Breaking News: President Joe Biden admits he can’t GET the $3.5 Trillion



 


Are you loving this? I’m lovin it. Watching Biden just keep twisting in the wind as more and more knives come out in his party is so hilarious. Sure it doesn’t get this country put back together from him doing more damage in a few months than most presidents could do with a lifetime appointment, but it’s still funny.

You probably heard him say today he can’t get the big ticket, which is hilarious.

"I'm convinced we're going to get this done," Biden said of the ongoing negotiations during the first stop of his trip in Hartford. "We're not going to get $3.5 trillion. We'll get less than that. But we'll get it. And we'll come back and get the rest."

Earlier in the speech, which was aimed at highlighting his administration's childcare proposals in the plan, Biden also suggested free community college may be an area that gets cut.
    "I don't know that I can get it done, but I also have proposed free community college, like you've done here in the state of Connecticut, to help students from lower-income families attend community college (and) four-year schools."
      The President argued that the US "cannot be competitive in the 21st century in this global economy if we fail to invest."
      "I wanted to come here today because too many folks in Washington still don't realize it isn't enough to just invest in our physical infrastructure. We also have to invest in our people," he continued.
      "Seeing children and educators here at this center is a perfect reminder about what our families need, and our economy needs so badly to be able to thrive," Biden said.
      During his speech, the President also recalled the challenges of becoming a single father after his first wife and daughter died in a car crash.
      "It made me realize how difficult it is for a vast majority of people who need help," Biden said. "I am lucky. I had a mother who was nearby, a sister -- who's my best friend, who quit her job temporarily ... most people don't have that option."
      While in Connecticut, Biden also attended a dedication ceremony later Friday at the Dodd Center for Human Rights at the University of Connecticut. The center is named after Nuremberg prosecutor and former US Sen. Thomas Dodd and his son, former US Sen. Chris Dodd -- Biden's longtime friend and peer in the Senate.
      It was expected that Biden would see every member of the Connecticut congressional delegation during the trip, as well as Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and US Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy, according to the White House.
      Ahead of his departure to Connecticut, Biden refrained from speaking with reporters -- a pattern that has played out over the last week. A senior administration official indicated that the President's mum behavior was to avoid saying something that could jeopardize negotiations with Congress to secure a deal for his legislative priorities.
      "He doesn't want to add to the conversation," the official told CNN regarding negotiations over the fate of his domestic agenda. "He doesn't want to shift anything" by commenting publicly.
      But Biden later spoke to reporters as he left Connecticut Friday evening, telling members of the press that he's aware it's unlikely Congress will pass his administration's full $3.5 trillion reconciliation proposal. He also indicated he remains hopeful his legislative priorities will eventually pass.
      "Look, it's clear that it's not going to be $3.5 trillion. The question is, how much of what is important will we get into the legislation?" Biden said. "I'm of the view that it's important to establish the principle on a whole range of issues without guaranteeing we get the whole ten years."
      He continued, "What happens is, you pass the principle, and you build on it, decide if it works or it doesn't work. And I'm convinced that's why I think we see so much support, even from the folks that are holding out for the child tax credit."
      During the brief question-and-answer period, Biden also spoke about former President Bill Clinton's condition and their phone call earlier, the Virginia governor's race and the infrastructure bill.
      The Virginia gubernatorial race in particular has put the President's economic agenda in focus. Democratic candidate and former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe said last week on CNN's "State of the Union" that Democrats need to pass Biden's agenda to show voters that Democrats can get something done for voters. McAuliffe also downplayed previous remarks that he made stating Biden is dragging down Democratic candidates because his agenda is stalled on Capitol Hill.
      When asked about the race, Biden told reporters, "I think everybody understandably reads the two gubernatorial off-year elections as being a bellwether of what may happen. Sometimes it's been right, sometimes it's been wrong. I think Terry's going to win -- if he doesn't win, I don't know how much you read into that, but, you know, I think he'll win."


      Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


      Remarks by President Biden on the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill and Build Back Better Agenda




       THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Michigan! (Applause.) It’s good to be back. It really is. And, John, thank you for that introduction.


      The truth of the matter is there’s a reason why the American labor movement across the board has the single-best workers in the world: because you’re the best trained.


      I wish the American people understood how much serious, serious training goes into being a union worker. I really mean it. You’re the best in the world.


      I was kidding — someone said to me earlier that — I said I’m a union President; I’m a union — a President who supports unions — not labor, unions. And someone pointed out to me that I allegedly have the — used the word “union” as President more than the last seven presidents combined. (Applause.)


      You built the country. No, not a joke. You built the country.


      And it’s great to be here with several excellent members of Congress. Elissa Slotkin — Elissa, you — you don’t want to screw around with her. (Laughter.) She’s an intelligence officer as well, so she’s forgotten more than most of you know. But thanks for riding out with me, and thanks for the advice you’ve given me — and I mean that sincerely — and how we’re going to make sure that everything we do here is paid for — paid for, and not a single penny raised in taxes of anybody making under 400 grand.


      And, Debbie, you’re the best in the world. You and John have been so — friends of mine — you’ve been for so, so long. You’ve stepped in and taken over in a way that I think is — had to be both emotionally difficult, but you’ve done an incredible job. And I consider you one of my great friends. Thank you.


      And, Dan, I — you’re okay, Dan. (Laughter.) You ain’t — you ain’t quite like the woman sitting next to you. But all kidding aside — (laughter) — Dan, you’ve done a great — I mean, I really mean it: You’re always there for everything that’s important to your constituents. And you understand what I’m going to talk about little bit later: The way we built this country is from the bottom up and the middle out, not from the top down. And you get it.


      And, Andy, as my dad would say, you’ve got good blood, kid. (Laughter.) And thank you for what you’re doing. Thank you for stepping in. And thank you for the great job you do.


      Michigan, I also have — it’s also fortunate to have an outstanding United States senators, who are doing what they’re supposed to do. They’re in Washington because the Senate is in. Debbie and Gary are in Washington now and — to cast some really important votes to keep things moving.


      And, of course, it’s great to be here with my friend — we’ve become friends — an outstanding governor, one of the best governors in the United States of America, and her lieutenant governor, who covers in every way — both in terms of physically and mentally — (laughter) — and every other way. And thank you for all you did to help me get elected. I really mean it. Thank you, thank you, thank you.


      Look, I know there’s a lot of noise in Washington; there always is. But it seems to me, a little more than usual now — a whole lot of hyperbole, a lot of heat. And I’m here today to try to set some things straight, if I can.


      I want to talk about what’s fundamentally at stake for our country now, at this moment.


      I know it’s an overused phrase, but I’ve been using it a lot: We’re at an inflection point. Every — anywhere from 40 to 80 years in America, there’s an inflection point where we have to choose what direction we’re going to go, what we’re going to do. Not — not Democrat/Republican, but what are we going to — who are we going to be?


      For a long time, America set the pace across the entire globe. For the better part of the 20th century, we led the world by a significant margin in investments in ourselves, in our people, in our country.


      We invested in our infrastructure — in our roads, highways, bridges, ports, airports — in the arteries of the nation that allow commerce to function smoothly and swiftly and allow us to generate significant income.


      We’ve invested in our people, in opportunity. We’re among the first to provide access, for example, to free education. It’s the reason why, in the 20th century, we began to take off.


      It was back in the late 1890s we decided, among the first countries, that we were going to be the first nation that every single American, regardless of their background — and it wasn’t, at the time, regardless of their background, but based on income — would have free 12 years of education.


      We invested to win the space race. We led the world in research and development that led to the creation of the Internet.


      And, you know, but then something happened. We slowed up. We stopped investing in ourselves.


      America is still the largest economy in the world. We still have the most productive workers and the most innovative minds in the world. But we risk losing our edge as a nation.


      Our infrastructure used to be the best in the world — literally, not figuratively. Today, according to the World Economic Forum, we rank 13th. Our infrastructure — 12 nations have a better infrastructure than we do, which means they can move product, they can do so many things better than we can do it.


      We’re among the first in the world to guarantee access to universal education. Now, the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development ranks America 35th out of 37 major countries when it comes to investing in early childhood education as a percent of GDP.


      Think of that. Think of that. Of all the industrial nations in the world, the instinct Americans would say if you asked them 25 years — they would say, “We’re number one.” We are not. There’s only two industrial nations that are lower than us.


      All those investments that fuel the strong economy, we’ve — we’ve taken our foot off the gas. We’ve taken — we just — I don’t know what’s happened. The world has taken notice, by the way, including our adversaries. And now they’re closing the gap in a big way.


      So it’s essential that we regain our momentum that we’ve lost. And work our — you know, the work of our time, it seems to me — those of us who hold public office — is to prepare ourselves to be more competitive and to win the fast-changing 21st century and — the global economy.


      Things are changing incredibly quickly. That’s why I proposed two critical pieces of legislation being debated back in Washington right now. The first, a bill to invest in our physical infrastructure. And the second is a bill to invest in our human infrastructure. I’ll talk about both of these bills in just a moment.


      But first I want to set one thing straight: These bills are not about left versus right or moderate versus progressive or anything that pits Americans against one another. These bills are about competitiveness versus complacency. They’re about opportunity versus decay. They’re about leading the world or continuing to let the world pass us by, which is literally happening.


      To support these investments is to create a rising America, America that’s moving. And to oppose these investments is to be complicit in America’s decline.


      To support these bills is to pursue a broader vision of our nation. And to oppose them is to accept a very cramped view of our future.


      This isn’t about two pieces of legislation; it’s about the inflection point I mentioned earlier we are in our history — the world history.


      So here’s what I’m proposing. First, the infrastructure bill: It’s about rebuilding our roads, our highways, our bridges, our ports, our airports, our broadband — all the things that need repair. Our arteries of our economy have always been fueled by the economic might and dynamism of Americans.


      Across the country right now, 45,000 bridges and 173,000 miles of roads, according to the engineers — Society of Engineers — are in poor condition right now, including more than 1,200 bridges, as the Governor has been fighting to repair here in your state; 73 — 7,300 miles of roads here in Michigan.


      I’ll bet everyone in this room can tell me what the most dangerous intersection in this town or any town they live in — and where it is — that you hold your breath when you’re driving over or trying to cross the street. Not a joke.


      Working with the Governor and members of the Congress here, we’re going to put hardworking Americans, like the operating engineers here in Howell, on the job to bring back our infrastructure and bring it up to speed. Good union jobs, not 12, 15, 18 doll- — prevailing wage jobs. (Applause.) Wage that gives you dignity, that you can raise a family on, that you can hold your head up.


      This is a blue-collar blueprint for how we restore America’s pride. And the jobs can’t — these are jobs that can’t be outsourced.


      We’re going to put plumbers and pipefitters to work replacing lead pipes in America so families and children can drink clean water. Forty — 400,000 schools. I mean, this — it’s not just our homes; it’s across the country.


      We’re going to put line workers and electricians to work laying thousands of miles of transmission lines and to build a modern infrastructure and energy grid.


      We’re going to make high-speed Internet affordable and available to — everywhere in America. We were talking about it on the way over with Elissa, that how short the number of — number who don’t have access to the Internet here because of the lack of investment.


      We’re going to make the largest investment in public transit in American history. And we’re going to make the most important investment in our rail system since the creation of Amtrak 50 years ago.


      Now, let me tell you, our competitors aren’t hanging around and waiting to see what we’re going to do. They’ve been pouring billions of dollars into infrastructure and into training their people for years now.


      Take China, for example. Now, I’ve been clear that China

      uses unfair and coercive practices to get ahead of their competitors. But that’s not the whole of the story. They also invest in themselves.


      In recent years, China has spent around three times as much

      on infrastructure as a share of their economy than we have. Three times. And they’re not slowing down.


      Yesterday, my U.S. Trade Representative delivered an important speech on our competition with China. She pointed out that China made a major investment in steel plants beginning about 20 years ago. And in the last 20 years, half of America’s steel companies have been shuttered.


      We went from 100 U.S. steel companies to 51. And employment in the American steel industry dropped by 40 percent since the year 2000.


      China now produces more steel in one month than America does in an entire year. You can see it in the sector after sector: Other countries are speeding up and America is falling behind.


      We’ve got to reset the pace again. We’ve got to set a different pace. For example, here in Michigan, we need to make sure that American autoworkers lead the world in electric vehicles. (Applause.)


      And some of you came to the White House when I had the chairmen of the board of General Motors, Chrysler, and GM — I mean, General Motors, Chrysler, and Ford. You know — and what have they decided to do? They decided they’re going to lead the world and they’re going to build more of the electric vehicles than any other country.


      But guess what? China is not waiting around. They’ve manufactured more than twice as many electric vehicles as we have over the last decade. They control more than 75 percent of the battery market. And they’re poised to invest another $14 billion in charging capacity now in their country.


      Back in May, I had the chance to tour Ford’s new state-of-the-art facility in Dearborn, where union workers are building the first-ever all-electric Ford F-150. I got to drive that sucker. (Laughter.) It’s quick: zero to sixty in 4.1 seconds. And it’s a big boy. It’s a big one.


      Months later, I hosted the three — the Big Three automakers at the White House, where the Ford 150 was joined by the GMC Hummer and the Jeep Wagoneer [Wrangler] — all going electric, all in partnership with the UAW.


      The whole world knows that the future of the auto industry is electric. We need to make sure America builds that future instead of falling behind.


      We should build those vehicles, and the batteries to get them, here in the United States of America. That’s what we should build here in the state of Michigan. I want those jobs — (applause) — no, I really mean it. (Applause.) I want those jobs here in Michigan, not halfway around the globe.


      That’s what my plan will do. The infrastructure bill will put in motion the union workers on the job installing a national network of hundreds of thousands of charging stations along our roads and highways and communities — over 500,000 of them.


      And, by the way, parenthetically, when you build a charging station, it’s like back in the day when my grandpop worked for the American Oil Company back in the turn of the — in the 19 — 1920s, in that area. They went from state to state convincing people that they put — allowed them to put 20,000 gallons of gasoline under the ground. They didn’t want them around. But guess what happened? Everything builds up around them.


      You put these charging stations along the highway, and you’re going to see a significant economic development go well beyond the charging station.


      And the Build Back Better plan will boost our manufacturing capacity, investing in new and retooled facilities that employ American workers with good wages and benefits.


      That includes grants to kickstart new battery and parts productions, that — purchasing incentives for families to buy clean, union-made vehicles, like the ones championed by Debbie and Dan in the Senate and the House. And loans and tax credits to boost clean-vehicle manufacturing.


      Look, these are the kinds of investments that get America in the game and give our workers a chance.


      My plan also makes historic investments in clean energy, including tax credits to help people do things like weatherize their homes, install solar panels, develop clean energy products, to help businesses produce more clean energy.


      All told, this project will save literally hundreds of millions of barrels of oil on a yearly basis. Not a joke.


      These credits — those credits could cut the cost of installing a rooftop solar by about 30 percent, helping families cut their utility bills and helping the country cut its emissions.


      My infrastructure bill will put Americans to work on long-overdue national environmental cleanups.


      I want a job corps just like Roosevelt had a jobs corps — but an environmental job corps of over 160,000 — excuse me — 1.6 million people. That means good jobs at prevailing wages capping hundreds of thousands of abandoned oil wells. You know, we have thousands and thousands of abandoned oil wells and gas wells and methane — with methane leaks. Well, guess what? The miners and the people who dug those wells, they’ll get paid the same amount of money to cap them now. It’s going to help us meet the moment of the climate crisis and do away with — you know, it’s going to create good jobs and make more economi- — make us more economically competitive.


      Folks, here in Michigan, you all know the cost of extreme weather. All you remember the flooding this summer that shut down parts of I-96 — the power outages and the tornado warnings. They’re costing your state billions of dollars.


      Nationally, last year — last year, because of extreme weather, cost America $99 billion. Ninety-nine billion taxpayers’ dollars.


      I went all over the country. I went out West to the fires. You know, more has burned down in the Northwest than the entire state of New Jersey. That’s how much we’ve lost. You see what’s happened with the droughts that are out there. You see reservoirs that are down 30, 40, 50 feet. Who’s worried about the cooling down — you’re worried about whether you’re going to have — what the Colorado River is going to do.


      This is a big deal. This is gigantic. And we’re not going to ease up. We’re not going to ease up on any of this.


      We have to invest in resilience. Resilience. You saw Texas? Their entire power grid went down because they had no resilience — the ability to build back and build things stronger.


      Why a lot of those fires in the far west? And — because guess what? It’s a hell of a lot safer to have those wires underground not be knocked down by high winds and tornadoes and the like, causing fires.


      Look, I haven’t pressed — I haven’t a passed a — we haven’t passed a major infrastructure bill for decades in this country. It used to be a normal thing to do. It used to be a bipartisan thing to do.


      If we get this done, we’re going to breathe new life into our economy and our workers, and we’re going to breathe cleaner air. Economists left, right, and center agree.


      Earlier this year, Wall Street — not some liberal think tank — Wall Street and a Wall Street outfit called Moody’s projected that the investments in these bills could help our economy create an additional 2 million jobs per year, every year. Two million per year. That’s going to be transformative.


      And here’s the deal: The jobs in my plan are for people who too often felt left behind and were left behind — left out.


      Ninety percent of the jobs in this bill — these bills — in my infrastructure plan don’t require a four-year college degree.


      We need to get this done. But it isn’t enough just to invest in our physical infrastructure. We’re going to lead the world like we used to. If we’re going to do that, we have to also invest in our people, like you do right here in training — in this training facility.


      And that’s what my second bill, the Build Back Better plan, that’s what it does.


      Take education, for example. When America said everyone is entitled to 12 years of free public education — universal — a century ago, it gave us the best-educated, best-prepared workforce in the world. That was one of the reasons why America began to grow so rapidly. It’s a big part of why we led the world the bulk of the 20th century.


      But guess what? If we were going to put together a committee today, like they did in 1898 — I think it was — and we were going to invent a public education system, is there any chance we’d say that we thought 12 years is enough in the 21st century? Just 12 years? I don’t think so.


      Study after study shows that the earlier our children begin to learn in school — not daycare — the better for themselves, for their families, no matter what the background they come from — no matter what their background.


      Recent university studies point out that they’re increased by 56 percent the chance for them to get all the way through 12 years of school without getting in trouble. It’s a gigantic deal. It doesn’t matter whether their mom or dad know how to read or write, or the home is a home that is challenging.


      But right now, we’re lagging behind while other countries are investing in their children. Today, only about half of three- and four-year-olds in America are enrolled in early childhood education.


      In Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Latvia, the number — that number is more than 90 percent. Ninety percent of their three- and four-year-olds.


      We’re falling further and further behind the curve. It’s not just early education.


      According to one study, we rank 33 out of 44 advanced economies when it comes to the percentage of our young people who have attained a post-high school degree — anything after high school. We’re at the bottom of the heap.


      I’ll bet if I — if that was on a quiz — you were on one of these quiz shows that ask you that, you would have said maybe we’re two or three or four. It’s ridiculous.


      My Build Back Blett- — Build Back Better plan gets us back on track. We’ll make four additional years of public education available to every person in America. Two years of high-quality preschool at the front end and investments in community colleges so our students can gain the skills they need to carve out a place for themselves in the 21st century economy.


      And it’ll also increase Pell Grants. They’re grants for kids making — families making less than 50 grand, helping their — helping their folks — helping them get through community college or a historically Black colleges in order to be able to get a shot so they can live; they can eat while they’re going to school.


      And we’ll invest in our historically Black college and universities, which are an essential asset to help, to support, and to make sure that young people of every background and circumstance have a shot at good-paying jobs.


      Look, this bill also invests in our workforce by providing so much-needed breathing room for working families. After all, how can we compete in the world if millions of American parent — parents, especially moms, can’t join the week — the workforce because they can’t afford the cost of childcare or eldercare; they have to stay home.


      For example, here in Michigan, the average two-parent family spends $10,400 on childcare costs for just one child each year. Thirty years ago, the United States ranked sixth — sixth among advanced economies in the share of women in the workforce. You know where we are today? Twenty-three. Twenty-two countries have a higher percentage of their women in the workforce making a competitive wage than the United States.


      While our competitors are investing in the care economy, we’re standing still. And the fact is, millions of American parents are feeling the squeeze, having a hard time doing their job, earning a paycheck while taking care of their children or aging parents — and at the same time — in the sandwich generation.


      My Build Back Better plan is going to change that. It’s going to cut the cost of childcare for most Michigan families by more than half. It’s going to extend the historic middle-class tax cut to the Child Care Tax Credit, which we passed in my American Rescue Plan.


      Now, most people don’t know — if you walk to the average informed person — doctor, lawyer, whatever — and said, “Child Care Tax Credit,” they’re not sure what that means. But what it means is, you know, if you were making a decent salary and you had two kids or three kids or four under the age of 18, you get to deduct $2,000 for each child off your bottom line of your taxes you owe. Well, guess what? If you’re making 15 bucks an hour, you don’t have any taxes to pay like that. So guess what you got? Nothing. Zero. Zero. No help.


      My friends on the other team have no problem giving billionaires and millionaires gigantic tax breaks. This is a tax cut. You know, what it does is now — and it’s in place, and people in your state are understanding it now — instead of it provides — it upped the ante how much you could get for a child under seven: You get 3,600 bucks tax cut on a yearly basis, and you get $3,000 for a child under 17.


      But guess what we did? That means we’re doing it on a monthly basis now. It means you’re getting either $300 a month or $200 a month, just like your Social Security check — at home.


      It’s cut child poverty in — by 40 percent. That money is already a life-changer for so many working families. And as I said — it’s actually — I was wrong: In Michigan, it’s 44 percent cut in child poverty.


      We need to keep it going. My plan is going to put Americans to work constructing and rehabilitating safe and affordable housing to help ease the cost of housing while generating even more jobs. In most of the major metropolitan areas of America, they’re — you can’t afford the housing.


      And it helps to meet the moment on climate change as well. We’re setting the course for America to achieve 50 to 52 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 for us to reach ne- — to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.


      This bill helps us get there in a way that creates good jobs, makes us global leaders of fast-growing clean energy industries, like electric vehicles, solar and wind power, battery power.


      The bottom line is this: When we give working families a break, we’re not just raising their quality of life; we’re putting parents in a position to earn a paycheck. We’re also positioning our country to compete in the world. That’s what these bills are all about.


      If you want proof, just come to this training facility. This is where hardworking folks come to learn how to operate road graders and so much more; where workers use virtual reality to master operating a crane and to learn how to deal with drones to look underneath bridges and so on; where young people in Michigan show up and emerge as expert technicians, engineers, heavy equipment operators.


      They leave here with a shot at something great: a union job with good wages and benefits that allow them to maintain their dignity and their pride. It’s a ticket to the middle class.


      This is where the economy starts: with you — your skills, your dreams, and your limitless potential. The only thing we’ve been missing is the will from Washington to finally build an economy around you — an economy that gives you and your family a fighting chance to get ahead, gives our country a fighting chance to compete with the rest of the world. We can’t get here thinking small. We have to think big.


      Let me be clear: We need to prepare for 10 years down the line. That’s what these bills do. Both these bills spend out over 10 years, not in the first year.


      So if you take the infrastructure bill, folks, it’s described as a $1.2 trillion bill. What that means is that of all those investments in roads, bridges, high-speed Internet, water, everything else, all of it would be less than one half of 1 percent of our economy each year. And it’s all paid for, and they don’t increase the debt because they’re paid for by asking the very wealthy to begin their par- — pay their fair share.


      As a matter of fact, a significant portion of this plan cuts taxes for working people.


      And best of all, the cost of these bills, in terms of adding to the deficit, is zero. Zero. Zero. And I made a commitment when I wrote these when I was running: No one making under $400,000 a year will see a penny in their taxes go up. That’s why, in the infrastructure bill, there is no gas tax increase, because people making under 400 would have to pay more.


      It’s simple. If you’re working here at this facility or your spouse is a teacher or a firefighter, there’s no reason why — combined — why millionaires and billionaires in this country should be paying at a lower tax rate than you do. Hear me again now: a lower tax rate.


      A police officer or teacher, a union crane operator, and a nurse — they paid a higher tax rate — a higher tax rate than a significant portion of the major corporations in America and the super wealthy.


      Look, it isn’t right — isn’t right that 55 of the largest corporations in America, in this country — and I come from the corporate capital of the world. More people — more corporations are incorporated in the state of Delaware than all — every other state combined. But you know how much those 55 companies — I can go on; more than that — they made over $40 billion and they paid zero — zero in federal income tax.


      Since the pandemic began, the number of billionaires — and I forget the exact number there are in America — have seen their wealth go up collectively by $1 trillion. $1 trillion.


      It isn’t fair. It needs to change. Look, working folks understand that.


      That’s why, despite the attacks — the attacks and misinformation, my plan has overwhelming support of the polling data from the American people. They understand what’s at stake.


      They understand that workers and families have a better shot and Americans have a better shot.


      I’m a capitalist. I think you should be able to go out and make a million dollars, or a billion. But just pay your fair share. Join the crowd, man.


      They know that this is about dignity and respect. It’s about changing the paradigm so the economy works for you, not just for those at the very top.


      It’s about building this economy from the bottom up and the middle out. That’s what I’ve done my entire career. That’s why I ran for president.


      As I said, I’m a capitalist. I think you should be able to

      make a lot of money in America. But just pay your fair share. Pay your fair share.


      I took this agenda to the country. They said it was time to build an economy that looks out from Scranton, Pennsylvania — where I grew up as a kid — instead of looking down from Wall Street. An economy that looks out from Howell, Michigan, and towns like it all over America, that brings people from every race, background, religion into the game.


      That’s what — and notwithstanding some of the signs that I saw com- — that’s why 81 million Americans voted for me. The largest number of votes in American history. (Applause.) A clear majority who supported when they supported me.


      Look, it’s now time to deliver.


      Let me close with this: The world is watching. Not a joke. The autocrats of the world believe the world is moving so rapidly that democracies can’t generate consensus quickly enough to bring their people together to get things done.


      They think democracies — not — not a joke — in my meetings with Putin, in my meetings with Xi Jinping and other leaders, they truly believe that we can’t compete in the 21st century because things are moving so fast — democracies take so much time that they are so divided that they can’t get together in time to act.


      They believe — they believe they’ll win — they’ll win the day and they can dictate their way forward and leave us behind. They’re betting — not a joke — they’re betting, for the first time, we won’t respond to this inflection point in history, that we’ll fail to rise to the occasion.


      But you’ve heard me say it a lot of times: It’s never, ever been a good bet to ge- — to bet against the American people. Never.


      Look, just look back a little ways. After World War Two, the United States did what we’re trying to do now: invested in the American people to lead the world.


      At the time, presidents and congresses of both parties and Americans of all political views stepped up. I’m not being sentimental here. There was racial discrimination; it was a fact of life. We know how deep-rooted racism is in this country. We saw the Klan marching right here in Howell generations ago and again in recent years. It’s a never-ending battle.


      But think about what also unfolded in this critical — in these critical decades. Great protest movements summoned the nation to most prom- — promise of equity.


      The GI Bill sent millions of veterans to college. The federal government helped make home ownership possible because it’s the vehicle by which people can generate wealth. Most of us who come from lower- or middle-class backgrounds, that’s how our parents were able to generate any wealth. The investments in our home for those who could previously only dream of having a house to call their own.


      We invested in the Interstate Highway System, propelling our economy into the future.


      We invested in the space race, which led to huge strides in technology.


      We invested in something called DARPA, a program within the federal government that helped create the Internet.


      Folks, we need to step up again. But the challenge of today is one of economic competition. Let’s learn from that history, not because it was perfect, because Americans then did what they must do now: invest in ourselves to show the world that American democracy works and that, given half a chance, there’s nothing — not a single thing we can’t achieve when we do it together. I know we can do this. I’m positive we can. I’ve never been more optimistic about this country than I am right now. We’re going to restore faith, pride, and dignity in the future of this country.


      And we’re going to pass both — both of these bills and start building this economy to beat the competition and deliver for working families.


      Thank you. May God bless you. And may God protect our troops. Let’s get this done. Thank you. (Applause.)


      Q  President Biden, what are you willing to cut to get to $2 trillion?


      THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.


      Q  President Biden, what are you willing to cut from the package to get to $2 trillion?


      THE PRESIDENT: I want to make sure that we have a package that everyone can agree on. It’s not going to be $3.5 trillion. It’s going to be less than that. I don’t know what the answer to that is. And we’re going to get it done.


      Thank you.


      Q  President Biden, are you going to call Mitch McConnell today?


      Q  Do you think Senator Manchin will support a bill larger than $2.2 trillion, sir?


      THE PRESIDENT: Well, you heard him on television today. It sure sounds like he’s moving, and I hope that’s the case. Thank you.


      Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


      Biden tells GOP to ‘get out of the way’ on debt limit




       President Joe Biden on Monday said he couldn't guarantee the debt ceiling would be raised in two weeks as he slammed Republicans for opposing efforts to keep the nation from being unable to pay its debts for the first time in its history.

      In a speech from the White House, Biden put the blame on Republicans for refusing to join with Democrats in raising the debt limit to pay for debts incurred in the past. Congressional Republicans are steadfastly refusing to supply any votes to raise the debt limit, Biden said they should vote on bipartisan basis to pay for bills for which both parties are responsible.
      "Not only are Republicans refusing to do their job, but they're threatening to use their power to prevent us from doing our job -- saving the economy from a catastrophic event. I think quite frankly it's hypocritical, dangerous and disgraceful," Biden said.
        Biden said: "Republicans say they will not do their part to avoid this needless calamity. So be it. But they need to stop playing Russian roulette with the US economy."
          Congress has until October 18 to increase the country's borrowing limit, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned lawmakers last week, a date that is now just two weeks away. When asked by a reporter if he could guarantee the US won't hit the debt ceiling, Biden said, "No I can't -- that's up to Mitch McConnell. ... I can't believe that that would be the end result, because the consequences are so dire. I don't believe that, but can I guarantee it? If I could, I would, but I can't."
          Republicans, led by Senate Minority Leader McConnell, argue that Democrats should handle the debt ceiling on their own by using a special budget process known as reconciliation, which would not require Republicans to vote on it. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer have said they are opposed to that idea and they believe it is Republicans' responsibility to help pay down debts that were incurred by both parties.
          But as the deadline fast approaches, Democrats need to make a decision soon if they are going to use the budget reconciliation process.
          "A failure to raise the debt limit will call into question Congress' willingness to meet our obligations that we've already incurred -- not new ones -- we've already incurred. This is going to undermine the safety of US Treasury securities and will threaten the reserve status of the dollar as the world's currency, that the world relies on," Biden said.  
          The President continued: "The American credit rating will be downgraded, interest rates will rise for mortgages, auto loans, credit cards, and borrowing."
          Biden said minutes before delivering his remarks he received and read a letter from McConnell about the debt ceiling and said he planned to talk to the Republican leader about it.
          "I hope we can have some intelligent and honest conversation about what he is proposing. I think the easiest way to do this, and if the Republicans would not use the filibuster, would be to let us vote on what is already in the Senate right now, passed by the house, to raise the debt limit. And we could do that in the next several days," Biden said.
          Biden said part of the reason Congress needs to raise the debt limit is because of what he described as "reckless tax and spending policies" under the Trump administration.
          "Republicans in Congress raised the debt three times when Donald Trump was President, and each time with Democrats' support. But now they won't raise it even though they're responsible for more than $8 trillion in bills incurred in four years under the previous administration," Biden said.
          The President said: "They won't raise it even though defaulting on the debt would lead to a self-inflicted wound that takes our economy over a cliff and risks jobs and retirement savings, Social Security benefits, salaries for service members, benefits for veterans, and so much more."
          The President said in the days ahead, the American people may see the value of their retirement accounts shrink, interest rates go up and their mortgage and car payments increase.
          "As soon as this week, your savings and your pocketbook could be directly impacted by this Republican stunt. It's as simple as that," Biden said.
          Failure to raise the debt ceiling in time could halt payments that millions of Americans rely on, including paychecks to federal workers, Medicare benefits, military salaries, tax refunds, Social Security checks and payments to federal contractors. It could cause job losses, a shutdown of tens of billions in Covid-19 economic recovery aid still set to be delivered, a near-freeze in credit markets and gross domestic product taking a tangible hit that could last for multiple quarters.
          Biden noted raising the debt limit would pay off previous debts and that it would not be connected to new spending being considered, like his economic proposals that are currently stalled in Congress.
          "It has nothing to do with my plan for infrastructure or building back better," Biden said.
          He added, "So if we are going to make good on what's already been approved by previous Congresses and previous presidents and parties, we have to pay for it."
          The President defended the lack of a deal on his economic packages and appeared to single out two moderate Democratic senators, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona.
          "I've been able to close the deal with 99% of my party. Two, two people, it's still underway," Biden told reporters Monday.
          He continued, "It's a process, it's a process. We'll get it done."
          Pressed on whether he was specifically calling out Manchin and Sinema, Biden said: "I need 50 votes in the Senate. I have 48."
          Senior White House officials explored whether the US could unilaterally continue payments should the debt ceiling be breached, but ultimately officials concluded it would not be possible to avoid default and economic catastrophe, CNN reported last week.
          The standoff over raising the debt ceiling comes at a chaotic time in Washington. Last week, Congress avoided a government shutdown just before the deadline and Democrats were also forced to punt on their infrastructure and social safety net agenda.
          House Democratic leaders put off plans to vote on a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan amid sharp disagreements between progressive and moderate Democrats over the size and scope of the President's sweeping domestic agenda. Senior White House officials went up to Capitol Hill last week to broker an agreement but were unsuccessful in hammering out a framework that both progressive and moderate Democrats would sign on to.
            Biden will meet virtually on Monday with progressive House Democrats, White House press secretary Jen Psaki announced Monday, saying the group will have a discussions about the path forward on the President's agenda. She added that the President will likely hold a similar meeting with moderates later this week.


            Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


            The National School Board Association asks President Joe Biden for protection against angry mobs as more people are growing frustrated with Covid-19 mandates.




             Yesterday the National School Boards Association called on the Biden Admin to start labeling parents speaking out at school board meetings as “domestic terrorists.”

            Today CNN invited their president on to help advance the cause.




            Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


            President Joe Biden says ‘everybody is frustrated’




             "Everybody is frustrated, it’s part of being in government, being frustrated,"Mr. Biden told reporters before leaving the White House for a weekend stay at his home in Wilmington, Delaware. He pledged to "work like hell" to get the two pillars of his domestic agenda passed into law, but refrained from laying out a new deadline.




            Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


            “We're going to get it done,” President Biden said at the Oval Office following a critical meeting before the vote on the Build Back Better reconciliation package.




            President Biden just now after meeting with House Democrats: "It doesn't matter when. It doesn't matter whether it's in 6 minutes, 6 days, or 6 weeks, we're going to get it done."

            Video Transcript

            [INTERPOSING VOICES]

            - Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Thank you. You're asking a thousand different questions and I-- they're all legit. I'm telling you, we're going to get this done.

            [INTERPOSING VOICES]

            - It doesn't matter when. It doesn't matter whether it's in six minutes, six days, or six weeks. We're going to get it done.

            [INTERPOSING VOICES]

            - --party, Mr President? Why has it been so challenging to unite the party? Why isn't the party united?

            - 50-50? Come on, man. Unite the party 50-50-- I got it.

            - How big is this bill going to be?

            - You've-- [INAUDIBLE]




            Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


            President Joe Biden said 'good luck' when Boris Johnson asked if he could take questions from reporters




             Seriously, it happened again. President Alzheimer’s aides actually shouted over top of him to prevent reporters from hearing him responding to a question. They then kept shouting and rushed the reporters out of the room:

            Get this. Boris Johnson took three questions from reporters but President Alzheimer’s wasn’t allowed to answer any. Biden looks like a damn fool, and I mean that seriously.

            Full Interview Here:

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Well, it’s a pleasure to welcome to the White House, the Oval Office, Prime Minister Johnson.  I’m honored to have a chance to have him here. 

            He returned a small amount of hospitality compared to all the hospitality he provided for the G7 and our families and — in Cornwall.  And since then, our countries have worked in close cooperation on a whole range of things, and our fellow democracies. 

            We continue to work on — we’re going to talk about today — the ambitions we laid out at the G7.  And we’re turning to our revitalized Atlantic Charter.  We’re going to make it something — we’re going to turn it into real action so it makes a ma- — plays a major role in the challenges we face. 

            Earlier today, I addressed the United Nations General Assembly, and I made clear that climate has to be the core area of action for all of us and — as we look ahead to the UK-hosted COP26, which I’m really anxious to attend in Glasgow in November, Mr. Prime Minister.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Good.  Fantastic.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  And we’re promoting our —

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  We need you there.  Yeah.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Oh, we’re going to be there.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Fantastic.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  With bells on, as they say.

            And we’re going to also — our economies have to work together, including through our Build Back Better World initiative that we — that we launched in Car- — at Carbis Bay. 

            And today, we’re going to discuss the next steps in all — on all of this, and as well as how the U.S. and UK can continue our cooperation in Afghanistan, in the Indo-Pacific, and around the world. 

            And I want to thank you again, Boris, for making the effort to be here. 

            And I understand, Boris — I just want you to know, Boris — you came down on Amtrak, is that right?

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  I did.  And — and you’re — you’re a living deity —

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  I am. 

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  — on Amtrak, I can tell you.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  I’ve traveled millions of miles.  You think I’m joking.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  They love you.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Well, they should.  (Laughter.)  I traveled more on Amtrak than any — if I were a conductor, I’d be number one in seniority.  (Laughter.) 

            I got to tell you a quick story that has nothing to do with anything.  When I was Vice President, the Secret Service didn’t like me traveling on Amtrak because there were too many options for people to cause trouble along the way.  But I insisted I do it. 

            And one day, they put in the newspaper: “Biden travels one million…” — and I think — don’t hold me to the exact number — I think it was — “…three hundred and fifty thousand miles on Air Force Two.”

            And — and so I was walking up to the – up to — getting the train on that Friday.  And a guy, who was the number three guy from New Jersey in seniority as a conductor, walked up and grabbed me and he goes like this: “Joey, baby!” — grabs my cheek.  I thought the Secret Service was going to shoot him.  (Laughter.)  And I said, “No, no.  He’s a friend.”

            He said, “Joey, big deal.  1,300,000 miles on Amtrak” — I mean, on Air Force Two.  “Do you know how many miles you traveled on Amtrak?”  And I said, No.”  He said, “Well, at the retirement dinner, we worked it out.”  He said, “Thirty-six years in the Senate; ‘X’ number of years as…” — at that point — “…as Vice President; average 131 days a year, 257 miles a day.  Joey, you travelled over 2 million miles.  Big deal.”  (Laughter.) 

            I thought they should name the railroad after me or something.  But at any rate —

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  They named the station after you. 

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Yeah, they did do that.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Yeah, yeah, yeah — it’s big news there.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Anyway. 

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Joe, I want to thank you.  And I share your — your belief in transport infrastructure, particularly trains. 

            I want to thank you very much for the warm welcome today.  And it’s great to be with you in the White House.  And this is a very important trip for us in the UK, and we’ve seen some great progress just in the last period. 

            And it’s great that the ban is being lifted on British beef and the people of the United states of America can eat British beef.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  And we’re going to be working on lamb, too.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  And the lamb.  We’re working on the — we’re working on the lamb. 

            But what you did with the travel so that people can travel to the U.S. with two jabs is also fantastic and very welcome.  We’ve been working on that for a long time.

            But I think the most important thing today has been your speech, Joe, to UNGA, where you made a commitment to supporting the world to adapt to climate change, doubling the American commitment.  That’s very important for us. 

            And we’ve made a £11.6 billion commitment I made when I first became prime minister.  But it’s fantastic to see the United States really stepping up and showing a lead — a real, real lead.

            And then, of course, there’s the progress that we’re making in the defense technology partnership that you’ve led and — with our Australian friends that I think has great potential to benefit the whole of the world and the security of the whole of the world. 

            So, Joe, thank you for having us.  And I think, you know, we’re — we’re boosting our shared agenda.  We want to build back the world together with you.  And I think we want to renew and strengthen our transatlantic bond.  And it feels to me like it’s going very, very well.

            But I think — would it be okay if we just have a couple of questions?  Just a — just a couple of questions for the —

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Good luck.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  And I think we’re going to be ruthless.  (Laughter.)  We’re going to be ruthless.  I’m going to go to — I’m going to go to Harry Cole from The Sun.

            Q    Mr. President —

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Hey, he — ask him the question.  (Laughter.)  No, I’m jo-

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  I’ll take it.

            Q    Mr. President, is Britain still at the back of the queue for a trade deal — a free trade deal, as your predecessor, President Obama, promised? 

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Well, it’s actually (inaudible) a nice question.

            Q    And may I just ask, what possible justification is there for Anne Sacoolas not to be extradited to the United Kingdom to face justice over the death of Harry Dunn?

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  Two things: One, that latter case is being worked on.  I was under the impression — but I don’t know this, I want to be clear — I was under the impression there had been a civil settlement reached, but I don’t know that.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  That’s correct.  That’s correct.

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  And based on what I’ve been told, it was — it was not an intentional act.  It was someone who was new to “driving on the side of the road,” quote, unquote.

            And — but we’re following — I’ll follow up on that.  I expressed my sympathies when it occurred, but I don’t know the status of that case right now.

            The other question was?

            Q    A Brexit free trade deal with Britain.  Is it —

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  A Brexit free trade — well, we’re going to talk about trade a little bit today, and we’re going to have to work that through.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Let me just say, on that, Harry — I mean, don’t forget, folks, that we’ve — we’ve settled the Boeing Airbus thing, which was a massive problem between us.  So we’re making a lot of progress — to say nothing of the beef and the whiskey, which I already — I already mentioned.

            And just to kind of say on —

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  You smiled when you said “the whiskey.”  (Laughter.)

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  Well, he’s a — he’s a grade-A ambassador for them.

            On the Harry Dunn case, which is a very, very sad — very sad case, and everybody’s sympathies are with the family of Harry Dunn, I know that the President has been personally trying to move things along, and I’m grateful for that.

            We’re going to take — we’re going to take one more question.  I’m going to go to Beth.

            Q    Thank you.  President Biden, President Trump said that the UK was in front of the queue when it came to a trade deal.  You seem to have a different approach.  Is that because of your heritage, your concern about the Irish Protocol?  Is that what’s holding it back when it comes to doing this deal with the UK?

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  They’re two separate issues.  On the deal with the UK, that’s continuing to be discussed.  But on the protocols, I feel very strongly about those.

            We spent an enormous amount of time and effort in the United States.  It was a major bipartisan effort made.  And I — I would not at all like to see — nor, I might add, would many of my Republican colleagues like to see — a change in the Irish courts that — the end result having a closed border again.

            PRIME MINISTER JOHNSON:  That is absolutely right.  And I — on that point, Joe, you know, we are — we are completely at one.  And I think nobody wants to see anything that interrupts or unbalances the Belfast Good Friday Accord — that’s the Belfast Good Friday Agreement.

            Q    What’s your response to the situation on the border, Mr. President?

            PRESIDENT BIDEN:  (Inaudible.)  Violence is not justified.


            Read More Add your Comment 0 nhận xét


             

            © 2012 Học Để ThiBlog tài liệu