entertained the Prime Minister of India, Manmohan Singh, the guest chef, Marcus Samuelsson a big name in the cooking world, was neither seen nor heard from and asked not to give interviews about the dinner in advance. He was not allowed to appear at the press preview of the dinner.

    Bayless has given interviews about his upcoming stint, has more booked after the dinner and is Twittering. He flew to Washington on Monday from Chicago and when he arrived, he Twittered, “Just arrived in DC. Headed to the White House kitchens. I have to say: I’m a little nervous.”

    After he checked out the White House kitchen–which is fairly small– Bayless Twittered, “The White House staff could not be nicer&more professional! Most worried about ingredients, but all will b here 4 big day!”

    At many White House meetings, participants are ordered to surrender Blackberries and cell phones before entering the room; the rule has not trickled down to the kitchen.

    The White House is keen on limiting reporting opportunities from the State Dinner. First Lady Michelle Obama and Mrs. Zavala–she does not use the title “First Lady” preferring attorney or wife of the president–will be visiting an elementary school in the Maryland suburbs of Washington with students from Central and South America on Wednesday morning and that is the picture of the day the East Wing wants.

    In a further crack down on reporting, the White House this time is not planning any advance event to preview the dinner. Last year on the afternoon of the India dinner, Mrs. Obama’s East Wing set up sample table settings; the first lady arranged for a briefing on the history of state dinners for the group of girls she is mentoring. I’m told reporters will be able to see a place setting only just before the dinner.

    As with the India dinner, so far the White House is not allowing any advance look at the pavilion being built on the South Lawn for the party. To call it a tent is an understatement. The pavilion built for the India dinner was lit by chandeliers.

    The main Calderon dinner is in the East Room; desert and entertainment will be on the South Lawn in order for more people to be invited. The East Room only holds about 200.

    Mrs. Obama visited Mrs. Zavala last month in Mexico City. Calderon and Zavala hosted a dinner for Mrs. Obama at Los Pinos, their official residence. Mrs. Obama and Mrs. Zavala visited a museum together and Mrs. Obama went on her own to a Mexico City grammar school.

    The New Hampshire Estates Elementary School in Silver, Spring, Md. has programs dealing with healthy eating and physical education that have gotten notice as well as a program with a sister school in Mexico where students track annual migrations of the Monarch Butterfly.

  • Susan Sher to deliver Loyola Law School commencement address

    WASHINGTON–Susan Sher, chief of staff for First Lady Michelle Obama, will deliver the commencement address Saturday at the Loyola University Law School in Chicago. Sher, an alumnus of Loyola, will address graduates at the Gentile Center, on the Lake Shore campus.

  • Mark Kirk’s Illinois GOP Senate bid gets Chamber boost today at Chicago event

    below, from Kirk campaign…

    ***Media Advisory***

    Illinois Chamber of Commerce to Endorse Kirk for Senate

    State’s oldest and largest business advocacy group represents Illinois employers of all sizes from all sectors of the economy

    WHO: Congressman Mark Kirk

    Doug Whitley, Illinois Chamber President and CEO

    Calvin Butler, Chairman of Illinois Chamber Board of Directors

    WHERE: Cardinal Colorprint Printing

    2532 W. Irving Park Rd.

    Chicago

    WHEN: Tuesday, May 18th

    10:00 AM

    WHAT: The Illinois Chamber of Commerce will announce its endorsement of Congressman and Navy veteran Mark Kirk for U.S. Senate due to his strong support for policies that create jobs, help small businesses grow and spur economic growth.

    The Illinois Chamber is the state’s oldest and largest broad-based business advocacy group representing small and large employers across all sectors of the state’s economy.

  • Tuesday primary hot contests: Will Specter win in Pennsylvania?

    Politics Daily has a wrap-up of the biggest Tuesday primary contests. (Illinois is out of this picture, holding the first-in-the nation 2010 primary last Feb. 2)

  • Obama revamped book deal; “Dreams From My Father” youth edition in the works

    WASHINGTON — Bo, the Portuguese water dog, was a priceless addition to the first family, a gift from the late Sen. Ted Kennedy and his wife, Victoria. Bo’s value, according to the Obama’s latest financial disclosure form, released on Monday, was $1,600.

    Bo’s worth, the White House said, was determined by his breeder. Much of the financial picture of President Obama and first lady Michelle is known from their tax returns and prior disclosure statements. Obama signed his new statement on Friday, with details from January-December 2009. Among them:

    • Last year, Obama recast his book deal with Crown Publishing; the original agreement dates to December 2004, after he was elected senator from Illinois but before he took office.

    Under the new arrangement, Obama will not owe his publisher a nonfiction book — or any future works — while he is president. Obama’s original deal called for him to write two nonfiction books and a children’s book. Obama delivered one of the books, The Audacity of Hope.

    • Also last year, Obama agreed to a deal with Crown in which one of its divisions, Random House Books, will published an edition of his memoir, Dreams From My Father, suitable for middle-grade or young adult readers. In 2009, Obama received a $225,000 payment, part of a previously disclosed $500,000 advance.

    This youth book was proposed in 2008. Last year, Obama received royalties of more than $1 million for each of his best-selling books.

    • The Obamas still keep a checking account at Chicago-based Northern Trust, though less than $1,000 was in it.

    • At retirement, Obama will be able to draw a pension from his days as an Illinois state senator because he paid into the plan when he served.

    • In 2009, Michelle Obama received a payment of an unknown amount from the University of Chicago Hospitals, her final deferred compensation distribution. She is not obliged to disclose her financial information.

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, May 18, 2010. Youngstown, Ohio; Jewish congressional Democrats

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    May 17, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

    TUESDAY, MAY 18, 2010

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

    The President will later travel to Youngstown, Ohio. The arrival at Youngstown-Warren Air Reserve Station is open press. The President will tour the facilities of V&M Star. There will be travel pool coverage of the tour. The President will then deliver remarks on jobs and the economy to workers. The President’s remarks are open press.

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

    Later, the President will meet with Jewish Members of the Democratic Caucuses in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building. This meeting is closed press.

    Also tomorrow, Solicitor General Elena Kagan will travel to Capitol Hill to meet separately with Senator Whitehouse, Senator Cornyn, Senator Murray, Senator Franken, Senator Graham, and Senator Stabenow.

    In-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: CNN

    Print: Newsday

    Radio: ABC

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool

    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

    TV Corr & Crew: CNN

    Print: AFP

    Radio: FOX

    EDT

    9:30AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    10:00AM THE PRESIDENT receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    10:30AM THE PRESIDENT receives the Economic Daily Briefing

    Oval Office

    Closed Press

    11:20AM THE PRESIDENT departs the White House en route Andrews Air Force Base

    In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 11:00AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    11:50AM THE PRESIDENT departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Youngstown, Ohio

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool (Call Time 10:30AM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

    12:50PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Youngstown, Ohio

    Youngstown-Warren Air Reserve Station

    Open Press

    1:20PM THE PRESIDENT tours the facilities of V&M Star

    Youngstown, Ohio

    Travel Pool Coverage

    1:45PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks on jobs and the economy to workers

    V&M Star

    Open Press

    3:20PM THE PRESIDENT departs Youngstown, Ohio en route Andrews Air Force Base

    Youngstown-Warren Air Reserve Station

    Open Press

    4:25PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at Andrews Air Force Base

    Out-of-Town Travel Pool

    4:55PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at the White House

    In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 2:45PM – Stakeout Location)

    5:15PM THE PRESIDENT meets with Jewish Members of the Democratic Caucuses

    Eisenhower Executive Office Building

    Closed Press

    Briefing Schedule

    Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton will gaggle aboard Air Force One

    ##

  • Michelle Obama at George Washington University grauation. Transcript.

    Michelle george Washington
    May 16, 2010

    Written for PD may 17, 2010

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the First Lady

    ___________________________________________________________

    For Immediate Release May 16, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE FIRST LADY

    AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY COMMENCEMENT

    National Mall

    Washington, D.C.

    10:55 A.M. EDT

    MRS. OBAMA: Wow. Thank you all. Thank you so much. (Applause.) Thank you. “Dr. Obama” — I like that. (Laughter.) I think I’ll have everybody at home start calling me that. (Laughter.)

    Thank you. I am so honored to help you celebrate this wonderful day.

    And thank you, Ally; thank you, Dr. Knapp, for your generous introduction. I also want to thank Russ Ramsey, Chair of the George Washington University Board of Trustees.

    And congratulations to the extraordinary young men and women of the Class of 2010! (Applause.)

    You guys, you should be so proud of yourselves and your incredible accomplishments. But let’s not forget all the people who also share in that pride — again, your moms and dads, and brothers and sisters, your friends, grandparents, mentors — all of whom took this journey with you in ways both seen and unseen. So this is their day, too. So let’s give them another round of applause and thank you. (Applause.)

    Now, I’m here today for a reason — and not just because it’s a quick commute. (Laughter.) I am here because, as you’ve seen, eight months ago, I used you all in great ways. I issued a challenge to the students, faculty, staff, and trustees of GW. I promised you that if you performed 100,000 hours of service to the greater Washington community this school year, that I’d come and speak at your commencement.

    Well, I am a woman of my word! So congratulations on this remarkable achievement. Thank you for the incredible contributions that you’ve made to the lives of so many people.

    But I will say that if I had known that you’d complete more than 3,300 hours on the first day of the challenge — (laughter) — I’d probably have picked a higher number! (Laughter.)

    Each month, you sent me just wonderful letters updating your progress. “Dear Mrs. Obama, we’re at 19,000 hours.” “Dear Mrs. Obama, we’re at 46,000 hours.” “Dear Mrs. Obama, we’ve at 73,958 hours.” (Laughter.) Yes, I got every minute of detail. (Laughter.) And soon enough, I realized, “Uh-oh, I better start working on that commencement speech!” (Laughter.)

    But more impressive than the fact that you did it was really how you did it. Your letters were filled with, oh, wonderful stories of holding food drives, and beautifying parks, and making care packages for our troops and writing postcards to their families.

    You helped your neighbors in Foggy Bottom dig out after “Snowmageddon” — an effort spurred by Ally.

    And led by junior Eden Sutley, you helped more than 1,000 — hey, Eden, yay for Eden — (applause) — you helped more than 1,000 World War II veterans from her home state of Louisiana come to see the monuments on this Mall and visit their fallen friends at Arlington.

    You hosted about 200 local senior citizens for GW’s eighth annual Senior Prom. And yes, I saw the photos, and it looked like they were showing you all how to dance. (Laughter.)

    GW law students — (applause) — you showed a greater commitment to community and public service careers than ever before. GW medical students — (applause) — they ran their own clinic in Anacostia for our neighbors most in need of medical aid, and so many students wanted to do it that you had to hold a lottery. And more than 500 of you spent Martin Luther King, Jr. Day at Roosevelt Senior High School here in D.C. You repainted the classrooms, and revamped the athletic facilities, you updated the library. You all restored an entire school. And just think about that. What was just a few hours to you is going to make the difference for thousands of young lives for years to come.

    And those are just some of the stories that I’ve read in your letters. But what you may not know is that the people whose lives you’ve touched, they also sent me letters.

    One was from a local retirement community for veterans and their spouses. On September 11, the day that I issued the challenge to you, more than 100 of you hopped on a bus and spent the day there.

    And the letter described in moving detail how you altered your plans to stay an extra hour so you could keep talking with an original Tuskegee Airman; how you decided to set up regular visits with the veterans; how you started a monthly intergenerational discussion group. I mean, the letter went on and on about just how incredible you were. And it described just what your efforts meant to those veterans. But it also showed me what theirs meant to you.

    And that’s what you guys have done, simply because this university decided to play a role in the life of its neighbors. You have made immeasurable differences in the life of this community and to your country. And you should be so proud, because we certainly are.

    And for every act of service that you performed for the community here in D.C., you committed yourselves to serving the greater global community, as well.

    I’m talking about the more than 200 of you who took your winter breaks abroad — building a school in Guatemala, community center in Peru, comforting the sick in Ecuador; the freshman who spent his break in Ghana helping prevent blindness; and the students who helped Sudanese refugees settle in Tennessee; stepping in one night to teach when the refugees’ English teacher didn’t show up — a class that the refugees called their very best.

    So even as you’ve buried yourselves in your books, becoming thoughtful and educated scholars — so parents, they did that, right? — (laughter) — you’ve also immersed yourselves in your community, becoming active and engaged citizens.

    You have fully joined a generation of activists and doers. And when you think about how your generation has come of age, that’s pretty astounding. I mean, you all have seen so much. Just since you were in middle school, you’ve witnessed terrorism touch our soil, you’ve seen the cost of war reach into our communities. You’ve watched unimaginable devastation and suffering in the aftermath of a tsunami; a hurricane; an earthquake. You’ve felt the wrath of a recession that’s changed your towns and even your families.

    Now, that’s a whole lot to bear for any generation. So, no one would have blamed you had you chosen to hunker down and turn inward; if you had simply focused on making sure that your own lives were secure.

    But so many of you have done the exact opposite. Instead, you’ve dived in. You’ve reached out. You have volunteered and applied to organizations like Teach for America and the Peace Corps in record numbers. In fact, this year is the second year in a row that GW led universities of this size in the number of undergraduate alumni serving in the Peace Corps. (Applause.)

    So for every ill of this interconnected world, you’ve tried to find a way to make good. Where there’s hate, you’ve tried to heal it. Where there’s need, you’ve tried to fill it. Where there’s devastation, you’ve tried to rebuild it.

    You guys can’t be stopped. You don’t know the meaning of the word “can’t.” And every time someone’s tried to say to tell you that, you’ve replied what — “Oh, Yes We Can.” (Laughter and applause.)

    In fact, you remind me of something President Wilson once said. He said, “Sometimes people call me an idealist. Well, that’s the way I know I’m an American.”

    Even so, you’ve probably also run up against people who love your idealism, but warn you to lower your sights; to scale back your ambitions a bit; to settle for something less.

    And you know their hearts may be in the right place. They may be worried that you’re in for a letdown once you realize that it can take years and even decades for your best efforts to bear fruit. See, we live in a culture, after all, that tells us that our lives should be easy; that we can have everything we want without a whole lot of effort.

    But the truth is — and you know this — creating anything meaningful takes time. And sometimes, the only thing that happens in an instant is destruction.

    And I say this because during our trip to Haiti, Jill Biden and I, we got to visit the people there, and there amidst so much misery and destruction, all of which occurred in a matter of minutes, it is so easy to ask: After so much ruin, how can anything rise again? After so much loss, how can anyone still have hope?

    But let me tell you that everyone I met during that visit — doctors, relief workers; Haitians, Americans, citizens of the world — they were focused on the task of answering those questions. Yeah, they were exhausted and they were heartbroken. But they were equally unyielding in their determination to help that country heal, and fully aware of how many years that would take.

    And by the way, I also met with President Preval and his wife, Elisabeth, who’s a GW graduate herself. And she just went on and on about how GW, the community, has been there at the forefront of the efforts to help Haiti from the very beginning.

    But the point is, everyone I encountered during my trip embodied a Haitian proverb that I learned which says that, “little by little, the bird builds its nest.” And your generation is doing its best to live by this idea.

    You see, as impatient as you may be to get out there and change the world — and that’s a good thing — you’re equally patient for that change to come. As idealistic as all of you may be, what your generation has lived through has also tempered you with a deep realism.

    You understand things that perhaps your parents and I even don’t always have to consider when our world was still separated by walls of concrete and communication.

    That we are no longer isolated from what happens on the other side of the world. That it’s in our best interest to look beyond our immediate self-interest, and look out for one another globally. That so many of today’s challenges are borderless, from the economy to terrorism to climate change, and that solving those problems demands cooperation with others. And more than any other generation, yours is fully convinced that you’re uniquely equipped to solve those challenges. You believe that you can change your communities and change the world. And you know what, I think you’re right. Yes, you can.

    So today, graduates, I have one more request to make of you, one more challenge, and that is: Keep going. Keep giving. Keep engaging.

    I’m asking you to take what you’ve learned here and embrace the full responsibilities that a degree from an institution like GW gives you. I’m asking your generation to be America’s face to the world. It will make the world safer, it will make America stronger, and it will make you more competitive.

    Now, you didn’t think I’d show up here without another challenge, did you? (Laughter.)

    I know that some of you may be thinking, well, “Hang on, Michelle. I’m in debt, I’ve got to find a job in a tough economy, and now you want me to what?”

    And I know there are parents out there thinking the same thing. “Hang on, Michelle. I just shelled out six figures to get my kid to this day, and now you want her to do what?” (Laughter.)

    I’m just asking you to keep being you, to keep doing what you’re doing. Just take it global.

    Yes, that can mean serving in the world’s most broken places. Or it can simply mean surfing foreign news sources to get an idea of how other young people see things in other parts of the world.

    It can mean continuing your own personal and professional growth by traveling far and wide. Or it can mean reaching back to convince the students behind you to try study abroad programs, especially students from communities and backgrounds who might not normally consider it.

    It can mean seizing that overseas opportunity with a company. Or it can mean staying here and fixing the world by doing business with the world, and, at the same time, creating opportunity in your own community.

    This class of graduates in particular has a leg up, because at GW, you’ve already been trained to think this way. Nearly half of undergraduates here study abroad. As Zoe said, you can’t walk a block without running into the State Department, or the World Bank, or any number of NGOs and faith-based organizations. And all around you, every day, are classmates and friends from more than 130 different countries. So for you, it’s as easy as falling out of bed, even if some of you stay in bed until noon. (Laughter.)

    But so many Americans either don’t have those opportunities or simply don’t consider them.

    And as interconnected as we are; as quickly as the 21st century global economy moves; we have to find ways to extend those opportunities to as many young people as possible.

    And I say this as someone who, like, perhaps many of your parents, didn’t always have or consider those opportunities. As you heard, I grew up in a blue-collar neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago, where the idea of spending some time abroad just didn’t register. My brother and I were the first in our families to go to college, so we were way more focused on just getting in, getting through, and getting on with our lives. And after law school, my priority was paying off my student debt. So, I just never considered that I needed to take an additional journey or expand the boundaries of my own life.

    And then I met my husband, whose life was — yeah, yeah — (laughter) — his life was somewhat different than mine. His had been more informed by experiences abroad. And watching him helped me to expand the way I looked at things; to consider my life as connected not just to my country but to the world. And it’s a perspective that we now are trying to instill in our daughters, as well.

    And today, fortunately my new role, it affords me extraordinary opportunities to visit foreign countries. And during these trips, I try to spend as much time as possible with young people. And those experiences are what convince me so fully that it’s in this nation’s best interest that your generation get out there, because it’s going to strengthen all of us.

    Now, there are some things that government can do, and things that I’ll pursue as First Lady, to bring these opportunities within reach to more young people.

    For example, my husband is committed to substantially increasing the number of volunteer opportunities within the Peace Corps. And, by the way, joining the Peace Corps only requires that you be young at heart, because the oldest active member is 85 years old! (Applause.)

    We’re also expanding exchange programs, study abroad opportunities; and encouraging universities like GW to create their own, because as those of you who have already participated in study abroad know, the most lasting lessons sometimes don’t always come from books.

    But more important than anything government can do will be a sincere willingness on your part to keep sharing your enthusiasm; to keep believing that you can make a difference; to keep going to places where there is brokenness and injustice and despair, and asking what you can do to lift those places up.

    It is through the simple act of engaging with your counterparts around the world that you can make the world a safer place. As you know, in times of tension, we tend to focus on what makes us different — things like color or creed; class or country — when sometimes, that only serves to deepen misunderstanding and harden mistrust. In the midst of our struggles, we too easily forget about all that we share in common — that no matter where or how we live, we all have the same dreams: a life of dignity, a chance at opportunity, a better future for our kids.

    It reminds me of a story our Secretary of State and friend, Hillary Clinton, told during a visit to one of our embassies earlier this year. She spoke about a meeting she attended with a State Councilor of China, who proudly told her that he had just had his first grandchild.

    And Secretary Clinton responded that she thought everyone should bring pictures of their children and grandchildren to international meetings, and set those pictures right in front of them and ask themselves, “Is the decision that we’re about to make going to make their lives better?” And then at the very next meeting together, the first thing he did when he had arrived was pull out a picture of his grandchild.

    Now, perhaps some of you have had similar interactions with your classmates; interactions that helped you discover that when we just make that effort to engage with one another; when we share our stories; we begin to build familiarity that often ultimately softens mistrust. We begin to see ourselves in one another. We begin to realize that the forces that bind us are so much more powerful than the forces that blind us.

    And because many of you already serve around the world, this class knows firsthand that each one of those interactions in the world has the power to start a chain reaction. Every child that learns to read can teach another. Every girl taught that she has power inspires dozens of others. Every school built improves thousands of lives.

    And just as that makes the world safer, it also makes America stronger.

    Imagine a child whose first memory of an American is a student who helps him see again. Imagine a community whose first experience with America is a group of youth on winter break standing side by side with them building homes. Imagine a country shattered by a catastrophic earthquake that they see wave after wave of rescuers and doctors and relief workers all wearing the stars and stripes on their sleeve.

    Imagine how powerful that is. Imagine what impact thousands of stories like that today can have a decade from now.

    Now, this is not to discourage any American from continuing to serve in their own communities in this country as best they can, especially in a time when so many fellow Americans need help here at home. And thanks to the ingenuity of the American people, and a newly strengthened AmeriCorps, there are more opportunities to serve at home than ever before.

    But just know that when you serve others abroad, you’re serving our country, too. You’re showing the world the true face of America — our generosity, our strength, the enduring power of our ideals, the infinite reservoir of our hope.

    And yes, serving abroad will make you stronger, more competitive, a more valuable asset for a career in the public or private sectors. Just talk to any of your colleagues who have spent some time abroad. And one of the first things they’ll tell you, for example, is that you’ll never learn a language or develop self-reliance as quickly as you will when you’re on your own in a foreign country!

    But they may also tell you that making a difference abroad might just be the thing that inspires you to come back and make a difference here at home. They might tell you that engaging with the world doesn’t just change the course of other people’s lives — it may change the course of yours, too. You may just find that pivot point that you’ve been looking for, or maybe one that you didn’t even expect at all.

    An extraordinary young woman that I met in Mexico last month, during my visit, she told me that in high school, she felt as if she were living in a bubble. So on a whim, she went to Vietnam to volunteer with children.

    She described her days there as very “unfair” and “difficult.” She said there were days there “that [made] us feel meaningless.” But she also said there were days “…where I felt I could change the world.” And that trip made her realize she wanted to be a doctor. And when she returned to Mexico, she enrolled in medical school. But her journey led her to an important pivot point in her life. She said, and these are her words, “I realized that this is my country. This is where I belong and this is my culture, where I need to help.”

    You see, that young woman, she went halfway around the world before she found her way home. And I suspect that something has — like that has happened to many of you.

    I know it did for Davina Durgana, who’s a remarkable young woman who’s graduating with you today. A simple mission trip to El Salvador inspired her to take up the cause of human trafficking — modern day slavery — when she came back. She found an internship that allowed her to work on an anti-human trafficking campaign, and she’s going to pursue graduate studies in human rights next year at the Sorbonne.

    And by the way, Davina, she also serves as a Big Sister to a young girl in Anacostia; she volunteers with wounded warriors at Walter Reed; she helped run a Girl Scouts troop where she encouraged underprivileged girls to get involved; she volunteers as an EMT at the busiest fire department in the D.C. area, and convinced other classmates to join her — and, somehow, she found time to graduate! That’s for your parents, Davina. (Laughter.)

    In the end, the simple act of opening your mind and engaging abroad — whether it’s in the heart of campus or in the most remote villages — can change your definition of what’s possible.

    And more importantly, you can change ours. See, after all, it’s your generation that always has — often from the very Mall where we’re sitting right now. I mean, just look around you. It was on this Mall where young people marched for women’s rights. It was on this Mall where young people marched for civil rights. It was on this Mall where young people marched for peace, for equality, for awareness.

    Decade after decade, young Americans who loved their country; and loved its ideals; who knew that it stood for something larger in the world; came here to this spot to wade into the rushing currents of history because they believed that they could change its course.

    And on a cold January morning last year, many of you came here to wade in yourselves. It was the day my husband took the oath of office as President of the United States. And that day, he pledged to seek a new era of American engagement, and he asked each of us to embrace anew our duties to ourselves, our nation, and the world.

    Now, I’m not a President. I’m just a citizen. But as a citizen, I’m asking you, as graduates of this global institution, to seize those responsibilities gladly. I’m asking you to fully embrace your role in the next vital chapter of our history. I’m asking you to play your part.

    And from what I’ve seen from your class, I have no doubt that you will. Look, we believe in you so deeply. So, your new challenge begins now — and it’s one that doesn’t end after 100,000 hours.

    So thank you, graduates. I wish you God’s grace and the greatest luck on the journey ahead. Congratulations. Thank you. (Applause.)

    END 11:22 A.M. EDT

  • Giannoulias Illinois Senate race: Top strategists on conference call

    WASHINGTON–Top strategists for Alexi Giannoulias Illinois Senate campaign will be on a conference call today to discuss the state of the race.

    On the call, from the Giannoulias team: Pete Giangreco, The Strategy Group; Eric Adelstein, Adelstein Liston; Michael Bocian, Greenburg Quinlan Rosner and Michael Rendina, Campaign Manager.

  • Mark Kirk campaigning for Illinois Senate in Quincy

    WASHINGTON–GOP Illinois Senate nominee Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) stumps in Quincy, Ill. on Monday afternoon meeting with hospital administrators, a selection of local and elected leaders at Blessing Hospital there.

  • Giannoulias own poll has him tied with Kirk

    A poll taken by Alexi Giannoulias’ Democratic Illinois Senate campaign last week shows Giannoulias even with GOP rival Rep. Mark Kirk, making up for ground lost after the failure of the Giannoulias family-owned Broadway Bank.

    Giannoulias, the state treasurer, is even with Kirk, according to his campaign pollsters, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research. Their poll of 600 likely November voters — taken May 11-13 — shows a 44-44 tie.

    A Giannoulias campaign internal poll of 600 conducted April 27-29, just after federal regulators shut down the bank on April 23, had Kirk at 43 and Giannoulias at 37.

    Both polls had a 4 percentage-point margin of error. Each time the question was the same: if the election were today, would you vote for Giannoulias or Kirk.

    The Greenberg poll shows that despite taking a hit from the bank failure, Giannoulias is a viable contender, albeit one with an uphill battle.

    Giannoulias gained ground between the April and May polls especially in Chicago and its suburbs.

    The poll also showed that President Obama has high approval ratings in his adopted state, with 62 percent of all likely voters approving of the job Obama is doing in the White House.

    Giannoulias was a vice president of the bank before being elected state treasurer in November 2006, and Kirk seized on Broadway Bank as a major issue having to do with Giannoulias’ competency and credibility.

    Giannoulias immediately went on the offensive after Broadway Bank failed, with a round of ads framing Broadway as a victim of the recession — and GOP policies Kirk supported.

    Kirk responded with his own $250,000 ad buy to rebut Giannoulias’ claims and continued pounding on Giannoulias over Broadway Bank.

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, May 17, 2010. U. Connecticut womens basketball team

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    May 16, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    MONDAY, MAY 17, 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.

    Later, the President will sign the Freedom of Press Act in the Oval Office. The signing will be pooled press.

    In the afternoon, the President will welcome the NCAA champion University of Connecticut women’s basketball team to the White House to honor the Huskies for their second straight NCAA Championship and back-to-back undefeated seasons. The President will deliver remarks in the Rose Garden. This event is open press.

    In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: CBS
    Print: National Journal
    Radio: VOA

    EDT

    9:00AM Pool Call Time

    10:00AM THE PRESIDENT receives the Presidential Daily Briefing
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    10:30AM THE PRESIDENT meets with senior advisors
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    11:35AM THE PRESIDENT signs the Freedom of Press Act
    Oval Office
    Pooled Press (Gather Time 11:30AM – Briefing Room)

    1:05PM THE PRESIDENT welcomes the NCAA champion University of Connecticut women’s basketball team to the White House
    Rose Garden
    Open Press (Pre-set 12:05PM – Final Gather 12:45PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    Briefing Schedule

    1:30PM Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs

    ##

  • Obama week ahead: State dinner for Mexico President Felipe Calderon and Margarita Zavala

    Schedule for Week of May 17, 2010

    On Monday, the President will sign the Freedom of Press Act Bill. In the afternoon, the President will welcome the NCAA champion University of Connecticut women’s basketball team to the White House.

    On Tuesday, the President will travel to Youngstown, Ohio, and tour the facilities of V & M Star Ohio before delivering remarks on jobs and the economy to workers.

    On Wednesday, the President will hold a bilateral meeting and press conference with President Calderón of Mexico. In the evening, the President and Mrs. Obama will host a State Dinner in honor of President Calderón and Mrs. Zavala.

    On Thursday and Friday, the President will attend meetings at the White House.

    ###

  • Obama raises $1 million at $30,400 per couple fund-raiser. Pool report

    Thursday evening pool report by Paul West, Baltimore Sun….

    At 7:25 p.m. the lower door of the South Portico opened and Malia Obama bounded out in sports attire, carrying a ball at best half the size of a soccer ball, and trailed by her mother with leashed dog in tow. They frolicked on the lawn for a minute or two, then sat on the side of a grassy knoll, waving, as the motorcade rolled past. Bo, sensing an opening, bolted for the moving limos. He obediently turned back almost immediately after being summoned by his young mistress, who ran the other way to the north side of the lawn, tossing her ball and rather quickly nabbing his leash.

    That was the best of it for the pool, now holding just off Pennsylvania Ave. in West End outside the luxe Columbia Condominiums, the former Columbia Hospital for Women (2400 block of L St. NW). Obama entered unseen and press coverage of the million-dollar Democratic Party fundraiser was rendered opaque, on the grounds that he is not making “formal remarks.”

    A DNC official provided the following table scrap, via email:
    The private dinner is at the home of Frank White, a local entrepreneur, early supporter of the President and a National Finance Committee member. The President will not be delivering remarks. Tickets for the dinner were a suggested donation of $30,400 per couple and the event is expected to raise a little over $1 million for the DNC.

    Paul West
    Baltimore Sun