Transcripts
Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and Shalanda Young 9/29/23 Transcript

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and Shalanda Young 9/29/23 Transcript

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre and Shalanda Young 9/29/23. Read the transcript here.

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Karine (00:00):

That was risky. Very risky. I am feisty. It’s Friday, folks. It’s Friday. Happy Friday. Good afternoon. We have the amazing Shalanda Young in the house, so this is great. But before I turn it over to the OMB director and I’ll do that in a second, I want to recognize a terrible milestone that I know many of you are very aware of, which is it has now been about six months since American journalist Evan Gershkovich was wrongfully detained in Russia for doing his job, for reporting the news. As the world knows, Russia’s claims are baseless, it is clear that Evan is being held for leverage because he is an American that should bother every single one of us, every single one of us. The President has been clear that we have no higher priority than securing the release of Evan, Paul Whelan, and all Americans wrongfully detained abroad. Once again, we call for Russia to immediately release Evan and also to release wrongfully detained US citizen Paul Whelan. Our efforts to secure their release are ongoing and we will not stop until they are home.

(01:19)
I also want to take a minute to echo the President’s sentiments on the legacy of Senator Dianne Feinstein. She was a history maker, a history making trailblazer who dedicated her life to the people of California for over half a century. From the city of San Francisco to the halls of Congress, Senator Feinstein turned her passion into purpose to benefit the lives of all Americans. As the President said, he had his own close relationship with the Senator forged over 15 years together in the Senate and she was a cherished friend. And finally, before I do turn it over to our guests, I wanted to make one more thing very clear, which we have been doing as an administration from here for the past couple of days.

(02:06)
Now, as you all know, extreme House Republicans are solely, solely to blame for marching us toward a shutdown. That is what we’re seeing right now. It is a basic fact and one that many of you have already reported. I know how much you all love when I quote folks, so here we go. Political wrote, “Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s choice to go back on the deal he made with President is about to plunge the federal government into chaos.” Punchbowl says, and I quote, “McCarthy is the only congressional principal no longer abiding by the agreement.” Washington Post writes, “Of course, Biden has played no role in bringing Congress to the brink of a shutdown.” And it’s not just what you all are reporting, it’s also what Republicans are saying themselves. Leader McConnell said, and I quote, “Shutting down the government is a choice and it’s a choice that would make the crisis at our southern border even worse.”

(03:12)
Speaker McCarthy said, “Some individuals just want to burn the whole place down.” Representative Garret Graves said, “The arsonists have lit their house on fire.” Representative Matt Gaetz said, “We will have a government shutdown and we cannot blame Joe Biden. We cannot blame House Democrats.” Representatives George Santos and Ralph Norman admitted by saying, “Shut it down.” Those are their words, but no one can explain what House Republicans are shutting down the government over. It’s a serious question and they don’t have a good answer for it.

(03:59)
As Newt Gingrich said, and I quote, “I frankly don’t understand it, I think it’s sort of nuts. There are times people vote yes one day and then they come back and vote no the next day and can’t explain why they switched.” So we are here today facing a possible shutdown because even after Speaker McCarthy said that the bipartisan budget agreement would help Congress work again to do their jobs, the appropriation bills, he chose a different path, an extreme partisan path toward a shutdown, a extreme Republican shutdown. So for more on this, our speaker has broken… So let me step back for now… for more on how the speaker has broken his word and the impacts of the devastating cuts, he is proposing we have our OMB Director, Shalanda Young, to talk through those impacts.

Shalanda Young (04:58):

Thank you.

Karine (04:58):

Here you go.

Shalanda Young (05:01):

Hi. Who all thought I’d be back here so soon? Maybe you all did, I certainly hoped I would not. It’s been just four months since President Biden, House Republicans, House Democrats, Senate Republicans, and Senate Democrats all made a bipartisan budget deal. You all were there. I was there. You remember what it took to get to that deal. We shook hands. Two-thirds of Congress voted for it and the President signed it into law. A commitment to the American people that reduced the deficit, protected critical programs, and ensured their government remained open. Today, four of those five sides I just listed are sticking by that deal. The one side, House Republicans are refusing to live up to their end of the bargain. They have turned their back on the deal. They are on an island entirely by themselves and entirely of their own making. Their chaos and their chaos alone is now threatening to push us into a shutdown.

(06:11)
This is not only a violation of the deal. The president signed this deal into law, and let’s be very clear about what they are demanding as a condition of keeping the government open. It’s all right there in the CR they’re considering right now. Plain black and white, instead of working in a bipartisan fashion to keep the government open, they’re now tripling down on their demands to eviscerate programs that the American people rely on, the exact same ransom they sought for honoring the full faith and credit of the United States. Their bill includes devastating 30% cuts. You heard me, 30% cuts. And listen to what that means. It would eliminate 12, 000 FBI agents, almost 1,000 ATF agents, and more than 500 local law enforcement, kick almost 300,000 children out of Head Start, rob more than a million seniors of nutrition services like Meals on Wheels.

(07:21)
And guess what? If they don’t get their way, if we don’t go along with the devastating cuts I just listed here, they want to force a shutdown that will hurt our economy and natural security. What would a shutdown mean? More than 2 million service members wouldn’t get their paycheck, long-term disaster recovery would be further delayed, nutrition assistance for nearly 7 million women and children who rely on WIC would be jeopardized, small businesses would lose out on more than $100 million a day in loans. What kind of choice is that? In addition to the more than 2 million service members who won’t get their paychecks, we’re talking about more than 1.5 million federal civilian employees by current estimates, roughly a quarter of whom are veterans missing paychecks, meat and food inspectors, border patrol agents, air traffic controllers, TSA agents, just a small example.

(08:24)
On top of that, federal contractors have no guarantee of back pay. None. The thousands of federal contractors who serve the mission of this country, to serve their American people, no guarantee that they’re made whole. Folks who I see around my office every day, people you see around here cleaning who can least afford to miss a paycheck, no guarantee they will be made whole. Our message is simple, House Republicans need to stick to the agreement we already reached and they already voted for. Do the job they were elected to do. And we know it’s not a lot to ask for because just yesterday an overwhelming 76 Senators, Democrats and Republicans voted to move forward on a bipartisan bill to keep the government open. Enough is enough. A deal is a deal. Extreme House Republicans need to stop playing political games with people’s lives, keep their promise, and keep the government open.

Speaker 3 (09:38):

All right, first question.

Speaker 1 (09:40):

Thank you.

Speaker 3 (09:40):

Thank you.

Speaker 1 (09:41):

Hi, how are you? I know you mentioned a couple workers, cleaning staff, people in your office. Can you give us a bigger picture of who at the White House will be affected? Who will be deemed essential and who will be furloughed, including the press team for-

Shalanda Young (10:01):

I’ll let them read out the specifics of who will be here. But just like every federal agency, there are legal definitions about who can work during a time of shutdown. No one clearly gets paid, but there are people who will be furloughed and there are people who’ll be accepted. And just at a macro level, about 800,000 people would be accepted across the government of the 1.5 million civilians I talked about, and about 700,000 would be furloughed. I don’t want to get into specifics of different agencies in the White House. We can read out, I’m sure you talk to the various offices later, but that is a large amount of people who will be furloughed across the government. The White House in OMB will feel the same as the rest of agencies. We will do the best we can to continue to service the American people. Clearly, our men and women in uniform will be at their duty stations without pay, unfortunately. So we will keep vital national security things going, life and safety. But it will be hard to do everything government should do for the American people in a shutdown.

Speaker 1 (11:09):

Then quickly, do you and President Biden regret trusting McCarthy?

Shalanda Young (11:15):

Look, I won’t go there. And it’s not a trust exercise, right? We passed a law. I didn’t fall backwards in the woods. It’s not a trust exercise.

Speaker 1 (11:27):

Please don’t-

Shalanda Young (11:27):

Yeah, 70% of House Republicans voted for a bill. So it’s beyond trust. We have a law. What else are we supposed to do? This President’s committed to governing, committed to doing the right thing. This is who the Republican Conference elected to be their speaker. He asked to work with us on the budget deal. We did that. We find ourselves here.

Speaker 1 (11:55):

Thank you.

Speaker 2 (11:57):

I wondered if you could talk about the US assistance to Ukraine on the face of a shutdown. What happens to it? How does it work?

Shalanda Young (12:06):

Well, just like the rest of defense and our diplomacy efforts, we do as much as we can. Clearly, there is carryover money to keep some things going, but it’s impacted just like if we don’t get further assistance, that is impacted. You cannot do more with less when you talk about a wartime effort. It just doesn’t exist. And there are rules for a reason. You must have money to buy things. So we also worry about our own stockpiles. So even if we could continue to deliver, what can we do to ensure American readiness does not suffer? So I worry about that in a shutdown and I worry about that if we don’t keep the critical aid going to Ukraine, which is why you saw on a bipartisan basis the Senate move forward to keep that going.

Speaker 2 (12:59):

Thanks, Karine. Hi, director. What do you see as the end game here? Are you willing to make any concessions to the hard-line Republicans? And for how long are you expecting the shutdown to last?

Shalanda Young (13:12):

So one, I think you get into real trouble in this town trying to play crystal ball maker. I will tell you what the fastest path is to make sure this does not happen. You saw it in the Senate with bipartisan vote to keep the government running. I think we have to remember what we’re talking about. 47 days. Not a year, not 2, 47 days. The point of a CR, we call them stop gaps, you keep stuff going. What did you do on September 30th as a government, you should keep doing that on October one. This is not hard. It is not meant to come back and negotiate and redo things we just agreed to do three months ago. It is to keep the government open, to give congressional negotiators more time on long-term bills. This is not an exercise in reopening negotiations. We negotiate it at the Speaker’s request three months ago. My life is still recovering from, I remember it very vividly. There are no negotiations left to have on a 47-day bill. The conversation that needs to happen is with the speaker and the Republican Conference, period.

Speaker 4 (14:36):

Thank you, Dr. Young. Given that FEMA is already only prioritizing urgent and life and death operations in the event of a shutdown, how long can even just those operations be sustained?

Shalanda Young (14:50):

Look, it depends on, we’re still in hurricane season. People think that it ends in August, September. So my answers will be assuming

Shalanda Young (15:00):

… no more major disasters happen. Everything’s off the table if something really, truly catastrophic happens. But on due course, we think we can continue to do life and safety from FEMA.

(15:15)
But you’re right, FEMA is holding over 2,000 projects in abeyance because of their current fiscal situation. When did we tell Congress about this? In mid-August. It’s now late September. We told them we could not pay our disaster relief bills in mid-August. It’s now late September, and they are now marching us towards a shutdown where those 2,000 projects just get longer and longer and longer.

(15:47)
So, if you are my home state of Louisiana, if you are Puerto Rico, if you are Texas, anyone who has had a major declaration in the past who are doing long-term recovery, we have to continue to hold to pay for those projects that are needed to continue to rebuild.

Speaker 5 (16:06):

But the life-and-death operations, though, they can continue indefinitely?

Shalanda Young (16:08):

They can continue, but I want you to know that statement applies if there are no more large, large events. We will have a different answer if there is a catastrophic event that pushes FEMA past the point of having enough money to do life and safety. Right now, if there are no catastrophic events, we can continue to do life and safety.

Speaker 5 (16:39):

But if there are, then that may not be possible?

Shalanda Young (16:39):

That is always the answer. I’ve done FEMA budgets since I was a baby staff on Appropriations. All rules, all statements are out the windows when you have large events. They just skew the numbers needed so greatly.

Karine Jean-Pierre (16:58):

Go ahead, Patsy.

Patsy (16:58):

Thanks, Karine. Do you have a, and I’m sorry if you mentioned this at the top, but do you have an estimate of how much does it cost when we have a shutdown and then we reopen the government again, an estimate of per day or per week or however long it goes?

Shalanda Young (17:10):

Yeah, we’ll say, look, our analysis on a shutdown really is tied to how long it happens. But one can expect, like, a 0.1 to 0.2%, I think most economists agree, hit to GDP.

(17:24)
The hope is, though, during a shutdown, if that happened, the economy would be able to pick that GDP loss up in the next quarter. So it may not be a permanent loss, but why risk our economy for a manufactured shutdown, all a problem within one conference in Congress? I say 0.1 and 2, and that doesn’t sound big, .1% of our economy is $26 billion.

Patsy (17:54):

I’m sorry if I wasn’t clear. That’s a hit to the economy. But is there an actual cost to shutting down the government and then reopening again, like any kind of logistical admin cost?

Shalanda Young (18:04):

So, it will not cost anything that would be outside of our normal spend rate. The people in the office on, not the 30th because the 30th is a Saturday, on the 29th will do the work they need to do today. They’ll be provided like four hours on their devices to send people, and have out of office, send people last messages. But there tends not to be, we don’t have to go close major infrastructure. There’s not a large spike in spending in order to close down.

(18:39)
What is really expensive is the hit to GDP, the inability of people to access services like WIC. And it’s not just new people signing up for things like WIC; it is people who are on WIC currently. They cannot get access to the meals they would normally get. That is the real impact to the American people.

Speaker 6 (19:00):

Fundamentally, we’ve been here-

Karine Jean-Pierre (19:02):

[inaudible 00:19:02].

Speaker 6 (19:02):

Oh, I’m sorry. [inaudible 00:19:03], I got excited.

Shalanda Young (19:04):

Sorry.

Karine Jean-Pierre (19:05):

I’ll come back. I’ve just got to go back a little bit.

Shalanda Young (19:06):

Don’t let me get you in trouble.

Karine Jean-Pierre (19:09):

And I promise I’ll come down. But go ahead, Ed.

Ed (19:10):

Thanks, Karine. Thank you, Shalanda. So, the Treasury Department now says the federal deficit is at 1.5 trillion. That’s more than the CBO projected. The president’s pushed the bipartisan infrastructure bill, he’s pushed the Inflation Reduction Act, the American Rescue Plan. He signed into spending $5.8 trillion over the past two years. Spending is at the heart of this impasse, so does the president bear any responsibility for a shutdown?

Shalanda Young (19:34):

Absolutely not. And by the way, the deal was to ensure that we had a fiscally responsible plan. I think the name of the bill was the Fiscal Responsibility Act, that saved a trillion dollars over a decade.

(19:47)
And look, if House Republicans want to join us in the Fiscal Reduction Act, I’m happy to talk to them about the tax cuts they have pending in Ways and Means that add to the deficit. I’m also happy to talk to any Republican who voted for two and a half trillion dollars of tax cuts unpaid.

(20:04)
So, the problem I have is when people vote for that, bust the deficit on tax cuts for the wealthy, and then come and say we’re doing too much for Head Start and childcare and cancer research. Because that’s what we’re talking about.

(20:21)
They’ve taken the smallest amount of spending, do nothing about taxes for the rich, and they want to cut the smallest amount of spending. That’s not serious fiscal conversation. Anybody in DC will tell you, you cannot get on a better fiscal path by going after these domestic programs. They’re the smallest portion of our budget. It ain’t going to happen. It’s not serious. Even cutting it 30% doesn’t put you on a better fiscal path.

(20:55)
So, let’s just get real. It’s not about that.

Karine Jean-Pierre (20:58):

All right.

Ed (20:59):

[inaudible 00:20:59]. One more. So the House Speaker Kevin McCarthy says that he’s not going to take a salary during the shutdown. Does the president plan to pause his salary also?

Shalanda Young (21:06):

Look, I’m glad that the Speaker’s made that statement. By the way, members of Congress have to get paid constitutionally, so maybe he’ll put it in a sock drawer. I don’t know. But they have to get paid during a shutdown. That’s theater. That is theater. I will tell you, the guy who picks up the trash in my office won’t get a paycheck. That’s real. And that’s what makes me angry.

Karine Jean-Pierre (21:29):

Okay, Peter. Thanks for your patience.

Peter (21:31):

If I can ask you very briefly about, we’ve seen this show before where it goes down to the wire and then at the last minute something happens, or several days passed before anything happens. Can you just talk about fundamentally the impact, even if this were to be resolved, of playing this game where it goes to the last minute before there’s a short-term spending bill, how that sort of impacts the way our country runs? Because a lot of Americans see that and they know that that’s not the way it can work in their own homes.

Shalanda Young (21:53):

You’re right, and you’re right. We have time, what’d the president say? There’s nothing inevitable in politics. We don’t have to go down this road. House Republicans don’t have to take us down this road. So, you’re right. There is always a chance that people can do the right thing and the government remain open or have a quick reopening.

Peter (22:19):

But even getting to this place, there’s already a ton of money lost, right?

Shalanda Young (22:19):

Not a ton of money lost. The confidence in government is what I worry about. People watching this, the dysfunction sowed. And I think there are a small amount of people who know that. It’s the carelessness by which people’s like, “Oh, this shut down is not much of government.” Well, you tell people who live paycheck to paycheck that.

(22:42)
I know it’s not popular to defend federal workers. I know it’s not. But a lot of them live paycheck to paycheck. “They get repaid.” What are they supposed to do in the meantime? What are they supposed to do?

(22:58)
And then people can’t get government services. You go sign up for WIC. You finally convinced this mother it’s the right thing to do because a lot of families, they’re embarrassed about taking aid from the government. You finally convinced this young mother to go do that. Not available. Confidence lost in government. It’s one more knock on democratic institutions. And that worries me.

Karine Jean-Pierre (23:21):

Go ahead, Joey.

Joey (23:21):

Yeah, as we get closer to a shutdown at the end of the week, does it remain the case that President Biden is unwilling to meet with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, as he’s suggested he would like to do?

Shalanda Young (23:33):

It’s not an unwillingness. We’ve talked. We talked a lot. The president talked a lot to Speaker McCarthy. We got a deal. This is the easy part. The debt deal was two and a half years. You know what we’re talking about? 47 days to keep the government running, to give Congress time to work on full year spending bills. This is not hard. This is just not hard.

(24:03)
And by the way, every day I read some other reason why they can’t vote on the Senate bill, the Senate bipartisan bill. It changes every day. So there’s not an unwillingness. We’ve had this conversation. The speaker wanted to set top lines, we set them. Now he needs to talk to whomever he needs to talk to in the Republican conference and live up to that deal.

Joey (24:28):

What will be the engagement from President Biden to lawmakers, particularly as we get closer Saturday, tomorrow?

Shalanda Young (24:37):

You’re talking about a president who was a former senator for 36 years. He has close relationships on the Hill. He stays in dialogue with Congress. Clearly, there’s going to be an uptick in that as we are led down this path by House Republicans. And that’ll continue. The president is constantly updated on what is happening.

(25:02)
But I’ll tell you, we’re at the 29th. We have until midnight tomorrow. What needs to happen is the one corner out of five who is having problems with their votes and their strategies need to find a path to meet the other four corners at the deal we all signed up for in early summer.

Karine Jean-Pierre (25:29):

Okay, a couple more. Go ahead, Michael.

Michael (25:30):

Thanks, Karine. Director Young, can you talk a bit more about the impact a shutdown will have on the crisis at the Southern border?

Shalanda Young (25:36):

We asked for $4 billion to help deal with migration challenges at the border. You wouldn’t know that to hear what Republicans talk about. If border is an issue for House Republicans, where’s the dialogue on what the president asked for to help with enforcement, to help with transportation costs, to help with detention capacity?

(26:02)
I’ve done this a long time. This is just a new, interesting time in our political atmosphere where we can’t get Republicans to really engage us on more money to help control migration issues at the border. Almost no dialogue. No interest in taking on the president’s request. No interest in dealing with the fentanyl issues that we asked for more money to deal with, to put more equipment to find fentanyl coming through.

(26:34)
So there’s serious and there’s not serious. This president asked for money to help deal with issues that hurt people: disaster, Ukraine, and border. We appreciate the Senate meeting us to make sure Ukraine aid continues, disaster aid continues. But let’s not forget, this president asked for money to deal with the situation at the border. And you’re absolutely right, during a shutdown, not only do we not get the $4 billion we asked for to help, we’re asking CBP agents, ICE agents to go without pay. How is that helping?

Karine Jean-Pierre (27:12):

Go ahead.

Speaker 7 (27:13):

Thank you, Director. I’ve been speaking to many mothers who rely on WIC for food for their babies, and they don’t follow the ins and out of politics and whether a shutdown would be the fault of Congress, the White House, the president, they just can’t believe that this country’s leaders would allow babies to go hungry. So what would you say to them?

Shalanda Young (27:30):

I’d go back to my answer earlier. I worry about people’s engagement and thought about their government. It worries me tremendously that people will show up on Wednesday or Thursday, trying to decide whether they were going to even apply for this aid. Because a lot of people don’t trust, like their friends tell them to go get this and they’re like, “Oh, it’s going to be difficult. A lot of paperwork.” So it takes convincing for people to go seek this aid. And then to be told, nevermind. Nevermind, government’s closed. Shut down. They don’t follow the ins and outs. It’s a pox on all of our houses. That’s why four out of the five corners are trying not to go there. We’re doing everything we can to plead, beg, shame House Republicans do the right thing. Don’t have this happen.

(28:29)
The cavalier- ness is what gets me. I’ve heard people say in House conference, “Oh, shutdown down’s not that bad. It’s not like the debt ceiling.” Well, you go tell people who cannot pay their daycare bill. You go tell people that. You go tell men and women in uniform that they don’t get a paycheck when they show up to work every day. You go tell that mother that she cannot get formula after having had to be convinced to even give government a try. It’s the cavalier-ness that really gets me.

(29:06)
And you’re right, it sets an expectation for how people deal with their government throughout their lives. And it’s something we should work really hard to avoid.

Speaker 7 (29:15):

And to follow on that, could you clarify the total number of workers that would go without pain next week, and how many of them would still be required to show up to work?

Shalanda Young (29:22):

So, in civilians, 1.5 million, about 800,000 of them would be accepted and have to show up to the office. As you know, depending on how long shutdowns go, people can be called back into work if their job and their duties start to fall into one of the categories that’s accepted. So, there would be changes in those numbers if a shutdown would continue.

Speaker 7 (29:51):

And what about the breakdown for the military’s 1.3 million active-duty troops and the reservists plus DOD personnel?

Shalanda Young (29:57):

Right. It’s a little over $2 million. 2 million

Shalanda Young (30:00):

And people who serve, who are all expected to show up to their duty stations.

Speaker 8 (30:07):

Thank you so much. Thank you, Director. You said this shutdown could be a knock on democratic institutions. What about the international reputation of this country, when it seems like the United States is going from one major fiscal crisis into another?

Shalanda Young (30:23):

I think you just answered it. This country, we owe services to the American people. We talked a lot about one of those, in WIC, cancer research. Our diplomatic efforts, this President has worked harder than most to hold alliances together that represent democratic institutions, the Western alliance, and ensure that the world knew America was back. I do believe we will continue to do most of our missions as best as possible. We will show up where needed, but it certainly makes that more difficult the longer and longer this goes on. In a very short-term situation, I think we will remain with the same posture across the world. The question is, how we are viewed. It is not the shining example we want to portray, that we continue to have fiscal crises, because other world leaders look at that. I’m still hoping, I’m still remaining an optimist that we have a day and a half to work out, in one corner, what is needed to take the deal that is laid before them by the United States Senate. There’s still a chance.

Karine (31:51):

Last question.

Speaker 9 (31:51):

Thank you, Director. Given that we’ve seen, in prior shutdowns, that some of these workers that have to go to work without pay, including in the travel industry, FAA and others, that they might call in sick in greater numbers, do you have any guidance around that, or any estimates as to how that might affect the shutdown for you?

Shalanda Young (32:11):

Look, we don’t shut down often. I know it may feel like it, because we talk about it even if it doesn’t happen-

Speaker 10 (32:17):

Negative. Sorry.

Shalanda Young (32:19):

You sure? It doesn’t happen often, so there aren’t numbers. We certainly have anecdotal evidence that that happens on occasion, and it goes back to what I talked about earlier. People make decisions that are best for their families.

Karine (32:40):

Thank you so much.

Shalanda Young (32:40):

Thank you.

Karine (32:41):

I appreciate it.

Shalanda Young (32:41):

Thank you. Have fun. I hope not to see you all for a little bit.

Karine (32:48):

Thank you so much, Director Young. I do want to add to something that the director said, which I think was really important, about how this affects families. I think I’ve seen on some of the cable news networks this morning, if it was this morning, that you’ve seen federal workers being interviewed, and members of the military. I think one interview, someone was crying about how this shutdown that Republicans in the House are barrelling us to is going to affect them. This is real. This is real life, real life changes and real life impact on people across the country. There was one military personnel who was interviewed, who said that one of the reasons that they went into the military is to have that stability, is to make sure that they have a stability in their life.

(33:44)
When you have one of the five groups who are taking away that stability because of a political stunt, because of their chaos within their own caucus, and they do that to a military member personnel who is really, truly putting their lives on the line for this country, and making a commitment to this country, and they’re saying that they no longer have the stability that they thought the military would bring them, I think that’s devastating. This should not be partisan. This should be bipartisan. This is supposed to be the basic duty of Congress to do this, to do their jobs. If we do indeed have a shutdown, it is going to truly hurt some of the people that we rely on every day, as well as cutting some key programs that families need. With that, Colleen, do you want to kick us off?

Colleen (34:46):

Sure. Can you say anything more about what the President’s plans are going to be this weekend, in the face of the shutdown? What’s he going to be up to?

Karine (34:53):

I can say that the President’s going to be in Washington DC, and he’s going to continue to remain in touch with Congressional… our team here is going to continue to remain in touch with Congressional leaders, and the members of both parties. Certainly, he’s going to get updates on what’s happening on the Hill. Again, this is going to be the extreme part of the House Republicans. It’s going to be their shutdown. I don’t expect any travel outside of DC from this President, but of course, if that changes, we certainly would communicate that. The President will be here. He’ll be getting updates from his team, and the team more broadly. As you saw the director was here, and also our office of Leg Affairs is going to stay in close touch with Congressional leaders on the hill.

Colleen (35:50):

Would he be meeting with anybody in person this weekend?

Karine (35:52):

No, I don’t have any meetings, or to read out as it relates to Congress. What I can say, and we’ve said it over and over again, and it needs to be repeated, this is something that Congress can fix. This is something that those extreme Republicans in the House can fix. They know how to fix this. We just heard the process that the OMB director went through earlier this summer, late spring, on helping to make that bipartisan deal become a law. We should not be here. She shouldn’t have been here at this podium, talking about a potential shutdown. It should not have been this way, and they can fix it.

Colleen (36:37):

On the auto worker’s strike. It’s expanded now, and I just wondered if the White House is concerned about broader economic impact of a strike as it wears on, I think it’s two weeks?

Karine (36:52):

A couple of things, and I’ve been asked this question about the potential impacts. Look, we always take a look at what a major economic situation, the potential impacts could have, certainly in our economy more broadly. I will just go back to what I’ve said, as it relates to the shutdown. The shutdown does not need to happen. These programs that families need should be continuing. We should not be in this position that we’re in. This is something that Republicans in Congress, and the House more specifically, are heading us towards. You saw, there was a chart that was up when we were speaking, and Senate Republicans, Senate Democrats, House Democrats, the President, we’re all on the same page. We’re all on the same page here. For some reason, extreme House Republicans refuse. They have refused to get to on board here. As it relates to the shutdown, it should not be happening. This can be avoided. They can fix this if they choose. Go ahead.

Speaker 1 (38:00):

Thank you, Karine. I hear what you’re saying.

Karine (38:04):

About what?

Speaker 1 (38:04):

About Republicans, that they have to fix this. “It’s their problem, it’s not ours.” That’s exactly what the White House said before the deal was struck about raising the debt ceiling. Initially, you guys weren’t going to touch any kind of negotiation, because you said it was solely up to House Republicans, up to Congress to raise the debt ceiling. But then, the President did intervene to avoid the U.S. defaulting. I’m just trying to understand, at what point would the President intervene to avoid a shutdown?

Karine (38:43):

I understand your question as well. Here’s the thing, and I think Director Young did a really good job laying this out. What we are talking about is a bipartisan bill that became law. That’s what we’re talking about, something that became law, that was agreed by the five sides. The House Republicans even themselves, two thirds of them voted for this. This is law. This is an agreement that was already made. Multiple conversations were had about this. This should be simple, this should be easy, and that’s what we’re talking about. We’re talking about something that already existed not that long ago, that they all literally voted for in the House and in the Senate, in a bipartisan way. I’ve said before, that’s what Americans want us to do here in Congress, and in the White House, in the federal government, to get things done in a bipartisan way so that it helps American families.

(39:42)
What they’re doing, they can fix it. There’s no conversation that needs to be had, because they literally can fix this. It is their chaos, they can fix this. What they’re putting at risk is our economy, our national security, as we just talked about, the military personnel. The President, in the last two years, has been able to get our economy back on track We’ve talked about the 13.5 million jobs. We’ve talked about unemployment being under 4%. What they’re doing is incredibly irresponsible, and it is reckless. That’s the difference, when you’re asking me, you don’t quite understand, or trying to figure out what we’re talking about, we already made the deal. That’s why we keep saying a deal is a deal. It’s a majority of Congress that agrees with us. The Senate actually moved forward, and kept their deal.

(40:39)
When you think about 77 senators who are moving forward, who voted to move forward with their CR, they are keeping the deal. We’re talking about a small fraction of Congress, and that’s reckless. That’s irresponsible. That’s why we’re saying it’s not on us to fix. It’s not on this President to fix. It is on Congress to fix. It’s not just us. I started a briefing listing out quotes from Republicans in Congress themselves.

(41:09)
All right, I’m going to keep on. Go ahead.

Speaker 11 (41:12):

Thank you, thanks Karine. On China, can you clarify if the administration is stepping up engagement with the goal towards a Biden/Xi meeting on the sidelines of APEC in November, including whether there are any plans for Vice Premier He Lifeng, or Prime Minister Wang Yi to come visit in Washington, or meet you as officials?

Karine (41:33):

I don’t have anything to lay out for you on any meetings, or any potential meetings as it relates to our President and President Xi. The President spoke about this very recently, and his expectation is to have a meeting. I don’t have a location for you, I don’t have a timeline for you at this time. The President, as he said, is expected to do so, I just don’t have anything to share. Once we do, we certainly will share that with you.

Speaker 11 (41:56):

Can I just follow up on that? Just a few days ago, Wang Yi seems to suggest that the onus of creating the right environment for a Biden/Xi meeting lies in Washington, a summit that promotes cooperation rather than provoke confrontation. How would you respond to that?

Karine (42:12):

We’ve been very clear. We’re not looking to have confrontation with China, we’re looking to have competition, and that’s what the President has shown these last two years. The President spoke about this. He’s looking forward to having that conversation with President Xi. I don’t have anything to share with you at this time, and I’m just going to leave it there. Go ahead.

Speaker 7 (42:29):

Thank you. Does the President plan to take up McCarthy’s offer to meet, and does the White House see any value in that?

Karine (42:35):

Look, I’m going to be very clear. The person that McCarthy, or the people that McCarthy needs to talk to is his own caucus. That’s who he needs to have a conversation with, not the President. The President had multiple conversations with Speaker McCarthy very early on, to get this bipartisan deal that two thirds of the Republican House voted on. The conversation is not between the President and McCarthy. What I’m saying very clearly is, the conversation needs to happen between Speaker McCarthy and his caucus, that’s the fix. That’s the chaos that we’re seeing, and that’s where he needs to focus on.

Speaker 7 (43:11):

How would you describe the President’s relationship with Senator Feinstein in recent years? When was the last time they spoke to one another?

Karine (43:18):

I believe the President reached out back in August. They missed each other, and so the President had a conversation with her chief of staff. That is the last time that the President had reached out. The President spoke to this, I think very deeply just moments ago, when you all watched his remarks. They were very close friends. They served together for over a decade, I believe 15 years in the Senate together. He saw her as a close friend. One of the things that they worked on, that is an issue right now, across the country, was assault ban weapons. That is something that they worked together on in 1994, and actually saved lives for those 10 years before it’s sunset in 2004. There’s been many things that they’ve been able to work on together, and even as President as well. He sees her as a dear friend. It is a sad day, certainly for us here, and also for her family, and clearly for the state of California. I’ll just leave it there.

Speaker 12 (44:23):

We just heard Director Young saying, “This is not hard,” but Speaker McCarthy clearly is finding this difficult. Can you give us any sense of how President Biden sees the situation that Speaker McCarthy is in? Does he think that the Speaker is in a tough spot? Have you gotten the sense that there’s any sense of sympathy towards Speaker McCarthy, or is it all pure exasperation?

Karine (44:48):

Look, I’m not going to go into the President’s feeling about the Speaker, or his situation currently, as Speaker of the House. What I can speak to

Karine (45:00):

… is what we’ve been saying all along, which is a deal was made. The President has, as you all know, and saw this happening when these conversations were going on in person and trying to get that bipartisan deal very early on in the summer. And what the President believes is that many Americans are going to be hurt by this. Many families are going to be hurt by this. By something that extreme House Republicans are barreling us down through, right? They’re heading us down a road that is unfortunate, that is reckless. And that’s what the President is concerned about. He’s concerned about the American people. And this is something, again, they can fix this, they can.

Speaker 4 (45:42):

Can you confirm when the two men last spoke?

Karine (45:45):

I don’t have a date or a timeline of when they last spoke. What I can say is that clearly the OMB Director, congressional, or Office of Ledge Affairs has been in regular touch with congressional leaders on this for the past several weeks, several months. And I don’t have a conversation to confirm with the speaker.

Speaker 4 (46:07):

And just in the coming days in the event of a government shutdown, does the White House believe that the President has a responsibility to offer any words of reassurance to people in the country who will be affected, will be worried about the situation?

Karine (46:22):

So look, I don’t have any previews of any remarks that the President’s going to make, but either tomorrow and any upcoming days, but of course the American, the President is always, when it comes to situations like this, you can expect to hear from him directly in the days ahead. I just don’t have a date to speak to at this time. And the President, here’s the thing, the President’s not going to stop working. He’s going to continue to work and he’s not going to stop delivering for the American people in the event of an extreme Republican shutdown. You’re going to hear from the President. I just don’t have anything to lay out on a specific date or time. But of course the American people are going to hear from him again. India, thank you.

Speaker 16 (47:04):

Just on the automaker strike, has the President spoken to automakers after he said he supports a 40% pay raise for UAW workers or just even broadly after his visit to Michigan? We understand from sources that the chances of the deal in the near term have been complicated by the President’s remarks about him supporting a 40% pay raise.

Karine (47:27):

So just want to just give some clarity. So first, the President’s senior advisors, they’ve been in touch with all parties. I’ll let you know if there’s any conversations that the President has or to read out with the automakers more specifically as it relates to the 40%. Look, he believes they should get a significant raise. That’s why the President can keep saying a record profit should lead to record contract, right? He believes that the UAW workers should get a fair share for profits they help create. And so the President has been really, really clear about that.

(48:02)
But as it relates to any negotiations and what they are asking for, he wants to make sure that he leaves that up to the EUAW leadership. And ultimately, again, members should be able to receive a fair and just deal. And the President’s going to be consistent about that. He has said that recently when he was in Michigan, when you saw him on an active picket line. He was very proud to be there in solidarity of the union workers. And so that is something that he has said throughout his career and he’ll continue to be very clear about that.

Speaker 16 (48:31):

So just on the automakers part, you said his team has constantly in touch. We’ve known that. Are there any specifics or conversations after this visit specifically after those comments that he made?

Karine (48:44):

Well, they’ve been in regular touch. I don’t have if they talked today or on Tuesday or Wednesday, but they have been. The senior advisors certainly have been in touch with all parties. They’re not, I want to be clear, they’re not part of the negotiations. They’re not convening all sides. They’re just there to offer any assistance that the parties might need. We’ve been always very clear, it’s up to the UAW leadership. It’s up to the union to have these all parties involved, to have these negotiation conversations. But again, we’ve just offered any helpful assistance that they might need.

Speaker 17 (49:23):

Can I circle back, thank you, to a question that was asked, I think of UMB director, which is essentially if we could get a sense of what the White House will look like during the shutdown and who all folks can anticipate will be here specifically from the press side, but broadly what the White House will look like.

Karine (49:37):

Yeah, so look and not going to have much more to share than what the OMB Director said. Many people are going to be furloughed. That’s kind of unfortunately how this all works. The process that we are kind of dealt with here as we’re dealing with this potential shutdown. But we will do our best certainly to continue communicating with all of you. We will have a press briefing during next week and look again, there are going to be furloughed and some will be expected and continuing to work as the director said. And that’s going to be across the government. That’s going to be the same case here at the White House. And that’s just kind of the way it is. And we are going to continue to deliver for the American people, but it’s not going to be as business as usual when you have majority of folks furloughed. And that’s kind of where we are, sadly, unfortunately in this time. But as it relates to the press team, certainly we’ll be holding press briefings and we’ll certainly have more to share if this is where we head down to, which is a shutdown.

Speaker 18 (50:59):

We can take a couple more.

Speaker 13 (50:59):

Thank you, Karine. Just to follow [inaudible 00:50:59]’s earlier question. You know that you say it’s their problems than ours. From the outside of the US we see the government in more of a one thing. With the tension with China towards allied in the war in Ukraine. What can the President say to reassure leaders who are worried at this moment?

Karine (51:18):

So I think Jake Sullivan got this question a little bit when he was here last week. And I think the question came to him is, has he heard any concerns from any leadership? And he had said he wasn’t aware of any conversations to that effect. What I can say is when you have this potential chaos and unpredictability, countries around the world are seeing from this Republican House, it’s not something to be proud of. It’s not. But what the President and our team have done for the past two years is rebuild those relationships with our partners and allies.

(51:57)
And so at the same time, trying to carry out the work of the American people. And that’s something that you’ve seen the President do over the past two years, whether it’s here at the White House or whether it’s at a summit that he’s attended. And you’ve seen the President build that confidence back into the world, the confidence that allies and partners had of the United States. And so that’s important. We have rebuilt those relationships. We’ll continue to do so. But obviously when you seize this type of chaos, chaos and potential recklessness from House Republicans, it’s nothing to be proud of. But it doesn’t stop us to continue those diplomatic conversations and continue to build those relationships.

Speaker 19 (52:45):

Thank you. This time of week, we’re usually talking about the week ahead. And I wonder how that’s impacted by the government shutdown, if the President has any plans for next week. And I’m assuming that people who would facilitate his travel would be essential, but is that impacted at all by the shutdown talk?

Karine (53:05):

So it’s a really good question, Matt. This is something that we have been internally trying to figure that out, what it’s going to look like if we have a extreme house Republican shutdown. That is something certainly we’ve been very focused on. Look, as I said, the President’s going to be staying in DC. You could be assured that the American people, and you all are going to hear from him on a regular basis in the next upcoming days because he’s going to continue to work for the American people. I can’t speak to travel right now. Right now, we’re going to focus on just the next couple of days and what that’s going to look like. Again, he’s going to stay here in DC and we’re going to continue to work for the American people. Yes, people are going to be furloughed. It’s not going to be business as usual, but we’re going to continue to do our best to work on behalf of the American people.

Speaker 19 (53:52):

And then it also sounds like you guys don’t view there being any need for a negotiation from the White House perspective. So in thinking about what is the work that he needs to do, in your eyes. Is the work communicating to the American people about this? Or is he going to be in touch with anybody on the hill? I am just trying to think through the [inaudible 00:54:16]-

Karine (54:15):

No, it’s all good questions. Look, the President is going to say privately what he’s been saying publicly, right? And he has spoken to this almost every day this week about the shutdown, about what Republicans in the house are doing. He’s been very clear about this, right? He’s talked about the economic impact. When he was doing the meeting with HBCU, his board of advisors, he talked about the impact on the black community specifically. He’s talked about impacts just broadly with American families and Americans. So he has been very clear about this and we are going to continue to be clear about this. And the reason why, just to go back to what I stated earlier to Weja, the reason why we’re not negotiating is because we already did that. We did negotiate. The President spoke multiple times with congressional leadership on this, and there was a bipartisan piece of legislation that was agreed upon that was passed, that was made into law.

(55:10)
And so this is something that Congress and this sits with really, when we say House Republicans, it really sits with them. Because we saw what the Senate was able to do in a bipartisan way, which is keep their promise, move forward with the deal that we’ve made. And we know House Democrats are on board to keep the government open and keeping with the deal that was made. It’s just this really small extreme fraction in the Congress. These extreme House Republicans that continue to hold this back because they want to push extreme policies. That’s going to hurt Americans. And so that’s why we say that because that is the fact. That is what’s happening and being played out on the other side of Pennsylvania Avenue. And so look, the President’s going to continue doing the job. American people are going to hear from him over the next couple of days. And yes, he’ll be in DC. Go ahead.

Speaker 14 (56:01):

Anticipating if there is a shutdown, the President has never come to the briefing room. And if it would facilitate and make it easier with staff furloughs for him to speak to us from here, we always invite the President to come to the briefing room.

Karine (56:13):

We appreciate the invite.

Speaker 14 (56:16):

The issue of debt ceiling played out in a similar way where the position was, it’s their job to do it. And then when a critical hour came, the President engaged. If it goes to a shutdown, would he then view it as, “Okay, there’s a new chapter to this in terms of resolving it, getting out of it,” and would he feel like he needs to engage more at that point? Would that be a different mindset?

Karine (56:40):

Weja asked me a similar question as you did, and we’re going to be very clear about this and don’t want to get into hypotheticals from here because we believe that this can be fixed. We believe that House Republicans can fix this. It is their job to fix this, so not going to get too far down the road.

Speaker 14 (57:00):

Would he see it as a different set of circumstances?

Karine (57:02):

No, I just want to be careful, right? Because again, I don’t want to get into hypotheticals. We see this as a situation that could be fixed because we already made a deal. A deal is a deal. When we say that, it is true, a deal is a deal. That’s what they are disputing here. Something that two thirds of House Republicans voted on so they can fix this. This is something that they can get on board with because it’s something that they voted on. It is something that they voted on. And so what I’m going to say is continue, what we’ve been saying is that the conversation is not with this president. The conversation is with Speaker McCarthy and his caucus. They need to have that conversation and get this done on behalf of the American people. Millions of Americans are going to be hurt by this, by their action. And it is reckless. And it is irresponsible. I have to go. Thanks everybody. We’ll see you on Monday.

Speaker 18 (58:00):

Thank you.

Speaker 15 (58:00):

Thanks Karine.

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