Your Thoughts Matter
Feed aggregator
Readout of President Biden’s Call with Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar
President Biden spoke today with Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar. The two leaders discussed the negotiations in Doha for a ceasefire and hostage release deal based on the May 27, 2024 arrangement described by the President last year and endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council. The President thanked the Amir for his leadership and praised the mediating role of Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani throughout the process. Both leaders emphasized the urgent need for a deal to be implemented to return the hostages to their families and bring immediate relief to the people of Gaza through a surge in humanitarian aid enabled by the ceasefire and called for in the deal. Both leaders agreed to remain in close coordination directly and through their teams at this critical point in the negotiations.
###
The post Readout of President Biden’s Call with Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar appeared first on The White House.
Readout of President Biden’s Call with Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar
President Biden spoke today with Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar. The two leaders discussed the negotiations in Doha for a ceasefire and hostage release deal based on the May 27, 2024 arrangement described by the President last year and endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council. The President thanked the Amir for his leadership and praised the mediating role of Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani throughout the process. Both leaders emphasized the urgent need for a deal to be implemented to return the hostages to their families and bring immediate relief to the people of Gaza through a surge in humanitarian aid enabled by the ceasefire and called for in the deal. Both leaders agreed to remain in close coordination directly and through their teams at this critical point in the negotiations.
###
The post Readout of President Biden’s Call with Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani of Qatar appeared first on The White House.
Statement from President Joe Biden on Approving Student Debt Cancellation for Over 5 Million Americans
Today, my Administration is approving student loan relief for more than 150,000 borrowers – bringing the total number of Americans who have had their student debt cancelled by my Administration to over 5 million. These 150,000 borrowers include: almost 85,000 borrowers who attended schools that cheated and defrauded their students, 61,000 borrowers with total and permanent disabilities, and 6,100 public service workers.
My Administration has taken historic action to reduce the burden of student debt, hold bad actors accountable, and fight on behalf of students across the country. This includes fixing the broken Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program and ensuring over 1 million public service workers receive the student loan relief they are entitled to under the law, approving student loan relief for 1.7 million borrowers who were cheated and defrauded by their schools, delivering student debt relief to 633,000 borrowers with total and permanent disabilities, and fixing administrative errors in the Income-Driven Repayment programs to deliver relief to over 1.4 million borrowers who have been in repayment for decades. My Administration also secured the largest increase to the maximum Pell Grant award in a decade to put higher-education in reach for more Americans.
Since Day One of my Administration, I promised to ensure higher-education is a ticket to the middle class, not a barrier to opportunity, and I’m proud to say we have forgiven more student loan debt than any other administration in history.
###
The post Statement from President Joe Biden on Approving Student Debt Cancellation for Over 5 Million Americans appeared first on The White House.
Statement from President Joe Biden on Approving Student Debt Cancellation for Over 5 Million Americans
Today, my Administration is approving student loan relief for more than 150,000 borrowers – bringing the total number of Americans who have had their student debt cancelled by my Administration to over 5 million. These 150,000 borrowers include: almost 85,000 borrowers who attended schools that cheated and defrauded their students, 61,000 borrowers with total and permanent disabilities, and 6,100 public service workers.
My Administration has taken historic action to reduce the burden of student debt, hold bad actors accountable, and fight on behalf of students across the country. This includes fixing the broken Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program and ensuring over 1 million public service workers receive the student loan relief they are entitled to under the law, approving student loan relief for 1.7 million borrowers who were cheated and defrauded by their schools, delivering student debt relief to 633,000 borrowers with total and permanent disabilities, and fixing administrative errors in the Income-Driven Repayment programs to deliver relief to over 1.4 million borrowers who have been in repayment for decades. My Administration also secured the largest increase to the maximum Pell Grant award in a decade to put higher-education in reach for more Americans.
Since Day One of my Administration, I promised to ensure higher-education is a ticket to the middle class, not a barrier to opportunity, and I’m proud to say we have forgiven more student loan debt than any other administration in history.
###
The post Statement from President Joe Biden on Approving Student Debt Cancellation for Over 5 Million Americans appeared first on The White House.
IPEC Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress
The Office of the Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC) has issued its Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress, which brings together the combined and coordinated efforts of the White House, the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Justice, State, and Treasury, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, and the U.S. Copyright Office. The report provides an overview of the intellectual property enforcement strategy and related efforts undertaken by departments and agencies during fiscal year 2024.
To view the Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress, visit: https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IPEC-FY-24-Annual-Report_Final.pdf
###
The post IPEC Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress appeared first on The White House.
IPEC Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress
The Office of the Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC) has issued its Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress, which brings together the combined and coordinated efforts of the White House, the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Justice, State, and Treasury, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, and the U.S. Copyright Office. The report provides an overview of the intellectual property enforcement strategy and related efforts undertaken by departments and agencies during fiscal year 2024.
To view the Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress, visit: https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/IPEC-FY-24-Annual-Report_Final.pdf
###
The post IPEC Annual Intellectual Property Report to Congress appeared first on The White House.
FACT SHEET: Ensuring U.S. Security and Economic Strength in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Artificial intelligence is quickly becoming central to both security and economic strength. The United States must act decisively to lead this transition by ensuring that U.S. technology undergirds global AI use and that adversaries cannot easily abuse advanced AI. In the wrong hands, powerful AI systems have the potential to exacerbate significant national security risks, including by enabling the development of weapons of mass destruction, supporting powerful offensive cyber operations, and aiding human rights abuses, such as mass surveillance. Today, countries of concern actively employ AI – including U.S.-made AI – in this way, and seek to undermine U.S. AI leadership.
To enhance U.S. national security and economic strength, it is essential that we do not offshore this critical technology and that the world’s AI runs on American rails. It is important to work with AI companies and foreign governments to put in place critical security and trust standards as they build out their AI ecosystems.
To strengthen U.S. security and economic strength, the Biden-Harris Administration today is releasing an Interim Final Rule on Artificial Intelligence Diffusion. It streamlines licensing hurdles for both large and small chip orders, bolsters U.S. AI leadership, and provides clarity to allied and partner nations about how they can benefit from AI. It builds on previous chip controls by thwarting smuggling, closing other loopholes, and raising AI security standards.
Six key mechanisms in the rule catalyze the responsible diffusion of U.S. technology:
- No restrictions apply to chip sales to 18 key allies and partners. This flexibility enables jurisdictions with robust technology protection regimes and technology ecosystems aligned with the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States to benefit from seamless large-scale purchases.
- Chip orders with collective computation power up to roughly 1,700 advanced GPUs do not require a license and do not count against national chip caps. The overwhelming majority of chip orders are in this category, especially those being placed by universities, medical institutions, and research organizations for clearly innocuous purposes. Streamlined processing of these orders represents an improvement over the status quo, rapidly accelerating low-risk shipments of U.S. technology around the world.
- Entities that meet high security and trust standards and are headquartered in close allies and partners can obtain highly trusted “Universal Verified End User” (UVEU) status. With this status, they can then place up to 7% of their global AI computational capacity in countries around the world – likely amounting to hundreds of thousands of chips. This trusted status is granted on a global and enduring basis, allowing responsible entities to expand rapidly and flexibly, and strengthening U.S. and allied global leadership while keeping frontier training at home.
- Entities that meet the same security requirements and are headquartered in any destination that is not a country of concern can apply for “National Verified End User” status, enabling them to purchase computational power equivalent to up to 320,000 advanced GPUs over the next two years. This provision permits trusted national entities to benefit from advanced U.S. technology, serving local, governmental, and regional customers, while guarding against diversion risks.
- Non-VEU entities located outside of close allies can still purchase large amounts of computational power, up to the equivalent of 50,000 advanced GPUs per country. This cap ensures that U.S. technology is available to service foreign governments, healthcare providers, and other local businesses.
- Government-to-government arrangements cultivate an international ecosystem of shared values regarding the development, deployment, and use of AI. Governments that sign these arrangements – which align those nations’ export control, clean energy, and technology security efforts with the United States – can double their chip caps (up to 100,000 of today’s advanced GPUs).
Even as it encourages the diffusion of U.S. technology, the rule takes significant steps against countries of concern, constraining them from accessing advanced AI systems and the computing power used to train them. These actions include:
- Continuing to ensure that advanced semiconductors sold abroad are not used by countries of concern to train advanced AI systems, while still permitting access for general-purpose applications from telecommunications to banking.
- Restricting the transfer to non-trusted actors of the model weights for advanced closed-weight models. The rule does not in any way inhibit the publication of model weights for open-weight models.
- Setting security standards to protect the weights of advanced closed-weight AI models, permitting them to be stored and used securely around the world while helping prevent illicit adversary access.
The rule builds on previous regulations that aim to protect U.S. national security, including the October 2022 and October 2023 chip controls. It follows a broad range of relevant engagements over the past ten months with stakeholders, bipartisan members of Congress, industry representatives, and foreign allies and partners.
###
The post FACT SHEET: Ensuring U.S. Security and Economic Strength in the Age of Artificial Intelligence appeared first on The White House.
FACT SHEET: Ensuring U.S. Security and Economic Strength in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
Artificial intelligence is quickly becoming central to both security and economic strength. The United States must act decisively to lead this transition by ensuring that U.S. technology undergirds global AI use and that adversaries cannot easily abuse advanced AI. In the wrong hands, powerful AI systems have the potential to exacerbate significant national security risks, including by enabling the development of weapons of mass destruction, supporting powerful offensive cyber operations, and aiding human rights abuses, such as mass surveillance. Today, countries of concern actively employ AI – including U.S.-made AI – in this way, and seek to undermine U.S. AI leadership.
To enhance U.S. national security and economic strength, it is essential that we do not offshore this critical technology and that the world’s AI runs on American rails. It is important to work with AI companies and foreign governments to put in place critical security and trust standards as they build out their AI ecosystems.
To strengthen U.S. security and economic strength, the Biden-Harris Administration today is releasing an Interim Final Rule on Artificial Intelligence Diffusion. It streamlines licensing hurdles for both large and small chip orders, bolsters U.S. AI leadership, and provides clarity to allied and partner nations about how they can benefit from AI. It builds on previous chip controls by thwarting smuggling, closing other loopholes, and raising AI security standards.
Six key mechanisms in the rule catalyze the responsible diffusion of U.S. technology:
- No restrictions apply to chip sales to 18 key allies and partners. This flexibility enables jurisdictions with robust technology protection regimes and technology ecosystems aligned with the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States to benefit from seamless large-scale purchases.
- Chip orders with collective computation power up to roughly 1,700 advanced GPUs do not require a license and do not count against national chip caps. The overwhelming majority of chip orders are in this category, especially those being placed by universities, medical institutions, and research organizations for clearly innocuous purposes. Streamlined processing of these orders represents an improvement over the status quo, rapidly accelerating low-risk shipments of U.S. technology around the world.
- Entities that meet high security and trust standards and are headquartered in close allies and partners can obtain highly trusted “Universal Verified End User” (UVEU) status. With this status, they can then place up to 7% of their global AI computational capacity in countries around the world – likely amounting to hundreds of thousands of chips. This trusted status is granted on a global and enduring basis, allowing responsible entities to expand rapidly and flexibly, and strengthening U.S. and allied global leadership while keeping frontier training at home.
- Entities that meet the same security requirements and are headquartered in any destination that is not a country of concern can apply for “National Verified End User” status, enabling them to purchase computational power equivalent to up to 320,000 advanced GPUs over the next two years. This provision permits trusted national entities to benefit from advanced U.S. technology, serving local, governmental, and regional customers, while guarding against diversion risks.
- Non-VEU entities located outside of close allies can still purchase large amounts of computational power, up to the equivalent of 50,000 advanced GPUs per country. This cap ensures that U.S. technology is available to service foreign governments, healthcare providers, and other local businesses.
- Government-to-government arrangements cultivate an international ecosystem of shared values regarding the development, deployment, and use of AI. Governments that sign these arrangements – which align those nations’ export control, clean energy, and technology security efforts with the United States – can double their chip caps (up to 100,000 of today’s advanced GPUs).
Even as it encourages the diffusion of U.S. technology, the rule takes significant steps against countries of concern, constraining them from accessing advanced AI systems and the computing power used to train them. These actions include:
- Continuing to ensure that advanced semiconductors sold abroad are not used by countries of concern to train advanced AI systems, while still permitting access for general-purpose applications from telecommunications to banking.
- Restricting the transfer to non-trusted actors of the model weights for advanced closed-weight models. The rule does not in any way inhibit the publication of model weights for open-weight models.
- Setting security standards to protect the weights of advanced closed-weight AI models, permitting them to be stored and used securely around the world while helping prevent illicit adversary access.
The rule builds on previous regulations that aim to protect U.S. national security, including the October 2022 and October 2023 chip controls. It follows a broad range of relevant engagements over the past ten months with stakeholders, bipartisan members of Congress, industry representatives, and foreign allies and partners.
###
The post FACT SHEET: Ensuring U.S. Security and Economic Strength in the Age of Artificial Intelligence appeared first on The White House.
Readout of President Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Ishiba of Japan and President Marcos of the Philippines
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. spoke today with Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru of Japan and President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. of the Philippines to advance our continuing cooperation in the Indo-Pacific. This meeting follows the historic trilateral summit hosted at the White House in April 2024. Together the three Leaders discussed trilateral maritime security and economic cooperation, as well as the People’s Republic of China’s dangerous and unlawful behavior in the South China Sea. The three Leaders agreed on the importance of continued coordination to advance a free and open Indo-Pacific.
###
The post Readout of President Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Ishiba of Japan and President Marcos of the Philippines appeared first on The White House.
Readout of President Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Ishiba of Japan and President Marcos of the Philippines
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. spoke today with Prime Minister Ishiba Shigeru of Japan and President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. of the Philippines to advance our continuing cooperation in the Indo-Pacific. This meeting follows the historic trilateral summit hosted at the White House in April 2024. Together the three Leaders discussed trilateral maritime security and economic cooperation, as well as the People’s Republic of China’s dangerous and unlawful behavior in the South China Sea. The three Leaders agreed on the importance of continued coordination to advance a free and open Indo-Pacific.
###
The post Readout of President Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Ishiba of Japan and President Marcos of the Philippines appeared first on The White House.
Readout of President Joe Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel
President Biden spoke today with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel. The two leaders discussed the ongoing negotiations in Doha for a ceasefire and hostage release deal based on the May 27, 2024 arrangement described by the President last year and endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council. The President discussed the fundamentally changed regional circumstances following the ceasefire deal in Lebanon, the fall of the Assad regime in Syria, and the weakening of Iran’s power in the region. He stressed the immediate need for a ceasefire in Gaza and return of the hostages with a surge in humanitarian aid enabled by a stoppage in the fighting under the deal. The Prime Minister thanked the President for his lifelong support of Israel and for the extraordinary support from the United States for Israel’s security and national defense.
###
The post Readout of President Joe Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel appeared first on The White House.
Readout of President Joe Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel
President Biden spoke today with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel. The two leaders discussed the ongoing negotiations in Doha for a ceasefire and hostage release deal based on the May 27, 2024 arrangement described by the President last year and endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council. The President discussed the fundamentally changed regional circumstances following the ceasefire deal in Lebanon, the fall of the Assad regime in Syria, and the weakening of Iran’s power in the region. He stressed the immediate need for a ceasefire in Gaza and return of the hostages with a surge in humanitarian aid enabled by a stoppage in the fighting under the deal. The Prime Minister thanked the President for his lifelong support of Israel and for the extraordinary support from the United States for Israel’s security and national defense.
###
The post Readout of President Joe Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel appeared first on The White House.
President Biden Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction to His Holiness Pope Francis
Today, President Biden spoke with His Holiness Pope Francis and named him as a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction. The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the Nation’s highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States, world peace, or other significant societal, public or private endeavors. This is the first time that President Biden has awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction.
Citation:
As a young man, Jorge Bergoglio sought a career in science before faith led him to a life with the Jesuits. For decades, he served the voiceless and vulnerable across Argentina. As Pope Francis, his mission of serving the poor has never ceased. A loving pastor, he joyfully answers children’s questions about God. A challenging teacher, he commands us to fight for peace and protect the planet. A welcoming leader, he reaches out to different faiths. The first pope from the Southern Hemisphere, Pope Francis is unlike any who came before. Above all, he is the People’s Pope – a light of faith, hope, and love that shines brightly across the world.
###
The post President Biden Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction to His Holiness Pope Francis appeared first on The White House.
President Biden Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction to His Holiness Pope Francis
Today, President Biden spoke with His Holiness Pope Francis and named him as a recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction. The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the Nation’s highest civilian honor, presented to individuals who have made exemplary contributions to the prosperity, values, or security of the United States, world peace, or other significant societal, public or private endeavors. This is the first time that President Biden has awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction.
Citation:
As a young man, Jorge Bergoglio sought a career in science before faith led him to a life with the Jesuits. For decades, he served the voiceless and vulnerable across Argentina. As Pope Francis, his mission of serving the poor has never ceased. A loving pastor, he joyfully answers children’s questions about God. A challenging teacher, he commands us to fight for peace and protect the planet. A welcoming leader, he reaches out to different faiths. The first pope from the Southern Hemisphere, Pope Francis is unlike any who came before. Above all, he is the People’s Pope – a light of faith, hope, and love that shines brightly across the world.
###
The post President Biden Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom with Distinction to His Holiness Pope Francis appeared first on The White House.
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves South Carolina Disaster Declaration
Yesterday, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that a major disaster exists in the State of South Carolina and ordered Federal assistance to supplement state, tribal, and local recovery efforts in the areas affected by severe storms and flooding from November 6 to November 14, 2024.
Federal funding is available to state, tribal, and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storms and flooding in the counties of Bamberg, Calhoun, and Orangeburg.
Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures statewide.
Mr. Brian F. Schiller of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has been appointed to coordinate Federal recovery operations in the affected areas.
Additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the state and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDIA SHOULD CONTACT THE FEMA NEWS DESK AT (202) 646-3272 OR FEMA-NEWS-DESK@FEMA.DHS.GOV.
###
The post President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves South Carolina Disaster Declaration appeared first on The White House.
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves South Carolina Disaster Declaration
Yesterday, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that a major disaster exists in the State of South Carolina and ordered Federal assistance to supplement state, tribal, and local recovery efforts in the areas affected by severe storms and flooding from November 6 to November 14, 2024.
Federal funding is available to state, tribal, and eligible local governments and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storms and flooding in the counties of Bamberg, Calhoun, and Orangeburg.
Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures statewide.
Mr. Brian F. Schiller of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has been appointed to coordinate Federal recovery operations in the affected areas.
Additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the state and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDIA SHOULD CONTACT THE FEMA NEWS DESK AT (202) 646-3272 OR FEMA-NEWS-DESK@FEMA.DHS.GOV.
###
The post President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves South Carolina Disaster Declaration appeared first on The White House.
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Disaster Declaration for the Native Village of Kwigillingok
Yesterday, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that a major disaster exists for the Native Village of Kwigillingok and ordered federal aid to supplement the Tribal Nation’s efforts in the areas affected by a severe storm and flooding from August 15 to August 18, 2024.
Federal funding is available to the Native Village of Kwigillingok and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storm and flooding.
Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures for the Native Village of Kwigillingok.
Mr. Lance E. Davis of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has been appointed to coordinate Federal recovery operations in the affected areas.
Additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the Tribal Nation and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDIA SHOULD CONTACT THE FEMA NEWS DESK AT (202) 646-3272 OR FEMA-NEWS-DESK@FEMA.DHS.GOV.
###
The post President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Disaster Declaration for the Native Village of Kwigillingok appeared first on The White House.
President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Disaster Declaration for the Native Village of Kwigillingok
Yesterday, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that a major disaster exists for the Native Village of Kwigillingok and ordered federal aid to supplement the Tribal Nation’s efforts in the areas affected by a severe storm and flooding from August 15 to August 18, 2024.
Federal funding is available to the Native Village of Kwigillingok and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storm and flooding.
Federal funding is also available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures for the Native Village of Kwigillingok.
Mr. Lance E. Davis of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has been appointed to coordinate Federal recovery operations in the affected areas.
Additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the Tribal Nation and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDIA SHOULD CONTACT THE FEMA NEWS DESK AT (202) 646-3272 OR FEMA-NEWS-DESK@FEMA.DHS.GOV.
###
The post President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Disaster Declaration for the Native Village of Kwigillingok appeared first on The White House.
Remarks by President Biden on Jobs Report and the State of the Economy
Roosevelt Room
5:55 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Hey, everybody. Thanks for your patience. Been a long day.
I’d like to talk about the transformational progress our economy has made over the last four years.
This morning’s job report shows the economy added more than 250,000 jobs in December, that the unemployment rate has dropped below 4.1 — as low as 4.1 percent, and, all told in four years, we’ve created 16.6 million new jobs, the most of any single presidential term in history.
There wasn’t a month — not a single month — when the economy lost jobs, another record for any presidency. In fact, last month, America has lost — the last month America had lost jobs was the month before I came to office.
And the question is — and I want to make it clear: How and why did we make such progress? We did it by fundamentally changing the economic policy of this country.
After decades of trickle-down economics that primarily benefitted those at the very top, Kamala and I and our administration have written a new playbook that’s growing the economy from the middle out and the bottom up, that benefits everyone.
The new playbook is working, but in 10 days, our administration will end and the new administration will begin. And we’re going to face another inflection point: Do we continue to grow the economy from the middle out and the bottom up, as we have the past four years, or do we backslide to an economy — economic theory that benefitted those at the very top while working people and middle-class people struggled for their fair share of growth?
Four years ago, when Kamala and I came to office, 3,000 Americans were dying per day — per day — because of the pandemic. Millions of Americans had lost their jobs and were at risk of losing their homes. Hundreds of thousands of factories and businesses closed, creating despair in so many communities all across America. Supply chains were shattered. Prices soared from everything from cars to home appliances.
The previous administration had no real plan to get — get us through one of the toughest periods in the nation’s history. In fact, there’s an old saying: If the only tool is a hammer you have, everything looks like a nail. But over the course of decades, our Republican leadership’s trickle-down economic was a hammer and working people were the nail — slashing taxes for the very wealthy and biggest corporations, offshoring jobs and factories for cheaper labor overseas while importing products that used to be made in America.
To offset its cost, advocates of trickle-down economics ripped the social safety net, trying to privatize Social Security and Medicare, trying to deny access to affordable health care and prescription drug costs. Lifting the fortunes of the wealthy often meant attacking the rights of workers.
We came to office with a different vision of America. Within the first two months that I was in office, I signed the American Rescue Plan that put shots in arms and checks in pockets to vaccinate the nation and return us to full employment.
We followed up with long-term investments in our future. My Investing in America agenda, which includes the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the CHIPS and Science Act, the Inflation Reduction Act — together mark the most significant investment in America since the New Deal. The Inflation Reduction Act alone is the most significant investment in climate and clean energy ever — ever — anywhere in the world.
And we make these investments — when we do, we buy American. Buy America has been the law of the land since the ‘30s. It says that any money the president is authorized to Con- — by Congress to spend should use American workers and American products. But past administrations, including my predecessor, failed to buy American and use American workers. But not on our watch.
We’re modernizing roads, bridges, ports, airports, clean water systems, affordable high-speed broadband systems and Internet, and so much more. And we’ve incentivized building all these large federal projects with American products and American union labor.
Remember — remember the shortage of semiconductors during the pandemic, those tiny, little chips — computer chips the size of your fingertip that power everything in our everyday lives, from vehicles to refrigerators to advanced weapons to your cell phones? America invented these computer chips. But over time, we stopped making them, and chip factories went overseas for cheaper labor.
So, when the pandemic hit, we found out how vulnerable America was. Supply chains abroad shut down because of the pandemic. We couldn’t get the chips, and prices soared.
For example, it takes over 3,000 of these computer chips to build an automobile today. And when overseas factories making those chips shut down, the production stopped and the cost of a new car soared.
It didn’t have to be this way. I was determined to change that. And that’s what we’ve done with the CHIPS and Science Act, which has attracted $350 billion in private-sector investment in America, including from Korea and Taiwan and other countries.
These investments are building new fabs, they call them — the — the place where they build these chips — new fabs, massive chip factories the size of several football fields — on fields of dream all across America, creating, so far, 125,000 jobs on the construction side of this, which will ultimately create tens of thousands more jobs — tens of thousands. These jobs in these co-called [so-called] fabs are paying over $100,000 a year, and you don’t need a college degree.
It’s not just the fabs. These investments are creating opportunity for entire communities, for small business, and creating even more jobs and much more. You know, when they build these factories, they’re going to find out that they’re going to need drug stores and — and shops and restaurants, and everything grows.
When faced with unfair practices from abroad, we’ve taken tough but targeted action on behalf of American workers, businesses, and factory towns.
We know the pandemic and Russia’s war against Ukraine and the inflation they created caused enormous pain and hardship all across America and around the world. And so, we took aggressive action that brought down prices; ordered the biggest release of our Strategic Petroleum Reserve in our history, reducing the price of gas at the pump here in America. I also challenged the oil and gas companies: take their record profits and invest in more production.
Today, American energy production is at record levels, including record oil and gas production. Gas prices are $3 a gallon, which is below the price before the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
My Inflation Reduction Act took on Big Pharma and reduced the price of insulin for seniors with diabetes to $35 a month from as much as $400 a month.
The Inflation Reduction Act also finally gives Medicare the power to negotiate lower drug cricis [prices] across the board. As of this month, out-of-procton — out-of-pocket prescription drug costs — this already passed — will be capped at $2,000 a year, no matter how expensive the drugs are, how — even those expensive cancer drugs that cost $10-, $12-, $14,000 a year. No senior will have to pay more than $2,000 a year.
These and other reforms not only save seniors money; it saves the American taxpayers money. A hundred and sixty billion dollars will be saved over the next decade because Medicare will no longer have to pay the exorbitant prices that pharmaceutical companies have been charging.
And, you know, with our historic backing of unions, public support for unions is the highest it’s been in more than half a century, and the labor movement is expanding to new companies and new industries.
The middle-out, bottom-up playbook is also about asking the very wealthy and the most profitable corporations — we want them to do well, but begin — begin to pay their fair share in taxes.
My predecessor’s tax cut, the last time he was here, not only increased the federal debt by $2 trillion, it overwhelmingly benefitted the biggest corporations, delivering tax cuts to the top 1 percent worth more than 50 times what the middle-class families received.
And you’ve heard me say it a hundred times: We have over a thousand billionaires in America. They paid an average of 8.2 percent in federal taxes.
Look, folks, my approach to — is leading to better results for everyone. I kept my commitment that no one earning less than $400,000 a year would pay a single penny more in federal taxes.
I fought hard to expand the Child Tax Credit for working families that, when they existed, cut child poverty nearly in half. I expanded tax credits to make health insurance more affordable for millions of Americans enrolled in the Affordable Care Act.
Because of our policy — our policies and confidence of entrepreneurs in our economy, we have also seen 21 million new business applications filed in our administration, the most in any single presidential term on record. And that’s important because every single one of those applications for a small business is an act of hope, believing in the country.
There’s so much more from our playbook, but the bottom line is we’ve come a long way from the crisis we’ve inherited.
Let me close where I started: with the morn- — this morning’s jobs report. More than 250,000 jobs in December. In four years, the economy created 16.6 million new jobs, the most in any single presidential term. We’ve created jobs every single month I was in office.
During my presidency, we saw the lowest average un- — unemployment rate of any administration in the last 50 years.
And battling through the worldwide effects of the pandemic, Putin’s war in Ukraine, and supply chain disruption, the inflation rate is down near 2 percent.
These are simple, well-established ep- — economic benchmarks that measures the strength of any economy and the success or failure of any president’s four years in office.
I believe the economy I’m leaving is the best in the world and stronger than ever for all Americans.
So, I think that’s what we have, and we’ll see what the next president does.
I want to thank you all. God bless you all. And may God protect our troops.
I’d be happy to take some questions.
Q Mr. President, you talked about gas prices coming down. You made today a decision about sanctions against Russia. Are you concerned that that decision will perhaps lead to gas prices going up? And can you explain why those sanctions were imposed today and not earlier in the term?
THE PRESIDENT: The sanctions were imposed today because they will have profound effect on the growth of the Russian economy and make it more difficult for Putin to conduct his wars.
It is probable that gas prices could increase as much as three, four cents a gallon, but wha- — it’s going to have a more profound impact on Russia’s ability to continue to act in the way it’s acting in the conduct of war.
Q Mr. President, did you speak to Pope Francis about canceling your trip to the Vatican? And are you disappointed to not make that visit before leaving office?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, to tell you the truth, I am disappointed, but it’s much more important I stay here with all that’s going on. He fully understands that. I did not personally speak to him, but the team spoke with the apostolic delegate. And — and so — but I am disappointed.
Q Mr. President, have you had any reaction to the — President Trump’s verdict today up in New York and whether or not the — you believe that the punishment fit the crime?
And also, sir, on pardons. Have you ruled out a pardon for yourself or any other additional members of the family?
THE PRESIDENT: For myself?
Q Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: What would I pardon myself for?
Q That’s what I’m asking. (Laughs.)
THE PRESIDENT: No, I have no contemplation of pardoning myself for anything. I didn’t do anything wrong.
Q Mr. President, would you comment on Meta’s decision to end its fact-checking operations in the United States? Is that a good decision, in your opinion?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, look, the whole idea of walking away from facts-checking, as well as not reporting anything having to do with discrimination regarding to TPS, I — I find to be just contrary to American justice, American — the way we talk about one another. Telling the truth matters.
I mean, it’s — I know I’m on national television, but you all are local reporters and national reporters. I — I’m not — this is not a legi- — real question, but what do you think? You think it doesn’t matter that they let be printed where millions of people read it things that are simply not true?
I mean, I want to know what that’s all about. It’s just completely contrary to everything America is about. We want to tell the truth. We haven’t always done it as a nation, but we want to tell the truth.
And the idea — (laughs) — that, you know, a billionaire can buy something and say, “By the way, from this point on, we’re not going to — we’re not going to fact-check anything.”
And, you know, when you have millions of people reading — going online and reading this stuff, it — it is —
Anyway, I think it’s — I think it’s really shameful.
Q Mr. President — Mr. President, do you regret your decision to run for reelection? Do you think that that made it easier for your predecessor to now become your successor?
THE PRESIDENT: I don’t think so. I think I would have beaten Trump, could have beaten Trump. And I think that Kamala could have beaten Trump, would have beaten Trump.
It wasn’t about — I thought it was important to unify the party. And when the party was worried about whether or not I was going to be able to move, I thought it was — even though I thought I could win again, I thought it was better to unify the party.
And I had — it was the greatest honor in my life to be president of the United States, but I didn’t want to be one who caused a party that wasn’t unified to lose an election, and that’s why I stepped aside. But I was confident she could win.
Q Do you think she should run again?
Q Can I ask you what your assessment is of how long Ukraine can last without further aid if, in fact, your administration marks the end of American provisions over there, sir?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I had long talk with Zelenskyy today, and I think that as long as we continue to keep Western Europe united as it relates to Ukraine, that there is a real chance that the Ukrainians can prevail, because the cost to Russia is incredibly high. Over six hundred-some thousand dead or wounded. The Koreans they brought in is having high mortality rates as well.
And I made it clear that I was — I provided every bit of funding that the authority I have as president — to be able to do that now, and I know that there are a significant number of Democrats and Republicans on the Hill who think we should continue to support Ukraine. It is my hope and expectation they’ll speak up and not agree to President — if — if — if Trump decides to cut off fu- — funding for Ukraine.
Q Did — did the president-elect’s position on that conflict influence your decision to enact the oil and other sanctions on Russia today — in other words, put more pressure on Russia at a point where the president-elect appears to be (inaudible)?
THE PRESIDENT: The truth of the matter is no. But if it hadn’t — if those other conditions didn’t exist, it would have had an impact. I already decided that — Putin is in tough shape right now, and I think it’s really important that he not have any breathing room to continue to do the godawful things he is continuing to do.
And as I said, he’s got his own problems, economically — significant problems, economically as well as politically at home. And so, I decided to do everything I possibly could within my power and authority to give Ukraine every advantage it could have to be able to sustain support for an independent Ukraine.
Q You said, Vice President Harris would be able to beat — you said Vice President Harris had a good shot to beat Trump. Do you think she should run again in four years?
THE PRESIDENT: I think that’s a decision she should ma- — I think she’s competent to run again in four years. That’ll be a decision for her to make.
Q Mr. President, on Venezuela. The sanctions that your administration announced today, some are saying that they don’t go far enough by not targeting the petroleum sector. Why was this administration hesitant to apply further sanctions to the oil and gas industry there?
THE PRESIDENT: That’s still being investigated in terms of what impact it would have and whether or not it would just be replaced by Iran or any other count- — so matters what — what would happen afterwards.
I had a long discussion, again, with the man who should be appointed president on that score, and — and — but since I didn’t have a clear answer to what that would be — if I had more time, I may very well do that, but it — I wasn’t — I didn’t the — enough data to make that judgment.
Q If I — if I could also ask about Havana syndrome. Today, the intelligence community assessment changed slightly, with two intelligence agencies now saying there’s an even chance that this is being caused by a foreign actor. Do you personally believe that a foreign actor is responsible for these incidents?
THE PRESIDENT: No. Now, do I believe that — that ISIS’s theology, if you will, has impacted people in America — some who are not particularly well suited to handle the life of — they live. That — it has that effect.
But I — there’s no – I find no evidence, and I’ve — I’ve done — I spent 17, 18 hours with the community, right off the bat, trying to determine whether or not there was any outside influence. And thus far, we find no connection between an outside player, individual, but that doesn’t mean someone reading the malarkey that they’re — that’s going out there does — isn’t influenced by it.
Both these men, both in — in Nevada and in Louisiana, have been men who’ve had their own problems that have — but not because they’ve been influenced by a specific individual that I’m —
Q Sorry. Sorry, sir. My question was on Havana syndrome, not — not Nevada. Sorry, on the Havana syndrome, the intelligence community today, part of their assessment changed, saying that there is now an even chance that the Havana syndrome cases and incidents — there’s a foreign actor potentially behind them. Do you — is that — do you agree with that assessment?
THE PRESIDENT: I — I don’t have the full brief on that right now. I’m not going to comment on that.
Q Do you have an update on Austin Tice in Syria and whether or not he’s —
THE PRESIDENT: The answer is I’m not going to respond to that because that’s an active, ongoing issue. You know, my attitude about getting prisoners released from abroad, and I’m not going to comment on that right now.
Q And just one question, again, back on pardons and commutations. Can you just give us a sense of what other pardons and commutations you’re considering in your last 10 days?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, the answer is no, because two things. One is that it depends on some of the language and expectations that Trump broadcasts in the last couple days here as to what he’s going to do. The idea that he would punish people for not adhering to what he thinks should be policies related to his well-being is outrageous, but there’s still consideration of some folks. The — nothing — but no decision.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: All right, thanks everybody.
Q Have you talked about what kind of post presidency — what kind of —
(Cross-talk.)
Q Have you decided what kind of a — what kind of a — what kind of role will you have post presidency, sir? Do you plan to speak out after you leave Washington or are you going to follow, kind of, the Bush model where you’re kind of out of sight and out of mind?
THE PRESIDENT: (Laughs.) I’m not going to be out of sight or out of mind.
Thank you. (Inaudible.) Thank you.
6:16 P.M. EST
The post Remarks by President Biden on Jobs Report and the State of the Economy appeared first on The White House.
Remarks by President Biden and Vice President Harris Before Briefing on the Full Federal Response to the Wildfires Across Los Angeles
Oval Office
12:15 P.M. EST
THE PRESIDENT: Here’s what we’re going to do. We’re going to get a briefing from the governor and the mayor and FEMA, and then we’re going to lay out where we go from here. Okay?
Ready? Get set. Go.
AIDE: Ready.
THE PRESIDENT: All right. Vice President Harris and I are about to receive a briefing from Governor Newsom and Mayor Bass and the FEMA Director Criswell. So, both of them are on the ground leading the fight against this god-awful wildfire in Calif- — the worst in California history.
And there has been some progress in the last 24 hours, so I want to give an update to where we think things are at the moment.
First, overnight, local, state, and federal firefighters were able to partially prevent some of the largest fires from spreading to new areas: 3 percent in Pasadena has been kept from spreading, 8 percent in the Pacific Palisades, 35 percent in Ventura, and 37 percent in Sylmar. And — and I — but this time yesterday, these fires were mostly spreading out of control.
We — we’ve still got a long way to go, as we’re about to hear from the governor and others. And while the winds have died down for the time, we expect they’ll remain a threat until early next week. So, we’re going to keep working 24/7 to support state and local officials to fully stop these fires as soon as possible.
Next, we’re going to make sure California has every possible resource to fight these fires and help survivors. As soon as the fire started, I approved the — the Fire Management Assistance Grants, which is a fancy phrase for saying the grants to cover the cost of firefighting federally and the gear, equipment, and capabilities like search and rescue.
Then, I immediately approved the governor’s request of major disaster declaration, which will pay for things like debris removal, temporary lodging, and first responder overtime pay. Both of these — the grants and the declaration — usually cover 75 percent of the state’s costs. But yesterday, I directed the federal government to cover 100 percent of state costs for 180 days.
I also announced FEMA has — is go- — has turned on its Critical Needs Assistance program. This program gives a one-time payment of $750 to survivors so they can quickly purchase critical items, like water, formula, gasoline, and prescription drugs. And survivors should go to DisasterAssistance.gov or call 1-800-621-3362. We can’t help you if we don’t know you need the help, so call. DisasterAssistance.gov — I mean, co- — contact or call 1-800-621-3362.
And I want to be clear: This is not the only aid that survivors can request from FEMA. More programs are going to be available through the — that disaster declaration, but this is assistance that survivors can get now and get it fast.
We’re also helping the state and local law enforcement personnel keep people safe. I’ve offered Governor Newsom additional support on — on that front too. For example, the Defense Department — military personnel can help direct traffic, evacuate people where traffic lights have been destroyed.
Finally, I want to thank all the first responders. And I often say, “God made man, then he made a few firefighters.” And these are men and women. The firefighters of Los Angeles are proof of that.
The scope, the scale, and the erratic movements of these fires is truly unprecedented. I mean, it’s truly unprecedented. And — but day after day, these firefighters have been pulling 24-hour shifts, rushing the flames with har- — hurricane-force winds as well, to rescue people, to evacuate neighborhoods, and put these fires out.
Now, I speak for the American people when I say we owe you, we’re with you, and we’re going to make sure you get every resource you need.
Now I want to turn it over to the vice president.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Mr. President. As you’ve said, what we have been witnessing is truly mass devastation. And whether we are talking about Sylmar to the Palisades to Altadena, it’s important to know that we’re talking about neighborhoods of people who, in many cases — I think about Altadena — these are — these homes have been in these families for generations. And in many of these homes, it is a multigenerational family that lives there.
Also understand that, in a lot of these neighborhoods, the folks who live there also work in that neighborhood, which means they’ve lost their home and their livelihood. So, the devastation that we are looking at is multigenerational and is going to linger for quite some time.
And the work, under the president’s leadership, that we are doing through the federal government to provide aid in every way to the governor, to the mayor, to local police and fire is critically important, and we are doing it with a sense of urgency.
I also would mention that not only are firefighters out there working around the clock, some of whom — sadly, more than a few who have lost their own homes in the fire — but so too with LAPD police officers who are working around the clock, and there are at least a dozen who have also lost their own homes to the fire.
So, there is a real human story that is associated with the mass devastation that we are seeing, and everything that we can do to support, we will do. Also understanding there are moments where we should find optimism in the heroism of people who are taking in strangers, taking in friends, providing shelter to evacuees — people looking out for each other. Regardless of where they come from or who they voted for, they’re looking out for each other and showing the best of the American spirit in a moment of crisis.
THE PRESIDENT: In addition to that, I want to point out that — that this is not going to be over even when all the fires are out.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: It’s just going to be the beginning. And the change in insurance policy in California for these modest homes —
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Yep.
THE PRESIDENT: — as well as these really expensive homes and businesses. So, the — we — we’re going to be around a long while, Gov, to help, the federal government.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: And the mayor as well.
So — but why don’t I yield to you, Governor, for any comments you have to make. Bring us up to date.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: I — I appreciate it, Mr. President and Madam Vice President. Let me just pick up, in the spirit of y- — of your comments. But first, with just deep gratitude to both of you for being so solicitous, so supportive, hand in glove in this operation. There’s simply not an ask that hasn’t been met.
The major disaster declaration, Mr. President, was a game changer. In fact, you were able to do that within 36 hours. I don’t know that there’s another precedent in American history for disaster that was in the making, was unfolding and for you to be there in real time and prescient as well. It turns out that we’re going to need all of that support. And the fact that you were able to provide 100 percent is just tremendous relief on the (inaudible) side and other disaster relief side.
And I think the — the big focus now, to your point — and appreciate the recognition of some progress last night. The winds were favorable. We were able to address some of the perimeter issues. Again, it’s been focus about life, property, and perimeter. But the perimeter progress was real because we were able to get fixed-wing and helicopters up.
Last night, we had a new fire start. Five fires that we’re actively battling as we speak. The two large ones you’ve highlighted, the 8 and 3 percent contained. But we’re able to — these guys just did an amazing job. We had this fire, the Kenneth fire, that could have been one of the bigger headlines today, and these guys were able to knock that down.
It was heroic. I flew around it to see the dozers, the hand crews, Rattlesnake crews in the National Guard, the mutual aid system.
Mr. President, 175 engines from across this country, from New Mexico and Oregon and Washington State, Utah, Idaho — men and women coming out here, regardless of their differences, in the spirit of what the vice president said, working together in the spirit that defines the best of all of us. And so, just with deep gratitude to you, your team.
We had the National Guard out last night. We had 43 key posts that they were — they were working — 855 National Guard men and women. We’re stationing additional National Guard men and women to the extent we need it.
We’ve searched all the assets and we drew down from all over the state and, obviously, now increasing across the country.
I want to also highlight, because I think it’s incredibly important: We have 150,000 people still under mandatory evacuation orders. These fires are not out. Though, today, we’re going to make a lot of progress and continue to increase these containment numbers.
But it is important, and I cannot impress upon you more how happy I was to hear, Mr. President, you say DisasterAssistance.gov.
People are now naturally calling. There’s tremendous anxiety out there around getting immediate assistance. The reality of this is — is starting to come.
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: The clarity is — as the, you know, smoke begins to — to move and, in daylight, people are starting to understand the magnitude.
I thought I never would see anything like the Tubbs Fire and then the Camp Fire. This is up there. This will be one of the most destructive fires, I mean, in terms of property damage, perhaps in the history of the country, but certainly in terms of scale and scope — 10-plus thousand structures already identified. Ten people we fear have lost their lives; likelihood of more. The magnitude of this is pretty profound.
And — and in closing, you know, I appreciate, Madam Vice President, you bringing up Altadena as well. You know, I was there yesterday, saw a middle school — it’s a beautiful middle school — burning down. Lifestyles, places, tradition, kids, families, memories, communities completely, you know, torn — just torn asunder.
It’s — it’s not just a home. It’s — it’s their lives and their livelihoods, these businesses, community centers. I can’t tell you how many churches burned down.
And so, you know, we had these hurricane-force winds, the likes of which we’ve never imagined in our lifetime — 99-plus-mile-an-hour gusts, couldn’t — you know, there was no helicopters that can go up in — in those gusts, in those wind shears.
But we had, you know, thousands and thousands of men and women that — that did everything in their power to hold the line. And so, hats off to the first responders.
And in closing, hats off to those neighbors that are stepping up, these self-organizing communities that are coming together in the spirit of what makes us great, the spirit of neighbor to neighbor, of being there for each other.
And final words: You know, I ask you, we’ve got to deal with this misinformation. There were hurricane-force winds —
THE PRESIDENT: That’s right.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: — of mis- and disinformation, lies. People want to divide this country, and — and we’re going to have to address that as well.
And it breaks my heart, as people are suffering and struggling, that we’re up against those hurricane force — forces as well. And — and that’s just a point of personal privilege that I share that with you, because it infects real people that are out there, people I meet every single day, people the mayor has been meeting with. And they’re having conversations that are not the typical conversations you’d have at this time.
And — and you wonder where this stuff comes from, and it’s very damaging as well.
But — but we’re here to get the job done, to be here for folks, to focus, yes, on this mitigation and then, absolutely, recovery in record time. With your support, we’re going to be able to do that. With FEMA’s support, we’re going to get people back on their feet. We’re going to rebuild this remarkable community, and we’re going to come back.
I know it’s rote and cliché. It’s just a fact. We’re going to come back stronger because we’re all in this together. And — and we’re in this together because we have a leader in the Oval Office right now, Mr. President — Joe Biden, an American president, being there for the American people at a time of critical need.
And I cannot impress upon you personally, on behalf of 40 million Americans that live in the great state of California, how proud we are of you, the vice president, and your leadership.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, Gov, thank you. You know, that’s why I think it’s so important I — I — we speak plainly to the American people and let them know what we can and can’t do.
For example, those churches that get burned down you talked about, those public schools, the federal government will pay to rebuild those — rebuild those. There’s a — so, we have to let people know that there are things that are going to be coming that we’ve declared — and there’s disaster relief legislation and others — that are going to be available.
Because I think people say, “Okay. I’m out. But, God, what — what happens now? What do I…” — and — but we’re — we’re not leaving. We’re not leaving until we get it done.
Karen — Mayor.
MAYOR BASS: Yes. Thank you, Mr. President and Madam Vice President.
I just can’t emphasize enough how important your support and involvement has been. And how, in the midst of such incredible devastation and — and tragedy, that it has been comforting to know that you are — have been accessible.
Again, you know, the governor certainly mentioned the fact that you moved so quickly in response to the emergency declaration, the idea of 100 percent reimbursement. And we have made it clear to folks that that is not the norm, but that is what leadership does in response to such a devastating event.
And the governor mentioned, and let me just repeat: hurricane-strength wind without the rain. And that has led to such amazing devastation in terms of the Palisades fire and some of the other fires.
I think it is important to acknowledge the successes that have been going on, where there have been evacuation orders that have been canceled, and people are going back to certain neighborhoods. Fires have been extinguished in several neighborhoods — Pacoima, Hollywood, Studio City — where people were told they had to evacuate, and those evacuation orders have been rescinded.
And as our first responders are out there putting their lives on the line, as the vice president mentioned, they’ve been experiencing the losses as well, as well as the city and the county workforces. We have a number of our employees who have had to evacuate. While responding, their families have had to evacuate, or they’ve had the loss, the personal loss of their homes, their places to worship, their schools, or their businesses.
But Los Angeles, the region, we are going to recover. We’re going to recover, and we’re going to rebuild, and we’re going to rebuild better.
One of the biggest challenges that is facing us — and I also know that it is a national situation — is insurance. And so, today, I’m here at the County Hall of Administration. We do two press conferences a day — one in the county, one in the city. And we had our state insurance commissioner here.
We do have a state plan, but that state plan certainly needs to be — and he’s — he talked about introducing emergency legislation to respond to some of the ways we need to strengthen our system.
So, many of the homes in the area, especially in the Palisades area, had their insurance canceled — canceled a year or so ago. And he talked about how he wanted to have a moratorium — he was going to use the power of his office to have a moratorium — that said that no policies can be canceled, even if your home was not damaged. If you’re in the area and everybody around you burnt down but your home was not damaged, that your policy cannot be canceled.
So, we have mobilized the philanthropic community. The philanthropic community is already setting up funds to assist. But we are also convening — and the city is — is taking the lead here — in the rebuilding effort, and we’re going to expedite rebuilding.
It brings back a lot of memories for me, in 1992, when we experienced massive civil unrest, and we were able to get the majority of Los Angeles rebuilt quickly by coming together and suspending — waiving rules, you know, getting past bureaucracy.
If you — if your home was devastated in the fire, there’s no reason for you to have to go all the way back through the permitting process.
So, while we are saving lives, preventing further destruction, saving homes, saving businesses, dealing with the emergency at hand, we also have our eyes on the future and are preparing to put forward policies, executive directors next week that would address how we bring our city back together and how we expedite the rebuilding.
And so, again, let me just end by saying that, you know, your leadership — your leadership, period, over the last several years has just been outstanding, Mr. President, Madam Vice President. Madam Vice President, who’s an Angeleno, we know that you know.
When I spoke with you yesterday, you mentioned that you had to evacuate. You weren’t going to mention yourself, but I asked you, and you mentioned that you had to evacuate from your home here while you were in Washington, D.C. And I just want to commend your outstanding leadership and let you know how the residents of Los Angeles are so deeply grateful.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Karen, one of the things I’ve found in my experience in dealing with these disasters — similar, not as devastating than this — is: People take a look at the immediate help, and they’re satisfied, they’re happy. But they look down the road and say, “My God, look at downtown. It’s gone. Look at — how are we going to do this?”
We’re going to need the United States Congress to follow up with appropriations to help provide for significant help for our fellow Americans who need this help to pay for the — these programs that we have because a lot more is going to be c- — be happening.
And now, yield to a woman who’s an expert in all this. She and I have traveled more states that are — flying over fires for the last four years, and we’ve literally observed, from the air or on the ground, more areas burned to the ground — burned to the ground — from Arizona all the way up to Idaho — than the entire state of Maryland. Took it all — to the ground.
And so, we’ve — but we’re used to this but nothing like the concentration that’s here. This is profound.
And so, we got the best person we could.
Go ahead, Deanne.
ADMINISTRATOR CRISWELL: Thank you. Yeah, thank you, Mr. President, Madam Vice President. I mean, you and I, sir, have traveled many different disasters, and I can say from what I’ve seen here yesterday that this is certainly one of the most destructive that you and I have had to — to deal with during our time here.
I had a chance yesterday to talk with the governor and the mayor, to hear some of their immediate concerns, but mostly to start to talk about what this recovery is going to look like.
I had an opportunity to get briefings from the incident command post, both at the Palisades fire as well as the Eaton fire.
And, Madam Vice President, I had a chance to drive through Altadena and see just what the heart of this community is by hearing from the local officials and just witness the amount of loss that they are experiencing and going through. I mean, in addition to the thousands of structures that we hear about that are — that are gone, many of those homes, an entire small-business district — a booming business district in Altadena that has just been burnt to the ground — churches and schools and other public facilities that are just gone.
And so, this is going to be a very complex recovery, but I know that when we all come together and work together through all of our federal partners and bringing in our — our nonprofit and our private-sector partners, that we are going to get through this.
And your approval, sir, of the 100 percent for the debris removal and the emergency protective measures for 180 days is really going to be a game changer in helping to make sure that this recovery gets started off on the right foot.
And the major disaster declaration itself is going to do so much. It’s — so many people, as you heard, are evacuated, and there’s not very many in shelters. And so, we know that so many people are either staying with friends and family or they’re staying in hotels.
And with the changes that we have made to our programs over the last year, we are going to be able to cover most of those costs, if not all of those costs that people are incurring, whether they’re staying with family and friends or they’re staying in hotels, to help ease some of that burden.
And as they register for assistance — so, we’ve already got close to 10,000 people that have registered, but we know that that’s going to continue to go up, and we’re going to send more people into the community to make sure that they register. They’re going to be able to get things to help support that recovery, whether that’s moving into the next-term and longer-term sheltering or their longer-term housing needs to help reimburse for some of the losses and damages, even though we know it’s not going to come close to the total devastation and the total loss that they had.
Working together, again, if Congress approves additional funding, and working with our partners like the SBA, we’re going to really be able to help all of these families with their specific needs and what they’re going to need to do to help start this recovery journey.
And one of the biggest things is going to be debris removal. And, you know, we’ve had lots of conversations with the governor’s team about debris removal. They have an excellent capability here within the state, and we’re going to be able to provide technical assistance through the Army Corps of Engineers to make sure that they’re getting everything done in the most expeditious way possible so they can start that recovery process.
And I think, Mr. President and Madam Vice President, what I would just close with is that, as you have said and as, you know, the governor — and I’ve talked to the governor and the mayor — we are going to be here with you. Governor, Mayor, just know that FEMA, the entire federal family, is going to be here with you throughout this entire recovery journey. We are going to work through the complicated problems together. We’re going to find the right federal resource to meet the needs and to get the outcomes that you want. And we’re going to help every Angeleno with the — the impacts that they’ve had and help them on this road to recovery.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. You know —
MAYOR BASS: Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: — one of the things that —
ADMINISTRATOR CRISWELL: Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: — that you and I have done, Deanne, is we not only have to build back, we have to build back better. There are certain things we can do to prevent things from being — if the same thing occurred — from as much damage occurring. And that costs money, but it also saves money.
There is climate —
ADMINISTRATOR CRISWELL: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: — change. There is climate change. This is part of it. And we have to deal with it.
And the other thing is that, you know, when I was with you, Gov, and we were looking around the state, it looked to me, as I traveled — when I was out with you in — in California,
it — what it reminded me of — it reminded me of — more of a war scene where you had certain targets that were bombarded, where artillery was — just blew them up with no — with — with no rhyme or reason. In other words, you’d have this fire going crazy and burning everything down and three houses being fine —
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Yeah.
THE PRESIDENT: — noth- — nothing is happening.
Or neighborhoods that were still green — I mean, still green, and next to a place that — for example, you know, there was — we were just looking at a Secret Service house that was out there. You know, all the vehicles were melted — melt — melt — yet that house next door still has green shrubbery on it, and, you know, it — the house is fine. There’s only, I think, four or five houses in that 200 — you know, it’s in — in the Pasadena area.
But — but my generic point is, it’s almost like it’s a — it’s a battle scene.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: But, you know, Mr. President —
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Yeah.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: — we saw that in South Carolina, North Carolina —
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, I know. That’s the point.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: — Georgia, and Florida with hurricanes.
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, same thing.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: This is also the nature of, to your point, this changing climate, these extreme weather conditions, not only are they — they volatile and devastating, but there — there is no method necessarily to how — to the impact in terms of the predictability of where it might land, if we’re talking about a hurricane or — or a wildfire.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, for example, we —
THE VICE PRESIDENT: And so, resilience and adaptation becomes more important.
THE PRESIDENT: You know, we found, Gov, that in these other areas, like the hurricanes from North Carolina to Florida, where you saw entire highways devastated —
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
THE PRESIDENT: — coming off the side of the mountains, dropping into —
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, we got to build back the highway a different way —
THE VICE PRESIDENT: That’s right.
THE PRESIDENT: — to make it stronger.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: That’s right.
THE PRESIDENT: We’re — so, we — we’re going to have to deal with this, and we can make it — I know if anybody — any of your constituents are listening and saying, “My, God, don’t tell me about ‘better,’ just tell me when about getting back.” But, you know, we can not only build it back, we can build it back better, God willing.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: A hundred percent. No, it’s — it is remarkable, and it’s — yeah, to your point, particularly as — as the smoke is clearing, you see that, you know, very indelibly and visually here in this fire. These — these newly constructed homes more likely to have survived — those with — with different materials, those with the latest home hardening investments.
And that wou- — the — the chapter, verse, the lesson, the master class in this was the Camp Fire. Remember, we lost 85 lives —
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: — 18,000 structures up there in Paradise, California, and those structures that did survive — and so, we’ve changed our building codes. We — we began to adapt to this new reality.
And I just say this to the deniers out there: You may not believe in science, but you have to believe your own eyes.
You know, Mother Nature is — it’s been said by others — it’s just, you know, the chemistry, biology, and physics — she bats last; she bats a thousand.
There’s been no rain. It’s January — January in Southern California. So, what is “time of year”? None projected in the next many days. There’s been a modest amount since last May here in Southern California. The hots are getting hotter; dries, drier; wets a lot wetter with these atmospheric rivers.
And on that, Mr. President, this is an area that we need to focus right now, and that’s the likelihood that we may see some intense rain and a lot —
THE PRESIDENT: Exactly.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: — of debris flow —
THE PRESIDENT: Exactly.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: — and issues around massive flooding, which often is more deadly than the fires themselves.
THE PRESIDENT: That’s what —
MAYOR BASS: And we —
THE PRESIDENT: — happened in North Carolina. When — when we talked about the hurricane, you saw the entire rivers fill and —
Anyway, there’s a lot we can do though.
MAYOR BASS: You know, I — I do remember when we used to have a fire season. Do you remember that, Governor? You —
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: No. (Laughs.)
MAYOR BASS: — used to have a fire season, right? In your — in your entire term, that has not been the case.
This is January. (Laughs.) Fire season used to be at the end of summer. So, you know, ab- — absolutely correct.
And then we know that that was the reason for such massive, massive devastation.
But, again, you know, sending out your Deanne Criswell — Criswell. It was wonderful to meet you yesterday. Everybody was very excited to know that you were going to be here and to know that FEMA was going to be a resource that they can access right away.
Continuing that is really what is needed right now. And I want to thank you once again.
THE PRESIDENT: The vice president and I have initiated every federal agency, from the Department of Defense on — every federal agency — to be part of this.
And the other thing is, look, you know, I think you get a bad rap. I know you’re getting a bad rap about “these fire hydrants don’t have enough water in them.” Give me a break. Give me a break.
What this is all about is the utilities, understandably — what they did is they cut off power because they’re worried about these high-tension lines coming down and causing more fires in the wind. Right? When they do that, guess what? They shut off the power that controls the ability to pump the water.
And so, now they’re put- — they’re getting generators now. I mean, this is complicated stuff.
You’re going to have a lot of demagogues out there trying to take advantage of it, but you’re doing the right thing. We’re going to get it done, God willing.
And I say to the people of Southern California, “God bless you. Stay strong. Stay strong. We’re not going anywhere. We’re not going anywhere.”
MAYOR BASS: Thank you. Thank you very much.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Thank you, Mr. President, for everything.
THE PRESIDENT: And you know, all kidding aside, you both have my phone number, so —
MAYOR BASS: Yes, we do.
THE PRESIDENT: No — no, I’m for real. Anything that comes up, if you have any ideas.
And — and if you didn’t, I’ve got a California vice president, man.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Yeah, that’s — that helps too.
THE PRESIDENT: She’s wildly focused on this.
MAYOR BASS: The access to both of you is a tremendous benefit.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Yeah.
THE PRESIDENT: All right. Well, thank you very much. Keep in touch, okay?
MAYOR BASS: Okay.
GOVERNOR NEWSOM: Thank you for everything.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
MAYOR BASS: Bye-bye.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Take care, guys.
AIDE: Thanks, press. Thanks, press. Let’s go. Thanks guys. Thank you, press.
(Cross-talk.)
AIDE: All right. Thanks, folks.
(Cross-talk.)
THE PRESIDENT: Whoa. Hey, I’m going to be talking a little later this afternoon about a number of things you’re asking about, from Russian energy to what’s — what’s going on in terms of the economy, but — but focused on this issue now. And let’s focus on this, and we’ll be back on the rest of it.
So, about this, you can ask me questions.
Q Can I just ask you about — you mentioned yesterday that you’re about to leave office. Are you coordinating with the incoming administration about this federal response?
THE PRESIDENT: We are making — everything they know — every single thing we’re doing about the re- — what — the response, my hope is that they will have — at least acknowledge we have some significant experience in this. We’ve done really well on it, and I’m praying that they continue to focus.
Q Mr. President, have you been told that the loss of life is likely to increase significantly in California?
THE PRESIDENT: It is likely it will increase. Whether it’s significantly or not, we don’t know yet. There’s still a lot of people who are unaccounted for. We don’t know where they are. I think this toll is likely to go up. Whether it’s significant or not — pray God it’s not — but it could be.
Q How concerned are you about looting, Mr. President, in this?
THE PRESIDENT: (Inaudible.)
Q How concerned are you about looting and incidents of looting in Los Angeles —
THE PRESIDENT: We are concerned. That’s why I provided more police officers and more military. Look, the DOD is in full (inaudible) with this. They’re providing everything from security through the military, the National Guard; supplementing the National Guard. Because we are — there’s clear evidence that there’s looting. There’s clear evidence that people are going into these surviv- — even places where they’re not — they’re evacuated, and it’s not all rubble, and people are going in and they’re looting.
And so, that’s going to — that — we know that will continue, unless we make sure we — we’re providing the help to prevent it from happening.
Q Mr. President, what will you be seeking from Congress? Is the supplemental for this, specifically, or is it broader for FEMA?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think — I think whether I’m going to be here to suggest it, and I have 10 days left — we have 10 days left, but we’re briefing the opposition — “the opposition” — the incoming administration on what they’re going to have to do.
Look, we have an awful lot of experience in this, unfortunately. Climate change has been real. It’s been real for the last four years of our administration. We’ve seen devastating impacts of consequences of the changes.
And it’s just like — you know, there are — it’s going to take more funding. I mean, look, you’re the most informed people in the country. I’m not being facetious. You cover this every single minute. You’ve seen what these downtowns look like. I mean, they look like bombing. They look like they actually have been blown up — entire sections of the cities blown up. Just to remove the debris — just to remove the debris is an incredibly expensive undertaking.
We’re going to do it for them. We’re going to get it done. We’re going to pay for it, but we’ve got to be prepared to pay for it. And — and when we do, we’ve got to build back better than we did before.
So, thank you.
AIDE: Thank you, press.
(Cross-talk.)
THE PRESIDENT: One l- — one — one last question. There was one last question: Do I have any estimates of cost?
I could tell you, based on my experience, what I think the cost would be, but I’m not going to do that because we don’t know. We want to make sure when we — we get the cost estimate, it’s real. We’ve thought it through. We get — we got the engineers and the scientists in to give us the best assessment of what’s happening.
And one of the things that is going to have to change, and it’s been — I’ve been a — been broken record on this for the last three years: We’ve got to change the way in which we transmit energy. And these high-tension wires that are the things that cause — some — remember we had someone from the other team about, “Well, we just ought to sweep the floor of the — the forest floor so we have no fires.” Come on, man.
You know, we — the idea is if we had these wires underground, it’s a hell of lot safer. We wouldn’t have as many fires as we have now or in the future, but it costs a hell of a lot of money to put it underground.
So, we’re working out all those issues to determine what would be needed — when I say “build back better” — to build back in a way that diminishes the prospect that the change in weather and the environment is going to continue to cause such devastation.
We can protect against much of it, but it’s going to cost a lot of money to do it.
Thank you.
12:50 P.M. EST
The post Remarks by President Biden and Vice President Harris Before Briefing on the Full Federal Response to the Wildfires Across Los Angeles appeared first on The White House.
POTUS 46 Joe Biden
Whitehouse.gov Feed
- The Biden-Harris Administration Record
- Proclamation on the Establishment of the Sáttítla Highlands National Monument
- Proclamation on the Establishment of the Chuckwalla National Monument
- President Biden Announces Presidential Delegation to the Republic of Palau to Attend the Inauguration of His Excellency Surangel S. Whipps, Jr.
- Message to the Congress on the Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to the Situation in the West Bank
- Press Release: Notice to the Congress on the Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to the Situation in the West Bank
- Message to the Senate on the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Arab Emirates on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters
- Message to the Congress on the Agreement for Cooperation Between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Kingdom of Thailand Concerning Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy
- Statement from Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Steps to Support the Cuban People
- Remarks by President Biden, Vice President Harris, and Senior White House and Administration Officials During Briefing on the Full Federal Response to the Wildfires Across Los Angeles
Blog
Disclosures
Legislation
- Press Release: Bills Signed: H.R. 4984
- Press Release: Bills Signed: H.R. 670, H.R. 1318, H.R. 2997, H.R. 3391, H.R. 5103, H.R. 5443, H.R. 5887, H.R. 6062, H.R. 6395, H.R. 6492, H.R. 6852, H.R. 7158, H.R. 7180, H.R. 7365, H.R. 7385, H.R. 7417, H.R. 7507, H.R. 7508…
- Press Release: Bills Signed: H.R. 1555, H.R. 1823, H.R. 3354, H.R. 4136, H.R. 4955, H.R. 5867, H.R. 6116, H.R. 6162, H.R. 6188, H.R. 6244, H.R. 6633, H.R. 6750
- Press Release: Bill Signed: S. 141
- Press Release: Bill Signed: H.R. 5009
- Press Release: Bill Signed: H.R. 10545
- Press Release: Bill Signed: S. 50, S. 310, S. 1478, S. 2781, S. 3475, S. 3613
- Press Release: Bills Signed: H.R. 1432, H.R. 3821, H.R. 5863, S. 91, S. 4243
- Press Release: Bills Signed: H.R. 2950, H.R. 5302, H.R. 5536, H.R. 5799, H.R. 7218, H.R. 7438, H.R. 7764, H.R. 8932
- Press Release: Bills Signed: H.R. 599, H.R. 807, H.R. 1060, H.R. 1098, H.R. 3608, H.R. 3728, H.R. 4190, H.R. 5464, H.R. 5476, H.R. 5490, H.R. 5640, H.R. 5712, H.R. 5861, H.R. 5985, H.R. 6073, H.R. 6249, H.R. 6324, H.R. 6651, H.R. 7192, H.R. 7199, H.R....
Presidential Actions
- Proclamation on the Establishment of the Chuckwalla National Monument
- Message to the Congress on the Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to the Situation in the West Bank
- Press Release: Notice to the Congress on the Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to the Situation in the West Bank
- Message to the Senate on the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Arab Emirates on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters
- Message to the Congress on the Agreement for Cooperation Between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Kingdom of Thailand Concerning Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy
- Letter to the Speaker of the House and President of the Senate on the 2024 Federal Programs and Services Agreement between the Government of the United States and the Government of the Republic of Palau, and the 2024 Federal Programs and Services...
- Memorandum on the Revocation of National Security Presidential Memorandum 5
- Message to the Congress on Transmitting a Report to the Congress with Respect to the Proposed Rescission of Cuba’s Designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism
- Certification of Rescission of Cuba’s Designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism
- Executive Order on Advancing United States Leadership in Artificial Intelligence Infrastructure
Press Briefings
- Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan
- Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell
- Press Gaggle by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre En Route Kenner, LA
- On-the-Record Press Gaggle by White House National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby
- Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre
- On-the-Record Press Gaggle by White House National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby
- Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre
- Press Call by Senior Administration Officials on the U.S. Nationally Determined Contribution
- Background Press Call on the Ongoing Response to Reported Drone Sightings
- Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and National Security Communications Adviser John Kirby
Speeches and Remarks
- Remarks by President Biden, Vice President Harris, and Senior White House and Administration Officials During Briefing on the Full Federal Response to the Wildfires Across Los Angeles
- Remarks by President Biden on Jobs Report and the State of the Economy
- Remarks by President Biden and Vice President Harris Before Briefing on the Full Federal Response to the Wildfires Across Los Angeles
- Remarks by President Biden at a Memorial Service for Former President Jimmy Carter
- Remarks by President Biden During Briefing on the Palisades Wildfire | Santa Monica, CA
- Remarks by Vice President Harris at the Lying in State Ceremony for Former President Jimmy Carter
- Remarks by President Biden at Signing of the Social Security Fairness Act
- Remarks of National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan A New Frontier for the U.S.-India Partnership
- Remarks by President Biden at an Interfaith Prayer Service for Peace and Healing
- Remarks by Vice President Harris After Joint Session of Congress to Certify the 2024 Presidential Election
Statements and Releases
- The Biden-Harris Administration Record
- Proclamation on the Establishment of the Sáttítla Highlands National Monument
- President Biden Announces Presidential Delegation to the Republic of Palau to Attend the Inauguration of His Excellency Surangel S. Whipps, Jr.
- Statement from Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Steps to Support the Cuban People
- BIDEN-HARRIS ADMINISTRATION TAKES ACTION TO COMBAT EMERGING FIREARM THREATS AND IMPROVE SCHOOL-BASED ACTIVE SHOOTER DRILLS
- Readout of President Biden’s Call with President Abdel-Fattah El Sisi of Egypt
- FACT SHEET: The Biden-Harris Administration Advanced Gender Equity and Equality at Home and Abroad
- Letter to the Chairmen and Chair of Certain Congressional Committees on the Suspension of the Right to Bring an Action Under Title III of the Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of 1996
- FACT SHEET: Biden-Harris Administration Highlights Historic Food System Investments
- Readout of the White House Convening on Police Accountability Databases