Readout of President Joe  Biden’s Call with Prime Minister Liz Truss of the United  Kingdom

Source: The White House

President Joseph R. Biden Jr. spoke today with Prime Minister Liz Truss of the United Kingdom to offer his congratulations. The leaders reaffirmed the special relationship between our countries and expressed their readiness to further deepen those ties.  President Biden and Prime Minister Truss discussed the importance of continued close cooperation on global challenges, including supporting Ukraine as it defends itself against Russian aggression, addressing the challenges posed by China, preventing Iran from ever acquiring a nuclear weapon, and securing sustainable and affordable energy resources. They also discussed their shared commitment to protecting the gains of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement and the importance of reaching a negotiated agreement with the European Union on the Northern Ireland Protocol.

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Nominations Sent to the  Senate

Source: The White House

NOMINATIONS SENT TO THE SENATE:

Jabari Brooks Wamble, of Kansas, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Tenth Circuit, vice Mary Beck Briscoe, retired.

DeAndrea Gist Benjamin, of South Carolina, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit, vice Henry F. Floyd, retired.

     Terry J. Burgin, of North Carolina, to be United States Marshal for the Western District of North Carolina for the term of four years, vice Gregory Allyn Forest, resigned.

     Glenn M. McNeill, Jr., of North Carolina, to be United States Marshal for the Eastern District of North Carolina for the term of four years, vice Michael Blaine East.

     Catrina A. Thompson, of North Carolina, to be United States Marshal for the Middle District of North Carolina for the term of four years, vice Steven L. Gladden, term expired.

     Michael Purnell, of Mississippi, to be United States Marshal for the Northern District of Mississippi for the term of four years, vice Daniel R. McKittrick, term expired.

     Dale L. Bell, of Mississippi, to be United States Marshal for the Southern District of Mississippi for the term of four years, vice Mark B. Shepherd.

     Todd Gee, of the District of Columbia, to be United States Attorney for the Southern District of Mississippi for the term of four years, vice D. Michael Hurst, Jr., term expired.

     Colleen R. Lawless, of Illinois, to be United States District Judge for the Central District of Illinois, vice Sue E. Myerscough, retiring.

     Gordon P. Gallagher, of Colorado, to be United States District Judge for the District of Colorado, vice William Joseph Martinez, retiring.

     P. Casey Pitts, of California, to be United States District Judge for the Northern District of California, vice Lucy Haeran Koh, elevated.

     Arun Subramanian, of New York, to be United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York, vice Alison J. Nathan, elevated.

     Jonathan James Canada Grey, of Michigan, to be United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, vice Denise Page Hood, retired.

     Anthony Devos Johnstone, of Montana, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, vice Sidney R. Thomas, retiring.

     Ramon Ernesto Reyes, Jr., of New York, to be United States District Judge for the Eastern District of New York, vice Kiyo A. Matsumoto, retired.

     Orelia Eleta Merchant, of New York, to be United States District Judge for the Eastern District of New York, vice William Francis Kuntz, II, retired.

     Karen Sasahara, of Massachusetts, a Career Member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the State of Kuwait.

     Arthur W. Brown, of Pennsylvania, a Career Member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Republic of Ecuador.

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Press Briefing by White  House COVID-⁠ 19 Response Team and Public Health  Officials

Source: The White House

Via Teleconference

11:12 A.M. EDT

DR. JHA:  Good morning, everybody.  Thanks for joining us.  My name is Ashish Jha, and I’m the White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator.

Today I’m joined by Secretary Xavier Becerra, to my right, and Dr. Fauci and Walensky remotely.

In addition to providing our perspective on the state of the pandemic, we are going to focus today on a major milestone — a major milestone we marked heading into the Labor Day weekend.  The FDA authorized and the CDC recommended new updated COVID-19 vaccines for all Americans 12 and above.  This makes us, the United States, the first nation with new vaccines that match the version of the Omicron variant that is currently dominant — dominant both here in the U.S. and around the world.

For the first time since December of 2020, these vaccines — our vaccines — have caught up with the virus.  And as Secretary Becerra and I will discuss, the Biden administration has been preparing for this moment in close partnership with state and local health departments, with pharmacies and community health centers, rural health clinics, physicians and other healthcare providers.

This is a moment when people can keep themselves healthy and safe as they think about the road ahead.

So we have worked extremely hard to make sure we have ample supply of these new updated vaccines available for the American people.  And these vaccines will continue to remain free.

Now, we have been working over the weekend to get these vaccines out to tens of thousands of convenient, trusted locations around the country.  And before we get into talking more about the vaccines, the vaccination programs, let me first turn to Dr. Tony Fauci — everybody knows Dr. Fauci — to discuss the importance of this milestone.

Dr. Fauci?

DR. FAUCI:  Thank you very much, Dr. Jha.  I’d like to take the next few minutes to walk through certain aspects of where we are now with COVID-19 vaccinations. 

It is becoming increasingly clear that, looking forward with the COVID-19 pandemic, in the absence of a dramatically different variant, we likely are moving towards a path with a vaccination cadence similar to that of the annual influenza vaccine, with annual, updated COVID-19 shots matched to the currently circulating strains for most of the population.

However, some — particularly vulnerable groups — may continue to need more frequent vaccination against COVID-19.

Let us review what we know about the safety and efficacy of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, as well as the benefits we expect from the recently updated vaccines.

First, safety.  More than 600 million doses of mRNA vaccines have been administered in the United States alone, with billions more given to people globally.  Through robust safety monitoring systems, we now have an extensive body of safety data as good or better than what we have for any prior vaccine.  In addition, in clinical trials, more than 1,700 people have received bivalent mRNA vaccines with no additional safety concerns.

Regarding effectiveness, data from the pivotal COVID-19 mRNA vaccine efficacy trials in 2020 showed a remarkable 94 to 95 percent efficacy against symptomatic disease.

We later learned through real-world evidence that vaccine protection, particularly against infection, wanes over time but that additional doses enhance protection particularly against severe disease leading to hospitalization or death.

Now, what should we expect from our recently updated vaccines?  Data from Moderna and Pfizer have shown that vaccines containing sequences from both the original SARS-CoV-1 virus and the Omicron BA.1 variant induced higher antibody titers against Omicron than did the original vaccines.

These bivalent vaccines also induced higher antibody titers against all SARS-CoV-2 variants than did the original vaccines.  In addition, the bivalent vaccines induced even higher levels of neutralizing antibodies in individuals who have recovered from COVID-19.

And so we fully expect that the updated bivalent vaccines containing BA.4 and BA.5 sequences will offer better protection against currently circulating strains than the original vaccines, although it is difficult to predict at this point how much better that protection will be.

In conclusion, we know that the mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are safe.  We know that receiving the recommended vaccine dose is critical to maintaining optimal protection against severe COVID-19, particularly for the elderly.  And we expect that the updated vaccines will offer better protection against the SARS-CoV-2 subvariants that are currently circulating.

And so my message to you is simple: Get your updated COVID-19 shot as soon as you are eligible in order to protect yourself, your family, and your community against COVID-19 this fall and winter.  I certainly will do so.

Back to you, Dr. Jha.

DR. JHA:  Great.  Thank you, Dr. Fauci.  I want to pick up where Tony left off.

For the last two years, this virus has continued evolving while our vaccines have stayed the same.  But now we have a vaccine that matches the dominant strain out there. 

By the way, let me be very clear — achieving this was no small feat, but what it means is this: It is reasonable to expect, based on what we know about immunology and science of this virus, that these new vaccines will provide better protection against infection, better protection against transmission, and ongoing and better protection against serious illness.

And, importantly, as Dr. Fauci said, this also marks a significant progress in terms of our ability to protect people and manage the virus moving forward.

So, barring any new variant curveballs — we’ve seen curveballs — but barring those variant curveballs, for a large majority of Americans, we are moving to a point where a single annual COVID shot should provide a high degree of protection against serious illness all year.  That’s an important milestone.

Now, let me be clear: For our highest-risk individuals — and here, I’m thinking about my elderly parents, for instance, who are in their 80s, or one of my close friends who recently had a liver transplantation — individuals like that may need more than annual protection, and we will ensure in this administration that they get whatever protection they need.

Now, I know over the past 18 months figuring out what you need and when you need it hasn’t always been super simple.  That all changes.  These new vaccines make it easy for us to think differently.

So here’s the simple version: If you’re 12 and above and previously vaccinated, it’s time to go get an updated COVID-19 shot.

Now, here are a couple of caveats, because there are always a few caveats.  If you got a recent infection or were recently vaccinated, it’s reasonable to wait a few months.  Now, we expect millions of people to get the shot this month as folks get back to school, get back to work, and get back into their regular routines after the summer.

And as the annual flu vaccination campaign kicks into high gear later this month and into early October, we expect millions will choose to get their COVID-19 shot at the same time, or over the course of the fall when people go in for routine checkups.

The good news is you can get both your flu shot and COVID shot at the same time.  It’s actually a good idea. 

I really believe this is why God gave us two arms — one for the flu shot and the other one for the COVID shot.

But our goal for this fall is we will make sure — we, the administration, will make sure that vaccines are free, that they’re widely available, and they are easy to access for everybody.

But we’re also focused on taking targeted actions to reach those at the highest risk to ensure we’re meeting those individuals where they are.
 
We will put special efforts to reach older Americans, those living in congregate care settings like nursing homes, and others who are particularly vulnerable.
 
The pandemic isn’t over.  And we will remain vigilant, and of course, we continue to look for and prepare for unforeseen twists and turns.
 
But this week marks an important shift in our fight against the virus.  It marks our ability to make COVID vaccines a more routine part of our lives as we continue to drive down serious illness and deaths and protect Americans heading into the fall and winter.
 
So, now, let me turn the floor over to Secretary Becerra to provide an update on the specific efforts.
 
Mr. Secretary.
 
SECRETARY BECERRA:  Dr. Jha, thank you very much.

Right now, we are working hard to ensure that these new, updated vaccines are widely and equitably available to all Americans.
 
We are engaging trusted partners and messengers to help spread the word.  We’re launching a national coordinated effort to collaborate with national, regional, and local community-based organizations to help meet people where they are.
 
We want to make sure that the work that Dr. Jha, Dr. Walensky, Dr. Fauci — that all of us are doing is clearly having an effect.  So we’re going to ramp up to get updated COVID-19 shots nationwide to all Americans.
 
Immediately after the FDA authorized our team to begin the process of packing and shipping millions of pre-ordered doses of tens of thousands of these locations nationwide, we started to act.
 
Doses should start arriving — in fact, actually, I think as of this past Friday they started arriving.  And by the end of this week, over 90 percent of Americans will live within five miles of these new updated vaccines.
 
Americans can start to visit Vaccines.gov to find a location near them with new updated vaccines.
 
CVS, Walgreens, and other pharmacy partners began making appointments over the weekend, and we expect appointments to be widely available within the next week or so.
 
As we work to deliver vaccines equitably, our focus is on reaching the highest-risk Americans, particularly people ages 50 and up.
 
We’ll be ramping up our education and outreach efforts this month as we head into October, when we expect more people to get their updated shots, potentially together with their flu shot, as Dr. Jha has mentioned.
 
And heading into Thanksgiving, we’ll emphasize the importance of getting an updated shot.
 
So, for example, in the coming weeks, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will reach out to the more than 16 million people who will receive Medicare emails to share information on these updated vaccines, including when and how to get them.  And we’re engaging trusted partners and messengers to help spread the word.
 
To date, we’ve closed rates of disparity throughout the country.  We have closed a 10-point disparity gap in our nation’s vaccine rate between white Americans and Black and Latino communities.
 
We’ve engaged well over 1,000 organizations that have reached over 26 million people and held hundreds of community events.
 
And we launched the COVID-19 Community Corps, a national network of nearly 20,000 community leaders and volunteers who serve as trusted voices.
  
Finally, we’re launching a national coordinated effort in collaboration with national, regional, and local community-based organizations to help meet people where they are.
 
So, in September, the local chapters of the national PTA — the Parent Teacher Association — will host “Shots to Go” vaccination clinics throughout the month.
 
Organizations with strong reach among racial and ethnic minority communities, including the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Montague Cobb, and the National Hispanic Pastors Alliance, will host community health expos and vaccine drives throughout America in various cities.
 
Faith-based groups, such as the Women’s Missionary Society Foundation, will host a series of vaccine events at AME churches in several states.
 
And groups with strong reach across rural communities, such as Healthy Trucking of America, will host pop-up clinics.
 
We have an — have another opportunity to get ahead of this pandemic, and the Biden-Harris administration will continue working with — with you, with all Americans every day to get everyone protected from COVID.

Dr. Jha, I’ll pass it back to you.
 
DR. JHA:  Mr. Secretary, thank you.  And thank you for your leadership. 
 
And let me just take one minute to highlight a point that you made, sir, which I think has been not adequately appreciated, which is the administration’s commitment to ensuring that all Americans have equitable access to these vaccines.  The fact is that when you look at our booster rates, when you look at vaccination rates, we have closed the gap based on race and ethnicity.  And that has been proactive work by this administration and through your leadership.
 
So I just want to say, Mr. Secretary, thank you for centering equity in this effort.
 
Let me take a moment to zoom out and provide a bit more perspective on the state of the pandemic.
 
And I will ask Dr. Walensky for the data around that, but let me underscore a couple of key points.  First, we are clearly in a far better place today than where we were when the President — when President Biden took office 19 months ago or over — or even 9 months ago.
 
This summer, we demonstrated that we know how to manage fluctuations in COVID-19 and move forward safely.  We did a briefing here early in the summer about the BA.5 subvariant as it became dominant.
 
And while it did drive rises in infections, we had far lower rates of hospitalizations and deaths than we did with Delta last summer or Omicron this past winter.
 
We know that there is a potential for an increase in infections this fall, in part due to waning immunity from vaccines and prior infections, but really because what we know is that as the weather gets colder, people spend more time indoors, and we know respiratory viruses like COVID-19 spread more easily.
 
The good news here is that we go into this fall with a whole host of capabilities.  We have a matched vaccine.  We have great treatments that save lives.  We have widespread availability of testing.  And we have been working diligently with organizations around the country — schools, offices, buildings — to make large improvements in indoor air quality that many, many places have — have invested in.
 
Obviously, we have much more to do on all of those fronts, but we are clear at a point — we are at a point where in most instances we can prevent serious illness and death, we can keep businesses and schools open and running, and we can get people back to a more normal set of routines.
 
But as the President has said from day one, everyone has a part to play. 
 
So, today, we’re calling on all Americans: Roll up your sleeve to get your COVID-19 vaccine shot.
 
If you don’t think you need it because you are healthy, do it for your grandmother, do it for your vulnerable uncle or for your friend.
 
And to state and local leaders and employers and school leaders: Please help your communities get vaccinated this fall.
 
Vaccines are not partisan.  They are not political.  We want everyone in your community, in your business, in your school to stay healthy and safe without disruption.
 
And to our friends in Congress: You have been such great partners for so much of this pandemic; it is now critical that you step up and provide additional COVID-19 funding so we can stay ahead of this virus and help Americans get back to their lives with less suffering and less disruption.
 
Because to protect the progress we have made and to keep moving forward safely, we need everyone to step up.
 
And with that, let me turn it over to Dr. Walensky.

DR. WALENSKY:  Thank you, Dr. Jha.  And good morning, everyone.  It’s great to be back with you today. 
 
As always, I’d like to start with walking you through the latest data.  As Dr. Jha has mentioned, Omicron continues to be the dominant circulating variant with the BA.5 sublineage accounting for over 88 percent of circulating viruses and BA.4 sublineages accounting for over 11 percent of the remaining circulating viruses.
 
The seven-day average of hospital admissions is about 4,500 per day, a decrease of about 14 percent over the prior week.
 
Since April, we have seen a greater increase in hospitalization rates in older adults relative to other age groups.  For the week of September 3rd, over 63 percent of hospitalizations are in those 60 and older, and about 46 percent of hospitalizations are in those 70 and older. 
 
The seven-day average daily deaths are still too high, about 375 per day — well above the around 200 deaths a day we saw earlier this spring and, in my mind, far too high for a vaccine-preventable disease.
 
Data have repeatedly demonstrated that being up to date on your COVID-19 vaccination provides protection against severe illness and death from COVID-19, especially for those most at risk, including those over the age of 50 and others at high risk of severe disease.
 
Additionally, a recent JAMA article also demonstrated that healthcare workers who received one, two, or three doses of vaccine were less likely to have long COVID compared to those who were not vaccinated.
 
Last week, following FDA’s emergency use authorization, CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recommended Pfizer-BioNTech updated COVID-19 vaccine for people ages 12 and older and Moderna updated COVID-19 vaccine for people ages 18 and older.
 
CDC and ACIP recommend that everyone, regardless of the number or type of previous COVID-19 doses, receives a COVID-19 bivalent vaccine this fall.  You can receive an updated vaccine dose at least two months after your last COVID-19 vaccine dose.
 
As 99 percent of circulating viruses in the United States are BA.5 or BA.4, updating our COVID-19 vaccines to match the circulating variants helps us to better be protected against these variants and future variants that might be closely related to Omicron.
 
Getting an updated vaccine this fall will help restore protection that has waned since previous vaccination.  And laboratory data suggests that the addition of the Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 spike protein components may help broaden the spectrum of variants the immune system is ready to respond to. 
 
Finally, modeling projections show that an uptake of updated COVID-19 vaccine doses similar to an annual flu vaccine coverage early this fall could prevent as many as 100,000 hospitalizations, 9,000 deaths, and save billions of dollars in direct medical cost. 
 
The benefits of being up to date on your COVID-19 vaccines are clear.  If you are eligible, I strongly encourage you to get your fall COVID-19 shot.  And remember, if you’re so inclined, it’s perfectly safe and similarly effective to get your flu shot at the same time. 
 
Thank you.  And now I’ll turn it back to you, Dr. Jha.
 
DR. JHA:  Great.  Dr. Walensky, thank you.  Let’s go ahead and open it up for questions.
 
Kevin.
 
MR. MUNOZ:  Thank you.  First, let’s go to Adrianna Rodriguez at USA Today.
 
Q    Hi, thank you so much for taking my question.  Now that there’s, you know, so many di- — an array of vaccine bottle caps, labels, and doses, on expiration dates and dilution requirements with, you know, the new vaccines, plus the old vaccines that we’ve been having, there’s some concern that this has probably led to some errors and is likely to lead to more with the new vaccines.  Is there anything that federal officials or agencies can do to reduce the confusion and ensure that everyone gets the proper dose?
 
DR. JHA:  Yeah, I’m — I’m happy to start.  I don’t know if — Dr. Walensky, I know this was some conversation on this — about this at ACIP as well. 
 
Look, FDA — let’s just take a step back here.  FDA, when it comes to regulatory agencies, is the gold standard in the world.  And ensuring safety of products is its number-one goal. 
 
So FDA scientists are — I know have been engaged on this topic very closely, continue to make sure that people get proper — pharmacists get proper education — not just pharmacists; obviously, other people who administer the vaccines as well — and continue to work with companies to identify and create strategies to make sure that the bottle caps and the bottles are all such that people can get the right vaccination. 
 
We have not seen any evidence of wide-scale mistakes or people getting the wrong vaccine.  I am confident that the system is continuing to work effectively, but I know the FDA continues to monitor this very closely. 
 
I don’t know if anybody else — Dr. Walensky or Secretary Becerra or if anybody else wants to add to this. 
 
I wish we had Dr. Califf or someone else from FDA here.  But I do know we’ve spoken about this.  This is ongoing work the FDA is very engaged and aware of. 
 
DR. WALENSKY:  And maybe I’ll just add, Dr. Jha, that this is a concern that has been raised.  And one of the things that we’re actively working to do is taking close pictures of those bottle caps, doing all of that education that is needed, minimizing the amount of product that is on the shelf to minimize confusion, but recognizing that we are doing an extraordinary amount of education for those who are administering the vaccine for exactly that reason.
 
DR. JHA:  Great.  Kevin?
 
MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s go to Alex Tin at CBS.
 
Q    Hi, thanks for taking my question.  Following up on Dr. Fauci’s opening remarks, can you address why the primary series wasn’t updated as well, as well as shots for younger kids?  When do you expect that to happen? 
 
And then, separately, can you address what you’re hearing from the early jurisdictions and pharmacies that are now rolling out the shots, in terms of demand?  Thanks so much.
 
DR. JHA:  I’m happy to start.  Dr. Fauci, I don’t know if you want to talk at all.  Why don’t you — yeah, let me just start off very quickly saying: We know FDA is working on both updating the primary series and making booster shots for kids under 12 — the bivalent.  But that work is ongoing. 
 
Obviously, in every one of these decisions, FDA looks at the totality of the evidence, and the FDA scientists make an independent decision.  What I’m aware of is that they’re looking at the evidence, they’re making assessments.  I expect that there may be updates on the booster for kids under 12 at some point down the — later in the fall.  But I don’t have any specific timeline or specific thing to offer. 
 
Dr. Fauci, any — anything else you want to add to that?
 
DR. FAUCI:  Yeah.  You know, Alex, I think what people need to appreciate: Although it’s very important that we are now matching the new updated vaccine with the circulating, that the original ancestral strain vaccine created a very broad degree of coverage that did very well against many of the variants, as you know, from the D614G to the Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and even Omicron. 
 
So we don’t want to deprive the population of getting that broad coverage at the same time as we give them the added benefit of a variant-specific that’s circulating. 
 
So I think it’s a very positive thing that when you get people to get their primary vaccination, you give them the benefit of that initial broad coverage.  So there’s a good reason to do that.
 
DR. JHA:  That’s a great point, Tony.  Thank you.
 
Next question.
 
MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s go to Betsy Klein at CNN.
 
Q    Thanks, guys.  Dr. Jha, as you mentioned, we learned last week that the administration is re-upping its request to Congress for COVID response funding down just a hair from that $22.5 billion request earlier this year to $22.4 billion.  Just wondering if there have been any meetings or communication over the recess that would indicate there’s any new appetite for this in Congress.
 
DR. JHA:  Yeah.  What I can say — and, again, Mr. Secretary, you may have more to add on this — is that we are obviously in constant dialogue with our colleagues on the Hill — both Democrats and Republicans in the House and Senate.
 
And so they’re — I think they know that this request was coming.  The request has critical pieces of our response.  Look, we are in a much better place because we’ve been able to respond effectively.  Congress is aware that if we do not continue to fund the response, we can easily go backwards.  That’s what we are committed to making sure doesn’t happen.  So, yeah, those conversations have been ongoing.
 
Mr. Secretary, I don’t know if you want to add anything to that.
 
SECRETARY BECERRA:  I will simply add that Congress has been a very responsible partner in this whole effort.  The fact that we are today able to give Americans access to a vaccine that now can go after this latest variant is a sign of what happens when you have a partner that gives you the resources you need.
 
We obviously need more resources.  We want to continue work with a good partner in Congress to make that happen.  And we want to make sure that we could tell the American people we’re looking around the corner to what comes next.  And with the help of Congress and the resources that they’ve provided in the past, and hopefully will continue, we’ll be able to tell Americans, “We’re going to keep you safe.  We’re going to stay ahead of this.”
DR. JHA:  Kevin.

MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s go to Alex Nazaryan at Yahoo.

Q    Thanks.  Thanks, everyone.  Just a question broadly about how we avoid playing catch-up to new variants or subvariants of the vaccine.  Because unlike the flu, we’re probably not going to have the kind of indication we get from the southern hemisphere of the variants, or at least not a very — or at least not an indication with any kind of useful lag to develop those vaccines.

So are we just hoping that the new subvariants continue to have spike protein mutations that allow this new bivalent vaccine to work against them?  Or is there going to be some — I mean, can we expect some curveballs just because of what this virus tends to do?

DR. JHA:  That’s a great question.  Let me start, but I would love Tony’s thoughts on this as well.

So, we — you know, the line that we use is “hope is not a strategy.”  So we’re not planning or hoping on any one specific outcome.  Obviously, we all hope that the viral evolution slows down.  But here’s the way I’ve been thinking about this — I think we’ve been thinking about it inside the administration:

First of all, right now we have a vaccine that exactly matches the variant that’s out there.  We may see more evolution of this virus.  To the extent that that evolution comes off of BA.5, this updated vaccine will continue to provide a very high degree of protection.

One of the things that we’ve been thinking about — and you’ve heard me talk about it, we held a summit here at the White House on this — is that we need to get to a point where we have variant-proof vaccines, we have mucosal vaccines.  We need to play the long game against this virus.

That is going to require additional resources from Congress.  So part of what’s in the request to Congress is funding for that next generation of vaccines that’s so critical if we’re going to be able to ultimately get this virus behind us.

So I remain confident that the bivalent vaccine we have right now will provide a high degree of protection with, you know, some durability.  But in the long run, we’re going to need a different game in terms of much more durable vaccines.

Tony?

DR. FAUCI:  Well, just to underscore what Dr. Jha said about the long game: We totally agree; we want to get a pan-coronavirus type of a vaccine with either a different platform or a better immunogen to do that, hopefully even with mucosally administrated.  But that’s the long game.  I believe, Alex, you’re asking the short game question, like in the next year or so.

Now, one of the defining aspects of what we’ve all said is: Barring the out-of-left-field curveball, I mean, there’s nothing we can do about that, except know that we have vaccine platforms that will allow us to quickly move to address that.

But let’s say we don’t get a real big difference over the next year.  You would expect that BA.5, if it stays with us, in the sense of being the dominant one for a considerable period of time, or if there is a minor drift from it, the BA.5 updated vaccine that we’re talking about very likely would hold a substantial degree of protection against a minor sublineage change from BA.5.

So that’s what we’re talking about.  If we can do that, at the end of each year, for most of the population — and again, to underscore what we said, for those who have underlying conditions, immunocompromised, we may need to do it more.  But for the bulk of the population, we can look at it on a yearly basis and see, are we still close to what we’re doing now where we match pretty closely?  If so, good.  If not, then you’d want to make the modification.

Thanks.

DR. JHA:  Great.  Kevin.

MR. MUNOZ:  All right.  Let’s do a few more questions.  Let’s go to Zeke Miller at the Associated Press.

Q    Thanks, all, for doing this.  I just wanted to follow up on the projections Dr. Walensky was referring to earlier about the modeling showing a decline in cases and deaths this winter if there’s significant uptake of these updated boosters.

Can you elaborate on sort of how — what level of population coverage you need to get in order to achieve those — those unnece- — the sort of production in unnecessary deaths and serious illnesses?

And then, sort of, what is the general outlook that you’re looking at for — now that we have these boosters — for the fall?  What is the range of disruption, serious illness, and death that Americans should be preparing for over the coming — coming seasons?
 
DR. WALENSKY:  Yeah, thank you for that question.  This was a — not a CDC-based modeling study; it was a modeling study done by others.  But it was critically important, and it does demonstrate if we can get uptakes similar to a flu vaccine uptake — similar to what we get every single year from a flu vaccine — we could avert over 100,000 hospitalizations.
 
In terms of projections, we, of course, know where we are with around, you know, 4,500 hospitalizations right now.  And many of these projections anticipate what we might see, as Dr. Jha indicated, with respiratory viruses in leading to more cases and potentially more hospitalizations.  But those projections very much depend on everyone going out — going out and doing exactly what we’re recommending, which is getting your updated COVID-19 vaccine now, which can avert all of the challenges that we, you know, otherwise might anticipate.
 
DR. JHA:  And let me — let me just add one more thing to this because I think it’s really important and builds on Rochelle’s points. 
 
If we think back to where we were two years ago, compared to where we are today, we have a virus out there that’s still circulating, still killing hundreds of Americans every day.  We now have all of the capability to prevent, I believe, essentially all of those deaths.  If people stay up to date on their vaccines, if people get treated if they have a breakthrough infection, we can make deaths from this virus vanishingly rare. 
 
And as I think about the fall and winter ahead — you know, many people are predicting that flu is going to be back after two years of being largely away because of all the mitigation — we are looking at an opportunity to prevent lots of people getting infected, lots of people getting sick, stressing our healthcare system at a point where healthcare workers are exhausted. 
 
If people go out and get their annual COVID shot, that is the opportunity in front of us. 
 
And I think we all as Americans have to pull together to try to protect Americans this fall and winter and do what we can to get our healthcare system through what might be a difficult fall and winter ahead.
 
Kevin? 
 
MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s go to Lauren Gardner at Politico.
 
Q    Hi, thanks for taking my question.  This was addressed a little bit a couple questions ago, but I kind of want to get a finer point on it.  You know, versions of Omicron have been dominant now for nine months or so, give or take, in the U.S.  So can you explain maybe in more detail for Americans — you know, given the length of time we’ve had with this lineage of the virus — how does that make you confident enough to say that you think we’re heading towards that annual booster cadence for your average healthy American, given that, you know, you also just acknowledged that we never know what kind of curveball we’re going to get with this virus and what it can develop into at any given time?
 
DR. JHA:  Yeah, let me — let me start, and then I’d love it if, Tony, you could sort of chime in and fill in the critical details here. 
 
We have watched Omicron over the last nine months.  We’ve watched it evolve.  It has taught us a lot about this virus and how it is evolving right now. 
 
What we have also seen is — again, taking those high-risk individuals off the table for a second — if you’re an average-risk person and if you have stayed up to date on your vaccine, your risk of getting into serious trouble against this virus is really pretty low, if you’ve stayed up on your — again, if you stayed updated on the vaccine.  I think that gives us a lot of confidence. 
 
Now, on the issue of the curveball, you know, variant, I always remind people: We have an annual flu vaccine that holds us in good stead when people get it.  We know that there could be some curveball pandemic flu that shows up in February.  We always know that that is a possibility.  It is a possibility we’re going to get some crazy curveball, but it is not that — I think what — you know, we plan for what we think is the median, the most likely scenario.  But we’re always watching for that unusual event, and if that happens, we will address it and we will adjust to it and we’ll account for it. 
 
But I think the most likely scenario is we’re going to see ongoing evolution off of BA.5.  And we believe that these vaccines should continue to provide a high degree of protection. 
 
But, Tony, do you want to either expand, change, edit any of that?
 
DR. FAUCI:  No editing or changing but just — Ashish — but maybe to expand a little. 
 
Lauren, it relates to a little bit what I said before and what Dr. Jha has just mentioned: If you look at the original introduction of Omicron in November of last year, we’re almost a year now — almost a year of Omicron sublineages.  And the boosts that we’ve had — the first and second boost — have done pretty well in reconstituting the waning immunity even against the evolution of the different sublineages of Omicron. 
 
So, again, you’ve got to put the wildcard of a way-out, out-of-left field variant coming in.  If that happens, all bets are off, and we change.
 
But if we continue to have an evolution of what we used to call and still do call an “influenza adrift” — not a major change, but just sort of drifting along to BA.5 sublineage — I believe that that would fit in well with what we’re talking about the likelihood that we’ll get into a cadence that on a yearly basis for most people we’ll be able to cover what is out there as the dominant variant.
 
DR. WALENSKY:  And if I might just add: You know, one of the very for this bivalent vaccine is not just because it keeps the great protection of the original strain and because it improves the protection against the BA.5 variant, as laboratory data suggests, but also that it — the laboratory data suggests it will improve protection against other variants as well.  So it gives us that breadth of protection that we might anticipate should another variant come through.

DR. JHA:  Great, thank you, Dr. Walensky and Dr. Fauci.

Okay.  Kevin, back to you.

MR. MUNOZ:  Last question.  Let’s go to Cheyenne Haslett at ABC News.

Q    Thank you.  I wanted to go back to the funding quickly.  Collectively, you’ve all warned again and again that we wouldn’t have enough bivalent boosters for everyone because Congress didn’t allocate more COVID funding during the last request.  But they now do seem to be widely available to everyone who’s eligible.

So can you explain if the calculus has changed there, or if people should still be concerned that there are not enough for everybody?

DR. JHA:  Yeah, so let me start off.  And I suspect, Mr.  Secretary, you may have some thoughts on this as well.

I had warned that we did not have funding for enough vaccines.  We found ourselves in a — what I would say is an impossible situation of looking at the fall and winter and asking, even though Congress has failed to act, can we really go into the fall and winter without having vaccines for Americans, watching Europeans watching others have access to these bivalent vaccines?  And we thought that was unacceptable.

And so we have gone and pulled resources out of critical public health efforts.  We had planned on having an adequate stockpile of PPE, of personal protective equipment, should there be another surge.  We will not have that stockpile.

We had to shut down COVIDTests.gov, a wildly popular program, where two thirds of American households had ordered tests — shut it down because we do not have enough tests in our stockpile.  We do not have the ability to continue.

We will not have enough tests in our Strategic National Stockpile should we see another Omicron-like event.  We had promised the American people we would make sure that we did not get into that.  But with — but we needed Congress to step up; Congress has not stepped up.

So we are constantly making what I think are impossibly difficult decisions.  But our commitment is to absolutely make sure that vaccines and treatments are widely available, easily accessible, and free.  And that’s where we are.  And that is a set of decisions we’ve made.

We’re — we think this is the right set of decisions, but it certainly has not been easy ones.

Mr. Secretary.

SECRETARY BECERRA:  Dr. Jha, I’ll just add that the actions we execute today are meant for tomorrow, so the announcement of today was really executed far earlier.  And so we’re constantly trying to stay ahead of this.  And we forecast based on the resources we have and what we see coming at us from Omicron itself.  And so we are trying to constantly stay ahead of this.  We’re trying to be able to look around the corner.  It gets tougher and tougher as you get fewer and fewer resources and have fewer and fewer resources in your pocket. 

But what we’re announcing today didn’t get executed today. It got executed far — far in advance.  And what we’re suggesting now is that to be able to continue that, we need the resources that we’ve requested from Congress. 
 
And so, while we may have the vaccines today for folks, for this fall vaccine effort, we don’t know what’s coming next.  We don’t know what the next generation of vaccine will look like if we don’t have the resources to continue that research going.
 
And so, it’s all a matter of preparing.  And what we don’t want to do is act today — execute today for today.  That would put us way behind.  We’re going to keep our weight on our front foot as much as we can so we can be ready to see around the corner.
 
DR. JHA:  And let me just add one last thing on this point. You know, one of the things that we learned — we’ve learned throughout the pandemic — we certainly learned this during the Omicron wave of last winter — is that it is always more expensive to be responding than it is to be prepared. 
 
And one of the things that we have wanted to do — we thought it was responsible and important — was to build up that stockpile so that if we do get a surge, that we can get these tests out.
 
Let me be clear: If we get another surge, Congress likely at that point will step up.  It will cost the American taxpayer twice as much and will be less effective.  One of the reasons to be prepared and to be on the front footing, as the Secretary said, and to be looking around the corner is it’s much more effective and it’s much more cost efficient.  And that’s one of the reasons we’re back at Congress this fall saying, “You’ve got to continue supporting this.  You’ve got to allow us to continue preparing for what’s next for the American people.”  Thank you.
 
Kevin?
 
MR. MUNOZ:  That was the last question.
 
DR. JHA:  Okay.  Great.  Well, I want to just finish off by saying thank you — thank you to my colleagues on the screen. Tony Fauci — Dr. Fauci, thank you for joining us.  And, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, CDC Director, thank you.  Mr. Secretary, always a pleasure to share the stage, and thank you for your leadership in this. 
 
I want to remind us it has been two years — more than two years.  We’re heading into the third fall winter since this pandemic began.  We are in a totally different place because of the leadership of this administration, of the President, and because of what we know — now have in front of us: We have a vaccine that matches the variant that’s out there.
 
It’s critical that Americans protect themselves, protect their families, protect their loved ones.  And if people step up and do what is necessary, we can get through this fall and winter with far less suffering, far less death, far less disruption.  And that should absolutely be our priority and goal; it is in this administration.  And I hope everybody joins us in that effort. 
 
Thank you all for joining us today.
 
11:56 A.M. EDT

Remarks by Vice President Harris Before Roundtable Discussion With Union Members and Organizers

Source: The White House

Boston Park Plaza Hotel
Boston, Massachusetts

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Well, good morning, everyone.  I’m very much looking forward to our conversation. 
 
I want to thank Senator Markey for all that you do in the United States Senate.  We were colleagues for four years there, and I’ve seen how you always fight for working people.
 
Congresswoman Pressley — just a force and always a voice for those who — who must be seen and treated with dignity.  So, thank you.
 
Maura Healey — we served together, overlapped when I was Attorney General of California.  I have seen you just be such a fighter on all of these issues, always fighting for working people.  I’m so honored to be with you today.  I also know that you have been a leader nationally around fighting for what we need to do in terms of wage theft and making sure that workers recover their pay and what they are due because of their hard work.  So, thank you for being a part of this panel as well.
 
So, on Labor Day, as it is every day — certainly for those of us at this table — we celebrate and thank the workers of America for what they do to keep our country moving, to strengthen our country, to build our country, to take care of those things that must be addressed if we are to be competitive around the globe, whether it be as a home healthcare worker or as a member of the building trades, the work that — that these union members do is critical to our strength and our success and our prosperity.
 
So, I have asked these workers from a variety of sectors — some new to organizing and some who have established the traditions of organizing and the strength of it — to have a conversation with us about what we can do through our administration — the Biden-Harris administration — to continue to support workers and their ability to organize and to advocate for safe working conditions and wages and benefits that meet and recognize the value and the dignity of their work.
 
So, that’s the conversation we are having today and that is on top of all of the work that we have done together over the last 18-plus months and before to coordinate and collaborate around how our administration can best be supportive of the working people of America.
 
So, with that, I thank you all, each of you, for being here, and I look forward to our discussion.  And again, I thank you for your leadership.
 
And so, with that, I’m going to turn it back to Brian, and I think you’re going to then moderate this discussion.
 
Thank you.
 
(The roundtable discussion commences.)
 
                               END
 

Remarks by President  Biden Celebrating Labor Day and the Dignity of American  Workers

Source: The White House

Henry Maier Festival Park
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

1:37 P.M. CDT
 
THE PRESIDENT:   Hello, Milwaukee!  (Applause.)  My name is Joe Biden.  I am Jill Biden’s husband.  (Applause.)  And I want to start by saying: Any child under 12 years of age deserves a little extra ice cream or something for doing this.  (Laughter.)  This has got to be the most boring thing in the world for you, honey.  (Laughter.)  But we’re going to work something out for you, I promise.
 
Folks, if you have seat, don’t hesitate to take them.
 
AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you, Uncle Joe!
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you, man.  (Applause.) 
 
Well, you know, I think this is getting to be a pretty good — a good year for a Labor Day.  (Applause.) 
 
Eduardo, thank you for that introduction.  It’s great to be with Governor Evers, Representative Gwen Moore.  Where’s Gwen?  There you go, Gwen. I love you, kid.  (Applause.)  You’ve been there every step of the way when I’ve needed help as President.  Thank you, thank you, thank you.  (Applause.)
 
And Mayor Johnson.  Where is Mayor — where is the mayor?  There you go.  You’ve got those two beautiful girls and a son.  I tell you what, you got to tell your girls you got to be patient with we dads.  We’re hard to raise.  We’re hard to raise.  (Laughter.)
 
And — and I — where is the county executive?  Stand up big guy?  I think these guys spend — I think these two guys spend all their time in the gymnasium.  They look like they’re in too good a shape.  (Applause.)
 
And I want to thank Tammy — she couldn’t be here today — who’s a champion of working people and always there.  (Applause.)
 
You know, and the same goes to Lieutenant Governor Mandela Barnes, who couldn’t be here, but — (applause) — he’s going be your next United States senator.   (Applause.)  Oh, he is. 
 
And I want to thank Liz Shuler for her fearless leadership at the AFL-CIO. 
 
And thanks to Pam for your leadership of the AFL-CIO here in Milwaukee.  Thank you, thank you, thank you.  (Applause.)  Where is she?  Back there.  Okay, there you are, Pam.  I was — okay.  I wonder where everyone is sitting. 
 
And how about actually having a union guy as the Secretary of Labor?   (Applause.)  I’ll tell you what, if you’re going to be in a foxhole, you want Marty in there with you.  Now, you may have trouble understanding when he starts talking about car barns — (said in Boston accent) — and (inaudible) garages and talks — (laughter) — he talks kind of funny, but he knows what he’s talking about. 
 
I promised to be the most pro-union President in American history, and Marty is keeping me to make that promise.  (Applause.)
 
And by the way, the reason for that, I’ll — and I’ve — I’ve had this conversation with the Business Roundtable and all the major chambers of commerce — is not just — just that I think that it’s important that people get a shot.  But, look the reason why — the reason why businesses should be hiring labor folks is simple: You have — you’re the single-greatest technicians in the world.  You’re the best laborers in the world.  You build the best product.
 
And no, no, I’m not just joking.  I’m not just saying that.  But people forget — a lot of the trades — they forget — you go to four, five years of school — your apprenticeship.  It’s like going back to college.  It’s not like you, all of a sudden, just step — step in.  You build a better product, it lasts longer, and it’s cheaper for the business, and it’s better for the country.  (Applause.)
 
Look — folks, Labor Day is a special day in the country for — and here in Milwaukee.  This is one of the biggest Labor Day events in America you all have here.  (Applause.) 
 
And it’s a special day to me as well.  Because the fact of the matter is I wouldn’t be here without unions — unions: electricians, ironworkers, letter carriers, Teamsters, laborers, bricklayers, transit workers, plumbers and pipefitters, steelworkers.  (Applause.)  I wouldn’t be here without cops, firefighters, teacher, nurses.  (Applause.)  I wouldn’t be here without painters, pilots, autoworkers, custodians, carpenters, grocery store workers, steel metal workers, and so many others.  That’s not a joke. That’s not a joke.
 
I got elected when I was 29 years old to the United States Senate in a state that had recently been “right to work.”  You know why?  Because union labor endorsed me and fought for me.  (Applause.) 
 
So bad news for you all is: I’m here because of you. 
 
Look, the middle class — the middle class built America.  Everybody knows that.  But unions built the middle class.  (Applause.)  That’s a fact.  That’s a fact.
 
Look, folks, I believe we’re at an inflection point in American history — I really mean that — that comes around every five or six generations, an inflection where — one of those moments where everything is changing.  Everything is changing. 
 
And we’re going to have to ask whether we want to be a country that moves forward or backwards; we’re going to — we’re going to build a future or we’re going to obsess about the past. 
 
I’ve said many times: We’re the only country in the world that’s come out of every crisis we ever faced stronger than we went in it.  No other nation has done that.  (Applause.) 
 
And we do it because we’ve been a nation of unity, of hope, of optimism — not as a nation of division and violence and hatred that’s being preached by some others. 
 
I want to be very clear up front: Not every Republican is a MAGA Republican.  Not every Republican embraces that extreme ideology.  I know because I’ve been able to work with mainstream Republicans my whole career. 
 
But the extreme MAGA Republicans in Congress have chosen to go backwards — full of anger, violence, hate, and division. 
 
But together, we can and we must choose a different path: forward.  (Applause.)  No, I really mean it.  We have to.  A future of unity, of hope, of optimism.  We’re going to choose to build a better America — a better America.  (Applause.) 
 
There’s no question it’s been a hard few years, but we’ve come a long way. 
 
Today, COVID no longer controls our lives.  More Americans are working than at any time in all of American history. 
 
Last year, more people applied to start small businesses than any year in history.  But it didn’t just happen.   We never gave up.  We never gave in.  And we are delivering for working- and middle-class Americans now — now.  (Applause.)
 
Nearly 10 million new jobs — more jobs than have ever been created at this point in any presidency in history.  Wages are up.  Unemployment remains near a 50-year low.  And the big reason for all this is the American Rescue Plan that I signed into law shortly after taking office — (applause) — with the help of your Democratic members of Congress.  That’s how we got it done.  Not one, single Republican vote.
 
And the plan took America from economic crisis to economic recovery.  And here in Wisconsin, your governor and your mayor of Milwaukee used that money like it’s supposed to be used: keeping city workers on the job in the face of rising costs, keeping streets safe by fixing streetlights, training 130 new firefighters, helping hire close to 200 more police officers. 
 
And not a single Republican voted for that — not one, single one.  Every single Republican in Congress in this state voted against that funding.
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  So, let me remind you — no, I really mean it.  Let me remind you what else was in that American Rescue Plan. 
 
A thing called the Butch Lewis Act.  (Applause.)  Now, look, for too long, most Americans didn’t know what that means.  Those of you who have been driving trucks from factories to stores; bagging our groceries; building our buildings, bridges, roads, so much more.   And with each paycheck you earn, the employers put that money into pension plan. 
 
But some companies didn’t set aside enough money to pay for those plans.  And as a result, hundreds of pensions — 2 to 3 million workers and retirees — were going insolvent.  Millions of retirees were at risk of losing their retirement security through no fault of your own. 
 
So, with the American Rescue Plan, we passed the Butch Lewis Act to protect pensions all of you worked so damn hard for — (applause) — pensions you sacrificed for.  In retirement, it’d be a little like losing your Social Security and your Medicare. 
 
It’s one of the most significant achievements union workers and retirees — for union workers and retirees in over 50 years.  And I’ll say it again: Not a single Republican congressman voted to protect your pensions — not one.
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  And by the way, I know a lot of them wanted to vote for it, but they’re afraid of losing primaries in this new Republican Party.
 
We also passed a once-in-a-generation investment in our nation’s roads, highways, bridges, railroads, ports, water systems, high-speed Internet.
 
Folks, your governor has already repaired over 5,000 miles [of roads], 1,500 bridges here in Wisconsin alone.  Just a start.  (Applause.)
 
We will, when this is over, have the best infrastructure — not a joke — in the entire world.  The single-best in the world.  (Applause.)
 
And that means jobs.  No, that means jobs.  That means we continue to lead the world.  You can’t do it without the best ports.  You can’t do it without the best airports.  You can’t do it — I’m not going to go on, but the point is: You can’t do it.
 
Right here in Milwaukee, it’s estimated 40 percent of the homes still have lead service water — lead pipes for their water.  Because of the Infrastructure Law, the city is receiving millions of dollars to replace lead pipes to make sure families have safe drinking water.  (Applause.)  Your child shouldn’t have to worry about turning on the faucet or going to school, going to the water fountain and worrying about any kind of lead in the water.
 
Look, it’s the biggest investment in America since President Eisenhower’s Interstate Highway Act.  And we made sure that the Infrastructure Law included significant labor protections.  For example, the majority of the funds in the law are subject to Davis-Bacon.  (Applause.) 
 
And it’s not just because I wanted to help unions.  It’s simple: You’re the best in the world.  That’s not hyperbole.  No, you really — it’s not a joke.   You really, genuinely are.
 
You don’t just decide you want to be a pipefitter or an electrician.  It takes you four to five years of hard work — the apprenticeships.  It’s like going to college.  You’re the best-trained workers in the world, and you deserved to be treated that way.  (Applause.) 
 
And by the way, those of you who know me, no one ever doubts I mean what I say.  The problem is, I sometimes say all that mean.  (Laughter.)  I’ve made the same comments to the Business Rountable, to the Chamber of Commerce.  They understand it.  They don’t want to pay it; they understand it, though.  Because it’s true.
 
I also signed the CHIPS and Science Act, a groundbreaking law.  We’ll once again manufacture semiconductor chips that power everyday — everything — our smartphones, dishwashers, automobiles, national security stuff — right here in America. 
 
Guess what?  We invented it here.  We invented it here in America.  (Applause.)
 
And by the way, the reason why last time out, last year, inflation was so high — you know the biggest reason?  Cost of automobiles.  You know why they cost so much?  They didn’t have the computer chips to make the automobiles.
 
Folks, here in Wisconsin, Senator Baldwin made clear that you’re ready to take advantage of this law with world-class universities and a workforce that knows how to manufacture a product here in Wisconsin.  This law is going to create tens of thousands of jobs in America, bringing billions of dollars of investment here in America — well over $100 billion in investments in America, revitalizing American manufacturing.  (Applause.)
 
Where is written — where is it written that says America can’t lead the world in manufacturing?  Where does it say that?  We’ve exported too damn much.
 
In fact, next week, I’m going to Ohio for the groundbreaking of a multi-billion-dollar semiconductor manufacturing plant.  (Applause.)  The company is Intel.  It’s one of the largest investments of its kind ever.  They’re putting $20 billion in as a start. 
 
It’s going to create thousands of jobs — thousands — 7,000 construction jobs just building the facilities; 5,000 permanent jobs for blue-collar workers who will make $125,000 a year in those jobs.  (Applause.) 
 
And by the way, if you take a look, manufacturers all over the world are coming to the United States — (applause) — from Korea, from Japan, from all over the world. 

Why?  You know why the head of an outfit out of Korea told me they’re coming here?  Because we have the safest environment and the best workers in the world.  (Applause.)  That’s a fact.  We do.  I’m not just saying this.  This is real.  (Applause.)

Look, folks, it means we’re going to build the future in America with American workers in American factories using American-made products.  (Applause.)
 
Look, it’s something most people don’t know, but you guys out there in this audience know: 15 percent of our military become — veterans become union workers when they leave the military.  Fifteen percent.  (Applause.) 

How many veterans out there?  Holler out.  (Applause.)  You got it. 

In my State of the Union Address, I put forward what I call a Unity Agenda that — including taking care of our veterans. 

Look, we have a lot of responsibilities but only one sacred responsibility — not a joke, and I mean this from the bottom of my heart and I’ve said it from the first day I entered politics: We have an obligation to equip those we send into harm’s way and care for them and their families when they come home — (applause) — both their families — especially our veterans who’ve been exposed to toxic burn pits, like my son.

Those pits the size of football fields — 8, 9, 10 feet deep in Afghanistan and Iraq — I was in and out of those countries over 35 times in the middle of these wars as Vice President — that incinerate wastes of war — tires, poisons, chemicals, jet fuel, so much more. 
 
A lot of people, like my son, had their hooch just probably 300, 500 yards from those pits.  You could smell it.  You could inhale it.  Well, guess what?  These poisonous fumes just came — people came home with headaches, numbness, dizziness, cancer. 
 
I just signed — we call it the PACT Act — to take care of these veterans — (applause) — who need medical assistance and to provide for their families when they are gone.  (Applause.) 
 
For God’s sake, it’s the least we can do.  It’s the least we —

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you, Joe!

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I love you too, kiddo.  I tell ya —

Look, like I said, I believe we have a lot of obligations — we have a lot of obligations, but only one sacred obligation, and that’s to take care of those vets we send overseas and when they come home.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT:  No, I know — I — but I really mean it.  And as I said, I just signed into law a historic Inflation Reduction Act.  (Applause.) 
 
It wasn’t easy to take big drug companies, but we did.  I’ve been fighting them since I got in Congress 180 years ago.  (Laughter.)

You know, we pay more for our prescription drugs in the United States of America than any major country in the world — here in the United States.  Okay?  There’s no reason for it. 

For the last several decades, many of us have been trying to fix the problem.  But for decades, Big Pharma tried to block giving lower drug prices for those on Medicare or anywhere else. 
 
For decades, Big Pharma won — year in, year out — because they own chunks of the Congress, because they had help, like your senior senator, Ron Johnson, who said —

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  No, I — I want to say what he said.  He said he opposed lowering drug costs because it would result in “punishing the pharmaceutical industry.”

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Bless me, Father, for I have sinned.  I mean, come on, man.  (Applause.)

Not this year.  We beat Pharma this year.  We beat Pharma this year, and it mattered.  We’re going to change people’s lives.  (Applause.)  We finally beat Pharma. 

Now Medicare will have the power to negotiate lower prescription drug prices.  We can guarantee no senior — no senior will have to pay more than $2,000 out of pocket for their drugs for the entire year, no matter whether their bill is $50,000.  No more than $2,000.  Period.  (Applause.) 
 
And if you’re on Medicare and you have diabetes, your cost for insulin will be capped at $35.  (Applause.)  
 
And by the way, there’s a reason for that.  You know how much it costs for them to make and package the insulin for diabetes?  Ten bucks.  Ten.

Any of you have to — you need that insulin or your children need it.  You know what it costs.  It costs you somewhere between 650 and 1,000 bucks a month.  It’s outrageous.

Well, guess what?  We also had, in this bill of mine — we also had a provision that affected people who weren’t on Medicare, but because of the leadership of your senior senator and others, it got defeated.  But I’m coming back and getting it.  (Applause.)

Imagine — this about this.  Imagine being a mom or a dad — I mean this from the bottom of my heart.  Imagine being a mom or a dad with a kid with Type 2 diabetes, knowing you need that insulin and you don’t have the insurance, you can’t pay for it.  I’m not joking.  Think about it.  Think about how it would rip your heart it.

It’s wrong.  It’s simply wrong.  And we’re going to end it.  It costs 10 bucks, and you can make 35 if you want.  That’s it.  (Applause.)
 
For decades, the biggest corporations — and by the way, I know corporations; I come from the corporate state of the world.  (Laughter.)  More corporations are incorporated in Delaware than every other nation — every other state in the country combined.  Okay?  So I could write a doctrine on corporations.  (Laughter.)  So, it’s not like I’m anti-corporation generically.  But I do think everybody should pay their fair share.  (Applause.) 
 
And, by the way — and, by the way, look, for decades, the biggest corporations and the wealthiest Americans have fought to block a fair tax code.  Republicans passed a $2 trillion tax cut mainly benefiting the wealthiest corporations under the Trump administration.  Put us —
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  By the way, it increased the debt by $2 trillion. 
 
Well, guess what?  In 2000, 55 of those corporations earned a $40 billion in profit.  They didn’t pay a single solitary penny in taxes.
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  And the wealthiest Americans — of the 700-plus billionaires in America — you know what their average tax rate is — the federal tax?  Eight percent.  They pay more taxes than any one of you — less — fewer taxes than any of you pay. 
 
AUDIENCE MEMBER:  It’s not right!
 
THE PRESIDENT:  It’s not right.  No, no, I mean, this is — I — it’s just outrageous. 
 
Well, guess what?  Guess what?  I wasn’t able to take care — anyway. 
 
If you’re a cop, a teacher, a firefighter, a steelworker, a miner, you pay double that federal tax.  It’s just wrong. 
 
But this year, the American people won.  Now, big corporations have to pay at least the minimum tax of 15 percent — at least.  (Applause.)
 
The days of billion-dollar companies paying zero, they are over in America.  (Applause.)  And they know they can afford it.
 
And while we’re doing this, we’re actually reducing the federal deficit.  You know how they talk about responsible de- — they — the last guy left me with a giant deficit.  Well, guess what?  In my first year I reduced the deficit by $350 billion.  (Applause.)
 
And you know how much — you know how much I’m reducing the deficit this year?  One trillion, five hundred thousand reduction of the deficit.  (Applause.)
 
And, by the way, just by dealing with allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices, it means Medicare doesn’t have to pay out that many tax dollars to buy them.  That alone is reduce — going to reduce, over time, $300 billion in the deficit. 
 
You would think that if Republicans really cared about reducing inflation, they’d vote for the Inflation Reduction Act.  But every single Republican in House and Senate voted against it.  Every single Republican in the House and Senate. 
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Now, I admit some of them voted against it.  They thought it made sense, but they weren’t — they couldn’t let Biden, quote, “have a victory.”  It’s not my victory.  It’s American people’s victory.  (Applause.)
 
In spite of the fact that while doing all this we lowered the deficit by a trillion five this year here, here in America, every single Republican voted against lowering prescription drug prices, against lowering healthcare costs, against protecting your pensions, against lower energy costs, against creating good-paying jobs, against a fairer tax system — every single one in the House and Senate.  Every one.
 
And one thing more: When Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the National Labor Re- — Labor Relations Act — when it passed in the ‘30s — he didn’t say it was okay to be a union.  He said — and in fact, it says we should “encourage unions” — “encourage.”  (Applause.) 
 
Well, I’m encouraging unions.  (Applause.)  That’s what I’ve been doing from day one.
 
It includes for public service sector workers in Wisconsin as well. 
 
Today, support for unions in this country is higher than it’s been in nearly 60 years.  Think about this.  You guys know the numbers.  Unions are more — have more support today in America in public opinion than any time in 60 years.  The key — it’s a key way to building the economy, to grow us from the bottom up and the middle out.  I’m so sick and tired of trickle-down economics.  (Applause.)
 
I come from a family where my dad worked hard.  He worked like hell.  We lived a decent, middle-class life.  We lived in a three-bedroom, split level home in a development that was — there — as we were — the area was growing, with four kids and a grandpop. 
 
I sometimes wonder — anyway, I wonder — it was great for us, but those walls are thin.  (Laughter.)
 
But all kidding aside, we did fine.  No complaints.  We did fine. 
 
But here’s the point: The biggest contrast from what MAGA Republicans — the extreme right, the — the “Trumpies” — they want to go to — these MAGA Republicans in Congress are coming for your Social Security as well. 
 
Now, are you — by the way, as I said, you might think I’m making this — some of this stuff up it’s so outrageous. 
 
But here’s the deal, guys: The Republicans — read the Republican campaign plan, the Senate campaign they put out this year.  Go online and read it.  Senator Rick Scott of Florida heads that campaign committee.
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  It’s all in black and white.  I’m not making it up.  You can go online and read it. 
 
They want to require Congress to vote on the future of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid every five years to decide whether they continue. 
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  No, no, every five years, they get to vote to change, to cut, to reduce, or entirely eliminate Social Security and other things.  How’s that make us feel knowing you guy —
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  And then along — you know, remember that song, “Along Comes Jones”?  And then along comes Ron Johnson of Wisconsin.
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  He — he’s arguing that five years is too long to wait to savage these programs people depend on.  He wants to put Social Security and Medicare literally on that chopping block every single year, treated like any other appropriation. 
 
Let me remind you: You paid for your Social Security and Medicare.  (Applause.)  It’s taken out of your paycheck from the time you’re 18 years old.  (Applause.) 

The same guy who said — he’s the same guy who said if the Republicans get control of the Congress, they’re coming after the Affordable Care Act again, denying health insurance to anyone with a preexisting condition.  That’s the only reason they have — they’re able to get it.

Only reason they get — if they have a preexisting condition, the only way they can insurance is because of the Affordable Care Act.  That’s not a joke.

This guy never stops.  (Laughter.)  But guess what?  I ain’t stopping either.  (Applause.)

Folks, you and I, we offer a starkly different vision for this country — a vision of a fairer, more decent America.  One where everybody has a fair share, where every American is treated with — as my dad would say — with dignity.  The economy that works for work, not wealth.
 
Now let’s me close with this: We’re at a serious moment in our nation’s history, and it’s not hyperb- —
 
(A protester disruption can be heard in the audience.)
 
I mean it from the bottom of my heart.  As I said last week, we remain in the battle for the soul of America.

By the way —

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  You’re a liar!

THE PRESIDENT:  All right, God love ya.
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Let him go.  Let him go. 
 
AUDIENCE:  Booo —
 
THE PRESIDENT:  No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.  Don’t — let him — let him go.  Let him — he’s — look, everybody is entitled to be an idiot.  (Applause.)  No, no.  Everybody is entitled.  (Applause.)  Okay?

Look, extreme MAGA Republicans don’t just threaten our personal rights and our economic security, they embrace political violence.  (Applause.)  Look — no, look, the reason — I’m not talking all Republicans, I’m talking about these extreme MAGA Republicans. 

Think about it.  Think about it.  The definition of democracy is you accept the will of the people when the votes are honestly counted.  (Applause.)  These guys don’t do it.

Name me a democracy in the world where a leader argues to engage in violence.  To this day, MAGA Republicans in Congress defend the mob that stormed the Capitol, and people died later. 

Senator Johnson said it was a — “by and large a peaceful protest.”

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Have you seen the videos of what happened on that day, listened to the stories of the members of both parties of Congress and the jeopardy they were put in? 
 
Cops attacked and assaulted.  Speared with flag poles.  Sprayed with mace.  Stomped on, dragged, brutalized.
 
Police lost their lives as a result of that day.  And the MAGA Republicans and your senior senator said it was “a peaceful protest.”

AUDIENCE:  Booo — 
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Folks, you can’t be pro-ex- — you can’t be pro-insurrectionist — I’m being deadly earnest now.  There’s no democracy where you can be pro-insurrection and pro-democracy.  (Applause.)  So, when I say that democracy is at stake, I mean what I’m saying literally. 
 
You can’t say you support law enforcement and call the people who attacked the police on January 6th “patriots”.  (Applause.)  This was an attack on American democracy and all we stand for.

Imagine if you go home this afternoon, turn on the television, and saw several thousand people storming the British Parliament, knocking down the doors, threatening the lives, trying to overthrow the election of the new prime minister, and people dying.  What would you think?  No, I’m being deadly earnest now.  Honest to God, what would you think?  You’d think, “This is not a democracy.”

Well, let me tell you something.  Let me tell you something: That is why, in this moment, those of you in this country — Democrats, Republicans — and mainstream Republicans and independents — we have to be stronger and more determined and more committed to saving American democracy than the MAGA Republicans and that guy walking out the door are [to] destroying democracy — (applause) — because democracy is at stake.
 
We got to remember who we are.  (Applause.)  We’re the United States of America.  There is nothing — nothing we can’t do if we do it together.  (Applause.)
 
God bless you all.  And may God protect our troops.  Thank you, thank you, thank you.  (Applause.)

2:10 P.M. CDT

Remarks by Vice President Harris at the Annual Greater Boston Labor Council  Breakfast

Source: The White House

Boston Park Plaza Hotel
Boston, Massachusetts

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Good morning.  (Applause.)  Good morning.  Oh, it is always good to be in the house of labor.  Good morning, good morning, good morning. 
 
I said to Darlene, you really packed the house, man.  Look at this.  Look at this.  Happy Labor Day, everybody.  Happy Labor Day.  (Applause.)
 
Darlene, I want to thank you because we’ve had some time to talk about your leadership and the work you have done your entire working career.  And I just want to thank you for being such a dedicated leader for the working people of Boston and of America.  (Applause.)
 
And I want to thank the Greater Boston Labor Council, the Greater Boston Building Trades, everyone here, all the workers who spoke this morning.  I want to thank you for your leadership and being such a clear and powerful voice for the working people of America.  You are powerful.  You are powerful.  And we are powerful together. 
 
You know, there’s so much about the concept of solidarity that is about understanding the importance of making sure nobody ever has to fight alone; understanding the importance of standing shoulder to shoulder, recognizing the power of the many to speak with a clear and unified voice around some of the biggest issues of the moment.
 
I want to recognize my friend — I know your longstanding friend — Marty Walsh.  He’s not able to be here today because he’s with the President.  (Applause.)
 
Marty and I head up the Labor Council together, and I don’t need to tell you what a fighter he is — what an extraordinary fighter.  He is a champion for the working people of our nation.  So he asked me to tell y’all “Hello, good morning.”  And so, I’m passing that on. 
 
So, for the new friends, you may not know, but I was raised by parents who met while they were protesting for civil rights.  And when I was a child, they would take me to the marches in a stroller.  And what that meant and what that has meant is that from the earliest stages of my life, I learned that when people stand together in solidarity, shoulder to shoulder, whether at a protest or a picket line, it makes a difference.  And it is powerful.
 
And so, that knowledge has guided my entire career, and it guides our administration.  President Joe Biden and I are determined to lead the most pro-union administration in America’s history.  (Applause.)  We are proud.  We are proud.  We are proud.
 
Because what we are celebrating today, on Labor Day, is what we all in this room know we celebrate every day.  When union workers go to work, they go to work for the entire nation.  That means the building trades workers and steelworkers who are helping us to rebuild our nation.  It is our educators who inspire our children and shape our future.  It is our firefighters who put their lives at risk to keep our communities safe.  It is our healthcare workers and our home-care workers who go to work every day to provide healing and hope during the greatest time of need for so many people and who, these days, have to fight on the frontlines to protect access to reproductive healthcare.  And it’s our hospitality workers who take care of us when we are away from home.
 
Today, on picket lines, in union homes, and on job sites; in hospitals, schools, and grocery stores, union workers fight for better wages and safer working conditions.  You fight to protect union pensions and the right for all working people to be able to retire with dignity. 
 
And let us be clear, our whole nation — our whole nation, whether they are a member of a union or not, benefits from your work because when union wages go up, everybody’s wages go up.  When union workplaces are safer, all workplaces are safer.  (Applause.)  When unions are strong — when unions are strong, America is strong.  (Applause.)
 
And, you know, as Vice President, I’ve had the occasion to talk directly with at least 100 world leaders — so in the last year and half — presidents, prime ministers, chancellors, and kings.  I was born in Oakland, California.  How about that?  (Laughter.)  And in those meetings, I will tell you, these heads of state — they recognize that a great part of the success and prosperity of the United States is the result of your work.  Because every day, workers fight to move our country forward. 
 
And yet, we must recognize: There are those who are fighting to drag us back.  In Congress, in statehouses across our nation, extremist, so-called leaders are fighting to turn back the clock to a time before workers had the freedom to organize; to a time before women had the freedom to make decisions about their own bodies; to a time before all Americans had the freedom to vote.
 
Today in America, our communities are being terrorized by gun violence.  And yet these extremist, so-called leaders are fighting to keep assault weapons on the shelves.  
 
Today in America, so many working families are struggling   to get by.  But instead of standing with working people to lower the price of healthcare, education, and childcare, these extremist, so-called leaders prioritize breaks for big corporations and the wealthiest 1 percent. 
 
But together, we are fighting back because — (applause) — because we share a vision for our nation.  We see a future in which every person will have an opportunity to succeed and to thrive no matter where they were born, what they look like.  And so, with your help we are building that future.  (Applause.)
 
So I’ll tell you a bit about what we’ve been up to with your help and because of you. 
 
Since our administration took office, our nation has created nearly 10 million jobs, more than making up for every job lost during the pandemic.  (Applause.)
 
In our first year in office, we extended the Child Tax Credit and cut child poverty in America by 40 percent.  (Applause.)
 
We also passed a tax cut not for corporations, but for parents, to give them up — (applause) — to give parents up to $8,000 for the cost of raising a child — the cost of medication, food, school supplies — putting more money in their pocket to help them do what any civilized nation would do, which is to support working parents, understanding it’s an investment in our collective future.  (Applause.)
 
Through our White House Labor Task Force, which Marty and I have been running together, we have torn down barriers to organizing. 
 
This year our administration did the long-overdue — and we’re very proud of this — the long-overdue work to protect pension plans for millions of union workers.  (Applause.) 
 
Because of your support, our administration made the largest investment in a generation in our nation’s infrastructure.  Many promised it before; we did it.  (Applause.)  
 
And not only did we do it, we did it with strong labor protections, like Davis-Bacon standards — (applause) — to pay the prevailing wage.
 
“Why?” some might ask.  Well, it’s simple: So that we can create millions of good-paying, good union jobs across our nation.
 
And we are clear: To rebuild our nation’s infrastructure, we need you.  We need plumbers and pipefitters in Malden and Chelsea — (applause) — to replace lead pipes in schools and homes to help us replace every lead pipe within 10 years, which is our goal.  (Applause.)
 
We need electrical workers in Northampton and Essex to lay the fiber optic lines that will bring high-speed Internet to every household in America.
 
During the height of the pandemic, it became clear — you want to talk about the inequities in the system?  When parents who did not have access or couldn’t afford high-speed Internet, what that meant for their children and lost precious days of education, not to mention our seniors who otherwise could have benefited from telemedicine.
 
We need the hardworking members of Boston’s building trades to build new bus lanes and sidewalks in Roxbury and to make — (applause) — and to make — and to make upgrades at Logan.  (Laughter and applause.) 
 
And because of your support, our administration is lowering the cost of living for working people.
 
Just last month, we signed a law — our President signed a law that will cap the cost of insulin for seniors at $35 a month.  (Applause.)  And the last numbers I saw tell me that one in three of our seniors has diabetes.  This is no small matter.
 
Because the President signed it into law, we’re going to reduce health insurance premiums for 13 million Americans an average of $800 a year — (applause) — and lower prescription drug prices for people on Medicare.
 
And on that point, you know, for years — and I saw this when I was attorney general of California — Maura Healey has been doing extraordinary work.  (Applause.)  So, for years, the largest drug companies have made billions of dollars in profits selling drugs for 10 to 100 times what it costs to make.  The healthcare workers in the audience — I know you know what I’m talking about.  (Applause.)
 
So, for years, Big Pharma has tried to grow their profits by preventing Medicare from negotiating for lower drug prices.  For years, so-called leaders in Washington, D.C., supported this injustice.  And for years, they got away with it.
 
But we said, “Enough.”  So, last month — (applause) — last month, our administration, because of your support, gave Medicare the power to negotiate on behalf of over 60 million people.  (Applause.)  That is the power of collective bargaining.
 
So — so, friends, here’s the thing: To build a future where working people can get ahead and stay ahead, we’ve got to do a lot, including the cost of healthcare, including lost of — bringing down energy bills.  In fact, we gave working families as much as an $8,000 upgra- — a credit for — to upgrade their HVAC system in their home, and that’s going to be about lower energy costs and cleaner air and more jobs for some of the folks in this room.
 
But here’s the thing: All of this work that we’ve been doing on behalf of working people, the critics — who have not been stepping up to support working people — would like to throw out all these red herrings, these distractions and talk about how are we going to pay for it.
 
Well, let me tell you, if anybody asks you how we’re going to pay for all of this, do let them know: As promised, we will not raise taxes on anyone making less than $400,000 a year, but this will be paid for.  Because, you see, finally, our nation’s largest corporations will now be required to pay their fair share.  (Applause.)  It’ll be paid for.  It’ll be paid for.  (Applause.)
 
And one more thing: Do note that in our fight to build a better future, not a single Republican in Congress stood with us to reduce child poverty, to cut taxes for working people, or lower the cost of healthcare.  Not one.
 
So, here’s my last point: The midterms are in 64 days.  And we know what we are up against, and we know what we stand for.  And I believe when you know what you stand for, you know what to fight for.  (Applause.)
 
So, on this Labor Day and every day, we will continue to fight for working people.  We will fight for the strength of our nation, understanding the connection.  And we will fight, understanding — and Boston knows this — when we fight, we win.  (Applause.)  And so, we fight knowing there is more work to be done.
 
And so, let me just also mention, because I just decided to write this down — so, we fight in battleground states like Michigan and Wisconsin, in Georgia and North Carolina and Nevada and Arizona and Pennsylvania, New Hampshire and Ohio.  Those are just some.  That’s where we fight.
 
We travel to do the work of reminding folks that when they stood in those lines for four hours, when they had to find childcare to drop off their ballot, when they navigated the obstacles that certain states are putting up for them to have access to the vote, when they put in their order in 2020 for what they wanted, we gave them most of what they asked for, but we need to see it through.
 
Let’s remind folks, because every year — we’ve all done this, most of us for our entire lives — around election time, people are going to say, “Why should I vote?”  So we know, because that’s a righteous question.
 
Let’s remind them, starting now, that when they did that in 2020, these are the things they got and that elections matter.  Let’s not let — (applause) — let’s not let extremist, so-called leaders turn back the clock.
 
We know what’s at stake.  We know what we stand for.  We know when we fight, we win.  We love our country so deeply — (applause) — and all of this is worth it.
 
So, I thank you, Boston, for all that you do.  God bless you.  And God bless America.  (Applause.)
 
END

Statement by President  Biden in Support of California’s Agricultural Labor Relations Voting Choice  Act

Source: The White House

I strongly support California’s Agricultural Labor Relations Voting Choice Act (AB 2183), which will give California’s agricultural workers greater opportunity to organize and collectively bargain for better wages, benefits, and working conditions. Farmworkers worked tirelessly and at great personal risk to keep food on America’s tables during the pandemic. In the state with the largest population of farmworkers, the least we owe them is an easier path to make a free and fair choice to organize a union. I am grateful to California’s elected officials and union leaders for leading the way.

Government should work to remove – not erect – barriers to workers organizing. But ultimately workers must make the choice whether to organize a union.

Unions transform how we work and live: higher wages, better benefits, like health insurance and paid leave, protections against discrimination and harassment, and a safer and healthier workplace. Unions built the middle class. And, unions give workers a voice. Workers’ voices are heard and heeded. Organizing or joining a union, that’s democracy in action. And it’s especially important today for Black and Brown workers whose voices have long been silenced through shameful race-based laws and policies. 

It is long past time that we ensure America’s farmworkers and other essential workers have the same right to join a union as other Americans.

###

Readout of Vice President Harris’s Call with Prime Minister Morawiecki of  Poland

Source: The White House

Vice President Kamala Harris today spoke with Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki of Poland.  The Vice President recognized Poland’s generosity and leadership in hosting millions of Ukrainian refugees and providing critical humanitarian assistance, while also providing vital security assistance to help the Ukrainian people defend their democracy from Russia’s ongoing aggression.  The Vice President reaffirmed the enduring strength of the U.S.-Polish relationship and efforts to bolster our collective security,  including the permanent stationing of the  U.S. Army V Corps Headquarters Forward Command Post in Poznan, which President Biden recently announced as the first permanently-stationed U.S. force presence on NATO’s Eastern Flank.  The Vice President also discussed opportunities to enhance bilateral cooperation on civil nuclear power generation in Poland, which would advance European energy security, support global climate solutions, and create thousands of clean energy jobs in both Poland and the United States. 

###

Readout of President  Biden’s Meeting With Leaders from Legacy Black Civil Rights  Organizations

Source: The White House

President Biden met today with leaders from legacy Black Civil Rights organizations. The group discussed the Biden-Harris Administration’s accomplishments and continued efforts to advance justice and equity for the Black community and all Americans, including cutting health care costs and student debt, increasing public safety, advancing effective and accountable policing, and protecting women’s rights. The group discussed their shared commitment to advancing legislation protecting voting rights and to combatting hate-fueled violence. The leaders also discussed the Administration’s ongoing work to strengthen the economy and advance opportunity for all communities through the Inflation Reduction Act, the CHIPS and Science Act, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, and the American Rescue Plan. 

In addition, the leaders provided the President with their ideas on ways to engage the public on civil rights and other critical issues facing our democracy.

Meeting participants included:

  1. Rev. Al Sharpton, President, National Action Network
  2. Melanie Campbell, President and CEO, National Coalition on Black Civic Participation
  3. Dr. Thelma Daley, National Chair and President, National Council of Negro Women
  4. Damon Hewitt, President and Executive Director, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law                
  5. Derrick Johnson, President and CEO, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People             
  6. Marc Morial, President and CEO, National Urban League
  7. Janai Nelson, President and Director-Counsel, NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund
  8. Maya Wiley, President and CEO, Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
  9. Cedric Richmond, Former U.S. Congressman 

From the White House:

  1. Chiraag Bains, Deputy Assistant to the President for Racial Justice and Equity, Domestic Policy Council
  2. Keisha Lance Bottoms, Senior Advisor to the President for Public Engagement
  3. Sherice Perry, Chief of Staff, Office of Public Engagement
  4. Karine JeanPierre, Assistant to the President and Press Secretary
  5. Susan Rice, Assistant to the President and Domestic Policy Advisor

###

President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Disaster Declaration for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian  Community

Source: The White House

President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Disaster Declaration for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community

Today, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that a major disaster exists for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community and ordered federal aid to supplement the Tribe’s efforts in the areas affected by severe storms from July 17-18, 2022.

The President’s action makes Federal funding available to affected individuals in the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community.

Assistance can include grants for temporary housing and home repairs, low-cost loans to cover uninsured property losses, and other programs to help individuals and business owners recover from the effects of the disaster.

Federal funding is also available to the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community and certain private nonprofit organizations on a cost-sharing basis for emergency work and the repair or replacement of facilities damaged by the severe storms.

Finally, Federal funding is available on a cost-sharing basis for hazard mitigation measures for the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community.

Deanne Criswell, Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Department of Homeland Security, named Andrew F. Grant as the Federal Coordinating Officer for Federal recovery operations in the affected areas. 

Additional designations may be made at a later date if requested by the Tribe and warranted by the results of further damage assessments.

Residents and business owners who sustained losses in the designated areas can begin applying for assistance tomorrow by registering online at http://www.DisasterAssistance.gov or by calling 1-800-621-FEMA (3362) or 1-800-462-7585 (TTY) for the hearing and speech impaired.  The toll-free telephone numbers will operate from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. (local time) seven days a week until further notice. 

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDIA SHOULD CONTACT THE FEMA NEWS DESK AT (202) 646-3272 OR FEMA-NEWS-DESK@FEMA.DHS.GOV.