Remarks by the President at DNC Event–San Jose, California

September 26, 2011

Private Residence
San Jose, California

September 25, 2011
6:56 P.M. PDT

THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. (Applause.) It is good to be back in Silicon Valley. It is good to be back at the Thompson residence. (Applause.) I try to make this a regular stop. (Laughter.) Once every year or two, I figure, well, I need a little dose of John and Sandi and their friends. So thank you all for being here. Thanks for arranging wonderful weather.

A couple of other people I want to acknowledge. First of all, I hope they’re still here, because I love them and they do a great job every single day — Congressman Mike Honda in the house. (Applause.) And Congresswoman Anna Eshoo. We’ve also got Jean Quan, mayor of Oakland, in the house. (Applause.) And I want to thank Bruce Hornsbee — (applause) — and Chris Cornell — (applause) — for their outstanding entertainment.

Now, as I was in the photo line, it turned out there are at least three birthdays here. Where are the birthday boys? There’s one of them. There’s another one. And then — (laughter) — four, five, six, seven. (Laughter.) So this obviously a propitious day, with so many birthdays. Happy birthday to all of you. It is wonderful to help celebrate. But don’t — for the kids, don’t let your parents say, this is what you’re getting for your birthday. (Laughter.) I mean, I know that trick and — (laughter.)

As Sandi said, these folks have been great friends for a long time. Many of you were here when I was still running for President.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Senate!

THE PRESIDENT: For Senate, even better. (Applause.) And I think, at the time, we understood there were enormous challenges that the country was facing, that there were problems that we had been putting off for decades. But I don’t think we fully grasped, at least in 2007, the full magnitude of the challenges we were going to be facing. We’ve now gone through the worst financial crisis and the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. So for most of our lifetimes, we’ve never seen anything like what we’ve seen over the last two and a half years.

And I think you may remember that, on Inauguration Day, when it was already becoming apparent, we could see the clouds on the horizon — Lehman’s had already happened — I warned people my election was not the end. It wasn’t the end of the journey; it was the beginning of a journey. And it was going to be a tough journey. Because not only did we have to stabilize the financial system and get the banking system working once again, not only did we have to make sure that we yanked ourselves out of the great depression that could have happened had we not intervened, and not only did we have to take emergency measures like save the U.S. auto industry, but even after we did all that, we were going to have to tackle some fundamental structural problems that were preventing ordinary people, were preventing middle-class families from thriving and prospering and achieving the American Dream.

And we talked, when I was running, about what some of those challenges were. We knew that we were going to have to create an energy policy that would not only free ourselves from dependence on foreign oil, but also start changing how we think about the planet and how we think about climate. We knew that we were going to have to make sure that we changed our health care system that was broken, leaving millions of people without health insurance and leaving folks who did have health insurance less secure than they needed to be. We knew that we were going to have to get control of our federal budget, but do so in a way that ensured that we could still make the core investments in infrastructure and basic research and education that are so vital for us winning the future. We knew that we were going to have to not only put more money into our education system, but we were going to have to revamp it so that not just a few of our kids are prepared for the 21st century, but all of our kids are prepared for the 21st century.

So we knew that we had all these incredible challenges domestically. And then, overseas, we knew that it was unsustainable for us to continue two wars and to think that the only way that we were going to be able to project American power around the world was through our military. And we had to remind ourselves that diplomacy — (applause) — the power of our example and the power of our values ultimately was going to make more of a difference in terms of how influential we are around the world.

But I’m back to report to you, my stockholders — (laughter) — in the last two and a half years, we’ve stabilized the economy. We’ve ended the war in Iraq. We are on a pathway to bringing our troops home from Afghanistan. We have decimated al Qaeda and killed bin Laden. (Applause.) We have made sure that, by 2013 — as long as I get a second term — that we are implementing a health care reform package that will provide 30 million people with health insurance, and make the entire system more efficient and more effective. (Applause.) We have signed into law everything from making sure that every woman and every young girl who is thinking about a career is going to make sure that she gets paid equally for an equal day’s work. (Applause.) We ended “don’t ask, don’t tell” because we don’t believe that anybody — (applause) —

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Good job, Mr. President!

THE PRESIDENT: — that anybody who wants to serve this country should be prohibited because of who they love. (Applause.) We passed some of the toughest financial regulations in our history, including making sure that consumers are finally getting the protection they deserve. We made sure that, despite constant battles with Congress that we continue to make progress on the environmental front. And some of it we did administratively. So we made sure, for example, that for the first time in 30 years we are doubling fuel efficiency standards on cars and trucks and heavy trucks — (applause) — which will reduce carbon in our atmosphere and actually save folks money over the course of their lifetimes.

So we’ve done a lot. But here is the challenge I have for all of you. We’ve got so much more work to do. Yes, we stabilized the economy, but at a level where the unemployment rate was way, way too high. And we still have all sorts of international challenges that we’re facing, from Europe to Asia. So we’re still going to have to do a lot to restructure our economy to meet the competitive challenges of the 21st century. And that means we’ve got to continue to invest in cutting-edge research that enables the kind of explosion of technology that’s taken place here in Silicon Valley. It means that we’ve continually got to revamp our education system. It means that we’ve got to make sure that we’re rebuilding the best infrastructure in the world.

And we’ve got to think short term about how do we put people back to work, as well as long term, how do we make sure that a middle class can thrive in this country again.

And that’s why I need your help. (Applause.) That’s why I need your help. Because the fact of the matter is, is that too many people are hurting out there right now, and we’ve got to take some steps right now. So before I even talk to you about the campaign, I need your help to make sure that we get this jobs bill passed that puts people back to work. (Applause.)

Every idea that we have in this jobs bill has, in the past, been supported by Democrats and Republicans. Rebuilding our roads and our bridges and our airports and our schools — that’s not a partisan idea, that’s part of what made America an economic superpower. We’ve got all kinds of workers out there who are unemployed because of the housing bubble burst. We could put them to work right now rebuilding America. It will be good for the economy now, but it will also be good for our economic future.

We need to put teachers back in the classroom. (Applause.) We have — even in the midst of this economic crisis, we’ve actually created 2 million jobs over the last couple of years. The problem is we’ve also lost half a million jobs, mostly in state and local government, and a huge proportion of those are teachers that should be in our classrooms right now. We’ve got to change that, and the jobs bill would put people back in the classroom where they belong.

At a time when — I had lunch with the President of South Korea, and I asked him, what’s your biggest challenge. And he says, just keeping pace with the huge demand for education. He said, our parents are too demanding. (Laughter.) He says, they want kindergarteners to learn English. I’m having to ship teachers in from foreign countries to meet the demand, because we understand that whoever wins the education battle, they’re going to win the economic battle of the future. (Applause.) And at the same time as that’s happening, we’re laying off teachers in this country? That makes absolutely no sense. We’ve got to put them back in the classroom. (Applause.)

This jobs bill provides a tax cut not only to every working family in America, which will put more money in their pockets and allows them to make sure that they can buy all the great products that are created here in Silicon Valley — (applause) — but it also cuts taxes for small businesses and entrepreneurs. It cuts taxes for companies that are hiring new workers or who are providing their workers raises. And it provides a tax credit for those who are hiring veterans.

So we’ve got an opportunity to put people back to work right now. And by the way, it is paid for. Every dime. Now, this has caused some controversy — well, how do you pay for it? Keep in mind that it is absolutely true that we’ve got to have a government that lives within its means. And we weren’t living within our means over the last decade: two wars we didn’t pay for, a prescription drug plan we didn’t pay for, tax cuts we did not pay for. So we’ve already made $1 trillion worth of cuts over the course of this summer. We’ve slated another half million dollars in cuts, including making some modest modifications to entitlements.

So we’re doing our part. But what we’ve said is the only way we actually close the gap if we want to have long-term fiscal sustainability is we’ve also got to make sure that everybody is doing their fair share — everybody — and that includes the people in this audience. We’ve got to do our fair share. (Applause.)

Now — and I want to be very clear about this. I mean, there are just some basic principles. Warren Buffett’s secretary should not be paying a higher tax rate than Warren Buffett. It’s a pretty straightforward principle. (Applause.) A teacher making $50,000 a year shouldn’t be paying a higher tax rate than somebody who’s pulling in $50 million.

Contrary to what the Republicans claim, that’s not class warfare. This is not about leveling down. The people in this audience, some of you have been extraordinarily successful, and that’s what America is all about. We want everybody to thrive. We want everybody to succeed. God bless you. If you’re starting a business, you’ve got a good idea, you’ve got a new product, a new service, put that out onto the market. Create jobs. Create opportunity for others. That’s great. But we have to remind ourselves that the reason we’re successful is because somebody else made an investment in us. Somewhere along the line, somebody made an investment in us either directly — people like myself getting college scholarships — indirectly, because somebody invested in DARPA a few years back.

The fact of the matter is we’re not — we didn’t do all this on our own, and we’ve got an obligation to make sure that the folks coming behind us are going to have the same opportunities that we did. (Applause.) That’s not class warfare. That is common sense. That’s what America is all about. That’s our values. Those are our ideals.

Now, I need all of you to be vocal about trying to get this jobs bill passed over the next 14 months. That’s going to be absolutely critical. But I’ll be honest with you, we’re not — I don’t know if you’ve noticed, we’re not getting a lot of cooperation from members of Congress. (Laughter.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Party of no —
THE PRESIDENT: I like that. We might have to use that. (Laughter.) And for those — some of you here may be folks who actually used to be Republican, but are puzzled by what’s happened to that party. (Laughter.) Are puzzled by what’s happened to that party. I mean, has anybody been watching the debates lately? (Laughter.)

You’ve got a governor whose state is on fire denying climate change. (Laughter and applause.) No, no, it’s true. You’ve got audiences cheering at the prospect of somebody dying because they don’t have health care, and booing a service member in Iraq because they’re gay. That’s not reflective of who we are. (Applause.) We’ve had differences in the past, but at some level we’ve always believed, you know what, that we’re not defined by our differences. We’re bound together.

And so the reason I bring this up is we’re going to get everything we can out of this Congress over the next 14 months, because the American people can’t wait. But let’s face it, we’re also going to need changes in Washington if we are going to be able to achieve the kind of vision that we talked about back in 2008. We’re going to have to fight for this.

And this is a choice about the fundamental direction of our country — 2008 was an important election; 2012 is a more important election. (Applause.) Now, in order for us to be successful in this 2012 election, I’m going to need all of you.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: You got it!

THE PRESIDENT: I’m going to need you to be out there talking to your friends, talking to your neighbors, talking to your co-workers. And I’m going to need you to be advocates for what we believe in. It’s not enough just to support me. I need you to go out there, and if other folks have been reading the Wall Street Journal editorial page or watching FOX News, and they’re full of inadequate information — (laughter) — I need you to push back. I need you to push back.

You have to make an argument that, yes, the President wants to close this deficit, but we can’t do it just on the backs of the poor and the middle class and our seniors, and that we’ve got to all do our part.

Yes, what’s driven our success historically has been a free market, but we’ve always been successful because we also made sure that that market operated fairly and that there were basic consumer protections, and people who were providing good products and good services were rewarded, not people who were trying to game the system.

I need you to be out there making arguments that the notion the only way we succeed in international competition is by stripping away laws against polluting our planet. That’s a short-sided approach to economic development and it’s not going to work. We’re never going to be able to compete on having the dirtiest air or the cheapest labor. We’ll never compete that way. (Applause.)

And, in some cases, I may need you to have some arguments with our progressive friends. Because, let’s face it, the fact of the matter is, is that over the last two and a half years, even as we’ve gotten a huge amount done, there’s a lot of folks on our side who get dispirited because we didn’t get it all done in two and a half years.

That’s not how America works. This is a big, messy, tough democracy. And we’re not going to get a hundred percent. So if we get a health care bill passed that provides health insurance for 80 million — 30 million people, and has the strongest patient bill of rights in history, and young people can now stay on their folks’ insurance so we actually know that a million young people have health insurance right now because of the bill that we put in place — your kids and grandkids — (applause) — the notion that somebody is out of joint because we didn’t get a public option — come on.

No, we haven’t gotten everything done on the environmental front because we’re in the midst of a very tough economic time and people naturally are more hesitant about big changes at a time when they’re worried about their jobs. But that doesn’t mean all the good work that we have done and are doing can be ignored. And the other thing that everybody has got to keep in mind — my friend, Joe Biden, he has a quote he likes to use. He says, “Don’t compare me to the Almighty; compare me to the alternative.” (Laughter and applause.)

So the fact of the matter is we’re going to have a stark choice in this election. But I have to make sure that our side is as passionate and as motivated and is working just as hard as the folks on the other side, because this is a contest of values. This is a choice about who we are and what we stand for. And whoever wins this next election is going to set the template for this country for a long time to come.

So I expect all of you, again, not just to be supporting me; you have to be out there, active, engaged — just as engaged as you were in 2008.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: We’re with you.

THE PRESIDENT: And if you do that, here and all across the country — if people of like mind, people who believe in a big and generous and a tolerant and ambitious and fact-based America — (applause) — an America that believes in science and an America that believes in education; an America that believes that investing in our children is an investment in all of us — if you believe in those things, then I need you out there knocking on doors and making phone calls.

If you guys are working like that, then not only am I optimistic about the election, I’ll be optimistic about the future.

Thank you so much, everybody. God bless you. God bless America. (Applause.)

END