Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Ending the Great American Funk

Tony Blankley, Washington Times
I suppose it is to be expected that the Great Recession should be accompanied by a sweeping national pessimism in which our purported leaders and commentators express historic despair, while the people and corporations mope about, convinced that the sun will not come up tomorrow.Such an intensity of self-loathing and lack of confidence has not been heard since the French contemplated their disgraced future in June 1940 when they annihilated their nation, and the great light that was France, by surrendering to the Germans. Receive news alertsBut even that French despair ended -- and it started...

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/12/01/the_great_american_funk_108100.html

Richard Durbin Richard Shelby Robert Foster Bennett Robert Menendez Roger Wicker

Statement by the Press Secretary, 11/24/10

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

On Wednesday, November 24, 2010, the President signed into law:

S. 3774, which extends through September 30, 2011, the deadline for States to spend supplemental disaster relief funds provided through the Social Services Block Grant program.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/11/24/statement-press-secretary-112410

Hillary Clinton Jack Reed Jay Rockefeller Jeanne Shaheen Jeff Bingaman

WikiLeaks Shows Bush in Fantasy World

Richard Cohen, Washington Post

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/11/30/after_latest_wikileaks_bush_should_rethink_108092.html

Chuck Grassley Chuck Hagel Chuck Schumer Claire McCaskill Colin Powell

Remarks by the President and Vice President to Chrysler Plant Workers in Kokomo, Indiana

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release
Location: 
Chrysler Indiana Transmission Plant, Kokomo, Indiana

2:00 P.M. EST

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Hello, folks, how are you?  (Applause.) Good to see you all.  Good to be back in an automobile plant, making things.  (Applause.)  Hey, thank you all very much.  We’re delighted to be here and I expect as delighted as you are to be able to be here.  (Laughter.) 

     Look, when the President and I got elected we knew we had a heavy load to carry.  The country was in some real tough shape.  And we stepped up, and with the help of some of -- all the congressmen, the senators here, we passed the Recovery Act just after taking office, in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. 

And we had three clear goals, led by the President.  One is help communities and people who were hit the hardest, hit the hardest by this awful recession.  Save and create jobs today, but also lay a foundation for long-term prosperity in the future.  Because more than -- a year after implementing this act, I can say proudly that not only have we helped millions of people, but -- not only have we created millions of jobs, not only have we spurred growth in new industries, but we have completely transformed, with the great leadership of the local and state leadership here, communities like this one here in Kokomo.  (Applause.)

Look, I’m the son of an automobile man, and I want to tell you he managed automobile facilities for my entire life.  And Kokomo, anybody in the automobile business has already known, was one of the great auto towns in America -- not only making Chrysler automobiles but Delphi, supplying parts and so many other suppliers, and all the related jobs that go with that. 

To bring Kokomo back, to bring the automobile industry back, we knew we had to change things.  We couldn’t just keep doing the things the way we did.  We knew the auto industry had to get leaner, had to get tougher, had to be more competitive.  And we insisted that they did.  And now you see the result -- an old industry adapting to a whole new era, competing again, leading again, and most importantly, hiring again.  Hiring again.  (Applause.)
 
Mr. President, I know you know this, but the last year of the last outfit we succeeded, they lost 461,000 automobile-related jobs.  And so far we’ve created almost 75,000 new jobs, and a lot more to come.

And, folks, look, the government didn’t do this.  The government didn’t do this alone.  The government did was it was supposed to do.  With the leadership of a President and leadership from the President, we had investment from the private sector brought onboard because the government was able to get back in the game and said we’re part of it.  The auto industry has roared back in America.   

Now, I was telling the boss over here that the thing I like most about everything -- again, being the son of an automobile man -- is that my dad would be happy.  For the first time in 24 years -- Americans like your product better than they like foreign products that are made here.  (Applause.)  That's a big deal.  That's a big deal.  (Applause.)

Look around here.  Look around here.  For every one guy working here in the assembly line, there’s five more doing exactly what you’re doing.  Everybody thinks it’s only the assembly plants.  Well, there's five people working at plants like this for every single job in the automobile assembly line.  It’s a big, big process.  People working in places like here and Delphi Suppliers, making parts was a major part of this recovery.

     And then when you guys have jobs, guess what happens.  The coffee shop stays open.  The barbershop stays open.  The restaurant stays open.  People open new businesses downtown.  People sell jackets and shoes and hats.  People, in fact, have jobs.  This has an effect all the way through the economy.

     And that's what’s happening here in Kokomo, as your mayor can tell you.  The lunch counter needs a few more waitresses and servers to feed them.  The remodeled plant can reinvigorate an entire community and give people who don't work here hope.  The people who don't work here.  We were just in town.  People were saying, thank you.  They don't work here.  They're saying thank you for this facility. 

But we can’t just build a new economy by revitalizing and modernizing an old industry.  We can’t stop at creating new jobs in old industries.  We need to create whole new industries, as well.  And that's what the President did.  A great example is over in Tipton, AboundSolar -- whole new industry.  There’s no reason why you can’t build the best automobiles in the world and also be a leader in what the new industries -- the new green industries in the world are going to be.

     The President did what every great President has done in the past.  He’s looked to the future.  We used the Recovery Act to provide seed money that sparked private investment -- private investment in new industries like solar and wind, advanced batteries, high-efficiency lighting, high-speed rail.

     Folks, some of our friends forget, that's what all great Presidents did.  Lincoln did it when he built the Transcontinental Railroad by putting down seed money to the railroads to go build it.  That's -- we’re doing the same thing here again. 

     Every great President has a vision.  And now we’re doing it here.  We’re doing it here with the renewable energy investments that are being made outside the city, with the new industries of the future.  And in a sense, there’s a whole new automobile industry building a different kind of automobile.

     Mr. President, my dad used to have a saying when he was -- ran automobile dealerships of almost four decades.  He said, Joey, all they got to do is give me product.  Give me product.  Give me product, I can sell it.  I can -- you’re giving them the best product in the world again.

     We also believe we can’t have a strong economy without strong communities.  And that's why the President in the Recovery Act made sure we helped hard-hit towns like Kokomo.  We now -- we were just at the fire station.  There’s 13 firefighters still on the job because of the Recovery Act and because of the SAFER Act. Teachers, law enforcement officers on the job.

     When I tell you an international recession hits and a worldwide recession, guess what.  A town like Kokomo and other towns of 50,000 all across America, they can't do it on their own.  You got to help them stand up a little bit.  And that's why we helped with infrastructure and roads, to bring improvements, to bring back Main Street, to bring it back to life.

     Kokomo is in the forefront of it all.  And nowhere is it written that Kokomo can't be the hub of innovation in emerging industries of the 21st century -- like it was in the 20th century.  (Applause.)  Nowhere is that written.

     Look, nobody knows better than this man that our work certainly isn’t done yet.  We're just starting.  But it’s important we recognize success stories like Kokomo as signs that we are definitely moving in the right direction.  This town and its people are a model for others looking to do the same thing over and over again in this country.  You guys here have been the embodiment of the limitless potential when we put government and the private sector and the community all together, working toward the same end -- a community built -- this community -- this community is built on grit and determination, a willingness for you all to fight hard, to pick yourself back up off the mat and to march toward what you all believe now -- I believe, I hope you do -- is a better day, a brighter future, a new start.

     We know it’s a long road back.  But we know we're on the road.  And the one most important thing we've got to communicate to the nation and to everyone listening is we can't stop now.  We can't turn around.  We're heading in the right direction. 

Kokomo is coming back.  America is coming back.  And it couldn't have happened without the vision of the man sitting behind me. 

Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States, Barack Obama.  (Applause.) 

     THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Thank you, everybody.  Thank you.  (Applause.)  Everybody have a seat.  Thank you so much.  Thank you, Joe.  Thank you, Kokomo.  I have to just say, by the way, Joe is not only one of the best Vice Presidents in history. He’s also one of the best introducers in history.  (Laughter.)  I try to take him wherever I can. 

I want to thank your plant manager, Jeremy Keating, for the great tour and the great work that he’s doing here.  (Applause.) He is proud of the work that's being done at this plant.  I want to thank your local UAW president, Richie Boruff, who’s here --  (applause) -- thank them for showing me around. 

A couple other hotshots -- U.S. Senator Evan Bayh is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Joe Donnelly is in the house.  (Applause.)  Congressman Andre Carson is here.  (Applause.)  Congressman Baron Hill is here.  (Applause.)  By the way, Congressman Baron Hill is in the Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame. Now, that's pretty cool.  Being a congressman is cool; being in the Basketball Hall of Fame in Indiana -- that's something.

Mayor of Kokomo, Greg Goodnight, is here, doing outstanding work.  (Applause.)  The CEO of Chrysler Group, Sergio Marchionne, is here.  (Applause.)  President of UAW, Bob King, is in the house.  (Applause.) 

We've got some of the best workers in the United States of America right here at this plant.  (Applause.)  And I had a chance to meet some of you as we were going around seeing these amazing transmissions that you’re building.  And I was very happy to hear that after a couple of tough years, this plant is now running at full capacity.  And that’s why I’m here today.  (Applause.)  That's why I'm here today. 

Now, we all know that one plant by itself doesn’t mean that there aren't people in Kokomo who are still hurting.  I had lunch with the mayor and some firefighters, and there's still a long way to go.  The mayor has got all kinds of great plans, and there are businesses that are looking to start expanding.  But the fact is there are millions of people around the country who are still looking for work in the wake of the worst recession in our lifetimes.  I don’t have to tell you that.  Many of you still have friends or neighbors, a husband or a wife who is still struggling.

     And I know that before this plant started rehiring, a lot of you were in the same position, so you remember that it is a tough, tough thing when you’re out of work, especially when you’ve taken a lifetime of pride in working and supporting a family and making great products.

But even as we continue to face serious challenges, what’s happening here at this plant -– the changes we’re seeing throughout Kokomo -– are signs of hope and confidence in the future -- in our future, together.  You’re showing us the way forward.  You’re living up to that spirit of optimism and determination -– that grit –- that’s always been at the heart of who we are as a people, at the heart of America.

I remember coming to Kokomo a little over two years ago.  Joe will remember this.  Some of you might have been here.  What was happening here reflected what was happening all over the country, all over this region.  For a decade or more, families had felt a growing sense of economic insecurity.  A lot of manufacturing had left the area.  And then a recession started taking hold, and folks were seeing job losses and facing new hardships. 

That was before anybody knew how devastating the recession was going to be.  So by the time I took office, just a few months later, the financial crisis had hit, the auto industry teetered on the brink, and we were losing millions of jobs.

And that left Joe and I with some tough choices.  One was to help the auto industry restructure.  And that wasn’t an easy call.  I understood that there were some reservations of those who said that the industry should pay a price for some poor decisions by the part of management.  But we also knew that millions of jobs hung in the balance.  We also knew that the very survival of places like Kokomo were on the line.  And we knew that the collapse of the American auto industry would lead to an even deeper disaster for our economy.

And you know what, we also believed that America, which popularized the automobile, whose middle class was made on the basis of manufacturing -- that we couldn’t just give up.  We couldn’t throw in the towel.  That was not an option.

     There were those who were prepared to give up on Kokomo and our auto industry.  There were those who said it was going to be too difficult, or that it was bad politics, or it was throwing good money after bad.  You remember the voices arguing for us to do nothing.  They were pretty loud, suggesting we should just step back and watch an entire sector of our economy fall apart. 

     But we knew that the auto industry was not built, and this country was not built, by doing the easy thing.  It wasn’t built by doing nothing.  It was built by doing what was necessary even when it’s difficult.  So we made the decision to stand behind the auto industry -- if automakers, if CEOs like Sergio were willing to do what was necessary to make themselves competitive in the 21st century, and if they have the cooperation of workers who were taking pride in the products that they made.

     We made the decision to stand with you because we had confidence in the American worker, more than anything.  And today we know that was the right decision.  (Applause.)  We know that was the right decision.

     Today each of the Big Three automakers has increased their market share -- each of them.  For the first time in over a decade, Americans are buying a larger share of Chryslers, Fords and G.M. cars, and a smaller share of their foreign counterparts -- for the first time in decades.  (Applause.)

     We’re coming back.  We’re on the move.  All three American companies are profitable, and they are growing.  Some of you read last week, G.M.’s stock offering exceeded expectations as investors expressed their confidence in a future that seemed so dim just 18 months ago.  And as a result, the Treasury was able to sell half of its G.M. stock.

     So here’s the lesson:  Don't bet against America.  (Applause.)  Don't bet against the American auto industry.  Don't bet against American ingenuity.  Don't bet against the American worker.  Don't bet against us.  (Applause.)  Don't bet against us.  (Applause.) 

Don't bet against us.  This plant is a shining example of why you shouldn’t.  Two years ago, production here was plummeting.  A lot of folks had lost their jobs.   Today, this plant is coming back.  The company has invested more than $300 million in this factory to retool.  (Applause.) 

But it gets better.  Sergio just told me today Chrysler is announcing an additional investment of more than $800 million in its Kokomo facilities -- $800 million.  (Applause.)   That's good.  That's good news.  (Applause.)  That's real money, $800 million.  (Laughter.)  See, the mayor has got a big grin on his face.  (Laughter.)  You're pretty happy about that.  (Laughter.)  
Over the next few years, folks here expect to manufacture more transmissions than ever before.  And as a result, hundreds of workers are back on the job.  Jeremy said we’re going to be hiring more.  (Applause.) 

This includes -- I’m going to name a couple of people just to embarrass them a little bit.  Where is Sharon Ybarra?  Is Sharon here?  Right here.  (Applause.)  Sharon lost her job of 20 years at a paper mill.  She was only able to find work that paid her far less than her old job -– until she was hired by Chrysler. And now she is doing a great job right here at Chrysler.  We’re proud of you.  (Applause.)

Jim Faurote is here.  Where’s Jim?  Jim’s right next to her. (Applause.)  Jim worked for Chrysler for a decade -- right?  Then he lost his job when the plant he worked at in New Castle shut down.  Over the next few years, he could only find intermittent work on and off.  It wasn’t until after the restructuring that he was able to have a job he could count on.  He’s been back at work now for more than a year doing an outstanding job, making great products here at Chrysler.  (Applause.)

At a plant down the road, workers are manufacturing parts for hybrid vehicles.  That’s already led to dozens of jobs, and will lead to nearly 200 jobs over the next few years.  A few miles outside of Kokomo, in Tipton, a clean energy company called Abound is going to be able to hire 900 workers -– taking over a plant that had to shut down a few years ago.

So a factory that was empty and dark will come back to life. And when people have a paycheck, as Joe said, they can go to the store, they’re able to spend.  That helps the economy grow.  And so on Main Street in Kokomo we’re seeing a revival, with new businesses opening downtown.

So, for anybody who says our country’s best days are behind us, anybody who would doubt our prospects for the future, anybody who doesn’t believe in the Midwest, anybody who doesn’t believe in manufacturing -- have them come to Kokomo.  Have them come to Kokomo.  (Applause.)  Come here.  Meet these workers.  Visit these plants.  Come back to this city that's fighting block by block, business by business, job by job.  (Applause.)

This is a reminder of what we do as Americans.  What we can do as Americans when we come together, when we’re not divided; we’re not spending all our time bickering, but instead focusing on getting the job done.  We don’t give up.  We don’t turn back. We fight for our future.

No, we’re not out of the woods yet.  It took a lot of years to get us into this mess.  It will take longer than anybody would like to get us out.  But I want everybody to be absolutely clear, we are moving in the right direction.  (Applause.)  We learned that the economy -- we learned today that the economy is growing at a faster pace than we previously thought.  That's welcome news.  But we’re going to keep on making it grow faster.  We’re going to keep on creating more jobs.  We need to do everything we can to make that happen. 

That’s why in the coming days it is so important, the coming months it’s so important, that Democrats and Republicans work together to speed up our recovery.  We’ve got to put aside our differences.  The election is over.  We’ve got to find places where we can agree.  We’ve got to remember the most important contest we face, it’s not between Democrats and Republicans.  It’s between America and our economic competitors.  Other nations are already making investments -- (applause) -- other nations are making investments in education, energy and infrastructure, technology, because they know that’s how they’re going to be able to attract the new jobs of the future.  And throughout our history, Democrats and Republicans have agreed on making these investments. 

If we don’t want to cede our economic leadership to nations like China, we’ve got to do the same today.  We’ve got to make sure our workers have the skills and the training to compete with any workers in the world.  We should give our businesses more incentive to invest in research and innovation that leads to new jobs and new products and new industries like the ones we’re seeing here in Kokomo.  We should make it easier, not harder, for middle-class families to get ahead. 

I'll give you an example -- on taxes.  Next year, taxes are set to go up for middle-class families unless Congress acts.  If we don’t act by the end of the year, a typical middle-class family will wake up on January 1st to a tax increase of $3,000 per year.
 
So, in the next few weeks, I’m asking Congress to take up this issue.  The last thing we can afford to do right now is raise taxes on middle-class families.  (Applause.)  If we allow these taxes to go up, the result would be that a lot of people most likely would spend less, and that means that the economy would grow less.  So we ought to resolve this issue in the next couple of weeks so you’ve got the assurance that your taxes won’t go up when that clock strikes midnight.

Now, this is actually an area where Democrats and Republicans agree.  The only place where we disagree is whether we can afford to also borrow $700 billion to pay for an extra tax cut for the wealthiest Americans, for millionaires and billionaires.  I don’t think we can afford it right now –- not when we are going to have to make some tough decisions to rein in our deficits.  That's going to require sacrifice from all Americans, including those who can most afford it. 

So I’m eager to sit down with leaders from both parties next week and to hammer this out.  But we need to hammer it out.

You know, long before transmissions were coming off the line at this plant -– and by the way, you look at these transmissions today and somebody 20 years ago or 10 years ago might not recognize them -- they’re amazing.  Before Henry Ford built the Model T or Walter Chrysler took up the reins at a start-up called Buick, a man by the name of Elwood Haynes decided to do a little experiment right in Kokomo.  (Applause.) 

He set up a one-horsepower boat engine on his kitchen; he bolted it to the ground.  His idea was that he might be able to rig the motor to a carriage.  So he starts it up -- and the engine worked great.  In fact, it worked so well that it came loose from the bolts and destroyed the kitchen floor.  And after a brief and what I imagine was a difficult conversation with his wife -- (laughter) -- Elwood decided to continue his tests in his machine shop.  And he toiled for months.  But when he was finished, he had completed one of the earliest working automobiles ever built in America.  And he named it the Pioneer.

So Kokomo has a storied place in our history.  This is a city where people came to invent things and to build things, to make things here in America; to work hard in the hopes of producing something of value and something that people could be proud of. 

That’s the legacy of all of you.  You are all heirs to that tradition right here at this plant.  That’s the legacy that has made this country the envy of the world.  (Applause.)  And I am absolutely convinced this legacy is one you will continue to uphold for years and decades to come. 

Congratulations, Chrysler.  Congratulations, Kokomo.  Proud of you.  (Applause.)

END
2:27 P.M. EST

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/11/23/remarks-president-and-vice-president-chrysler-plant-workers-kokomo-india

Patrick Leahy Patty Murray Ralph Nader Richard Burr Richard Durbin

Prosecute WikiLeaks

Jeffrey Smith, Washington Post

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/30/prosecute_wikileaks_246545.html

John Cornyn John Edwards John Ensign John F. Kerry John Kerry

Conservatives Debate Amending the Constitution

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/29/conservatives_debate_amending_the_constitution_246488.html

Hillary Clinton Jack Reed Jay Rockefeller Jeanne Shaheen Jeff Bingaman

Monday, November 29, 2010

Healthcare and Its Discontents

Kevin Drum, Mother Jones
Ezra Klein makes a good point today: contrary to much mythology, Medicare does control medical costs better than the private sector. Unfortunately, there's a limit to how much cost control Medicare can accomplish in a world that's still dominated by private insurance:

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/29/healthcare_and_its_discontents_246504.html

Kirsten Gillibrand Kit Bond Lamar Alexander Lindsey Graham Lisa Murkowski

The Fed and Foreclosures

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/29/the_fed_and_foreclosures_246461.html

Lisa Murkowski Maria Cantwell Mark Begich Mark Pryor Mark Udall

Kristina Schake to Join First Lady's Office as Communications Director

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The Office of the First Lady announced today that Kristina Schake will be joining the staff as Special Assistant to the President and Communications Director to the First Lady.  She will start in the East Wing in December, 2010.
 
“I’m thrilled to welcome Kristina to the team.  Kristina brings a wealth of expertise that I know will make her a tremendous asset in the East Wing,” said First Lady Michelle Obama.  “Kristina has done extensive work throughout her career on child nutrition and community health issues, and that paired with her experience as part of a military family will bring invaluable insight to our work on childhood obesity and our efforts to support military families.  I look forward to working with Kristina on these efforts and more in the months and years ahead.”
 
Kristina Schake is co-founder and principal of Griffin|Schake, a California-based public affairs and strategic communications firm.  She is a seasoned expert in helping major foundations, non-profit organizations and civic leaders bring about critical social change through policy, legislative, social marketing and media initiatives.  Ms. Schake served for several years as the senior communications strategist for First Lady Maria Shriver, the Women’s Conference and the California Endowment’s Building Healthy Communities Initiative.   Ms. Schake and her company also helped make issues such as stem cell research and early childhood education a national priority and helped change California's political landscape on renewable energy and civil rights.  Before forming her firm, she was the Director of the Governor’s Summit on Obesity and the Communications Director for First 5 California, which provides education, health care, child care and nutrition programs for the state’s youngest children.  A native Californian, Kristina is a graduate of Johns Hopkins University.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/11/22/kristina-schake-join-first-ladys-office-communications-director

Scott Brown Sheldon Whitehouse Sherrod Brown Susan Collins Ted Kaufman

Readout of the President?s Call with King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The President called King Abdullah bin Adb al-Aziz al Saud of Saudi Arabia today to convey his best wishes for a full and quick recovery from medical treatment that the King is receiving in the United States.  Both leaders reaffirmed the importance of the U.S.-Saudi bilateral relationship.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/11/23/readout-president-s-call-with-king-abdullah-saudi-arabia

Judd Gregg Kay Bailey Hutchison Kay Hagan Kent Conrad Kirsten Gillibrand

Future Economic Change That We Can All Believe In

Steve Forbes, Forbes

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/29/future_economic_change_that_we_can_all_believe_in_246473.html

Byron Dorgan Carl Levin Carte Goodwin Chuck Grassley Chuck Hagel

Still the Best Congress Money Can Buy

Frank Rich, New York Times
SO America's latest crisis "” until it wasn't "” was airport screeners touching our junk. As this long year lurches toward its end, we all agree that something has gone wrong in America, and we're desperately casting about for a coherent explanation for our discontent, if not a scapegoat. Alas, the national consensus that the T.S.A. and full-body scans might be the source of all evil fizzled in less than a week. Most everyone got to Grandma's house for Thanksgiving without genital distress.

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/28/still_the_best_congress_money_can_buy_246425.html

Mark Udall Mark Warner Mary Landrieu Max Baucus Michael Bennet

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Our Puritanical Progressives

George Will, Washington Post
An eminent Harvard law professor, James Thayer (1831-1902), argued that although the judicial function is "merely that of fixing the outside border of reasonable legislative action," this still gives courts "a great and stately jurisdiction." While patrolling that jurisdiction today, Supreme Court justices may be playing the video game "Postal 2," whose rich menu of simulated mayhem provoked California's legislature to pass a problematic law.

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/28/our_puritanical_progressives_246422.html

Chuck Schumer Claire McCaskill Colin Powell Condoleezza Rice Daniel Akaka

Extend Benefits for Jobless

Robert Reich, San Francisco Chronicle
America's long-term unemployed - an estimated 6 million or more - constitute the single newest and biggest social problem facing America.Their unemployment benefits are about to run out, and the lame-duck Congress might not have the votes to extend them. (You can forget about the next Congress.)The long-term unemployed can't get work because there are still five people needing work for every job opening.

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/28/extend_benefits_for_jobless_246430.html

Byron Dorgan Carl Levin Carte Goodwin Chuck Grassley Chuck Hagel

As Castro's Revolution Fades, Is Cuba Rising?

Sara Miller Llana, CSM
Antonio Santana and Marina Suarez are children of Fidel Castro's revolution – born into the communism that swept across this island of mambo and mob ties in 1959.Now thin and graying, with government-issue glasses, Mr. Santana – a pseudonym he asked the Monitor to use out of concern he should not talk to foreign journalists – has had a long career as a state barber. Snipping no-nonsense cuts in a society that overthrew the glamour and glitz of the corrupt Batista dictatorship for social egalitarianism, he and his wife were able to raise twins, a boy and...

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/28/as_castro039s_revolution_fades_is_cuba_rising_246436.html

George W. Bush Harry Reid Henry Kissinger Herb Kohl Hillary Clinton

Good Motives Can Produce Bad Results

Jay Ambrose, OC Register
Good intentions will get you if you don't watch out. That's true of the invasion of the body scanners, of minimum-wage laws, of some welfare programs and – please don't forget it – a supposedly altruistic push by federal agencies and politicians to put low-income families in their own homes.Again and again, the government throws us lifesavers that aren't lifesavers at all, but weighty, entangling devices that ensnare us, sink us, drown us.

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/28/good_motives_can_produce_bad_results_246435.html

Frank Lautenberg George H. W. Bush George LeMieux George Voinovich George W. Bush

Dancing All Over With the Palins

Clarence Page, Chicago Tribune
25° FNovember 28, 2010The liberals keep expressing the view that Sarah Palin should not run, she should run, she will hurt the Republican Party, she can win primary but lose the general, she is unqualified, she doesn't have any ideas, blah blah blah.Its amazing how much liberals seem to think they know about all things Sarah Palin, yet it is obvious to all her supporters who actually read what she writes, who actually listen to what she says and who do not believe the liberal smear bull crap that the liberals and even some in the Republican Party do not know much about Sarah...

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/11/28/dancing_all_over_with_the_palins_246432.html

Condoleezza Rice Daniel Akaka Daniel Inouye David Vitter Debbie Stabenow

Kristina Schake to Join First Lady's Office as Communications Director

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release

The Office of the First Lady announced today that Kristina Schake will be joining the staff as Special Assistant to the President and Communications Director to the First Lady.  She will start in the East Wing in December, 2010.
 
“I’m thrilled to welcome Kristina to the team.  Kristina brings a wealth of expertise that I know will make her a tremendous asset in the East Wing,” said First Lady Michelle Obama.  “Kristina has done extensive work throughout her career on child nutrition and community health issues, and that paired with her experience as part of a military family will bring invaluable insight to our work on childhood obesity and our efforts to support military families.  I look forward to working with Kristina on these efforts and more in the months and years ahead.”
 
Kristina Schake is co-founder and principal of Griffin|Schake, a California-based public affairs and strategic communications firm.  She is a seasoned expert in helping major foundations, non-profit organizations and civic leaders bring about critical social change through policy, legislative, social marketing and media initiatives.  Ms. Schake served for several years as the senior communications strategist for First Lady Maria Shriver, the Women’s Conference and the California Endowment’s Building Healthy Communities Initiative.   Ms. Schake and her company also helped make issues such as stem cell research and early childhood education a national priority and helped change California's political landscape on renewable energy and civil rights.  Before forming her firm, she was the Director of the Governor’s Summit on Obesity and the Communications Director for First 5 California, which provides education, health care, child care and nutrition programs for the state’s youngest children.  A native Californian, Kristina is a graduate of Johns Hopkins University.

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/11/22/kristina-schake-join-first-ladys-office-communications-director

Harry Reid Henry Kissinger Herb Kohl Hillary Clinton Jack Reed

Saturday, November 27, 2010

The Moral Dimension of Illegal Immigration

Victor Davis Hanson, IBD

Source: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2010/11/27/is_illegal_immigration_moral_108066.html

Mark Warner Mary Landrieu Max Baucus Michael Bennet Michelle Obama

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, 11/22/2010

Release Time: 
For Immediate Release
Location: 
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room

1:10 P.M. EST

MR. GIBBS:  Mr. Feller.

Q    Thanks, Robert.  Two topics, please.  On North Korea, could you give us some detail about the President’s thoughts on the revelation of this new enrichment facility?  Well, let’s start with that.

MR. GIBBS:  Well, look, I'm not going to get into intelligence or anything like that.  I'll just say that obviously their claims, if true, contradict the pledges and commitments that they’ve made repeatedly to the international community.  As you know, our representatives are traveling in the region right now to brief our partners and our allies and coordinating a policy response to their actions.

Q    You said, “if true.”  Is it still in doubt?

MR. GIBBS:  I'm not going to discuss intelligence.

Q    While the parties involved are trying to get North Korea to comply to the six-party process, does the White House view that this threat is deepening?  Is this another example of that?

MR. GIBBS:  I want to separate those for just a second.  I think the six-party process can -- and the administration believes the six-party process can play an important role if and when the North Koreans take that six-party process to move toward denuclearization seriously.  We do not wish to talk simply for the sake of talking.  North Koreans have to be serious about living up to their obligations, and not having done so has put the sanctions regime in place that is the strongest the country has ever faced and has greatly increased the price of their noncompliance.

What was your second --

Q    All the while, is the threat deepening from North Korea?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, look, I think that the threat has always been serious.  We have certainly taken it as such and will continue to do so.  That's why we went to the U.N. to get a stronger sanctions regime on their ability to move anything out of their country that could do others harm.

Q    One other topic, please.  On the controversy that's emerged about the security screening process at airports, does the White House have a view about the planned protests on Wednesday at airports and how that might affect both security and travel?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I think that our TSA Administrator, Mr. Pistole, addressed that in some interviews this morning.  I would just remind people that -- well, a couple things.  First I'd point obviously to what the President had to say on this Saturday evening in Lisbon, and that is we put in place enhanced security measures for the simple reason that for more than two decades al Qaeda and terrorists have sought to do us harm and have focused in on aviation and airplanes.  Just in the past year we've seen the Christmas Day attempt by Mr. Abdulmutallab to blow up an airplane using a device that, as the President said, would not have and was not picked up by a simple metal detector.

Just in the past few weeks alone we’ve seen an effort by al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula to bring down an airplane using explosives in cargo.  So we must do everything that we can to protect the public.

The President, again, as you heard him say a few days ago, in meeting with Secretary Napolitano and Administrator Pistole has said, our goal must be to maximize protection and security and minimize inconvenience and invasiveness.

He asked them then and continues to ask those that we do all that we can to protect the public and do so in a way that is the least inconvenient as possible.  And it’s not an easy task.  But we know that al Qaeda -- we know from intelligence that al Qaeda seeks to do harm through aviation security, through devices concealed on a body inside of a device that one might take onto an airplane or in luggage that's put on an airplane.

So our charge is to do all that we can to protect those that travel, but also to do so in a way that's, as I said, minimally invasive.  And that's a balance that we will continue to search for.  I think what’s important is -- this was a process that, based on intelligence and based on feedback, is and will continue to evolve and change.  That's the nature of both the threat and the response to it.

So I think that -- we’ve been asked, well, will you take into account some of people’s concerns or complaints based on medical conditions or how they feel personally about some of this?  Absolutely.  We seek to do -- as I said, we seek to maximize the security and protection and minimize that invasiveness.  So this is a -- these are procedures that will continue to evolve.

Again, the charge of the TSA is to ensure that when you or I or others get onto an airplane that we can feel reasonably assured that we can travel safely.  And I think that’s what the President wants certainly most of all around travel for this Thanksgiving holiday.

Q    Robert, what happened between Sunday, when the head of the TSA seemed to be signaling no ground on the searches and pat-downs, and Sunday night and this morning, when he is talking about the need for some flexibility?

MR. GIBBS:  Look, I don’t know that anything in particular happened except -- again, I think if you look at what the President’s charge has been in a flexible and evolving security process is to ensure exactly what I just told Ben, that we put the utmost importance on protection and to do so in a way -- have that carried out in a way that is the least inconvenient for those that travel.

Again, it’s -- and, look, the policies have to evolve.  Remember, when we originally -- and this is years ago, so I’m going to use a couple of examples.  When we originally did TSA screenings, you didn’t have to take your shoes off.  Then someone tried to put a bomb in their shoes and X-raying shoes was something that was important.  

Now, we’ve moved obviously to something where Mr. Abdulmutallab had a device on himself that walking through a metal detector is not going to go off.  Because of that, we moved to AITs -- advanced imaging technology -- to provide security screeners with a better opportunity to detect whether or not somebody is trying to smuggle, again, something concealed on themselves, concealed in what would be a normal device or in their luggage.

Q    I also wanted to ask about START.  Do you feel that you’ve answered Senator Kyl’s concerns on this issue?  At what point does it just become a political disagreement?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I think as the President said on Saturday, that we take everyone at their word that they are here to protect and do all that they can to protect the country.  The President spoke with Senator Kyl last week --

Q    Was that before or after he made his --

MR. GIBBS:  After.  After.  The Vice President continues to speak to senators from both sides of the aisle on trying to move this process forward.  Look, if Senator Kyl has questions we're happy to address them and to meet them.  That's what -- that's an important thing to do in this process.

I think it’s important, if you look at what the series and range of statements that we heard over the course of the weekend from the military, from those retired in the military who had operational roles in our nuclear security, hearing from our allies in NATO and particularly our allies in Eastern Europe, those closest to Russia and the old Soviet Union, in saying clearly that ratification of this treaty is in their best interest and our best interest in getting it done quickly -- that's I think a tremendously important endorsement for those efforts in curtailing the number of deployed nuclear weapons and ensuring an inspection regime as it relates to the Russian nuclear program.

Q    Robert, on the TSA rules, when Secretary Clinton was asked yesterday on CBS whether she would submit to this, she laughed and said that she wouldn't want to.  How can you ask the rest of the public to follow through on these rules if a senior administration official laughs at them and says she wouldn't do it?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I think, Ed, if you go back to look at the course of her interviews, I think she also says that -- look, I think we’d all love to live in a world and exist in a place where none of this is required.  But as she said, we don't have that luxury because, as I said earlier, we've known for two decades that al Qaeda and terrorists of the like have sought to do harm using an airplane, inside the aviation -- inside the realm of aviation.

Look, first and foremost, to avoid something like that, one should go through the AIT.  One should go through that screening device in order to be on a plane.  But I think, Ed, what she was saying was if you look at -- we live in a world where, of course, nobody would want to -- it would be nice to live in a world where that wasn’t necessary.  But again, just less than a year ago we know that somebody got on an airplane with the intent of blowing it up using a device that would not have been picked up by a metal detector and that's cause for quite a bit of security concern.

Q    So if the regulations are so important now to prevent another Abdulmutallab, why did it take nearly a year to put this system in place?  Why didn’t it happen in February, March, April -- it happened last Christmas.

MR. GIBBS:  There are a series of procedures that have been phased in.  We have AITs -- advanced imaging technology -- those are the machines at I believe 69 of roughly 400 or 450 airports throughout the country.  Obviously there has been a process for the construction and the procurement of those machines.  But it was not going to happen overnight.  

And, look, I think that as the security system involving pat-downs, as I said earlier, has evolved, it’s not something that just started a week or so ago.  This is something that has been phased in over a series of time.

Q    Real quick on North Korea, various officials like Secretary Gates have said they knew in general North Korea wanted to enrich uranium, but they didn’t know about this specific facility.  Is that a failure of U.S. intelligence then that it took the North Koreans to tell the U.S., here it is?

MR. GIBBS:  I'm not going to get into openly discussing the intelligence on that.

Q    We have a new poll on some of these security measures being taken.  Nearly half the public says they’re concerned about the health risks possible because of the new scanners or unsure about the health risks.  The administration’s position is that there are no health risks.

MR. GIBBS:  Well, the administration’s position, based on studies through the FDA and others that the imaging technology provides so little in terms of -- you're exposed, the truth is, to greater exposure sitting in an airplane than you do going through one of those machines.

Q    Well, why has the administration failed to convince so many members of the public that there are no health concerns about these new scanners?  

MR. GIBBS:  Jake, I've not seen the poll but I don't --

Q    Well, it’s obvious that there are a lot of people --

MR. GIBBS:  Let me find -- if you have another question -- let me try to find this in my paper here, and I think I've got something I think I can talk to you about on that.

Q    Okay.  And the other question I have, also about the TSA, is that the public does support -- they do care about security.  But when there is an intrusion on privacy they want it to be targeted and justified.  You spend a lot of time on the Internet; you watch YouTube and you obviously spend a great deal of time watching cable.  Don't you --

MR. GIBBS:  -- all that you might presume, but I'll accept the premise of your question.

Q    Do you think -- are you confident that the TSA intrusions onto people’s privacy have been targeted and justified?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I'll say this.  There are -- we are used to the understanding of a profile that looks at a range of people, for instance, 18 to 35.  Yet we've seen just in the past year, we know of people that have been arrested in this country for terrorism that would not fit into the range of those ages.  We know specifically that AQAP was targeting in Mr. Abdulmutallab somebody that did not have the characteristics that those previously that had attempted to do us harm through an airliner  -- that they shared.

We know that they are continually looking for ways -- and I think the cargo example is a very good one -- of ways in which they can take something that looks normal or a situation that appears not out of the ordinary, to augment that in a way that gets past security and does us harm.

So I think this -- what we would normally think of as, okay, these are the characteristics of what might happen -- understand that we have seen and we know about very specific efforts to find people outside of what security might normally be conditioned to look for.

We know that -- I mean, I don't think it’s an accident that AQAP through Mr. Abdulmutallab was seeking to -- through concealing this device on him, get onto a plane something that wasn’t going to be in a metal detector, that would be delivered by somebody that would not normally be seen as somebody associated or affiliated with AQAP, in an effort to get around what you would normally be constructed or set up to look for.

And I think it’s important that our -- I go back again to what I said to Ben -- that in and of itself provides the foundation or the basis for how security policy and screening has to evolve, because the nature of whatever the threat is today is going to be different in three to six months because they're going to be trying to find different ways around what’s been set up.

And I think that goes back again to what Secretary of State Clinton said.  Look, we would love -- and the President said this -- we have an apparatus now that greets us in going into buildings or getting onto an airplane that didn't exist before.  And we’d love to go back to a world in which none of that had to exist, but we have to continue to evolve and meet the threat that is out there.

Q    You’re a parent.  The President is a father.  There are a lot of parents out there whose children have been subjected to pat-downs, and they’ve been very upset by it.  There have been individuals with medical conditions who have been forced into humiliating situations.  This is evolution?

MR. GIBBS:  No, I think it’s important to understand that anybody under 12 goes through something much more modified.  I would say, first and foremost -- and I think if the TSA Administrator was here, he would say this to you as well -- has all of this been done perfectly?  No.  If somebody feels as if they have been unduly subjected to something that they find to be far more invasive than the line of convenience and security, they should speak to a TSA representative at the airport.

Again, without leaning too far into this, Jake, I think it’s important that it’s not out of the realm of possibility to think that -- I’m trying to be somewhat careful here -- that those that wish to do people harm via an airplane haven’t looked at some of the ways through explosives in devices or luggage or on themselves that we know can get around and through security.  And we have to be careful about that.

Again, I think we are trying -- and TSA is trying -- desperately to strike that balance.  That will evolve.  And, again, the evolution of the security will be done with the input of those that go through the security.  

I do think it’s important to understand since the more stepped-up pat-down process has taken place, approximately 34 million people have been through the TSA system.  I think the figure that I’ve seen is that about a percent of those that have gone through the process have gone -- through the overall screening process have gone through this more stepped-up procedure.

Q    Thanks, Robert.  During the period between the time the TSA Administrator made the comments that sounded like there was no give at all and later making clear that there was going to have to be some flexibility here, were there any conversations with him by anybody at the White House?  Did anybody speak to him?

MR. GIBBS:  I am sure people at the White House speak with TSA and to DHS constantly on security, on --

Q    But about that topic, about whether there should be some flexibility?  And were his later comments suggesting flexibility as a result of those conversations?

MR. GIBBS:  Look -- again, Chip, I think what the President said on Saturday is he communicated that to TSA and DHS several weeks ago.  

Q    But I’m talking about between the comments in the morning that created this controversy.

MR. GIBBS:  Chip, I don’t know every conversation, but do I assume that people here have constantly been in touch with them? Sure.

Q    That’s not what I’m asking.  I’m saying specifically with regard to the inflexibility he suggested in those comments, did somebody at the White House call him and say, that’s not our message?

MR. GIBBS:  Chip, I don’t know every conversation that happens with every person here.  But if you are asking me if people are constantly in touch with and talk to --

Q    I’m asking you did they specifically respond?

MR. GIBBS:  Chip, I’m acknowledging that I’m sure conversations have happened, yes.

Q    About that particular lack of flexibility?

MR. GIBBS:  Again, Chip, I don't know every conversation.  I just assume that a lot of those conversations have happened.

Q    You did not talk to him about that?

MR. GIBBS:  I have not talked to him.  I’ve not talked with the TSA Administrator.

Q    Can I ask -- and I don't -- I'm reluctant to get graphic here, but everybody knows there are theoretical possibilities way beyond what Abdulmutallab did, with body cavities and such.  Why respond so specifically to what he did with searches --

MR. GIBBS:  I’m not saying --

Q    -- in that particular area when there are so many other possibilities out there that I don't think anybody even dreams you would actually subject people to?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I think -- again, I think that -- let’s take this somewhat broader.  I think you’ve seen the progression in screening writ large, right?  We all remember you put your stuff on the -- it goes through the X-ray machine, you walk through a magnetometer, right?  So you’ve seen the evolution of something that's going to detect something that's metal.  We now know that -- again, if you look at the evolution of security of plots and attempts, now you’ve got shoes, liquids, again, based on specific attempts to use those very devices to do harm -- and again, the transitioning to an AIT, which gives you the ability to detect something that might be on someone hoping to do you harm but it’s not something that's metal.

Q    Completely changing topics, on tax cuts, is the President -- you said the Vice President is working the phones with senators on both sides of the aisle on START.  Is the President or anybody at a high level in the administration doing the same thing with senators on tax cuts?

MR. GIBBS:  I have not -- look, while I’m sure that Leg Affairs and others are discussing issues like taxes that will be dealt with in the lame duck, the President to my knowledge has not -- other than the meeting last week, has not made calls.

Q    On START or taxes?

Q    Robert, on START?

MR. GIBBS:  Yes, ma’am.

Q    Can I just do one more?  On the millionaires tax,  there’s this group of millionaires now saying that they don't want to extend the tax cuts for millionaires; they say it’s their patriotic duty.  What does the President think about that?  Is it patriotic to campaign to pay more taxes if you're a millionaire?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I’m not going to -- though I’d love to be the spokesperson for Warren Buffett -- (laughter) -- I’m not going to -- I bet that's a good gig.  (Laughter.)  I know he’s slightly above the millionaire threshold.

I don't necessarily have anything to add on that except, look, I think you’ve seen or heard from -- again, using Mr. Buffett as an example -- I mean, Mr. Buffett is somebody whose marginal tax rate based on where he derives his income is, as I think he said before -- pays at a rate that's far less than that of presumably his spokesperson -- though he’s his spokesperson -- than his secretary, because he derives a vast majority of his income from investments rather than from his paycheck.

Q    Can I follow on two questions?

MR. GIBBS:  I’ll come back over there.

Q    Different subject.  Steny Hoyer says -- not just in light of the Ghailani verdict --

Q    Robert, don't forget --

MR. GIBBS:  I’m -- (Laughter.)  Forget you?  Hold on one second.  I’ll be back --

Q    And in light of the election earlier this month, he says, it is, in his way of thinking, impossible that Congress is going to approve the money for federal civilian trials of Guantanamo Bay detainees.  Are you willing to basically give up on that idea now?

MR. GIBBS:  I said something different last week.  I don't  -- we spent the first row here talking about al Qaeda.  We know al Qaeda uses the prison at Guantanamo Bay as a recruiting effort to seek those -- the participation of those interested in doing us harm because of that.  I think to give up on that -- we’re not giving up on that goal.

Q    Conversely, it’s almost two years into the President’s administration.  You haven’t been able to close it.  Are you willing to commit to closing it in 2011?

MR. GIBBS:  I’m willing to commit to closing it as soon as possible to close it.

Q    Any way you can put any possible time frame on that?

MR. GIBBS:  No, I think I said last week that no one expects this to be easy, but I know that the President has not and will not give up on the goal.

Q    This is on START, and my question will be whether or not -- is whether or not the administration is willing to hand over the entire START record?  And let me tell you why I’m asking this.  Because there’s a new Republican senator coming in, Mark Kirk, who has quite a shopping list of things he wants before he says he can even think about this, a complete negotiation record of the treaty, also the documents relating to the parallel discussions with the U.S.-Russian resale, all classified briefings about having to terminate liability of --

MR. GIBBS:  I’m sorry -- the Russia resale?

Q    With the U.S.-Russian missile defense, the talks that were conducted by Ellen Tauscher.  This is according to “Foreign Policy.”  He wants a whole written analysis of all U.S. Strategic Command information that supports a treaty.  He wants all the planning documents.  And he wants formal briefings with State, Defense and Energy.  What is the posture of the White House -- will they possibly be able to accommodate a want list like this?

MR. GIBBS:  I will say, not knowing specifically -- thank you -- I’d have to obviously have somebody look at the technical list.  But I think a lot of what Senator-elect Kirk is looking for in way of documentation and briefing and questions, I don't know if some of that has been asked and answered and we’d certainly provide that documentation to him.

I think a discussion with somebody like General Cartwright on missile defense or others at a classified level -- those are conversations that are being had currently with senators right now.  So I think if there’s information that we have that can help answer those questions, we’d be more than happy to provide that information, those briefings, that documentation to Senator-elect Kirk or anybody else in order to demonstrate -- General Cartwright would tell him this has no effect on our ability to conduct our own missile defense activities.

And I think a pretty good example of that is NATO agreeing to the President’s phased adaptive approach to protect Europe at a meeting that saw the Russians ultimately participate in at the same time they are arguing -- people like the head of NATO are arguing for ratification of the treaty.

So, look, I think -- I don't know if Senator-elect Kirk has talked to anybody on the national security staff here, but I don't doubt that if he hasn’t, that folks here will reach out rather quickly to provide information that he thinks is necessary.

Q    Is it -- I heard that so far -- that some senators -- that the White House has refused -- or various entities in the administration has refused to turn over the negotiation record.

MR. GIBBS:  I’m not familiar with, as I said a minute ago, Lynn, each and every aspect of -- I'm happy to ask NSC whether that's the case.  Again, I think two of the best spokespeople -- three of the best spokespeople for our defense posture as it relates to this treaty are the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff -- that's General Cartwright -- again, he’s sort of the missile expert in that realm.  And I think all of them are very good spokespeople for how this enhances our security and our protection rather than the opposite.

Q    Real quick one.  On North Korea, you mentioned that this latest regime of U.N. sanctions is among the strongest or is the strongest the country has ever faced.  Well, then is there concern that these sanctions haven't been strong enough or working well enough to prevent this facility from being built?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, without getting into the timing of the facility, the sanctions that were put on North Korea and hinders greatly its ability to move product outside of the country are -- date back I think sometime to mid-last year.  So I think that -- again, that was in direct response to the testing of a long-range missile in late March, early April -- I forget the exact date.

So, look, I think you can go back many, many years to the North Koreans walking away from their obligations in six-party talks, in discussions with their neighbors, their partners and their allies, and flaunting of those international standards.  That, we've been aware of for quite some time.

Q    But the sanctions don't -- I mean, are you saying that -- wasn’t this plant built rather quickly, in the last couple of years or year or more?  So --

MR. GIBBS:  Well, again, I'm not going to get into the specifics of what’s in the intelligence, but understanding that  -- again, what you just asked and when the sanctions -- the sanctions based off of what the U.N. did last year are -- those don't line up.

Q    And quickly on START, you guys have said that the midterms show that the American public wants Democrats and Republicans to work together.  And so given that, why not be more direct in accusing the GOP or accusing Senator Kyl of being -- playing politics on START?  The President seemed to really kind of shy away from saying that directly over the weekend.

MR. GIBBS:  I think the President said that we live in an atmosphere in this town that normally, if one side wants to do something then the other side doesn’t want to do something.  I think given who you’ve seen in terms of validators and supporters of this treaty, that doesn’t fit the mold of what we normally see in a political issue.  And we don't think it should fit that mold given who those supporters are.  We think this is something that can and should get done over the course of the next several weeks and certainly before the end of the year.

Q    Last question.  Senator Simpson, from the deficit commission, said something colorful about the fight to raise the debt limit.  He said there’s going to be a big fight and there will be “hair and eyeballs all over the floor.”  (Laughter.)  So are you guys concerned that Tea Party Republicans or others will stand in their way --

MR. GIBBS:  A little hair or eyeball -- (laughter.)

Q    -- will stand in their way of raising -- of course, looking on the next Congress -- but are you concerned that people will stand -- new Republicans will stand in the way of raising the debt limit in a way that can really hurt?

MR. GIBBS:  I don't -- I think we've got a ways to go before we get to the situation and the scene that former Senator Simpson describes.  I would point you to what I think the incoming House speaker said last week.  It’s an issue that we’re going to have to deal with and we’re going to have to deal with, I think his words were “as adults.”  We understand that we did not get into a debt crisis in the last year or two years; that this is something that has built up for many, many, many years.  And we have to deal with that and put ourselves back on a path towards some fiscal sustainability.

Q    Can I follow up Chip?  You’re such a gentleman, Robert, but you didn’t answer his basic question, which is a very serious question.  If somebody is hiding explosives in a body cavity, do these machines pick that up?  And, also, the other thing --

MR. GIBBS:  Well, Connie, you’ve got to understand that I am -- let me give you two answers.  One, I think it is very safe to say that as the threat has evolved, our screening process has had to and has evolved.  I think you can understand why I would not want to get into the intricacies of exactly what would be detected, how and when, because we do know that those that want to get around those procedures watch what it is we do and what we say.

Q    But are you saying that at this point if under suspicion -- if they’re hiding something in a body cavity, it can be detected by the --

MR. GIBBS:  I’m saying that in order to address the most
up-to-date threats possible, we have instituted the very best in technology and in screening efforts in order to detect that threat.

Q    And what’s wrong with the Israeli system, where they’re questioning before they even get close to the gate?  Is that --

MR. GIBBS:  I would point out that I think the Israelis have, I think, it’s two airports -- two international airports.  I think that’s right.  It’s one?

Q    It’s one, I think --

MR. GIBBS:  -- in Tel Aviv.  We have 450.  This is -- there is a scale that is -- and I’ve seen -- look, I’ve watched and read the stories of, well, can’t you just do what -- understanding the scale involved is infinitely different.  

Q    A couple of questions.  First, next week, Wednesday, the President’s debt commission is due to reach its conclusions.  Does the President have anything planned off of that to try to pick up the ball where they leave off?

MR. GIBBS:  I have not looked through next week’s schedule, Jonathan, and don’t know the process after that.  But I can go back and check.

Q    Okay.  And on START, President and Senator Lugar both said if this treaty gets to the floor of the Senate, it will pass.  So what kind of conversations are going on between President Obama or Vice President Biden and Harry Reid to make that happen?  Because I mean ultimately it’s Harry Reid that will schedule that vote.

MR. GIBBS:  Look, this is a priority of this administration, the President and the Vice President.  It was a topic that came up -- it comes up, has come up in conversations between staff here and the Majority Leader’s staff, and in conversations directly with the Majority Leader.  It is a priority of ours to see it put on the floor and acted upon.

Q    Is it worse for U.S. international relations or U.S.-Russian relations to see this go to the floor and fail than to see it not go to the floor at all?

MR. GIBBS:  It is a -- for us not to get this done is, as you have seen those not just in our administration, but again throughout the weekend at NATO, discuss its impact on our security -- those countries, again -- I make mention of this, that border -- that represent that easternmost border with Russia are as -- believes this has to get done as urgently as we do.  And I think that is an overwhelming endorsement for why delay on this just doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Q    Robert, thank you.  The news of the Irish bailout initially sparked only a short-lived rally in the financial markets, including the FTSE and the Dow this morning.  How concerned is the President about the effect of the bailout on the U.S. and global markets?  And I have a follow-up, as well.

MR. GIBBS:  Well, look, we are -- we welcome Ireland’s intention to seek that assistance and for Europe to deal with the crisis that affects those countries.  I don’t think there’s any doubt, and we’ve certainly made mention of it here, the impact of Greece on our recovery and acting quickly to deal with problems in Ireland by the Europeans is good news.  

Q    Do you think the bailout will stem the tide of other problems in the euro zone?

MR. GIBBS:  I am not a euro zone expert.  I think that addressing these causes and concerns quickly is a good step.  

Mark.  

Q    Robert, on Wednesday, the President pardons another couple of turkeys.  Are there any people pardons in the pipeline?

MR. GIBBS:  I'm guessing that those aren't one and the same. (Laughter.)

Q    You would make news if they were.

MR. GIBBS:  I will check with counsel to see the degree to which -- what’s the process for active pardons in the administration.  

Q    He hasn’t had any yet.

MR. GIBBS:  No, he has not.

Q    Do you know why?

MR. GIBBS:  I don’t.

Q    Jim Morrison in Florida -- that’s a governor --

MR. GIBBS:  I think that’s a gubernatorial issue.  

Yes, ma’am.

Q    Is the Irish bailout coming up in the President’s daily briefings?  I mean, how closely is he monitoring the situation there?

MR. GIBBS:  It’s a topic that -- there wasn’t an economic daily briefing today, but I know it has come up in the past.  I mean, it’s been part of his briefing.

Q    Is there concern that Portugal and Spain will also need to tap into this fund?

MR. GIBBS:  I would point you, I guess, more particularly to their governments on that.  We have -- mostly I think the briefings that the President has got have focused primarily on -- well, primarily on Ireland and some on Portugal.  I have -- that’s the extent that I can recall.

Q    Do you know if today it came up at all?

MR. GIBBS:  There wasn’t an EDB today, so that wouldn’t have come up.

Q    Just one other thing.  Will the President be speaking at a summit at the Chamber of Commerce in the next few months?  And what is he doing to reach out to the business community?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, in terms of the second part, I certainly would point you to the first several days in India.  In terms of invitations from the Chamber, obviously we are and continue to be interested in speaking with them and their members and we’ll see if the schedule allows for that in the beginning of the year.  I know that they originally had an event for early in December that I think has been rescheduled to some time in January.

Q    Robert, following up to your response to Chip’s question, the President learned about these TSA procedures several weeks ago and he raised the concerns that he raised in Portugal at the time as well.  Is that what you’re --

MR. GIBBS:  Yes.

Q    And the second question, have you personally went through either one of these AIT machines or the pat-down?  I know it’s only been recently -- I was curious if you personally --

MR. GIBBS:  Personally, I think I’ve been through an AIT.  I’m trying to think.  Most of -- as you might -- most of my travel is on Air Force One.  I traveled to and from Atlanta a few weeks ago and I thought I went through one of the AITs.

Q    Let me ask about Kokomo, the stop tomorrow.  Part of it is at a Chrysler plant.  I guess I’m wondering if this is a way of showing a little love for Chrysler, having lavished it on G.M. last week.

MR. GIBBS:  Well, look, I think that -- this is a particular plant in Kokomo that because of some of the restructuring and some of the funding for retooling and modernization is a transmission plant that was able to retain more than 1,000 workers rather than seeing its plant shuttered.

So, look, we are -- we’ve been to and will continue to go Chrysler, G.M., even Ford facilities -- a company that didn't have to receive restructuring help.  But, look, I think if you look at some of these places and plants that are located throughout the country, particularly in the Midwest, you’ll see  -- and Kokomo is a pretty good example of a town that is very dependent upon those types of jobs for its economic livelihood.

So I think those are -- that's important, and I think the President is proud of our efforts to ensure -- whether there was a thousand there or more than a million people throughout the country whose jobs were saved as part of that restructuring, understanding that that restructuring was about making some difficult choices.  Some plants were closed.  We know there were corporate restructurings, particularly at General Motors, in order to get both of these companies pointed in the right direction.

Ann.

Q    Robert, why does the President believe --

MR. GIBBS:  I’m sorry, I called on Ann.  

Q    Robert, following --

Q    Will you come back to me?

Q    Following on what Mark asked --

MR. GIBBS:  Not necessarily.

Q    What specifically in terms of stimulus does the President think he can still get out of the lame duck Congress, either specific, other stimulus items that he had talked about before?  And is your to-do list for the lame duck session getting shorter and shorter?  There’s less time left.

MR. GIBBS:  No, I don't think there’s -- again, and I think we talked a little bit about this last week.  I don't believe that -- I don't think many people believe that the week that we came back before -- basically last week -- we obviously know this week was largely held off for Thanksgiving and then they’ll be back again a week from today.  I don't think many people believe that that first week back was going to be a period in which a lot of legislative business would be gone through.

It is traditionally an orientation and a caucus organizing process on both sides of the aisle.  You’ve got members and senators that are leaving.  You have new members and new senators that are coming in.  

Q    I guess my question is really more on what you're actually going to get done.  You didn't have a chance to meet with the Republicans.  But again, a lot of that is focused toward January.  What’s on the --

MR. GIBBS:  Well, no, but again, I think it’s -- but, Ann, I think you know that, if I’m not mistaken, that meeting is happening a week from tomorrow.  Right.  So again, I think moving a meeting from one week to the next does not stymie our legislative agenda.

Q    What’s left on the to-do list?  Do you have a specific list for us of what you --

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I'll say several things.  This is not a totally exhaustive list because my memory is not what it used to be -- even from this morning.  (Laughter.)  Look, I think there’s no doubt, as you’ve heard the President say, we've got to deal with issues around taxes.  We're going to have to deal with issues around unemployment insurance and compensation as well.  

You’ve heard the President make mention of START.  That's something that is crucially important to our national security and to our foreign relations.  There are issues around "don't ask, don't tell" that the President and I think many people believe are best dealt with through a legislative process and not through a legal system.  There are priorities such as the DREAM Act.  There are several things that -- and again, I know I'm probably leaving out more than I'm mentioning, but I think we've got -- there’s no doubt we have plenty of work to do.  I think we also have plenty of time with which to --

Q    Did the President ask the Pentagon to hurry up to November 30th -- the report, its internal report on --

MR. GIBBS:  I think the original date was December 1st.  Obviously the report is being released a day or so early in order to have some informed hearings on the survey and its results.  I think those hearings, if I'm not mistaken, start on the 1st.  

But I think it’s important, if you look at what others have said, particularly -- take, for instance, Secretary Gates -- that we know -- we can do this legislatively -- the House has done this, the Senate can do this -- do this legislatively which provides an avenue with which to implement the policy.  A court doing this is not likely to provide the Pentagon and others with a pathway for doing this.  And I think in order to do this in a way that the President and others see, that doing this legislatively is the best way to do this.

Q    Robert, on two separate issues.  There’s such a focus on security at airports.  We talked about how we know that terrorists are focusing in on using airlines as some of their ways to commit terror.  But what about this country’s rail system?  What about the security for rail?  I mean, we saw it in London in the Tube; we saw Spain on the rail system there.  What about the nation’s rail system and subway system in major cities?

MR. GIBBS:  Without getting, again, into a lot of detail about what’s out there, I think -- let me say this -- I think to presume that only aviation is -- that only aviation security is a priority is not the case.  Obviously there's passenger rail, there's cargo rail, there's a whole host of different ways in which we know terror can be brought into this country.  Aviation is not the only thing that we are concerned about.  We know that -- I think if I'm recalling correctly, the plot that Mr. Zazi was planning dealt specifically with some aspects of transportation beyond that of airports.  The only reason I mention airports is, again, we know for quite a long period of time this has been a focus of al Qaeda and its affiliates.

Q    I'm not finished.  But is Amtrak working off -- I'm talking about passenger rail now -- because some of these corridors, particularly the East Coast corridor into Washington is very sensitive.  Is there any pushback from Amtrak?  Are you  -- is this administration working with Amtrak to try to work something out to enforce security on the rail system, passenger rail?

MR. GIBBS:  I don't have a lot of this stuff in front of me, April, but I can assure you -- and I would contact both DHS and Amtrak to discuss in particular regional, transcontinental passenger rail, all that sort of thing.

Q    All right.  And also on my issue that I wanted to ask, we're now -- the midterms are over.  You said expect change after the midterms as far as administration staff.  Are we expecting to hear some names being dropped, of new moves, and are you going to stand at that podium much longer?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I'm going to be out here to answer a few more questions.

Q    How much longer?

MR. GIBBS:  I don't know.  That's a good question, Les.  Do you have anything to do?

Q    Yes, I do.  (Laughter.)

MR. GIBBS:  Hold on, let me answer April's question.

Q    You'll come back?

MR. GIBBS:  Not necessarily.

Q    Why not?

MR. GIBBS:  Because there's a whole group of people and I think I called on you just last week.

Q    Last week?

MR. GIBBS:  Yes.  Well, we haven't briefed since then, for goodness sakes.

Q    Yes, but you recognized one of the front here for eight questions.

Q    Here we go.

MR. GIBBS:  Lester, let me answer the question that's been posed to me.  I'm going to pick on some other people --

Q    And then you'll come back?

MR. GIBBS:  Not necessarily.  

April, in terms of the reorganization, obviously that's something that the Chief of Staff, the President, and others are continuing to work on.  I don't have a timeline for when any of those announcements would be made.

Q    So what about you?  Are you going to leave us?

MR. GIBBS:  I have spent very little time working on that.

Glenn.

Q    Robert, about a week ago a freshman Republican Congressman named Andy Harris from Maryland stood up apparently in a benefits session in the House and complained about how -- the time it would take, 28 days, for his government-subsidized health insurance to kick in.  Do you think there is -- some progressive groups called for House members who want to repeal the health reform law to renounce their health insurance.  Do you think there's an element of hypocrisy here and do you think it would be a wise idea for them to do that?

MR. GIBBS:  I do think there seems to be an element of understanding the role that health insurance plays in the security of families regardless of their economic lot in life.  I don't -- I'm not going to make a blanket statement about what Congressman-elect Harris should do.  I would say that -- I think it's probably a pretty good demonstration of the fact that the rhetoric of what people say either throughout political debates or in campaigns, and the reality of how something like that impacts their lives, is apparently quite different just in this example alone.  I think he's going to have to reconcile with himself the notion of health care that's subsidized by the American people and his statements surrounding that.  I think it presents a particularly interesting dilemma for those that have castigated that in the past.

Q    Do you think it's hypocritical?

MR. GIBBS:  I would agree with you; I think you think it is.  (Laughter.)

Q    Robert, back on "don't ask, don't tell," the service chief of the Navy recently praised the Pentagon report and said he's eager to see what happens with the Hill regarding repeal.  But the remaining three service chiefs, they're all on the record as saying they want to wait for the report to come out before Congress takes action.  Does the President anticipate that once the report comes out, those service chiefs will be on board in favor of repeal?

MR. GIBBS:  I don't -- I think the service chiefs, as I understand it, are meeting with the Chair of the Joint Chiefs and with the Secretary as we get closer to this report coming out in order to discuss where they are based on that survey.  The President has not yet seen that survey so I don't want to presume whether, based on those results, that would change their opinion or not.  And I think it's best not to get too far down the road on commenting on that until we get a chance to personally see the substance.

Q    Wasn't that the purpose of the study, though?  You've said the President has been for repeal since you've known him and the President has said he wants to work with military leaders.  In the State of the Union address, he said he wants to work with military leaders to get them on board with repeal.  So what's the point of this report if not to get those service chiefs on board?

MR. GIBBS:  Well, I'm not saying that it won't.  I'm just saying -- I think the original question you asked me is would that report change their mind.  I haven't seen the report.  The President hasn't seen that report.  And neither of us have had an opportunity to talk with the chiefs.  That's not to say that it won't.  That's not to say that -- and quite frankly, that's not to say whether or not, whether you have unanimous agreement or not, that the policy -- look, the President has known where people have stood on this policy for as long as he's supporting changing that policy.  So I think it will be important to, again, view the attitudes, to view -- and to use those attitudes to craft a pathway to implementing a changed legislatively policy.  That's what the President has advocated through this process.

Again, I can't -- we may have a better sense of that when we get an opportunity to talk to those that have seen the report and get a chance to look at that report ourselves.

Q    Robert, has the President had conversations directly with the service chiefs to get them -- repeal during the lame duck session of Congress?

MR. GIBBS:  I know the President has spoken previously with the service chiefs on this subject and I expect that as this report is finalized and released, that he'll have an opportunity to speak directly with the Chair of the Joint -- the Vice Chair and the service chiefs as this process moves forward.

Thanks, guys.

END
2:07 P.M. EST

Source: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/11/22/press-briefing-press-secretary-robert-gibbs-11222010

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