It
makes me a little nuts I can’t find the video of the President’s
speech last night on-line – several TV cameras were rolling, and I saw
snippets of it on the news – because as well as the transcript reads,
actually hearing and seeing him say these things is even more compelling.
As I
said yesterday . . . boy are we ever fortunate to have this guy. I know we’re
out of practice, but it’s really okay not to be cynical:
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the
Press Secretary
__________________________________________
Immediate Release 2009 October
21, 2009
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT DNC FUNDRAISER DINNER
October 20,
2009
Mandarin
Oriental Hotel
New York, New York
6:21 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody! Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you so much. Thank you. Please, everybody have a seat.
Back to your salads -- (laughter) -- or whatever they're serving. [Tomato
mozzarella, decent but not great; best lamb chops I ever ate; a so-so apple
tart “pre-set” when we sat down; good fresh-brewed coffee after the
President finished speaking; basically, what would have been about an $80
dinner at a nice restaurant, yours for $15,200. – A.T.]
It is good to be back in New York.
(Applause.) Always great to be in New York. I -- for those Yankee fans
out there, you're still up 2 to 1. (Applause.) You should be all
right. I love this town, and I -- want to know how much I appreciate
everything that so many of the people in this room have done, not just for me,
but for the country as a whole. There are a lot of folks here who were on
the frontlines of our campaign, and people who devoted their time and their
energy and their reputations to backing some guy nobody had ever heard
of. (Laughter.) And I will never forget that. And not a
day goes by that I don't think about the obligations that I have as a
consequence of this extraordinary honor that's been bestowed on me -- the
obligation I've got to every American and everybody who put their hopes
into a cause that wasn't just about winning an election, but was about changing
the country.
Now, it's been nine months since the Obama family
packed up and moved to Washington. And I want to report that Malia and
Sasha are doing very well. I got more requests for Malia and Sasha
meetings during the photo line than -- (laughter) -- you can't afford a
fundraiser involving Malia and Sasha. (Laughter.) I just want you
to know. I'm cheap. You guys can't afford that.
They are doing great. Michelle is obviously an
extraordinary First Lady. (Applause.) And we've got Bo, my dog, who
-- I now rank fourth in influence in the house -- (laughter) -- behind
Michelle, Malia, and Sasha. I'm slightly ahead of Bo.
(Laughter.) But he's coming on fast. (Laughter.)
It's important for all of us to remember, I think,
what was happening less than a year ago when we walked into the Oval Office,
because I notice that there's been a little bit of selective memory going on,
some collective amnesia on the part of some folks about what we were facing.
We were seeing an economic crisis unlike any that we had seen in
generations. We were losing 700,000 jobs per month. Our financial
system was on the brinks -- brink of collapse. Economists of every
stripe were suggesting that we might slip into a Great Depression. That
was just nine months ago.
And think about what we've done since that time.
We acted boldly and swiftly to pass a Recovery Act that's made a difference
in the lives of families across America. As promised, we put a tax cut in
the pockets of 95 percent of working families in America -- the most
progressive tax cut in history, benefiting 7 million families right here in New
York. (Applause.)
We extended and increased unemployment insurance to
help 12 million people get by during tough times. That's helped more
than a million folks here in New York. We made COBRA 65 percent
cheaper so that if people were out there looking for jobs, they could actually
still keep health care for themselves and their families. (Applause.)
We provided relief to states, including New
York, to make sure that teachers and firefighters and police officers weren't
laid off. According to initial reports, this has saved some 250,000 jobs
in our schools all across America -- 250,000 jobs; teachers that would have
been laid off had it not been for the Recovery Act. We supported more
than 30,000 loans to small businesses, including nearly 2,000 in this
state, helping to create thousands of private sector jobs.
But the Recovery Act wasn't just about tax cuts; it
wasn't just about providing emergency relief for middle-class families and
working families who bore the brunt of this recession. It was also the
largest investment in education in American history. Think about
that. The largest investment in education in American history -- and one
that is promoting reform in states all across the country. It was the
largest investment in clean energy in American history.
(Applause.) It was the largest boost to medical research and basic
research in American history. (Applause.) And it was the single
largest investment in our nation's infrastructure since Eisenhower built the
interstate highway system in the 1950s, an investment that's putting people
to work all across this country rebuilding not just our roads and our bridges
and crumbling schools, but also creating a whole new infrastructure, a smart
grid to help clean energy travel from where it's produced to where it's needed
-- broadband lines extending into communities that don't have it.
So that was pretty good for the first month.
(Applause.) And then we kept on going, and we passed the Lilly
Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, because I think women should get paid the same as
men for doing the same work. (Applause.) We lifted the ban on
stem cell research to begin restoring science to its rightful place in
America. (Applause.) We extended health insurance to 11 million
children in America -- (applause) -- 4 million of whom previously had no
insurance at all.
We passed a service bill named for Ted Kennedy,
which is encouraging folks to give back to their communities all across the
country, expanding Peace Corps and AmeriCorps. We passed
legislation to protect consumers from unfair rate hikes, and the most
comprehensive credit card reform legislation in a generation.
We passed laws to make sure that our children
weren't being targeted by big tobacco companies, and housing fraud
legislation. These were all things that we had been fighting for for
years, that we signed into law in the first nine months.
And for the first time in history, we've begun to put
in place a new national policy aimed at both increasing fuel economy and
reducing greenhouse gas pollution for all new cars and trucks sold in the
United States. (Applause.)
And while I was in line, I was talking to a few folks
who are involved in the environmental movement, and they will affirm -- we're
not doing this with a lot of fanfare -- that we have been as productive in
cleaning our environment and focusing on the big challenges having to do with
our air and our water as any administration that's been around in a very long
time. For decades.
If we stop now, if we didn't do anything else for
the next three months, we would have had one of the most productive legislative
sessions in decades -- already. (Applause.)
Now, that's what we've been able to do at
home. I've got a few things going on abroad. (Laughter.) We've
begun a new era of engagement. We're working with our partners to
stop the spread of nuclear weapons, to seek the long-term goal of a safer, more
secure world that is free of nuclear weapons. (Applause.) We are --
we're working in concert with nations on just about every continent to stem our
global economic downturn and to confront climate change. We banned
torture. We're rebuilding our military. We're reaffirming our
alliances. We've begun to leave Iraq to its own people. We've made
progress in taking the fight to al Qaeda, from Pakistan to Somalia to
Indonesia. We're making progress there, too.
But the reason you're here tonight, the reason I'm
here tonight, the reason Tim Kaine is doing such an extraordinary job as our
DNC chair, even though he's got another job as Governor of the Commonwealth of
Virginia, is because we all know our work is far from over.
There's still far too many Americans who are out of work right now; they're
seeing their hours and their wages reduced. There are too many Americans
who are subject to the whims of the insurance companies when it comes to their
health care, being dropped or discriminated against because they've got a
preexisting condition. Too many millions can't afford insurance in the
first place.
We know that we still face enormous challenges in this
country, and that's not news to you. Lately there had been some
discussion -- you know, what's taking him so long? Health care seems to
-- it's been nine months, we haven't solved world hunger yet.
(Laughter and applause.) And I try to explain to people, part of what
was remarkable about the campaign that we ran, was it wasn't easy. That's
how we knew it was worth it. We knew we were fighting against the status
quo and fighting against inertia. And it took a lot of hard work and a
lot of effort and a lot of defying the odds. That was part of what made
it special.
And I know you guys didn't sign up for this election
because I was a sure thing. And you didn't sign up because you thought
that somehow all the fun stuff of the election would just keep on continuing
into governing. You know, the poster was nice, and we had "Yes we
can," nice slogans -- (laughter) -- but that's not why you did this.
You did this because you understood that we were at a crossroads in our
history; that the future of our children, our grandchildren, our
great-grandchildren was going to be at stake, and that we were going to have to
completely rethink how we were dealing with key sectors of our economy and key
aspects of our national security.
So you understood that now is the time to build a
clean energy economy that will free our nation from the grip of foreign oil and
generate new green jobs in the process, jobs that pay well and can't be
outsourced. You understood that now is the time to transform our
education system so that every child is prepared to compete in this new global
economy, that now was the time to make sure that we put new rules of the road
in our financial sector to prevent the kinds of abuse and excess on Wall Street
that led us to this crisis. You understood that. And you also
understood that the insurance companies and the banks and the oil companies
might not be crazy about some of these changes; that they were doing just fine
under the status quo. So nobody thought this was going to be easy.
We talked about this during the campaign.
While I'm in New York, I want to stress something
about this financial reform effort. The financial industry is essential
to a healthy economy and to the well-being of our economy. That's why
we stepped in to prevent a collapse that would have had far-reaching and
devastating consequences for the American people -- steps, by the way, that
were not wildly popular and still aren't among the American people. But
it was the right thing to do.
But we also know we should never again have to face
potential calamity because of reckless speculation and deceptive practices and
short-sightedness and self-interestedness from a few. So if there are
members of the financial industry in the audience today, I would ask that you
join us in passing what are necessary reforms. Don't fight them, join us
on them. (Applause.)
This is important for our country. And in the
long run it will be good for the financial industry to have a level playing
field in which everybody knows the rules and everybody knows that the rules
will be enforced, and people are competing not by how confusing you can make
things and how you can avoid rules, but competing because you're offering
innovative good products that are helping grow the American economy and putting
people to work out on Main Street.
When I hear some folks who had just been taking taxpayer
bailout money suddenly say, "What do you want from me?" -- when I
hear stories about small businesses and medium-sized businesses not being able
to get loans despite Wall Street being back, very profitable, that tells me
that people aren't thinking about their obligations, our mutual obligations to
each other, the fact that we're in this together.
So what's true for financial reform, what's true for
energy reform, is also true for health insurance reform. You know why
this is so important. You know if you're an employer, you've seen what's
happening to the premiums that you're paying on behalf of your employees; and
if you're an employee, you've how your employer is passing on some of those
costs to you. Premiums have doubled over the past decade. They
could double again in the next decade.
Millions of people in this country have been
discriminated against because of preexisting conditions. More and more
companies are dropping their coverage; more and more families struggling to pay
health care even as insurance out-of-pocket costs rise year after year.
Now, here's the good news. We are closer than
we have ever been to passing health insurance reform that will make quality,
affordable -- (applause) -- that will make quality care affordable for
people who don't have insurance, and it will bring stability and security to
people who do have insurance, and that will slow the skyrocketing costs of
health insurance for our families and our businesses, our state and federal
budgets.
Nothing could be more important in terms of getting
our fiscal house in order than finishing the job on health reform.
There's still details to be ironed out, still disagreements that we've got to
work out, but for the first time we've passed bills through every committee.
They are now starting to be narrowed. There are negotiations taking
place. And we've got people who are engaging even if they don't want to
engage because they're starting to realize it's not a matter of whether,
it's a matter of when.
All the bills that have been passed, despite the
various differences, all of them would provide help to millions of people who
don't have coverage. Understand, 29 million -- under the Baucus bill --
29 million people who don't have health insurance would now have health
insurance, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
All the bills would prevent insurance companies from
barring you because of preexisting conditions. All of them would set up
an exchange, a framework so that businesses, self-employed individuals, could
buy in and leverage the fact that there are millions of people as part of a
pool so that they can get a better deal.
So we are nearing the finish line. With your
help, we are going to cross it. And there are going to be some fierce
arguments in the days ahead. That's how it should be. That's how
our democracy works. But I want all the Democrats who are in the
house -- (laughter) -- to understand what a profound potential achievement this
is, and stay focused on the goal line. Sometimes we like to have our
little intramural battles; that's fine. The American people need this.
I want all non-Democrats who may be here, or may be
watching to know that I believe in a strong and loyal opposition. I
believe in a two-party system where ideas are tested and assumptions are
challenged. That's how we strengthen our proposals. That's how our
democracy works. (Applause.) But what I reject, what I don't
have a lot of sympathy for is folks who are just sitting on the sidelines and
rooting for failure, whether it's on health care, or energy, or the
economy. (Applause.) What I reject is when some folks suggest that
we go back to the policies that got us in the mess in the first place -- as if
we didn’t just go through what we've been going through.
I said this before, last week at a fundraiser. I don't mind cleaning up the mess that some other folks
made. That's what I signed up to do. But while I'm there mopping
the floor I don't want somebody standing there saying, "You're not mopping
fast enough." Or, "You're not holding the mop the right way."
(Laughter.)
Grab a mop!
(Applause.) Why don't you help clean up? (Applause.)
Everybody in Washington -- Democrat, Republican -- we
all have a responsibility to rise to this occasion; to look past our
differences; to recognize that we have to move beyond the failed policies and
broken politics that allowed our toughest problems to go unsolved for decades.
When you look at the health care debate, you've got
a whole bunch of Republicans who are saying, yeah, we should do this -- except
those are all retired Republicans -- Bob Dole and Bill Frist and --
last time I checked they're not socialist. And they think it's important
for us to get this done. That's a model for what everybody needs to be
thinking. Roll up our sleeves and help to make this country the kind of
country it should be.
In the end, the people I meet across this country,
they aren't looking for a lot. They're not looking for government to
solve all their problems. They just want a chance to succeed. They
are modest hopes -- they want a job; they want to be able to get an
education. If they've got a good idea, they want to be able to get some
financing to start a business. They want to retire with some dignity and
respect. They want to be able to send their kids to college.
They're asking for the opportunity to make the most of their own lives.
That's it. It's the chance every American deserves. That's the
American Dream. That's the promise I'm working to fulfill every day.
And at this rare moment in history, I want you all
to know that without your help I can't do it. Like I said before,
what we're trying to do is big, and it's hard. If it was easy, somebody
else would have done it. And it now falls to us. And I hope that
everybody here is willing to recapture that sense of excitement that comes from
a big, but achievable challenge.
Not the superficial excitement that comes from
Election Day, but the excitement that comes from knowing we took on something
that had to be taken on; we didn’t kick the can down the road, and we
didn’t push it off on somebody else, but instead we decided we were going
to be the generation that puts things on better footing for those coming behind
us.
That's what tonight is about. That is what
our efforts are about. And if you're willing to stand with me and work
with me and occasionally march with me, I'm absolutely confident we're going to
get it accomplished.
Thank you very much, everybody. God bless
you. God bless the United States of America. (Applause.)
END
6:43 P.M. EDT
☞
Grab a mop, folks. Even if you choose no heavier a lift than suspending
cynicism and rooting for success – without demanding perfection.
(Demanding perfection, when it comes to a contentious situation, is just as
obstructionist as fighting reform.) And if you can go a step further, join Organizing
for America. And if you are so fortunate as to be able to help fund
Organizing for America by contributing $30,400 for two lamb chop dinners,
e-mail me your phone number. There is nothing in the world I enjoy more than
taking down credit card information. (Think of the frequent flier miles!)
Steve
G: “Re
those $30,000 lamb chops you wrote about yesterday, maybe they could give one
of these folks, below the poverty line,
half a plate? This is MY party? The party of the working people? Is there no
shame?”
☞ The money goes to help move the
President’s agenda, which is all about the things you and I care about.
Dems move millions out of poverty . . . then the other team comes in and lowers
taxes for the rich, freezes the minimum wage, and watches as millions move back
in the other direction. I am personally SO grateful to the wealthy folks who
are willing to give these big dollars to help, even though they know we mean to
raise their taxes. The good news, FWIW: most DNC money now comes NOT in big
checks but from a sea of small ones.
After
the President left us to our lamb chops, he motorcaded a few blocks south to a
crowd of 2,700, most of whom chipped in $100 or $250, and gave virtually the
same speech all over again. That video, I did find. You can watch it here.