Author: Lynn Sweet

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 27, 2010. Ottumwa, Iowa town hall meeting

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 26, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 2010

    In the morning, the President will greet members of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform in the Roosevelt Room. There will be a still photographer pool spray at the top of the greet. Following the greet, the President will deliver remarks in the Rose Garden, thanking the members of the Commission for their important service and underscore the importance of forging bipartisan consensus around recommendations to meaningfully improve our long-run fiscal health. The remarks are open press.

    The President will embark on another leg of the White House to Main Street tour with stops in Iowa. In the early afternoon, he will tour the Siemens Wind Turbine Blade Manufacturing Plant in Fort Madison. There will be travel pool coverage of the tour. The President will then deliver remarks and share ideas with workers for continuing to grow the economy and to put Americans back to work. This event is open press.

    The President will later tour a local business in Mt. Pleasant. There will be travel pool coverage of the tour.

    Later in the afternoon, President Obama will hold a town hall meeting at Indian Hills Community College in Ottumwa. This event is open press.

    The President will spend the night in Des Moines.

    Also tomorrow at 10:00AM EDT, the Fiscal Commission will hold its first formal meeting at the White House Conference Center where they will hear remarks from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, OMB Director Peter Orszag, and Former OMB Directors Robert Reischauer and Rudolph Penner. The meeting is pooled press and will be streamed live on www.WhiteHouse.gov/live.

    In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: CBS
    Print: Washington Post
    Radio: SRN

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

    EDT

    8:30AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    9:30AM THE PRESIDENT greets members of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform
    Roosevelt Room
    Still Photographer Pool spray at the top (Gather time 9:25AM – Briefing Room)

    9:45AM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks underscoring the importance of forging bipartisan consensus around recommendations to meaningfully improve our long-run fiscal health
    Rose Garden
    Open Press (Pre-set 8:45AM – Final Gather 9:30AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    10:05AM THE PRESIDENT departs The White House en route Andrews Air Force Base
    South Lawn
    Open Press (Pre-set immediately following Rose Garden remarks – Final Gather 9:55AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    10:20AM THE PRESIDENT departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Quincy, Illinois
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool (Call Time 9:00AM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

    CDT

    11:30AM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Quincy, Illinois
    Quincy Regional Airport
    Open Press

    12:30PM THE PRESIDENT tours the Siemens Wind Turbine Blade Manufacturing Plant
    Fort Madison, Iowa
    Travel Pool Coverage

    1:10PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks on how to grow the economy and put Americans back to work
    Siemens Wind Turbine Blade Manufacturing Plant
    Open Press

    2:00PM THE PRESIDENT tours a local business
    Mt. Pleasant, Iowa
    Travel Pool Coverage

    4:35PM THE PRESIDENT holds town hall meeting
    Indian Hills Community College, Ottumwa, Iowa
    Open Press

    Briefing Schedule

    Deputy Press Secretary Bill Burton will gaggle aboard Air Force One

    ##

  • Rahm Emanuel in Chicago Tuesday for Richard J. Daley Global Cities Forum

    WASHINGTON–White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel–whose ambition is to one day be Chicago mayor–will be in Chicago Tuesday to appear on a panel for the Richard J. Daley Global Cities Forum, named for the late Chicago mayor who is the father of the current Chicago Mayor, Richard M. Daley.

    Setting the record straight: Emanuel’s Chicago homecoming–taking place a week after his first public admission of interest in a mayoral bid–is a coincidence. Emanuel was booked for the panel months ago, I’m told by his spokesman–long before Emanuel said, on the record last week to Charlie Rose that one day he wanted to run City Hall.

    The global cities forum is co-sponsored by Chicago Sister Cities International and the University of Illinois at Chicago in conjunction with the World Organization of United Cities and Local Governments.

    Others at the forum:

    Motorola co-CEO and CEO of Motorola Solutions Greg Brown
    Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley
    Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoë
    Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard
    Merchandise Mart Properties, Inc. President and Chairman of the University of Illinois Board of Trustees Christopher Kennedy
    Amman Mayor Omar Maani
    Johannesburg Mayor Amos Masondo
    Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter
    Washington Post Writer’s Group Columnist Neal Peirce
    The Boeing Company Vice President of Global Corporate Citizenship Anne Eleanor Roosevelt
    World Bank Vice President for Sustainable Development Katherine Sierra
    Istanbul Mayor Kadir Topbas
    PBS NewsHour Senior Correspondent Judy Woodruff

  • Steve Goodman post office bill passes House; Senate next

    below, release from Quigley….

    Quigley Bill to Name Post Office for Steve Goodman Passes House
    Songwriter created “City of New Orleans,” “Go Cubs Go,” devoted life to Chicago, music

    WASHINGTON – Today, a bill introduced by Congressman Mike Quigley (D-IL) to name a Chicago post office for the late songwriter Steve Goodman passed in the U.S. House of Representatives. The bill now moves to the Senate for consideration.

    Quigley’s effort to memorialize and celebrate Goodman’s life at the Lakeview Post Office, located at 1343 W. Irving Park Road, has the full support of the Illinois Congressional delegation, the Old Town School of Folk Music, and a growing list of local and nationally known recording artists.

    In advance of this evening’s vote, Quigley delivered the following remarks on the House floor:

    “I rise today in support of H.R. 4861, a resolution to name the Post Office at 1343 West Irving Park Road after Steve Goodman.

    Steve Goodman was a true Chicagoan, a legendary folk singer and songwriter, and a faithful Cubs fan.

    Sadly, Goodman succumbed to leukemia in 1984 at the young age of 36 after a courageous 15-year battle with the disease.

    Over the course of his illness, Goodman wrote some of the most enduring American folk songs, including “The City of New Orleans,” for which he won one of his two Grammy awards, and the great Chicago tune “Lincoln Park Pirates.”

    Goodman’s career was inexorably intertwined with Chicago’s Old Town School of Folk Music, where he learned his craft and befriended folk music luminaries such as Roger McGuinn of The Byrds, Bob Gibson, Bonnie Koloc, and John Prine.

    While older Goodman fans are no doubt aware of his connection to the Cubs, best exemplified by his song “A Dying Cubs Fan’s Last Request,” in recent years younger generations have come to know Steve Goodman as the writer and performer of “Go, Cubs, Go,” the anthem played at Wrigley Field following Cubs’ wins.

    Steve’s spirit lives on after every Cubs home win, as thousands of fans happily head home from Wrigley singing, “Go, Cubs, Go…”

    With the passage of this legislation, it’s possible that the strains of this happy tune will be heard on the steps of the Steve Goodman Post Office, not a mile up Clark Street from Wrigley Field.

    Naming the Post Office at 1343 West Irving Park Road after Steve Goodman is a small but fitting way to honor the life and work of a man whose music was always imbued with emotions and scenes of everyday life.

    I urge the swift passage of this legislation.”

    Quigley’s resolution now moves to the Senate for consideration. Once the measure is approved, Quigley is planning a “musical” unveiling event at the post office for the community this summer, in collaboration with the Old Town School of Folk Music. More details will be made available as plans progress.

    Steve Goodman Biography
    Steve Goodman is perhaps best known by Chicagoans and Cubs fans as the writer and performer of “Go Cubs Go”, the song that plays at Wrigley Field following Cubs’ wins. But while this song may bring him notoriety, Steve Goodman’s life was an inspiration for many other reasons. Be it the courage and perseverance that characterized his 15-year battle with leukemia, his celebrated contributions to American folk music, or the general enthusiasm and good humor with which he approached life, Steve Goodman was a great Chicagoan by all accounts.

    Goodman’s career in folk music featured both exemplary writing and performance. Besides his Cubs-related music, Goodman released 10 albums of folk music and five albums of his work have been released posthumously. He received two Grammy Awards, both posthumously, for his writing of the hit “City of New Orleans” and his album Unfinished Business. In fact, “City of New Orleans” was a top-20 hit for Arlo Guthrie in 1972, and a number one country music hit for Willie Nelson in 1985, the year that Goodman won his first Grammy.

    Goodman’s singing career was centered largely around the folk music clubs of Chicago, and Goodman wrote and performed many classic songs about the city, including two well known songs about the Chicago Cubs – “The Dying Cub Fan’s Last Request” and “Go, Cubs, Go.” Other great Chicago-related songs of Goodman’s include “The Lincoln Park Pirates,” about the notorious Lincoln Towing Company, and “Daley’s Gone,” eulogizing the late Mayor Richard J. Daley.

    The Old Town School of Folk Music played a major role in Goodman’s music career. He studied at the School in the 1960s with folk music luminaries such as Roger McGuinn of the Byrds, Bob Gibson, Bonnie Koloc, and his good friend John Prine. Along with these artists, Goodman helped build the School’s reputation as home to many of folk music’s greatest writers and performers.

    Most remarkable, however, is that Goodman crafted such an illustrious music career while battling leukemia for 15 years until his death at age 36. He endured his fight with courage and good humor – it’s said that he nicknamed himself “Cool Hand Leuk” – and tragically died in 1984 just eleven days before his beloved Cubs played their first playoff game at Wrigley Field since 1945. Goodman had been asked to sing the “Star Spangled Banner” before that game, but Jimmy Buffett filled in and dedicated it to his friend. Goodman’s ashes were later spread at Wrigley Field, and his memory lives on every time the Cubs win a home game and thousands happily sing along to “Go Cubs Go.”

    ###

  • Giannoulias, other Illinois officials invited to Obama Quincy event

    WASHINGTON– Setting the record straight: Democratic Illinois Senate nominee Alexi Giannoulias–the Illinois treasurer was invited–in his official role as a statewide elected official–to join President Obama at his Wednesday afternoon event in Quincy.

    The Quincy stop–where Obama will deliver a speech on Wall Street reform–is on Obama’s Illinois, Missouri and Iowa swing on Tuesday and Wednesday. Giannoulias will attend.

    The invitations to all the Illinois statewide elected officials, from Gov. Quinn on down, came from the White House on Monday morning, sent by Chelsea Kammerer, Special Assistant to the Director of the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs ( a shop that at the top is overseen by White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett.)

    The White House also invited Iowa and Missouri statewide elected officials to Obama stops in their states.

    I know there is chatter out there that Giannoulias was somehow snubbed by the White House over the Quincy event that started last week, when Giannoulias said Quincy was not on his schedule. The chatter was fueled by the failure last week of his family-controlled Broadway Bank.

    Obama is visiting Illinois, Missouri and Iowa on a government, not a political trip–though the White House will distribute some VIP tickets for local politicos.

    Guidance from the White House: On Tuesday, the President will continue the White House to Main Street tour with stops in Iowa. In the early afternoon, he will tour Siemens Energy Inc Facility in Fort Madison and then share ideas with workers for continuing to grow the economy and to put Americans back to work. He will then make a stop in Mt. Pleasant. Later in the afternoon, President Obama will hold a town hall meeting in Ottumwa at Indian Hills Community College. On Wednesday, the President will hold events in Macon, Missouri and Quincy, Illinois. He will return to Washington, DC on Wednesday night.


  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 26, 2010. Yankees at the White House

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 25, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    MONDAY, APRIL 26, 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. Later, the President will meet with senior advisors in the Oval Office. These meetings are closed press.

    In the afternoon, the President will welcome the World Series Champion New York Yankees to the White House to honor their 2009 season. Appearing at this event with the team will be Yankees coaches and staff. This event is open press.

    Later the President and the Vice President will meet with Secretary of Defense Gates in the Oval Office. This meeting is Closed Press.

    In the evening, the President will deliver remarks at the Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship at the Ronald Reagan Building. At his June 4, 2009, speech in Cairo, President Obama announced that the U.S. Government would host a Summit on Entrepreneurship to identify how we can deepen ties between business leaders, foundations, and entrepreneurs in the United States and Muslim communities around the world. The President’s remarks will be streamed live on www.WhiteHouse.gov/live. The other sessions at the summit will be streamed live at www.state.gov/entrepreneurshipsummit. This event is pooled for TV and open to pre-credentialed correspondents and still photographers. The deadline to request credentials has passed.

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

    10:40AM THE PRESIDENT meets with senior advisors
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    3:00PM THE PRESIDENT welcomes World Series Champion New York Yankees to the White House.
    South Portico
    Open Press (Pre-set 2:00PM – Final Gather 2:30PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    4:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT meet with Secretary of Defense Gates
    Oval Office
    Closed Press

    6:00PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at the Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship
    Ronald Reagan Building
    Pooled TV, Open to pre-credentialed correspondents & still photographers (Pool Gather time 5:15PM- North Doors of the Palm Room)

    Briefing Schedule

    1:00PM Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs

    ##

  • Obama, Michelle hiking in North Carolina

    obamas asheville.jpg
    (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

    President Obama and First Lady Michelle, according to the White House on Friday, “have a chance encounter with other hikers while walking along a trail off the Blue Ridge Parkway outside of Asheville, N.C.” Pete Souza, the White House chief photographer, only posted this photo at Whitehouse.gov and did not offer a wide shot that might have shown other people or security with the First Couple.

  • David Axelrod guests on Jay Leno. Video

    WASHINGTON–White House senior advisor David Axelrod in Los Angeles, was Jay Leno’s guest Friday on NBC’s “The Tonight Show.” Leno flies to Washington to headline Saturday’s White House Correspondents Association Dinner.

    Axelrod on SEC porn

    Axelrod on Biden using the F word

    Axelrod calls President Obama

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 24, 25, 2010. Asheville, N.C. and Beckley, W. Va.

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 23, 2010

    WEEKEND GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    SATURDAY, APRIL 24 AND SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 2010

    The President and the First Lady will spend the weekend in Asheville, North Carolina. There are no scheduled public events.

    On Sunday, the President and the Vice President will travel to Beckley, West Virginia, to participate in a memorial service for the miners lost in the tragedy at Upper Big Branch mine. President Obama will deliver a eulogy honoring the lives of those who perished and offering his deepest condolences to the loved ones they left behind. The service is open to pre-credentialed media. The deadline to request credentials has passed. Prior to the service, the President and the Vice President will meet with family members of the miners who lost their lives. This is closed press.

    The President will return to Washington, DC on Sunday evening.

    Saturday’s In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: FOX
    Print: USA Today
    Radio: CBS

    Saturday’s Out-of-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: FOX
    Print: Tribune

    Sunday’s In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: NBC
    Print: Wall Street Journal
    Radio: FOX

    Sunday’s Out-of-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: NBC
    Print: Washington Post
    Radio: CBS

    Saturday, April 24, 2010

    EDT

    No In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    Sunday, April 25, 2010

    EDT

    1:50PM THE PRESIDENT departs Asheville, North Carolina en route Beckley, West Virginia
    Asheville Regional Airport
    Open Press

    2:40PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Beckley, West Virginia
    Raleigh County Memorial Airport
    Open Press

    3:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT meet with family members of miners who lost their lives at Upper Big Branch mine
    Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center
    Closed Press

    3:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT attend memorial service; THE PRESIDENT delivers eulogy
    Beckley-Raleigh County Convention Center
    Open to pre-credentialed media

    5:20PM THE PRESIDENT departs Beckley, West Virginia en route Andrews Air Force Base
    Raleigh County Memorial Airport
    Open Press

    5:30PM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    6:20PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at Andrews Air Force Base
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool

    6:35PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at the White House
    South Lawn
    Open Press (Pre-set 6:05PM – Final Gather 6:20PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    Schedule for Week of April 26, 2010

    On Monday, the President will welcome the World Series Champion New York Yankees to the White House to honor their 2009 season. Appearing at this event with the team will be Yankees coaches and staff. In the evening, the President will deliver remarks at the Presidential Summit on Entrepreneurship at the Ronald Reagan Building. At his June 4, 2009, speech in Cairo, President Obama announced that the U.S. Government would host a Summit on Entrepreneurship to identify how we can deepen ties between business leaders, foundations, and entrepreneurs in the United States and Muslim communities around the world. The President’s remarks will be streamed live on www.WhiteHouse.gov/live.

    On Tuesday, the President will continue the White House to Main Street tour with stops in Iowa. In the early afternoon, he will tour Siemens Energy Inc Facility in Fort Madison and then share ideas with workers for continuing to grow the economy and to put Americans back to work. He will then make a stop in Mt. Pleasant. Later in the afternoon, President Obama will hold a town hall meeting in Ottumwa at Indian Hills Community College. On Wednesday, the President will hold events in Macon, Missouri and Quincy, Illinois. He will return to Washington, DC on Wednesday night.

    On Thursday, the President will present the 2010 National Teacher of the Year Award at the White House.

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

    ##

  • Houlihan interested in mayoral run: Felsenthal

    In the wake of Rahm Emanuel eyeing City Hall one day, retiring Cook County Assessor James Houlihan talks to Carol Felsenthal about one day running for mayor over at Felsenthal Files at Chicago Magazine

  • Obama visits Quincy on Wednesday, an Illinois homecoming

    As predicted in this blog, the White House on Friday confirmed President Obama will visit Quincy, Ill. next week.

    below, from the White House….

    WASHINGTON- On Tuesday, April 27, President Obama will continue the White House to Main Street tour with stops in Iowa. In the early afternoon, he will tour Siemens Energy Inc Facility in Fort Madison and then share ideas with workers for continuing to grow the economy and to put Americans back to work. He will then make a stop in Mt. Pleasant. Later in the afternoon, President Obama will hold a town hall meeting in Ottumwa at Indian Hills Community College. The President will depart from Des Moines International Airport on the morning of April 28.

    On Wednesday, April 28, the President will hold events in Macon, MO and Quincy, IL. More details will be announced for these events as they become available.only.

  • Blagojevich subpoenas Durbin

    below, Durbin release…..

    DURBIN OFFICE STATEMENT ON SUBPEONA ISSUED BY FORMER GOV. ROD BLAGOJEVICH

    [CHICAGO] – Joe Shoemaker, spokesman for U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin (D-IL) made the following statement regarding a subpoena issued by Rod Blagojevich’s defense team:
    .
    “On April 16, 2010 Senator Durbin was served a subpoena by Rod Blagojevich’s defense attorneys.

    Given the former Governor’s previous antics regarding this case, it’s no surprise he is casting a wide net – apparently from the President down to dogcatcher.

    We have accepted service of the subpoena and will cooperate with the court in any reasonable way. The matter has been referred to counsel, and our office will not be commenting further.”

    – 30 –

  • Mayor Daley fine with Rahm Emanuel’s Chicago mayor ambitions

    Mayor Daley has no problems with Rahm Emanuel’s ambition to one day be Chicago mayor, my Chicago Sun-Times colleague Fran Spielman is reporting after Daley spoke to reporters on Friday.

    “No, he’s not stepping on my toes,” Daley says. “He’s a good friend of mine. I think it was something that he should be proud of, that someday he would like to be mayor. I didn’t give him any advice. I don’t give people advice. I don’t advise people. I’m not their advisor. But there’s nothing wrong with people having a commitment to public service.”

    Video courtesy NBCChicago’s Ward Room

  • Rahm won’t give Durbin pledge on helping Alexi Giannoulias

    WASHINGTON–Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) who has been quarterbacking the Illinois Senate bid of Democratic nominee Alexi Giannoulias, asked White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel for help and did not get any promise of assistance.

    That’s according to a Politico story by Glenn Thrush and Manu Raju. Excerpt:

    “At the moment, the White House seems open to the idea of losing Obama’s old seat rather than putting the president’s prestige on the line for Giannoulias, the brash and boyish Illinois state treasurer — and onetime Obama basketball buddy — whose campaign has been rocked by the financial meltdown of his family’s bank.”

    Read the rest here.

  • Blagojevich says Obama pushed Jarrett for Senate

    By NATASHA KORECKI and CHRIS FUSCO
    Chicago Sun-Times Staff Reporters

    CHICAGO–Former Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s lawyers asked a federal judge today to force President Obama to testify at Blagojevich’s upcoming corruption trial, asserting that Obama played more of a role in the process of selecting someone to replace him in the U.S. Senate than Obama has acknowledged.

    On the day before he was elected president, then-Sen. Obama personally called a union official about his desire for Blagojevich to appoint Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett to replace him in the Senate, according to Blagojevich’s defense filing in U.S. District Court in Chicago.

  • President Obama official schedule and guidance, April 23, 2010. Asheville, N.C. weekend getaway

    grove park inn resort and spa.jpg (photo: Grove Park Inn)

    The Obama family is headed to the Grove Park Inn in Asheville, N.C.

    THE WHITE HOUSE
    Office of the Press Secretary
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    April 22, 2010

    DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR
    FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 2010

    In the morning, the President will deliver remarks at a naturalization ceremony for active duty service members in the Rose Garden. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano will deliver the oath of allegiance. The President will also present the Outstanding American by Choice Recognition. This event is open press.

    In the afternoon, the President and the First Lady will travel to Asheville, North Carolina. The departure from the South Lawn and the arrival at Asheville Regional Airport is open press.

    At 2:00PM, Austan Goolsbee, Chief Economist of the President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, will participate in a live video discussion following up on the President’s speech on Wall Street Reform, via WhiteHouse.gov/live or Ustream.tv/whitehouse.

    In-Town Travel Pool
    Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg
    Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP
    TV Corr & Crew: CNN
    Print: Tribune
    Radio: AURN

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

    EDT

    8:45AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

    10:00AM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at a naturalization ceremony for active duty service members
    Rose Garden
    Open Press (Pre-set 9:00AM – Final Gather 9:30AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    11:45AM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY depart The White House en route Andrews Air Force Base
    South Lawn
    Open Press (Pre-set 11:15AM – Final Gather 11:30AM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

    12:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY depart Andrews Air Force Base en route Asheville, North Carolina
    Out-of-Town Travel Pool (Call Time 11:00AM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

    1:20PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY arrive in Ashville, North Carolina
    Asheville Regional Airport
    Open Press

    ##

  • Stephanie Cutter, White House advisor: West Wing, East Wing, West Wing

    Below, from the White House….

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary
    _____________________________________________________________________________
    For Immediate Release April 22, 2010

    President Obama Names Stephanie Cutter Assistant to the President for Special Projects

    Washington — President Obama today named Stephanie Cutter to the position of Assistant to the President for Special Projects. In this role Cutter will advise on key presidential initiatives, including the communications and outreach strategy for the implementation of the landmark health insurance reform legislation. She will begin work on May 1, 2010.

    “Stephanie is one of the most respected professionals in public affairs and has an innate understanding of the nexus between policy and communications. She’s also a veteran of the White House, and I’m thrilled to have her on board in this new role,” said President Obama.

    Stephanie Cutter has spent two decades in public service, serving most recently as an advisor to the First Lady in the development and launch of the First Lady’s Let’s Move initiative. She also recently served as Adviser to the President in overseeing the political and communications strategy around the successful nomination of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. From January to May 2009, Cutter served as Counselor to the Treasury Secretary, helping to guide the strategy behind the development and implementation of the Administration’s Financial Stability Plan.

    Prior to serving in the Administration, Cutter was the Chief Spokesperson for the Obama-Biden Transition, and was Michelle Obama’s Chief of Staff during the presidential campaign.

    Stephanie Cutter is also the founder of the The Cutter Media Group, LLC, a strategic communications firm, and served as a senior strategist for Majority Leader Harry Reid, Senator Edward M. Kennedy, and Senator John Kerry. She held several positions in the Clinton Administration, including Deputy Communications Director for the White House.

    A graduate of Smith College and the Georgetown University Law Center, Cutter has also served as a lecturer at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

    ###

  • Obama to Wall Street: reform now. Speech transcript

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________________

    For Immediate Release April 22, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT

    ON WALL STREET REFORM

    Cooper Union

    New York, New York

    11:50 A.M. EDT

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Everybody, please have a seat. Thank you very much. Well, thank you. It is good to be back. (Applause.) It is good to be back in New York, it is good to be back in the Great Hall at Cooper Union. (Applause.)

    We’ve got some special guests here that I want to acknowledge. Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney is here in the house. (Applause.) Governor David Paterson is here. (Applause.) Attorney General Andrew Cuomo. (Applause.) State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli is here. (Applause.) The Mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg. (Applause.) Dr. George Campbell, Jr., president of Cooper Union. (Applause.) And all the citywide elected officials who are here. Thank you very much for your attendance.

    It is wonderful to be back in Cooper Union, where generations of leaders and citizens have come to defend their ideas and contest their differences. It’s also good to be back in Lower Manhattan, a few blocks from Wall Street. (Laughter.) It really is good to be back, because Wall Street is the heart of our nation’s financial sector.

    Now, since I last spoke here two years ago, our country has been through a terrible trial. More than 8 million people have lost their jobs. Countless small businesses have had to shut their doors. Trillions of dollars in savings have been lost — forcing seniors to put off retirement, young people to postpone college, entrepreneurs to give up on the dream of starting a company. And as a nation we were forced to take unprecedented steps to rescue the financial system and the broader economy.

    And as a result of the decisions we made — some of which, let’s face it, were very unpopular — we are seeing hopeful signs. A little more than one year ago we were losing an average of 750,000 jobs each month. Today, America is adding jobs again. One year ago the economy was shrinking rapidly. Today the economy is growing. In fact, we’ve seen the fastest turnaround in growth in nearly three decades.

    But you’re here and I’m here because we’ve got more work to do. Until this progress is felt not just on Wall Street but on Main Street we cannot be satisfied. Until the millions of our neighbors who are looking for work can find a job, and wages are growing at a meaningful pace, we may be able to claim a technical recovery — but we will not have truly recovered. And even as we seek to revive this economy, it’s also incumbent on us to rebuild it stronger than before. We don’t want an economy that has the same weaknesses that led to this crisis. And that means addressing some of the underlying problems that led to this turmoil and devastation in the first place.

    Now, one of the most significant contributors to this recession was a financial crisis as dire as any we’ve known in generations — at least since the ’30s. And that crisis was born of a failure of responsibility — from Wall Street all the way to Washington — that brought down many of the world’s largest financial firms and nearly dragged our economy into a second Great Depression.

    It was that failure of responsibility that I spoke about when I came to New York more than two years ago — before the worst of the crisis had unfolded. It was back in 2007. And I take no satisfaction in noting that my comments then have largely been borne out by the events that followed. But I repeat what I said then because it is essential that we learn the lessons from this crisis so we don’t doom ourselves to repeat it. And make no mistake, that is exactly what will happen if we allow this moment to pass — and that’s an outcome that is unacceptable to me and it’s unacceptable to you, the American people. (Applause.)

    As I said on this stage two years ago, I believe in the power of the free market. I believe in a strong financial sector that helps people to raise capital and get loans and invest their savings. That’s part of what has made America what it is. But a free market was never meant to be a free license to take whatever you can get, however you can get it. That’s what happened too often in the years leading up to this crisis. Some — and let me be clear, not all — but some on Wall Street forgot that behind every dollar traded or leveraged there’s family looking to buy a house, or pay for an education, open a business, save for retirement. What happens on Wall Street has real consequences across the country, across our economy.

    I’ve spoken before about the need to build a new foundation for economic growth in the 21st century. And given the importance of the financial sector, Wall Street reform is an absolutely essential part of that foundation. Without it, our house will continue to sit on shifting sands, and our families, businesses, and the global economy will be vulnerable to future crises. That’s why I feel so strongly that we need to enact a set of updated, commonsense rules to ensure accountability on Wall Street and to protect consumers in our financial system. (Applause.)

    Now, here’s the good news: A comprehensive plan to achieve these reforms has already passed the House of Representatives. (Applause.) A Senate version is currently being debated, drawing on ideas from Democrats and Republicans. Both bills represent significant improvement on the flawed rules that we have in place today, despite the furious effort of industry lobbyists to shape this legislation to their special interests.

    And for those of you in the financial sector I’m sure that some of these lobbyists work for you and they’re doing what they are being paid to do. But I’m here today specifically — when I speak to the titans of industry here — because I want to urge you to join us, instead of fighting us in this effort. (Applause.) I’m here because I believe that these reforms are, in the end, not only in the best interest of our country, but in the best interest of the financial sector. And I’m here to explain what reform will look like, and why it matters.

    Now, first, the bill being considered in the Senate would create what we did not have before, and that is a way to protect the financial system and the broader economy and American taxpayers in the event that a large financial firm begins to fail. If there’s a Lehmans or an AIG, how can we respond in a way that doesn’t force taxpayers to pick up the tab or, alternatively, could bring down the whole system.

    In an ordinary local bank when it approaches insolvency, we’ve got a process, an orderly process through the FDIC, that ensures that depositors are protected, maintains confidence in the banking system, and it works. Customers and taxpayers are protected and owners and management lose their equity. But we don’t have that kind of process designed to contain the failure of a Lehman Brothers or any of the largest and most interconnected financial firms in our country.

    That’s why, when this crisis began, crucial decisions about what would happen to some of the world’s biggest companies — companies employing tens of thousands of people and holding hundreds of billions of dollars in assets — had to take place in hurried discussions in the middle of the night. And that’s why, to save the entire economy from an even worse catastrophe, we had to deploy taxpayer dollars. Now, much of that money has now been paid back and my administration has proposed a fee to be paid by large financial firms to recover all the money, every dime, because the American people should never have been put in that position in the first place. (Applause.)

    But this is why we need a system to shut these firms down with the least amount of collateral damage to innocent people and innocent businesses. And from the start, I’ve insisted that the financial industry, not taxpayers, shoulder the costs in the event that a large financial company should falter. The goal is to make certain that taxpayers are never again on the hook because a firm is deemed “too big to fail.”

    Now, there’s a legitimate debate taking place about how best to ensure taxpayers are held harmless in this process. And that’s a legitimate debate, and I encourage that debate. But what’s not legitimate is to suggest that somehow the legislation being proposed is going to encourage future taxpayer bailouts, as some have claimed. That makes for a good sound bite, but it’s not factually accurate. It is not true. (Applause.) In fact, the system as it stands — the system as it stands is what led to a series of massive, costly taxpayer bailouts. And it’s only with reform that we can avoid a similar outcome in the future. In other words, a vote for reform is a vote to put a stop to taxpayer-funded bailouts. That’s the truth. End of story. And nobody should be fooled in this debate. (Applause.)

    By the way, these changes have the added benefit of creating incentives within the industry to ensure that no one company can ever threaten to bring down the whole economy.

    To that end, the bill would also enact what’s known as the Volcker Rule — and there’s a tall guy sitting in the front row here, Paul Volcker — (applause) — who we named it after. And it does something very simple: It places some limits on the size of banks and the kinds of risks that banking institutions can take. This will not only safeguard our system against crises, this will also make our system stronger and more competitive by instilling confidence here at home and across the globe. Markets depend on that confidence. Part of what led to the turmoil of the past two years was that in the absence of clear rules and sound practices, people didn’t trust that our system was one in which it was safe to invest or lend. As we’ve seen, that harms all of us.

    So by enacting these reforms, we’ll help ensure that our financial system — and our economy — continues to be the envy of the world. That’s the first thing, making sure that we can wind down one firm if it gets into trouble without bringing the whole system down or forcing taxpayers to fund a bailout.

    Number two, reform would bring new transparency to many financial markets. As you know, part of what led to this crisis was firms like AIG and others who were making huge and risky bets, using derivatives and other complicated financial instruments, in ways that defied accountability, or even common sense. In fact, many practices were so opaque, so confusing, so complex that the people inside the firms didn’t understand them, much less those who were charged with overseeing them. They weren’t fully aware of the massive bets that were being placed. That’s what led Warren Buffett to describe derivatives that were bought and sold with little oversight as “financial weapons of mass destruction.” That’s what he called them. And that’s why reform will rein in excess and help ensure that these kinds of transactions take place in the light of day.

    Now, there’s been a great deal of concern about these changes. So I want to reiterate: There is a legitimate role for these financial instruments in our economy. They can help allay risk and spur investment. And there are a lot of companies that use these instruments to that legitimate end — they are managing exposure to fluctuating prices or currencies, fluctuating markets. For example, a business might hedge against rising oil prices by buying a financial product to secure stable fuel costs, so an airlines might have an interest in locking in a decent price. That’s how markets are supposed to work. The problem is these markets operated in the shadows of our economy, invisible to regulators, invisible to the public. So reckless practices were rampant. Risks accrued until they threatened our entire financial system.

    And that’s why these reforms are designed to respect legitimate activities but prevent reckless risk taking. That’s why we want to ensure that financial products like standardized derivatives are traded out in the open, in the full view of businesses, investors, and those charged with oversight.

    And I was encouraged to see a Republican senator join with Democrats this week in moving forward on this issue. That’s a good sign. (Applause.) That’s a good sign. For without action, we’ll continue to see what amounts to highly-leveraged, loosely-monitored gambling in our financial system, putting taxpayers and the economy in jeopardy. And the only people who ought to fear the kind of oversight and transparency that we’re proposing are those whose conduct will fail this scrutiny.

    Third, this plan would enact the strongest consumer financial protections ever. (Applause.) And that’s absolutely necessary because this financial crisis wasn’t just the result of decisions made in the executive suites on Wall Street; it was also the result of decisions made around kitchen tables across America, by folks who took on mortgages and credit cards and auto loans. And while it’s true that many Americans took on financial obligations that they knew or should have known they could not have afforded, millions of others were, frankly, duped. They were misled by deceptive terms and conditions, buried deep in the fine print.

    And while a few companies made out like bandits by exploiting their customers, our entire economy was made more vulnerable. Millions of people have now lost their homes. Tens of millions more have lost value in their homes. Just about every sector of our economy has felt the pain, whether you’re paving driveways in Arizona, or selling houses in Ohio, or you’re doing home repairs in California, or you’re using your home equity to start a small business in Florida.

    That’s why we need to give consumers more protection and more power in our financial system. This is not about stifling competition, stifling innovation; it’s just the opposite. With a dedicated agency setting ground rules and looking out for ordinary people in our financial system, we will empower consumers with clear and concise information when they’re making financial decisions. So instead of competing to offer confusing products, companies will compete the old-fashioned way, by offering better products. And that will mean more choices for consumers, more opportunities for businesses, and more stability in our financial system. And unless your business model depends on bilking people, there is little to fear from these new rules. (Applause.)

    Number four, the last key component of reform. These Wall Street reforms will give shareholders new power in the financial system. They will get what we call a say on pay, a voice with respect to the salaries and bonuses awarded to top executives. And the SEC will have the authority to give shareholders more say in corporate elections, so that investors and pension holders have a stronger role in determining who manages the company in which they’ve placed their savings.

    Now, Americans don’t begrudge anybody for success when that success is earned. But when we read in the past, and sometimes in the present, about enormous executive bonuses at firms — even as they’re relying on assistance from taxpayers or they’re taking huge risks that threaten the system as a whole or their company is doing badly — it offends our fundamental values.

    Not only that, some of the salaries and bonuses that we’ve seen creates perverse incentives to take reckless risks that contributed to the crisis. It’s what helped lead to a relentless focus on a company’s next quarter, to the detriment of its next year or its next decade. And it led to a situation in which folks with the most to lose — stock and pension holders — had the least to say in the process. And that has to change. (Applause.)

    Let me close by saying this. I have laid out a set of Wall Street reforms. These are reforms that would put an end to taxpayer bailouts; that would bring complex financial dealings out of the shadows; that would protect consumers; and that would give shareholders more power in the financial system. But let’s face it, we also need reform in Washington. (Applause.) And the debate — the debate over these changes is a perfect example.

    I mean, we have seen battalions of financial industry lobbyists descending on Capitol Hill, firms spending millions to influence the outcome of this debate. We’ve seen misleading arguments and attacks that are designed not to improve the bill but to weaken or to kill it. We’ve seen a bipartisan process buckle under the weight of these withering forces, even as we’ve produced a proposal that by all accounts is a commonsense, reasonable, non-ideological approach to target the root problems that led to the turmoil in our financial sector and ultimately in our entire economy.

    So we’ve seen business as usual in Washington, but I believe we can and must put this kind of cynical politics aside. We’ve got to put an end to it. That’s why I’m here today. (Applause.) That’s why I’m here today.

    And to those of you who are in the financial sector, let me say this, we will not always see eye to eye. We will not always agree. But that doesn’t mean that we’ve got to choose between two extremes. We do not have to choose between markets that are unfettered by even modest protections against crisis, or markets that are stymied by onerous rules that suppress enterprise and innovation. That is a false choice. And we need no more proof than the crisis that we’ve just been through.

    You see, there has always been a tension between the desire to allow markets to function without interference and the absolute necessity of rules to prevent markets from falling out of kilter. But managing that tension, one that we’ve debated since the founding of this nation, is what has allowed our country to keep up with a changing world. For in taking up this debate, in figuring out how to apply well-worn principles with each new age, we ensure that we don’t tip too far one way or the other — that our democracy remains as dynamic and our economy remains as dynamic as it has in the past. So, yes, this debate can be contentious. It can be heated. But in the end it serves only to make our country stronger. It has allowed us to adapt and to thrive.

    And I read a report recently that I think fairly illustrates this point. It’s from Time Magazine. I’m going to quote: “Through the great banking houses of Manhattan last week ran wild-eyed alarm. Big bankers stared at one another in anger and astonishment. A bill just passed… would rivet upon their institutions what they considered a monstrous system… such a system, they felt, would not only rob them of their pride of profession but would reduce all U.S. banking to its lowest level.” That appeared in Time Magazine in June of 1933. (Laughter and applause.) The system that caused so much consternation, so much concern was the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, also known as the FDIC, an institution that has successfully secured the deposits of generations of Americans.

    In the end, our system only works — our markets are only free — when there are basic safeguards that prevent abuse, that check excesses, that ensure that it is more profitable to play by the rules than to game the system. And that is what the reforms we’ve been proposing are designed to achieve — no more, no less. And because that is how we will ensure that our economy works for consumers, that it works for investors, and that it works for financial institutions — in other words, that it works for all of us — that’s why we’re working so hard to get this stuff passed.

    This is the central lesson not only of this crisis but of our history. It’s what I said when I spoke here two years ago. Because ultimately, there is no dividing line between Main Street and Wall Street. We will rise or we will fall together as one nation. (Applause.) And that is why I urge all of you to join me. I urge all of you to join me, to join those who are seeking to pass these commonsense reforms. And for those of you in the financial industry, I urge you to join me not only because it is in the interest of your industry, but also because it’s in the interest of your country.

    Thank you so much. God bless you, and God bless the United States of America. Thank you. (Applause.)

    END 12:16 P.M. EDT