Monday, August 16, 2010

EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00AM PDT: Background On The President's Event in Seattle, Washington

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00AM PDT

August 16, 2010

 

BACKGROUND ON THE PRESIDENT'S EVENT IN SEATTLE, WASHINGTON

 

Upon arrival at Boeing Field-King County International Airport in Seattle, WA the President will be greeted by:

 

Governor Chris Gregoire

US Senator Patty Murray

US Representative Jim McDermott

 

Roundtable & statement to press

11:40 AM PDT (roundtable) & 12:20 pM pDT (remarks)

Seattle, Wa

 

Tomorrow the President will travel to Seattle, where he will meet with three area small business owners for a discussion about strengthening the economy and creating jobs.  He will be joined by Commerce Secretary Gary Locke and US Senator Patty Murray for the roundtable, following the discussion he will make remarks to the press. 

 

The names of the small business owners participating in the roundtable discussion and their stories are below:

 

Gillian Allen-White joined Grand Central Bakery in 1997 after having worked in banking and for a small high-tech start-up.  She is currently a co-owner and the general manager of Grand Central's Seattle operations.  Grand Central is a locally owned artisan bakery that opened in Seattle in 1989 and has grown to include a Seattle based wholesale facility and eight cafés with over 250 employees in Seattle and Portland.  In Seattle, Grand Central will be opening its ninth café on Friday and over the next two months plans to hire five additional employees across the three Seattle locations.  Gillian is optimistic about the bakery's future potential for growth and continues to look for expansion opportunities in the greater Seattle area.

 

Tiffany Turner and her husband, Brady, opened the Inn at Discovery Coast in 2004 in their native Long Beach, with a loan from a local community bank.  Out of the same office Tiffany and Brady manage the 12-room Inn and eight bungalows nearby.  There are currently four full-time employees and during the peak season there are up to seven additional part-time employees.   Since its opening the business has thrived, even expanding during the recent economic downturn.  In 2009 they approached their bank about a loan in order to expand but were turned down.   However, just recently, Tiffany and Brady were approved for a loan that will enable them to expand operations and hire up to 20 additional full-time and part-time employees over the coming year.  Tiffany and her husband have been ready to expand and hire more employees, and can finally do so thanks to an economic climate where community banks are lending to small businesses again.

 

Joe Fugere is the founder of Tutta Bella Neapolitan Pizzeria in Seattle.  The first Tutta Bella opened in 2004 and has since grown to four locations, employing 180 employees.  Joe funded his first restaurant personally and later opened two additional locations funded by loans from a large commercial bank.   In December of 2008 Joe approached his bank, a large regional commercial bank, to discuss the funding of an additional location, but was turned down.  He then approached other large regional and national commercial lending institutions; but was again turned down due to the uncertain economic climate.   Having been rejected by larger banks, Joe approached a community bank and within a few weeks the loan was approved.  In mid-2009 Tutta Bella's fourth location opened and currently employs 50 people.  Recently, a SBA loan under the Recovery Act has helped him improve the company's cash flow.  Joe is proof that community banks can be the engine for getting much needed loans to small businesses, so small businesses can grow, create jobs, and build the economy.

 *Backgrounder on Recovery Act Investments in Washington and the surrounding area attached.

 ###

Embargoed: Remarks of President Barack Obama On Clean Energy Manufacturing-As Prepared for Delivery

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED UNTIL DELIVERY

August 16, 2010

 

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama-As Prepared for Delivery

Clean Energy Manufacturing

Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin

 

As Prepared for Delivery—

 

It's good to be here with the folks of ZBB Energy.  I just had the chance to see some of the batteries you're manufacturing here – and talk to the men and women who build them.  The reason I'm here today is because, at this plant, you're doing more than just making high-tech batteries.  You're pointing the country towards a brighter economic future.

 

That's not easy.  We've been through a terrible recession – as bad as we've seen since the Great Depression.  And this recession was the culmination of a decade that fell like a sledgehammer on middle-class families.  For the better part of ten years, people faced stagnant incomes, sluggish job growth, skyrocketing health care costs and tuition bills, and declining economic security. 

 

Few parts of the economy were hit harder than manufacturing.  Over the last ten years, the number of people working in manufacturing shrank by a third.  This has left millions of skilled, hardworking people sitting idle as the plants that they once worked in shut their doors.  And that was before the recession left them and millions of others struggling in ways they never imagined. 

 

Now, there are some who suggest this decline is inevitable.  But I don't see it that way – and neither do you.  Yes, times are tough.  But we have been through tough times before.  And we've made it through because we're resilient – because we have never given in to pessimism or cynicism.  We fight for our future and we shape our own destiny.  Well, that's what we've been doing over the past year and half.  We have been fighting on all fronts – inch by inch, foot by foot, mile by mile – to get this country moving forward again, going after every job we can.

 

We're investing in 21st century infrastructure – in roads and bridges, in faster internet access and high-speed railroads – projects that will lead to hundreds of thousands of private-sector jobs.  We've cut taxes for small businesses that hire unemployed workers, and I've signed seven other small business tax cuts to help folks expand, buy new equipment, and add employees.  And we've taken emergency steps to prevent layoffs of hundreds of thousands of teachers, firefighters, police officers, and other critical public servants in our communities.  These are folks who would have otherwise lost their jobs because of state and local budget cuts.

 

At the same time, we've been jumpstarting a homegrown, clean energy industry – building on the good work of your governor and others in this state.  That's why I'm here today.  Because of the steps we've taken to strengthen the economy, ZBB received a loan that's helping to fund an expansion of their operations.  Already, it's allowed ZBB to retain nearly a dozen workers.  Over time, the company expects to hire about 80 new workers, too.  And this is leading to new business for your suppliers, including MGS Plastics, another manufacturer here in Wisconsin.

 

ZBB is also planning to take advantage of a special tax credit to build another factory in Southeastern Wisconsin to create more jobs.  They are confident they can expand because they are seeing rising demand for advanced batteries.  This is in part a result of steps we've taken in clean energy – steps that have led to jobs manufacturing wind turbines and solar panels, building hybrid and electric vehicles, and modernizing our electric grid so that it can use more renewable sources of energy. 

 

We expect our commitment to clean energy to lead to more than 800,000 jobs by 2012.  And this isn't just creating work in the short term – it's helping to lay a new foundation for lasting growth.  Just a few years ago, for example, American businesses made only 2 percent of the world's advanced batteries for hybrid and electric vehicles.  But in just a few years, we'll have up to 40 percent of the world's capacity.  Here at ZBB, you're building batteries to store electricity from solar cells and wind turbines.  And you've been able to export batteries around the globe, helping us to lead in this new industry.  For years, we've heard about manufacturing jobs disappearing overseas.  Companies like this one are showing us how manufacturing jobs can come back.

 

Now, obviously, the progress we've made isn't nearly enough to undo all the damage that was done by the recession.  Too many of our family members, our friends, our neighbors are still unable to find work – often for long stretches of time.  I've said since I took office that my administration will not rest until every American who is able and willing to work can find a job, and a job that pays a decent wage with decent benefits to support a family.

 

But what's clear is that we are heading in the right direction.  Just a year and a half ago, the economy was shrinking rapidly.  Now the economy is growing.  We were bleeding 750,000 jobs each month.  Now the economy has added private-sector jobs for seven months in a row.  The worst mistake we could make now would be to turn back.  We've got to keep moving forward. 

 

But some folks in Washington argue we should abandon these efforts.  These are the same folks in Washington who made the political calculation that it was better to stand on the sidelines than work as a team to help the American worker.  They said no to small business tax cuts, no to rebuilding infrastructure, no to clean energy projects.  They even voted against getting rid of tax breaks for shipping jobs overseas. 

 

Well, my answer to the folks who have played politics the past year and a half is to come to this plant.  They should go to any of the dozen new battery factories, or the new electric vehicle manufacturers, or the wind turbine makers, or solar plants that are popping up all over this country.  I want them to explain why they think these clean energy jobs are better off in other countries instead of right here in the United States. 

 

See, when folks lift up the hoods on the cars of the future, I want them to see engines stamped "Made in America."  When new batteries to store solar power come off assembly lines, I want to see printed on the side, "Made in America." And when new technologies are developed with the potential to unleash new businesses – and even whole new industries – I want those products to be made in America.  That's how we'll create jobs.  That's how we'll strengthen this economy.

 

These have been a very hard couple of years for America.  And there will be some more difficult days ahead.  It would a mistake to pretend otherwise.  But we are headed in the right direction.  And I am confident about our future.  Because of what I have seen at this plant.  Because of what I have seen taking place across this country.  And because, when the chips are down, it is always a mistake to bet against the American worker. 

 

This nation is home to the most skilled and industrious people on this earth.  There is nothing we cannot achieve when we set our minds to it.  All we need to do is harness the potential that has always been central to our success.  That's not only how we'll come through these storms – that's how we'll emerge stronger than ever before.

 

Thank you.

 

###

Friday, July 23, 2010

EMBARGOED: FY 2011 Mid-Session Review

EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT

OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20503



EMBARGOED UNTIL 3:00 P.M. ET, FRIDAY, JULY 23, 2010

FY 2011 Mid-Session Review

The EMBARGOED FY 2011 Mid-Session Review is attached.

 

For Planning Purposes Only: OMB Director Peter Orszag, OMB Acting Deputy Director Jeffrey Liebman, and Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Christina Romer will host a phone briefing for reporters at 2:30 p.m. today to present updated Budget data in the MSR. To obtain call-in information, email media@omb.eop.gov.

 

###

 

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

EMBARGOED: Department of Energy Releases New Report on Economic Impact of Recovery Act Advanced Vehicle Investments

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

______________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED UNTIL 8:00 PM EDT

July 14, 2010

 

EMBARGOED: Department of Energy Releases New Report on Economic Impact of Recovery Act Advanced Vehicle Investments

Report Finds Recovery Act Advanced Vehicle Projects Are Creating Jobs, Spurring Private Capital Investment and Cutting Electric Vehicle Cost

**Embargoed until 8:00 PM EDT**

 

WASHINGTON, DC – Ahead of President Obama’s trip to Holland, MI tomorrow for the official groundbreaking of the new Compact Power plant, the Department of Energy today released a new report on the economic impact of Recovery Act investments in advanced batteries and vehicles.  The report, “Recovery Act Investments: Transforming America’s Transportation Sector,” documents how Recovery Act funds are being matched with private capital to create new jobs, construct new plants, add new manufacturing lines, install electric vehicle charging stations across the country and help build the emerging domestic electric vehicle industry from the ground up.

 

The report can be viewed in full HERE

 

Among the key highlights of the report:

 

·         For every dollar of the $2.4 billion in seed money the government provided through the Recovery Act advanced battery and electric vehicle grants, the companies have matched it at minimum dollar for dollar

 

·         Pre-Recovery Act, the U.S. produced just 2 percent of the world’s batteries for advanced vehicles, but due to Recovery Act investments, the U.S. will have the capacity to produce 20 percent of these batteries by 2012 and up to 40 percent by 2015 - that’s a jump from 2 percent to 40 percent in a span of just five years

 

·         Nine of the nine new battery plants opening as a result of Recovery Act investments will have started construction by Thursday – and four of those will be operational by the end of the year.  In addition, twenty-one other plants will make battery or electric vehicle components with the help of Recovery Act grants.

 

·         Before the Recovery Act, high battery costs meant a car with a 100 mile range would need a battery that cost $33,000.  But because of the higher-volume domestic manufacturing the Recovery Act is spurring, the cost of such a battery could come down to $16,000 by the end of 2013 and $10,000 by the end of 2015, dramatically driving down the cost of an electric vehicle and greatly expanding the domestic market.

 

·         Before the Recovery Act, there were less than 500 electric vehicle charging locations in the U.S., but as a result of Recovery Act investments, there will be over 20,000 by 2012. 

 

Compact Power is the ninth of nine new advanced battery plants that will open as a result of the $2.4 billion in Recovery Act advanced battery and electric vehicle awards President Obama announced last August.  Before the Recovery Act, there were no domestic factories doing high-volume manufacturing of batteries for electric vehicles, but due to Recovery Act investments, the U.S. will have the capacity to produce up to 40 percent of the world’s batteries by 2015.  The $151 million Recovery Act grant awarded to Compact Power last August has been matched more than dollar-for-dollar by the company.  As a result of this public-private partnership, the Compact project is expected to create and save hundreds of construction jobs in Holland and put hundreds of Michigan workers on the job at the new Compact Power plant once it is fully operational.  The Compact Power plant in Holland will manufacture batteries to support 52,000 Chevy Volts a year and will also supply batteries for the new electric Ford Focus.

 

In addition to the President’s event, a half dozen Cabinet Members and senior Administration officials are traveling across the country this week, visiting businesses that are benefiting from Recovery Act investments in advanced batteries and electric vehicles and surveying the significant progress they have made in less than a year. 

 

###

 

 

 

EMBARGOED: Administration Officials to Hold Conference Call to Preview the President's Trip to Holland, Michigan

The White House

Office of Media Affairs

EMBARGOED UNTIL 8:00 PM EDT

July 14, 2010

 

 

EMBARGOED: Gov. Granholm, Administration Officials to Preview the President’s Trip to Holland, Michigan

Officials to preview new DOE report on Recovery Act investments in advanced battery and electric vehicle industry

 

WASHINGTON- Today at 4:00 p.m. EDT, Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm, White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer, and Matt Rogers, Senior Advisor to Energy Secretary Chu, will hold a press conference call ahead of the President's trip to Holland, MI, for the official groundbreaking of the new Compact Power plant.  As part of the call, they will preview a new Department of Energy report to be released on Thursday that details how Recovery Act investments are creating jobs and helping to build the domestic advanced battery and electric vehicle industry from the ground up.  The Compact Power plant is the ninth of nine new advanced battery plants to start construction as a result of the $2.4 billion in Recovery Act advanced battery and electric vehicle grant awards the President announced last August.  Compact Power, a subsidiary of LG Chem, is matching its $151 million Recovery Act grant dollar-for-dollar to build a new plant in Holland that will manufacture advanced batteries for the Chevy Volt and the new electric Ford Focus. 

 

WHAT: Embargoed Conference Call with Administration Officials, Governor Granholm to Preview the President’s Trip to Holland, Michigan

 

WHO:             Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm

Dan Pfeiffer, White House Communications Director

Matt Rogers, Senior Advisor to Energy Secretary Chu

 

WHEN: Today at 4:00 p.m. EDT

 

DIAL IN: Reporters that wish to join this call should dial (800) 288-8967 and ask to join the “Batteries Call.”

 

 

###

 

 

Friday, July 9, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: President Obama Announces Changes to Help Veterans with PTSD Receive the Benefits They Need

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY, July 10, 2010

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Announces Changes to Help Veterans with PTSD Receive the Benefits They Need

 

WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama announced that on Monday the Department of Veterans Affairs, led by Secretary Shinseki, will begin to make it easier for veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder to receive the benefits they need.  For many years, veterans with PTSD have been stymied in receiving benefits by requirements they produce evidence proving a specific event caused the PTSD.  Streamlining this process will help not just the veterans of the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, but generations of veterans who have served and sacrificed for the country.

 

The audio and video of the address will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 am ET, Saturday, July 10, 2010.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

As Prepared for Delivery

Weekly Address

July 10, 2010

 

Last weekend, on the Fourth of July, Michelle and I welcomed some of our extraordinary military men and women and their families to the White House.

 

They were just like the thousands of active duty personnel and veterans I’ve met across this country and around the globe.  Proud.  Strong.  Determined.  Men and women with the courage to answer their country’s call, and the character to serve the United States of America.

 

Because of that service; because of the honor and heroism of our troops around the world; our people are safer, our nation is more secure, and we are poised to end our combat mission in Iraq by the end of August, completing a drawdown of more than 90,000 troops since last January.

 

Still, we are a nation at war.  For the better part of a decade, our men and women in uniform have endured tour after tour in distant and dangerous places.  Many have risked their lives.  Many have given their lives.  And as a grateful nation, humbled by their service, we can never honor these American heroes or their families enough.

 

Just as we have a solemn responsibility to train and equip our troops before we send them into harm’s way, we have a solemn responsibility to provide our veterans and wounded warriors with the care and benefits they’ve earned when they come home.

 

That is our sacred trust with all who serve – and it doesn’t end when their tour of duty does.

 

To keep that trust, we’re building a 21st century VA, increasing its budget, and ensuring the steady stream of funding it needs to support medical care for our veterans.

 

To help our veterans and their families pursue a college education, we’re funding and implementing the post-9/11 GI Bill.

 

To deliver better care in more places, we’re expanding and increasing VA health care, building new wounded warrior facilities, and adapting care to better meet the needs of female veterans.

 

To stand with those who sacrifice, we’ve dedicated new support for wounded warriors and the caregivers who put their lives on hold for a loved one’s long recovery.

 

And to do right by our vets, we’re working to prevent and end veteran homelessness – because in the United States of America, no one who served in our uniform should sleep on our streets.

 

We also know that for many of today’s troops and their families, the war doesn’t end when they come home.

 

Too many suffer from the signature injuries of today’s wars: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury.  And too few receive the screening and treatment they need.

 

Now, in past wars, this wasn’t something America always talked about.  And as a result, our troops and their families often felt stigmatized or embarrassed when it came to seeking help.

 

Today, we’ve made it clear up and down the chain of command that folks should seek help if they need it.  In fact, we’ve expanded mental health counseling and services for our vets.

 

But for years, many veterans with PTSD who have tried to seek benefits – veterans of today’s wars and earlier wars – have often found themselves stymied.  They’ve been required to produce evidence proving that a specific event caused their PTSD.  And that practice has kept the vast majority of those with PTSD who served in non-combat roles, but who still waged war, from getting the care they need.

 

Well, I don’t think our troops on the battlefield should have to take notes to keep for a claims application.  And I’ve met enough veterans to know that you don’t have to engage in a firefight to endure the trauma of war.

 

So we’re changing the way things are done.

 

On Monday, the Department of Veterans Affairs, led by Secretary Ric Shinseki, will begin making it easier for a veteran with PTSD to get the benefits he or she needs.

 

This is a long-overdue step that will help veterans not just of the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars, but generations of their brave predecessors who proudly served and sacrificed in all our wars.

 

It’s a step that proves America will always be here for our veterans, just as they’ve been there for us.  We won’t let them down.  We take care of our own.  And as long as I’m Commander-in-Chief, that’s what we’re going to keep doing.  Thank you.

 

EMBARGOED: TODAY: Senior VA Officials to Hold Background Briefing to Preview New Policy on Veterans' Disability Benefits

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

FOR PLANNING PURPOSES ONLY

July 9, 2010

 

**EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00AM EDT SATURDAY, JULY 10th**

 

TODAY: Senior VA Officials to Hold Background Briefing to Preview New Policy on Veterans’ Disability Benefits

 

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Friday, July 9th at 2:00pm ET, senior officials from the Department of Veterans’ Affairs will hold a background briefing to preview a new policy on Veterans’ disability benefits that will be released on Monday.  The briefing call will be on background and will be embargoed until 6:00am on Saturday, July 10th.

 

WHAT: Background briefing call with senior VA officials on new policy regarding Veterans’ disability benefits

 

WHEN: TODAY, July 9th at 2:00pm ET

 

DIAL-IN: Media interested in joining the call should dial (800) 398-9402 and ask for the “White House call.”  No pass code is necessary.

 

##

 

 

 

Friday, July 2, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: President Obama Touts Nearly $2 Billion in New Investments to Help Build a Clean Energy Economy

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY, July 3, 2010

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Touts Nearly $2 Billion in New Investments to Help Build a Clean Energy Economy

 

WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama announced that the Department of Energy is awarding nearly $2 billion in conditional commitments from the Recovery Act to two solar companies. Abengoa Solar has agreed to build one of the largest solar plants in the world in Arizona, which will create about 1,600 construction jobs with over 70 percent of the construction components and products manufactured here in the USA.  When completed, this plant will provide enough clean energy to power 70,000 homes.  And, Abound Solar Manufacturing is building two new plants, one in Colorado and one in Indiana.  These projects will create more than 2,000 construction jobs, and over 1,500 permanent jobs as the plants produce millions of state of the art solar panels each year. 

 

The full audio of the address is HERE. The video can be viewed online at www.whitehouse.gov.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Weekly Address

Washington, DC

 

This week, I spent some time in Racine, Wisconsin, talking with folks who are doing their best to cope with the aftermath of a brutal recession.

 

And while I was there, a young woman asked me a question I hear all the time: “What are we doing as a nation to bring jobs back to this country?”

 

Well, on Friday, we learned that after 22 straight months of job loss, our economy has now created jobs in the private sector for 6 months in a row.  That’s a positive sign.  But the truth is, the recession from which we’re emerging has left us in a hole that’s about 8 million jobs deep.  And as I’ve said from the day I took office, it’s going to take months, even years, to dig our way out – and it’s going to require an all-hands-on-deck effort.

 

In the short term, we’re fighting to speed up this recovery and keep the economy growing by all means possible.  That means extending unemployment insurance for workers who lost their job.  That means getting small businesses the loans they need to keep their doors open and hire new workers.  And that means sending relief to states so they don’t have to lay off thousands of teachers and firefighters and police officers. 

 

Still, at a time when millions of Americans feel a deep sense of urgency in their own lives, Republican leaders in Washington just don’t get it.  While a majority of Senators support taking these steps to help the American people, some are playing the same old Washington games and using their power to hold this relief hostage – a move that only ends up holding back our recovery.  It doesn’t make sense.

 

But I promised those folks in Wisconsin – and I promise all of you – that we won’t back down.  We’re going to keep fighting to advance our recovery.  And we’re going to keep competing aggressively to make sure the jobs and industries of the future are taking root right here in America.

 

That’s one of the reasons why we’re accelerating the transition to a clean energy economy and doubling our use of renewable energy sources like wind and solar power – steps that have the potential to create whole new industries and hundreds of thousands of new jobs in America.

 

In fact, today, I’m announcing that the Department of Energy is awarding nearly $2 billion in conditional commitments to two solar companies.

 

The first is Abengoa Solar, a company that has agreed to build one of the largest solar plants in the world right here in the United States.  After years of watching companies build things and create jobs overseas, it’s good news that we’ve attracted a company to our shores to build a plant and create jobs right here in America.  In the short term, construction will create approximately 1,600 jobs in Arizona.  What’s more, over 70 percent of the components and products used in construction will be manufactured in the USA, boosting jobs and communities in states up and down the supply chain.  Once completed, this plant will be the first large-scale solar plant in the U.S. to actually store the energy it generates for later use – even at night.  And it will generate enough clean, renewable energy to power 70,000 homes.

 

The second company is Abound Solar Manufacturing, which will manufacture advanced solar panels at two new plants, creating more than 2,000 construction jobs and 1,500 permanent jobs.  A Colorado plant is already underway, and an Indiana plant will be built in what’s now an empty Chrysler factory.  When fully operational, these plants will produce millions of state-of-the-art solar panels each year.

 

These are just two of the many clean energy investments in the Recovery Act.  Already, I’ve seen the payoff from these investments.  I’ve seen once-shuttered factories humming with new workers who are building solar panels and wind turbines; rolling up their sleeves to help America win the race for the clean energy economy.

 

So that’s some of what we’re doing.  But the truth is, steps like these won’t replace all the jobs we’ve lost overnight.  I know folks are struggling.  I know this Fourth of July weekend finds many Americans wishing things were a bit easier right now.  I do too.

 

But what this weekend reminds us, more than any other, is that we are a nation that has always risen to the challenges before it. We are a nation that, 234 years ago, declared our independence from one of the greatest empires the world had ever known.  We are a nation that mustered a sense of common purpose to overcome Depression and fear itself.  We are a nation that embraced a call to greatness and saved the world from tyranny.  That is who we are – a nation that turns times of trial into times of triumph – and I know America will write our own destiny once more.

 

I wish every American a safe and happy Fourth of July.  And to all our troops serving in harm’s way, I want you to know you have the support of a grateful nation and a proud Commander-in-Chief.  Thank you, God Bless You, and God Bless the United States of America.

 

Thursday, July 1, 2010

EMBARGOED FOR 12:01 AM EDT FRIDAY: Background on the President's Recovery Act Announcement Tomorrow

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED UNTIL JULY 2, 2010, 12:01 AM EDT

July 1, 2010

 

Background on the President’s Recovery Act Announcement Tomorrow

**Embargoed Until July 2, 2010, 12:01 AM EDT**

 

Tomorrow, President Obama will announce investment in sixty-six new Recovery Act broadband projects nationwide that, according to the grantees, will not only directly create approximately 5,000 jobs up front, but will also help spur economic development in some of the nation’s hardest-hit communities, helping create jobs for years to come.  In total, tens of millions of Americans and over 685,000 businesses, 900 healthcare facilities and 2,400 schools in all fifty states stand to benefit from the awards.  The $795 million in grants and loans through the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture have been matched by over $200 million in outside investment, for a total public-private investment of more than $1 billion in bringing broadband service to these communities, most of which currently have little or no access, to help them better compete and do business in the global marketplace.

 

Broadband Impact

According to analysis released by the National Economic Council last year, overall Recovery Act investments in broadband are expected to create tens of thousands of jobs in the near term and expand economic development and job opportunities in communities that would otherwise be left behind in the new knowledge-based economy.  Recovery Act broadband projects help bring down the cost of private investment, attract Internet service providers to new areas, improve digital literacy among students and workers, and help create new opportunities in employment, education, and entrepreneurship by wiring homes and businesses.  With new or increased broadband access, communities can compete on a level playing field to attract new businesses, schools can create distance learning opportunities, medical professionals can provide cost-efficient remote diagnoses and care, and business owners can expand the market for their products beyond their neighborhoods to better compete in the global economy.

 

Broadband and the Recovery Act

The grants and loans are part of an overall $7.2 billion investment the Recovery Act makes in expanding broadband access nationwide – $4.7 billion through the Commerce Department and $2.5 billion funded through the Department of Agriculture.  With the awards being announced tomorrow, more than $2.7 billion in Recovery Act broadband grants and loans will have been awarded to more than 260 projects across the country since December 2009.  Overall, the Recovery Act is making a $100 billion investment in science, innovation and technology that is not only creating jobs today, but laying a foundation for economic growth for years to come. 

 

Tomorrow’s Awards

There are two types of awards being announced tomorrow:

  • Infrastructure – Middle mile awards build and improve middle mile connections to communities lacking sufficient broadband access and last mile awards connect end users like homes, hospitals and schools to their community’s broadband infrastructure (the middle mile).
  • Public Computing Centers - Expand computer center capacity for public use in libraries, community colleges and other public venues.

 

A roster of the broadband awards being announced by the President tomorrow are attached.

 

 

 

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Embargoed: Remarks of President Barack Obama at G-20 Press Conference--As Prepared for Delivery

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED UNTIL DELIVERY

June 27, 2010

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama—As Prepared for Deliver

G-20 Press Conference

Toronto, Canada

Sunday, June 27, 2010

 

As Prepared for Delivery—

 

Good evening. I want to thank our wonderful hosts—my friend and partner President Harper, as well as the Canadian people, for their hospitality.  The success of these summits—the G-8 in Muskoka and the G-20 here in Toronto—is a tribute to Canadian leadership.  I also want to thank my fellow leaders for the sense of purpose that they brought to this summit. 

 

The G-20 is now the premier forum for international economic cooperation.  We represent East and West, North and South, advanced economies and those still emerging.  Our challenges are as diverse as our nations.  But together we represent some 85 percent of the global economy, and we have forged a coordinated response to the worst global economic crisis of our time.

 

In London last year, we took unprecedented action—to prevent an even larger economic catastrophe, to put our economies on the path to recovery and to begin reforming our financial system so that a crisis like the one we’re emerging from never happens again.          

 

In Pittsburgh we went further—moving beyond the old economic cycles of boom and bust by committing our nations to a new framework for growth that is balanced and sustained, as well as specific financial reforms.

 

Our bold action succeeded.  In the United States, we are committed – above all – to leading by example. Because of the steps that we’ve taken to get our economy moving, we are growing again, and this growth is beginning to translate into job creation. And we are now also poised to pass the toughest financial reform since the aftermath of a Great Depression.

 

Globally, economic contraction has given way to economic growth.  Trade that had plummeted is rebounding.  Emerging economies in particular are seeing impressive growth. So we have pulled ourselves back from the brink, and begun to move forward with economic recovery.

 

But as we all know, this is not good enough.  In the United States and around the world, too many people are still out of work.  In too many economies, demand for goods and services is still weak.  As we have been reminded in recent months, a financial crisis in one country can have consequences far beyond its borders.  And as history teaches us, growth and prosperity is never guaranteed.  It requires constant effort.  It requires continued leadership.

 

So we came to Toronto with three specific goals—to make sure the global recovery is strong and durable; to continue reforming the financial system; and to address the range of global issues that affect our prosperity and security.  And we made important progress in each of these areas.

 

First, to ensure the recovery is strong and durable, we agreed to continue coordinating our efforts so we are creating jobs.  This is my highest economic priority as President. And that is why we are focused on increasing global demand.  Every economy is unique, and every country will chart its own unique course, but make no mistake—we’re moving in the same direction.

 

As I reiterated to my colleagues, after years of taking on too much debt, Americans cannot—and will not—borrow and buy the world’s way to lasting prosperity.  No nation should assume its path to prosperity is paved with exports to America.  Indeed, I’ve made it clear that the United States will compete aggressively for the jobs and industries and markets of the future. 

 

That is why I have set the goal of doubling our exports over the next five years—an increase that would support millions of jobs in the United States.  It’s why I have launched a National Export Initiative to help meet this goal.  It’s why we focused earlier this week on deepening our economic cooperation with Russia – which would benefit both of our countries – including restarting our poultry exports, and accelerating our efforts to support Russia’s entry into the WTO. And it’s why I announced that my Administration will work to resolve outstanding issues regarding the United States-Korea Free Trade Agreement by my visit to Korea in November.  This will create new jobs and opportunity for people in both our countries, and enhance America’s competitiveness in the 21st century.

 

A strong and durable recovery also requires countries not having an undue advantage. So we also discussed the need for currencies that are market-driven.  As I told President Hu yesterday, the United States welcomes China’s decision to allow its currency to appreciate in response to market forces.

 

And because a durable recovery must also include fiscal responsibility, we agreed to balance the need for continued growth in the short-term and fiscal sustainability in the medium-term. In the United States, I’ve set a goal of cutting our deficit in half by 2013. A number of our European partners are making difficult decisions.   But we must recognize that our fiscal health tomorrow will rest in no small measure on our ability to create jobs and growth today.

 

Second – we advanced our goal of financial reform. Just as we are on the verge of passing financial reforms at home, our European partners have committed to the process we went through in the U.S.—a new level of transparency and stress tests for banks to rebuild confidence. 

 

Here in Toronto, we reaffirmed our commitment to the highest global standards. To maintain momentum, we directed our teams to finalize for our meeting in Seoul a global framework to ensure that banks hold enough capital to withstand the stresses of government intervention.  Rules must clear.  Oversight must be strong.  Complex trades—like derivatives—must be brought into the light of day.  Excessive risk-taking and abusive practices must be prevented.  Consumers must be protected.  In short, we have to do everything in our power to avoid a repeat of the recent financial crisis.

 

Finally, we made progress on a range of global challenges that are critical to shared prosperity.  We’re moving forward with the food security initiative that we announced last year, including by launching a special fund at the World Bank which will strengthen farmers' productivity in the poorest countries. And we made progress toward a new coordinated approach so that we can invest more than $20 billion to reduce hunger and promote agricultural development. 

 

The G-20 leaders renewed our commitment, made in Pittsburgh, to phase out inefficient fossil fuel subsidies. The United States has laid out our plans for achieving this goal, and we’re urging our G-20 partners to do so as well. This would be one of the most important steps we can take to create clean energy jobs, increase our energy security and address the threat of climate change.

 

And I am pleased we endorsed my proposal to broaden the G-20 agenda to include the fight against corruption.  In too many places, the culture of the bribe is a brake on development and prosperity. It discourages entrepreneurship, destroys public trust, undermines the rule of law and stifles economic growth.  With a new commitment to strengthening and enforcing rules against corruption, economic opportunity and prosperity will be more broadly shared. 

  

Let me conclude by saying that I know that much of the focus coming into these meetings was on whether our nations would be divided by different approaches. But as we have proven repeatedly over the last 18 months, our nations can come together through the G-20, and build on the foundation of our shared interests. Indeed, that is the purpose of these meetings. We can bridge our differences. We can coordinate our approaches. And we can continue our relentless focus on durable growth that puts our people to work, and broadens prosperity for the world. Thank you.

 

###

 

Friday, June 25, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: President Obama Urges Congress to Complete Work on Wall Street Reform Bill

 

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY, June 26, 2010

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Urges Congress to Complete Work on Wall Street Reform Bill

 

WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama asks Congress to pass historic Wall Street reform which will make the toughest financial reforms since the Great Depression the law of the land.  The Wall Street reform bill, which reflects 90 percent of what the President originally proposed, includes the strongest consumer financial protections in history with an independent agency to enforce them.  It ensures that the trading of derivatives, which helped trigger the crisis, will be brought into the light of day, and enacts the “Volcker Rule,” which will make sure banks protected by safety nets like the FDIC cannot engage in risky trades. And, this bill will create a resolution authority to wind down firms whose collapse would threaten the entire financial system.  Wall Street reform will end taxpayer funded bailouts and make sure Main Street is never again held responsible for Wall Street’s mistakes.

 

The full audio of the address is HERE. The video can be viewed online at www.whitehouse.gov.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Weekly Address

Washington, DC

 

This weekend, I’m traveling to Toronto to meet with members of the G20. There, I hope we can build on the progress we made at last year’s G20 summits by coordinating our global financial reform efforts to make sure a crisis like the one from which we are still recovering never happens again. We’ve made great progress toward passing such reform here at home. As I speak, we are on the cusp of enacting the toughest financial reforms since the Great Depression.

 

I don’t have to tell you why these reforms are so important. We’re still digging ourselves out of an economic crisis that happened largely because there wasn’t strong enough oversight on Wall Street. We can’t build a strong economy in America over the long-run without ending this status quo, and laying a new foundation for growth and prosperity.

 

That’s what the Wall Street reforms currently making their way through Congress will help us do – reforms that represent 90% of what I proposed when I took up this fight. We’ll put in place the strongest consumer financial protections in American history, and create an independent agency with an independent director and an independent budget to enforce them.

 

Credit card companies will no longer be able to mislead you with pages and pages of fine print. You will no longer be subject to all kinds of hidden fees and penalties, or the predatory practices of unscrupulous lenders.

 

Instead, we’ll make sure credit card companies and mortgage companies play by the rules.  And you’ll be empowered with easy-to-understand forms, and the clear and concise information you need to make the financial decisions that are best for you and your family.

 

Wall Street reform will also strengthen our economy in a number of other ways. We’ll make our financial system more transparent by bringing the kinds of complex trades that helped trigger this crisis – trades in a $600 trillion derivatives market – finally into the light of day.

 

We’ll enact what’s called the Volcker Rule to make sure banks protected by a safety net like the FDIC can’t engage in risky trades for their own profit. We’ll create what’s called a resolution authority to help wind down firms whose collapse would threaten our entire financial system. Put simply, we’ll end the days of taxpayer-funded bailouts, and help make sure Main Street is never again held responsible for Wall Street’s mistakes.

 

Beyond these reforms, we also need to address another piece of unfinished business. We need to impose a fee on the banks that were the biggest beneficiaries of taxpayer assistance at the height of our financial crisis – so we can recover every dime of taxpayer money.

 

Getting this far on Wall Street reform hasn’t been easy. There are those who’ve fought tooth and nail to preserve the status quo. In recent months, they’ve spent millions of dollars and hired an army of lobbyists to stop reform dead in its tracks.

 

But because we refused to back down, and kept fighting, we now stand on the verge of victory. And I urge Congress to take us over the finish line, and send me a reform bill I can sign into law, so we can empower our people with consumer protections, and help prevent a financial crisis like this from ever happening again.

 

 

Friday, June 18, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: President Obama Says Republicans in Congress Blocking Important Progress

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY, June 19, 2010

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Says Republicans in Congress Blocking Important Progress

 

WASHINGTON – In this week’s address, President Barack Obama called on Congress to put scoring political points aside, and instead to focus on solving the problems facing the nation.  The Republican leadership is currently blocking progress on a bill to boost the economy, retain jobs for teachers and cops, and help people buy their first home; another bill which would hold oil companies accountable for any disasters they cause by removing the current $75 million liability cap; and 136 highly qualified men and women who have been nominated to government positions.  In these challenging times, elected leaders in Washington need to remember that they have an obligation that goes beyond upcoming elections – an obligation to care for the next generation.

 

The full audio of the address is HERE. The video can be viewed online at www.whitehouse.gov.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Weekly Address

Washington, DC

 

At this moment, our nation is facing a host of big and difficult challenges.   And more than anything else, what’s required to meet those challenges right now is a sense of cooperation and common purpose among our leaders.  What we need is a willingness in Washington to put the public’s interests first – a willingness to score fewer political points so that we can start solving more problems. 

 

That’s why I was disappointed this week to see a dreary and familiar politics get in the way of our ability to move forward on a series of critical issues that have a direct impact on people’s lives.

 

In the United States Senate, we have legislation that would boost our economic recovery and help Americans who’ve been affected by the worst recession in generations.  We’ve certainly made progress since we were losing 750,000 jobs per month around the time I took office.  Our economy is growing again, and we’ve added jobs for five straight months.   But there are still millions of Americans out of work, and millions more who are struggling to pay the bills.  The legislation in the Senate right now would extend unemployment benefits to those workers who lost their job through no fault of their own.  It would provide relief to struggling states that would help save the jobs of thousands of teachers and cops and firefighters.  There are also provisions in this legislation that would extend the tax credit for first-time homebuyers, as well as tax cuts to keep research and development jobs here in the United States.

 

Unfortunately, the Republican leadership in the Senate won’t even allow this legislation to come up for a vote.  And if this obstruction continues, unemployed Americans will see their benefits stop.  Teachers and firefighters will lose their jobs.  Families will pay more for their first home. 

 

All we ask for is a simple up or down vote.  That’s what the American people deserve.  Just like they deserve an up or down vote on legislation that would hold oil companies accountable for the disasters they cause – a vote that is also being blocked by the Republican leadership in the Senate.  Right now, the law places a $75 million cap on the amount oil companies must pay to families and small businesses who suffer economic losses as a result of a spill like the one we’re witnessing in the Gulf Coast.  We should remove that cap.  But the Republican leadership won’t even allow a debate or a vote.

 

And as we speak today, 136 men and women who I’ve nominated for key positions in the federal government are awaiting a vote on the floor of the Senate.  All are highly qualified.  Very few are controversial.  The vast majority already have support from both parties.  But most of them are seeing their nominations intentionally delayed by Republican leaders, or even blocked altogether.  They cannot get a vote.  What this means is that, at a moment when our country is facing so many challenges – a time when we need all hands on deck – we cannot get the qualified people we need to start the jobs they were appointed to do. 

 

Look, the nature of our democracy is that we’ll always have disagreements and debates -- even heated ones.  That’s healthy and it’s important.  But let’s argue over genuine differences – over ideas and policies.  And let’s go into those debates with an open mind – a willingness to find common ground and a conviction that, in the end, one way or another, we will have a vote to decide them.  Next week, I’ll be meeting with a bipartisan group of Senators to discuss how we can transition away from our dependence on fossil fuels and embrace a clean energy future.  I don’t expect that we’ll agree on a solution right away.  In fact, I know that there will be plenty of disagreement and different ideas.  But at least it shows that Republicans and Democrats can still sit down together in an attempt to tackle the big challenges facing our nation. 

 

I know the political season is upon us in Washington.  But gridlock as a political strategy is destructive to the country.  Whether we are Democrats or Republicans, we’ve got an obligation that goes beyond caring about the next election.  We have an obligation to care for the next generation.  So I hope that when Congress returns next week, they do so with a greater spirit of compromise and cooperation.  America will be watching.   

 

Thanks.