The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
February 28, 2011
Remarks by the President and the Vice President to the
National Governors Association
State Dining Room
11:16 A.M. EST
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much.
Ifm Joe Biden -- Ifll Jill Bidenfs husband -- (laughter) -- which is how Ifm
getting to be known around here. Youfre about to -- we decided to bring in
the second team now to talk to you all. (Laughter.)
Folks, welcome back to the White House. And for those of you who -- this
is your first visit as governor, welcome and congratulations on your
elections.
You know, over the last two
years the new governors -- the older governors will tell you, or at least the
ones whofve been around for two years, will tell you they probably got tired of
hearing from me. I was on the phone with you all so often during the
Recovery Act. I know none of you liked the Recovery Act much.
(Laughter.)
But I just want to start off
by thanking the governors whofve been here for the last two years for the way in
which you implemented it. I just wanted to give you a little fact.
There were over 75,000 individual projects that went on in your states and a
total of 250,000 awards, meaning a check had to be cut to 250,000 different
entities. And a group of IGs and outside examiners pointed out therefs
less than 1/100th of 1 percent of fraud in the entire operation. And
thatfs because of you. Thatfs because of all of you.
(Applause.) And itfs because of the
mayors.
The new governors, although
therefs no Recovery Act, there will a be continued relationship between the
federal and state and local government, and we plan on trying to use that as a
template as to how to move forward so we save taxpayers
money.
The recovery is underway, although
Ifm sure a lot of you, having to cut your budgets, donft feel it. Itfs a
very difficult time for you all. And I just want you to know that I think
we probably can all agree on the major initiatives. We may have a
different prioritization, but we all know we have to do something about the
long-term debt. We all know that we have to do something about preparing
ourselves to compete in the future in terms of education, innovation and
infrastructure.
But I want to remind you
all that -- I know you all know but sometimes our constituents, you look at some
of the polling, they think wefve already lost the future to China. They
think wefve already lost the future to India. They already think we are
behind the eight ball.
We are still better
positioned than any country in the world -- any country in the world -- to own
the 21st century economically. Our GDP is bigger than that of China, Japan
and Germany combined. Wefre in a situation where here in the United States
of America the median income is close to $50,000. In China, itfs
$4,500. We wish them better. But just to put this in perspective,
itfs important to know where we stand now, the platform from which we now
operate, and why if we do the right things we have an overwhelming prospect --
an overwhelming prospect -- of not only recovery here in the United States but
leading the world in the 21st century.
The
man Ifm about to introduce to you shares your view. Americans have never
settled for number two -- literally. This is not hyperbole. Itfs not
one of these chauvinistic things. We want other nations to do well.
Wefll do better if they do well. But we are not -- we not -- prepared, nor
are you, to settle for being number two in anything.
And so, folks,
that's why wefve laid out -- the President has laid out in his State of the
Union speech the need for us to innovate. We have the most innovative
economy in the world. We have the freest of free-enterprise systems.
We know what wefre doing. We want to unleash the free-enterprise
system.
We also know that we cannot rank tied with five nations for
number nine in the world in the percentage of people we graduate from our
universities. Itfs not acceptable. Itfs simply not acceptable.
That's why by 2020, we will, in fact, be once again leading the world as we did
in the past. That is a goal, a goal we will meet. As my wife you
just heard from, a community college teacher, would say, any nation that
out-educates us is going to out-compete us. Itfs as simple and as basic as
that.
And thirdly, we cannot have a 20th century infrastructure for
the 21st century -- a 20th century infrastructure, as all of you know, that in
fact is already in some areas teetering on needing major, major repairs.
And by infrastructure, we not only mean ports, road, airports; we also mean
modern infrastructure from broadband to the new changes that are going to have
to take place for what reason -- to make American business more competitive, to
make American employees more hire-able, if you will. Therefs no such word,
but able to be hired. (Laughter.) But the neighborhood I come from
people understand what I say. (Laughter.)
And so, folks,
look, I just want to introduce you to the guy who -- as I said, wefll disagree
in the details, but Ifm sure you share this manfs view, there is no -- no, no,
no -- acceptable rationale for America being anything other than number one in
the world.
Ladies and gentlemen, the President of the United States
of America. (Applause.)
THE
PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you,
everybody. Please have a seat. Thank you so much. Well, thank
you, Joe. Thank you to the members of my Cabinet and my administration who
are here. Thank you, Governor Gregoire and Governor Heineman, for your
outstanding leadership. And I also want to acknowledge Ray
Scheppach. Wherefs Ray? There he is -- whofs been NGAfs executive
director for 28 years, and this is his final meeting. So, Ray, thank you
for your extraordinary service. (Applause.) Thank
you.
So I hope everybody had fun last night. I know that you
had a wonderful time listening to Michelle and Jill. Joefs main function
is to provide a buffer between me and them so that I donft have to follow them
immediately -- (laughter) -- because they are really good and care deeply about
whatfs happening with military families.
I hope today, all of you,
feel free to make yourselves at home. For those of you with a particular
interest in the next election, I donft mean that literally.
(Laughter.)
We meet at a moment when all of us -- Democrats and
Republicans, leaders at the national and the state levels -- face some very big
challenges. Our country has come through a long and wrenching
recession. And as we recover, the question wefre going to have to answer
is: Where will the new jobs come from? What will the new sources of
economic growth be? And how can we make sure that the American Dream
remains a reality into the 21st century?
Now, in the short term, we
came together here in Washington at the end of last year and enacted tax cuts
that are already making Americansf paychecks bigger and are allowing businesses
to write off major investments. These are tax cuts and changes in the tax
credit system that are going to spur job creation and economic growth, and Ifm
proud that Democrats and Republicans worked with each other to get it done.
In the long term, however, we need to address a set of
economic challenges that, frankly, the housing bubble largely papered over for
almost a decade. We now live in a world thatfs more connected and more
competitive than ever before. When each of you tries to bring new jobs and
industries to your state, youfre not just competing with each other, but youfre
competing with China, youfre competing with India, youfre competing with Brazil,
youfre competing with countries all around the world.
And that
means that we as a nation need to make sure that we are the best place on Earth
to do business. We need a skilled and educated workforce, a commitment to
cutting-edge research and technology, and a fast and reliable transportation and
communications network. Thatfs how wefre going to bring new jobs to
America, and thatfs how wefre going to win the future.
Making these
necessary investments would be hard at any time. But itfs that much harder
at a time when resources are scarce. After living through a decade of
deficits and a historic recession that made them worse, we canft afford to kick
the can down the road any longer. So the budget debate that wefre having
is going to be critical here in Washington. And so far, most of itfs been
focused almost entirely on how much of annual domestic spending -- what in the
parlance we all domestic discretionary spending -- that we should cut.
Therefs no doubt that cuts in discretionary spending have to be a part of the
answer for deficit reduction.
And thatfs why, as a start, Ifve
proposed a five-year spending freeze that will reduce our deficits by $400
billion. The budget that I sent to Congress cuts or eliminates more than
200 federal programs. And it reforms dozens of others, from health care to
homeland security to education, so that rather than throwing money at programs
with no accountability or measured results, wefre committed to funding only
those things that work.
All told, the budget cuts Ifve proposed
will bring annual domestic spending to its lowest share of the economy since
Dwight Eisenhower. Let me repeat that. Under my budget, if it were
to be adopted, domestic discretionary spending would be lower as a percentage of
GDP than it was under the nine previous administrations, including under Ronald
Reaganfs.
But we know that this kind of spending, domestic
discretionary spending, which has been the focus of complaints about
out-of-control federal spending, makes up only about 12 percent of the entire
budget. If we truly want to get our deficit under control, then we're
going to have to cut excessive spending wherever it exists -- in defense
spending -- and I have to say that Bob Gates has been as good a steward of
taxpayer dollars when it comes to the Pentagon as just about anybody out there,
but we're going to have to do more -- in health care spending, on programs like
Medicare and Medicaid, and in spending through tax breaks and loopholes.
Thatfs going to be a tough conversation to have, but itfs one we need to have,
and itfs one I expect to have with congressional leaders in the weeks to
come.
Those of you who are in this room obviously are on the front
lines of this budget debate. As the Recovery Act funds that saw through
many states over the last two years are phasing out -- and it is undeniable that
the Recovery Act helped every single state represented in this room manage your
budgets, whether you admit it or not -- you face some very tough choices
at this point on everything from schools to prisons to pensions.
I
also know that many of you are making decisions regarding your public
workforces, and I know how difficult that can be. I recently froze the
salaries of federal employees for two years. It wasnft something that I
wanted to do, but I did it because of the very tough fiscal situation that wefre
in.
So I believe that everybody should be prepared to give up
something in order to solve our budget challenges, and I think most public
servants agree with that. Democrats and Republicans agree with that.
In fact, many public employees in your respective states have already agreed to
cuts.
But let me also say this: I donft think it does anybody
any good when public employees are denigrated or vilified or their rights are
infringed upon. We need to attract the best and the brightest to public
service. These times demand it. Wefre not going to attract the best
teachers for our kids, for example, if they only make a fraction of what other
professionals make. Wefre not going to convince the bravest Americans to
put their lives on the line as police officers or firefighters if we donft
properly reward that bravery.
So, yes, we need a conversation about
pensions and Medicare and Medicaid and other promises that wefve made as a
nation. And those will be tough conversations, but necessary
conservations. As we make these decisions about our budget going forward,
though, I believe that everyone should be at the table and that the concept of
shared sacrifice should prevail. If all the pain is borne by only one
group -- whether itfs workers, or seniors, or the poor -- while the wealthiest
among us get to keep or get more tax breaks, wefre not doing the right
thing. I think thatfs something that Democrats and Republicans should be
able to agree on.
Now, as we begin to get our budgets under
control, the other thing we canft do is sacrifice our future. Even as we
cut back on those things that donft add to growth or opportunity for our people,
we have to keep investing in those things that are absolutely necessary to
Americafs success -- education, innovation, infrastructure.
On
education, our approach has been to partner with you -- to offer more
flexibility in exchange for better standards; to lift the cap on charter
schools; to spur reform not by imposing it from Washington, but by asking you to
come up with some of the best ways for your states to succeed. That was
the idea behind Race to the Top: You show us the best plans for reform;
wefll show you the money.
Wefre also working with you and with
Congress to fix No Child Left Behind with a focus on reform, responsibility and,
most importantly, results. And wefre trying to give states and schools
more flexibility to reward good teachers and stop making excuses for bad
teachers, because we know that the single most important factor in a childfs
success other than their parents is the man or woman at the front of the
classroom.
And I had a chance to see this recently. I went
over to Parkville Middle School in Maryland, where engineering is now the most
popular subject, mainly thanks to some outstanding teachers who have inspired
students to focus on their math and their science skills. So we know
teachers can make a difference, and we want to help you have the very best
teachers in the classroom.
We also have to invest in innovation --
in American research and technology, in the work of our scientists and
engineers, and in sparking the creativity and imagination of our
people.
Now, a lot of this obviously is done in the private
sector. But as much as the private sector is the principal driver of
innovation itfs often hesitant to invest in the unknown, especially when it
comes to basic research. Historically, that's been a federal
responsibility. Itfs how we ended up with things like the computer chip
and the GPS. Itfs how we ended up with the Internet. Itfs also how a
lot of your states are already attracting jobs and industries of the
future.
I went to Wisconsin, for example, a few weeks ago, and I
visited a small-town company called Orion thatfs putting hundreds of people to
work manufacturing energy-efficient lights in a once-darkened plant. They
benefited from federal research.
In Ohio and Pennsylvania, thanks
in part to federal grants, I saw universities and businesses joining together to
make America a world leader in biotechnology and in clean energy. And if
you have any doubt about the importance of this federal investment in research
and development, I would suggest that you talk to the cutting-edge businesses in
your own states. They will tell you that if we want the next big
breakthrough, the next big industry to be an American breakthrough, an American
industry, then we canft sacrifice these investments in research and
technology.
The third way that we need to invest is in our
infrastructure -- everything from new roads and bridges to high-speed rail and
high-speed Internet -- projects that create hundreds of thousands of private
sector jobs. And I know that in some of your states, infrastructure
projects have garnered controversy. Sometimes theyfve gotten caught up in
partisan politics.
This hasnft traditionally been a partisan
issue. Lincoln laid the rails during the course of a civil war.
Eisenhower built the Interstate Highway System. Both parties have always
believed that America should have the best of everything. We donft have
third-rate airports and third-rate bridges and third-rate highways. Thatfs
not who we are. We shouldnft start going down that path.
New
companies are going to seek out the fastest, most reliable ways to move people,
goods, and information -- whether theyfre in Chicago or theyfre in
Shanghai. And I want them to be here, in the United States. So to
those who say that we canft afford to make investments in infrastructure, I say
we canft afford not to make investments in infrastructure. We always have
had the best infrastructure. The notion that somehow wefd give up that
leadership at this critical juncture in our history makes no
sense.
Just ask the folks that I met up in Marquette, Michigan -- I
was talking to Rick Snyder about this -- up in the Upper Peninsula. This
is a town of 20,000 people far away from the hustle and bustle of places like
Detroit or Grand Rapids. But because of the wireless infrastructure that
they have set up, theyfve now got -- the local department store, third
generation family-owned department store, has been able to hook up with the
university and have access to wireless, and they are now selling two-thirds of
their goods online. Theyfre one of the 5,000 fastest growing companies in
America -- up in the Upper Peninsula because the infrastructure was in place to
allow them to succeed.
And youfve got kids
in schoolhouses in even more remote areas who are able to plug in to lectures
and science fairs anywhere in America because of the infrastructure that was set
up. Thatfs a smart investment for every state to make. And the
federal government wants to be your partner in making those
investments.
These are the kinds of investments that pay huge
economic dividends in terms of jobs and growth. They are the fundamentals
that allow some states to weather economic storms better than others.
Theyfre the fundamentals that will make some states better positioned to win the
future than others. These investments are not just critical for your
statefs success; theyfre critical for Americafs success. And I want to be
a partner in helping you make that happen.
Which brings me to the
final topic thatfs going to help determine our ability to win the future, and
thatfs getting control of our health care costs. Now, I am aware that I
have not convinced everybody here to be a member of the Affordable Care Act fan
club. But surely we can agree that for decades, our governments, our
families, our businesses watched as health costs ate up more and more of their
bottom line. Therefs no disputing that. That didnft just happen last
year. It didnft just happen two years ago. Itfs been going on for
years now.
We also know that the biggest driver of the federal debt
is Medicare costs. Nothing else comes close. We could implement
every cut that the House of Representatives right now has proposed and it would
not make a dent in our long-term budget, wouldnft make a dent in our long-term
deficits -- because of healthcare costs. We know itfs one of the biggest
strains in your state budgets -- Medicaid.
And for years,
politicians of both parties promised one thing: real reform.
Everybody talked about it. Well, wefve decided to finally do something
about it -- to create a structure that would preserve our system of private
health insurance; would protect our consumers from the worst abuses of insurance
companies; would create competition and lower costs by putting in place new
exchanges, run by the states, where Americans could pool together to increase
their purchasing power and select from various plans to choose whatfs best for
them -- the same way that members of Congress do, the same way that those who
are lucky enough to work for big employers do.
And the fact is,
that the Affordable Care Act has done more to rein in rising costs, make sure
everyone can buy insurance, and attack the federal deficit than wefve seen in
years. And thatfs not just my opinion; thatfs the opinion of the
Congressional Budget Office -- nonpartisan -- the same one that puts out numbers
that when itfs handy to go after me, people trot out and say, boy, these are --
look at these numbers. So theyfre saying wefre saving a trillion bucks
because of this act on our health care costs. Otherwise, wefd be a
trillion dollars more in the red. Thatfs something that we should build
on, not break down.
Now, that doesnft mean that the job of health
care reform is complete. We still have to implement the law, and we have
to implement it in a smart and non-bureaucratic way. I know that many of
you have asked for flexibility for your states under this law. In fact, I
agree with Mitt Romney, who recently said hefs proud of what he accomplished on
health care in Massachusetts and supports giving states the power to determine
their own health care solutions. Hefs right. Alabama is not going to
have exactly the same needs as Massachusetts or California or North
Dakota. We believe in that flexibility.
So right now, under
the law, under the Affordable Care Act,
Massachusetts and Utah already
operate exchanges of their own that are very different -- operate them in their
own way. And we made sure that the law allowed that. The same
applies for other requests, like choosing benefit rules that meet the needs of
your citizens, or allowing for consumer-driven plans and health savings
accounts.
And this recognition that states need flexibility to
tailor their approach to their unique needs is why part of the law says that,
beginning in 2017, if you can come up with a better system for your state to
provide coverage of the same quality and affordability as the Affordable Care
Act, you can take that route instead. That portion of the law has not been
remarked on much. It says by 2017, if you have a better way of doing it,
help yourself, go ahead, take that route.
Now, some folks have
said, well, thatfs not soon enough. So a few weeks ago, Oregon Senator Ron
Wyden, a Democrat, and Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown, a Republican, and
Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu, they proposed legislation that would accelerate
that provision. So it would allow states to apply for such a waiver by
2014 instead of 2017.
I think thatfs a reasonable proposal. I
support it. It will give you flexibility more quickly, while still
guaranteeing the American people reform. If your state can create a plan
that covers as many people as affordably and comprehensively as the Affordable
Care Act does -- without increasing the deficit -- you can implement that
plan. And wefll work with you to do it. Ifve said before, I donft
believe that any single party has a monopoly on good ideas. And I will go
to bat for whatever works, no matter who or where it comes from.
I
also share your concern about Medicaid costs. I know this has been a topic
of significant conversation over the last couple of days. We know that
over half of all Medicaid costs come from just 5 percent of enrollees, many of
whom are whatfs called dual eligibles -- seniors in Medicare as well as in
Medicaid. The Affordable Care Act helps address this by changing the
incentives for providers so that they start adopting best practices that will
work to reduce cost while improving quality.
But we understand the
pressure youfre under. We understand that wefve got to do more. So
today -- and I mentioned this to Christine last night -- Ifm asking you to name
a bipartisan group of governors to work with Secretary Sebelius on ways to lower
costs and improve the quality of care for these Americans. And if you can
come up with more ways to reduce Medicaid costs while still providing quality
care to those who need it I will support those proposals as
well.
So herefs the bottom line. Once fully implemented, Ifm
convinced the Affordable Care Act will do what it was designed it to do -- cut
costs, cover everybody, end the worst abuses in the insurance industry, and
bring down our long-term deficits. I am not open to re-fighting the
battles of the last two years, or undoing the progress that wefve made.
But I am willing to work with anyone -- anybody in this room, Democrat or
Republican, governors or member of Congress -- to make this law even better; to
make care even better; to make it more affordable and fix what needs
fixing.
You see, part of the genius of our Founders was the
establishment of a federal system in which each of our states serves as a
laboratory for our democracy. Through this process, some of the best state
ideas became some of Americafs best ideas. So whether itfs through Race to
the Top, or improving the Affordable Care Act, or reforming the way that we
approach social programs by ensuring that spending is tied to success, our
approach has been to give you the flexibility that you need to find your own
innovative ways forward. In fact, this week Ifm issuing a Presidential
Memorandum that instructs all government agencies to follow this flexible
approach wherever the law allows.
But even as we preserve the
freedom and diversity that is at the heart of federalism, letfs remember that we
are one nation. We are one people. Our economy is national.
Our fates are intertwined. Today, wefre not competing with each other;
wefre competing with other countries that are hungry to win new jobs, hungry to
win new industries.
Ifm confident we will win this competition as
long as wefre fighting it together. And I know that, whatever our
differences, you share that goal. So youfve got a partner in the White
House to make this happen. And I hope that this becomes the start of a
productive and serious conversation going forward -- one that I want to start by
answering some of your questions.
So thank you very much.
(Applause.) Thank you.
END
11:47 A.M. EST