Friday, March 12, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: President Obama to Send Updated Elementary and Secondary Education Act Blueprint To Congress on Monday

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY, March 13, 2010

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama to Send Updated Elementary and Secondary Education Act Blueprint To Congress on Monday

 

WASHINGTON – In his weekly address, President Barack Obama announced that on Monday, his administration will send to Congress the blueprint for an updated Elementary and Secondary Education Act that will overhaul No Child Left Behind.  The plan will set the ambitious goal of ensuring that all students graduate from high school prepared for college and a career, and it will provide states, districts and schools with the flexibility and resources to reach that goal. 

 

The audio and video will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 am ET, Saturday, March 13, 2010.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

As Prepared for Delivery

Weekly Address

March 13, 2010

 

Lost in the news of the week was a headline that ought to be a source of concern for every American.  It said, “Many Nations Passing U.S. in Education.”   Now, debates in Washington tend to be consumed with the politics of the moment: who’s up in the daily polls; whose party stands to gain in November.  But what matters to you – what matters to our country – is not what happens in the next election, but what we do to lift up the next generation.  And the fact is, there are few issues that speak more directly to our long term success as a nation than issues concerning the education we provide to our children. 

 

Our prosperity in the 20th century was fueled by an education system that helped grow the middle class and unleash the talents of our people more fully and widely than at any time in our history.  We built schools and focused on the teaching of math and science.  We helped a generation of veterans go to college through the GI Bill.  We led the globe in producing college graduates, and in turn we led in producing ground-breaking technologies and scientific discoveries that lifted living standards and set us apart as the world’s engine of innovation. 

 

Of course, other nations recognize this, and are looking to gain an edge in the global marketplace by investing in better schools, supporting teachers, and committing to clear standards that will produce graduates with more skills.  Our competitors understand that the nation that out-educates us today will out-compete us tomorrow.  Yet, too often we have failed to make inroads in reforming and strengthening our public education system – the debate mired in worn arguments hurled across entrenched divides. 

 

As a result, over the last few decades, we’ve lost ground.  One assessment shows American fifteen year olds no longer even near the top in math and science when compared to their peers around the world.  As referenced in the news report I mentioned, we’ve now fallen behind most wealthy countries in our high school graduation rates.  And while we once led the world in the proportion of college graduates we produced, today we no longer do. 

 

Not only does that risk our leadership as a nation, it consigns millions of Americans to a lesser future.  For we know that the level of education a person attains is increasingly a prerequisite for success and a predictor of the income that person will earn throughout his or her life.  Beyond the economic statistics is a less tangible but no less painful reality: unless we take action – unless we step up – there are countless children who will never realize their full talent and potential. 

 

I don’t accept that future for them.  And I don’t accept that future for the United States of America.  That’s why we’re engaged in a historic effort to redeem and improve  our public  schools: to raise the expectations for our students and for ourselves, to recognize and reward excellence, to improve performance in troubled schools, and to give our kids and our country the best chance to succeed in a changing world.

 

Under the leadership of an outstanding Education Secretary, Arne Duncan, we launched a Race to the Top, through which states compete for funding by committing to reform and raising standards, by rewarding good teaching, by supporting the development of better assessments to measure results, and by emphasizing math and science to help prepare children for college and careers. 

 

And on Monday, my administration will send to Congress our blueprint for an updated Elementary and Secondary Education Act to overhaul No Child Left Behind.  What this plan recognizes is that while the federal government can play a leading role in encouraging the reforms and high standards we need, the impetus for that change will come from states, and from local schools and school districts.  So, yes, we set a high bar – but we also provide educators the flexibility to reach it. 

 

Under these guidelines, schools that achieve excellence or show real progress will be rewarded, and local districts will be encouraged to commit to change in schools that are clearly letting their students down.  For the majority of schools that fall in between – schools that do well but could do better – we will encourage continuous improvement to help keep our young people on track for a bright future: prepared for the jobs of the 21st century. And because the most important factor in a child’s success is the person standing at the front of the classroom, we will better prepare teachers, support teachers, and encourage teachers to stay in the field.  In short, we’ll treat the people who educate our sons and daughters like the professionals they are.

 

Through this plan we are setting an ambitious goal: all students should graduate from high school prepared for college and a career – no matter who you are or where you come from.  Achieving this goal will be difficult. It will take time.  And it will require the skills, talents, and dedication of many: principals, teachers, parents, students.  But this effort is essential for our children and for our country.  And while there will always be those cynics who claim it can’t be done, at our best, we know that America has always risen to the challenges that we’ve faced.  This challenge is no different. 

 

As a nation, we are engaged in many important endeavors: improving the economy, reforming the health care system, encouraging innovation in energy and other growth industries of the 21st century.  But our success in these efforts – and our success in the future as a people – will ultimately depend on what happens long before an entrepreneur opens his doors, or a nurse walks the rounds, or a scientist steps into her laboratory.  Our future is determined each and every day, when our children enter the classroom, ready to learn and brimming with promise. 

 

It’s that promise we must help them fulfill.  Thank you.

 

 

Friday, March 5, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: Health Reform Will Benefit American Families and Businesses This Year

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

WEEKLY ADDRESS: Health Reform Will Benefit American Families and Businesses This Year

 

WASHINGTON – In his weekly address, President Barack Obama said that Congress owes the country an up-or-down vote on health reform and he described how more American families will have more control over their health care this year after health reform passes.  The proposal the President has put forward includes tax credits for small businesses to purchase coverage, making it possible for people with pre-existing conditions to purchase coverage, and stopping insurance companies from imposing lifetime caps or annual limits to the amount of care people receive, among other reforms.

 

The audio and video will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 am ET, Saturday, March 6, 2010.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

As Prepared for Delivery

Weekly Address

March 6, 2010

 

This week, I asked Congress to schedule a final vote on reform that will give families and businesses more control over their health care by holding insurance companies more accountable.  This comes after nearly a year of debate, as well as a seven hour summit with Democrats and Republicans where we had a public and substantive discussion on health care.  Since then, I’ve said that I’m willing to incorporate some ideas offered by Republicans, and we’re eliminating special provisions that had no place in health care reform.

 

Now, despite all the progress and improvements we’ve made, Republicans in Congress insist that the only acceptable course on health care is to start over.  But you know what?  The insurance companies aren’t starting over.  I just met with some of them on Thursday and they couldn’t give me a straight answer as to why they keep arbitrarily and massively raising premiums – by as much as 60% in states like Illinois.  If we do not act, they will continue to do this.  They will continue to drop people’s coverage when they need it.  They will continue to refuse coverage based on pre-existing conditions.  These practices will continue. 

 

That’s why we must act now.  That’s why the United States Congress owes the American people an up-or-down vote on health insurance reform. 

 

The proposal we’ve put forward would end the worst practices of the insurance industry, lower costs for millions of Americans, and give uninsured individuals and small businesses the same kind of choice of private health insurance that Members of Congress get for themselves.  And while it will take a few years to fully implement these reforms, there are numerous protections and benefits that would start to take effect this year. 

 

This year, small business owners will receive tax credits to purchase health insurance.

 

This year, thousands of uninsured Americans with pre-existing conditions will finally be able to purchase coverage.  Insurance companies will no longer be allowed to deny coverage to children with pre-existing conditions.  And they will no longer be allowed to drop your coverage when you get sick. 

      

This year, all new insurance plans will be required to offer free preventive care to their customers – so that we can start catching preventable illnesses and diseases on the front end.  There will no longer be lifetime limits or restrictive annual limits on the amount of care you receive.  Young adults will be able to stay on their parents’ insurance policy until they’re 26 years old.  And there will be a new, independent appeals process for anyone who feels they were unfairly denied a claim by their insurance company. 

 

Finally, seniors who fall into the gap in coverage known as the donut hole will receive $250 to help them pay for their prescriptions.  

 

What won’t change when this bill is signed this:  if you like the insurance plan you have now, you can keep it.  If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor.  Because nothing should get in the way of the relationship between a family and their doctor.  

 

If we act now, all of this will happen this year.  Millions of lives will improve.  Some will be saved.  Many families and small business owners will have health insurance for the very first time in their lives.  Doctors and patients will have more control over their health care decisions, and insurance company bureaucrats will have less.  This future is within our grasp.  

 

But we also know what the future will look like if we don’t act – if we let this opportunity pass for another year, or another decade, or another generation.   More Americans will lose their family’s health insurance if they switch jobs or lose their job.  More small businesses will be forced to choose between health care and hiring.  More insurance companies will raise premiums and deny coverage.  And the rising cost of Medicare and Medicaid will sink our government deeper and deeper into debt.

 

I don’t accept that future for the United States of America.  I know it has been a long and hard road to this point.  And we are not finished with our journey just yet.  But we are close.  We are very close.  And so I ask Congress to finish its work.  I ask them to give the American people an up or down vote.  And let’s show our citizens that it’s still possible for Washington to look out for their interests and their future.  Thanks for listening. 

 

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

EMBARGOED FOR DELIVERY: Remarks of President Barack Obama on Health Insurance Reform

THE WHITE HOUSE

 

Office of the Press Secretary

_____________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED FOR DELIVERY                           March 3, 2010

 

 

EMBARGOED: Remarks of President Barack Obama on Health Insurance Reform

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Washington, DC

 

Please find below President Obama’s remark as prepared for delivery in the East Room this afternoon. The remarks are embargoed for delivery:

 

Good afternoon.  We began our push to reform health insurance last March with the doctors and nurses who know the system best, and so it is fitting to be joined by all of you as we bring this journey to a close.    

 

Last Thursday, I spent seven hours at a summit where Democrats and Republicans engaged in a public and substantive discussion about health care.  This meeting capped off a debate that began with a similar summit nearly one year ago.  Since then, every idea has been put on the table.  Every argument has been made.  Everything there is to say about health care has been said and just about everyone has said it.  So now is the time to make a decision about how to finally reform health care so that it works, not just for the insurance companies, but for America’s families and businesses.

 

Where both sides say they agree is that the status quo is not working for the American people.  Health insurance is becoming more expensive by the day.  Families can’t afford it.  Businesses can’t afford it.  The federal government can’t afford it.  Smaller businesses and individuals who don’t get coverage at work are squeezed especially hard.  And insurance companies freely ration health care based on who’s sick and who’s healthy; who can pay and who can’t.

 

Democrats and Republicans agree that this is a serious problem for America.  And we agree that if we do nothing – if we throw up our hands and walk away – it’s a problem that will only grow worse.  More Americans will lose their family’s health insurance if they switch jobs or lose their job.  More small businesses will be forced to choose between health care and hiring.  More insurance companies will deny people coverage who have preexisting conditions, or drop people’s coverage when they get sick and need it most.  And the rising cost of Medicare and Medicaid will sink our government deeper and deeper into debt.  On all of this we agree. 

 

So the question is, what do we do about it? 

 

On one end of the spectrum, there are some who have suggested scrapping our system of private insurance and replacing it with government-run health care.  Though many other countries have such a system, in America it would be neither practical nor realistic.

 

On the other end of the spectrum, there are those, including most Republicans in Congress, who believe the answer is to loosen regulations on the insurance industry – whether it’s state consumer protections or minimum standards for the kind of insurance they can sell.  I disagree with that approach.  I’m concerned that this would only give the insurance industry even freer rein to raise premiums and deny care.

 

I don’t believe we should give government bureaucrats or insurance company bureaucrats more control over health care in America.  I believe it’s time to give the American people more control over their own health insurance.  I don’t believe we can afford to leave life-and-death decisions about health care to the discretion of insurance company executives alone.  I believe that doctors and nurses like the ones in this room should be free to decide what’s best for their patients. 

 

The proposal I’ve put forward gives Americans more control over their health care by holding insurance companies more accountable.  It builds on the current system where most Americans get their health insurance from their employer.  If you like your plan, you can keep your plan.  If you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor.  Because I can tell you that as the father of two young girls, I wouldn’t want any plan that interferes with the relationship between a family and their doctor. 

 

Essentially, my proposal would change three things about the current health care system:

 

First, it would end the worst practices of insurance companies.  No longer would they be able to deny your coverage because of a pre-existing condition.  No longer would they be able to drop your coverage because you got sick.  No longer would they be able to force you to pay unlimited amounts of money out of your own pocket.  No longer would they be able to arbitrarily and massively raise premiums like Anthem Blue Cross recently tried to do in California.  Those practices would end. 

 

Second, my proposal would give uninsured individuals and small business owners the same kind of choice of private health insurance that Members of Congress get for themselves.  Because if it’s good enough for Members of Congress, it’s good enough for the people who pay their salaries.  The reason federal employees get a good deal on health insurance is that we all participate in an insurance marketplace where insurance companies give better rates and coverage because we give them more customers.  This is an idea that many Republicans have embraced in the past.  And my proposal says that if you still can’t afford the insurance in this new marketplace, we will offer you tax credits to do so – tax credits that add up to the largest middle class tax cut for health care in history.  After all, the wealthiest among us can already buy the best insurance there is, and the least well-off are able to get coverage through Medicaid.  But it’s the middle-class that gets squeezed, and that’s who we have to help. 

 

Now, it’s true that all of this will cost money – about $100 billion per year.  But most of this comes from the nearly $2 trillion a year that America already spends on health care.  It’s just that right now, a lot of that money is being wasted or spent badly.  With this plan, we’re going to make sure the dollars we spend go toward making insurance more affordable and more secure.  We’re also going to eliminate wasteful taxpayer subsidies that currently go to insurance and pharmaceutical companies, set a new fee on insurance companies that stand to gain as millions of Americans are able to buy insurance, and make sure the wealthiest Americans pay their fair share of Medicare. 

 

The bottom line is, our proposal is paid for.  And all new money generated in this plan would go back to small businesses and middle-class families who can’t afford health insurance.  It would lower prescription drug prices for seniors.  And it would help train new doctors and nurses to provide care for American families.

 

Finally, my proposal would bring down the cost of health care for millions – families, businesses, and the federal government.  We have now incorporated most of the serious ideas from across the political spectrum about how to contain the rising cost of health care – ideas that go after the waste and abuse in our system, especially in programs like Medicare.  But we do this while protecting Medicare benefits, and extending the financial stability of the program by nearly a decade.    

 

Our cost-cutting measures mirror most of the proposals in the current Senate bill, which reduces most people’s premiums and brings down our deficit by up to $1 trillion over the next two decades.  And those aren’t my numbers – they are the savings determined by the CBO, which is the Washington acronym for the nonpartisan, independent referee of Congress. 

 

So this is our proposal.  This is where we’ve ended up.  It’s an approach that has been debated and changed and I believe improved over the last year.  It incorporates the best ideas from Democrats and Republicans – including some of the ideas that Republicans offered during the health care summit, like funding state grants on medical malpractice reform and curbing waste, fraud, and abuse in the health care system.  My proposal also gets rid of many of the provisions that had no place in health care reform – provisions that were more about winning individual votes in Congress than improving health care for all Americans. 

 

Now, despite all that we agree on and all the Republican ideas we’ve incorporated, many Republicans in Congress just have a fundamental disagreement over whether we should have more or less oversight of insurance companies.  And if they truly believe that less regulation would lead to higher quality, more affordable health insurance, then they should vote against the proposal I’ve put forward.

 

Some also believe that we should instead pursue a piecemeal approach to health insurance reform, where we just tinker around the edges of this challenge for the next few years.  Even those who acknowledge the problem of the uninsured say that we can’t afford to help them – which is why the Republican proposal only covers three million uninsured Americans while we cover over 31 million.  But the problem with that approach is that unless everyone has access to affordable coverage, you can’t prevent insurance companies from denying coverage based on pre-existing conditions; you can’t limit the amount families are forced to pay out of their own pockets; and you don’t do anything about the fact that taxpayers end up subsidizing the uninsured when they’re forced to go to the Emergency Room for care.  The fact is, health reform only works if you take care of all these problems at once. 

 

Both during and after last week’s summit, Republicans in Congress insisted that the only acceptable course on health care reform is to start over.  But given these honest and substantial differences between the parties about the need to regulate the insurance industry and the need to help millions of middle-class families get insurance, I do not see how another year of negotiations would help.  Moreover, the insurance companies aren’t starting over.  They are continuing to raise premiums and deny coverage as we speak.  For us to start over now could simply lead to delay that could last for another decade or even more.  The American people, and the U.S. economy, just can’t wait that long. 

 

So, no matter which approach you favor, I believe the United States Congress owes the American people a final vote on health care reform.  We have debated this issue thoroughly, not just for a year, but for decades.  Reform has already passed the House with a majority.  It has already passed the Senate with a supermajority of sixty votes.  And now it deserves the same kind of up-or-down vote that was cast on welfare reform, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, COBRA health coverage for the unemployed, and both Bush tax cuts – all of which had to pass Congress with nothing more than a simple majority.   

 

I have therefore asked leaders in both of Houses of Congress to finish their work and schedule a vote in the next few weeks.  From now until then, I will do everything in my power to make the case for reform.  And I urge every American who wants this reform to make their voice heard as well – every family, every business owner, every patient, every doctor, every nurse. 

 

This has been a long and wrenching debate.  It has stoked great passions among the American people and their representatives.  And that is because health care is a difficult issue.  It is a complicated issue.  As all of you know from experience, health care can literally be an issue of life or death.  As a result, it easily lends itself to demagoguery and political gamesmanship; misrepresentation and misunderstanding. 

 

But that’s not an excuse for those of us who were sent here to lead to just walk away.  We can’t just give up because the politics are hard.  I know there’s a fascination, bordering on obsession, in the media and in this town about what passing health insurance reform would mean for the next election and the one after that.  Well, I’ll leave others to sift through the politics.  Because that’s not what this is about.   That’s not why we’re here. 

 

This is about what reform would mean for the mother with breast cancer whose insurance company will finally have to pay for her chemotherapy.  This is about what reform would mean for the small business owner who will no longer have to choose between hiring more workers or offering coverage to the employees she has.  This is about what reform would mean for the middle-class family who will be able to afford health insurance for the very first time in their lives. 

 

And this is about what reform would mean for all those men and women I’ve met over the last few years who’ve been brave enough to share their stories.  When we started our push for reform last year, I talked about a young mother in Wisconsin named Laura Klitzka [KLITZ kah].  She has two young children.  She thought she had beaten her breast cancer but then later discovered it spread to her bones.  She and her husband were working – and had insurance – but their medical bills still landed them in debt.  And now she spends time worrying about that debt when all she wants to do is spend time with her children and focus on getting well. 

 

This should not happen in the United States of America.  And it doesn’t have to.  In the end, that’s what this debate is about – it’s about the kind of country we want to be.  It’s about the millions of lives that would be touched and in some cases saved by making private health insurance more secure and more affordable. 

 

At stake right now is not just our ability to solve this problem, but our ability to solve any problem.  The American people want to know if it’s still possible for Washington to look out for their interests and their future.  They are waiting for us to act.  They are waiting for us to lead.  And as long as I hold this office, I intend to provide that leadership.  I don’t know how this plays politically, but I know it’s right.  And so I ask Congress to finish its work, and I look forward to signing this reform into law.  Thank you.   

 

 

###

 

 

 

Friday, February 26, 2010

EMBARGOED: Weekly Address: President Obama Says Washington Must Use This Opportunity to Enact Health Reform

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________________________
EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY, February 27, 2010

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Says Washington Must Use This Opportunity to Enact Health Reform

 

WASHINGTON – In his weekly address, President Barack Obama said that the nation cannot lose the current opportunity to finally enact meaningful health care reform.  At Thursday’s meeting on reform, both sides were able to find several areas of agreement, but there were some differences.  While the President is willing and eager to move forward with members of Congress from both parties, American families and businesses cannot afford to wait another generation for reform.

 

The audio and video will be available online at www.whitehouse.gov at 6:00 am ET, Saturday, February 27, 2010.

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama

As Prepared for Delivery

Weekly Address

February 27, 2010

 

As the Winter Olympics draw to a close this weekend, I just want to take a minute to congratulate all the athletes who competed in these games.  And I especially want to say how proud I am of all the American men and women have achieved over the last few weeks. 

 

Whether it was the men’s hockey team’s stunning upset of the Canadians on their way to the gold-medal game, Lindsey Vonn’s heroic gold-medal comeback from a shin injury, or Apolo Ohno becoming the most decorated American winter Olympian of all time, you can’t help but be inspired by the sheer grit and athletic prowess on display in Vancouver.

 

And it’s not just the medal count that’s inspiring – though we’ve certainly done great on that score.  What’s truly inspiring is the character of the men and women who have won those medals.  The sacrifices they’ve made.  The integrity they’ve shown.  The indomitable Olympic spirit that says no matter who you are or where you come from or what difficulties you may face, you can work hard and train hard and still triumph in the end.  That is why we watch.  That is why we cheer.  That is why in the middle of an extremely challenging time for America, we’ve been able to come together as one nation for a few weeks in February and swell with pride at what our citizens have achieved. 

 

Now, when it comes to meeting the larger challenges we face as a nation, I realize that finding this unity is easier said than done – especially in Washington.  But if we want to compete on the world stage as well as we’ve competed in the world’s games, we need to find common ground.  We need to move past the bickering and the game-playing that holds us back and blocks progress for the American people. 

 

We know it’s possible to do this.  And we were reminded of that last week when Democrats and Republicans in the Senate came together to pass a jobs bill that will give small businesses tax credits to hire more workers.  We also saw it when Democrats and Republicans in the House came together to pass a bill that will force insurance companies to abide by common-sense rules that prevent price-fixing and other practices that drive up health care costs. 

 

We need that same spirit of cooperation and bipartisanship when it comes to finally passing reform that will bring down the cost of health care and give Americans more control over their insurance.  On Thursday, we brought both parties together for a frank and productive discussion about this issue.  In that discussion, we heard many areas of agreement.  Both sides agreed that the rising cost of health care is a serious problem that plagues families, small businesses, and our federal budget.  Many on both sides agreed that we should give small businesses and individuals the ability to participate in a new insurance marketplace – which members of Congress would also use – that would allow them to pool their purchasing power and get a better deal from insurance companies.  And I heard some ideas from our Republican friends that I believe are very worthy of consideration. 

 

But still, there were differences.  We disagreed over whether insurance companies should be held accountable when they deny people care or arbitrarily raise premiums.  I believe they should.  We disagreed over giving tax credits to small businesses and individuals that would make health care affordable for those who don’t have it.  This would be the largest middle class tax cut for health care in history, and I believe we should do it.  And while we agreed that Americans with pre-existing conditions should be able to get coverage, we disagreed on how to do that. 

 

Some of these disagreements we may be able to resolve.  Some we may not.  And no final bill will include everything that everyone wants.  That’s what compromise is.  I said at the end of Thursday’s summit that I am eager and willing to move forward with members of both parties on health care if the other side is serious about coming together to resolve our differences and get this done.  But I also believe that we cannot lose the opportunity to meet this challenge.  The tens of millions of men and women who cannot afford their health insurance cannot wait another generation for us to act.  Small businesses cannot wait.  Americans with pre-existing conditions cannot wait.  State and federal budgets cannot sustain these rising costs. 

 

It is time for us to come together.  It is time for us to act.  It is time for those of us in Washington to live up to our responsibilities to the American people and to future generations.  So let’s get this done. 

 

Thanks for listening. 

 

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

EMBARGOED: Remarks of the President to the Business Roundtable

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________

EMBARGOED UNTIL DELIVERY

February 24, 2010

 

Remarks of President Barack Obama – As Prepared for Delivery

Speech to the Business Roundtable

Wednesday, February 24, 2009

Washington, DC

 

It is great to be back here with the men and women of the Business Roundtable.  Over the last year, we have worked together on a number of issues – from economic recovery and tax policy to education and health care.  And more often than not, we’ve found common ground.

 

This is important, because we meet at a time of great economic anxiety and sharp political divisions.  We are still emerging from the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.  Eight million Americans have lost their jobs over the last two years.  Home values in too many parts of the country have plummeted.  Too many businesses are still reluctant to invest and expand. 

 

What’s more, this recession follows what some have called a “lost decade” – a decade in which the average family income fell while the costs of health care and tuition skyrocketed; a decade in which a continued erosion of America’s manufacturing base hollowed out many communities and put too many good jobs out of reach.

 

No wonder, then, people are frustrated with both business and government.  They’re angry at a financial sector that took exorbitant risks in pursuit of short-term profits, and they’re angry at a government that failed to catch the problem in time.  They’re angry at the price they paid to prevent a financial meltdown they didn’t cause, and they’re angry that recovery in their own lives seems to be lagging the recovery of bank profitability.  They’re angry at the lobbyists who use their influence to put their clients’ special interests ahead of the public interest.  And although both parties are predictably scrambling to align themselves with people’s frustrations, neither the usual answers from the left or right seem to inspire much confidence. 

 

So we have big challenges before us.  And I think all of us know that we cannot meet them by returning to the pre-crisis status quo – an economy too dependent on a housing bubble, consumer debt, financial speculation, and growing deficits.  That’s not sustainable for American workers, and it’s not sustainable for American businesses. 

 

Instead, we need to build an economy where we borrow less and produce more.  We need an economy where we generate more jobs here at home and send more products overseas.  We need to invest and nurture the industries of the future, and we need to train our workers to compete for those jobs.

 

Nations around the world, from Asia to Europe, have already realized this.  They’re putting more emphasis on math and science.  They’re building high-speed railroads and expanding broadband access.  They’re making serious investments in clean energy because they want those jobs. 

 

These countries know what’s required to compete in the 21st century.  But so do we.  And as I said in the State of the Union, I do not accept second place for the United States of America. 

 

We did not achieve global leadership in the last century by luck or happenstance.  We earned it by working together to define our own destiny and seize the future.  And to maintain our leadership in this new century, we must summon that same resolve.

 

A thriving, competitive America is within our reach.  But only if we move forward as one nation; only if we move past the old debates and crippling divides between left and right; business and labor; private enterprise and the public sector.  Whatever differences we have in this country, all of us have a stake in meeting the same goal:  an America in which a growing prosperity is shared widely by its people. 

 

So today I want to spend most of my time talking about the specific steps we need to take to build this more competitive America.   But before I do, I want to talk about the relationship between business and government in promoting economic growth. 

 

Contrary to the claims of some of my critics, I am an ardent believer in the free market.  I believe businesses like yours are the engines of economic growth in this country.  You create the jobs.  You develop new products and cutting-edge technologies.  And you create the supply chains that make it possible for smaller businesses to open their doors.  So I want everyone in this room to succeed.  I want your shareholders to do well, and I want your workers to do well.  Because I firmly believe that America’s success in large part depends on your success. 

 

But I also believe this:  government has a vital, if limited, role to play in fostering sustained economic growth.  Throughout our history, it has done so in three ways.

 

First, government has set up basic rules of the marketplace – from the enforcement of contracts and managing the money supply to maintaining airline safety standards and creating federal deposit insurance.  On balance, these rules have been good for business, not bad.  For they ensure honest competition, fair dealing, and a level playing field.

 

Second, only government can make those investments in common goods that serve the general welfare but are too expensive for any individual or firm to buy on their own.  Our Armed Forces is the most obvious example.  But government has also built infrastructure – roads and ports; railways and highways that enabled commerce and spurred entire industries.  Government has invested in basic research that led to new crop yields for farmers and the Internet.  Government has invested in our people, through land grant colleges and the GI Bill. 

 

Finally, government has provided a social safety net to guarantee a basic level of security for all of our citizens.  This last role has obviously been a source of great controversy over the last several decades.  But I think most Americans and business leaders would agree that programs like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and unemployment insurance have not only saved millions from poverty; they have helped secure broad-based consensus that is so critical to a functioning market economy.

 

The Business Roundtable has always understood that in each of these instances, government hasn’t stepped in to supplant private enterprise, but to catalyze it – to create the conditions for entrepreneurs and new businesses to adapt and thrive. 

 

But I take the time to make these points because we have arrived at a juncture in our politics where reasonable efforts to update our regulations, or make basic investments in our future, are too often greeted with cries of “government takeover” or even “socialism.” 

 

Not only does that kind of rhetoric deny our history, but it prevents us from asking hard questions about the right balance between the private and public sectors.  Too little investment in a competitive infrastructure or education system and we risk falling behind countries that are making these investments today.  On the other hand, if we just throw money at poorly-planned projects or failing schools, we will remain in debt to those same countries for decades to come.  If we do not pass financial reform, we can expect more crises in the future.  But if we design the new rules carelessly, they could choke off the supply of capital to businesses and families.  If we allow our safety net to be weakened, or lose a sense of fairness in our tax code, we can expect more anger and frustration from citizens across the political spectrum; at the same time, if an exploding entitlement state is gobbling up more and more of our tax dollars, there is no way we will retain our competitive edge. 

 

Rather than hurling accusations about big government liberals or mean-spirited conservatives, we will have to answer these tough questions.  And getting this balance right has less to do with big government or small government than it does smart government.  It’s not about being anti-business or pro-government; it’s about being pro-growth and pro-jobs.  And while there are no simple formulas or bumper-sticker slogans, let me discuss a few specific areas where we have to get this right.

 

Our first and most immediate task is to complete the economic recovery by taking additional steps to bolster demand and keep credit flowing.  Along with our efforts to unfreeze credit and stabilize the housing market, the Recovery Act helped do this, and it’s one of the main reasons our economy has gone from shrinking by 6% to growing by nearly 6%.  But we need to do more.  We should make it easier for small businesses to get loans and give them a tax credit for hiring new workers or raising wages.  We should invest in infrastructure projects that lead to new jobs in the construction industry and other hard-hit businesses.  And we should provide a tax incentive for large businesses like yours to invest in new plants and equipment.  That would make a difference now.  

 

We need businesses to support these efforts.  The Business Roundtable supported the Recovery Act, and for that I’m grateful.  But I think one of the reasons businesses haven’t been as vocal about their support is a belief that extraordinary measures like the Recovery Act or our financial stability plan represent a lasting increase in government intervention.  Let me assure you – they do not. 

 

One year ago, we were looking at the possible end of General Motors.  Today, GM has increased production and is paying us back ahead of schedule.  One year ago, there was a chance we would lose most of the $700 billion we spent to rescue the banks.  Today, most of that money has been repaid.  The financial fee we’ve proposed is simply designed to recover the rest and close the books on government’s involvement.  

 

And let me say a word here about compensation.  Most Americans – including myself – don’t begrudge reasonable rewards for a job well done.  What has outraged people are the outsized bonuses at firms that so recently required massive public assistance.  Once that money is fully repaid, I don’t believe it’s appropriate for the government to be in the business of setting compensation levels.  What I do believe is that shareholders should have a say in the compensation packages given to top executives, and that those packages should be based on long-term performance instead of short-term profits.  That’s particularly important in the financial industry, where reckless risks in pursuit of short-term gains helped create a crisis that engulfed the world economy.   

 

So the steps we took last year were about saving the economy from collapse, not expanding government’s reach into the economy.  The jobs bills now working through Congress is similarly designed to be targeted and temporary, and I am pleased that a few hours ago, the Senate just passed a series of tax cuts for small businesses that hire more workers.  This is an important step forward in putting more Americans back to work as soon as possible. 

 

But the larger question is this:  beyond the immediate requirements of recovery, how do we lay the foundation for a more competitive America?

 

I believe it starts with investments in innovation, education, and a 21st century infrastructure.  To build the infrastructure of tomorrow, we’re investing in expanded broadband access, health information technology, clean energy facilities, and the first high-speed rail network in America. 

 

To spur the discovery of services, products, and industries we have yet to imagine, we are devoting more than three percent of our GDP to research and development – an amount that exceeds the level achieved at the height of the Space Race.  We’ve also proposed making the research and experimentation tax credit permanent – a tax credit that helps companies like yours afford the high costs of developing new technologies and new products. 

 

To train our workers for the jobs of tomorrow, we’ve made education reform a top priority in this administration.  Last year, we launched a national competition to improve our schools based on a simple idea:  instead of funding the status quo, we only invest in reform – reform that raises student achievement, inspires students to excel in math and science, and turns around failing schools that steal the future of too many young Americans.  I just met with the nation’s governors this week, and education reform is one of those rare issues where both Democrats and Republicans are enthusiastic. 

 

And to achieve my goal of ensuring America again has the highest proportion of college graduates in the world by 2020, I’m urging the Senate to pass a bill that will make college more affordable by ending the unnecessary taxpayer-subsidies that go to financial intermediaries for student loans.   It’s a bill that will also revitalize our community colleges, which this organization has recognized are a career pathway to the children of so many working families.  And just as government needs to support young people eager to learn, I’m pleased to see that the business community has already begun to bet on the next generation of American talent.  Just yesterday, seventeen high-tech companies announced plans to hire over 10,000 recent college graduates this year. 

 

Finally, we’re investing in innovation that will lead to a more efficient, affordable, and consumer-friendly federal government.  Many of you have harnessed new technologies to build thriving businesses and provide better services to your customers.  There’s no reason government shouldn’t do the same, and give taxpayers a better bang for their buck. 

 

With new technology, we’re creating a single electronic medical record for our men and women in uniform that will follow them from the day they enlist until they day they are laid to rest.  We’re cutting down the time it takes to get a patent approved by cutting out unnecessary paperwork and modernizing the process.  We’re working to give people the chance to go online and book an appointment at the Social Security office or check the status of their citizenship application – services countless businesses already provide.

 

In all of these areas – infrastructure, research, education, and government reform – we are making investments that will lead to new products and services that will help America compete on the world stage. 

 

Of course, winning that competition also means we need to export more of our goods and services to other nations – something that supports more jobs here in America.  Unfortunately, the federal government has not done a good enough job advocating for companies’ exports abroad.

 

That’s why in the State of the Union, I set a goal of doubling our exports over the next five years, an increase that will support two million jobs.  To help meet this goal, my Secretary of Commerce, Gary Locke, recently announced that we’re launching a National Export Initiative where the federal government will significantly ramp up its advocacy on behalf of U.S. exporters.  We are substantially expanding the trade financing available to exporters, including small and medium-sized companies.  While always keeping our security needs in mind, we will reform export controls to eliminate unnecessary barriers.  And we will pursue a more strategic and aggressive effort to open up new markets for our goods. 

 

Now, I know that trade policy has been a longstanding divide between business and labor; Democrats and Republicans.  But to those who would reflexively support every trade deal, I would say that our competitors have to play fair and our agreements have to be enforced.  We simply cannot cede more jobs or markets to unfair trade practices.  And to those who would reflexively oppose every trade agreement, they need to know that if America sits on the sidelines while other nations sign trade deals, we will lose the chance to create jobs on our shores.  Other countries, whether China or Germany or Brazil, have been able to align the interests of workers, businesses, and government around trade agreements that open new markets and create new jobs.  We must do the same. 

 

That’s why we launched the Trans Pacific Partnership to strengthen our trade relations with Asia, the fastest growing market in the world.  That’s why we will work to resolve outstanding issues so that we can move forward on trade agreements with key partners like South Korea, Panama, and Colombia.  And that’s why we will try to conclude a Doha trade agreement – not just any agreement, but one that creates real access to key global markets. 

 

A competitive America is also an America that finally has a smart energy policy.  We know there is no silver bullet here – that to reduce our dependence on oil and the damage caused by climate change, we need more production, more efficiency, and more incentives for clean energy. 

 

Already, the Recovery Act has allowed us to jumpstart the clean energy industry in America – an investment that will lead to 720,000 clean energy jobs by 2012.  To take just one example, the United States used to make less than 2% of the world’s advanced batteries for hybrid cars.  By 2015, we’ll have enough capacity to make up to 40% of these batteries.  

 

We’ve also launched an unprecedented effort to make our homes and businesses more energy efficient.  We’ve announced loan guarantees to break ground on America’s first new nuclear plant in nearly three decades.  We are supporting three of the largest solar plants in the world.  And I’ve said that we’re willing to make tough decisions about opening new offshore areas for oil and gas development.   

 

But to truly transition to a clean energy economy, I’ve also said that we need to put a price on carbon pollution.   Many businesses have embraced this approach – including some here today.  Still, I am sympathetic to those companies that face significant transition costs, and I want to work with organizations like this to help with those costs and get our policies right. 

 

What we can’t do is stand still.  The only certainty of the status quo is that the price and supply of oil will become increasingly volatile; that the use of fossil fuels will wreak havoc on weather patterns and air quality.  But if we decide now that we’re putting a price on this pollution in a few years, it will give businesses the certainty of knowing they have time to plan and transition.  This country has to move towards a clean energy economy.  That’s where the world is going.  And that’s how America will remain competitive and strong in the 21st century.  

 

We’ll also be more competitive if we address those costs and risks that are preventing our economy from reaching its full potential – outdated financial regulations, crushing health care costs, and a growing deficit.

 

Right now, we have a financial system with the same vulnerabilities that it had when this crisis began.  As I said in the State of the Union, my goal is not to punish Wall Street.  I believe that most folks in the financial sector are looking to make money in an honest, transparent way. 

 

But if there aren’t rules in place to guard against the recklessness of a few, and they are allowed to exploit consumers and take on excessive risk, it starts a race to the bottom that results in all of us losing. 

 

That’s what we need to change.  We cannot repeat the mistakes of the past.  We cannot allow another AIG or another Lehmann to happen again.  We can’t allow financial institutions, including those that take your deposits, to make gambles that threaten the whole economy.  We must ensure consolidated supervision of all institutions that could pose a risk to the system.  We must close loopholes that allow financial firms to evade oversight and circumvent rules of the road.  And we need robust consumer and investor protections.  

 

I ask the members of the Business Roundtable to support these efforts.  The lobbyists up on the Hill right now are trying to kill reform by claiming that it would undermine businesses outside the financial sector.  That couldn’t be further from the truth.  This is about putting in place rules that encourage drive and innovation instead of short-cuts and abuse.  And those are rules that will benefit everyone.  

 

Another undeniable drag on our economy is the cost of health care.  Now, I appreciate the willingness of the Business Roundtable to work with us on health care reform, and when you’ve had concerns about specific measures or policies, we’ve listened and in some cases, made changes.

 

Still, I know there are many who have been skeptical of our reform efforts.  In the wake of the extraordinary measures we took to rescue our economy, it’s been an easy political tactic to characterize any effort at health reform as a “big government takeover.” 

 

But the truth is just the opposite.  We have not called for the elimination of private insurance or our employer-based system.  What we’ve called for is an insurance exchange where individuals and small businesses can pool together in order to get a better deal from insurance companies.  In return for getting more customers, we would require insurance companies to stop discriminating based on preexisting conditions or arbitrarily jacking up premiums.  We’ve also incorporated almost every serious idea from across the political spectrum about how to contain the rising cost of health care.  As a result, our proposal would reduce the deficit by as much as $1 trillion over the next two decades.  

 

These steps would provide more certainty for businesses, not less.  Because there is no certainty in a future where premiums rise without limit; a future where companies are forced to drop coverage or cutback elsewhere.  That can’t be good for business.  Our proposal contains good ideas from Democrats, Republicans, and experts from across the spectrum.  And tomorrow, I look forward to a good exchange of ideas at the Blair House.  I hope everyone comes with a shared desire to solve this challenge, and I hope the Roundtable supports our efforts to finally pass this reform.   

 

Now, one of benefits of health care reform is that by bringing down the cost of Medicare and Medicaid, it would significantly reduce our deficit.  I know this an issue of great concern to many of you.  Believe me – it’s been on my mind too. 

 

I walked into office facing a massive deficit, most of which was the result of not paying for two wars, two tax cuts, and an expensive prescription drug program.  And the lost revenue from the recession put us in an even deeper hole. 

 

The steps we took to save the economy from depression last year have necessarily added to the deficit – about $1 trillion, compared to the $8 trillion we inherited.  But I’ve also said that we intend to pay for what we added.  My administration is doing what families and businesses all across the country are doing during these difficult times:  we’re tightening our belts and making tough decisions.  We’re investing only in what we need and sacrificing what we can do without.  We’ve gone line by line through the federal budget, and identified more than 120 programs for elimination – a total of $20 billion in savings for next year.  And starting in 2011, I’ve proposed a freeze on non-security, discretionary government spending for three years – something that was never enacted in the last administration. 

 

I’m also grateful that Congress responded to my request and restored a simple budgeting rule that every family and business understands:  Pay-as-you-go.  And I’ve established a bipartisan, Fiscal Commission that will provide a specific set of solutions by the fall to deal with our medium and long-term deficit.

 

Of course, as many of you have reminded us, budget cuts aren’t the only step we’ve proposed this year to help bring down the deficit.  Which brings me to everybody’s favorite topic:  taxes.  You’ll notice I saved the best for last. 

 

I want to set the record straight on this issue, because it’s been one of the largest sources of tension between our administration and the business community. 

 

During the campaign, I promised a tax cut for 95% of working Americans.  I have kept that promise.  We’ve provided over $150 billion in tax cuts to small businesses and families.  We haven’t raised anyone’s income taxes by a single dime.  This year, I expect to sign into law another $70 billion worth of business tax cuts for 2010 and 2011 – a more than ten percent cut in corporate taxes.  

 

But I also made two other promises during the campaign.  I promised that folks making over $250,000 a year would go back to paying the tax rates they did in the 1990s – a time when businesses did well and many millionaires were made.  I’m not doing this to be punitive – I’m doing it because at a time of two wars and massive deficits, I just can’t justify continuing to give billionaires massive tax cuts.   

 

The other promise I made during the campaign was to ensure that our tax code doesn’t provide relief and a competitive advantage to companies that move jobs and investment outside of the United States.  Now, a number of you have made the point that we shouldn’t discourage anyone from keeping headquarters and operations in America and that we have to balance your need to compete overseas. So after listening to you, we’ve made some modifications in our proposal.  But as president of the United States, my interest is to reward – or at least not disadvantage – companies who are creating more jobs and doing more business within the borders of this country.  That’s not anti-business, it’s pro-America, and I don’t apologize for it.   

 

On all of these issues – from education to health care to taxes – my first question can’t be “Is this good for business?” or “Is this good for labor?” It can’t be “Is this good politics?” or “Will this tag me as liberal or conservative?” It has to be, “Is this good for America?  Does it help us compete?  Does it grow our economy?  Does it create jobs for the middle-class and those trying to join it?   That’s my job as President. 

 

But what I also know is that government can’t meet all of these challenges on its own.  When it comes to education, we need parents who are willing to read to their children and help with their homework.  When it comes to energy, we need consumers who are willing to buy more efficient appliances and automobiles, and conserve where they can.  And when comes to an economy that works for every American, we need business leaders like you who understand that private enterprise comes with a public responsibility. 

 

Andy Grove, who most of you know was the CEO of Intel, once gave an interview where he said, “Those of us in business have two obligations in my opinion.  The one that’s un-debatable is that we have a fiduciary responsibility to…the shareholders who put us in our place...There is another obligation that I feel personally, given that everything I have achieved in my career, and a lot of what Intel has achieved in its career, were made possible by a climate of democracy, an economic climate and investment climate provided by our domicile, the United States.” 

 

It is undoubtedly in the short-term interest of individual corporations to pay less in taxes and deal with fewer regulations.  But it is in the long-term interest of all companies to do business in a nation that maintains the world’s best research facilities and universities; a nation with public schools that graduate highly-skilled, highly-educated workers; a nation with functioning railways and airports; a nation that is not dragged down by crushing debt. 

 

If you pay your workers a salary they can raise a family on, they will feel more loyalty to your company.  If we have rules of the road that guard against recklessness in our financial system, it will protect the interests of everyone from the wealthiest CEOs to the lowest-paid workers.  If we give a child in the Bronx a world-class education, it doesn’t just benefit that child, it benefits the company that might hire him down the road and the country he lives in.     

 

To put it simply, we are all in this together.  We face some very big and difficult challenges as a nation right now.  And the only way we’ll get through them – the only way we ever have – is if we align the interests of workers and businesses and government around a common purpose; if we all pick up an oar and start rowing in the same direction. 

 

At a time of such economic angst, it is tempting, and perhaps easier, to turn against one another, and find scapegoats to blame.  Politicians can rail against Wall Street or against each other.  Businesses can fault Capitol Hill.  And all of it makes for easy talking points and good political theater.  But it doesn’t solve our problems.  It doesn’t move us forward.  It only traps us in the same debates and divides that have held us back for far too long. 

 

We can’t afford that kind of politics anymore.  Not now.  We know the way forward.  We know what the future can be.  And I am confident we can get there.  I am confident because we have the hardest-working, most productive citizens in the world.  I am confident because our universities and research facilities are second to none.  And I am confident because of the caliber of the leaders and businesses represented in this room.

 

We will not always agree on every issue or support the same policies.  But I will never stop listening to your concerns and your ideas.  Because we are in this together.  All of us.  And whether we rise or fall as nation does not depend on some economic forces beyond our control.  It depends on us – on the ingenuity of our entrepreneurs, the determination of our workers, and the strength of our people.  I will always believe in that strength, and remain hopeful about our future.  Thank you.    

 

 

 

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