May 7, 2024
Wednesday, May 8, 2024
At 12:15 PM ET, the Vice President will depart Washington, DC en route to Philadelphia PA. This departure from Joint Base Andrews will be pooled press.
At 1:00 PM ET, the Vice President will arrive in Philadelphia, PA . This arrival at Philadelphia International Airport will be pooled press and open to pre-credentialed media.
At 2:30 PM ET, the Vice President will participate in a campaign event that is pooled press and open to pre-credentialed media.
At 5:05 PM ET, the Vice President will depart Philadelphia, PA en route to Washington, DC. This departure from Philadelphia International Airport will be pooled press.
At 5:55 PM ET, the Vice President will arrive in Washington, DC. This arrival at Joint Base Andrews will be pooled press.
At 7:00 PM ET, the Vice President will deliver remarks at the EMILY's List "We Are EMILY" National Gala in Washington, DC. This event will be pooled press and open to pre-credentialed media.
# # #
Fact Sheet: Third Ministerial Meeting on the Los Angeles DeclarationOn Migration and Protection in Guatemala
Fact Sheet: Third Ministerial Meeting on the Los Angeles DeclarationOn Migration and Protection in Guatemala
May 7, 2024
On Migration and Protection in Guatemala
Nearly two years ago, in response to the historic challenge of migration and forced displacement, President Biden launched the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and Protection, with 20 leaders from across the Western Hemisphere. The Los Angeles Declaration is a first-of-its-kind framework to promote coordinated action under three core pillars: (1) addressing root causes and supporting the integration of migrants to foster long-term stabilization; (2) expanding lawful pathways; and (3) strengthening humane enforcement.
On May 7, 2024, Guatemala hosted the third Los Angeles Declaration Ministerial with foreign ministers and senior representatives from 20 endorsing countries. Secretary of State Antony Blinken led the U.S. delegation, alongside White House Coordinator for the Los Angeles Declaration Marcela Escobari, Department of Homeland Security Acting Deputy Secretary Kristie Canegallo, and USAID Acting Assistant Administrator for Latin America and the Caribbean Michael Camilleri. The United States is grateful for President Arévalo's leadership in hosting the Ministerial.
On behalf of the United States, Secretary Blinken announced $578 million in humanitarian, development, and economic assistance to support partner countries and host communities in responding to urgent humanitarian needs, expanding lawful pathways, and supporting the regularization and integration of migrants. The United States also announced expanded enforcement partnerships to deter irregular migration, including increased consequences for the smuggling networks that prey on vulnerable migrants. The U.S. Government reiterated its commitment to work alongside partners to establish a permanent, regionally-driven Secretariat to ensure that coordinated progress is sustained under the Los Angeles Declaration.
The endorsing countries presented progress toward their commitments under the Los Angeles Declaration and announced the following new initiatives.
Strengthening Humane Enforcement
The United States took steps on May 6 to impose visa restrictions on executives of several Colombian maritime transportation companies for facilitating irregular migration to the United States. These are part of a broader set of U.S. actions targeting owners, executives, and senior officials of companies providing transportation by land, sea, or charter air designed for use primarily by persons intending to irregularly migrate to the United States. Earlier restrictions were placed on individuals in the charter air sector.
The International Air Transport Association and several of its member airlines committed to concerted action to limit the use of commercial flights for irregular migration.
The United States and Costa Rica announced the establishment of a new Biometric Data Sharing Partnership to enhance Costa Rica's biometric collection and matching, and strengthen its border management, thereby increasing safety and security in the region. The United States and Costa Rica also signed a memorandum of understanding outlining bilateral cooperation in countering trafficking in persons.
The United States is deploying additional resources to Guatemala to increase security at land, air, and sea ports throughout the country, increasing screening and vetting in the region.
The United States will expand public awareness of the CBP One™ mobile app among migrants seeking to enter the United States. From January 2023 through the end of March 2024, more than 547,000 individuals have used CBP One™ and presented themselves to a port of entry for processing, instead of risking their lives at the hands of smugglers.
The United States leads the Countering Human Trafficking and Migrant Smuggling Action Package Committee under the Los Angeles Declaration, coordinating international efforts to target, investigate, arrest, and prosecute human smuggling organizations that are preying on vulnerable migrants.
Partner countries reaffirmed their commitment to stem extracontinental irregular migration through increased use of transit visas, passenger vetting, and enforcement measures against entities and individuals that profit from irregular migration.
Expanding Lawful Pathways for Migration and Protection
President Biden rebuilt our refugee resettlement program and led a historic expansion of lawful pathways to the United States and partner countries. Under the President's Safe Mobility Offices initiative to deter irregular migration and expand lawful pathways in the Western Hemisphere, we are on track to increase six-fold the number of approved refugees from the region. Already, over 21,000 individuals have been approved to resettle safely and legally in the United States through the Safe Mobility Offices in Guatemala, Costa Rica, Colombia, and Ecuador.
Guatemala and the United States announced that the Safe Mobility Offices in Guatemala will expand eligibility to include Hondurans, Salvadorans, and Nicaraguans present in Guatemala.
Costa Rica and the United States announced that the Safe Mobility Offices in Costa Rica will expand eligibility to accept Ecuadorians.
The United States reaffirmed its commitment to strengthening lawful pathways. Under the Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela parole process, flows of irregular migrants from these four countries have been reduced significantly, while 435,000 vetted and cleared individuals of these nationalities have been approved to lawfully enter the United States. Applicants must have a U.S.-based financial supporter, pass vetting and background checks, and meet other established criteria to receive advanced travel authorization. Once paroled on a case-by-case basis, CHNV nationals are eligible to apply for work authorization and start work immediately.
USAID announced plans to launch a new regional labor mobility initiative -- "Alianza de Movilidad Laboral para las Américas" or "Labor Neighbors" -- to increase access to lawful temporary labor pathways for new migrant-source and destination countries. The initiative will work with international organizations and other partners to provide technical assistance to countries across the region to identify eligible workers to meet pressing labor needs.
The Department of Labor launched a $3 million project to strengthen protections for workers participating in U.S. temporary foreign worker programs. The United States also announced it is joining the International Labor Organization's Fair Recruitment Initiative and its Advisory Committee. The initiative seeks to ensure that domestic and cross-border recruitment practices are grounded in international labor standards, promote gender equality, and prevent human trafficking and forced labor. These steps reinforce the Biden Administration's Presidential Memorandum on Advancing Worker Empowerment, Rights, and High Labor Standards Globally and its steadfast commitment to protecting worker rights at home and around the world.
Mexico announced that, since 2022, it has issued over 17,500 temporary visas to individuals seeking international protection to address labor shortages in the country. Additionally, Mexico has launched a pilot program in collaboration with the Haitian Embassy, International Organization for Migration, and the Tent Partnership to expand labor pathways, offering job opportunities and work permits to Haitian migrants.
Costa Rica committed to continue modernizing its asylum system through digitalization, data-driven solutions, and adopting practices to streamline refugee status determination with support from UNCHR and the international community.
Canada confirmed it will take UNHCR referrals from the Safe Mobility Offices, as part of Canada's ongoing commitment to this important initiative. Canada has also made significant progress on its commitment to welcome 15,000 migrants from the Americas region. Canada is also investing $75 million Canadian dollars over six years to fund capacity building projects to strengthen migration and protection systems in the region.
Addressing Root Causes and Supporting the Integration of Migrants to Foster Long-term Stabilization
The United States reaffirmed its commitment to addressing the root causes of irregular migration. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation is announcing the approval of a $20 million direct loan to Cosami, a savings and loan cooperative, for low-income mortgages in rural Guatemala. Cosami's assistance will help finance the construction of borrowers' first homes, helping to improve living conditions, create jobs, and promote economic growth in lower-income communities.
With initial support from the U.S. Government, the International Organization for Migration launched a new online platform and data portal for the Los Angeles Declaration, which enables endorsing countries to obtain, share, and disseminate best practices and data.
Ecuador announced that, under a new regularization program, those who have already registered will be able to complete their process to obtain a temporary resident visa and more migrants will be able to apply for a temporary visa.
Colombia announced a plan for regularization of irregular migrants through special permits for parents and legal guardians of children with valid Temporary Protective Status. Colombia also announced a new special permanent visa for Latin American and Caribbean migrants without regular status in the country. The Colombian government estimates these actions will benefit up to 600,000 individuals.
Costa Rica committed to expand the Special Temporary Category regularization pathway and reduce barriers to access with continued assistance from the international community.
May 7, 2024
Readout of President Biden's Meeting with President Iohannis of Romania
President Biden welcomed Romanian President Klaus Iohannis to the White House today to celebrate Romania's 20^th anniversary as a member of the NATO Alliance. President Biden thanked Romania for graciously hosting U.S. servicemembers and for its commitment to security in NATO's Eastern Flank, including in the Black Sea region. President Biden applauded Romania's defense investments, which have consistently exceeded its NATO pledge to spend at least 2 percent of its GDP on defense. The leaders reaffirmed their steadfast support for Ukraine as it defends itself against Russia's senseless aggression, and President Biden expressed his appreciation for Romania's support to Ukrainian refugees and efforts to move Ukrainian grain to market.
Both leaders agreed that bilateral cooperation on energy security is critical. They noted this is one of many areas of our growing economic and commercial relationship.
Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with President Iohannis of Romania
Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with President Iohannis of Romania
President Biden welcomed Romanian President Klaus Iohannis to the White House today to celebrate Romania's 20thanniversary as a member of the NATO Alliance. President Biden thanked Romania for graciously hosting U.S. servicemembers and for its commitment to security in NATO's Eastern Flank, including in the Black Sea region. President Biden applauded Romania's defense investments, which have consistently exceeded its NATO pledge to spend at least 2 percent of its GDP on defense. The leaders reaffirmed their steadfast support for Ukraine as it defends itself against Russia's senseless aggression, and President Biden expressed his appreciation for Romania's support to Ukrainian refugees and efforts to move Ukrainian grain to market.
Both leaders agreed that bilateral cooperation on energy security is critical. They noted this is one of many areas of our growing economic and commercial relationship.
May 7, 2024
This afternoon, the President met with CEOs from a range of industries, including manufacturing, banking, clean energy, and construction. The CEOs discussed how the President's historic investment agenda at home, coupled with renewed alliances abroad, is creating strong and stable conditions for businesses and workers. The President and business leaders agreed on the importance of continuing government-enabled, private sector-led investments for strong economic growth and U.S. leadership in the global economy.
Industry Participants
Revathi Advaithi, Chief Executive Officer, Flex
Roger Altman, Founder and Senior Chairman, Evercore
Brendan Bechtel, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Bechtel Group
Ursula Burns, Retired Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Xerox
Anthony Capuano, President and Chief Executive Officer, Marriott International
Jane Fraser, Chief Executive Officer, Citi
Scott Kirby, Chief Executive Officer, United Airlines
Wendell P. Weeks, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Corning
Administration Participants
Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen
Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo
Chief of Staff Jeff Zients
Counselor to the President Steve Ricchetti
National Economic Advisor Lael Brainard
Senior Advisor to the President and Director of Public Engagement Steve Benjamin
Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo
Readout of President Joe Biden’s Meeting with CEOs
Readout of President Joe Biden’s Meeting with CEOs
May 7, 2024
Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill Biden at Event to Honor Memory of World War I Service Members
The East Room
Welcome to the White House!
"They were mortal, but they were unconquerable." Those are the words etched into the stone of the National World War I Memorial.
Through DC's wilting heat and beating rain, the memorial shares the echoes of our history, of the heroes – who gave their all so that others could be free, for the hope that our world could know peace. That spirit lives on in the service members who returned, and the families who served alongside them.
The spouses and children left on our shores, who watched a piece of their hearts walk away, who waited – with love and hope – for their service members to come home. I know so many in this room are part of that legacy – have family who served in World War I. America will always remember your family's sacrifice. And now, we can honor it for the world to see in our nation's front yard, because of all of you.
Military spouses and children may not wear the uniform, but they serve our country too. That was true a century ago and it's true now.
That's why I started Joining Forces, my White House initiative to support military and veteran families, caregivers, and survivors.
The Bidens are a military family. My father was a Navy Signalman in World War II. And our son, Major Beau Biden, served for a year in Iraq as part of the Delaware Army National Guard. So, this is personal to us.
I know so many of you have worked long and hard to bring this memorial to Washington. Your work commemorates a generation who changed our world with their courage and sacrifice. And as we stand before the rippling water and lines of soldiers, we feel our history weaving with our present, stitching us to something greater than we are alone.
As your First Lady, as a military mom and military daughter, with all my heart, thank you.
Now, please welcome, someone who has put so much heart and hard work into making this memorial possible, Chairman Hamby.
Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill Biden at Event to Honor Memory of World War I Service Members
Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill Biden at Event to Honor Memory of World War I Service Members
The East Room
Welcome to the White House!
"They were mortal, but they were unconquerable." Those are the words etched into the stone of the National World War I Memorial.
Through DC's wilting heat and beating rain, the memorial shares the echoes of our history, of the heroes – who gave their all so that others could be free, for the hope that our world could know peace. That spirit lives on in the service members who returned, and the families who served alongside them.
The spouses and children left on our shores, who watched a piece of their hearts walk away, who waited – with love and hope – for their service members to come home. I know so many in this room are part of that legacy – have family who served in World War I. America will always remember your family's sacrifice. And now, we can honor it for the world to see in our nation's front yard, because of all of you.
Military spouses and children may not wear the uniform, but they serve our country too. That was true a century ago and it's true now.
That's why I started Joining Forces, my White House initiative to support military and veteran families, caregivers, and survivors.
The Bidens are a military family. My father was a Navy Signalman in World War II. And our son, Major Beau Biden, served for a year in Iraq as part of the Delaware Army National Guard. So, this is personal to us.
I know so many of you have worked long and hard to bring this memorial to Washington. Your work commemorates a generation who changed our world with their courage and sacrifice. And as we stand before the rippling water and lines of soldiers, we feel our history weaving with our present, stitching us to something greater than we are alone.
As your First Lady, as a military mom and military daughter, with all my heart, thank you.
Now, please welcome, someone who has put so much heart and hard work into making this memorial possible, Chairman Hamby.
May 7, 2024
On Thursday, May 16, Vice President Kamala Harris will return to Milwaukee, WI for the third stop on her nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour. This will be her fourth visit to the state this year and her eighth since being sworn in.
Vice President Harris began her Economic Opportunity Tour with a moderated conversation in Atlanta, GA on April 29 followed by a speech in Detroit, MI earlier this week. During each stop, the Vice President is highlighting how the Biden-Harris Administration has built economic opportunity, supported communities, and delivered historic investments for the American people. This includes making unprecedented investments in small businesses and achieving the fastest creation of
Black-owned small businesses in more than 30 years, creating a record number of jobs, increasing access to capital for underserved communities, erasing medical debt, forgiving more student loan debt than any administration in history and boosting investments in education, making housing more affordable, lowering child care costs, and increasing the wealth of American families. She is being joined on the tour by Administration officials, members of Congress, and local leaders.
Last month, Vice President Harris visited La Crosse to convene nursing home care workers for an announcement about two final rules to establish minimum staffing requirements for federally funded nursing homes, and help raise pay for home and community-based service workers. In March, she visited Madison to highlight the Biden-Harris Administration's investments in clean energy infrastructure and tout a new Executive Order to expand
registered apprenticeship programs while creating good-paying union jobs. In January, she kicked off her nationwide Fight for Reproductive Freedoms tour with a speech in Waukesha County.
Media interested in covering this Economic Opportunity Tour stop in Milwaukee should RSVP HERE by 12:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday, May 15.
Media interested in covering the Vice President's arrival at Milwaukee Mitchell International Airport should RSVP HERE by 12:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday, May 15.
# # #
May 7, 2024
At 6:00 PM ET, in recognition of National Teacher Appreciation Week, First Lady Jill Biden will host a virtual appreciation event for educators with the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association . This South Court auditorium event will be open to pre-credentialed media and livestreamed at WhiteHouse.gov/live . For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Wednesday, May 8 th at 11:00 AM ET.
May 7, 2024
AND PRESIDENT IOHANNIS OF ROMANIA
BEFORE BILATERAL MEETING
Oval Office
2:15 P.M. EDT
PRESIDENT BIDEN: Well, Mr. President, welcome to the White House. Welcome back to the Oval Office.
PRESIDENT IOHANNIS: Thank you.
PRESIDENT BIDEN: We were reminiscing for a moment before you came in that, back when I was a senator, 180 years ago, I fought very hard for Romania's admission to NATO. And you -- you've exceeded every expectation.
And 20 years ago, when you joined NATO for real, the -- and every year since, our nations have grown only closer, in my view -- closer and closer together.
And we see it in Romania and American troops serving side by side across NATO, and including in your country. I believe there's about 1,800 American forces there. We thank you for that. And -- and we see our work in strengthening NATO's eastern flank.
And I want to thank you, Mr. President, for your leadership, especially in the Black Sea. You've been incredible. You've stood up, and the help you've provided for Ukraine is -- is real. It's significant.
The -- the unified support for the people of Ukraine -- you've allowed a number of refugees to come across, be in your country -- about 8,000, they tell me. A whole lot. And that's really something. And, also, your security assistance to Ukraine, moving Ukrainian grain.
And I want you to know the United States is committed to standing with you.
Today, we lay the foundation for the next 20 years. I look forward to our discussions and just say that we've got a lot to discuss, so I'm looking forward to it.
The floor is yours, sir.
PRESIDENT IOHANNIS: Thank you very much, Mr. President. Thank you for making this meeting possible on a short notice.
I believe it is timely. And I believe that you're absolutely right: We have a lot of issues to discuss.
Let me just start by saying that we managed not only to -- to be members of NATO, thanks to you and others who really fought for us -- 20 years since Romania is a proud member of NATO -- but we also managed to work on our bilateral relationship, which became stronger and stronger.
We have a Strategic Partnership. And I think by making this partnership strong, we also managed to make the transatlantic link strong. In my opinion, a transatlantic link is the cornerstone of our democratic way of -- of life, our values.
And so, this is obviously linked to the way we see the future of our nations; the way -- how we manage to make our nations work better, live better; how we manage to guarantee the security of our peoples; how we manage to make our economies grow.
And so, we have, really, a lot of issues we can discuss. But also, sometimes I believe it is important to underline that we managed to move ahead and that we managed to have very positive results. And, of course, we will discuss things we still have to achieve.
And so, maybe just an example: We are working together on a visa waiver for Romania. If this goes well, hopefully, not before long, we will have results.
But unfortunately, the most important issue is to find the way to reinstall peace in Europe. And helping Ukraine and the Ukrainians -- you set such a huge example how this can be done.
Romania is trying its best, and we have some pretty good results. I think it is decent. But nevertheless, we have to find ways to prevent Russia to win this war in Ukraine. And here we have to stay united. We have to work together. And we will, as far as I can see.
So, a lot of issues, Mr. President.
PRESIDENT BIDEN: Well, there's a lot of issues.
Let me just say one thing. I don't think there's any NATO partner who has a stronger commitment to the Euro-Atlantic alliance than Romania and the United States. And it's a value set. It's what we believe.
PRESIDENT IOHANNIS: Absolutely.
PRESIDENT BIDEN: And you've stepped up, and you've been incredible. And what you've done and what we're going to continue to do together, I think, is going to be significant, not only for Europe but for the whole world.
So, thank you.
PRESIDENT IOHANNIS: Thank you.
PRESIDENT BIDEN: Thank you all.
2:20 P.M. EDT
Remarks by President Biden and President Iohannis of Romania Before Bilateral Meeting
Remarks by President Biden and President Iohannis of Romania Before Bilateral Meeting
May 7, 2024
AT THE U.S. HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM'S
ANNUAL DAYS OF REMEMBRANCE CEREMONY
U.S. Capitol
Washington, D.C
11:52 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Please.
Thank you, Stu Eizenstat, for that introduction, for your leadership of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. You're a true scholar, a statesman, and a -- a dear friend.
Speaker Johnson, Leader Jeffries, members of Congress, and, especially, the survivors of the Holocaust. If my mother were here, she would look at you and say, "God love you all. God love you all."
Abe Foxman and all other survivors who embody absolute courage and dignity and grace are here as well.
During these sacred Days of Remembrance, we grieve. We give voice to the 6 million Jews who were systematically targeted and murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators during World War Two. We honor the memory of victims, the pain of survivors, the bravery of heroes who stood up to Hitler's unspeakable evil. And we recommit to heading and heeding the lessons that [of] one of the darkest chapters in human history, to revitalize and realize the responsibility of "never again."
Never again, simply translated for me, means "never forget." Never forget. Never forgetting means we must keep telling the story. We must keep teaching the truth. We must keep teaching our children and our grandchildren.
And the truth is we are at risk of people not knowing the truth.
That's why, growing up, my dad taught me and my siblings about the horrors of the Shoah at our family dinner table. That's why I visited Yad Vashem with my family as a senator, as vice president, and as president. And that's why I took my grandchildren to Dachau, so they could see and bear witness to the perils of indifference, the complicity of silence in the face of evil that they knew was happening.
Germany, 1933. Hitler and his Nazi party rise to power by rekindling one of the world's oldest forms of prejudice and hate: antisemitism. His rule didn't begin with mass murder. It started slowly across economic, political, social, and cultural life: propaganda demonizing Jews; boycotts of Jewish businesses; synagogues defaced with swastikas; harassment of Jews in the street and in the schools; antisemitic demonstrations, pogroms, organized riots.
With the indifference of the world, Hitler knew he could expand his reign of terror by eliminating Jews from Germany, to annihilate Jews across Europe through genocide the Nazi's called the "Final Solution" -- concentration camps, gas chambers, mass shootings.
By the time the war ended, 6 million Jews -- one out of every three Jews in the entire world -- were murdered.
This ancient hatred of Jews didn't begin with the Holocaust; it didn't end with the Holocaust, either, or after -- or even after our victory in World War Two. This hatred continues to lie deep in the hearts of too many people in the world, and it requires our continued vigilance and outspokenness.
That hatred was brought to life on October 7 th in 2023. On a sacred Jewish holiday, the terrorist group Hamas unleashed the deadliest day of the Jewish people since the Holocaust.
Driven by ancient desire to wipeout the Jewish people off the face of the Earth, over 1,200 innocent people -- babies, parents, grandparents -- slaughtered in their kibbutz, massacred at a musical festival, brutally raped, mutilated, and sexually assaulted. Thousands more carrying wounds, bullets, and shrapnel from the memory of that terrible day they endured. Hundreds taken hostage, including survivors of the Shoah.
Now, here we are, not 75 years later but just seven and a half months later, and people are already forgetting. They're already forgetting that Hamas unleased this terror, that it was Hamas that brutalized Israelis, that it was Hamas who took and continues to hold hostages. I have not forgotten, nor have you, and we will not forget.
And as Jews around the world still cope with the atrocities and trauma of that day and its aftermath, we've seen a ferocious surge of antisemitism in America and around the world: vicious propaganda on social media, Jews forced to keep their -- hide their kippahs under baseball hats, tuck their Jewish stars into their shirts.
On college campuses, Jewish students blocked, harassed, attacked while walking to class.
Antisemitism -- antisemitic posters, slogans calling for the annihilation of Israel, the world's only Jewish State.
Too many people denying, downplaying, rationalizing, ignoring the horrors of the Holocaust and October 7 th, including Hamas's appalling use of sexual violence to torture and terrorize Jews.
It's absolutely despicable, and it must stop.
Silence -- -- silence and denial can hide much, but it can erase nothing. Some injustices are so heinous, so horrific, so grievous, they cannot be muri- -- buried, no matter how hard people try.
In my view, a major lesson of the Holocaust is, as mentioned earlier, it's not -- was not inevitable. We know hate never goes away; it only hides. And given a little oxygen, it comes out from under the rocks.
But we also know what stops hate. One thing: all of us.
The late Rabbi Jonathan Sacks described antisemitism as a virus that has survived and mutated over time. Together, we cannot continue to let that happen.
We have to remember our basic principles as a nation. We have an obligation -- we have an obligation to learn the lessons of history so we don't surrender our future to the horrors of the past. We must give hate no safe harbor against anyone -- anyone.
From the very founding -- our very founding, Jewish Americans, who represent only about 2 percent of the U.S. population, have helped lead the cause of freedom for everyone in our nation. From that experience, we know scapegoating and demonizing any minority is a threat to every minority and the very foundation of our democracy.
So, in moments like this, we have to put these principles that we're talking about into action.
I understand people have strong beliefs and deep convictions about the world. In America, we respect and protect the fundamental right to free speech, to debate and disagree, to protest peacefully and make our voices heard.
I understand. That's America.
But there is no place on any campus in America -- any place in America -- for antisemitism or hate speech or threats of violence of any kind -- -- whether against Jews or anyone else.
Violent attacks, destroying property is not peaceful protest. It's against the law. And we are not a lawless country. We're a civil society. We uphold the rule of law.
And no one should have to hide or be brave just to be themselves.
To the Jewish community, I want you to know I see your fear, your hurt, and your pain.
Let me reassure you, as your President, you are not alone. You belong. You always have, and you always will.
And my commitment to the safety of the Jewish people, the security of Israel, and its right to exist as an independent Jewish state is ironclad, even when we disagree.
My administration is working around the clock to free remaining hostages, just as we have freed hostages already, and we will not rest until we bring them all home.
My administration, with our Second Gentleman's leadership, has launched our nation's first National Sec- -- Strategy to Counter Antisemitism that's mobilizing the full force of the federal government to protect Jewish communities.
But -- but we know this is not the work of government alone or Jews alone. That's why I'm calling on all Americans to stand united against antisemitism and hate in all its forms.
My dear friend, and he became a friend, the late Elie Wiesel, said, quote, "One person of integrity can make a difference." We have to remember that now more than ever.
Here in Emancipation Hall in the U.S. Capitol, among the towering statues of history, is a bronze bust of Raoul Wallenberg. Born in Sweden as a Lutheran, he was a businessman and a diplomat. While stationed in Hungary during World War Two, he used diplomatic cover to hide and rescue about 100,000 Jews over a six-month period.
Among them was a 16-year-old Jewish boy who escaped a Nazi labor camp. After the war ended, that boy received a scholarship from the Hillel Foundation to study in America. He came to New York City penniless but determined to turn his pain into purpose, along with his wife, also a Holocaust survivor. He became a renowned economist and foreign policy thinker, eventually making his way to this very Capitol on the staff of a first-term senator.
That Jewish refugee was Tom Lantos, and that senator was me.
Tom and his wife, Annette, and their family became dear friends to me and my family. Tom would go on to become the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to Congress, where he became a leading voice on civil rights and human rights around the world.
Tom never met Raoul, who was taken prisoner by the Soviets, never to be heard from again. But through Tom's efforts, Raoul's bust is here in the Capitol.
He was also given honorary U.S. citizenship -- only the second person ever, after Winston Churchill.
And the Holocaust Museum here in Washington is located on a roal- -- a road in Raoul's name.
The story of the power of a single person to put aside our differences, to see our common humanity, to stand up to hate. And it's an ancient story of resilience from immense pain, persecution to find hope, purpose, and meaning in life we try to live and share with one another. That story endures.
Let me close with this. I know these Days of Remembrance fall on difficult times. But we all do well to remember these days also fall during the month we celebrate Jewish American heritage -- a heritage that stretches from our earliest days to enrich every single part of American life today.
Great American -- great Jewish American named Tom Lantos used the phrase, "The veneer of civilization is paper thin. We are its guardians, and we can never rest."
My fellow Americans, we must -- we must be those guardians. We must never rest. We must rise against hate, meet across the divide, see our common humanity.
And God bless the victims and survivors of the Shoah.
May the resilient hearts, the courageous spirit, and the eternal flame of faith of the Jewish people forever shine their light on America and around the world, pray God.
Thank you all.
12:06 P.M. EDT
Remarks by President Biden at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's Annual Days of Remembrance Ceremony
Remarks by President Biden at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Annual Days of Remembrance Ceremony
U.S. Capitol
Washington, D.C.
11:52 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. [Applause] Thank you, thank you, thank you. Please.
Thank you, Stu Eizenstat, for that introduction, for your leadership of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. You're a true scholar, a statesman, and a — a dear friend.
Speaker Johnson, Leader Jeffries, members of Congress, and, especially, the survivors of the Holocaust. If my mother were here, she would look at you and say, "God love you all. God love you all."
Abe Foxman and all other survivors who embody absolute courage and dignity and grace are here as well.
During these sacred Days of Remembrance, we grieve. We give voice to the 6 million Jews who were systematically targeted and murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators during World War Two. We honor the memory of victims, the pain of survivors, the bravery of heroes who stood up to Hitler's unspeakable evil. And we recommit to heading and heeding the lessons that [of] one of the darkest chapters in human history, to revitalize and realize the responsibility of "never again."
Never again, simply translated for me, means "never forget." Never forget. Never forgetting means we must keep telling the story. We must keep teaching the truth. We must keep teaching our children and our grandchildren.
And the truth is we are at risk of people not knowing the truth.
That's why, growing up, my dad taught me and my siblings about the horrors of the Shoah at our family dinner table. That's why I visited Yad Vashem with my family as a senator, as vice president, and as president. And that's why I took my grandchildren to Dachau, so they could see and bear witness to the perils of indifference, the complicity of silence in the face of evil that they knew was happening.
Germany, 1933. Hitler and his Nazi party rise to power by rekindling one of the world's oldest forms of prejudice and hate: antisemitism. His rule didn't begin with mass murder. It started slowly across economic, political, social, and cultural life: propaganda demonizing Jews; boycotts of Jewish businesses; synagogues defaced with swastikas; harassment of Jews in the street and in the schools; antisemitic demonstrations, pogroms, organized riots.
With the indifference of the world, Hitler knew he could expand his reign of terror by eliminating Jews from Germany, to annihilate Jews across Europe through genocide the Nazi's called the "Final Solution" — concentration camps, gas chambers, mass shootings.
By the time the war ended, 6 million Jews — one out of every three Jews in the entire world — were murdered.
This ancient hatred of Jews didn't begin with the Holocaust; it didn't end with the Holocaust, either, or after — or even after our victory in World War Two. This hatred continues to lie deep in the hearts of too many people in the world, and it requires our continued vigilance and outspokenness.
That hatred was brought to life on October 7th in 2023. On a sacred Jewish holiday, the terrorist group Hamas unleashed the deadliest day of the Jewish people since the Holocaust.
Driven by ancient desire to wipeout the Jewish people off the face of the Earth, over 1,200 innocent people — babies, parents, grandparents — slaughtered in their kibbutz, massacred at a musical festival, brutally raped, mutilated, and sexually assaulted. Thousands more carrying wounds, bullets, and shrapnel from the memory of that terrible day they endured. Hundreds taken hostage, including survivors of the Shoah.
Now, here we are, not 75 years later but just seven and a half months later, and people are already forgetting. They're already forgetting that Hamas unleased this terror, that it was Hamas that brutalized Israelis, that it was Hamas who took and continues to hold hostages. I have not forgotten, nor have you, and we will not forget. [Applause]
And as Jews around the world still cope with the atrocities and trauma of that day and its aftermath, we've seen a ferocious surge of antisemitism in America and around the world: vicious propaganda on social media, Jews forced to keep their — hide their kippahs under baseball hats, tuck their Jewish stars into their shirts.
On college campuses, Jewish students blocked, harassed, attacked while walking to class.
Antisemitism — antisemitic posters, slogans calling for the annihilation of Israel, the world's only Jewish State.
Too many people denying, downplaying, rationalizing, ignoring the horrors of the Holocaust and October 7th, including Hamas's appalling use of sexual violence to torture and terrorize Jews.
It's absolutely despicable, and it must stop.
Silence — [applause] — silence and denial can hide much, but it can erase nothing. Some injustices are so heinous, so horrific, so grievous, they cannot be muri- — buried, no matter how hard people try.
In my view, a major lesson of the Holocaust is, as mentioned earlier, it's not — was not inevitable. We know hate never goes away; it only hides. And given a little oxygen, it comes out from under the rocks.
But we also know what stops hate. One thing: all of us.
The late Rabbi Jonathan Sacks described antisemitism as a virus that has survived and mutated over time. Together, we cannot continue to let that happen.
We have to remember our basic principles as a nation. We have an obligation — we have an obligation to learn the lessons of history so we don't surrender our future to the horrors of the past. We must give hate no safe harbor against anyone — anyone.
From the very founding — our very founding, Jewish Americans, who represent only about 2 percent of the U.S. population, have helped lead the cause of freedom for everyone in our nation. From that experience, we know scapegoating and demonizing any minority is a threat to every minority and the very foundation of our democracy.
So, in moments like this, we have to put these principles that we're talking about into action.
I understand people have strong beliefs and deep convictions about the world. In America, we respect and protect the fundamental right to free speech, to debate and disagree, to protest peacefully and make our voices heard.
I understand. That's America.
But there is no place on any campus in America — any place in America — for antisemitism or hate speech or threats of violence of any kind — [applause] — whether against Jews or anyone else.
Violent attacks, destroying property is not peaceful protest. It's against the law. And we are not a lawless country. We're a civil society. We uphold the rule of law.
And no one should have to hide or be brave just to be themselves. [Applause]
To the Jewish community, I want you to know I see your fear, your hurt, and your pain.
Let me reassure you, as your President, you are not alone. You belong. You always have, and you always will.
And my commitment to the safety of the Jewish people, the security of Israel, and its right to exist as an independent Jewish state is ironclad, even when we disagree. [Applause]
My administration is working around the clock to free remaining hostages, just as we have freed hostages already, and we will not rest until we bring them all home. [Applause]
My administration, with our Second Gentleman's leadership, has launched our nation's first National Sec- — Strategy to Counter Antisemitism that's mobilizing the full force of the federal government to protect Jewish communities.
But — but we know this is not the work of government alone or Jews alone. That's why I'm calling on all Americans to stand united against antisemitism and hate in all its forms.
My dear friend, and he became a friend, the late Elie Wiesel, said, quote, "One person of integrity can make a difference." We have to remember that now more than ever.
Here in Emancipation Hall in the U.S. Capitol, among the towering statues of history, is a bronze bust of Raoul Wallenberg. Born in Sweden as a Lutheran, he was a businessman and a diplomat. While stationed in Hungary during World War Two, he used diplomatic cover to hide and rescue about 100,000 Jews over a six-month period.
Among them was a 16-year-old Jewish boy who escaped a Nazi labor camp. After the war ended, that boy received a scholarship from the Hillel Foundation to study in America. He came to New York City penniless but determined to turn his pain into purpose, along with his wife, also a Holocaust survivor. He became a renowned economist and foreign policy thinker, eventually making his way to this very Capitol on the staff of a first-term senator.
That Jewish refugee was Tom Lantos, and that senator was me.
Tom and his wife, Annette, and their family became dear friends to me and my family. Tom would go on to become the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to Congress, where he became a leading voice on civil rights and human rights around the world.
Tom never met Raoul, who was taken prisoner by the Soviets, never to be heard from again. But through Tom's efforts, Raoul's bust is here in the Capitol.
He was also given honorary U.S. citizenship — only the second person ever, after Winston Churchill.
And the Holocaust Museum here in Washington is located on a roal- — a road in Raoul's name.
The story of the power of a single person to put aside our differences, to see our common humanity, to stand up to hate. And it's an ancient story of resilience from immense pain, persecution to find hope, purpose, and meaning in life we try to live and share with one another. That story endures.
Let me close with this. I know these Days of Remembrance fall on difficult times. But we all do well to remember these days also fall during the month we celebrate Jewish American heritage — a heritage that stretches from our earliest days to enrich every single part of American life today.
Great American — great Jewish American named Tom Lantos used the phrase, "The veneer of civilization is paper thin. We are its guardians, and we can never rest."
My fellow Americans, we must — we must be those guardians. We must never rest. We must rise against hate, meet across the divide, see our common humanity.
And God bless the victims and survivors of the Shoah.
May the resilient hearts, the courageous spirit, and the eternal flame of faith of the Jewish people forever shine their light on America and around the world, pray God.
Thank you all. [Applause]
12:06 P.M. EDT
Bills Signed: H.R. 292, H.R. 996, H.R. 2379, H.R. 2754, H.R. 3865, H.R. 3944, H.R. 3947, S. 474
Bills Signed: H.R. 292, H.R. 996, H.R. 2379, H.R. 2754, H.R. 3865, H.R. 3944, H.R. 3947, S. 474
On Tuesday, May 7, 2024, the President signed into law:
H.R. 292, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 24355 Creekside Road in Santa Clarita, California, as the William L. Reynolds Post Office Building;
Thank you to Representative Mike Garcia and the California delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 996, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 3901 MacArthur Blvd., in New Orleans, Louisiana, as the Dr. Rudy Lombard Post Office;
Thank you to Representative Troy Carter, Senators Cassidy and Kennedy, and the Louisiana delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 2379, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 616 East Main Street in St. Charles, Illinois, as the Veterans of the Vietnam War Memorial Post Office;
Thank you to Representative Krishnamoorthi and the Illinois delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 2754, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 2395 East Del Mar Boulevard in Laredo, Texas, as the Lance Corporal David Lee Espinoza, Lance Corporal Juan Rodrigo Rodriguez and Sergeant Roberto Arizola Jr. Post Office Building;
Thank you to Representative Cuellar, Senators Cornyn and Cruz, and the Texas delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 3865, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 101 South 8th Street in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, as the Lieutenant William D. Lebo Post Office Building;
Thank you to Representative Meuser, Senators Casey and Fetterman, and the Pennsylvania delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 3944, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 120 West Church Street in Mount Vernon, Georgia, as the Second Lieutenant Patrick Palmer Calhoun Post Office;
Thank you to Representative Allen and the Georgia delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 3947, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 859 North State Road 21 in Melrose, Florida, as the Pamela Jane Rock Post Office Building; and
Thank you to Representative Bean and the Florida delegation for their leadership.; and
S. 474, the "Revising Existing Procedures On Reporting via Technology Act" or the "REPORT Act," which requires electronic communication service providers and remote computing service providers to submit reports to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children when they become aware of certain violations involving the online sexual exploitation of children.
Thank you to Senators Blackburn and Ossoff, and Representatives Laurel Lee, Susie Lee, Dean, and Miller-Meeks, for their leadership.
May 7, 2024
H.R. 292, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 24355 Creekside Road in Santa Clarita, California, as the William L. Reynolds Post Office Building;
Thank you to Representative Mike Garcia and the California delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 996, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 3901 MacArthur Blvd., in New Orleans, Louisiana, as the Dr. Rudy Lombard Post Office;
Thank you to Representative Troy Carter, Senators Cassidy and Kennedy, and the Louisiana delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 2379, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 616 East Main Street in St. Charles, Illinois, as the Veterans of the Vietnam War Memorial Post Office;
Thank you to Representative Krishnamoorthi and the Illinois delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 2754, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 2395 East Del Mar Boulevard in Laredo, Texas, as the Lance Corporal David Lee Espinoza, Lance Corporal Juan Rodrigo Rodriguez and Sergeant Roberto Arizola Jr. Post Office Building;
Thank you to Representative Cuellar, Senators Cornyn and Cruz, and the Texas delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 3865, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 101 South 8 th Street in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, as the Lieutenant William D. Lebo Post Office Building;
Thank you to Representative Meuser, Senators Casey and Fetterman, and the Pennsylvania delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 3944, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 120 West Church Street in Mount Vernon, Georgia, as the Second Lieutenant Patrick Palmer Calhoun Post Office;
Thank you to Representative Allen and the Georgia delegation for their leadership;
H.R. 3947, which designates the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 859 North State Road 21 in Melrose, Florida, as the Pamela Jane Rock
Post Office Building; and
Thank you to Representative Allen and the Georgia delegation for their leadership; and
S. 474, the "Revising Existing Procedures On Reporting via Technology Act" or the "REPORT Act," which requires electronic communication service providers and remote computing service providers to submit reports to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children when they become aware of certain violations involving the online sexual exploitation of children.
Thank you to Senators Blackburn and Ossoff, and Representatives Laurel Lee, Susie Lee, Dean, and Miller-Meeks, for their leadership.
May 7, 2024
AT A CINCO DE MAYO RECEPTION
Rose Garden
5:15 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Happy Cinco de Mayo!
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT:
AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you, thank you, thank you.
I'm Jill Biden's husband, Joe.
Doug, our Second Gentleman, is here also. Doug, good to see you, pal.
And, Jaime, thanks for that introduction, pal. I've always looked up to you. Congratulations on a great rookie season in the NBA.
As you said, you stand on the shoulders of those who came before you. Future generations will stand on your 6'6" shoulders -- -- and be a hell of a lot taller, man.
Thanks, Pete and Nanette and all the members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus here today. I want to publicly say: We're going to meet, I promise. Okay? We got --
And when I was elected, I promised my administration would look like America. And I'm proud to say it does.
I want to thank my Cabinet members here today: Secretary Becerra, where are you? -- -- Secretary Cardona -- -- Administrator Guzman.
Former Cabinet members of the O-Biden -- the Obam- -- Obama-Biden administration, Tom Perez -- Tom, where are you?
Well, I'll tell you what, on Friday, I had the honor of bestowing our nation's highest civilian awards on 19 incredible people -- two trailblazing Hisp- -- Hispanic Americans as well: Teresa Romo -- [DEL: Romeo :DEL] [Romero] -- excuse me -- Teresa [DEL: Romeo :DEL] [Romero], the first Latina to lead the national union, an American -- a national union, the [DEL: American :DEL] [United] Farm Workers.
And if you look inside the door here, I've got only a few busts in there, and one of them is of Cesar Chavez, who started the whole deal.
And Dr. [DEL: Elaine :DEL] [Ellen] Ochoa, the first Latina to travel to space. I'm glad she decided to come home.
In the land of possibilities, they represent something essential about America: We are a nation of immigrants, and we shouldn't forget it. No, we -- not -- it's why we're so good, why we're so strong, why we have such potential.
We're a nation of dreamers. As Cinco de Mayo represents, we're a nation of freedom. That's America -- the America we share; the America we're fighting for together.
And the plan is working. You know, we've created 15 million jobs since we took office; record-low unemployment for among -- among Latinos; the fastest small-business creation in more than a decade -- -- as we've doubled loans to Latino-owned businesses.
We've invested a record $15 billion in Hispanic-serving colleges and universities. And we -- we've -- we've relieved student debt for 4.6 million -- -- a burden disproportionately falling on Latino borrowers.
And you're the future of our nation. You know, everybody says why am I so -- why have I always been so fundamentally focused on Latinos. Simple proposition: You make up 28 percent of the students in America. Think -- think about it. Twenty-eight percent of all the students in high school and grade school in America are Latino. And I want to tell you, the idea we're not going to pay attention is the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
Look, we have to have your backs, and you've had ours.
In March, in Nevada, I invited the most ambitious housing plan for decades to come into being. For example, it boosts construction on rental units and lowers rent. To crack down on discrimination by home appraisers so Latino homes are finally valued as fairly as they were when built by wealthy families.
Folks, look, we're in a situation where to lower costs across the board, we finally beat Big Pharma -- Big Pharma -- and gave Medicare the power to negotiate lower prescription drug prices.
And, by the way, for example, we capped insulin at $35 a month, down from $400 a month for seniors on Medicare, including 5 million Latinos. And guess what? It saved not only those lives but taxpayers. It saved them $160 billion in Medicare costs over the next 10 years. They're not going to have to pay. So, it's a big deal across the board.
We also expanded health coverage through the Affordable Care Act, doubling the number of Latinos enrolled since 2020.
And I'm proud, last Friday, my annou- -- my administration finally announced a rule that for the first time, and finally -- finally, I'm able to provide health insurance through the Affordable Care Act for DACA recipients.
The first bill I introduced was about DACA, to make sure that they have a path -- direct path to citizenship. And President [Obama] and I, we created that program 12 years ago.
It's given 800,000 DREAMers a chance to go to work and school, contribute their immense talents in America. But more than a third of DREAMers couldn't get health insurance. It's wrong. And this rule changes all that. DREAMers can now get health insurance, as they deserve.
My first day in office, as I said, I sent a comprehensive immigration reform bill to Congress. It expands legal paths for entries for families and employers. It includes pathways to citizenship for DREAMers in the only country that they ever called home.
I love it when people say, "Why DREAMers?" Can you imagine a kid, two years old, saying, "Mom, don't take me across the Rio Grande; it's against the law"? Give me a break. These have been model citizens.
Congress has to act. And the right thing to do is to keep pushing forward until we get it done -- -- get it done.
On this day two years ago, we were honored to host the First Lady of Mexico to celebrate the unbreakable bonds between our nations -- bonds rooted in [DEL: historage :DEL] [history], heritage, boosted by record trade, embodied in nearly 40 million Mexican Americans that are here.
I want to thank President Op- -- López Obrador for his partnership. We've become friends. I talk to him all the -- he's helping on immigration. We have a significant economic security, as well as security overall.
Folks, we're doing all this while cutting the federal deficit and fighting to make the wealthy and the big corporations finally begin to pay their fair share.
Under my plan, no one earning less than $400,000 a year would pay one extra penny in federal taxes -- not a single penny.
Did you know that there are a thousand billionaires in America? Well, guess what? That's good. I'm a capitalist. You can make a billion bucks, go get it. But guess what? Begin to pay your fair share.
You know what the average tax rate for a billionaire is in America? 8.2 percent in federal taxes. Anybody want to trade with them? Well, it's -- that's less than the vast majority of Americans. No billionaire should pay a lower tax rate than a teacher, a nurse, a firefighter, a cop.
That's why I proposed a minimum tax of 25 percent for billionaires. You know what that will do? That will raise $500 billion over the next 10 years. Imagine what we could do to affordable care for children, paid leave, lower the federal deficit, generate -- -- significant economic growth.
See, he cheered. That's a kid who knows what he's about, man.
But, as you know, there are those of a different view. When my predecessor was in office, he enacted a $2 trillion tax cut that overwhelmingly benefitted the super wealthy and the biggest corporations and exploded the federal debt more than any other president has in a four-year term. He added more. He wants to do it again.
He also wants to terminate the Affordable Care Act, denying healthcare to millions of Latinos -- millions. He wants to go to -- he wants to bring back the Big Pharma to be able to charge $400 a month so they don't -- eliminate that legislation -- instead of $35 a month. He wants to cut Social Security and Medicare. He says, "There's a lot we can do in terms of cutting."
I got one really serious idea how to cut. A candidate. Any rate -- .
He brags about getting Roe v. Wade overturned. He just did an interview with TIME Magazine and said states should monitor women's pregnancies. Monitor --
AUDIENCE: Booo --
THE PRESIDENT: -- monitor their pregnancies? He also said we should prosecute those who violate abortion bans.
AUDIENCE: Booo --
THE PRESIDENT: Kamala and I will never let that happen. We're going to keep fighting to restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land.
In the same interview, my predecessor vowed to use the U.S. military to deport 11 million people here in America he says shouldn't be here -- going to use the military to deport 11 million people in America.
He calls immigrants "rapists" and "murderers." He said, "They are not people." He said the immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our country." He wants to bring back cruel and unhuman- -- inhumane family separation policies that ripped children from their parents at the border.
Folks, that's not who we are. That's not America. My administration has reunited 700 of those families and still looking. Families belong together, folks, not separated.
Let me close with this. We're here in the Rose Garden. Through that window in the Oval Office, you'll see I have a bust of Cesar Chavez. There's only five busts I have in that office. And in the back corner of the garden here, the rose bush that's planted in his honor.
He once said, quote, "Our ambitions must be broad enough to include the aspirations and needs of others for their sake and for our own."
Folks, the reason why we're the fastest-growing country in the world, why we're the best economy in the world is because of immigration. That's why we're . That -- that's not hyperbole. That's a fact.
What I see in the Latino community is doctors, teachers, athletes, artists, community leaders, construction workers, first responders who put themselves on the line to keep the rest of us safe.
You are dreamers and doers. You're cutting cancer. You're commanding the military. You're taking deep steps into space. And it matters. You matter. You really do. You matter more than we can express.
As I said earlier, you know, when you have 28 percent of all the students in our schools up to high school -- 28 percent speaking Spanish, how in God's name can we not pay attention?
There's -- always have been [DEL: compelling :DEL] [competing] value sets to visions of America. One of those value sets is of revenge and retribution. The other is hope and opportunity that we share -- honesty, decency, faith, fairness.
That's the future we're building together. In America, we defend democracy; we don't not diminish it. We protect freedoms; we don't take them away. An America where the economy grows from the middle out and the bottom up, the wealthy pay their fair share, and working people have a fair shot -- that's what we're about: an America where no one is left behind.
I know we can do this. Because of you, I've never been more optimistic about the future. We just have to remember who we are.
We're the United States of America -- -- a nation of immigrants. And there's nothing, nothing beyond our capacity when we do it together.
God bless you all. And may God bless our troops.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you.
5:27 P.M. EDT
Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill Biden at Cinco de Mayo Reception
Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill Biden at Cinco de Mayo Reception
The White House
Welcome to the White House!
Please join me in another round of applause for our talented musicians who flew all the way here from Los Angeles just this morning.
Today, we celebrate Cinco de Mayo, and pay tribute to a long line of Mexican-Americans who have added their own threads to our rich American tapestry with bravery and vision. Writers whose poems trace the contours of our sorrows and joys. Activists whose movements for justice achieved hard-won progress. Trailblazers in every career and calling who have led us toward a more perfect union.
And as we recognize the Mexican-Americans who have so profoundly shaped this country, and are continuing to shape it, we also remember that the first step to progress is dreaming – creating those images in our own heads, even if the odds are against us, reaching for the stars, even if we may miss, sculpting the world we see when we close our eyes and imagine.
That's what your President does every day for this country. He's growing the middle class – working to level the playing field for all families. He's fighting injustice and inequality, defending our rights and freedoms, and creating a brighter future ahead.
But he can't do it alone, he needs your help – your hopes and dreams, and your passion and determination to make those dreams – those images – real.
Thank you for all you do to lift up our communities, thank you for helping us celebrate our nation's Mexican-American heritage today, and happy Cinco de Mayo!
And now it's my pleasure to introduce an incredible athlete who is sculpting his own path in the NBA and in his community, and inspiring so many young people to reach for their own dreams: Jaime Jaquez.
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING: Advocates, Leaders Applaud Administration’s New Action to Expand Affordable, Quality Health Care Coverage to DACA Recipients
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING: Advocates, Leaders Applaud Administration’s New Action to Expand Affordable, Quality Health Care Coverage to DACA Recipients
May 7, 2024
Advocates, Leaders Applaud Administration's New Action to Expand Affordable, Quality Health Care Coverage to DACA Recipients
Last week, the Biden-Harris Administration expanded affordable, quality health care coverage to Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients. Dreamers are our loved ones, our nurses, teachers, and small business owners, and President Biden and Vice President Harris believe they deserve the promise of health care just like all of us. The final rule announced last week will provide Dreamers the same access to health care under the Affordable Care Act as other Americans, twelve years after President Obama and Vice President Biden provided a path for them to live and work legally in the United States.
While only Congress can provide Dreamers permanent status and a pathway to citizenship, President Biden remains committed to protecting and preserving DACA and providing Dreamers with the opportunities and support they need to succeed, including access to affordable, quality health care coverage.
See below for what they are saying:
Congressional Leaders And Caucuses
Leader Chuck Schumer : "I applaud President Biden for this highly impactful policy change that lives up to the greatest ideals of America and will improve the lives of so many Dreamers." [Tweet , 5/3/24]
Senator Catherine Cortez Masto : "This is incredible news, and it's going to make a real difference here in Nevada." [Tweet , 5/3/24]
Senator John Fetterman : "Joe Biden is a president who delivers--this time for Dreamers, who will now have expanded access to affordable, high-quality health care through the Affordable Care Act." [Tweet , 5/3/24]
Senator Alex Padilla : "NEWS: DACA recipients will be eligible for health care coverage under the Affordable Care Act starting this year! Grateful that @POTUS heeded @HispanicCaucus calls to secure high quality and affordable health care for DACA recipients." [Tweet , 5/3/24]
Senator Laphonza Butler : "I applaud@potus and his administration for taking a step toward bettering the lives of DACA recipients. Starting this November, more than 100 K DACA recipients will be eligible to enroll in Affordable Care Act coverage." [Tweet , 5/3/24]
Rep. Nannette Barragan : "CHC applauds the Biden-Harris administration for expanding access to the ACA to Dreamers. This is a huge win for Dreamers who will now have access to affordable healthcare. […] Everyone deserves access to healthcare. Now, tens of thousands of Dreamers who are American in every way and are part of the American fabric will have access to high quality and affordable health insurance. This will pave the road to healthier communities and improve their quality of lives." [Statement, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Joaquin Castro : "Over the last twelve years, DACA has allowed hundreds of thousands of first-generation Americans to graduate from college, join the workforce, and chase their American dreams in the only country many of them have ever known. Throughout that time, these young Americans have been asked to work and pay taxes to support a system of affordable health care that excluded them. Today's announcement is an important step forward to right that wrong. The rapid spread and devastating toll of the COVID-19 pandemic was a reminder that our country is safer when everyone has access to the care they need. I'm proud to see the Biden administration heed the calls of public health advocates and immigrant communities and open the Affordable Care Act marketplace to DACA recipients, and I hope the administration will also move to similarly expand Medicaid and CHIP eligibility as soon as possible." [Statement, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Veronica Escobar : "DACA recipients work the same jobs and pay the same taxes as anyone in our community, and some have been doing so for years. It's only right that they have access to the same healthcare services. I'm thankful the Biden administration is taking this historic step." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Pramila Jayapal : "I want to thank and applaud President Biden and Secretary Becerra for today's announcement that allows DACA recipients to access health care and enhances coverage for other groups, including those approved for Special Immigrant Juvenile status and children applying for humanitarian relief. […] Health care is a human right, and DACA recipients deserve access to that care just like everyone else." [Statement, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Linda Sanchez : "Great news - @POTUS announced that DACA recipients will soon be able to access health care through the ACA.
DACA recipients pay taxes, contribute to our economy, & they deserve access to health care. I will continue fighting for health equity & citizenship for our Dreamers." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Sylvia Garcia : "I have been fighting for our Dreamers since before I came to Congress, and I commend the Biden Administration for taking this critical step in expanding access to the #AffordableCareAct to include #DACA recipients." [Tweet , 5/3/2024]
Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee : "Amazing progress, thank you @POTUS!" [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Katherine Clark : "NEWS: DACA recipients will now have access to affordable, quality health insurance through the ACA.
President Biden is committed to supporting our dreamers, who are an integral part of the fabric of America. They deserve the promise of health care just like all of us." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Gerry Connolly : "This is fantastic news. DACA recipients are taxpayers like you and me. There is no reason they should be denied the option of getting health care coverage through the ACA. My colleagues and I urged President Biden to do this last year. Thankful to him for making it happen." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Rob Menendez : "This is incredible news for Dreamers, allowing over 100 K to have access to affordable and quality healthcare.
@POTUS is making good on his promise to protect and support DACA recipients. Healthcare is a right, not a privilege, and this rule reflects that belief." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Judy Chu : "DACA recipients are Americans through and through--serving their communities, opening businesses, and raising American families. Since President Obama's creation of the DACA program in 2012, young people brought to this country by family, including thousands from Asia and the Pacific, have had the ability to obtain work permits, generate wealth for themselves and their community, and pay taxes that go toward the services we all benefit from. Today's announcement by President Biden builds on the program--finally providing DACA recipients the life-changing opportunity to purchase health insurance on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces. Everyone deserves the security that comes with health care coverage and the ability to see a doctor for treatment, and I'm so thrilled that more than 100,000 DACA recipients will soon have access to that coverage." [Statement,
5/3/2024]
Rep. Barbara Lee : "Last year, I sent a letter to @POTUS calling on his administration to expand health coverage for #DACA recipients. Today, he came through! ?? This move will impact thousands. #Dreamers are Americans, and they deserve accessible, affordable, quality health care." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Chuy Garcia : "DACA recipients are our neighbors, coworkers, friends, and loved ones. They deserve health care like everyone else. I applaud the President for expanding access to health care for 100,000 DACA recipients" [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Lou Correa : "DACA recipients are essential to our community--they're our students, leaders, and servicemembers. I'm proud to have supported this new rule in Congress, and to finally see expanded health care access become a reality for these young adults." [Tweet , 5/3/2024]
Rep. Deborah Ross : "DACA recipients will soon be eligible for affordable, accessible health care coverage through the ACA.
I'm grateful for the leadership of @POTUS & his support for Dreamers. I'll keep working to ensure all Dreamers can access the resources & care they deserve." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Juan Vargas : "Dreamers are our neighbors, teachers, nurses, students, and family members. They should be able to access affordable health coverage in the only country they call home. I applaud the Biden Administration for taking this important step that will improve thousands of lives and provide Dreamers with the support they deserve. I'll always stand up for Dreamers, and I'm not going to stop pushing for comprehensive immigration reform, including a pathway to citizenship for the Dreamers, Temporary Protected Status holders, and farmworkers who enrich our economy and our communities." [Statement, 5/3/2024]
Rep. Sean Casten : "Dreamers deserve accessible, affordable, and quality health care. This is a great move to ensure access for all." [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Ranking Member Richard E. Neal, Ways and Means Committee: "Fourteen years after its passage, the Affordable Care Act remains a driving force behind building a stronger, healthier America. Today, the Biden Administration is correcting years of an unjust exclusion that has kept thousands from health care coverage, and finally bringing DACA recipients into the peace of mind and security that health coverage under the Affordable Care Act affords our nation. This is a historic step forward for our communities, and Ways and Means Democrats will continue to work towards the high-quality, affordable health care system that the American people deserve." [Statement, 5/03/24]
Local Government
Mayor John Giles : Giving DACA recipients--who are often our nurses, teachers, and small business owners--the ability to purchase health insurance, is a smart and compassionate move. Thank you, @POTUS, for giving Dreamers access to affordable healthcare. [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Mayor Ron Nirenberg :Extremely grateful for @POTUS' actions to expand the Affordable Care Act's eligibility to DACA recipients. Texas is home to tens of thousands of dreamers. This step will undoubtedly improve San Antonio's overall health. [Tweet, 5/3/2024]
Community and Advocacy Organizations
Voto Latino: "HUGE VICTORY: Thanks to the Biden Administration, more than 100,000 DACA recipients will have access to the Affordable Care Act for the first time ever. ?We're by no means done. We must continue the fight to protect Dreamers everywhere." [Statement, 5/03/24]
President Kica Matos, National Immigration Law Center: "We are thrilled that DACA recipients will finally be able to access health care through the Affordable Care Act. We commend the Biden administration for taking this important step for health equity and immigrant justice. Even as we celebrate this victory, we must also remember that politically motivated attacks on DACA continue, DACA recipients remain in limbo, and the health and wellbeing of our communities has suffered as a result. We continue to urge Congress to pass a pathway to citizenship for immigrant youth who call this country home, so they can enjoy the same peace and stability that we all need to thrive." [Statement, 5/03/24]
Executive Director Mayra Macias, Building Back Together: "Today's announcement underscores President Biden's commitment and unequivocal support for Dreamers and DACA recipients. Once again, the Biden-Harris Administration is taking a bold step towards equity and inclusivity in health care access by ensuring that approximately 100,000 DACA recipients can enjoy the peace of mind and security that access to health care brings. By expanding DACA recipients' health care options, President Biden is reaffirming that health care is a fundamental right, and that everyone, including hardworking DACA recipients, deserves the opportunity and resources needed to live a healthy and fulfilling life." [Statement, 5/03/24]
Deputy Director Becca Telzak, Make the Road New York: "We applaud the efforts of the federal government to expand federal health care coverage to DACA recipients. This move, which follows in the footsteps of a hard-fought and successful campaign in New York to expand health care coverage to DACA recipients, will allow communities across the country to access affordable and quality healthcare coverage to see a doctor, receive preventative care, treatments and more and allows DACA recipients in New York who weren't already covered by insurance to access federal tax credits and subsidies." [Statement, 5/03/24]
President and CEO Gaby Pacheco, TheDream.US: "Today's announcement is a meaningful step forward to help DACA recipients more fully participate and give back to this nation. DACA remains one of the most popular and successful immigration policies in U.S. history and its recipients are increasingly homeowners, essential employees, and parents heading households all throughout America. Ensuring their access to healthcare coverage through the ACA will help thousands of families sleep a little easier at night - including TheDream.US alumni who have relied on DACA to work as doctors, nurses, and in other healthcare occupations. Of course, at a time when the future of the DACA program itself remains uncertain due to legal challenges that have barred younger Dreamers from even applying into the program, we still need the same solution that is two decades in the making: Congress to work together to deliver permanent legal status for Dreamers with and without DACA. As we work toward that goal, we
celebrate any steps forward that expands opportunities for Dreamers, such as today's positive announcement." [Statement , 5/03/24]
Alumna Indira Islas, TheDream.US: "I am proud to be part of a family of healthcare workers - my parents were doctors in Mexico, my sister is a nurse, and I am an aspiring doctor and have a graduate degree in public health. Providing opportunities and healthcare access to DACA recipients is good for families like mine and for the entire nation. The majority of Americans agree that Dreamers are Americans in all but their official paperwork and accessing healthcare shouldn't be a barrier for any American. By eliminating this barrier to access the ACA marketplace, this rule will be a game-changer for over 100,000 DACA recipients. Our contributions as DACA recipients, including as fellow healthcare workers, have been well-documented. Today's announcement is a good thing for us and for America." [Statement , 5/03/24]
Executive Director Miriam Feldblum, Presidents' Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration: "We applaud the rule expanding ACA eligibility access to DACA recipients. The Presidents' Alliance had called on the current Administration to issue the regulation, which is much welcomed and will strengthen the nation. DACA recipients contribute billions of dollars in tax revenue annually, fill critical job shortages in our economy, are employed in essential jobs supporting our communities, and fuel our country with their talent and entrepreneurship." [Statement , 5/03/24]
FACT SHEET: Vice President Harris Announces $5.5 Billion to Boost Affordable Housing, Invest in Economic Growth, Build Wealth, and Address Homelessness in Communities Throughout America
FACT SHEET: Vice President Harris Announces $5.5 Billion to Boost Affordable Housing, Invest in Economic Growth, Build Wealth, and Address Homelessness in Communities Throughout America
Announced after the first two stops of the Vice President's nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour, the new funding to 1,200 communities will build and preserve homes, lower housing costs, support renters and homeowners, aid people experiencing homelessness, create jobs, and improve public facilities and community resilience.
Today, Vice President Harris announced new funding to boost affordable housing, invest in economic growth, build wealth, and address homelessness across America. This funding is through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development [HUD].
President Biden and Vice President Harris are working to lower housing costs and increase the housing supply to address the large shortage of affordable homes they inherited from their predecessor, while investing historic resources to prevent and end homelessness. In President Biden's State of the Union address, he called on Congress to support the construction and rehabilitation of two million additional homes, lower costs for renters, and help first time homebuyers and families seeking to trade up or downsize.
Yesterday, Vice President Harris was in Detroit, MI for the second stop on her nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour. During her speech, the Vice President highlighted the Administration's plan to cut housing costs, boost supply, and expand access to affordable housing. She also discussed the Administration's work to address racial bias in home appraisals.
Today, the Vice President announced a crucial infusion of funds to address the country's critical housing needs: $5.5 billion in grants to 1,200 communities through more than 2,400 grants to states, cities, DC, Puerto Rico, and local organizations across the country. These grants build on ongoing efforts by the Administration, the White House Housing Supply Action Plan and the Blueprint for a Renters Bill of Rights, boost housing supply, lower housing costs, expand rental assistance, enhance renter protections, and invest in stronger, more resilient communities for all.
"Homeownership is an essential part of the American Dream that represents so much more than a roof over our heads. For people all across our nation, a home represents financial security, the opportunity to build wealth and equity, and a foundation for a better future for themselves, their children, and future generations," said Vice President Harris. "That is why President Biden and I are expanding on our historic investments in housing by announcing $5.5 billion that will increase access to affordable housing, invest in economic growth, and address homelessness in communities throughout America. This funding will build more affordable homes and support renters and homeowners while also lowering costs, building wealth, and creating jobs."
"A coordinated whole-of-community approach is crucial to build strong and resilient communities, invest in decent housing, create healthy environments, expand economic opportunities accessible to low-income households, and support aspiring homebuyers and those experiencing homelessness," said Acting HUD Secretary Adrianne Todman. "The funding made available today serves as building blocks to empower communities to take ownership of community development investments and put the needs of residents first."
These funds will be provided through the following HUD programs:?
The grants announced today by the Vice President will provide critical funding for a wide range of activities to address communities' most pressing local needs, providing flexible resources to build homes, support renters and homeowners, provide life-saving assistance to people experiencing homelessness, create jobs, and improve public facilities, community resilience, and local economies.
For more information, see the following examples from previous years about how these funds have enabled communities to provide innovative housing solutions and expand affordable housing:
Today's announcement follows the first two stops of the Vice President's nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour, which is taking her back to several states across the country as she highlights how the policies of the Biden-Harris Administration have delivered for the American people. During each stop, the Vice President is highlighting how the Biden-Harris Administration has delivered historic investments that have supported communities and helped people thrive. This includes improving access to housing while making it more affordable. The tour kicked off last week with a moderated conversation in Atlanta, GA.
Today's announcement builds on the Vice President's career of working to protect homeowners and address housing supply and affordability. As Attorney General of California, she helped pass the California Homeowner Bill of Rights to provide protections to homeowners facing foreclosure. As U.S. Senator, she introduced several bills to increase the supply of affordable housing and lower costs for renters. Now as Vice President, she has led the charge on addressing racial bias in home appraisals by announcing key actions of the PAVE Action Plan, including recent actions that make it easier for more homeowners to appeal home appraisals that may be undervalued because of racial bias.
May 7, 2024
Announced after the first two stops of the Vice President's nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour, the new funding to 1,200 communities will build and preserve homes, lower housing costs, support renters and homeowners, aid people experiencing homelessness, create jobs, and improve public facilities and community resilience.
Today, Vice President Harris announced new funding to boost affordable housing, invest in economic growth, build wealth, and address homelessness across America. This funding is through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development .
President Biden and Vice President Harris are working to lower housing costs and increase the housing supply to address the large shortage of affordable homes they inherited from their predecessor, while investing historic resources to prevent and end homelessness. In President Biden's State of the Union address, he called on Congress to support the construction and rehabilitation of two million additional homes, lower costs for renters, and help first time homebuyers and families seeking to trade up or downsize.
Yesterday, Vice President Harris was in Detroit, MI for the second stop on her nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour. During her speech , the Vice President highlighted the Administration's plan to cut housing costs, boost supply, and expand access to affordable housing. She also discussed the Administration's work to address racial bias in home appraisals.
Today, the Vice President announced a crucial infusion of funds to address the country's critical housing needs: $5.5 billion in grants to 1,200 communities through more than 2,400 grants to states, cities, DC, Puerto Rico, and local organizations across the country. These grants build on ongoing efforts by the Administration, the White House Housing Supply Action Plan and the Blueprint for a Renters Bill of Rights , boost housing supply, lower housing costs, expand rental assistance, enhance renter protections, and invest in stronger, more resilient communities for all.
"Homeownership is an essential part of the American Dream that represents so much more than a roof over our heads. For people all across our nation, a home represents financial security, the opportunity to build wealth and equity, and a foundation for a better future for themselves, their children, and future generations," said Vice President Harris. "That is why President Biden and I are expanding on our historic investments in housing by announcing $5.5 billion that will increase access to affordable housing, invest in economic growth, and address homelessness in communities throughout America. This funding will build more affordable homes and support renters and homeowners while also lowering costs, building wealth, and creating jobs."
"A coordinated whole-of-community approach is crucial to build strong and resilient communities, invest in decent housing, create healthy environments, expand economic opportunities accessible to low-income households, and support aspiring homebuyers and those experiencing homelessness," said Acting HUD Secretary Adrianne Todman. "The funding made available today serves as building blocks to empower communities to take ownership of community development investments and put the needs of residents first."
These funds will be provided through the following HUD programs:
$1.3 billion to 668 grantees to build affordable housing -- The HOME Investment Partnerships Program is the primary Federal block grant that helps States and local governments to produce affordable rental and owner-occupied housing for low-income families. HOME funds a wide range of activities including building, buying, and/or rehabilitating affordable housing for rent or homeownership or providing direct rental assistance to low-income people. HOME projects leverage non-federal funds including, in many cases, tax credits for affordable rental housing. In 2023 the program helped create over 13,000 units of housing and more than 13,000 households were assisted with tenant based rental assistance through the HOME program.
$214 million to every state to increase affordable housing supply – The Housing Trust Fund is an affordable housing production program that complements existing Federal, state and local efforts to increase and preserve the supply of decent, safe, and sanitary affordable housing for extremely low- and very low-income households, including families experiencing homelessness. HTF is a formula-based program for States and U.S. Territories. By law, each state is allocated a minimum of $3 million. In 2023, the program helped create more than 1,681 units of affordable rental housing for extremely low-income households.
$3.3 billion to 1,254 grantees to build stronger communities -- The Community Development Block Grants provide annual grants on a formula basis to States, cities, counties, and insular areas to develop stronger, more resilient communities by providing decent housing and a suitable living environment, and by expanding economic opportunities, principally for low- and moderate-income people. In 2023 the program helped over 62,000 families through housing activities, 25,500 individuals through job creation or retention, 52,000 people experiencing homelessness through improvements to homelessness facilities, over 5.4 million people through public services, and over 41.8 million people through through public improvements.
$455 million to 130 grantees to connect people with HIV/AIDS to housing and support -- The Housing Opportunities for Persons With HIV/AIDS program provides stable and permanent housing assistance and supportive services to low-income people living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus . Over 100,000 households receive HOPWA housing assistance and/or supportive services annually.
$290 million to 357 grantees to address homelessness -- Emergency Solutions Grants provide funds for homeless shelters, assist in the operation of local shelters, and funds related social service and homeless prevention programs. ESG funds may be used for street outreach, emergency shelter, homelessness prevention, and rapid re-housing assistance. Annually, ESG connects over 350,000 people to emergency shelter as they transition to permanent housing.
$30 million to 23 States and the District of Columbia to support recovery from substance use disorder -- The Recovery Housing Program allows States and the District of Columbia to provide stable, transitional housing for individuals in recovery from a substance-use disorder.
The grants announced today by the Vice President will provide critical funding for a wide range of activities to address communities' most pressing local needs, providing flexible resources to build homes, support renters and homeowners, provide life-saving assistance to people experiencing homelessness, create jobs, and improve public facilities, community resilience, and local economies.
For more information, see the following examples from previous years about how these funds have enabled communities to provide innovative housing solutions and expand affordable housing:
Transforming a Historic Building into Affordable Homes in Cleveland, Ohio: Through the Section 108 Loan Guarantee program, HUD granted a $15 million loan guarantee to the City of Cleveland, Ohio, to transition the downtown historic Huntington Building back into productive use, including affordable housing, commercial and retail space, and a museum.
Supporting Affordable Homes for Seniors and People with Disabilities in East Greenwich, Rhode Island: The Frenchtown Road project will create 63 units of affordable housing available to low- and moderate-income household, serving a community with a low stock of affordable housing currently available. The project will offer on-site supportive services for seniors and people with disabilities. Construction is underway with completion anticipated in early 2025.
Building Affordable Homes for Homeless Seniors and Veterans in Vista, California: The County of San Diego awarded over $4 million in HOME and HOME-American Rescue Plan funding to support the development of a 54-unit affordable housing complex – Santa Fe Village – in the City of Vista. The development will include 25 units for homeless seniors with serious mental illnesses, and two units will be reserved for veteran households. This property will provide access to supportive services for these households, including on-site case management, and peer support activities.
Funding Water & Wastewater Systems in Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development used their CDBG allocation in 2023 to award nearly $3.5 million in funding to ensure safe water and sewage systems in Mifflin, Somerset, and Sullivan counties.
Today's announcement follows the first two stops of the Vice President's nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour , which is taking her back to several states across the country as she highlights how the policies of the Biden-Harris Administration have delivered for the American people. During each stop, the Vice President is highlighting how the Biden-Harris Administration has delivered historic investments that have supported communities and helped people thrive. This includes improving access to housing while making it more affordable. The tour kicked off last week with a moderated conversation in Atlanta, GA.
Today's announcement builds on the Vice President's career of working to protect homeowners and address housing supply and affordability. As Attorney General of California, she helped pass the California Homeowner Bill of Rights to provide protections to homeowners facing foreclosure. As U.S. Senator, she introduced several bills to increase the supply of affordable housing and lower costs for renters. Now as Vice President, she has led the charge on addressing racial bias in home appraisals by announcing key actions of the PAVE Action Plan, including recent actions that make it easier for more homeowners to appeal home appraisals that may be undervalued because of racial bias.
May 7, 2024
PRESS SECRETARY KARINE JEAN-PIERRE AND NATIONAL SECURITY COMMUNICATIONS ADVISOR JOHN KIRBY
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room
2:28 P.M. EDT
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Good afternoon, everyone.
Q Good afternoon.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, you just heard from my colleague over at the State Department who has confirmed that Hamas sent a response. I'm going to turn things over very quickly to my colleague, Admiral John Kirby, who will share more updates in the region.
Okay.
MR. KIRBY: Thanks, Karine.
Good afternoon, everybody.
Q Good afternoon.
MR. KIRBY: As Karine noted, there has been a response from Hamas to the hostage deal. We're currently reviewing that response, and we're discussing it with our partners in the region.
Director Burns, as you know, is there, and he's working this in real time on the ground. I won't be able to comment any further on this until we know where things stand. I hope you can understand that. I know everybody is curious about what's in this response, what the Israeli reaction to it is. I'm just not going to get ahead of the process.
We want to get these hostages out. We want to get a ceasefire in place for six weeks. We want to increase humanitarian assistance. And the last thing that I want to do is say anything at this podium that's going to put that process at risk.
Regardless, as we've said before, we still believe that reaching an agreement is the absolute best outcome not only for the hostages but for the Palestinian people. And we're not going to stop working to that outcome.
Now, as you know, the President talked with Prime Minister Netanyahu this morning. The call lasted about 30 minutes and was constructive.
The President reaffirmed his message on Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. The two leaders discussed the shared commitment of Israel and the United States to remember the 6 million Jews who were systematically targeted and slaughtered in the Holocaust, one of the darkest chapters in human history, and to forcefully act against antisemitism and all forms of hate-fueled violence.
Now, of course, the two leaders spoke about our efforts to secure the hostage deal, including through these ongoing talks today.
During the call, at the President's urging, Prime Minister Netanyahu agreed to ensure that the Kerem Shalom crossing is back open for humanitarian assistance for those in need.
And I also want to take a moment to address the latest reports now out of Rafah, which was also a topic of discussion on the -- on the call.
I'll reiterate again that we cannot and we will not speak for IDF operations. But we've made clear our views about operations in Rafah that could potentially put more than a million innocent people at greater risk. During his call with Prime Minister Netanyahu, the President again made this clear.
He also made clear that we continue to believe that the hostage deal is the best way to avoid that sort of an outcome while securing the release of those hostages. And as I said, those conversations continue.
Just one more thing: President Biden hosted His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan for lunch at the White House. That probably wrapped up here just recently. They discussed the strong partnership between the United States and Jordan. They also spoke about the situation in Gaza, of course, including efforts to secure the hostage deal and to get more humanitarian assistance into the civilians of Gaza.
Now, we're going to have a more detailed readout of that conversation here very, very soon. Just don't have it right now. But you'll be seeing it shortly.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Steve.
Q As far as you can tell, which proposal did Hamas accept?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to get into that, Steve.
Q And is the issue over how long a ceasefire would last?
MR. KIRBY: Again, you're asking me for the parameters around the response and the deal itself, and I'm just not going to do that.
Q Lastly, Israel has called on people in -- in Rafah to evacuate. Is -- does that presage a full-scale assault? What -- what are we seeing?
MR. KIRBY: As I said in my opening statement, I'm not going to speak for IDF operations or their military intentions and plans. They should be the ones to answer those kinds of questions.
What I can only reiterate is that we've been consistent and the President was consistent again this morning that we don't support ground operations in Rafah that would put the majority or even any of the -- the civilians there at any greater risk. We want to see their safety and security allowed for and factored in.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Seung Min.
Q Noting your caveats at the top, are you able to say whether Hamas was agreeing to something that had been discussed over the last several days?
MR. KIRBY: Again, without getting into the details of it -- and Director Burns is still talking to partners about this -- there have been ongoing negotiations and talks here for weeks. And the Director traveled recently to see if we can't bring this thing home.
And, again, without speaking about the details of the response by Hamas, I think it's safe to conclude that that response came as a result or at the end of these continued discussions that Director Burns was part of.
Q And when do you think you'll have a better sense of what is happening? When will you get a readout from Director Burns? Later today? Early tomorrow?
MR. KIRBY: I don't know. The President has been briefed on -- on the response. He's aware of where the situation and where the process is. What you're asking me is like when are we going to get, like, a final -- you know --
Q Like, what is the answer? Yeah.
MR. KIRBY: Yeah -- a final, you know, table slap here. There is a -- there's a process that has -- that -- that has been worked in the past and will be worked this time. You get a response by Hamas. We're going to have to evaluate that. We're going to see what's in it. Certainly, the Israelis get it -- must have a chance to look at this and to evaluate it.
And Director Burns, as -- as we speak -- literally, as you and I are talking -- are having these conversations with partners in the region. You know, it would be great -- I'm sure we'd all like to have an answer as soon as possible. But I just don't want to get ahead of that process.
Q And a quick follow-up on the readout. When do you expect the Kerem -- Kerem Shalom crossing to reopen? Or is it already reopened?
MR. KIRBY: It should be open very, very soon. Prime Minister Netanyahu committed to opening it on the call this morning. So, at 2:30, is it open? I don't know. But he assured the President that it would be reopened. It had been closed for several days.
Q Okay. And one more. Cindy McCain, the executive director of the World Food Programme, said over the weekend that Northern Gaza is in a, quote, "full-fledged famine." Is that the assessment of the U.S. government as well?
MR. KIRBY: The U.N. has not declared a famine in Gaza writ large. But I don't want to understate the degree of need here and the -- the dire situation that so many people in Gaza are in, particularly with respect to food and water. So, it is not a great situation, clearly. And that's why, again, we're working so hard to get this deal in place, so we can keep that humanitarian assistance up at a higher level.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Mary.
Q Thank you.
Q I understand you don't want to get into the specifics here. But is it your understanding that this is Hamas's final offer? I mean, is there still room to negotiate here?
MR. KIRBY: I think it's going to depend on our evaluation and the Israelis' evaluation of the response and where we go from here.
Q And as Steve mentioned, the Israelis are already warning people to evacuate Gaza. If they do go through with this operation, is the U.S. willing to consider putting limits or conditions on aid to Israel?
MR. KIRBY: I won't get ahead of where we are right now, Mary, in the process here, and I'm certainly not going to speak to hypothetical operations that haven't happened yet. I think we just have to see what transpires.
The President was very direct -- and consistently so -- this morning that we don't want to see major ground operations in Rafah that put these people at greater risk.
Q But, you know, a month ago, the administration did make clear that the U.S. would change its approach -- right? -- if Israel didn't take significant steps to address the humanitarian crisis.
MR. KIRBY: That's right.
Q Does that still hold? Is it possible that the U.S. could change course --
MR. KIRBY: Of course.
Q -- if the humanitarian process isn't improved?
MR. KIRBY: Of course. We always --
Q And presumably, a Raf- --
MR. KIRBY: No, no. We always have the right to adjust our policies as appropriate, and that has not changed, no.
Q And presumably, an operation in Rafah would jeopardize steps to address the humanitarian crisis?
MR. KIRBY: All I can say is we've been very direct and very consistent in our views of concerns about operations in Rafah.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, M.J.
Q Does the U.S. currently have any sense of whether Israel is inclined or not inclined to accept this deal?
MR. KIRBY: I -- I won't speak for the Israelis.
Q The -- when the President and the Prime Minister spoke earlier today, was this specific framework discussed? And did the President encourage, put pressure on the Prime Minister to accept this framework?
MR. KIRBY: You're talking about the -- what the -- what Hamas says they responded to?
Q Yes.
MR. KIRBY: So, just -- and just so you have the tick-tock here, by the -- when they were talking this morning, we did not have news that Hamas had responded. So, that news broke after their call.
That said, as I mentioned in my opening statement, of course they talked about the hostage deal and the importance of getting it secured.
Q So, you're saying when the two leaders spoke, Hamas had not yet accepted --
MR. KIRBY: It would be wrong --
Q -- this framework --
MR. KIRBY: Yeah.
Q -- so the President would not have specifically asked the Prime Minister to --
MR. KIRBY: Correct.
Q -- potentially accept this framework?
MR. KIRBY: It would be wrong for you to conclude that -- that the call this morning was about having the Israelis accept the Hamas response. The Hamas response hadn't happened yet.
Q Did he broadly encourage the Prime Minister to get, yes, to some sort of deal?
MR. KIRBY: He, as he has consistently with Prime Minister Netanyahu, urged that we get this deal secured. But it wasn't a -- it wasn't a pressure call. It wasn't about twisting his arm towards a certain set of parameters.
Director Burns is in the region having these conversations with the Israelis, the Qataris, the Egyptians, as -- again, as we speak. And -- and that's the forum for working out the parameters of it. But the President clearly talked to the Prime Minister about the importance of getting a deal done, yeah.
Q And, John, what is the President's position on a limited operation into Rafah?
MR. KIRBY: I think I -- I don't think I can answer it any differently than I did with Mary. We've been very clear that we don't support a major ground operation in Rafah, operations in general that put at greater risk the more than a million people that are sheltering there.
And the question right now is a hypothetical. I mean, we're aware that they've dropped leaflets. We're aware that they're -- that they're warning people to evacuate. I'll let them speak to their operations and to their intents -- intentions.
Nothing has changed about where we are with respect to operations in Rafah that could put those people at greater risk.
Q Right. But you know that they are asking people in the area to evacuate and the possibility of a limited Rafah operation is on the table. So, I'm asking: Does the President believe that Israel can execute a limited operation into Rafah while adequately protecting the lives of civilians there?
MR. KIRBY: The President doesn't want to see operations in Rafah that put at greater risk the more than a million people that are seeking refu- -- refuge there.
Q So, he wouldn't support a limited operation into Rafah?
MR. KIRBY: I think I've answered the question.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Francesca.
Q In the back.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Francesca, go ahead.
Q Picking up on the timeline. So, prior to Hamas saying that they accepted this proposal, what, as you understood them to be, were the sticking points for either Hamas or the Israelis in the -- the deal that had been on the table?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to get into that.
Q Okay. Did it involve Rafah in any way?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to talk about the parameters of the proposal that was worked before this Hamas response, and I'm certainly not going to talk about the response right now.
I mean, I do understand the curiosity. And you guys are all asking exactly the right questions -- all very fair. But I really do hope you understand that the last thing I would ever want to do from this podium is say something that could put this very sensitive process at greater risk.
We are at a critical stage right now. We got a response from Hamas. Now Director Burns is working through that, trying to assess it, working with the Israelis.
I mean, my goodness, folks, I don't know that it gets any more sensitive than right now. And the worst thing that we can do is start speculating about what's in it.
Q And one more thing on Rafah. What was your understanding why the Israelis were only evacuating part of Rafah at this time?
MR. KIRBY: You'd have to talk to the Israelis.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Danny.
Q Thanks, Karine. Thanks, Admiral. You've previously said several times that the ball is in the court of Hamas at previous stages of negotiations. Would it be fair to say now that the ball is in Israel's court?
MR. KIRBY: It's going to depend on what the response actually says and the conversations that we have with the Israelis about what -- where we go from here.
Q And just one other thing. If I can ask, I mean, is -- do you have any sense that Israel is currently using this threat or the start of an operation in Rafah as a means of putting pressure on Hamas at this stage of the negotiations?
MR. KIRBY: Again, you'd have to talk to the Israelis about their intentions.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Franco.
Q You said that they -- that -- that you did not know the news during the call. But were you surprised by -- was the White House surprised by Hamas saying that they've reached a deal or agreeing to the agreement?
MR. KIRBY: It wasn't like we had a heads up about it. We -- we knew that, as I said publicly, they had a proposal in front of them, and as was just remi- -- I was just reminded of the fact that I said many times it was -- the ball was in Hamas's court. So, we certainly knew that they had it before them, and we were waiting on word.
We had hoped that there would be word very, very soon. We certainly hope that there could be word today. But did we know the exact moment that Al Jazeera was able to break the news that Hamas had a response? No, we didn't predict that particular moment.
Q Are you encouraged that that -- that there -- that you are at this sensitive point? You've been talking about it's a very sensitive point, it's important --
MR. KIRBY: We'll be encouraged when we get a deal in place and we can start seeing hostages get back with their families. That'll be encouraging.
Q And if I can, what role, if any, do you feel like the leaflets and the pressure of an evacuation or the evacu- -- the announcement of evacuating, do you think that had any role in -- in triggering Hamas to do --
MR. KIRBY: I don't think we know that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead.
Q John, can you talk a little bit about the timeline, as the administration understands it, of those evacuations? How much time do people have to leave? Do you -- did you guys put any demands on the Israelis in terms of how those evacuations are to take place under the parameters that you guys have talked
about previously?
MR. KIRBY: We're asking questions of the Israelis about what their intentions are here and what the -- what the larger purpose of this evacuation is and sort of where they're wan- -- wanting to go.
I think to answer your question, though, you'd really have to go to the Israelis and to -- to speak to their military operations and plans. I'm not going to get ahead of that.
But are we curious about the timing and the intent and where they're going? Yes, absolutely. And the President expressed our curiosity about that on the call today.
Q But more than curiosity, are you expressing what you want to see happen in terms of those evacuations, how they take place, whether Israel is prepared for people moving around within Rafah?
MR. KIRBY: I would just say -- again, without -- without -- I don't want to get ahead of operations that haven't happened. I don't want to speak for the Israeli military. I can just say that we don't want to see operations in and around Rafah that make it harder for the people that are seeking refuge there and shelter to be safe and secure. And we have made that case privately to the Israelis. The President did it again today with the Prime Minister directly. We certainly made it publicly. We've been very, very consistent about that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Jacqui.
Q Thank you, Karine. John, noting everything that you've said about the concerns expressed by the U.S. about the risk to Palestinians in Gaza with a full-scale operation, is the U.S. still aligned with Israel in its intention to eliminate the terrorist threat posed by Hamas?
MR. KIRBY: Of course.
Q And is there any feeling that Hamas may be trying to trick the public in some way? You heard Israeli officials commenting on this latest proposal as -- as a trick, and --
MR. KIRBY: Oh --
Q -- there's been a lot of pressure to -- go ahead.
MR. KIRBY: Yeah, no, I'm just -- go ahead. Sorry. I'm listening.
Q Well, there's -- there's been, you know, pressure on the administration to make sure that the needs of Palestinians are -- are being served and that the U.S. support for Israel isn't, you know, overhanded. And you had the -- the report come out earlier today or maybe yesterday that the U.S. was potentially weighing withholding an arms shipment to Israel. Is there any concern that Hamas was trying to capitalize on that public pressure and, you know, "play a trick," as Israeli officials put it?
MR. KIRBY: I mean, I don't think there's any possible way I can answer that question unless I got between the ears of Mr. Sinwar, and that's a place I really don't want to be. I think that is a great question for him.
You know, it's interesting. I stand up here and answer questions, Karine does, Matt Miller at the State Department, Pentagon colleagues, the President does, Prime Minister Netanyahu does, and the IDF military spokesman does.
You know who hasn't answered a single question about his intentions and what games he might be playing or where he intends to take this? Mr. Sinwar, the head of Hamas. And I think it's -- I think it's high time that he answers some of these questions and he come clean about what his intentions are. I don't know.
All I know is we got a response. Bill Burns is looking at that response. He's talking to the Israelis about it. And we'll see where this goes. Hopefully -- hopefully -- whatever is in this thing, hopefully it can lead to those hostages getting out real, real soon with their families where they need to be.
And as each new -- as each day passes, their lives get further at risk. So, time is really of the essence here.
Q Well, noting your answer, is it still a good idea to try to negotiate with terrorists, then?
MR. KIRBY: It's -- it's not -- it's not like -- it's not like we sit down pie in the sky and say, "Hey, today's a good day. Let's negotiate with terrorists." You -- you got to negotiate with who you got to negotiate to get people back with their family.
So, frankly, if -- if there's a better idea to get those hostages home with their families, I think we'd love to hear them. I just don't think there's another way to do it. There's no other way to do it, quite frankly.
You got to negotiate through Qatar with Hamas to get those folks back with their families. And it -- does -- you know, that's the hard work of diplomacy, qu- -- you know, sometimes it means you got to sit across the table from some really bad folks that you'd rather not have to talk to. But they got those hostages, and we want them back.
Q But the U.S. backs Israel's intention to eliminate Hamas?
MR. KIRBY: We, of course, back their right and responsibility to go after the Hamas threat, to eliminate that threat.
Now, look, Jacqui, I've said many times here, you're not going to eliminate an ideology through military operations. But does Israel have a right and responsibility to eliminate a threat that they suffered on the 7 th of October? A hundred percent. Absolutely, they do. And we've been nothing but -- but very steadfast on that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Gabe.
Q Thanks, Karine. Thanks, John. Speaking about a tick-tock, what prompted this morning's call?
MR. KIRBY: I think you've heard me say many times now, they talk as appropriate. And given where we were in the hostage deal negotiations, given where we were with humanitarian assistance and Kerom -- Kerem Shalom being shut down for several days, certainly given where we were with expectations in Rafah, this made all the sense in the world for today to be the day that the President and Prime Minister Netanyahu speak.
Q But when exactly was the call set up? Was it this morning? Was it yesterday after the rocket attack that killed the three Israelis? Or what -- what specifically prompted it?
MR. KIRBY: I would tell you the initial planning for the call took place late in the weekend, is about what I'd say.
Q And one more on a different topic. Why did the U.S. halt an ammunition shipment to Israel last week?
MR. KIRBY: Yeah, look, I've seen the press reporting on this. All I can tell you is that -- to Jacqui's question -- our support for Israel's security remains ironclad. And I'm not going to get into the specifics of -- of one shipment over another.
Q It's our -- NBC is reporting that it included 2,000-pound bombs that may have been used in Rafah. Did concerns over Rafah and what the Israelis could use this ammunition for -- did that play any role in halting that shipment?
MR. KIRBY: I don't have a better answer for you other than the one I just gave you.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead.
Q I just want to go at that question one more time. Did the United States put a pause on an arms shipment to Israel? Is that -- is that reporting correct?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to confirm that report.
Q Okay. Just another on another topic. Well, same topic, different question. Over the weekend, the Queen of Jordan said in an interview that the United States is giving the world mixed messages, offering both expressions of concern and support for Gaza in addition to providing arms to Israel. Can you -- can you comment at all on this -- on her criticism or her critique of the United States' position?
MR. KIRBY: I'm -- I'm not going to -- I don't think it'd be appropriate to get into a back-and-forth here from the podium on this.
We have said that two things can be true at once, and they are. Israel has a right and a responsibility to defend itself, and we're going to continue to provide for their security and help them with that. And at the same time, they have a right and obligation to be careful about civilian casualties and getting more humanitarian assistance in.
And that's why we're working so hard on this hostage deal. And that's why the American -- the President and the United States continue to lead the world in terms of actually making a difference in that outcome, making life better for the Palestinian people. No other country is doing more than the United States to try to increase that -- that assistance and get this -- get this ceasefire in place.
Q And just really quickly, the Israelis stopped a broadcast of Al Jazeera over the weekend. Can you comment on whether that's an appropriate action for a United States ally?
MR. KIRBY: We don't support that action. As we said very clearly on World Press Freedom Day on Friday -- I know Karine talked about this -- the work of independent journalism around the world is absolutely vital. It's important to an informed citizenry and public, but it's also important to -- to help inform the policymaking process.
So, we don't support that at all.
Q And did the President bring it up at all in his call with --
MR. KIRBY: The focus of the call was on the hostage deal and on Rafah.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Okay. I'm going to give it to Al Jazeera.
MR. KIRBY: You saw my -- sorry. You saw, I --
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Sorry.
MR. KIRBY: -- I think I put a statement out this morning on that. So, we have officially reacted to it. Sorry.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Al Jazeera.
Q Thank you so much, Karine. Thank you, John. Is the administration planning on discussing the banning of Al Jazeera in Israel with the Israeli government?
We just celebrated the freedom of the press here in the United States and across the globe. And then this decision came, and it was really a big shock.
MR. KIRBY: As I just said, we don't --
Q Would the administration raise this issue with the government of Israel?
MR. KIRBY: We have raised this issue, and I made a public statement about it.
Q And on -- on the -- on Rafah. Has Israel presented or provided the administration with a comprehensive plan for the ?
MR. KIRBY: No.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Ed.
Q I want to take you back to this report on whether shipments were paused.
MR. KIRBY: Okay.
Q Are the reports wrong?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to confirm the press reporting, Ed. What I've said is our security commitments to Israel are ironclad. The President pushed very hard to get that supplemental funding so that we could continue to help Israel with its security needs and --
Q You can appreciate the ambiguity makes it sound like it's true.
MR. KIRBY: I can't --
Q That we held it up.
MR. KIRBY: I can't speak for what you appreciate in my answer. All I can do is tell you that my answer is not going to change.
Q All right. What is the definition of a assault or attack on Rafah, in the view of the White House, that would be seen as impermissible?
MR. KIRBY: There hasn't been an assault or an attack --
Q Well, there's reports tonight that there are --
MR. KIRBY: -- in terms of a ground operation at this time.
Q Okay.
MR. KIRBY: So, let's not get ahead of where we are. The President did express, again, our concerns about operations in Rafah that would put at risk these -- these people finding or trying to find shelter there.
I think it would be a futile e- -- exercise for me to get up here and -- and give you a laundry list of what would or would not compose some kind of ground operation in Rafah. We have to -- well, let me put it another way -- the IDF has to speak to what their intentions and their plans are.
Q But it's still ground operation versus missiles that may be landing over Rafah tonight, which is what we're hearing.
MR. KIRBY: Well, it doesn't matter whether it's missiles or rockets. Things that kill innocent people -- that's not okay. And, again, the President made it clear that we don't want to see operations in Rafah that put at risk --
Q And how does --
MR. KIRBY: -- those million and a half people that are there.
Q How does the President assess Bill Burns's ongoing attempts to make sure this deal comes together?
MR. KIRBY: It's a nice side way of getting at sort of talking to the parameters of the deal. I appreciate that. He's very grateful for --
Q Oh, no, I was -- I was more genuinely interested in what he thinks --
MR. KIRBY: Oh, really?
Q -- of the CIA Director's work on this, yes.
MR. KIRBY: Excellent. I'm sorry. I impugned your question.
The -- look, I think he's very grateful for the -- the work that Director Burns and the whole team has been doing to try to get us to this point. But it only really matters if we can get the deal in place -- and I'm sure Director Burns would agree me -- would agree with me on that -- and those hostages can get home.
But he's -- he's done terrific work thus far, and I know that he wants to see th- -- get this across the finish line, as this -- just as much as we do.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Jonathan.
Q Thank you, Karine. Admiral, on a different topic. Reports breaking just the last few minutes that a U.S. soldier has been detained in Russia. This apparently happened in the last few days. The reporting is he had been stationed in Korea, traveled to Russia on his own. He's being accused of some sort of theft. Are -- is the administration aware of this report?
MR. KIRBY: Yes.
Q What can you tell us about what happened?
MR. KIRBY: I can't really say much about it right now, Jonathan. I hope you can understand that. And, certainly, it's a better question put to our DOD colleagues. But we are aware of this case.
Q And other matter just related to Russia. There has been threats from Moscow in the last couple days about striting -- striking British military facilities because of the -- and also simulating nuclear drills, as it sharply rises tensions because of weapons manufactured in the UK being used in the conflict. This says it could potentially apply to other ally countries as well -- theoretically, the United States.
Do you have a response to that?
MR. KIRBY: Well, what I'd say, number one, is it's just reckless and irresponsible for the leader of a major nuclear-armed power to be saber-rattling the way that he is with respect to potential use for -- for nuclear weapons.
We're -- obviously, we monitor this and have continued to monitor this very closely. I can tell you we've seen nothing, even despite the reckless rhetoric, that would cause us to change our strategic deterrent posture.
And, look, lastly, if -- if Mr. Putin and Russian officials are worried about their troops in Ukraine getting hit with weapons from other countries, then the easiest thing to do is just take your troops and leave.
Q Thank you.
Q There are reports of AFP right now that Israel is committing airstrikes on Rafah -- intense airstrikes on Rafah right now. What would that timing mean to the relationship between the President and the Prime Minister?
MR. KIRBY: Well, , you -- you know something I don't know. I haven't seen those reports. I can't confirm it. I'll just go back to what I've said, I don't know, half a dozen, if not more, times today: We don't support operations in Rafah that put people at greater risk.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead.
Q Thank you. Thank you, Karine, and thank you, John. I just wanted to make it clear that regarding the limit on the refined petroleum provided by Russia to North Korea, the annual refined petroleum limit under U.N. sanctions against North Korea is 500,000 barrels. But last week, you say that the limit was exceeding that 6- -- 165,000 barrels in March alone. So, how many barrels were supplied in January and February?
MR. KIRBY: I will have to take that question and get back to you. I didn't bring the barrel data with me today.
Q And one one more quick question again. State -- yes, State Department Spokesperson Miller said that the sanctions against this will be imposed through these months, and a North Korea oil tanker sanctioned by the U.N. is currently staying in Chinese water. So, is China included in the sanctions this time? Or U.N. sanctions against Russia and sanctions against China are together?
MR. KIRBY: I -- I will admit that I will owe you now yet another answer. I'll get back to you with something more detailed.
I will only just say, to exit myself from this question gracefully, that -- -- that -- that we want everybody to enforce the sanctions that are against North Korea appropriately and consistently. And not everybody does. And North Korea has benefited from sanctions evasions by countries in the region and beyond the region. I'll leave it at that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Okay. I'm going to -- we're going to have to start wrapping it up.
Q Thank you very much, Karine. Thank you very much, John. I have a question on Russia and growing ties between China and Russia. Putin is reportedly visiting China this month, and right before this visit, just last week, we learned that Russian police raided the homes of Falun Gong practitioners in Russia -- this is a group persecuted in China -- and detained several of them.
Does -- does the White House have any reaction to this? And then I have a follow-up one.
MR. KIRBY: I haven't seen the reports about the detention of these individuals. If the -- if they're true, certainly, that would be concerning to us. But I'd probably refer you to the State Department to speak a little bit more about that than -- than I can.
Just, again, writ -- writ large, we have seen China and Russia try to go -- grow closer together. We believe a big reason for that is, frankly, the United States and -- and putting themselves in positions to -- to either oppose our foreign policy objectives or to try to be an obstacle to them in many, many different ways.
So, it's -- it's concerning to us.
The most specific concern that we have right now is the fact that some Chinese companies are providing microelectronics and components so that Mr. Putin can continue his defense industrial base improvements and developments and put weapons in the field that just kill innocent Ukrainians.
And, again, we've been -- we've made those concerns clear directly to our Chinese counterparts and at the U.N.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: All right. Jared. Ja- -- oh, yeah --
Q Oh --
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: You have the last question.
Q Yeah, I did want to ask just a clarification, first, on the King's visit. Is he meeting with any other senior administra- -- Defense Department, anybody?
MR. KIRBY: I -- I -- not that I'm aware of.
Q So, this wasn't, like, a broader bilateral, kind of --
MR. KIRBY: No. No, the President hosted him for lunch. They've done this before in the past.
Q And, secondly, can you give us a --
MR. KIRBY: I -- I can't -- but, look, I -- I can't speak to his whole schedule while he's in town. So, I'm not aware of any other meetings, but that doesn't mean that he's got something --
Q But it wasn't, like, a broader bilateral here at the White House?
MR. KIRBY: No.
Q And on the pier, the temporary pier, if you could give us an update on that and whether or not, like, a ceasefire would need to be in place for that to be fully implemented and operational.
MR. KIRBY: A ceasefire doesn't have to be in place for the pier to operate. Now, obviously, somewhat -- it's a whole heck of a lot easier if there's no fighting going on. But it doesn't have to be.
In fact, one of the big issues that we are still working out is what the force protection laydown would look like and how the -- not -- not just the people operating the pier but the material itself can be safe from any -- any attack.
As far as I know -- and, again, you should go to the Pentagon for more detail -- the -- essentially, the pier itself has been constructed. It is not in place because, last week, they had some weather issues in the Eastern Med, so they weren't able to put it in place.
You should go to the Pentagon for, like, where it is right now. As I understand it, it's still not being put into place.
Then you've got to anchor it, and you've got to make sure you build a causeway so you can get to and from it. And so, there's still a lot of work that has to be done to get it operational, and that would include the force protection laydown.
But no, the short answer to your question is you don't have to have a ceasefire in place to use the temporary pier.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Thank you, Admiral. Appreciate it.
MR. KIRBY: Thank you, Karine. Appreciate your -- appreciate your patience.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: No, you're all good. Thank you.
Q Thank you.
Q Thank you, John.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Thanks.
All right. I do have a couple of things at the top. I wanted to get to the -- to the Admiral at the beginning.
So -- so, tomorrow, the President will deliver remarks during the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's annual Days of Remembrance ceremony. You can expect the President to make clear that during these sacred days of remembrance, we honor the memory of the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust and we recommit to heeding the lessons of this dark chapter: Never again.
He will speak to the horrors of October 7 th, when Hamas unleashed the deadliest day for Jewish people since the Holocaust.
And he will speak to how, since October 7 th, we've seen an alarming rise in antisemitism in the U.S. -- in our cities, our communities, and our -- and on our campuses.
The President will touch on how his National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism is putting the full force of the federal government behind protecting the Jewish community and that all Americans must stand united against antisemitism.
He will reaffirm that we respect and protect the fundamental right to free speech, but there is no place on any campus or anywhere for antisemitism. There is no place for hate speech or threats of violence against -- against the Jewish people.
Next, today, as part of the Economic Opportunity Tour, Vice President Harris is traveling to Michigan to announce $100 million in funding and resources for small- and medium-size auto manufacturers and auto workers.
The Vice President will also announce actions to expand workforce training and improve job quality in the EV supply chain.
For decades, trickle-down econ- -- e- -- economics drove manufacturers overseas. Thanks to the Biden-Harris administration's Investing in America agenda, companies are making historic investments in EV battery supply manufacturing. More than 20 auto and battery plants have been announced, after no net new plants opened under the previous administration.
Historic contracts secured the -- by the UAW and the Big Three automakers in Detroit, as well as recent organizing victories, like Volkswagen in Chattanooga, Tennessee, ensure that these jobs of the future will provide comp- -- comparable wages, retirement security, and respect at work.
These actions build on the Biden-Harris administration's ongoing work to ensure that the workers and businesses that built the auto industry remain community anchors for generations to come.
And, finally, I want to acknowledge some important news. While the previous administrations oversaw the largest one-year increase in murders ever recorded, under the President's -- this President's leadership, President Biden, violent crime is at a nearly 50-year low.
Thanks to the extraordinary efforts of law enforcement and community leaders, Americas are safe -- Americans are safer from violent crime today than they were a year ago. Violent crime declined across every category in the first quarter of 2024, and murders are down 17 percent.
Let me be clear here: This reduction in crime is no accident. President Biden and his administration are taking historic action to make our communities safer and give our law enforcement officers the tools they need to protect and serve.
We are stopping the flow of illegal guns and making the largest-ever federal investment in fighting and preventing crime through the American Rescue Plan, which every Republican in Congress voted against. But we can't stop now.
Through the Safe [Safer] America -- America Plan, the President is calling on Congress to invest $37 billion to support law enforcement and crime prevention. Every family deserves to live in a safe community.
With that, Seung Min.
Q Thanks. You had another school, Columbia University, announce this morning that they're canceling commencement ceremonies. I'm wondering if the White House is concerned that the situation on college campuses is not calming down, despite what the President said last week.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, I want to quote what the President said from last week, as you laid that out for me. And here's the quote: "Peaceful protest in America -- violent protest is not protected; peaceful protest is. It's against the law when violence occurs. Destroying property is not a peaceful protest. It's against the law. Vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations -- none of this is a peaceful protest."
And it is unfortunate that a small group -- a small group of people went too far and cost their classmates this important event. We've talked about it many times from here. When it's -- when it comes to commencement day and when it comes to speaking at commencement events, this is something that the President has done for some time now. And he understands that this is a moment of joy, a moment of celebration. And -- and we feel for them. We feel for each of the graduates.
And -- and we're going to continue to reiterate the President's comments and statements and what we've said from this podium to call for protest peacefully. And that's what we're going to continue to do.
But we do feel for them. These are graduates who are going to miss out on an incredibly important day of commencement.
Q Quick follow-up. Does the White House anticipate any issues -- or how are you preparing for any potential issues when he delivers the remarks at Morehouse later this month?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, look, I'm not going to get into -- I'm not going to speculate on what might happen, might not happen. Obviously, when it comes to any type of -- when it comes to events and security, that's something that Secret Service obviously is going to -- going to deal with and -- and figure that out on their end. But I'm not going to get into specu- -- to speculate from here.
I'm just going to reiterate what I just said about how the President truly enjoys doing commencement speeches. He understands how important -- not just for the graduate but the families and the loved ones that are there to celebrate a really, truly important day. And so, that's what we're looking forward to.
As you know, the President is also going to go to West Point and honor -- honor those who serve to protect our country. And -- and so -- and we'll continue to do that, obviously. And so, that's what he's going to look forward to: really being there for the graduates and lifting them up in this moment.
Q Thank you, Karine. Congressman Ro Khanna said that the President should and will be out visiting these campus among the protests -- amid the protests. Is there any plan for him to get out there and talk to students --
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: No.
Q -- right now? Okay.
And then, separately, GW's president has called for Metro Police in D.C. to intervene to dismantle what they've deemed an illegal encampment. And D.C. police have so far refused to respond to that call. It's happening in the President's backyard. Is there any reaction from the White House on what should happen?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, that is something that I'm going to leave to the local law enforcement and universities. That's for them to figure out, for them to work it through. They know what is happening on the ground. And we've always been very clear about that. And we'll continue to be clear about that.
We're going to continue to call for peaceful protest. And, you know, dissent cannot lead to disorder. And so, going to continue to be very, very clear, as the President has been, as I have been, as so many of us here on -- in this administration has been.
Q Any idea why D.C. police would not respond --
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I would --
Q -- to this call?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I would refer you to the D.C. police. That's something for them to speak to.
Q Okay.
Q In the back.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Okay.
Q And then, j- -- lastly, on these reported plans for the U.S. to bring over Palestinian refugees, potentially. Is there anything you can tell us about where we are in the works with that? And what -- I know it would have to depend on coordination with Egypt, which so far has been resistant to cooperate on this. What -- what can you tell us about this plan?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I don't have anything further to announce. I know I was asked this question a couple of times last week. I just don't have anything else to share.
Go ahead, Steve.
Q Karine, the -- the speech tomorrow, is it a broad-brush speech or will he get into some of the specifics of the Gaza conflict?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I'm not going to get ahead of the President too much. Obviously, it is a day of remembrance. You know the term. We -- as I just stated at the top: Never forget -- or never again.
And so, certainly the President will -- will talk about that day and how horrific it was for the Jewish -- Jewish Americans, Jewish community.
I just don't want to get too far ahead. But obviously, it's an important day for -- for not just Jewish Americans but Americans more broadly.
Q Thank you.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Karen.
Q Thanks, Karine. Given the key role that Jordan has played over the last several months in the Middle East -- especially on humanitarian aid -- and the day's development, there was obviously a lot of news value to the King's visit today.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yeah.
Q Why didn't we see the President and the King together for a photo op? Why was that closed press?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, look, we try to do everything that we can, obviously, to give you all as much access, give the press as much access. It is sometimes the -- the visitor -- the visiting country have -- you know, they have their own requests, and we try to certainly accommodate their request as well.
And so, look, we will try all -- every -- at every turn, at every of these events to make sure that there is press -- there is press access.
In this particular instance, it's a -- it was a private lunch. And we tried to also accommodate the visitors that come here as well.
Q So, the King did not want to do anything on camera today?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I -- I would leave it up to -- to the King and his team to speak to that. But, again, we try to also accommodate the visiting country as well.
Q And if there's any news from the Israeli side on this -- the -- where things stand, should we expect to hear from the President today or this evening on this?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I don't have anything to -- of note or any changes to the President's schedule at this time. Obviously, if there i- -- are any changes, we -- you all will be one of the first, if not the first, to know. I just don't have anything at this time.
The President was going to speak tomorrow. So, stay tuned.
AIDE: Karine.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead. Go ahead.
Q Thank you. I just wanted to go again at the speech the President is --
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yeah.
Q -- is exp- -- is giving tomorrow. I mean, just given the context in which he's giving it, where there's -- you know, 34,000 people have died in Gaza. He's going to be talking about "never again" and a genocide. And he's protested almost everywhere he goes, you know, with that moniker of -- of "Genocide Joe."
And it's a -- I'm just wondering: How is he going to sort of thread the needle of -- of address- -- of addressing a genocide that happened quite a while ago while there are some people who are saying that there is one happening right now that he bears some responsibility for?
I mean, I understand that that's not the view of the administration, but it's still a very tricky line to -- to walk. And I'm just wondering if you can share any sort of thought as to whether he may be trying to send us a subtle message with the speech at all or if there's any sort of nod to the broader context in which the speech is being given.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, I'm going to let the President speak for himself. I gave a broad stroke of the day --
Q Yes.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: -- and how important it's going to be for the President to speak on this Day of Remembrance, the ceremony. So, just going to be really mindful there.
On your broader question, look, the President understands that this is an incredibly painful time. And we have said that over and over again, and we understand that. And he also respects the right of all Americans to peacefully protest and also with the understanding and -- and the knowledge of having those conversations, those sometimes really tough conversations with community leaders.
And we have done that on the White -- White House -- you've heard from senior White House officials -- or you've heard us talk about senior White House officials going across the country, having those conversations with Muslim leaders, Arab leaders, Palestinian leaders in talking through this painful moment.
And I would also -- also say that this is why this hostage deal is so important. This is why we continue to work around the clock. This is why Director Burns is there meeting -- and obviously meeting -- continuing to meet with partners in the region to try to get to this deal so we can get that all-important humanitarian aid, get that ceasefire that is much needed, and also make sure that we get the hostages home, which also -- American hostages are part of those hostages, and we need to get them home to their loved ones.
So, that's what we're going to continue to do. The President will speak for himself tomorrow. So, I would say: Tune in. Listen to what he has to say. But we understand how painful this is for many, many communities across this country.
Thanks.
Q Has he had an input from any of those communities that you mentioned? Like, as he's been sort of wrestling with his speech and working on it, have any of those communities had any input into what he should say or what --
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I can't speak -- I can't to -- to that -- that question about input from communities. But the President understands how important this moment is. And I would say this is a president that tends to meet the moment when it comes to speeches and remarks like these. He understands what's going on, has the finger -- his finger is on the pulse as far as what people are feeling.
And so, I'm just not going to get beyond that. And I would say: Tune in.
Go ahead, Gabe.
Q Karine, just really quickly.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yeah.
Q What's your response to Kristi Noem's comments implying that Commander should be put down?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Look, you know, when we learned last week, obviously, like all of you, in her book that she killed her puppy, you heard me say that was very, very sad.
We find her comments from yesterday disturbing. We find them absurd. And -- and here, this is a country that loves dogs. And you have a leader talking about putting dogs down, killing them. And that's a disturbing statement to say.
I would say to -- I would say to her -- is she should -- probably should stop digging herself in a hole.
Thanks, everybody.
Q Where -- where is Commander now?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Who? Oh. So, Commander -- we said this back in the fall. Commander is living with family members.
Q Where?
Q In Delaware?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yes. We said this before.
All right. Thanks, everybody.
3:14 P.M. EDT
Biden-Harris Administration Ramps Up Actions to Counter Antisemitism on College Campuses and Protect Jewish Communities
Biden-Harris Administration Ramps Up Actions to Counter Antisemitism on College Campuses and Protect Jewish Communities
Today, during Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Biden-Harris Administration announced several new actions to counter the abhorrent rise of Antisemitism in the United States. President Biden will speak at the Days of Remembrance commemoration hosted by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, reaffirming our Nation's sacred commitment to the Jewish people following the Holocaust: Never Again.
This year's remembrance is particularly sobering, as it comes seven months after the terrorist group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7th, the deadliest day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust. Since that time, there has been an alarming rise of Antisemitic incidents across the country and throughout the world—most recently, in instances of violence and hate during some protests at college campuses across the Nation.
Today's new actions build on the work of the President's National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism, the first-ever such strategy, which was released one year ago this month. The strategy represents the most comprehensive and ambitious U.S. government effort to counter Antisemitism in American history. It includes over 100 actions the Biden-Harris Administration has taken, and continues to take, to address the rise of Antisemitism in the United States, as well as over 100 calls to action for Congress, state and local governments, companies, technology platforms, students, educators, civil society, faith leaders, and others. It has involved actions by the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security to provide greater security to Jewish institutions, as well as actions by the Department of Education to address antisemitism and by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum to further support education around Jewish history.
The Biden-Harris Administration has taken aggressive action to implement the strategy and to speak out forcefully against hate of all kinds, especially in the wake of the October 7thattacks. Through the National Security Supplemental, President Biden secured an additional $400 million for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, which funds security improvements and training to nonprofits and houses of worship, including campus organizations and community centers. This funding has been critical to the security of Jewish institutions. Last week, for example, the Biden-Harris Administration sent a guide to the leadership of more than 5,000 colleges and universities with information on resources to promote campus safety from the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security, and Education.
Today, the Biden-Harris Administration announced additional actions to counter Antisemitism in Year Two of the Strategy, building on its work over the past year:
These new actions build on actions taken to date:
Title VI Enforcement
Campus and School Safety
Community Safety Resources
Hate Crimes Prevention and Response
Addressing Discrimination and Religious Accommodations
To learn more about the National Strategy, see previous White House Fact Sheets.
May 7, 2024
Today, during Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Biden-Harris Administration announced several new actions to counter the abhorrent rise of Antisemitism in the United States. President Biden will speak at the Days of Remembrance commemoration hosted by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, reaffirming our Nation's sacred commitment to the Jewish people following the Holocaust: Never Again.
This year's remembrance is particularly sobering, as it comes seven months after the terrorist group Hamas attacked Israel on October 7^th, the deadliest day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust. Since that time, there has been an alarming rise of Antisemitic incidents across the country and throughout the world--most recently, in instances of violence and hate during some protests at college campuses across the Nation.
Today's new actions build on the work of the President's National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism , the first-ever such strategy, which was released one year ago this month. The strategy represents the most comprehensive and ambitious U.S. government effort to counter Antisemitism in American history. It includes over 100 actions the Biden-Harris Administration has taken, and continues to take, to address the rise of Antisemitism in the United States, as well as over 100 calls to action for Congress, state and local governments, companies, technology platforms, students, educators, civil society, faith leaders, and others. It has involved actions by the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security to provide greater security to Jewish institutions, as well as actions by the Department of Education to address antisemitism and by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum to further support
education around Jewish history.
The Biden-Harris Administration has taken aggressive action to implement the strategy and to speak out forcefully against hate of all kinds, especially in the wake of the October 7^th attacks. Through the National Security Supplemental , President Biden secured an additional $400 million for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program, which funds security improvements and training to nonprofits and houses of worship, including campus organizations and community centers. This funding has been critical to the security of Jewish institutions. Last week, for example, the Biden-Harris Administration sent a guide to the leadership of more than 5,000 colleges and universities with information on resources to promote campus safety from the Departments of Justice, Homeland Security, and Education.
Today, the Biden-Harris Administration announced additional actions to counter Antisemitism in Year Two of the Strategy, building on its work over the past year:
Today, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights issued new guidance through a Dear Colleague Letter to every school district and college in the country, providing examples of Antisemitic discrimination, as well as other forms of hate, that could lead to investigations for violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 . This guidance is meant to ensure that colleges and universities do a better job of protecting both Jewish students and all of their students.
The Department of Homeland Security will work with interagency partners to build an online campus safety resources guide and landing page to provide the range of financial, educational, and technical assistance to campuses in one, easy-to-use website.
DHS will develop and share best practices for community-based targeted violence and terrorism prevention to reduce these assaults and attacks. Federal agencies will elevate ongoing efforts to address the fear felt in targeted communities and ensure that resources are widely known among communities that need them.
The Office of the Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism at the Department of State will convene technology firms to identify best practices to address Antisemitic content online. Departments and agencies will continue to provide technology companies with relevant information about symbols and themes associated with violent extremism online to help them enforce their terms of service.
These new actions build on actions taken to date:
Title VI Enforcement
ED-OCR has opened more than 100 investigations over the past seven months into complaints alleging discrimination based on shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics, including Antisemitism. The previous administration opened 27 such investigations in all four years.
On Friday, Department of Education Secretary Miguel Cardona sent a letter to more than 5,000 leaders at institutions of higher education across the country to reiterate that federal law protects against Antisemitic discrimination that violates Title VI. He also shared a Campus Safety Resource Guide to serve as a one-stop-shop of federal resources. ED OCR has issued several Dear Colleague Letters to every school district and college in the country and conducted training and outreach reminding them of their obligation to provide educational
environments free from discrimination, as well as the tools available to report discriminatory incidents. OCR maintains a website with more resources on shared ancestry discrimination.
ED OCR updated its complaint form specifying that Title VI's protection from discrimination, including harassment, based on race, color, or national origin includes discrimination against students based on shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics, including those who are or are perceived to be Jewish, Muslim, Arab, Hindu, or Sikh.
Eight Cabinet-level agencies clarified for the first time in writing that Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits certain forms of antisemitic, Islamophobic, and related forms of discrimination in federally funded programs and activities. In addition, these agencies--the Departments of Agriculture , Health and Human Services , DHS , Housing and Urban Development , Interior, Labor , Treasury, and Transportation --have taken a number of steps to raise awareness of Title VI protections and other relevant statutes among Jewish and other communities, including by translating Title VI fact sheets into languages such as Yiddish and Hebrew and creating new Title VI landing pages to serve as a one-stop-shop of resources.
Campus and School Safety
Since October 7^th, FBI and DHS have taken steps to expand and deepen engagements with campus law enforcement and others to improve school safety. DHS has engaged with schools to identify security enhancements and raise awareness of SchoolSafety.gov, which offers school safety information and resources. DHS also has shared information via threat briefings and partner calls with the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators. The Federal Emergency Management Agency offers a training course called Crisis Management Affecting Institutions of Higher Education: A Collaborative Community Approach , through which campus members can learn how to effectively manage a crisis using a whole community approach, effective crisis communication, and more.
In the wake of October 7^th, DHS's Cybersecurity Infrastructure Security Agency tasked its field force to proactively engage with schools to understand and address their needs. CISA has further expanded security capacity-building services to synagogues, community centers, and Jewish day schools. These services include risk assessments, planning assistance, and active shooter and bomb prevention-related training. CISA has held sessions on active shooter preparedness; an introduction to bomb threat management; tabletop exercise packages for synagogues; and a training on responding to suspicious behaviors and items. Since June 2023, CISA personnel have conducted over 400 in-person visits with Jewish houses of worship and other institutions. Additional security trainings, information and resources are found here .
USDA has held sessions with university leaders from 80 land-grant universities and rural colleges to share promising practices to address Antisemitism, Islamophobia, and other forms of hate.
Under the National Strategy, the Department of Justice launched a pilot curriculum for middle and high school-age youth designed to prevent youth hate crimes and identity-based bullying. In year two of the National Strategy, the curriculum will be rolled out this August, before the school year begins.
Community Safety Resources
DHS broadened access to the Nonprofit Security Grant Program by holding several webinars, expanding its Protecting Places of Worship Week of Action, and leveraging partnerships with DOJ. During the Biden-Harris Administration, this program has made 2,960 grants to Jewish institutions for a total of $397 million in funding to Jewish institutions.
To assist campus public safety and law enforcement identify available federal financial assistance opportunities, DHS published guidance clarifying the eligibility of law enforcement agencies at institutions of higher education to receive both State Homeland Security Program and Urban Area Security Initiative grant funding.
DHS hosts the Prevention Resource Finder to provide stakeholders the full range of federal resources available to help prepare for and prevent targeted violence and terrorism across our country. Resources on the website include community support resources, grant funding opportunities, information-sharing platforms, evidence-based research, and training opportunities for campuses and communities to reduce the risk of hate-based and targeted violence. Since its launch in March 2023, it has been viewed over 58,000 times.
Through the DHS Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships , DHS is strengthening the country's ability to prevent targeted violence and terrorism nationwide through funding, training, increased public awareness, and partnerships across government, the private sector, and local communities.
The U.S. Secret Service's National Threat Assessment Center conducts training on threat assessments and the prevention of targeted violence. These resources examine attacks against colleges and universities, among other locations.
Hate Crimes Prevention and Response
The Federal Bureau of Investigation widely disseminated its updated hate crimes threat response guide to inform Americans about steps they can take if they receive a threat. The guide, published on the FBI's hate crimes resource page , has been shared with organizations and state and local law enforcement entities across the nation. The FBI reviews every tip it receives to ascertain the credibility of the information and, if it learns of a credible threat, quickly takes action. FBI's campus liaisons enhance information-sharing with campuses.
DOJ has expanded its engagement with Jewish community groups in support of the National Strategy. The FBI has held over 650 engagements with faith-based and community organizations since October 7^th. DOJ and the FBI have used robust and diverse outreach to local law enforcement agencies to improve the reporting of hate crime data. DOJ's United Against Hate community outreach and engagement initiative has held over 300 engagements involving over 10,000 participants to educate community members about hate crimes, build trust between community and law enforcement, and strengthen local networks to combat unlawful acts of hate. DOJ's Community Relations Service provides mediation, training and consultation services to assist communities come together, develop solutions to conflict and prevent future conflict. DOJ has also developed and released two documents
that explain civil rights law prohibiting national origin discrimination and religious discrimination and provide information to the public on identifying and reporting national origin and religious discrimination in the civil and criminal context.
Throughout the spring, USDA is providing hate crime trainings, including Antisemitic hate crimes, for law enforcement agents of the U.S. Forest Service. The Department of the Interior has distributed new resources on Jewish American heritage through the National Park Service.
Addressing Discrimination and Religious Accommodations
USDA is making kosher food more accessible by working to ensure equal access to all USDA feeding programs for customers with religious dietary needs.
The Department of Defense leveraged existing survey data to estimate the prevalence of Antisemitic and Islamophobic behavior in the military workplace and to evaluate its policies to counter discrimination, discriminatory harassment, and extremist activity. This analysis was the first to specifically estimate Antisemitic and Islamophobic activity in the military workplace.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has disseminated materials on nondiscrimination and religious accommodation in the workplace and has held more than 50 outreach and training events on Antisemitism at its field offices around the country.
The HHS Office for Civil Rights issued a Dear Colleague letter and guidance to U.S. hospital and long-term care facility administrators, reminding organizations of their legal obligations under relevant regulations and federal civil rights laws to ensure that facility visitation policies do not unlawfully discriminate against patients or other individuals receiving care, including on the basis of religion. HHS's Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration's National Child Traumatic Stress Network has released a toolkit of behavioral health resources pertaining to the Israel-Hamas war, as well as
additional resources on how to talk with children and youth about hate crimes and identity-based violence, including Antisemitism.
DOL published a "Know Your Rights" resource for union members regarding their right to be free from discrimination based on religion, national origin, or race in the workplace.
On Thursday, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum will convene state education officials to discuss best practices in Holocaust education, including the incorporation of the history of Antisemitism, and opportunities to expand such education.
The USHMM concluded its first tour of the Americans and the Holocaust traveling exhibitions. Launched in fall 2021, the exhibition visited 41 states, reaching more than 330,000 visitors. Thirty-four college courses have incorporated content from this exhibition. The USHMM and American Library Association will launch a second tour of the exhibition in September 2024 at an additional 50 libraries.
Several federal agencies have incorporated information about Antisemitism, workplace religious accommodations, and related topics into employee training programs as they carry out their obligations under Executive Order 14035 . To support this work, the Office of Personnel Management surveyed federal agencies about their existing trainings. OPM, EEOC, and the White House Office of Management and Budget have provided learning sessions for agency diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility officers on Antisemitism, Islamophobia, and related forms of discrimination, as well as workplace religious accommodations.
To learn more about the National Strategy, see previous White House Fact Sheets .
May 6, 2024
Readout of President Biden's Meeting with His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan
President Biden met today with His Majesty King Abdullah II of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan at the White House. Both leaders acknowledged 75 years of partnership and friendship between our two countries. President Biden congratulated His Majesty on the 25 th anniversary of his accession to the throne.
The President and King Abdullah II discussed the latest developments in Gaza and affirmed their commitment to work together towards an enduring end to the crisis. They further underscored the need for an immediate release of the hostages held by Hamas and a sustainable ceasefire that allows for a surge of the urgently needed humanitarian assistance to be delivered safely through Gaza. Both remain committed to achieving a durable, lasting peace to include a pathway to a Palestinian state, with security guarantees for Israel. Both President Biden and King Abdullah II reiterated their shared commitment to facilitating the increased, sustained delivery of life-saving humanitarian assistance to Palestinian civilians in Gaza. President Biden thanked His Majesty for Jordan's critical leadership and partnership in this effort.
The President and King Abdullah II also discussed the critical importance of stability in the West Bank and support for the reforms now being pursued by the Palestinian Authority. Both leaders reaffirmed their commitment to working together to realize a more stable and integrated Middle East region, and President Biden confirmed unwavering U.S. support for Jordan and the Jordanian people.
Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan
Readout of President Biden’s Meeting with His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan
President Biden met today with His Majesty King Abdullah II of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan at the White House. Both leaders acknowledged 75 years of partnership and friendship between our two countries. President Biden congratulated His Majesty on the 25th anniversary of his accession to the throne.
The President and King Abdullah II discussed the latest developments in Gaza and affirmed their commitment to work together towards an enduring end to the crisis. They further underscored the need for an immediate release of the hostages held by Hamas and a sustainable ceasefire that allows for a surge of the urgently needed humanitarian assistance to be delivered safely through Gaza. Both remain committed to achieving a durable, lasting peace to include a pathway to a Palestinian state, with security guarantees for Israel. Both President Biden and King Abdullah II reiterated their shared commitment to facilitating the increased, sustained delivery of life-saving humanitarian assistance to Palestinian civilians in Gaza. President Biden thanked His Majesty for Jordan's critical leadership and partnership in this effort.
The President and King Abdullah II also discussed the critical importance of stability in the West Bank and support for the reforms now being pursued by the Palestinian Authority. Both leaders reaffirmed their commitment to working together to realize a more stable and integrated Middle East region, and President Biden confirmed unwavering U.S. support for Jordan and the Jordanian people.
May 6, 2024
FOR TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2024
At 3:10 PM ET, the Second Gentleman will participate in a campaign event. This event in Atlanta, GA will be open to pre-credentialed media.
At 4:30 PM ET, the Second Gentleman will participate in a campaign event. This event in Atlanta, GA will be open to pre-credentialed media.
May 6, 2024
Tuesday, May 7, 2024
The Vice President will receive briefings and conduct internal meetings with staff. These meetings will be closed press.
# # #
May 6, 2024
Today, Second Gentleman Douglas Emhoff met with Jewish college students at the White House. The meeting, which was held on Yom HaShoah , honored the lives of the six million Jews who were murdered during the Holocaust. The students shared their ancestors' stories and recommitted to the promise of "Never Again."
The roundtable discussion also focused on combating present-day antisemitism. The students described their own experiences with antisemitism, including threats of violence and hate speech.
The Second Gentleman highlighted the importance of Holocaust education. He spoke about the Biden-Harris Administration's efforts to combat Holocaust denialism and misinformation. The Second Gentleman also emphasized the need to protect Jewish communities and provide safe learning environments for all students.
The National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism outlines a whole-of-society approach to tackle the scourge of antisemitism in America. The strategy seeks to increase awareness and education in schools, communities, and the workplace about antisemitism, including the Holocaust, and Jewish American heritage.
Participants were selected in partnership with Hillel International and included students from the following colleges and universities:
Bryn Mawr College
Lehigh University
Muhlenberg College
University of Southern California
Washington University in St. Louis
The United States Military Academy at West Point
May 6, 2024
All times are local and subject to change.
From Thursday, May 9 th, 2024 – Saturday, May 11 th, 2024, First Lady Jill Biden will travel to Oregon, California, and Arizona.
Thursday, May 9 th, 2024
At 1:00 PM, the First Lady will arrive at Portland International Airport in Portland, Oregon. This arrival will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Tuesday, May 7 th, at 9:00 PM ET.
At 2:00 PM, the First Lady will deliver remarks at a political finance event in Portland, Oregon. This event will be covered by a print pooler for editorial coverage only.
At 6:15 PM, the First Lady will deliver remarks at a political finance event in Marin County, California. This event will be covered by a print pooler for editorial coverage only.
Friday, May 10 th, 2024
At 1:15 PM, the First Lady will arrive at Burbank Airport in Burbank, California. This arrival will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Wednesday, May 8 th, at 10:00 AM ET.
At 3:30 PM, First Lady Jill Biden will then deliver remarks at a political finance event in Los Angeles, California. This event will be covered by a print pooler for editorial coverage only.
At 6:00 PM, the First Lady will arrive at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, Arizona. This arrival will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Wednesday, May 8 th, at 10:00 AM ET.
At 6:45 PM, the First Lady will deliver remarks at political event in Phoenix, Arizona. This event will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please contact press@joebiden.com .
Saturday, May 11 th, 2024
At 9:30 AM, First Lady Jill Biden will deliver remarks at Mesa Community College's 2024 Commencement Ceremony in Tempe, Arizona. This event will be open to pre-credentialed media and livestreamed at Mesacc.edu/live . For interested media, please contact dawn.zimmer@mesacc.edu .
Remarks by President Biden at a Cinco de Mayo Reception
Remarks by President Biden at a Cinco de Mayo Reception
Rose Garden
5:15 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Happy Cinco de Mayo! [Applause]
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: [Laughs]
AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you, thank you, thank you.
I'm Jill Biden's husband, Joe. [Laughter]
Doug, our Second Gentleman, is here also. Doug, good to see you, pal. [Applause]
And, Jaime, thanks for that introduction, pal. I've always looked up to you. [Laughter] Congratulations on a great rookie season in the NBA. [Applause]
As you said, you stand on the shoulders of those who came before you. Future generations will stand on your 6'6" shoulders — [laughter] — and be a hell of a lot taller, man.
Thanks, Pete and Nanette and all the members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus here today. I want to publicly say: We're going to meet, I promise. Okay? We got —
And when I was elected, I promised my administration would look like America. And I'm proud to say it does.
I want to thank my Cabinet members here today: Secretary Becerra, where are you? — [applause] — Secretary Cardona — [applause] — Administrator Guzman. [Applause]
Former Cabinet members of the O-Biden — the Obam- — Obama-Biden administration, Tom Perez — Tom, where are you? [Applause]
Well, I'll tell you what, on Friday, I had the honor of bestowing our nation's highest civilian awards on 19 incredible people — two trailblazing Hisp- — Hispanic Americans as well: Teresa Romo —Romeo[Romero] — excuse me — TeresaRomeo[Romero], the first Latina to lead the national union, an American — a national union, theAmerican[United] Farm Workers.
And if you look inside the door here, I've got only a few busts in there, and one of them is of Cesar Chavez, who started the whole deal. [Applause]
And Dr.Elaine[Ellen] Ochoa, the first Latina to travel to space. [Applause] I'm glad she decided to come home. [Laughter]
In the land of possibilities, they represent something essential about America: We are a nation of immigrants, and we shouldn't forget it. [Applause] No, we — not — it's why we're so good, why we're so strong, why we have such potential.
We're a nation of dreamers. As Cinco de Mayo represents, we're a nation of freedom. That's America — the America we share; the America we're fighting for together.
And the plan is working. You know, we've created 15 million jobs since we took office; record-low unemployment for among — among Latinos; the fastest small-business creation in more than a decade — [applause] — as we've doubled loans to Latino-owned businesses.
We've invested a record $15 billion in Hispanic-serving colleges and universities. And we — we've — we've relieved student debt for 4.6 million — [applause] — a burden disproportionately falling on Latino borrowers.
And you're the future of our nation. You know, everybody says why am I so — why have I always been so fundamentally focused on Latinos. Simple proposition: You make up 28 percent of the students in America. [Applause] Think — think about it. Twenty-eight percent of all the students in high school and grade school in America are Latino. And I want to tell you, the idea we're not going to pay attention is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. [Laughter]
Look, we have to have your backs, and you've had ours.
In March, in Nevada, I invited the most ambitious housing plan for decades to come into being. For example, it boosts construction on rental units and lowers rent. To crack down on discrimination by home appraisers so Latino homes are finally valued as fairly as they were when built by wealthy families.
Folks, look, we're in a situation where to lower costs across the board, we finally beat Big Pharma — Big Pharma — and gave Medicare the power to negotiate lower prescription drug prices. [Applause]
And, by the way, for example, we capped insulin at $35 a month, down from $400 a month for seniors on Medicare, including 5 million Latinos. And guess what? It saved not only those lives but taxpayers. It saved them $160 billion in Medicare costs over the next 10 years. They're not going to have to pay. So, it's a big deal across the board.
We also expanded health coverage through the Affordable Care Act, doubling the number of Latinos enrolled since 2020.
And I'm proud, last Friday, my annou- — my administration finally announced a rule that for the first time, and finally — finally, I'm able to provide health insurance through the Affordable Care Act for DACA recipients. [Applause]
The first bill I introduced was about DACA, to make sure that they have a path — direct path to citizenship. And President [Obama] and I, we created that program 12 years ago.
It's given 800,000 DREAMers a chance to go to work and school, contribute their immense talents in America. But more than a third of DREAMers couldn't get health insurance. It's wrong. And this rule changes all that. DREAMers can now get health insurance, as they deserve.
My first day in office, as I said, I sent a comprehensive immigration reform bill to Congress. It expands legal paths for entries for families and employers. It includes pathways to citizenship for DREAMers in the only country that they ever called home.
I love it when people say, "Why DREAMers?" Can you imagine a kid, two years old, saying, "Mom, don't take me across the Rio Grande; it's against the law"? Give me a break. These have been model citizens.
Congress has to act. And the right thing to do is to keep pushing forward until we get it done — [applause] — get it done.
On this day two years ago, we were honored to host the First Lady of Mexico to celebrate the unbreakable bonds between our nations — bonds rooted inhistorage[history], heritage, boosted by record trade, embodied in nearly 40 million Mexican Americans that are here.
I want to thank President Op- — López Obrador for his partnership. We've become friends. I talk to him all the — he's helping on immigration. We have a significant economic security, as well as security overall.
Folks, we're doing all this while cutting the federal deficit and fighting to make the wealthy and the big corporations finally begin to pay their fair share. [Applause]
Under my plan, no one earning less than $400,000 a year would pay one extra penny in federal taxes — not a single penny.
Did you know that there are a thousand billionaires in America? Well, guess what? That's good. I'm a capitalist. You can make a billion bucks, go get it. But guess what? Begin to pay your fair share. [Applause]
You know what the average tax rate for a billionaire is in America? 8.2 percent in federal taxes. Anybody want to trade with them? [Laughter] Well, it's — that's less than the vast majority of Americans. No billionaire should pay a lower tax rate than a teacher, a nurse, a firefighter, a cop. [Applause]
That's why I proposed a minimum tax of 25 percent for billionaires. You know what that will do? That will raise $500 billion over the next 10 years. Imagine what we could do to affordable care for children, paid leave, lower the federal deficit, generate — [a child in the audience cries] — significant economic growth.
See, he cheered. [Laughter] That's a kid who knows what he's about, man. [Laughter]
But, as you know, there are those of a different view. When my predecessor was in office, he enacted a $2 trillion tax cut that overwhelmingly benefitted the super wealthy and the biggest corporations and exploded the federal debt more than any other president has in a four-year term. He added more. He wants to do it again.
He also wants to terminate the Affordable Care Act, denying healthcare to millions of Latinos — millions. He wants to go to — he wants to bring back the Big Pharma to be able to charge $400 a month so they don't — eliminate that legislation — instead of $35 a month. He wants to cut Social Security and Medicare. He says, "There's a lot we can do in terms of cutting."
I got one really serious idea how to cut. [Laughs] A candidate. Any rate — [laughter].
He brags about getting Roe v. Wade overturned. He just did an interview with TIME Magazine and said states should monitor women's pregnancies. Monitor —
AUDIENCE: Booo —
THE PRESIDENT: — monitor their pregnancies? He also said we should prosecute those who violate abortion bans.
AUDIENCE: Booo —
THE PRESIDENT: Kamala and I will never let that happen. We're going to keep fighting to restore Roe v. Wade as the law of the land.
In the same interview, my predecessor vowed to use the U.S. military to deport 11 million people here in America he says shouldn't be here — going to use the military to deport 11 million people in America.
He calls immigrants "rapists" and "murderers." He said, "They are not people." He said the immigrants are "poisoning the blood of our country." He wants to bring back cruel and unhuman- — inhumane family separation policies that ripped children from their parents at the border.
Folks, that's not who we are. That's not America. My administration has reunited 700 of those families and still looking. Families belong together, folks, not separated. [Applause]
Let me close with this. We're here in the Rose Garden. Through that window in the Oval Office, you'll see I have a bust of Cesar Chavez. There's only five busts I have in that office. And in the back corner of the garden here, the rose bush that's planted in his honor.
He once said, quote, "Our ambitions must be broad enough to include the aspirations and needs of others for their sake and for our own."
Folks, the reason why we're the fastest-growing country in the world, why we're the best economy in the world is because of immigration. [Applause] That's why we're [inaudible]. That — that's not hyperbole. That's a fact.
What I see in the Latino community is doctors, teachers, athletes, artists, community leaders, construction workers, first responders who put themselves on the line to keep the rest of us safe.
You are dreamers and doers. You're cutting cancer. You're commanding the military. You're taking deep steps into space. And it matters. You matter. You really do. You matter more than we can express.
As I said earlier, you know, when you have 28 percent of all the students in our schools up to high school — 28 percent speaking Spanish, how in God's name can we not pay attention?
There's — always have beencompelling[competing] value sets to visions of America. One of those value sets is of revenge and retribution. The other is hope and opportunity that we share — honesty, decency, faith, fairness.
That's the future we're building together. In America, we defend democracy; we don't not diminish it. We protect freedoms; we don't take them away. An America where the economy grows from the middle out and the bottom up, the wealthy pay their fair share, and working people have a fair shot — that's what we're about: an America where no one is left behind.
I know we can do this. Because of you, I've never been more optimistic about the future. We just have to remember who we are.
We're the United States of America — [applause] — a nation of immigrants. And there's nothing, nothing beyond our capacity when we do it together. [Applause]
God bless you all. And may God bless our troops.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you. [Applause]
5:27 P.M. EDT
May 6, 2024
At 3:30 PM, as a part of her Joining Forces initiative to support military and veteran families, First Lady Jill Biden will host a White House event to honor the men and women who served during World War I and recognize the contributions of those who made the National World War I Memorial possible. The First Lady's remarks at this East Room event will be open to pre-credentialed media and livestreamed at WhiteHouse.gov/live . For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Tuesday, May 7 th at 10:00 AM ET.
Remarks by Vice President Harris During the Nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour
Remarks by Vice President Harris During the Nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour
May 6, 2024
Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History
Detroit, Michigan
2:23 P.M. EDT
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, everyone. Good afternoon, Detroit. Good afternoon. It's good to be back. Good afternoon. Please have a seat. Please have a seat.
I want to thank Ron Busby. We have -- many of us have worked with him over the years and know: As president of the U.S. Black Chambers, he has been an extraordinary leader to an essential organization in our fight for economic empowerment. Can we please hear it for Ron Busby and his courageous leadership?
And I want to thank all of the extraordinary leaders who are here today. Secretary of Energy and the former governor of this state, Jennifer Granholm -- -- who traveled with me today on Air Force Two from Washington, D.C. She said, "I have got to be in Michigan."
I want to thank Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su for all you do to fight for the working people of America.
Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves, thank you for your extraordinary leadership.
Representative Shri Thanedar, thank you for you and your being here. And he is somewhere here. Thank you.
And I want to thank also Representative Steven Horsford, who is the chair of the Congressional Black Caucus.
And Lieutenant Governor of Michigan Garlin Gilchrist. Thank you.
So, Michigan, you know, I believe that America's economy is powered by the ambition and the aspiration of her people -- the ambition and aspiration to innovate, to create, and to prosper.
Therefore, to grow our economy, we must invest in that ambition and those aspirations. I believe every person in our country, then, must have access to the opportunity to compete, to succeed, and to thrive; the ability to achieve what I call financial freedom, which means having enough not just to get by but to get ahead -- -- to be able to build a business, to own a home, to start a family, and to create intergenerational wealth.
Which is why, over the past three years, the President and I have invested now trillions of dollars in America's infrastructure, in clean energy and a clean energy economy, in manufacturing, and in supply chains.
Our work is also guided by the understanding that there are certain communities that have faced, historically and currently, profound obstacles to acquire that opportunity.
And I'll tell you over the last three years, both in the White House and at the Vice President's Residence, where I live -- -- I have convened Black entrepreneurs from around the country to solicit their advice and leverage their expertise as to how we can have the greatest impact with the billions of dollars that we are investing and to identify the challenges they face in building financial security and wealth, including disparities in access to capital and lending, disparities in homeownership and access to government contracts, to obstacles like student loan debt and medical debt.
President Biden and I have invested hundreds of billions of dollars to address these disparities. And I launched, then, this national tour, the Economic Opportunity Tour, to bring together entrepreneurs, businessowners, and community leaders together with representatives from the United States Departments of Commerce and Energy and Housing and Labor and Treasury and the Small Business Administration -- and the Undersecretary the SBA is with us as well -- to make sure founders and families have the information and assistance to access the resources they need.
For example, on the subject of access to capital. We all know Black entrepreneurs do not lack for ideas or ambition but often lack the capital that is necessary to turn an idea into a thriving business, to invest in inventory, hire employees, to scale up.
In fact, Black entrepreneurs are three times as likely to not apply for a loan, for fear they're going to be turned away from a bank.
So, two years ago, I founded the Economic Opportunity Coalition -- a group of 31 companies and nonprofits -- including, for example, the Bank of America, MasterCard, and the Ford Foundation -- that are working currently to invest $3 billion in community banks -- banks which we know are uniquely designed to serve minority and women entrepreneurs.
And this builds on the work that I did when I was a United States senator in 2020 to invest $12 billion more in our community banks. Thank you.
And understand: This work is helping Black businesses receive loans not only for thousands of dollars, but for millions of dollars.
For example, I'm proud to announce we are investing $100 million in small- and medium-sized auto supply companies, many of which -- -- many of which are Black-owned and based right here in Michigan. These grants will allow businesses to upgrade production and production lines to produce parts for electric vehicles.
I'm also pleased to announce the launch of a new program that will match government-backed loans with private equity capital to help small- and mid-size auto suppliers access loans from a quarter million dollars to 10 million dollars.
The strength of America's economy is also based on the strength of America's supply chains. We all learned that in the pandemic, if we weren't clear before.
This investment will help to keep our auto supply chains here in America, which strengthens America's economy overall, and keep those jobs here in Detroit.
We are also axpending [sic] -- expanding, excuse me, access to government contracts -- government contracts. At the beginning of our administration, President Joe Biden and I pledged to increase federal contracts for minority-owned small businesses by 50 percent, knowing that, traditionally and historically, folks didn't necessarily have access to the relationships to get those contracts.
And we are on track to meet our goal by the end of next year, which means -- -- which means thousands more minority entrepreneurs with contracts worth hundreds of thousands and even millions of dollars -- contracts which can last up to five years with the option to renew for 10, 20, and 30 years. Think about what that means in terms of a sustained investment and all of the folks that, over a period of time, will benefit.
Now, I also want to point out -- because there is a contrast here between us and the last administration. The last administration invested access to tax cuts for billionaires. We are investing in access to capital for entrepreneurs.
And this work and our overall perspective is that we must understand that if we want a great return on investment, we must understand the natural resources that are available and then see that and invest in those resources.
To strengthen America's economy, we are also helping more people buy a home. Homeownership is one of the most powerful engines of intergenerational wealth. It builds equity, which can help pay for a child's college education or provide equity that then can be used as startup capital to start a business.
But as a result of lasting legacies of structural inequities -- such as segregation, redlining, and so-called urban renewal -- today, Black Americans are 40 percent less likely to own a home. And homeown- -- this is a sad fact -- and homeownership rates for Black men have been falling for three decades straight. We've got to do something about that.
So, to help address these disparities in our budget, President Biden and I outlined a blueprint to provide folks who are first in their family to buy a home with $25,000 toward a down payment -- ; to give families up to $400 a month to help with a mortgage; and to build 2 million units of affordable housing to lower costs for homebuyers and renters.
We are also calling out and addressing the issue of racial bias in home appraisals. We all know the stories. We've heard the stories. The stories like of a Black family that gets a home appraisal and the valuation is much lower than they know what their home is worth. So, they get a new appraisal, only this time they replace their photographs with photos of a family friend who is white, and they ask that family to bring in the appraiser. And the new appraisal is much higher. We've heard those stories.
Today, I'm proud to report that we have made it now easier for more homeowners to appeal home appraisals. And we have reached a commitment that all licensed home appraisers be required to complete racial bias training.
And, by the way, one of the people who is not present with us today that I want to thank is former Secretary of HUD Marcia Fudge -- -- all that she did to make sure this would happen.
So, the bottom line is that every family, I believe -- every family, whatever their background, their race, their geographic location -- has a right to the full and fair value of their home.
In addition to increasing opportunity, we have also focused on removing obstacles. One big obstacle to wealth-building is debt. While an issue for many people, Black Americans are twice as likely to have medical debt and more likely to struggle to repay student loan debt.
For anyone carrying debt, we know it is much more difficult, then, to save for a house, to grow a small business, to build intergenerational wealth. And it just plain makes people feel like they can never get ahead.
So, President Biden and I have made debt forgiveness a central pillar of our economic agenda. And we have already forgiven about $500 million of medical debt for hundreds of thousands of Americans across the nation.
And in Wayne County, Michigan, we will forgive an additional $700 million of medical debt for as many as 300,000 people.
And there's more. We are also implementing a rule -- and this is critically important -- we are also implementing a rule that medical debt cannot be used in calculating your credit score -- -- which means medical debt cannot be the reason someone is denied a car loan, a home loan, or a small-business loan.
On the issue of student loan debt, we have also forgiven nearly $160 billion -- billion -- for more than four and a half million people.
On average, more than $30,000 per person and $70,000 for our public servants, like nurses, firefighters, and teachers -- and God knows we don't pay them enough as it is, so it's only right.
And please, to everyone here, all the leaders, help us get the word out on the student loan debt issue. Your student loan debt can be forgiven, even if you didn't graduate. Please help us get the word out because it's only logical. Think about it. How many people have to drop out because they can't afford tuition? They don't graduate, and they still have the debt.
So, Detroit, I'll end with this. All of our work -- whether it be debt forgiveness, affordable housing, government contracts, or access to capital -- it is all guided by a fundamental principle. President Biden and I believe in you. We believe in the people of our country.
And so, we believe that it is a great return on the investment to invest in the people of America and to invest, as we have discussed today, in your business, in your financial security, and your wealth.
And this approach is working. Since taking office, we have seen record Black small-business growth and we have created more than two and a half million new jobs for Black workers. And since 2019, Black wealth is up 60 percent.
So, President Biden and I are clear. These are not only our accomplishments, they are yours. It is the result of your drive, your creativity, and your power.
And so, I'll end with this, Detroit. Together, let us continue to invest in the ambition and aspirations of our people -- of the American people. Together, let us continue to help folks create wealth and achieve financial freedom. And together, let us continue to build a nation where every person has the opportunity to compete, prosper, and thrive.
Thank you, all. God bless you. And God bless the United States of America. Thank you.
END 2:41 P.M. EDT
# # #
Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby
Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room
2:28 P.M. EDT
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Good afternoon, everyone.
Q Good afternoon.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, you just heard from my colleague over at the State Department who has confirmed that Hamas sent a response. I'm going to turn things over very quickly to my colleague, Admiral John Kirby, who will share more updates in the region.
MR. KIRBY: Thanks, Karine.
Good afternoon, everybody.
Q Good afternoon.
MR. KIRBY: As Karine noted, there has been a response from Hamas to the hostage deal. We're currently reviewing that response, and we're discussing it with our partners in the region.
Director Burns, as you know, is there, and he's working this in real time on the ground. I won't be able to comment any further on this until we know where things stand. I hope you can understand that. I know everybody is curious about what's in this response, what the Israeli reaction to it is. I'm just not going to get ahead of the process.
We want to get these hostages out. We want to get a ceasefire in place for six weeks. We want to increase humanitarian assistance. And the last thing that I want to do is say anything at this podium that's going to put that process at risk.
Regardless, as we've said before, we still believe that reaching an agreement is the absolute best outcome not only for the hostages but for the Palestinian people. And we're not going to stop working to that outcome.
Now, as you know, the President talked with Prime Minister Netanyahu this morning. The call lasted about 30 minutes and was constructive.
The President reaffirmed his message on Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. The two leaders discussed the shared commitment of Israel and the United States to remember the 6 million Jews who were systematically targeted and slaughtered in the Holocaust, one of the darkest chapters in human history, and to forcefully act against antisemitism and all forms of hate-fueled violence.
Now, of course, the two leaders spoke about our efforts to secure the hostage deal, including through these ongoing talks today.
During the call, at the President's urging, Prime Minister Netanyahu agreed to ensure that the Kerem Shalom crossing is back open for humanitarian assistance for those in need.
And I also want to take a moment to address the latest reports now out of Rafah, which was also a topic of discussion on the — on the call.
I'll reiterate again that we cannot and we will not speak for IDF operations. But we've made clear our views about operations in Rafah that could potentially put more than a million innocent people at greater risk. During his call with Prime Minister Netanyahu, the President again made this clear.
He also made clear that we continue to believe that the hostage deal is the best way to avoid that sort of an outcome while securing the release of those hostages. And as I said, those conversations continue.
Just one more thing: President Biden hosted His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan for lunch at the White House. That probably wrapped up here just recently. They discussed the strong partnership between the United States and Jordan. They also spoke about the situation in Gaza, of course, including efforts to secure the hostage deal and to get more humanitarian assistance into the civilians of Gaza.
Now, we're going to have a more detailed readout of that conversation here very, very soon. Just don't have it right now. But you'll be seeing it shortly.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Steve.
Q As far as you can tell, which proposal did Hamas accept?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to get into that, Steve.
Q And is the issue over how long a ceasefire would last?
MR. KIRBY: Again, you're asking me for the parameters around the response and the deal itself, and I'm just not going to do that.
Q Lastly, Israel has called on people in — in Rafah to evacuate. Is — does that presage a full-scale assault? What — what are we seeing?
MR. KIRBY: As I said in my opening statement, I'm not going to speak for IDF operations or their military intentions and plans. They should be the ones to answer those kinds of questions.
What I can only reiterate is that we've been consistent and the President was consistent again this morning that we don't support ground operations in Rafah that would put the majority or even any of the — the civilians there at any greater risk. We want to see their safety and security allowed for and factored in.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Seung Min.
Q Noting your caveats at the top, are you able to say whether Hamas was agreeing to something that had been discussed over the last several days?
MR. KIRBY: Again, without getting into the details of it — and Director Burns is still talking to partners about this — there have been ongoing negotiations and talks here for weeks. And the Director traveled recently to see if we can't bring this thing home.
And, again, without speaking about the details of the response by Hamas, I think it's safe to conclude that that response came as a result or at the end of these continued discussions that Director Burns was part of.
Q And when do you think you'll have a better sense of what is happening? When will you get a readout from Director Burns? Later today? Early tomorrow?
MR. KIRBY: I don't know. The President has been briefed on — on the response. He's aware of where the situation and where the process is. What you're asking me is like when are we going to get, like, a final — you know —
Q Like, what is the answer? Yeah. [Laughter]
MR. KIRBY: Yeah — a final, you know, table slap here. There is a — there's a process that has — that — that has been worked in the past and will be worked this time. You get a response by Hamas. We're going to have to evaluate that. We're going to see what's in it. Certainly, the Israelis get it — must have a chance to look at this and to evaluate it.
And Director Burns, as — as we speak — literally, as you and I are talking — are having these conversations with partners in the region. You know, it would be great — I'm sure we'd all like to have an answer as soon as possible. But I just don't want to get ahead of that process.
Q And a quick follow-up on the readout. When do you expect the Kerem — Kerem Shalom crossing to reopen? Or is it already reopened?
MR. KIRBY: It should be open very, very soon. Prime Minister Netanyahu committed to opening it on the call this morning. So, at 2:30, is it open? I don't know. But he assured the President that it would be reopened. It had been closed for several days.
Q Okay. And one more. Cindy McCain, the executive director of the World Food Programme, said over the weekend that Northern Gaza is in a, quote, "full-fledged famine." Is that the assessment of the U.S. government as well?
MR. KIRBY: The U.N. has not declared a famine in Gaza writ large. But I don't want to understate the degree of need here and the — the dire situation that so many people in Gaza are in, particularly with respect to food and water. So, it is not a great situation, clearly. And that's why, again, we're working so hard to get this deal in place, so we can keep that humanitarian assistance up at a higher level.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Mary.
Q Thank you.
Q I understand you don't want to get into the specifics here. But is it your understanding that this is Hamas's final offer? I mean, is there still room to negotiate here?
MR. KIRBY: I think it's going to depend on our evaluation and the Israelis' evaluation of the response and where we go from here.
Q And as Steve mentioned, the Israelis are already warning people to evacuate Gaza. If they do go through with this operation, is the U.S. willing to consider putting limits or conditions on aid to Israel?
MR. KIRBY: I won't get ahead of where we are right now, Mary, in the process here, and I'm certainly not going to speak to hypothetical operations that haven't happened yet. I think we just have to see what transpires.
The President was very direct — and consistently so — this morning that we don't want to see major ground operations in Rafah that put these people at greater risk.
Q But, you know, a month ago, the administration did make clear that the U.S. would change its approach — right? — if Israel didn't take significant steps to address the humanitarian crisis.
MR. KIRBY: That's right.
Q Does that still hold? Is it possible that the U.S. could change course —
MR. KIRBY: Of course.
Q — if the humanitarian process isn't improved?
MR. KIRBY: Of course. We always —
Q And presumably, a Raf- —
MR. KIRBY: No, no. We always have the right to adjust our policies as appropriate, and that has not changed, no.
Q And presumably, an operation in Rafah would jeopardize steps to address the humanitarian crisis?
MR. KIRBY: All I can say is we've been very direct and very consistent in our views of concerns about operations in Rafah.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, M.J.
Q Does the U.S. currently have any sense of whether Israel is inclined or not inclined to accept this deal? [Laughter]
MR. KIRBY: I — I won't speak for the Israelis.
Q The — when the President and the Prime Minister spoke earlier today, was this specific framework discussed? And did the President encourage, put pressure on the Prime Minister to accept this framework?
MR. KIRBY: You're talking about the — what the — what Hamas says they responded to?
Q Yes.
MR. KIRBY: So, just — and just so you have the tick-tock here, by the — when they were talking this morning, we did not have news that Hamas had responded. So, that news broke after their call.
That said, as I mentioned in my opening statement, of course they talked about the hostage deal and the importance of getting it secured.
Q So, you're saying when the two leaders spoke, Hamas had not yet accepted —
MR. KIRBY: It would be wrong —
Q — this framework —
MR. KIRBY: Yeah.
Q — so the President would not have specifically asked the Prime Minister to —
MR. KIRBY: Correct.
Q — potentially accept this framework?
MR. KIRBY: It would be wrong for you to conclude that — that the call this morning was about having the Israelis accept the Hamas response. The Hamas response hadn't happened yet.
Q Did he broadly encourage the Prime Minister to get, yes, to some sort of deal?
MR. KIRBY: He, as he has consistently with Prime Minister Netanyahu, urged that we get this deal secured. But it wasn't a — it wasn't a pressure call. It wasn't about twisting his arm towards a certain set of parameters.
Director Burns is in the region having these conversations with the Israelis, the Qataris, the Egyptians, as — again, as we speak. And — and that's the forum for working out the parameters of it. But the President clearly talked to the Prime Minister about the importance of getting a deal done, yeah.
Q And, John, what is the President's position on a limited operation into Rafah?
MR. KIRBY: I think I — I don't think I can answer it any differently than I did with Mary. We've been very clear that we don't support a major ground operation in Rafah, operations in general that put at greater risk the more than a million people that are sheltering there.
And the question right now is a hypothetical. I mean, we're aware that they've dropped leaflets. We're aware that they're — that they're warning people to evacuate. I'll let them speak to their operations and to their intents — intentions.
Nothing has changed about where we are with respect to operations in Rafah that could put those people at greater risk.
Q Right. But you know that they are asking people in the area to evacuate and the possibility of a limited Rafah operation is on the table. So, I'm asking: Does the President believe that Israel can execute a limited operation into Rafah while adequately protecting the lives of civilians there?
MR. KIRBY: The President doesn't want to see operations in Rafah that put at greater risk the more than a million people that are seeking refu- — refuge there.
Q So, he wouldn't support a limited operation into Rafah?
MR. KIRBY: I think I've answered the question.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Francesca.
Q In the back.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Francesca, go ahead.
Q Picking up on the timeline. So, prior to Hamas saying that they accepted this proposal, what, as you understood them to be, were the sticking points for either Hamas or the Israelis in the — the deal that had been on the table?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to get into that.
Q Okay. Did it involve Rafah in any way?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to talk about the parameters of the proposal that was worked before this Hamas response, and I'm certainly not going to talk about the response right now.
I mean, I do understand the curiosity. And you guys are all asking exactly the right questions — all very fair. But I really do hope you understand that the last thing I would ever want to do from this podium is say something that could put this very sensitive process at greater risk.
We are at a critical stage right now. We got a response from Hamas. Now Director Burns is working through that, trying to assess it, working with the Israelis.
I mean, my goodness, folks, I don't know that it gets any more sensitive than right now. And the worst thing that we can do is start speculating about what's in it.
Q And one more thing on Rafah. What was your understanding why the Israelis were only evacuating part of Rafah at this time?
MR. KIRBY: You'd have to talk to the Israelis.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Danny.
Q Thanks, Karine. Thanks, Admiral. You've previously said several times that the ball is in the court of Hamas at previous stages of negotiations. Would it be fair to say now that the ball is in Israel's court?
MR. KIRBY: It's going to depend on what the response actually says and the conversations that we have with the Israelis about what — where we go from here.
Q And just one other thing. If I can ask, I mean, is — do you have any sense that Israel is currently using this threat or the start of an operation in Rafah as a means of putting pressure on Hamas at this stage of the negotiations?
MR. KIRBY: Again, you'd have to talk to the Israelis about their intentions.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Franco.
Q You said that they — that — that you did not know the news during the call. But were you surprised by — was the White House surprised by Hamas saying that they've reached a deal or agreeing to the agreement?
MR. KIRBY: It wasn't like we had a heads up about it. We — we knew that, as I said publicly, they had a proposal in front of them, and as was just remi- — I was just reminded of the fact that I said many times it was — the ball was in Hamas's court. So, we certainly knew that they had it before them, and we were waiting on word.
We had hoped that there would be word very, very soon. We certainly hope that there could be word today. But did we know the exact moment that Al Jazeera was able to break the news that Hamas had a response? No, we didn't predict that particular moment.
Q Are you encouraged that that — that there — that you are at this sensitive point? You've been talking about it's a very sensitive point, it's important —
MR. KIRBY: We'll be encouraged when we get a deal in place and we can start seeing hostages get back with their families. That'll be encouraging.
Q And if I can, what role, if any, do you feel like the leaflets and the pressure of an evacuation or the evacu- — the announcement of evacuating, do you think that had any role in — in triggering Hamas to do —
MR. KIRBY: I don't think we know that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead.
Q John, can you talk a little bit about the timeline, as the administration understands it, of those evacuations? How much time do people have to leave? Do you — did you guys put any demands on the Israelis in terms of how those evacuations are to take place under the parameters that you guys have talked
about previously?
MR. KIRBY: We're asking questions of the Israelis about what their intentions are here and what the — what the larger purpose of this evacuation is and sort of where they're wan- — wanting to go.
I think to answer your question, though, you'd really have to go to the Israelis and to — to speak to their military operations and plans. I'm not going to get ahead of that.
But are we curious about the timing and the intent and where they're going? Yes, absolutely. And the President expressed our curiosity about that on the call today.
Q But more than curiosity, are you expressing what you want to see happen in terms of those evacuations, how they take place, whether Israel is prepared for people moving around within Rafah?
MR. KIRBY: I would just say — again, without — without — I don't want to get ahead of operations that haven't happened. I don't want to speak for the Israeli military. I can just say that we don't want to see operations in and around Rafah that make it harder for the people that are seeking refuge there and shelter to be safe and secure. And we have made that case privately to the Israelis. The President did it again today with the Prime Minister directly. We certainly made it publicly. We've been very, very consistent about that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Jacqui.
Q Thank you, Karine. John, noting everything that you've said about the concerns expressed by the U.S. about the risk to Palestinians in Gaza with a full-scale operation, is the U.S. still aligned with Israel in its intention to eliminate the terrorist threat posed by Hamas?
MR. KIRBY: Of course.
Q And is there any feeling that Hamas may be trying to trick the public in some way? You heard Israeli officials commenting on this latest proposal as — as a trick, and —
MR. KIRBY: Oh —
Q — there's been a lot of pressure to — go ahead.
MR. KIRBY: Yeah, no, I'm just — go ahead. Sorry. I'm listening.
Q Well, there's — there's been, you know, pressure on the administration to make sure that the needs of Palestinians are — are being served and that the U.S. support for Israel isn't, you know, overhanded. And you had the — the report come out earlier today or maybe yesterday that the U.S. was potentially weighing withholding an arms shipment to Israel. Is there any concern that Hamas was trying to capitalize on that public pressure and, you know, "play a trick," as Israeli officials put it?
MR. KIRBY: I mean, I don't think there's any possible way I can answer that question unless I got between the ears of Mr. Sinwar, and that's a place I really don't want to be. I think that is a great question for him.
You know, it's interesting. I stand up here and answer questions, Karine does, Matt Miller at the State Department, Pentagon colleagues, the President does, Prime Minister Netanyahu does, and the IDF military spokesman does.
You know who hasn't answered a single question about his intentions and what games he might be playing or where he intends to take this? Mr. Sinwar, the head of Hamas. And I think it's — I think it's high time that he answers some of these questions and he come clean about what his intentions are. I don't know.
All I know is we got a response. Bill Burns is looking at that response. He's talking to the Israelis about it. And we'll see where this goes. Hopefully — hopefully — whatever is in this thing, hopefully it can lead to those hostages getting out real, real soon with their families where they need to be.
And as each new — as each day passes, their lives get further at risk. So, time is really of the essence here.
Q Well, noting your answer, is it still a good idea to try to negotiate with terrorists, then?
MR. KIRBY: It's — it's not — it's not like — it's not like we sit down pie in the sky and say, "Hey, today's a good day. Let's negotiate with terrorists." You — you got to negotiate with who you got to negotiate to get people back with their family.
So, frankly, if — if there's a better idea to get those hostages home with their families, I think we'd love to hear them. I just don't think there's another way to do it. There's no other way to do it, quite frankly.
You got to negotiate through Qatar with Hamas to get those folks back with their families. And it — does — you know, that's the hard work of diplomacy, qu- — you know, sometimes it means you got to sit across the table from some really bad folks that you'd rather not have to talk to. But they got those hostages, and we want them back.
Q But the U.S. backs Israel's intention to eliminate Hamas?
MR. KIRBY: We, of course, back their right and responsibility to go after the Hamas threat, to eliminate that threat.
Now, look, Jacqui, I've said many times here, you're not going to eliminate an ideology through military operations. But does Israel have a right and responsibility to eliminate a threat that they suffered on the 7th of October? A hundred percent. Absolutely, they do. And we've been nothing but — but very steadfast on that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Gabe.
Q Thanks, Karine. Thanks, John. Speaking about a tick-tock, what prompted this morning's call?
MR. KIRBY: I think you've heard me say many times now, they talk as appropriate. And given where we were in the hostage deal negotiations, given where we were with humanitarian assistance and Kerom — Kerem Shalom being shut down for several days, certainly given where we were with expectations in Rafah, this made all the sense in the world for today to be the day that the President and Prime Minister Netanyahu speak.
Q But when exactly was the call set up? Was it this morning? Was it yesterday after the rocket attack that killed the three Israelis? Or what — what specifically prompted it?
MR. KIRBY: I would tell you the initial planning for the call took place late in the weekend, is about what I'd say.
Q And one more on a different topic. Why did the U.S. halt an ammunition shipment to Israel last week?
MR. KIRBY: Yeah, look, I've seen the press reporting on this. All I can tell you is that — to Jacqui's question — our support for Israel's security remains ironclad. And I'm not going to get into the specifics of — of one shipment over another.
Q It's our — NBC is reporting that it included 2,000-pound bombs that may have been used in Rafah. Did concerns over Rafah and what the Israelis could use this ammunition for — did that play any role in halting that shipment?
MR. KIRBY: I don't have a better answer for you other than the one I just gave you.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead.
Q I just want to go at that question one more time. Did the United States put a pause on an arms shipment to Israel? Is that — is that reporting correct?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to confirm that report.
Q Okay. Just another on another topic. Well, same topic, different question. Over the weekend, the Queen of Jordan said in an interview that the United States is giving the world mixed messages, offering both expressions of concern and support for Gaza in addition to providing arms to Israel. Can you — can you comment at all on this — on her criticism or her critique of the United States' position?
MR. KIRBY: I'm — I'm not going to — I don't think it'd be appropriate to get into a back-and-forth here from the podium on this.
We have said that two things can be true at once, and they are. Israel has a right and a responsibility to defend itself, and we're going to continue to provide for their security and help them with that. And at the same time, they have a right and obligation to be careful about civilian casualties and getting more humanitarian assistance in.
And that's why we're working so hard on this hostage deal. And that's why the American — the President and the United States continue to lead the world in terms of actually making a difference in that outcome, making life better for the Palestinian people. No other country is doing more than the United States to try to increase that — that assistance and get this — get this ceasefire in place.
Q And just really quickly, the Israelis stopped a broadcast of Al Jazeera over the weekend. Can you comment on whether that's an appropriate action for a United States ally?
MR. KIRBY: We don't support that action. As we said very clearly on World Press Freedom Day on Friday — I know Karine talked about this — the work of independent journalism around the world is absolutely vital. It's important to an informed citizenry and public, but it's also important to — to help inform the policymaking process.
So, we don't support that at all.
Q And did the President bring it up at all in his call with —
MR. KIRBY: The focus of the call was on the hostage deal and on Rafah.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Okay. I'm going to give it to Al Jazeera.
MR. KIRBY: You saw my — sorry. You saw, I —
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Sorry.
MR. KIRBY: — I think I put a statement out this morning on that. So, we have officially reacted to it. Sorry.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Al Jazeera.
Q Thank you so much, Karine. Thank you, John. Is the administration planning on discussing the banning of Al Jazeera in Israel with the Israeli government?
We just celebrated the freedom of the press here in the United States and across the globe. And then this decision came, and it was really a big shock.
MR. KIRBY: As I just said, we don't —
Q Would the administration raise this issue with the government of Israel?
MR. KIRBY: We have raised this issue, and I made a public statement about it.
Q And on — on the — on Rafah. Has Israel presented or provided the administration with a comprehensive plan for the [inaudible]?
MR. KIRBY: No.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Ed.
Q I want to take you back to this report on whether shipments were paused.
MR. KIRBY: Okay.
Q Are the reports wrong?
MR. KIRBY: I'm not going to confirm the press reporting, Ed. What I've said is our security commitments to Israel are ironclad. The President pushed very hard to get that supplemental funding so that we could continue to help Israel with its security needs and —
Q You can appreciate the ambiguity makes it sound like it's true.
MR. KIRBY: I can't —
Q That we held it up.
MR. KIRBY: I can't speak for what you appreciate in my answer. [Laughter] All I can do is tell you that my answer is not going to change.
Q All right. What is the definition of a assault or attack on Rafah, in the view of the White House, that would be seen as impermissible?
MR. KIRBY: There hasn't been an assault or an attack —
Q Well, there's reports tonight that there are —
MR. KIRBY: — in terms of a ground operation at this time.
Q Okay.
MR. KIRBY: So, let's not get ahead of where we are. The President did express, again, our concerns about operations in Rafah that would put at risk these — these people finding or trying to find shelter there.
I think it would be a futile e- — exercise for me to get up here and — and give you a laundry list of what would or would not compose some kind of ground operation in Rafah. We have to — well, let me put it another way — the IDF has to speak to what their intentions and their plans are.
Q But it's still ground operation versus missiles that may be landing over Rafah tonight, which is what we're hearing.
MR. KIRBY: Well, it doesn't matter whether it's missiles or rockets. Things that kill innocent people — that's not okay. And, again, the President made it clear that we don't want to see operations in Rafah that put at risk —
Q And how does —
MR. KIRBY: — those million and a half people that are there.
Q How does the President assess Bill Burns's ongoing attempts to make sure this deal comes together?
MR. KIRBY: It's a nice side way of getting at sort of talking to the parameters of the deal. I appreciate that. He's very grateful for —
Q Oh, no, I was — I was more genuinely interested in what he thinks —
MR. KIRBY: Oh, really?
Q — of the CIA Director's work on this, yes. [Laughter]
MR. KIRBY: Excellent. I'm sorry. I impugned your question. [Laughter]
The — look, I think he's very grateful for the — the work that Director Burns and the whole team has been doing to try to get us to this point. But it only really matters if we can get the deal in place — and I'm sure Director Burns would agree me — would agree with me on that — and those hostages can get home.
But he's — he's done terrific work thus far, and I know that he wants to see th- — get this across the finish line, as this — just as much as we do.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Jonathan.
Q Thank you, Karine. Admiral, on a different topic. Reports breaking just the last few minutes that a U.S. soldier has been detained in Russia. This apparently happened in the last few days. The reporting is he had been stationed in Korea, traveled to Russia on his own. He's being accused of some sort of theft. Are — is the administration aware of this report?
MR. KIRBY: Yes.
Q What can you tell us about what happened?
MR. KIRBY: I can't really say much about it right now, Jonathan. I hope you can understand that. And, certainly, it's a better question put to our DOD colleagues. But we are aware of this case.
Q And other matter just related to Russia. There has been threats from Moscow in the last couple days about striting — striking British military facilities because of the — and also simulating nuclear drills, as it sharply rises tensions because of weapons manufactured in the UK being used in the conflict. This says it could potentially apply to other ally countries as well — theoretically, the United States.
Do you have a response to that?
MR. KIRBY: Well, what I'd say, number one, is it's just reckless and irresponsible for the leader of a major nuclear-armed power to be saber-rattling the way that he is with respect to potential use for — for nuclear weapons.
We're — obviously, we monitor this and have continued to monitor this very closely. I can tell you we've seen nothing, even despite the reckless rhetoric, that would cause us to change our strategic deterrent posture.
And, look, lastly, if — if Mr. Putin and Russian officials are worried about their troops in Ukraine getting hit with weapons from other countries, then the easiest thing to do is just take your troops and leave.
Q Thank you.
Q There are reports of AFP right now that Israel is committing airstrikes on Rafah — intense airstrikes on Rafah right now. What would that timing mean to the relationship between the President and the Prime Minister?
MR. KIRBY: Well, [inaudible], you — you know something I don't know. I haven't seen those reports. I can't confirm it. I'll just go back to what I've said, I don't know, half a dozen, if not more, times today: We don't support operations in Rafah that put people at greater risk.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead.
Q Thank you. Thank you, Karine, and thank you, John. I just wanted to make it clear that regarding the limit on the refined petroleum provided by Russia to North Korea, the annual refined petroleum limit under U.N. sanctions against North Korea is 500,000 barrels. But last week, you say that the limit was exceeding that 6- — 165,000 barrels in March alone. So, how many barrels were supplied in January and February?
MR. KIRBY: I will have to take that question and get back to you. I didn't bring the barrel data with me today.
Q And one one more quick question again. State — yes, State Department Spokesperson Miller said that the sanctions against this will be imposed through these months, and a North Korea oil tanker sanctioned by the U.N. is currently staying in Chinese water. So, is China included in the sanctions this time? Or U.N. sanctions against Russia and sanctions against China are together?
MR. KIRBY: I — I will admit that I will owe you now yet another answer. I'll get back to you with something more detailed.
I will only just say, to exit myself from this question gracefully, that — [laughter] — that — that we want everybody to enforce the sanctions that are against North Korea appropriately and consistently. And not everybody does. And North Korea has benefited from sanctions evasions by countries in the region and beyond the region. I'll leave it at that.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Okay. I'm going to — we're going to have to start wrapping it up.
Q Thank you very much, Karine. Thank you very much, John. I have a question on Russia and growing ties between China and Russia. Putin is reportedly visiting China this month, and right before this visit, just last week, we learned that Russian police raided the homes of Falun Gong practitioners in Russia — this is a group persecuted in China — and detained several of them.
Does — does the White House have any reaction to this? And then I have a follow-up one.
MR. KIRBY: I haven't seen the reports about the detention of these individuals. If the — if they're true, certainly, that would be concerning to us. But I'd probably refer you to the State Department to speak a little bit more about that than — than I can.
Just, again, writ — writ large, we have seen China and Russia try to go — grow closer together. We believe a big reason for that is, frankly, the United States and — and putting themselves in positions to — to either oppose our foreign policy objectives or to try to be an obstacle to them in many, many different ways.
So, it's — it's concerning to us.
The most specific concern that we have right now is the fact that some Chinese companies are providing microelectronics and components so that Mr. Putin can continue his defense industrial base improvements and developments and put weapons in the field that just kill innocent Ukrainians.
And, again, we've been — we've made those concerns clear directly to our Chinese counterparts and at the U.N.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: All right. Jared. Ja- — oh, yeah —
Q Oh —
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: You have the last question.
Q Yeah, I did want to ask just a clarification, first, on the King's visit. Is he meeting with any other senior administra- — Defense Department, anybody?
MR. KIRBY: I — I — not that I'm aware of.
Q So, this wasn't, like, a broader bilateral, kind of —
MR. KIRBY: No. No, the President hosted him for lunch. They've done this before in the past.
Q And, secondly, can you give us a —
MR. KIRBY: I — I can't — but, look, I — I can't speak to his whole schedule while he's in town. So, I'm not aware of any other meetings, but that doesn't mean that he's got something —
Q But it wasn't, like, a broader bilateral here at the White House?
MR. KIRBY: No.
Q And on the pier, the temporary pier, if you could give us an update on that and whether or not, like, a ceasefire would need to be in place for that to be fully implemented and operational.
MR. KIRBY: A ceasefire doesn't have to be in place for the pier to operate. Now, obviously, somewhat — it's a whole heck of a lot easier if there's no fighting going on. But it doesn't have to be.
In fact, one of the big issues that we are still working out is what the force protection laydown would look like and how the — not — not just the people operating the pier but the material itself can be safe from any — any attack.
As far as I know — and, again, you should go to the Pentagon for more detail — the — essentially, the pier itself has been constructed. It is not in place because, last week, they had some weather issues in the Eastern Med, so they weren't able to put it in place.
You should go to the Pentagon for, like, where it is right now. As I understand it, it's still not being put into place.
Then you've got to anchor it, and you've got to make sure you build a causeway so you can get to and from it. And so, there's still a lot of work that has to be done to get it operational, and that would include the force protection laydown.
But no, the short answer to your question is you don't have to have a ceasefire in place to use the temporary pier.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Thank you, Admiral. Appreciate it.
MR. KIRBY: Thank you, Karine. Appreciate your — appreciate your patience.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: No, you're all good. Thank you.
Q Thank you.
Q Thank you, John.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Thanks.
All right. I do have a couple of things at the top. I wanted to get to the — to the Admiral at the beginning.
So — so, tomorrow, the President will deliver remarks during the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's annual Days of Remembrance ceremony. You can expect the President to make clear that during these sacred days of remembrance, we honor the memory of the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust and we recommit to heeding the lessons of this dark chapter: Never again.
He will speak to the horrors of October 7th, when Hamas unleashed the deadliest day for Jewish people since the Holocaust.
And he will speak to how, since October 7th, we've seen an alarming rise in antisemitism in the U.S. — in our cities, our communities, and our — and on our campuses.
The President will touch on how his National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism is putting the full force of the federal government behind protecting the Jewish community and that all Americans must stand united against antisemitism.
He will reaffirm that we respect and protect the fundamental right to free speech, but there is no place on any campus or anywhere for antisemitism. There is no place for hate speech or threats of violence against — against the Jewish people.
Next, today, as part of the Economic Opportunity Tour, Vice President Harris is traveling to Michigan to announce $100 million in funding and resources for small- and medium-size auto manufacturers and auto workers.
The Vice President will also announce actions to expand workforce training and improve job quality in the EV supply chain.
For decades, trickle-down econ- — e- — economics drove manufacturers overseas. Thanks to the Biden-Harris administration's Investing in America agenda, companies are making historic investments in EV battery supply manufacturing. More than 20 auto and battery plants have been announced, after no net new plants opened under the previous administration.
Historic contracts secured the — by the UAW and the Big Three automakers in Detroit, as well as recent organizing victories, like Volkswagen in Chattanooga, Tennessee, ensure that these jobs of the future will provide comp- — comparable wages, retirement security, and respect at work.
These actions build on the Biden-Harris administration's ongoing work to ensure that the workers and businesses that built the auto industry remain community anchors for generations to come.
And, finally, I want to acknowledge some important news. While the previous administrations oversaw the largest one-year increase in murders ever recorded, under the President's — this President's leadership, President Biden, violent crime is at a nearly 50-year low.
Thanks to the extraordinary efforts of law enforcement and community leaders, Americas are safe — Americans are safer from violent crime today than they were a year ago. Violent crime declined across every category in the first quarter of 2024, and murders are down 17 percent.
Let me be clear here: This reduction in crime is no accident. President Biden and his administration are taking historic action to make our communities safer and give our law enforcement officers the tools they need to protect and serve.
We are stopping the flow of illegal guns and making the largest-ever federal investment in fighting and preventing crime through the American Rescue Plan, which every Republican in Congress voted against. But we can't stop now.
Through the Safe [Safer] America — America Plan, the President is calling on Congress to invest $37 billion to support law enforcement and crime prevention. Every family deserves to live in a safe community.
With that, Seung Min.
Q Thanks. You had another school, Columbia University, announce this morning that they're canceling commencement ceremonies. I'm wondering if the White House is concerned that the situation on college campuses is not calming down, despite what the President said last week.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, I want to quote what the President said from last week, as you laid that out for me. And here's the quote: "Peaceful protest in America — violent protest is not protected; peaceful protest is. It's against the law when violence occurs. Destroying property is not a peaceful protest. It's against the law. Vandalism, trespassing, breaking windows, shutting down campuses, forcing the cancellation of classes and graduations — none of this is a peaceful protest."
And it is unfortunate that a small group — a small group of people went too far and cost their classmates this important event. We've talked about it many times from here. When it's — when it comes to commencement day and when it comes to speaking at commencement events, this is something that the President has done for some time now. And he understands that this is a moment of joy, a moment of celebration. And — and we feel for them. We feel for each of the graduates.
And — and we're going to continue to reiterate the President's comments and statements and what we've said from this podium to call for protest peacefully. And that's what we're going to continue to do.
But we do feel for them. These are graduates who are going to miss out on an incredibly important day of commencement.
Q Quick follow-up. Does the White House anticipate any issues — or how are you preparing for any potential issues when he delivers the remarks at Morehouse later this month?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, look, I'm not going to get into — I'm not going to speculate on what might happen, might not happen. Obviously, when it comes to any type of — when it comes to events and security, that's something that Secret Service obviously is going to — going to deal with and — and figure that out on their end. But I'm not going to get into specu- — to speculate from here.
I'm just going to reiterate what I just said about how the President truly enjoys doing commencement speeches. He understands how important — not just for the graduate but the families and the loved ones that are there to celebrate a really, truly important day. And so, that's what we're looking forward to.
As you know, the President is also going to go to West Point and honor — honor those who serve to protect our country. And — and so — and we'll continue to do that, obviously. And so, that's what he's going to look forward to: really being there for the graduates and lifting them up in this moment.
Q Thank you, Karine. Congressman Ro Khanna said that the President should and will be out visiting these campus among the protests — amid the protests. Is there any plan for him to get out there and talk to students —
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: No.
Q — right now? Okay.
And then, separately, GW's president has called for Metro Police in D.C. to intervene to dismantle what they've deemed an illegal encampment. And D.C. police have so far refused to respond to that call. It's happening in the President's backyard. Is there any reaction from the White House on what should happen?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, that is something that I'm going to leave to the local law enforcement and universities. That's for them to figure out, for them to work it through. They know what is happening on the ground. And we've always been very clear about that. And we'll continue to be clear about that.
We're going to continue to call for peaceful protest. And, you know, dissent cannot lead to disorder. And so, going to continue to be very, very clear, as the President has been, as I have been, as so many of us here on — in this administration has been.
Q Any idea why D.C. police would not respond —
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I would —
Q — to this call?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I would refer you to the D.C. police. That's something for them to speak to.
Q Okay.
Q In the back.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Okay.
Q And then, j- — lastly, on these reported plans for the U.S. to bring over Palestinian refugees, potentially. Is there anything you can tell us about where we are in the works with that? And what — I know it would have to depend on coordination with Egypt, which so far has been resistant to cooperate on this. What — what can you tell us about this plan?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I don't have anything further to announce. I know I was asked this question a couple of times last week. I just don't have anything else to share.
Go ahead, Steve.
Q Karine, the — the speech tomorrow, is it a broad-brush speech or will he get into some of the specifics of the Gaza conflict?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I'm not going to get ahead of the President too much. Obviously, it is a day of remembrance. You know the term. We — as I just stated at the top: Never forget — or never again.
And so, certainly the President will — will talk about that day and how horrific it was for the Jewish — Jewish Americans, Jewish community.
I just don't want to get too far ahead. But obviously, it's an important day for — for not just Jewish Americans but Americans more broadly.
Q Thank you.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead, Karen.
Q Thanks, Karine. Given the key role that Jordan has played over the last several months in the Middle East — especially on humanitarian aid — and the day's development, there was obviously a lot of news value to the King's visit today.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yeah.
Q Why didn't we see the President and the King together for a photo op? Why was that closed press?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, look, we try to do everything that we can, obviously, to give you all as much access, give the press as much access. It is sometimes the — the visitor — the visiting country have — you know, they have their own requests, and we try to certainly accommodate their request as well.
And so, look, we will try all — every — at every turn, at every of these events to make sure that there is press — there is press access.
In this particular instance, it's a — it was a private lunch. And we tried to also accommodate the visitors that come here as well.
Q So, the King did not want to do anything on camera today?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I — I would leave it up to — to the King and his team to speak to that. But, again, we try to also accommodate the visiting country as well.
Q And if there's any news from the Israeli side on this — the — where things stand, should we expect to hear from the President today or this evening on this?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I don't have anything to — of note or any changes to the President's schedule at this time. Obviously, if there i- — are any changes, we — you all will be one of the first, if not the first, to know. I just don't have anything at this time.
The President was going to speak tomorrow. So, stay tuned.
AIDE: Karine.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Go ahead. Go ahead.
Q Thank you. I just wanted to go again at the speech the President is —
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yeah.
Q — is exp- — is giving tomorrow. I mean, just given the context in which he's giving it, where there's — you know, 34,000 people have died in Gaza. He's going to be talking about "never again" and a genocide. And he's protested almost everywhere he goes, you know, with that moniker of — of "Genocide Joe."
And it's a — I'm just wondering: How is he going to sort of thread the needle of — of address- — of addressing a genocide that happened quite a while ago while there are some people who are saying that there is one happening right now that he bears some responsibility for?
I mean, I understand that that's not the view of the administration, but it's still a very tricky line to — to walk. And I'm just wondering if you can share any sort of thought as to whether he may be trying to send us a subtle message with the speech at all or if there's any sort of nod to the broader context in which the speech is being given.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: So, I'm going to let the President speak for himself. I gave a broad stroke of the day —
Q Yes.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: — and how important it's going to be for the President to speak on this Day of Remembrance, the ceremony. So, just going to be really mindful there.
On your broader question, look, the President understands that this is an incredibly painful time. And we have said that over and over again, and we understand that. And he also respects the right of all Americans to peacefully protest and also with the understanding and — and the knowledge of having those conversations, those sometimes really tough conversations with community leaders.
And we have done that on the White — White House — you've heard from senior White House officials — or you've heard us talk about senior White House officials going across the country, having those conversations with Muslim leaders, Arab leaders, Palestinian leaders in talking through this painful moment.
And I would also — also say that this is why this hostage deal is so important. This is why we continue to work around the clock. This is why Director Burns is there meeting — and obviously meeting — continuing to meet with partners in the region to try to get to this deal so we can get that all-important humanitarian aid, get that ceasefire that is much needed, and also make sure that we get the hostages home, which also — American hostages are part of those hostages, and we need to get them home to their loved ones.
So, that's what we're going to continue to do. The President will speak for himself tomorrow. So, I would say: Tune in. Listen to what he has to say. But we understand how painful this is for many, many communities across this country.
Q Has he had an input from any of those communities that you mentioned? Like, as he's been sort of wrestling with his speech and working on it, have any of those communities had any input into what he should say or what [inaudible] —
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: I can't speak — I can't to — to that — that question about input from communities. But the President understands how important this moment is. And I would say this is a president that tends to meet the moment when it comes to speeches and remarks like these. He understands what's going on, has the finger — his finger is on the pulse as far as what people are feeling.
And so, I'm just not going to get beyond that. And I would say: Tune in.
Go ahead, Gabe.
Q Karine, just really quickly.
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yeah.
Q What's your response to Kristi Noem's comments implying that Commander should be put down?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Look, you know, when we learned last week, obviously, like all of you, in her book that she killed her puppy, you heard me say that was very, very sad.
We find her comments from yesterday disturbing. We find them absurd. And — and here, this is a country that loves dogs. And you have a leader talking about putting dogs down, killing them. And that's a disturbing statement to say.
I would say to — I would say to her — is she should — probably should stop digging herself in a hole.
Thanks, everybody.
Q Where — where is Commander now?
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Who? Oh. So, Commander — we said this back in the fall. Commander is living with family members.
Q Where?
Q In Delaware?
[Cross-talk]
MS. JEAN-PIERRE: Yes. We said this before.
All right. Thanks, everybody.
3:14 P.M. EDT
May 6, 2024
Medicare is stronger and Social Security remains strong. As long as I am President, I will keep strengthening Social Security and Medicare and protecting them from Republicans' attempts to cut benefits Americans have earned. Since I took office, my economic plan and strong recovery from the pandemic have helped extend Medicare solvency by a decade, with today's report showing a full five years of additional solvency. My plan would extend Medicare solvency permanently by asking the wealthy to pay their fair share and lowering prescription drug costs. And I am committed to extending Social Security solvency by asking the highest-income Americans to pay their fair share without cutting benefits or privatizing Social Security.
Republicans in Congress have a very different vision. Their budget sides with the wealthy and special interests to cut Social Security by over $1.5 trillion, increase the retirement age, raise prescription drug costs, and transition Medicare to a system that would raise premiums for many seniors. These changes are cruel and unnecessary. I will always fight for America's seniors and prevent Republicans from cutting Social Security and Medicare.
Announces Public Tours and Media Preview of the White House Gardens on Mother’s Day Weekend
The White House Announces Public Tours and Media Preview of the White House Gardens on Mother’s Day Weekend
The White House will continue the tradition of welcoming members of the public to tour the White House Gardens and South Grounds. This spring the White House Gardens Tour will take place during Mother's Day Weekend, with tours available to the public from 10:00 AM to 4:30 PM ET on Saturday, May 11thand Sunday, May 12th.
2024 White House Gardens Tour
The White House Gardens Tour is free and open to the public; however, a daily timed ticket is required for all attendees, including small children. The National Park Service [NPS] will distribute free, daily timed tickets at a tent stationed outside the White House Visitor Center [1450 Pennsylvania Avenue NW] each tour day [May 11thand 12th] beginning at 8:30 AM ET, while supplies last. The tour entry point for all guests will be located on 15th Street, NW between E Street, NW and Constitution Avenue, NW. Advance reservations are not available. The ADA entrance will be located at 15th Street, NW and Alexander Hamilton Place, NW.
Media Preview
The White House will host a media preview of the White House Gardens and South Grounds on Friday, May 10th at 12:30 PM ET. This media preview will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Thursday, May 9that 3:00 PM ET.
May 6, 2024
AT PRESENTATION OF THE COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF'S TROPHY
TO THE ARMY BLACK KNIGHTS
East Room
12:09 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Well, good afternoon. Please -- please have a seat.
Well, I can -- you can tell the Academy grads in the audience; they got bigger grins on their faces --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Go Army!
THE PRESIDENT: -- than the others.
Well, welcome. Welcome. We are here today to celebrate a tough team, a storied football program, this year's Commander-in-Chief Trophy winners: The Army Black Knights.
I'm impressed with your generosity, General.
It was an honor to have so many friends and fans with us here today. They include Secretary of Defense Austin, a proud West Point grad himself. You can clap.
The Secretary of the Army, Christine Wormuth. Christine, where are you? There you are.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who's smiling anyway, C.Q. Brown -- -- Air Force. He's an Air Force guy, but he's the best. And I was so hon- -- not to try to rub this in too much.
But I also welcome Representative Stanford Bishop -- Sanford Bishop. Representative Burt -- where -- where is Brett? You here? There you are, Brett Guthrie. Good to see you, Brett.
Representative Pat Ryan.
REPRESENTATIVE RYAN: How you doing, sir?
THE PRESIDENT: Pat, how are you, pal?
REPRESENTATIVE RYAN: Beat Navy!
THE PRESIDENT: I ain't protecting you, man. You're on your own.
And Representative Steve Womack.
We're also joined by Army's football's biggest fans: Bill and Steve of the radio show "Crawdad's Countdown to Kickoff." Fellas, thanks for making the trip from Alabama.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Go Army!
THE PRESIDENT: And we finally have Coach Jeff Monken who -- who has once again led the Bla- -- Black Knights back to the White House again.
Where are you, Coach? I'll make sure you --
And some folks here know, over the past few seasons, the coach has restarted the old Army football tradition. Every time the team takes the field, they now carry the gold and black flag with a skull and crossbones. This flag represents everything the Black Knights stand for: toughness, tenacity, camaraderie, accountability. And you all certainly demonstrated that, Coach.
Over the course of this season, you faced setbacks, doubts, and uncertainties. Critics counted you out, but you never gave up. You never quit. Game by game, play by play, you ground it out together.
You beat Air Force, who was undefeated until you played them, forcing six turnovers and winning by 20 points.
A month later, you beat Navy -- -- second year in a row.
Today, you're taking home West Point's 10 th Commander-in-Chief Trophy. You should be very proud.
And I want you to know I'm proud of you, too, not just for the wins, but -- not just for those forced turnovers; although they're impressive, Coach -- but because every game, after you hang up that uniform, you immediately put on another uniform: one representing the United States of America.
Everyone -- everyone on this stage stepped up to serve, to lead, to join the long line of American servicemen, each a link in a chain of honor in America.
You represent the very best of who we are as Americans, and I'm confident that in the years to come you will be willing to do -- to see -- you'll see the same toughness, tenacity, and camaraderie, and accountability to our country that you brought to the field in every single game.
Now, many of these cadets are going to have to hear me twice, so I'm going to make this shorter than usual, because I'm -- I'm getting a -- I'll have the honor of speaking again at West Point's commencement.
So, let me just close with one brief final thought: Go Army.
AUDIENCE: Beat Navy!
THE PRESIDENT: I occasionally used to root for another club until my son joined the United States Army, spent a year in Iraq, became a major, won the Bronze Star and a few other things. And so, I wasn't even allowed to mention any other team ever -- -- ever.
Well, God bless you all. May God protect our troops. And, Coach, over to you.
COACH MONKEN: Thank you, sir.
Thank you, Mr. President and distinguished guests. On behalf of our superintendent, Lieutenant General Steve Gillen; our command- -- our commandant of cadets, Major General Lori Robinson; our academic -- our academic dean, Brigadier General Shane Reeves; our director of athletics, Mr. Mike Buddie; the United States Corps of Cadets; the Long Gray Line of West Point graduates; and the nearly 1 million men and women who serve our nation as members of the U.S. Army, Army Reserves, and Army National Guard, the Army football team is honored to accept the most coveted trophy in all of college football, the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy.
We're grateful --
THE PRESIDENT: I want to know who the hell is going to carry it home.
COACH MONKEN: I carried it in here. I'll get -- I'll take care of it, sir.
We're grate- -- we are grateful for your invitation to the White House and for welcoming the members of America's team as your guests here today.
This is a team of tough, talented players and a team of gritty, intense fighters. And just as they battled to finish the season with four straight victories, including wins over rivals Air Force and Navy, as you had mentioned, to claim the service academy dominance in winning the CIC Trophy, these warfighters will lead our nation's sons and daughters to victory on other fields on other days.
With us today are 48 soon-to-be-commissioned cadets who will later this month earn their diplomas, graduates of the world's preeminent leadership institution, the United States Military Academy. Soon after, they will enter the profession of arms prepared to lead and fight our nation's wars.
Joining them today on the stage is the rest of our team, underclassmen who, in the next few years, will join these soon-to-be graduates as officers in the Army.
Mr. President, these young men and women embody the values of duty, honor, country, and they represent the best our nation has to offer.
We're incredibly proud to be here and grateful to you for this tremendous honor. On, bro- -- on, Brave Old Army Team. And beat Navy.
Thank you, sir.
We got something for you.
Sir, I'm going to call Cadet First Class Jimmy Ciarlo, who's one of our team captains, Ringwood, New Jersey, to present you with one of our game-worn jerseys from the Army-Navy victory.
THE PRESIDENT: What do you think?
COACH MONKEN: Perfect.
THE PRESIDENT: I want to -- got to make sure you get my number right.
It's a great honor. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
What year are you?
MR. CIARLO: I'm a senior.
THE PRESIDENT: See you at graduation.
MR. CIARLO: Sounds good, sir. Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT:
Well, thank you all very much. And, by the way, are your par- -- any parents here? And to all the spouses of the guys running the show, God love you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Guys, thank you very much.
COACH MONKEN: Thank you, sir. Beat Navy.
12:18 P.M. EDT
Remarks by President Biden at Presentation of the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy to the Army Black Knights
Remarks by President Biden at Presentation of the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy to the Army Black Knights
East Room
12:09 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Well, good afternoon. Please — please have a seat.
Well, I can — you can tell the Academy grads in the audience; they got bigger grins on their faces —
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Go Army!
THE PRESIDENT: — than the others. [Laughs]
Well, welcome. Welcome. We are here today to celebrate a tough team, a storied football program, this year's Commander-in-Chief Trophy winners: The Army Black Knights. [Applause]
I'm impressed with your generosity, General. [Laughter]
It was an honor to have so many friends and fans with us here today. They include Secretary of Defense Austin, a proud West Point grad himself. You can clap. [Applause]
The Secretary of the Army, Christine Wormuth. Christine, where are you? There you are. [Applause]
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who's smiling anyway, C.Q. Brown — [laughter] — Air Force. [Applause] He's an Air Force guy, but he's the best. And I was so hon- — not to try to rub this in too much.
But I also welcome Representative Stanford Bishop — Sanford Bishop. Representative Burt — where — where is Brett? You here? There you are, Brett Guthrie. Good to see you, Brett. [Applause]
Representative Pat Ryan.
REPRESENTATIVE RYAN: How you doing, sir?
THE PRESIDENT: Pat, how are you, pal?
REPRESENTATIVE RYAN: Beat Navy! [Applause]
THE PRESIDENT: I ain't protecting you, man. You're on your own. [Laughter]
And Representative Steve Womack. [Applause]
We're also joined by Army's football's biggest fans: Bill and Steve of the radio show "Crawdad's Countdown to Kickoff." [Applause] Fellas, thanks for making the trip from Alabama.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Go Army!
THE PRESIDENT: [Laughs] And we finally have Coach Jeff Monken who — who has once again led the Bla- — Black Knights back to the White House again.
Where are you, Coach? [Applause] I'll make sure you —
And some folks here know, over the past few seasons, the coach has restarted the old Army football tradition. Every time the team takes the field, they now carry the gold and black flag with a skull and crossbones. This flag represents everything the Black Knights stand for: toughness, tenacity, camaraderie, accountability. And you all certainly demonstrated that, Coach.
Over the course of this season, you faced setbacks, doubts, and uncertainties. Critics counted you out, but you never gave up. You never quit. Game by game, play by play, you ground it out together.
You beat Air Force, who was undefeated until you played them, forcing six turnovers and winning by 20 points. [Applause]
A month later, you beat Navy — [applause] — second year in a row.
Today, you're taking home West Point's 10th Commander-in-Chief Trophy. You should be very proud.
And I want you to know I'm proud of you, too, not just for the wins, but — not just for those forced turnovers; although they're impressive, Coach — but because every game, after you hang up that uniform, you immediately put on another uniform: one representing the United States of America.
Everyone — everyone on this stage stepped up to serve, to lead, to join the long line of American servicemen, each a link in a chain of honor in America.
You represent the very best of who we are as Americans, and I'm confident that in the years to come you will be willing to do — to see — you'll see the same toughness, tenacity, and camaraderie, and accountability to our country that you brought to the field in every single game.
Now, many of these cadets are going to have to hear me twice, so I'm going to make this shorter than usual, because I'm — I'm getting a — I'll have the honor of speaking again at West Point's commencement.
So, let me just close with one brief final thought: Go Army.
AUDIENCE: Beat Navy! [Applause]
THE PRESIDENT: I occasionally used to root for another club until my son joined the United States Army, spent a year in Iraq, became a major, won the Bronze Star and a few other things. And so, I wasn't even allowed to mention any other team ever — [laughter] — ever.
Well, God bless you all. May God protect our troops. And, Coach, over to you.
COACH MONKEN: Thank you, sir. [Applause]
Thank you, Mr. President and distinguished guests. On behalf of our superintendent, Lieutenant General Steve Gillen; our command- — our commandant of cadets, Major General Lori Robinson; our academic — our academic dean, Brigadier General Shane Reeves; our director of athletics, Mr. Mike Buddie; the United States Corps of Cadets; the Long Gray Line of West Point graduates; and the nearly 1 million men and women who serve our nation as members of the U.S. Army, Army Reserves, and Army National Guard, the Army football team is honored to accept the most coveted trophy in all of college football, the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy. [Applause]
We're grateful —
THE PRESIDENT: I want to know who the hell is going to carry it home. [Laughter]
COACH MONKEN: I carried it in here. I'll get — I'll take care of it, sir. [Laughter]
We're grate- — we are grateful for your invitation to the White House and for welcoming the members of America's team as your guests here today.
This is a team of tough, talented players and a team of gritty, intense fighters. And just as they battled to finish the season with four straight victories, including wins over rivals Air Force and Navy, as you had mentioned, to claim the service academy dominance in winning the CIC Trophy, these warfighters will lead our nation's sons and daughters to victory on other fields on other days.
With us today are 48 soon-to-be-commissioned cadets who will later this month earn their diplomas, graduates of the world's preeminent leadership institution, the United States Military Academy. Soon after, they will enter the profession of arms prepared to lead and fight our nation's wars.
Joining them today on the stage is the rest of our team, underclassmen who, in the next few years, will join these soon-to-be graduates as officers in the Army.
Mr. President, these young men and women embody the values of duty, honor, country, and they represent the best our nation has to offer.
We're incredibly proud to be here and grateful to you for this tremendous honor. On, bro- — on, Brave Old Army Team. And beat Navy.
Thank you, sir. [Applause]
We got something for you.
Sir, I'm going to call Cadet First Class Jimmy Ciarlo, who's one of our team captains, Ringwood, New Jersey, to present you with one of our game-worn jerseys from the Army-Navy victory. [Applause]
[The President is presented with a United States Military Academy Black Knights jersey] [Applause]
THE PRESIDENT: [The President holds up the jersey] What do you think? [Applause]
COACH MONKEN: Perfect.
THE PRESIDENT: I want to — got to make sure you get my number right. [Laughter]
It's a great honor. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
What year are you?
MR. CIARLO: I'm a senior.
THE PRESIDENT: See you at graduation.
MR. CIARLO: Sounds good, sir. Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: [Inaudible] [Laughter]
Well, thank you all very much. And, by the way, are your par- — any parents here? [Inaudible] And to all the spouses of the guys running the show, God love you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Guys, thank you very much.
COACH MONKEN: Thank you, sir. Beat Navy. [Applause]
12:18 P.M. EDT
May 6, 2024
The White House will continue the tradition of welcoming members of the public to tour the White House Gardens and South Grounds. This spring the White House Gardens Tour will take place during Mother's Day Weekend, with tours available to the public from 10:00 AM to 4:30 PM ET on Saturday, May 11 th and Sunday, May 12 th.
2024 White House Gardens Tour
The White House Gardens Tour is free and open to the public; however, a daily timed ticket is required for all attendees, including small children. The National Park Service will distribute free, daily timed tickets at a tent stationed outside the White House Visitor Center each tour day beginning at 8:30 AM ET, while supplies last. The tour entry point for all guests will be located on 15 th Street, NW between E Street, NW and Constitution Avenue, NW. Advance reservations are not available. The ADA entrance will be located at 15 th Street, NW and Alexander Hamilton Place, NW.
Media Preview
The White House will host a media preview of the White House Gardens and South Grounds on Friday, May 10 th at 12:30 PM ET. This media preview will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Thursday, May 9 th at 3:00 PM ET.
May 6, 2024
AT THE TEACHERS OF THE YEAR STATE DINNER
East Room
THE PRESIDENT: I'm Jill Biden's husband. Please have a -- sit -- please sit down.
I'm going to be very brief. I just came back from North Carolina -- -- Wilmington, North Carolina. The mayor of Wilmington, North Carolina, has spent time living in Wilmington, Delaware. His daughter went to the University of Del- --
Anyway, look, I'll be very, very brief. First of all, I want to say how impressed I am with all that this woman does for the country and all -- no, I mean it sincerely.
But, look, you know, you all are the reason why we -- we have hope about the future. I really mean it. Not a joke.
And I was down in -- in North Carolina -- in Charlotte and Wilmington, North Carolina -- announcing a major multibillion-dollar program to make sure we got all lead out of water in North Carolina -- -- and the entire country.
And I was with a bunch of schoolteachers who -- they've discovered, in Wilmington, a significant -- a significant amount of lead coming out of one of the fountains that was in one of the schools. And I met these four little kids who were in second grade, coming up -- "Mr. Pwesident, you got to do something." And we're going to do something.
My -- the point I want to make is that, you know, the idea that we can't do more in education seems to me to be a ludicrous notion.
You know, how can we be the ma- -- the most powerful, most meaningful country in the world without having the best education system in the world?
And teaching is not what you do; it's who you are. It's who you -- no, for real. I know that. Believe me, I know that.
By the way, I actually taught for a number of years in law school. And then I was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania. No -- I don't get an applause for that?
But all kidding aside, what I realized is how damn hard she works every day and you all work every day.
So, look, I just want to say I appreciate all you do. You're incredible. You're -- you are -- as I've said before -- I got criticized for it the first time I said it -- you are the kite strings that lift our national ambitions aloft -- literally, not figuratively.
You are the kite strings. You are the future. You provide it for us.
So, I just came by to say thank you. I'm going to get the hell out of here. Thank you.
May 6, 2024
On Yom HaShoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, we honor the memory of six million Jews who were murdered by the Nazis in one of the worst atrocities in human history. The pain, suffering, and evil associated with the Holocaust--driven by Antisemitic ideology--must always be remembered and taught to ensure "never again."
Sadly, eight decades later, Antisemitism--and hate in general--is on the rise in our country and around the world.
On October 7, Hamas, a brutal terrorist organization, committed the worst atrocity against the Jewish people since the Holocaust--killing 1,200 innocent people, including 44 Americans, taking 240 people hostage, including eight Americans still in Gaza, and committing horrific acts of sexual violence against Jewish women.
And, in recent days in the United States, we have seen hateful rhetoric and harassment against Jews. This is Antisemitism and must be condemned unequivocally. Hate of any kind has no place in our country.
For the Jewish people, the past seven months have evoked the memories--along with fear and anguish--of the Holocaust. So to all the Jewish people around the world, know this: President Joe Biden and I stand with you. We will fight Antisemitism with the full force of the U.S. government, including through the first-ever National Strategy to Counter Antisemitism. We will continue to stand with the people of Israel and its right to defend itself from those that threaten its existence. And we remain committed to Holocaust remembrance and education.
Like many Jewish Americans, my husband Doug has learned the harrowing stories of his family members that perished in the Holocaust. Last year, he traveled to the town where some of them lived in what is now Poland, and heard stories of family members shot and others who were deported to an unknown fate. He walked through the old Jewish Quarter of Krakow. And he visited Auschwitz-Birkenau, and the gas chambers, to bear witness.
Today, I also reflect on Doug's great-grandparents who fled persecution in what is now Poland at the turn of the 20 th century and were able to build a life in America. Ultimately, the Jewish people persevered. And Jewish traditions continue to be passed down from one generation to next--including at the Vice President's Residence, where Doug and I have been proud to hang mezuzahs, light menorahs, and host Passover seders. And with each of these actions, we send a message to the world: the Jewish people can overcome evil. We can and we must stand strong in the face of hate.
Statement by Vice President Harris on Holocaust Remembrance Day
Statement by Vice President Harris on Holocaust Remembrance Day
May 6, 2024
President Biden will welcome President Klaus Iohannis of Romania to the White House on May 7. The leaders will celebrate Romania's 20^th year as a member of the NATO Alliance. President Biden will thank President Iohannis for hosting U.S. servicemembers in Romania, and recognize the many contributions that Romania, a stalwart NATO Ally, has made to security on NATO's eastern flank, particularly in the Black Sea region. The leaders will underscore their continued support for Ukraine as it continues to defend itself against Russia's aggression. They will also review the many areas in which Romania and the United States work together, including energy, economic cooperation, and our shared democratic values.
Statement from Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on the Visit of President Iohannis of Romania to the White House
Statement from Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on the Visit of President Iohannis of Romania to the White House
May 6, 2024
Readout of President Joe Biden's Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel
President Biden spoke this morning with Prime Minister Netanyahu. The President reaffirmed his message on Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. The two leaders discussed the shared commitment of Israel and the United States to remember the six million Jews who were systematically targeted and murdered in the Holocaust, one of the darkest chapters in human history, and to forcefully act against antisemitism and all forms of hate-fueled violence. President Biden updated the Prime Minister on efforts to secure a hostage deal, including through ongoing talks today in Doha, Qatar. The Prime Minister agreed to ensure the Kerem Shalom crossing is open for humanitarian assistance for those in need. The President reiterated his clear position on Rafah.
Readout of President Joe Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel
Readout of President Joe Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel
May 6, 2024
On Wednesday, May 8 th, 2024 at 6:00 PM, in recognition of National Teacher Appreciation Week, First Lady Jill Biden will host a virtual appreciation event for educators with the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association . This South Court auditorium event will be open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Tuesday, May 7 th at 5:00 PM ET.
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING: President Biden Expands San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument
WHAT THEY ARE SAYING: President Biden Expands San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument
As part of the Biden-Harris Administration's unprecedented commitment to protect America's natural wonders for future generations, honor areas of cultural significance to Tribal Nations and Indigenous peoples, and expand access to nature, yesterday President Biden signed proclamations expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument. Together, these actions protect nearly 120,000 acres of lands in California.
The Biden-Harris Administration has already conserved more than 41 million acres of lands and waters, putting President Biden on track to conserve more lands and waters than any President in history.
Leaders from California and across the country praised the announcement. Here's what they're saying:
Tribal and Community Leaders
Anthony Roberts, Chairman, Yocha Dehe Tribe: "We thank President Biden for expanding the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and protecting Molok Luyuk, an area steeped in thousands of years of rich history and profound meaning to the Patwin people, whose traditional territory stretches south from these hills to the shores of San Pablo Bay and east to the Sacramento River. Elements of the natural landscape on the ridge have traditional cultural significance to us. We look forward to the day when condors fly over Molok Luyuk once again." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Lynn Valbuena, Chairwoman, San Manuel Band of Missions Indians: "The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians is grateful for President Biden's action today to expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. The San Gabriel Mountains are culturally significant to the Serrano and other Indigenous peoples. It feels good to know that these mountains and lands will now be protected for future generations of our people." [Statement, o5/02/2024]
Rudy Ortega Jr., L.H.D., President, Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians: "We are thrilled that the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument is expanding. We thank the Biden administration for making this longstanding vision a reality. Expanding the Monument helps protect lands of cultural importance to my people who are part of this nation's history and who have cared for these lands since time immemorial. It also further protects areas that are critical for our environment and the wildlife and plants that depend on this landscape." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Chief Anthony Morales, Gabrieleno San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians: "We add our voices in celebration of expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. The San Gabriel Mountains are historically significant to our tribe, our people, and our culture. Protecting more of this important region helps protect our traditional plants and cultural resources. We join Senator Padilla and Representative Chu in thanking President Biden for using the Antiquities Act to expand the monument." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
David Diaz, Executive Director, Active San Gabriel Valley: "For San Gabriel Valley residents, the San Gabriel Mountains are the backdrop to our lives. They are a place of unreal beauty, connection, and rejuvenation, and offer multiple benefits to our community. We thank Representative Chu and Senator Padilla for their leadership to complete the vision of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, and we thank President Biden for taking action. We are looking forward to leading adventures into the western Angeles National Forest so they can feel the shade of a coast live oak, spend quality time with their family and enjoy views from our beautiful mountains." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Belén Bernal, Executive Director, Nature for All: "Our local community is overjoyed to see this next step in a 20-year effort to permanently protect the San Gabriel Mountains. The area included in the expanded San Gabriel Mountains National Monument is the closest section of the National Forest to the San Fernando Valley; this action helps ensure environmental justice for communities who lack access to green and open spaces throughout Los Angeles County. Thank you, President Biden, for taking this action to benefit the health and well-being of millions of Angelenos and to Vice President Harris for championing the protection of these special public lands!" [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Mary Creasman, Chief Executive Officer, California Environmental Voters: "The expansion of our national monuments and protection of our public lands are key nature-based solutions to the climate and biodiversity crises. These additions to the San Gabriel Mountains and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monuments include must-protect areas that provide communities with critical drinking water, create access to greenspaces for underserved communities, hold historical and cultural significance to California Tribes and Indigenous community leaders, and serve as wildlife corridors and habitats for imperiled animals and native plants. We thank President Biden for his leadership and urge him to look to additional places in California for national monument designation, so we can make more progress towards our 30×30 goals." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Jun Bando, Executive Director, California Native Plant Society: "We are incredibly grateful to President Biden and our steadfast congressional champions who have honored the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation's request to expand Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include Molok Luyuk. The protection of Molok Luyuk represents the promise of a new era in conservation, with its grounding in inclusive leadership, the embrace of shareable Indigenous knowledges, and the coming together of Tribes, communities, and organizations to protect California's remarkable biodiversity and our connections to it." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Francisco J. Moreno-Castillo, Executive Director, COFEM-Consejo de Federaciones Mexicanas: "Expanding the San Gabriel Mountains Monument is not just about preserving our natural heritage; it's about ensuring that future generations have the same opportunities to connect with nature, to find solace in its beauty, and to learn from its lessons. We owe a debt of gratitude to President Biden for his vision and commitment to conservation. His decision to protect and expand this monument is a testament to his understanding of the importance of safeguarding our environment and ensuring equitable access to outdoor spaces for all. Thank you, President Biden, for your leadership and foresight in preserving the San Gabriel Mountains for generations to come." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Pamela Flick, California Program Director, Defenders of Wildlife: "We're delighted that President Biden is expanding Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument with the addition of Molok Luyuk. It is critical that wildlife never lose access to this important corridor connecting the Mendocino National Forest to the Cache Creek Wilderness Area, and today's action ensures they won't. As someone who has worked to protect this incredibly diverse and unique landscape for the better part of two decades, this is incredibly exciting and personally rewarding news. My heartfelt thanks to President Biden for taking this important step forward in land conservation." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Katie Hawkins, California Program Director, Outdoor Alliance: "Adding Molok Luyuk to Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument will protect a recreation gem beloved by many in Northern California. This landscape has countless local advocates—local business leaders, scientists, conservationists, outdoor enthusiasts, and tribal community members have advocated for its designation and are thrilled to have it protected for future generations. We are thankful for the work of Senator Padilla, Senator Butler, Representative Garamendi and Representative Thompson, Governor Newsom, and are especially grateful to the Biden administration for their commitment to conservation and preservation." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Katie Goodwin, California Regional Director, Access Fund: "Access Fund is thrilled to see the designation and expansion of Moluk Luyuk and San Gabriel National Monument. These designations secure both sustainable recreation access and long-term conservation, a winning combination for health and wellness, our economy, and our environment. The Access Fund will continue to make sure that this new monument is protected for future generations and that all of us can sustainably access and enjoy these public lands." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Dennis Arguelles, Southern California Director, National Parks Conservation Association: "The expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument ensures the protection of some of the last wild spaces in the greater Los Angeles area. The expanded monument means better coordination across the region to preserve wildlife corridors, restore habitat, and address the threats of drought, wildfires, and climate change. We applaud President Biden for recognizing the value and fragility of these lands and the importance of their protection for both people and wildlife." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Walter "Redgie" Collins, Legal and Policy Director, California Trout: "The expansion of the San Gabriel National Monument is cause for celebration. Beyond providing expanded outdoor access and protecting precious water resources and culturally significant sites, the expansion will also protect higher reaches of the greater San Gabriel River watershed, which we know to hold endangered Southern steelhead genetics. At CalTrout, we dream of a future where our local communities are able to see Southern steelhead spawn in great numbers in Southern California rivers and streams once again – we thank the Biden Administration for supporting this future." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Daniel LoPilato, Colusa County Arts Council Member and Upstate California Creative Corps Grantee: "Expanding the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument is a win-win for Colusa County. Doing so will help improve access to public lands and offer more recreation and outdoor education opportunities for county residents, provide a mandate to safeguard the habitats of endangered plants and animals, and streamline planning for land managers so we can protect and honor this land for generations to come. We're lucky to have this spectacular landscape right in our backyard. Preserving it is the right thing to do." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Kelly Bessem, California Stewardship Director, Winter Wildlands Alliance: "Expanding protected lands and recognizing tribal cultures within these lands is the type of management needed to both address climate change issues and protect the ability for everyone to enjoy California landscapes for years and years to come. Honoring the land and people in this way is a win for everyone."[Statement, 05/02/2024]
Linda Castro, Assistant Policy Director, CalWild: "CalWild is grateful to President Biden for using his authority to expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. This momentous action protects a critical watershed for the LA region, access to nature for Angelenos, and important cultural areas. We also want to thank Representative Judy Chu for her tireless efforts over many years to expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and fulfill a vision 20 years in the making. We express our sincere gratitude to Senators Alex Padilla and Laphonza Butler for their strong support for the San Gabriel Mountains." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Guillermo Rodriguez, Vice President Pacific Region, California State Director, Trust for Public Land: "The Trust for Public Land applauds the Biden Administration's proclamation expanding the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. The San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, serving as the backyard to the nation's second-largest urban center, and the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, with its rich biodiversity and deep cultural significance, are invaluable assets that contribute to the well-being of communities and flora and fauna alike. We commend this decisive action to protect and enhance these national treasures in California. With the Biden Administration's proclamation expanding both the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, California takes a significant step forward in safeguarding vital ecosystems and ensuring equitable access to outdoor spaces for millions. Trust for Public Land also encourages the Administration to redouble its investments in these Monuments to ensure responsible stewardship and effective management. TPL stands ready to assist the Biden Administration in ensuring these Monuments live up to their fullest promise." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Eric Hanson, Chair of the California Chapter, Backcountry Hunters and Anglers: "Today we thank President Biden for answering the call of hunters, anglers, and public land owners across California by taking action to expand the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument through his authority under the Antiquities Act. We also commend the leadership of Sens. Padilla, as well as Reps. Garamendi and Thompson for their longtime support for the conservation of these public lands and waters that provide opportunities for sportsmen and women in a state that is rapidly developing." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
André Sanchez, Community Engagement & Conservation Policy Manager, CalWild: "We thank President Biden for responding to calls from the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation and other Tribes, California Natural Resources Secretary Wade Crowfoot, many local elected officials including the Lake County Board of Supervisors, business owners, faith leaders, veterans, and a long list of others to protect Molok Luyuk. We are also deeply indebted to our champions in Congress Senators Alex Padilla and Laphonza Butler and Representatives Mike Thompson and John Garamendi for not only proposing to protect Molok Luyuk by expanding the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, but also for including groundbreaking Tribal collaborative management language in their monument expansion bill. We are proud to have been a part of this campaign and look forward to working with the Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Forest Service, co-managing Tribes like the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation, and others to care for Molok Luyuk and the rest of the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument in the years to come." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Don Amador, Former Chair, CA State Parks Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Recreation Commission President of Quiet Warrior Racing/Consulting LLC: "As an avid OHV recreationist, I am thrilled at the expansion of Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include Molok Luyuk. The permanent protection of Molok Luyuk will improve the management of these lands and increase public access to recreation opportunities. This is a win-win for our community. I am grateful for President Biden using the Antiquities Act to expand the monument and protect these lands for future generations to enjoy." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Laura Deehan, State Director, Environment California Research & Policy Center: "Expanding these two monuments is a great first step by President Biden to protect California's public lands; and a meaningful action toward the state, federal, and global campaign to protect 30% of our land and waters by 2030. By permanently protecting these beautiful mountains and forests, we can ensure that Californians have more amazing places to enjoy nature. Additionally, local wildlife will be able to thrive, and awesome native California species such as golden eagles, peregrine falcons, black bears and mountain lions will have a better chance of survival. We thank President Biden for today's actions and look forward to future actions to conserve more of California's special places." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Mike Painter, Coordinator, Californians for Western Wilderness in San Francisco: "Californians for Western Wilderness applauds Pres. Biden for his proclamation expanding Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include and protect Molok Luyuk [Condor Ridge]. Molok Luyuk is a place of great cultural significance, as well as a geologically and botanically unique area worthy of protection. We are proud to have worked with the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation and other organizations to have its importance formally recognized." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Liz Reilly, Former Mayor, City of Duarte and Vice Chair, San Gabriel Mountains Community Collaborative: "The San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, located in the greater LA area, provides millions of people with the opportunity to experience the majesty and grandeur of the mountain backdrop to our community. It is a gift to the people of the Los Angeles area. We celebrate the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument which protects these ecologically rich landscapes for the clean air and clean water they provide for generations to come, while enhancing access to nature by the community." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Congressional Leaders
Senator Alex Padilla [CA): "From the majestic peaks of the San Gabriel Mountains to the sacred woodlands of Berryessa Snow Mountain, our national monuments hold some of our greatest natural marvels. Protecting our public lands as National Monuments is essential to combating the climate crisis, preserving cultural and sacred history, protecting biodiversity, and ensuring access to green space for millions of low-income Americans. I am thrilled to see President Biden exercise his authority to permanently protect the entire San Gabriel Mountains and formally incorporate Molok Luyuk and its thousands of years of tribal origin stories into the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument. These monuments have fostered a lifelong connection to nature for millions of Californians, and their expansions will ensure future generations can experience and enjoy them as well. This announcement will also usher in an important new era of cooperative stewardship between our federal land management agencies and tribal governments, and marks a significant milestone following decades of local efforts to safeguard these natural landscapes." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Senator Laphonza Butler (CA]: "I applaud @POTUS for expanding two of California's iconic public lands. By protecting these National Monuments, we not only preserve their beauty for future generations and safeguard important cultural landscapes, we also reaffirm our commitment to protecting our environment." [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Representative Raúl M. Grijalva [AZ-07]: "With today's expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monuments, President Biden is once again showing that this administration is committed to both community-led conservation and working alongside tribes to achieve meaningful protections for Indigenous lands," said Ranking Member Grijalva. "Today's action will also make the outdoors and natural spaces more accessible for communities that have only had limited options for too long. I am grateful to Congresswoman Chu and Congressman Mike Thompson for their tireless work in advocating for the protection and expansion of these two important landscapes." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Representative Grace Napolitano [CA-31]: "As a representative of the San Gabriel Foothills community, I am very proud of our community members and the local organizations who have worked tirelessly on preserving and expanding green space in LA County, including the establishment of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument, and now the long-awaited expansion," Napolitano said. "This expansion will improve recreation opportunities for millions of families and bring much needed resources to the communities that serve as the gateway to the mountains, while respecting local rights. The San Gabriel Mountains, Foothills, and River Corridor attract millions of visitors each year, and provide some of the only outdoor options for the open space poor LA County. As California is continuously faced with droughts, forest fires, and the growing impacts of climate change, it is critical that we champion policies that protect our environment and natural resources for all future generations! I want to thank Representative Judy Chu for her tireless work and last but certainly not least, President Biden and Vice President Harris, for continuing to support the conservation of our public lands and waters. I look forward to continuing to foster a close relationship between the communities and cities around the Monument and the National Parks Service." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Representative Judy Chu [CA-28]: "Just left the White House! I'm ecstatic that @POTUS is expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument! This will protect & expand access to sacred natural, cultural, & recreational treasures for the 18 million+ Angelenos living near these beautiful public lands. 10 years ago, @BarackObama responded to my call with indigenous leaders, community activists, & nature-lovers for permanent protection for the San Gabriel Mountains by declaring 346,000 acres as a National Monument. Even then, we recognized that our work wasn't finished. It's been an honor working with @SenAlexPadilla to advocate for expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. The benefits are immense: enhanced access to nature for underserved communities and safeguarding one-third of LA County's drinking water resources. Today's expansion would not be possible without the tireless efforts of @CalNatResources, @HildaSolis, @lanatureforall, @Pasadena_Mayor, @envirovoters, and many others to preserve the San Gabriels for present and future generations. Their dedication has been invaluable. I am deeply grateful to President Biden for his decisive action in preserving this invaluable natural treasure. This is just wonderful news. As we celebrate, let's also recommit to protecting these pristine public lands for the future." [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Representative Adam Schiff [CA-30]: "California is home to the most unique public lands in the world. President Biden's bold action will not only preserve the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument for generations to come, but also underscore our collective commitment to the protection of our public heritage and public lands. Along with Senators Padilla and Feinstein, and Representative Chu, I've fought to protect the San Gabriel Mountains. And the expansion of these monuments will provide increased access to green spaces for millions of Californians and boost local economies through sustainable tourism. As we continue to take on the impacts of climate change and environmental degradation, steps like these are essential in safeguarding our beautiful public lands for future generations to enjoy." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Representative Mike Thompson [CA-04]: "I worked to designate the Berryessa Snow Mountain region as a national monument in 2015, and I've worked to expand it ever since. I was honored to join President Biden today to see these efforts through. Molok Luyuk is culturally significant to numerous tribes and other Native peoples and this expansion begins a new era of tribal co-stewardship of ancestral public lands. Today's expansion will ensure the region's biodiversity, geological formations, and cultural connections are preserved for generations to come." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Representative John Garamendi [CA-08]: "Conserving California's natural beauty has been a lifelong passion throughout my tenure in the state legislature, as Deputy Secretary of the Interior to President Clinton, and now as a member of Congress. In 2022, I introduced the 'Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument Expansion Act' with Senator Alex Padilla and Congressman Mike Thompson. I am thrilled that President Biden has issued this presidential proclamation to expand the Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and preserve the tribal wisdom, heritage, and cultural traditions that 'Molok Luyuk' or Condor Ridge has been home to for over 11,000 years. I thank President Biden and Interior Secretary Haaland for conserving this special place forever." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Representative Jared Huffman [CA-02]: "@POTUS just expanded the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument ? Protecting these places honors Indigenous lands, helps us reach our climate goals, and boosts outdoor access for everyone. This move also permanently protects Molok Luyuk, where the Yurok Tribe in my district have worked to bring the California condor back from the brink of extinction. What a big milestone for these beautiful and culturally significant places!" [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Rep. Jerry Nadler [NY-12]: "Thank you, @POTUS for once again delivering for our public lands by expanding two National Monuments. I'm proud to have cosponsored @RepJudyChu's bill to protect and expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument. This monument was targeted by the Trump Administration and might not have survived a second term. Instead, thanks to the Biden Administration, it's being expanded." [X Post, 05/02/2024]
State and Local Officials
California Governor Gavin Newsom: "Berryessa Snow Mountain and San Gabriel Mountains National Monuments are getting bigger! Thanks to @POTUS, two national monuments in California are expanding by thousands of acres. We'll continue to protect our beautiful lands for all to enjoy." [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Secretary Wade Crowfoot, California Natural Resources: "I'm thrilled and deeply thankful. President Biden's action protects two very special places in California for future generations. It demonstrates this President's remarkable conservation leadership, which has driven historic amounts of public land protection and investments over the last four years. These monument expansions, combined with the establishment of new proposed monuments in California currently under consideration, are win-win actions that benefit California's people and nature alike. They will help us conserve 30 percent of California's lands by 2030, protect sacred cultural sites, and enshrine access to our public lands." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Secretary Yana Garcia, California Environmental Protection: "I am thrilled to support the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument in partnership with the Biden administration and NGOs. The San Gabriel River is a hub of recreational, economic, and cultural activity. This new infusion of resources, including funding from the State Water Board, will help protect water quality and ensure public access to one of California's most vibrant ecosystems." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
California State Senator Nancy Skinner [District 9]: "Biden just expanded a spectacular Northern California national monument. 'The Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument between Napa and Mendocino counties will add a picture-perfect ridgeline rich with wildflowers and tribal significance.'" [X Post, 05/02/2024]
California State Senator Bill Dodd [District 3]: "The Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument is one of the most scenic and diverse landscapes in all of Northern California. Now, it makes sense to include this additional piece, which was home to native tribes for thousands of years. We can recognize the land's cultural significance while protecting it for generations to come." [X Post, 05/02/2024]
California Assemblymember Mike Fong [District 49]: "The expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument is a historic moment for our #SGV community! Thank you to @POTUS, @RepJudyChu, @SenAlexPadilla, and our local advocates for championing our environment!" [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Mayor Thomas Wong, City of Monterey Park: "The San Gabriel Mountains National Monument is one of California's great treasures, and I am pleased to celebrate its expansion. I thank President Biden for taking action to include the upper Los Angeles River watershed in the Angeles National Forest. This is an important source of our region's drinking water and open space. I'm also grateful to Senator Padilla, Senator Butler, and Representative Chu for their work championing the expansion." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Mayor Victor Gordo, Pasadena: "Thank you President Biden for hearing and responding to our community's call for the protection of the San Gabriel Mountains. These beloved lands provide critical open space and access to nature for millions of local residents." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Supervisor Hilda L. Solis, Los Angeles County District 1: "I'm delighted about the announcement of the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument – an initiative I helped kickstart during my time in Congress when I introduced H.R. 519, known as the San Gabriel River Watershed Study Act. The San Gabriel Mountains are critical open spaces for many underserved communities in Los Angeles County that lack parks and suffer from severe health issues. I thank President Joe Biden for granting such protection to the western Angeles National Forest as it will ensure our future generations have access to critical open spaces." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Lake County Supervisor E.J. Crandell, Member of the Robinson Rancheria Tribe: "Molok Luyuk is a special and sacred place for area Tribes and for many residents who enjoy recreation activities like hiking and mountain biking. The natural beauty of our home also drives tourism, which is key to the economic vitality of the region. I am grateful that the President protected these beautiful lands. It is a gift to future generations." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Bruno Sabatier, Lake County Board of Supervisors: "Molok Luyuk contains both a natural and cultural richness in Lake County that deserves to be preserved for future generations to learn about and experience. This is a proud moment when we have successfully protected and preserved such a gem for Lake County, California, and beyond." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Denise Conrado, Colusa City Councilmember: "Colusa has benefitted from the vibrant recreation destination that Berryessa National Monument has provided for our local community. Adding Molok Luyuk to the monument area will ensure we also honor the heritage of the Patwin People who called these lands home long before we arrived. This designation will ensure that the Tribes have a leadership role in the cultural and restorative management practices to protect the unique history and biodiversity of the area. Colusa will only benefit further from creating equity and balance by expanding this monument." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Tom Stallard, Woodland City Councilmember: "It is entirely appropriate that we show deference and courtesy to Native People by expanding Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include additional lands sacred to them and referring to it in a way that honors their people by using their native language. Thank you to President Biden for taking action to protect Molok Luyuk." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Environmental Leaders
Maite Arce, President and Chief Executive Officer, Hispanic Access Foundation: "Los Angeles is one of the top cities in the country with the highest concentration of Latinos. The San Gabriel Mountains make up 70% of Los Angeles County's open space and are the backyard for many Latino and culturally diverse communities in the area that have limited access to green spaces in their neighborhoods. The designation expansion ensures permanent protection of the San Gabriels, which are critical for the health and wellbeing of millions of people and future generations." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Jamie Williams, President, The Wilderness Society: "We thank President Biden for expanding the San Gabriel Mountains and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monuments, a representation of our vision for a future where people and nature flourish together. This dual expansion gets us closer to realizing that vision by advancing 30×30 conservation goals, promoting biodiversity, mitigating climate impacts, and honoring decades of community-led efforts that aim to serve people and nature in unity." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Gene Karpinski, President, League of Conservation Voters: "The Biden-Harris administration has done more for conservation than any other first-term president in history. They have protected a historic 41 million acres and counting, and are continuing to deliver on community-led conservation with this latest expansion of San Gabriel Mountains and Berryessa Snow Mountains National Monuments. With these expansions, the administration is increasing equitable access to the outdoors in one of the country's most populated areas while protecting clean water sources, healthy ecosystems, and vital cultural resources in Southern California. Expanding Berryessa Snow Mountains National Monument to include Molok Luyuk also honors its cultural importance to the Yocha Dehe Wintun peoples, as well as other California Tribes, and conserves the region's incredible biodiversity. National monuments are a win-win to permanently protect our cultural and natural resources and advance equity in the outdoors. We join local partners and Tribal leaders in celebrating these expansions, and we look forward to supporting the Biden-Harris administration's efforts to protect even more places worthy of national monument designation." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Ben Jealous, Executive Director, Sierra Club: "National monuments protect more than landscapes. They preserve the historical, cultural, and spiritual legacies of the people who have made this country what it is. Expanding the San Gabriels monument and protecting Molok Luyuk will have significant and immediate benefits for the communities, wildlife, and ecosystems of California. Millions of people will have greater access to nature, vital habitat will be preserved for imperiled species, and critical water resources will be safeguarded for those who rely on them. Since day one, President Biden has made it clear that he is serious about protecting public lands and preserving the legacies etched into those landscapes. We urge him to continue to build his monumental legacy." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Jennifer Rokala, Executive Director, Center for Western Priorities: "Today's announcement not only adds to President Biden's conservation legacy, but also amplifies his commitment to environmental justice and Tribal sovereignty. Ensuring communities of color have equitable access to nearby public lands and honoring Tribally-led land protection efforts are both vital components of public land conservation. By expanding these monuments, President Biden is now within arm's reach of becoming the most consequential first-term conservation president in recent history. We're happy to see his administration continuing to make progress toward the goal of conserving 30 percent of lands and waters by 2030, and we're hopeful to see him designate more monuments so that he can solidify his place in conservation history." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Adam Cramer, Chief Executive Officer, Outdoor Alliance: "Outdoor Alliance is thrilled to see the expansion of San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument. Today's designations expand protections for some of California's most popular outdoor landscapes. These areas are recreation gems beloved by people across the state. We are thankful for the work of Senator Padilla, Senator Butler, Representative Garamendi and Representative Thompson, Governor Newsom, and are especially grateful to the Biden administration for their commitment to conservation and preservation." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Eric Artz, President and Chief Executive Officer, REI Co-op: "REI Co-op applauds the Biden Administration for expanding San Gabriel Mountains and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monuments. We recognize the leadership of Tribal Nations and local communities who called for the protection of these special places and are proud to have worked alongside them to achieve this goal. The permanent protection of these public lands will help ensure that current and future generations can enjoy them. We are especially grateful for the increased access to time outside that these spaces will provide." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Janessa Goldbeck, Chief Executive Officer, Vet Voice Foundation: "President Biden has delivered for California's veterans by expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument. These are places of reflection, reunion, and healing for our state's veterans. We urge President Biden to build on this tremendous achievement and protect three additional national monuments in California. Doing so would protect important cultural resources and military heritage sites, and help ensure access to nature for local communities." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Shoren Brown, Vice President of Public Affairs, The Conservation Alliance: "On behalf of The Conservation Alliance and its 270 member companies, we extend our heartfelt gratitude to President Joe Biden for expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument by over 100,000 acres. This landmark decision not only supports local communities and protects close-to-home outdoor access, but also further bolsters California's thriving outdoor economy. We are profoundly appreciative of the administration's commitment to community health, the environment, and California's economic well-being. We thank Senator Alex Padilla, Senator Laphonza Butler, and Representative Judy Chu for championing this effort, and congratulate on-the-ground coalition leaders and partners for their diligence over decades to urge both the creation and expansion of the National Monument. We look forward to continuing to work alongside partners on the ground and the Biden administration to designate more monuments and make sure those national monuments have the appropriate resources to manage them for conservation." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Hans Cole, Vice President of Environmental Activism, Patagonia: "The future of our business, along with other companies who depend on the outdoor recreation economy, depends on the health of natural places that customers explore. Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument and Molok Luyuk offer incredible opportunities for hiking and include critical wildlife habitat. We applaud the Biden administration for the expansion of this national monument as an opportunity to conserve land and combat the climate and environmental crisis." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Steve Messer, President, Concerned Off-Road Bicyclists Association: "The San Gabriel Mountains have been my backyard outdoor playground for the 40 years I've lived in their shadow. It warms my heart to know the entire range of the San Gabriel Mountains will now be protected for future generations to experience and enjoy under the expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Nicole Gentile, Senior Director for Conservation, Center for American Progress: "These monument expansions build on President Biden's legacy of centering equity and justice in his conservation work. They will ensure that historically marginalized communities have access to, and are represented in, the country's public lands. The San Gabriel Mountains National Monument expansion provides access to nature for millions of Southern Californians who live in one of the country's largest urban hubs. This is an area where nature deprivation disproportionately affects people of color and low-income communities. The Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument expansion honors and protects sacred lands and safeguards rich wildlife habitat. This expansion, combined with a commitment to explore Tribal co-stewardship, centers Indigenous voices, knowledge, and leadership on our public lands." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Christy Zamani, Executive Director, Day One: "We thank the Biden administration for the actions taken under the Antiquities Act to expand the San Gabriel Mountains. Adding more public lands to the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument will help ensure that young people will be able to continue experiencing and learning about unique plants in the region, including the drought-tolerant and fire-adapted chaparral shrubland, scrub oaks, wild lilac, western mountain-mahogany, and the California poppy." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Sara Husby, Executive Director, Great Old Broads for Wilderness: "Today is a day to celebrate. The expansion of Northern California's Berryessa Snow Mountain to include Molok Luyuk ensures the protection of a vital ecosystem important to numerous threatened species of plants and wildlife, as well as the protection of cultural sites held sacred by Indigenous people across the region. The expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument will not only protect threatened wildlife habitat and cultural sites but will also protect an important source of water for the Los Angeles basin and provide new opportunities for underserved communities in Southern California to experience nature. Thanks to the Biden administration for demonstrating its commitment to conservation with the protection of these two unique landscapes." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Charles Thomas, Executive Director, Outward Bound Adventures: "For over 60 years, Outward Bound Adventures [OBA] has introduced low-income and racially marginalized communities of color to the unique beauty of the San Gabriel Mountains. We celebrate this expansion of nationally-recognized wilderness on the fringe of a sprawling and densely populated urban center, providing much-needed access to outdoor recreation and employment opportunities for historically absent and forgotten communities of color. Thank you, President Biden, for recognizing this critical need and taking action to broaden recreational space where it is needed most." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Jocelyn Torres, Co-Interim Executive Director and Chief Conservation Officer, Conservation Lands Foundation: "Today's action by President Biden to expand Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument by designating Molok Luyuk honors efforts to safeguard sites of sacred, cultural and historic significance, wildlife and rare plant habitat, and outdoor recreation for current and future generations. We are grateful President Biden heard the calls of Tribal leaders; federal, state and local governments; businesses; and advocates from Indigenous, outdoor recreation, conservation and many other communities to permanently protect this sacred landscape by use of the Antiquities Act." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Zach Plopper, Environmental Director, Surfrider Foundation: "Surfrider is so proud to be a part of the designation of these national monuments. This expansion will enhance equitable access to nature, protect the upper Los Angeles River watershed, and safeguard a refuge for wildlife. Expanding the monument is the next step in a 20-year, locally-driven effort to protect the San Gabriel Mountains." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Christian La Mont, Storytelling and Advocacy Manager, Latino Outdoors: "Latino Outdoors is thrilled to celebrate and recognize the incredible collaboration of Tribes, Indigenous community leaders and advocates, local leaders, policymakers, and community members who organized, hiked, got loud, and showed up in every way to support the proposed expansion of the San Gabriel Mountains and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monuments. Expanding access to these public lands, especially in some of the most park-deprived areas of California, is a legacy we can all be proud of. Thank you and gracias to President Biden for his commitment to conservation and thank you for the tireless support of Senator Padilla, Senator Butler, Representative Chu, Representative Garamendi, Representative Thompson and so many others who are a part of this multi-generational movement to protect and preserve California's public lands and to ensure equitable access to the outdoors." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
Lisa Belenky, Senior Counsel, Center for Biological Diversity: "This proclamation expanding Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument to include Molok Luyuk will help preserve biodiversity and cultural resources on our public lands for generations to come. This remarkable area is of cultural importance to the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation and provides essential wildlife connectivity. Molok Luyuk is home to many plants and animals that we've long worked to protect, including ancient blue oak woodlands, wildflower meadows, extensive stands of McNab cypress, mountain lions, tule elk, and imperiled foothill yellow-legged frogs." [Statement, 05/02/2024]
National Wildlife Federation: "Thank you @POTUS @SecDebHaaland and @SecVilsack for listening to Indigenous community leaders, elected officials, and community members to expand the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument." [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Nuestra Tierra: "Thank you @POTUS for expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument and Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument through the Antiquities Act! Together, these actions have protected over 120,000 acres in California!" [X Post, 05/02/2024]
Monuments for All: "NEWS: President Biden is expanding the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument & Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument. @POTUS, thank you for listening to Tribes, Indigenous community leaders, elected officials, and community members protecting these lands! #MonumentsForAll" [X Post, 05/02/2024]
FACT SHEET: Vice President Harris Announces More Than $100 Million to Support American Auto Workers and Small Auto Suppliers
FACT SHEET: Vice President Harris Announces More Than $100 Million to Support American Auto Workers and Small Auto Suppliers
Actions announced during the Vice President's nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour build on the Administration's historic investments in the auto sector to ensure U.S. leadership in the clean vehicle future
Today, as part of her Economic Opportunity Tour, Vice President Harris will join Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, and Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su in Detroit, Michigan to announce new funding and resources for small- and medium-sized auto manufacturers and autoworkers.
For decades, trickle-down economics drove manufacturers overseas at the expense of good-paying manufacturing jobs that sustained the American middle class. Thanks to President Biden and Vice President Harris's Investing in America agenda, since they took office, companies have announced more than $170 billion in investments in electric vehicle (EV) and battery supply chain manufacturing, making the U.S. the global leader for EV manufacturing investment, and the U.S. auto industry has added over 250,000 jobs, after losing 90,000 jobs under the previous Administration. More than 20 auto and battery plants have been announced under President Biden and Vice President Harris, after no new net plants were opened under the previous Administration.
Historic contracts secured by the United Auto Workers with the Big 3 Detroit automakers—Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis—as well as recent organizing victories like at Volkswagen in Chattanooga, Tennessee, ensure that these jobs of the future will provide comparable wages, retirement security, and respect at work.
To ensure that the future of the auto industry is made in America by American autoworkers, today, Vice President Harris will announce:
More than $100 million in funding for small- and medium-sized auto parts manufacturers to expand or retool manufacturing facilities:
Actions to expand workforce training and improve job quality in the EV supply chain with a focus on Auto Communities in the Midwest:
New technical assistance programs to help small and medium-sized auto parts manufacturers and their communities take advantage of growth in the EV sector and other markets:
These actions build on the Biden-Harris Administration's ongoing commitment to ensuring that the workers and businesses that built the auto industry remain community anchors for generations to come, including the more than 250,000 auto workers in small- and medium-sized auto parts suppliers across the country. As part of that commitment, last fall, the Department of Energy announced the availability of up to $15.5 billion in grant and loan funding to retool and convert auto factories transitioning to electric vehicles, prioritizing applications from facilities at risk of closing or recently closed, and rewards applicants that retain existing workers, have strong labor partnerships, pay high wages, and convert facilities while remaining in the same community.
Today's announcement is also an important milestone in the Biden-Harris Administration's effort to help small businesses grow and thrive, including minority and veteran-owned businesses and businesses in distressed and disadvantaged communities. Traditionally underserved small businesses are growing at near-historic rates, with Black business ownership growing at the fastest pace in 30 years and Latino business ownership growing at the fastest pace in more than a decade.
As President Biden and Vice President Harris continue to invest in all of America, their agenda is lowering costs for Michigan families:
Congressional Republicans have no plan to lower costs—in fact, their plan would increase costs for Michiganders by:
May 6, 2024
Actions announced during the Vice President's nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour build on the Administration's historic investments in the auto sector to ensure U.S. leadership in the clean vehicle future
Today, as part of her Economic Opportunity Tour, Vice President Harris will join Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm, and Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su in Detroit, Michigan to announce new funding and resources for small- and medium-sized auto manufacturers and autoworkers.
For decades, trickle-down economics drove manufacturers overseas at the expense of good-paying manufacturing jobs that sustained the American middle class. Thanks to President Biden and Vice President Harris's Investing in America agenda, since they took office, companies have announced more than $170 billion in investments in electric vehicle and battery supply chain manufacturing, making the U.S. the global leader for EV manufacturing investment, and the U.S. auto industry has added over 250,000 jobs, after losing 90,000 jobs under the previous Administration. More than 20 auto and battery plants have been announced under President Biden and Vice President Harris, after no new net plants were opened under the previous Administration.
Historic contracts secured by the United Auto Workers with the Big 3 Detroit automakers--Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis--as well as recent organizing victories like at Volkswagen in Chattanooga, Tennessee, ensure that these jobs of the future will provide comparable wages, retirement security, and respect at work.
To ensure that the future of the auto industry is made in America by American autoworkers, today, Vice President Harris will announce:
More than $100 million in funding for small- and medium-sized auto parts manufacturers to expand or retool manufacturing facilities:
The Department of Energy will set aside $50 million of its Automotive Conversion Grants Program for partnerships with states to help small- and medium-sized suppliers convert from manufacturing internal combustion engine parts to manufacturing parts for the EV supply chain. This funding will maintain the Domestic Conversion Grant's same focus on supporting retooling to keep good, good-paying and union jobs in the same communities as automakers and auto suppliers transition to electric vehicle manufacturing here in America. The Department of Energy recently requested public input on the design of these state-federal partnerships in order to best support small- and medium-sized manufacturers in the auto supply chain.
The Department of Energy is setting aside up to $50 million of its Industrial Assessments Center Implementation Grants Program to help auto suppliers kickstart manufacturing diversification and conversion projects. Specifically, this program, which was funded by President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and is covered under the President's Justice40 Initiative , provides grants of up to $300,000 to entities that have received an Industrial Assessment Center assessment to improve their facilities' energy and material efficiency, cybersecurity, or productivity, or reduce the greenhouse gas emissions.
The Small Business Administration will leverage its Small Business Investment Company program to catalyze millions of dollars in private capital for the EV supply chain to help small and medium-sized manufacturers grow and diversify their businesses. The Department of Energy will partner with the Small Business Administration to provide technical expertise to de-risk private investments and lower the cost of capital for small and medium-sized manufacturers.
The Small Business Administration plans to establish a new Working Capital Pilot Program under its signature 7 lending program to provide lines of credit to small businesses, including auto parts manufacturers and distributors, to support their domestic or export finance needs. The program will be paired with business counseling from the Small Business Administration.
Actions to expand workforce training and improve job quality in the EV supply chain with a focus on Auto Communities in the Midwest:
Last month, President Biden announced the second round of Investing in America Workforce Hubs--including an electric vehicle hub in Michigan, which will be led by the Department of Energy and Department of Labor in partnership with the State of Michigan. Workforce Hubs are place-based initiatives focused on partnerships for job-training to ensure all Americans can access the good jobs created by the President's Investing in America agenda. As part of the Hub, the White House and agency partners will bring together state and local partners, unions, employers, philanthropy, non-profits, community colleges, high schools, and other stakeholders to tackle discrete workforce challenges in the Michigan electric vehicle supply chain--and to ensure that the workers,
unions, and businesses that have historically powered the auto industry lead the next generation of clean vehicles.
The Department of Energy is opening applications for its new Community Workforce Readiness Accelerator for Major Projects Fellowship. Fellows will spend two years building and scaling projects that expand workforce development partnerships to serve local and underrepresented populations in communities that have received major clean energy and manufacturing investments, including Michigan.
The Department of Energy recently made available $24 million in grants for EV and other clean energy and advanced manufacturing workforce training at community colleges, trade schools, union training programs, and registered apprenticeships through the Industrial Assessment Centers Program, which aims to deliver on the President's Justice40 Initiative .
Led by the Department of Energy, the Battery Workforce Initiative will fill a critical gap in the battery industry by developing standardized training guidelines for key battery manufacturing occupations, including operators and machine repairers, which will increase the quality of these jobs while responding to industry demand for skilled workers. The Department of Energy will pilot this workforce curriculum with union manufacturers. Under the Battery Workforce Initiative, the Department of Labor will also implement model safety and health management practices focused on battery manufacturing, as well as assess the need for an industry-wide standard.
The Department of Labor will organize EV workforce convenings in Ohio and Indiana. As part of the Building Pathways to Infrastructure Jobs Grant Program , the Department of Labor recently awarded $7 million across Indiana and Ohio to develop sector partnerships that bring together the public workforce and education system, community-based organizations, employers, and labor unions focused on the EV industry. These sector partnerships will work collaboratively to design and scale worker-centered training programs, help suppliers in auto communities analyze the impact of the EV transition on their labor force needs, and spread awareness of existing workforce development technical assistance and funding resources.
New technical assistance programs to help small and medium-sized auto parts manufacturers and their communities take advantage of growth in the EV sector and other markets:
The Department of Energy, in collaboration with industry experts, will develop a to help internal combustion engine suppliers navigate the transition of their business model to EV or adjacent markets. This playbook will describe new products that ICE suppliers could produce based on existing manufacturing capabilities, outline workforce and technical changes needed to succeed in new industries, and guide suppliers through available federal resources. Applications for partnerships are open through May 23, 2024, and playbook will provide guidance to be used by the Transition Network described below.
The Federal government will launch the Auto Supplier Transition Network, which will provide research and hands on, locally based technical assistance in auto communities to help small and medium-sized auto suppliers, unions, and auto communities navigate the opportunities in the EV transition and broader clean energy manufacturing acceleration. These providers will serve as regional hubs for technical, financial, industry, and workforce resources needed to support individual suppliers. These providers will offer technical, financial, industry, and workforce resources at no or below market rate costs and include:
The Department of Energy's Industrial Assessment Centers can provide no-cost assessments to help small and medium-sized auto suppliers improve energy performance and productivity. Auto suppliers that receive an assessment can also apply for Industrial Assessments Center implementation grants of up to $300,000 to kickstart manufacturing diversification and conversion projects.
Manufacturing Extension Partnership Centers, public-private partnerships located in all 50 states and Puerto Rico that help small and midsized manufacturers with workforce development, market research, launching new products, and much more--often in partnership with Industrial Assessment Centers. Manufacturing Extension Partnerships will help small and medium-sized suppliers implement recommendations from the Small Supplier EV Transition Toolkit.
The International Trade Administration local offices , which can serve as coordinators and multipliers to educate companies about these programs.
Small Business Administration district offices , which offer business development services and training to help small businesses grow.
U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development State Offices , which are locally-based and can help small businesses and manufacturers in rural areas expand or improve.
These actions build on the Biden-Harris Administration's ongoing commitment to ensuring that the workers and businesses that built the auto industry remain community anchors for generations to come, including the more than 250,000 auto workers in small- and medium-sized auto parts suppliers across the country. As part of that commitment, last fall, the Department of Energy announced the availability of up to $15.5 billion in grant and loan funding to retool and convert auto factories transitioning to electric vehicles, prioritizing applications from facilities at risk of closing or recently closed, and rewards applicants that retain existing workers, have strong labor partnerships, pay high wages, and convert facilities while remaining in the same community.
Today's announcement is also an important milestone in the Biden-Harris Administration's effort to help small businesses grow and thrive, including minority and veteran-owned businesses and businesses in distressed and disadvantaged communities. Traditionally underserved small businesses are growing at near-historic rates, with Black business ownership growing at the fastest pace in 30 years and Latino business ownership growing at the fastest pace in more than a decade.
As President Biden and Vice President Harris continue to invest in all of America, their agenda is lowering costs for Michigan families:
Saving 2.2 million Michigan Medicare beneficiaries money on prescription drugs, insulin, and vaccines.
Saving 418,000 Michiganders hundreds of dollars per year on health insurance.
Michigan families will get lower utility bills thanks to $211 million in home energy rebates and new tax credits for energy-efficient appliances.
President Biden is taking on corporate rip-offs like junk fees to lower costs for Michigan families on everything from airfares to event tickets to overdraft fees.
President Biden would lower housing costs with a $10,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers, expanded rental assistance, and by building more than 2 million homes.
President Biden would lower child care costs by guaranteeing child care for families making up to $200,000, with most families paying no more than $10 a day.
Congressional Republicans have no plan to lower costs--in fact, their plan would increase costs for Michiganders by:
Increasing costs for health care, prescription drugs, and insulin by siding with Big Pharma to repeal the Inflation Reduction Act and Affordable Care Act and slash Medicare.
Cutting Social Security by $1.5 trillion and raising Medicare costs for seniors by transitioning Medicare to a system that would raise premiums.
Raising taxes for middle-class families by repealing the Inflation Reduction Act and Affordable Care Act.
Raising housing costs by cutting rental assistance and programs to build new homes.
May 5, 2024
Monday, May 6, 2024
At 10:30 AM ET, the Vice President will depart Washington, DC en route to Detroit, MI. This departure from Joint Base Andrews will be pooled press.
At 12:00 PM ET, the Vice President will arrive in Detroit, MI. This arrival at Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport will be pooled press and open to pre-credentialed media.
At 1:55 PM ET, the Vice President will deliver remarks during the second stop of her nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour. These remarks will be pooled press, open to pre-credentialed media, and livestreamed at WhiteHouse.gov/live.
At 5:30 PM ET, the Vice President will depart Detroit, MI en route to Washington, DC. This departure from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport will be pooled press.
At 6:45 PM ET, the Vice President will arrive in Washington, DC. This arrival at Joint Base Andrews will be pooled press.
# # #
May 5, 2024
On Monday, May 6, the Vice President will return to Detroit, MI for the second stop on her nationwide Economic Opportunity Tour. During her speech, the Vice President will highlight how the Biden-Harris Administration has taken transformative steps to build economic opportunity, support communities, and deliver historic investments for the American people. These remarks will be pooled press, open to pre-credentialed media, and livestreamed at WhiteHouse.gov/live.
On Wednesday, May 8, the Vice President will continue her leadership in the fight for reproductive freedoms by traveling to Montgomery County, PA for a political event. This will be the Vice President's third visit to Pennsylvania this year and her 13 th since being sworn in. This event will be pooled press and opened to pre-credentialed media.
Later in the day, the Vice President will speak at the EMILY's List annual National Gala in Washington, D.C.
On Thursday, May 9, the Vice President and Second Gentleman will join the President in welcoming the Las Vegas Aces to the White House to celebrate their record-breaking season and victory in the 2023 WNBA Finals.
In the evening, the Vice President and Second Gentleman will host a Night Market at The Vice President's Residence in celebration of AANHPI Heritage Month.
On Friday, May 10, the Vice President will host a reception at The Vice President's Residence for the Democratic Mayors Association's Leadership Summit.
May 5, 2024
On Tuesday, May 7, 2024 at 3:30 PM ET, as a part of her Joining Forces initiative to support military and veteran families, First Lady Jill Biden will host a White House event to honor the men and women who served during World War I and recognize the contributions of those who made the National World War I Memorial possible. The First Lady's remarks at this East Room event will be pooled for TV and open to pre-credentialed media. For interested media, please RSVP HERE by Monday, May 6 th at 5:00 PM ET.
May 5, 2024
THE WEEK OF May 6, 2024 – May 12, 2024
Monday, May 6, 2024
In the morning, the President will depart Wilmington, Delaware and return to the White House.
After, the President will present the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy to the United States Military Academy Army Black Knights at the White House.
Then, the President will have lunch with King Abdullah II of Jordan.
Later, the President and the First Lady will host a Cinco de Mayo reception in the Rose Garden.
Tuesday, May 7, 2024
The President will deliver the keynote address at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's Annual Days of Remembrance ceremony at the U.S. Capitol in Washington D.C.
Wednesday, May 8, 2024
In the morning, the President will depart the White House and travel to Racine County, Wisconsin to deliver remarks on his Investing in America agenda.
After, the President will participate in a campaign event.
Then, the President will depart Racine County, Wisconsin and travel to Chicago, Illinois.
Later, the President will participate in a campaign reception.
In the evening, the President will depart Chicago, Illinois and return to the White House.
Thursday, May 9, 2024
The President, the Vice President, and the Second Gentleman will welcome the Las Vegas Aces to the White House to celebrate their record-breaking season and victory in the 2023 WNBA Finals.
May 5, 2024
On Tuesday, May 7, the Second Gentleman will travel to Atlanta, GA to visit Black-owned small businesses. These visits will be open to pre-credentialed media. Press interested in attending this event should contact Jasmine Harris, jharris@joebiden.com. Additional details to follow.
Later in the day, the Second Gentleman will participate in a panel on reproductive rights. This event will be open to pre-credentialed media. Press interested in attending this event should contact Jasmine Harris, jharris@joebiden.com. Additional details to follow.
Statement from President Joe Biden on Orthodox Easter
Statement from President Joe Biden on Orthodox Easter
Jill and I send warm wishes to Orthodox Christian communities around the world as they celebrate Easter.
The Resurrection of Jesus Christ reminds us of God's abundant love for us and the power of light over darkness. We join Orthodox Christians in giving thanks for these and other blessings and rededicate ourselves to caring for those most in need.
In this sacred season, we hold people who are suffering from war and persecution especially close to our hearts. We will continue to pray and work for peace and justice for all people.
May the Lord bless and keep you this Easter Sunday and in the year ahead.
May 5, 2024
Jill and I send warm wishes to Orthodox Christian communities around the world as they celebrate Easter.
The Resurrection of Jesus Christ reminds us of God's abundant love for us and the power of light over darkness. We join Orthodox Christians in giving thanks for these and other blessings and rededicate ourselves to caring for those most in need.
In this sacred season, we hold people who are suffering from war and persecution especially close to our hearts. We will continue to pray and work for peace and justice for all people.
May the Lord bless and keep you this Easter Sunday and in the year ahead.