A Proclamation on National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month,  2022

Source: The White House

During National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, we remember the bright lives of children we have lost to this terrible disease.  We recommit ourselves to finding new therapies to treat and defeat pediatric cancer.  And we pledge to help children not only survive cancer but thrive.
     Cancer remains the leading cause of death by disease for American children under the age of 15, and survivors often face physical, emotional, and cognitive challenges.  Jill and I know from personal experience how a cancer diagnosis can be paralyzing.  Worry and heartache cast a shadow on life’s joys, medical bills mount, and treatment paths are often confusing and difficult to absorb.
     My Administration is committed to ending cancer as we know it.  The First Lady and I reignited the 2016 Cancer Moonshot Initiative, and we have set a goal of cutting the cancer death rate by at least half over the next 25 years.  I formed a new Cancer Cabinet to ensure that Federal agencies are coordinating cancer care programs, research, and development.  And this year, my Administration created the first Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) with the single purpose of expediting breakthroughs in the prevention, detection, and treatment of deadly diseases.  This is one of the pillars of the Unity Agenda I announced in my State of the Union Address.
     Although significant progress has been made, many parents still have to advocate for their children’s basic care when insurance companies refuse to pay.  My Administration is committed to strengthening the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid to help ensure access to preventive care screenings and life-saving treatments.  Thanks to the American Rescue Plan’s provisions that build upon the Affordable Care Act and other actions my Administration has taken, 1 million children have gained health care coverage since I became President, helping to reverse the coverage losses during the previous Administration. And, as part of the Inflation Reduction Act, 13 million Americans will continue to save $800 per year on health insurance premiums — making lifesaving care affordable for millions of American families.  My Administration is also committed to helping families navigate the flood of information that comes with a cancer diagnosis.  For anyone experiencing uncertainty around risk factors, treatment options, or other opportunities for support, you can connect with a trained specialist at 1-800-4-CANCER or visit cancer.gov.
     During this National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month, we recognize the health care professionals, researchers, private philanthropies, social support organizations, and patient advocacy groups who work tirelessly to protect our children’s well-being.  We honor the courage of our children fighting pediatric cancers and the strength of their families and caregivers who never stop loving, supporting, and advocating for them.  We rededicate ourselves to ensuring that every child can enjoy a long, healthy, and fulfilling life.
     NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 2022 as National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month.  I encourage citizens, government agencies, private businesses, nonprofit organizations, the media, and other interested groups to increase awareness of what Americans can do to support the fight against childhood cancer. 
     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirty-first day of August, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-seventh.

                             JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

A Proclamation on National Wilderness Month,  2022

Source: The White House

     From the peaks of the Sierras to the rolling foothills of the Alleghenies, our Nation’s wilderness boasts national treasures that provide opportunities for discovery, wonder, and serenity.  They are also the current and ancestral homelands of Tribal Nations and Indigenous peoples, many of whom have deep cultural, historic, and spiritual connections to these places.  During National Wilderness Month, let us express gratitude for lands and waters that remain in their natural condition, acknowledge the importance of making public lands accessible to all Americans, and rededicate ourselves to conserving and protecting the earth for future generations.
     When designated wilderness areas are left intact, they defend us against climate change, keep us resilient when natural disasters strike, and create a refuge for biodiversity.  Our Nation’s forests offset 10 percent of our greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions every year.  Native grasslands, wetlands, and other healthy soils retain water at faster rates, protecting us against flooding and offering drought relief for surrounding vegetation.  Owing to the beauty of these places — and perhaps anticipating their environmental importance — President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the 1964 Wilderness Act and created the National Wilderness Preservation System.  In the years since, the Congress has designated over 800 wilderness areas comprising more than 111 million acres of land.
     Still, America’s natural spaces are in danger.  Extreme wildfires threaten to destroy our woodlands.  Rising tides imperil our coastlines.  Runoff from toxic chemicals pollutes our rivers and endangers species.  Even if designated wilderness areas appear safe from harm for now, the unpredictable nature of climate change and biodiversity loss looms over our entire Nation.
     In response, my Administration has set ambitious goals to scale back our GHG emissions and chart a new course with clean energy.  We pledged to reduce emissions by up to 52 percent by 2030, achieve 100 percent carbon pollution-free electricity by 2035, and create an economy with net-zero emissions by 2050.  We set the first-ever national conservation goal through the America the Beautiful Initiative to voluntarily conserve at least 30 percent of lands and waters in the United States by 2030.  We are funding ecosystem restoration and reforestation efforts with billions of dollars from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and through the America the Beautiful Challenge, which merges Federal investments with private and philanthropic donations to boost conservation.  We are making strategic investments through the Great American Outdoors Act to conserve at-risk lands, including critical habitats and migration corridors.  On Earth Day, I signed an Executive Order to strengthen our Nation’s, and the world’s, vitally important forests.
     As we reflect upon the work that remains before us, we must acknowledge that not all Americans share equal access to public lands.  I remain committed to ensuring that everyone can benefit from the natural beauty and bountiful gifts of our wild spaces.  I also remain committed to ensuring that Tribal Nations and Indigenous communities can continue sustainably using and connecting with their sacred lands.  My Administration will honor those whose ancestors stewarded these lands since time immemorial.
     This National Wilderness Month, we give thanks for the magnificent beauty that surrounds us, offer our gratitude to the men and women who maintain our public lands, and affirm our duty to safeguard designated wilderness areas and natural spaces across our world.
     NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 2022 as National Wilderness Month.  I encourage all Americans to experience our Nation’s outdoor heritage, to recreate responsibly and to leave no trace, to celebrate the value of preserving an enduring wilderness, and to strengthen our commitment to protecting these vital lands and waters now and for future generations.
     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirty-first day of August, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-seventh.

                             JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

A Proclamation on National Sickle Cell Awareness Month,  2022

Source: The White House

Sickle cell disease (SCD) presents grave health challenges for an estimated 100,000 Americans.  For some, it triggers intermittent episodes of pain, difficulty with vision, and serious fatigue.  Other survivors experience this disease more acutely — SCD can cause infections, strokes, and even organ failure.  For almost everyone impacted, coping with inherited red blood cell disorders means putting plans on pause, living with excruciating pain, paying for expensive treatments, and hoping for a day when medications and doctor visits no longer interrupt life.  During National Sickle Cell Awareness Month, we recognize the perseverance of SCD patients, and we recommit to working with our partners in State and local government, the nonprofit space, and the private sector to develop treatments and cures for this debilitating disease.
     Like many rare diseases, SCD affects our population unevenly.  Black and Brown Americans are disproportionately affected.  About 1 in 13 Black children tests positive for the sickle cell trait, and about 1 in 365 Black Americans develops the disease over the course of their lifetime.  Due to persistent systemic inequities in our health care system, these same patients are also often the last to get help.  Few specialty clinics are available for SCD treatments, information about detecting this disease is not always widely shared, and pain management can be a challenge due to the intermittent nature of sickle cell crises and persistent racial disparities in pain assessment and treatment.  Moreover, there exists no universally effective cure; bone marrow and stem cell transplants have allowed some people to overcome SCD, but low donor availability and treatment-related complications render these procedures unviable for many patients.
     Medical professionals and scientists in my Administration and across our Nation are working to put an end to SCD.  The Food and Drug Administration recently approved new drug therapies to help patients manage their pain.  Through its “Cure Sickle Cell Initiative,” the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is striving to develop safe and effective genetic therapies and exploring applications for machine learning to predict organ function decline in SCD patients.  Additionally, the NIH has invited researchers to apply for funding to support large-scale clinical trials on treating SCD pain symptoms.  We are closer than ever to finding a cure today for all patients, and I am optimistic about our progress.
     Even so, it is still important for Americans to understand the signs of this disease, the risks of inheriting this condition, as well as the various resources available to those who test positive.  Most people with the sickle cell trait do not exhibit symptoms, and many are unaware of their potential to carry on this gene.  Experts agree that it is important to get tested, especially if you have family members who have been diagnosed with SCD.  There are also helpful resources online to learn more about this disease, like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s sickle cell information page at cdc.gov/ncbddd/sicklecell/index.html.
     As we continue our quest to cure sickle cell disease, let us celebrate the strides our health experts have made in understanding and treating this condition.  Let us offer strength to those Americans fighting its effects today and unite in our mission to enhance the quality of life for those diagnosed with SCD.
     NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 2022 as National Sickle Cell Awareness Month.  I call upon the people of the United States to learn more about the progress we are making to reduce the burden of this disease on our fellow Americans.
     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirty-first day of August, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-seventh. 

                             JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

A Proclamation on National Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month,  2022

Source: The White House

This year, nearly 20,000 women in the United States will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer.  Hard to detect and frequently discovered in advanced stages, this disease is often deadly for so many.  Structural barriers inhibit access to quality and affordable health care, and documented disparities in treatment can lead to higher mortality rates for Black women and elderly women in particular.  During Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month, our Nation honors those who are struggling with this dreaded disease, remembers the loved ones we have lost, and recommits to ending ovarian cancer — and all cancer — as we know it.

This issue is personal to me and the First Lady, as it is for so many families.  Earlier this year, we re-ignited the Cancer Moonshot Initiative which I oversaw in 2016. The Cancer Moonshot Initiative has a goal of cutting the cancer death rate in half — at least — over the next 25 years.  My Administration also created, and the Congress has funded, the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) at the National Institutes of Health to revolutionize the way we detect and treat diseases like cancer, Alzheimer’s, and diabetes.  With improved screening and early detection technologies, diagnostics, treatments, and supportive care, we are on the cusp of real breakthroughs.  The incidence of ovarian cancer has decreased over the last decades as survival rates have increased. 

     Of course, there is more work to do.  I promised to protect and build on the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and that is exactly what my Administration will do — including by guaranteeing protections for women with preexisting conditions and preventing insurance companies from dropping patients with ovarian cancer.  The ACA covers visits to a primary care physician and gynecologist without copayments or deductibles, which can lead to earlier detection of ovarian cancer.  We must also increase diversity in clinical trials to ensure that new treatments will work for everyone and to better understand why ovarian cancer impacts some Americans more than others.  My Administration will continue supporting the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration, and other agencies as they broaden outreach to racial and ethnic minority populations and other underrepresented groups and assess whether cancer treatments will be effective for the diverse range of patients who need them.

     Expanding access to care is especially critical as we emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic.  In the early days of the pandemic, Americans missed almost 10 million cancer screenings.  Medical experts in my Administration and around the country encourage women to reschedule these appointments as soon as possible.  Additionally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) “Inside Knowledge about Gynecologic Cancer” website is a useful resource for information on ovarian cancer.  For people who think they may be at risk for this disease, experts have compiled helpful information about ovarian cancer at cancer.gov/types/ovarian and cdc.gov/cancer.  Being informed is a first step toward prevention.

As we observe National Ovarian Cancer month, we will never forget those we have lost.  We honor our health care experts who work tirelessly to save lives.  And we offer strength to women and families across this country fighting ovarian cancer today and in the future.

     NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim September 2022 as National Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month.  I call upon the people of the United States  to speak with their doctors and health care providers to learn more about ovarian cancer.  I encourage citizens, government agencies, private businesses, nonprofit organizations, the media, and other interested groups to increase awareness of what Americans can do to detect and treat ovarian cancer. 

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirty-first day of August, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-two, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-seventh.

                             JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

FACT SHEET: Biden-⁠ Harris Administration Announces Public and Private Sector Actions to Strengthen Teaching Profession and Help Schools Fill  Vacancies

Source: The White House

Our nation’s teachers prepare and inspire the next generation of leaders that are critical to our future. Yet for years, our education system has faced challenges in attracting, recruiting, and retaining qualified teachers – challenges that were made worse by the pandemic. As children across the country start the 2022-2023 school year, too many schools are struggling to fill vacancies for teachers, including with qualified teachers, and other critical school professionals – such as bus drivers, paraprofessionals, nurses, and mental health professionals – positions that are essential to help our students recover academically, access the mental health supports they need, and thrive in and out of the classroom.

Today, the Biden-Harris Administration is announcing new efforts to strengthen the teaching profession and support schools in their effort to address teacher shortages as the new school year begins. This announcement includes new commitments from leading job platforms to make it easier for Americans to find opportunities in the education field, and new initiatives from teachers unions and national and state organizations to expand high-quality pathways into the profession for future teachers.

The President has been clear from day one that to address these long-standing staffing challenges facing our schools, exacerbated by the pandemic, teachers, paraprofessionals, and other school staff need to be paid competitively, and treated with the respect and dignity that they deserve, including through improved working conditions for staff and learning conditions for students. Today’s announcements build on this call, and the actions the President has already taken to invest in and support educators across the country and address staffing shortages. The $130 billion in President Biden’s American Rescue Plan directed to the nation’s K-12 schools have allowed school districts across the country to invest in teacher pipeline programs, increase compensation for teachers, and hire more professionals across the education workforce. ARP funding has helped school districts increase the number of school social workers by 54%, increase the number of school counselors by 22% and increase the number of school nurses by 22% compared to years prior to the pandemic. Today’s announcements reflect additional steps by the Administration and leaders across sectors to continue to tackle this challenge.  

This afternoon, First Lady Jill Biden, Secretary Cardona, Secretary Walsh, Ambassador Rice, the executive leadership of ZipRecruiter, Handshake, and Indeed, and leaders from the National Governors Association, American Federation of Teachers, National Education Association, Council of Chief State School Officers, and American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education will convene in the Roosevelt Room to discuss the staffing challenges schools are facing, these new actions, and additional ways that the federal government, state and local governments, education organizations and the private sector can strengthen the teaching profession.

Talent Industry Announces New Commitments to Help School Districts Source Talent and Help More Americans Find Jobs in Schools.

Today, leading talent recruitment and job platforms are announcing a series of new actions to make it easier for states and school districts to source, recruit, and hire job seeking teachers and school professionals, and to help more Americans find jobs in education:

  • Today ZipRecruiter is launching a new online job portal specifically dedicated to K-12 school jobs. This portal will showcase job openings across public schools throughout the United States, including teachers, nurses, guidance counselors, social workers, mental health counselors, librarians, and more. Schools, districts, and states can partner with ZipRecruiter to have their open roles included for free. The job portal will also feature additional hiring resources including best practices for both job seekers and school districts’ human resource teams. 
  • Handshake will help college students explore careers in education. In October 2022, Handshake will host a nationwide free virtual event to help current undergraduate students learn about pathways in the field of education, including teachers, guidance counselors, school mental health specialists, and school psychologists. This event will provide information on how educators can make an impact and provide practical advice about building a career in the teaching profession. Alongside the event, Handshake will publish a list of all schools and districts hiring students and college graduates for jobs this year, helping aspiring educators kick off their career search. The Handshake network includes 10 million current and recent students at 1,400 two-and four-year colleges and universities nationwide, including 281,000 who have pursued or are pursuing education degrees.
  • Indeed is announcing that it will facilitate virtual hiring fairs for educators throughout the country. These events will specifically focus on the hiring of teachers, administrators, counselors, and other staff. Participating entities will gain access to Indeed’s free suite of hiring tools to manage the end-to-end hiring process, from job postings through interviews.

Biden Administration Announces New Actions and Highlights Resources to Strengthen the Educator Pipeline and Address Shortages.

Today, the Department of Education (ED) and the Department of Labor (DOL) have issued a joint letter to state and local education and workforce leaders encouraging them to take a series of actions to address teacher and school staff shortages and invest in the teaching profession, including:

  • Paying teachers a livable and competitive wage. Secretaries Cardona and Walsh are encouraging governors and district leaders to use American Rescue Plan’s Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds and the $350 billion in State and Local Fiscal Recovery funds to increase teacher pay. Low pay continues to be a significant contributor to a weak teacher pipeline and to a history of high turnover rates. On average, teachers make about 33 percent less than other college-educated professionals. Adjusted for inflation, the average weekly wages of public school teachers has only increased $29 between 1996 and 2021.
  • Expanding high-quality programs that prepare and support teachers, including registered teacher apprenticeship programs. DOL is committing to prioritize the education sector in future apprenticeship funding, including its next round of over $100 million in apprenticeship grants, which will provide critical support for states and other partners looking to start and expand teacher apprenticeship programs. Students need qualified teachers who are prepared to teach them, and who reflect the diversity of our students. Teachers need affordable pathways into the profession. Registered teacher apprenticeship programs allow individuals – including those already working in schools, like teaching assistants – to earn while they learn, receiving pay while they gain teaching skills with the supervision of a mentor teacher, and take coursework to earn their teaching license. This allows teachers to gain robust experience in the classroom before leading their own, and makes becoming a teacher more affordable. Once registered by DOL or their state apprenticeship agency, state and local workforce boards can use Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Title I funds to support these programs. The Secretaries also encourage state and local workforce boards to collaborate with education systems to address non-instructional staffing shortages in schools.
    • States like Tennessee have already used American Rescue Plan funds to invest in and expand registered teacher apprenticeship programs, using immediate resources to make long-term investments in teaching programs in the state that also address current needs.   As in Tennessee, registered teacher apprenticeship programs can be used to scale high-quality pathways into the profession, like residencies and Grow Your Own programs. These models provide robust classroom experience for teachers during their training. Grow Your Own programs specifically help districts develop their own teachers, in partnership with institutions of higher education, including by getting teaching assistants, career changers, and high school students on the pathway to becoming teachers.

National Teacher Unions and State Organizations to Expand High-Quality Pathways for Teachers, including Teacher Apprenticeship Programs

National organizations representing teachers, state school chiefs, governors, and teacher colleges are announcing today that they are working together to expand high-quality registered teacher apprenticeship programs, teaching residencies, and Grow Your Own programs.

  • The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO), the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the National Education Association (NEA), and the National Governors Association (NGA) are announcing that they will work together with other partners in the field to identify best practices and support their members in pursuing registered apprenticeships or other key strategies that ensure teacher quality while offering increased pathways for entrance and growth in the profession.
  • The Pathways Alliance – a coalition of public and private organizations dedicated to supporting a strong and diverse teacher pipeline – is creating national guidelines for registered teacher apprenticeship programs. These guidelines will help states and school districts establish high-quality registered teacher apprenticeship programs, building upon work currently underway to provide guidelines for high-quality teacher residencies.

As part of the Biden Administration’s commitment to supporting and investing in educators, today the White House is holding a Public Service Loan Forgiveness Day of Action.

Earlier this year, the Biden Administration made temporary changes to the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program to make sure teachers and school staff can access the loan forgiveness they are eligible for. As part of today’s Day of Action, leading education organizations, including the American Federation of Teachers and National Education Association, are working to ensure that school staff across the nation are able to take advantage of the temporary changes to the program. To benefit from the temporary changes, borrowers must apply and certify their employment for the period of time they wish to count toward PSLF using the PSLF Help Tool. For more information, please visit www.PSLF.gov. The temporary changes end on October 31, 2022.The White House is urging eligible teachers to take advantage today before time runs out.

###

President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Approves Mississippi Emergency  Declaration

Source: The White House

Today, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. declared that an emergency exists in the State of Mississippi and ordered Federal assistance to supplement the state’s response efforts due to the emergency conditions resulting from a water crisis beginning on August 30, 2022, and continuing.

The President’s action authorizes the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), to coordinate all disaster relief efforts which have the purpose of alleviating the hardship and suffering caused by the emergency on the local population, and to provide appropriate assistance for required emergency measures, authorized under Title V of the Stafford Act, to save lives and to protect property and public health and safety, and to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe in Hinds County.

Specifically, FEMA is authorized to identify, mobilize, and provide at its discretion, equipment and resources necessary to alleviate the impacts of the emergency.  Emergency protective measures, including direct federal assistance, will be provided at 75 percent Federal funding for a period of 90 days.

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

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

Press Briefing by White  House Monkeypox Response Team and Public Health  Officials

Source: The White House

Via Teleconference

2:02 P.M. EDT

MR. FENTON:  Good afternoon.  Thank you for joining us.  I’m Bob Fenton, the White House Monkeypox Response Coordinator. 

Today, Secretary Becerra, Deputy Coordinator Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, Assistant Secretary O’Connell, and I will provide an update on the administration’s effort to distribute vaccines quickly to places that need them; to help states, localities, and providers get shots in arms; and to partner with jurisdictions and LGBTQ+ leaders on the ground to meet impacted communities where they are with vaccinations and information. 

We also have Dr. Jenny McQuiston from CDC’s Monkeypox Incident Response Team on for questions. 

We’re also honored to be joined today by Governor John Bel Edwards of Louisiana to discuss our work together to surge vaccines and other prevention resources to Louisiana ahead of Southern Decadence in New Orleans this upcoming holiday weekend.

Before I turn over to Governor Edwards, let me just take a few key points that make my colleagues — and let me drill down on those. 

First on vaccine supply and distribution.  As I said on Friday, we have dramatically accelerated distribution of vaccine supply over the past several weeks through a strategy that continues to advance equity and ensures vaccines are getting to where they need — they are needed.  And to be very clear, as a result of our efforts, we have enough supply going out into the field to be in a strong position to get two doses of vaccine to everyone in the at-risk community — namely gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men — through intradermal administration.

Second, on vaccinations, we continue to be laser-focused on doing everything within our power to help jurisdictions and clinicians get shots in arms.  We’re seeing more and more jurisdictions adopt the intradermal administration.  As I said Friday, approximately 75 percent of jurisdictions have already adopted this safe and effective approach, and an additional 20 percent are working toward fully operational intradermal method.  In all, that means more shots in arms, more protection from monkeypox, and a faster effective way for us to end this outbreak. 

As of today, 14 jurisdictions have attested to having used more than 85 percent of their vials.  With all of this progress, it’s important to acknowledge that there’s more work we must do together with our partners on the ground to get shots in arms in the highest-risk communities. 

Equity is a key pillar in our response, and we recognize the need to put extra resources into the field to make sure we are reaching communities most impacted by the outbreak.  This requires hyper-localized and hyper-tailored efforts and a strong partnership with local leaders to understand how we can best reach those communities. 

Already, we’ve made allocations of vaccines to the Ryan White clinics, which are trusted sources of care for about a half million individuals living with HIV — about half of the people diagnosed with HIV in the United States.  And that’s why we’re working closely with state and local leaders, like Governor Edwards, to get vaccines and information to large events that bring together large groups of LGBTQ+ individuals — from Southern Decadence in New Orleans, to Black Pride in Atlanta, to Oakland Pride in California. 

And as Dr. Daskalakis will discuss in detail, that’s why we’re launching a new equity intervention pilot program that aims to directly reach queer communities of color that may face barriers in accessing vaccines currently. 

Through this new pilot program, we’ll provide vaccines to health departments, specifically for smaller-scale, community-based vaccination efforts that leverage the deep relationships that organizations already have on the ground in these communities, because we know every shot matters and we’re not going to stop until we can reach at — the highest-risk of con- — contracting monkeypox with the information and vaccines they need to protect themselves.

With that, let me turn it over to Governor Edwards to talk more about vaccination and prevention plans around Southern Decadence this weekend.  Governor Edwards and his team have been strong partners in the fight to end this outbreak, and we’ve been working closely with them to prepare for this weekend’s events. 

Governor Edwards, over to you.

GOVERNOR EDWARDS:  Thank you, Bob.  I appreciate it.  And — and you’re exactly right.  Several weeks ago, I called you to make sure that this event was on your radar; it already was.  And, in fact, you had already started communications with folks here in Louisiana. 

And so, I want to thank Dr. Walensky, because she’s personally made calls into Louisiana and talked to some of our healthcare professionals, but also Dr. Daskalakis as well, who is no stranger to New Orleans.  And he’s been helping us here for — for quite some time.  And, of course, I want to thank Secretary Becerra too. 

This is an example — I think a really solid example — of what a federal-state-local partnership and — and then the community providers as well.  Because the — the public health folks in New Orleans have been tremendous, but also the community providers. 

And it has manifested itself in several, I think, significant ways.  So, for example, you all have sent down multidisciplinary teams to New Orleans to help us to organize and to prepare; to better communicate and do outreach and set up testing and vaccination sites in the community that are going to be convenient for the at-risk population.

At our request, you sent down additional doses so that we could administer more vaccines, both to residents and to visitors around Southern Decadence festival — 6,000 doses.  We thank you so much. 

And with respect to testing, you all are going to pilot a mobile testing facility here around the Southern Decadence festival too.  So we really appreciate that. 

I did want to make sure you know that all of the providers that we’re partnering with in Louisiana, they have moved to the intradermal method of vaccinations.  And so now, rather than one dose per vial, we’re averaging about four and a half doses per vial, and that really helps us an awful lot as we try to administer these vaccinations as widely as possible.  And so, we’re having good luck there. 

And just for those people who may not be familiar with the Southern Decadence festival, we haven’t conducted it since 2019, because it wasn’t done during the first two years of the COVID pandemic.  But this festival can attract up to 300,000 individuals not just from Louisiana or not even from the South, but from around the country.  And we are expecting tens of thousands of people in New Orleans over this Labor Day weekend.

And so, being able to prepare for that and to get a head start on the vaccinations, on the testing, on the communications — all extremely important. 

And I will tell you, my public health officials here at the State of Louisiana have told me as recently as today that the working relationship that they’ve enjoyed with our federal partners around this particular effort is probably as good as they’ve ever seen. 

We — there’s no doubt we will learn lessons over the weekend that we can then share with other folks around the country and help them to do an even better job of preparing for similar events. 

But I want to, on behalf of the State of Louisiana, thank all of our federal partners, but also our partners in New Orleans and our community providers as well.  And we look forward to having as safe an event as we could possibly have over the weekend. 

So, thank you very much, Bob.

MR. FENTON:  Thank you, Governor.  We’re going to go over to Secretary Becerra to speak next.  Thank you.

SECRETARY BECERRA:  Bob, thank you very much.  And Governor Edwards, to you, thank you for joining us.  Thanks for your partnership and all the work that you’re doing to help the folks in Louisiana. 

I’m going to start the way I’ve always started: It is important that we all take monkeypox seriously and that we do everything we can to keep this virus from spreading so we can end this outbreak.  This means communicating and sharing information, getting vaccines to people most at risk, and ensuring those who are infected have access to treatment. 

One of the things we’ve learned from our response to COVID-19 is that it’s important to reach people where they are.  It’s not enough to wait for people to show up at a doctor’s office or a county health department to schedule a vaccination appointment.  We need to set up vaccination clinics where people are, and when we do that, there are better health outcomes for all of us.

Our focus every day is making sure that those most at risk for monkeypox have the information and resources they need — vaccines, tests, treatment — to keep themselves and their loved ones safe. 

As Bob mentioned, our latest effort involves working with state and local governments across the country to set up vaccination clinics at key upcoming festivals.  This is work that started a few weeks back when we allocated additional supplies of JYNNEOS vials to the Pride festival in Charlotte, North Carolina.  At that festival, local public health officials were able to vaccinate 540 people. 

Today, I am happy to announce that we will be allocating an additional supply of the JYNNEOS vaccine vials to the Southern Decadence festival in New Orleans, Louisiana, and the Black Pride festival in Atlanta, Georgia, which will allow up to 5,000 vaccinations at each event.

We’ll also be allocating an additional supply of JYNNEOS vials to two festivals in Oakland, California: the Pride festival, which is also this weekend, and PrideFest on September 11th.  This allocation will allow up to 2,400 additional vaccinations.

And we’re not stopping there.  I’m happy to report that we’re working with additional jurisdictions to ensure that we’re able to set up vaccination clinics at other key festivals.

Since the beginning of this outbreak, we have worked to ensure monkeypox vaccines, tests, and treatments are available.

We began providing vaccines to states and jurisdictions for free within two days of the first confirmed case of monkeypox in the U.S. back in May.

In addition, we increased testing capacity from 6,000 specimens per week to up to 80,000 specimens per week.  And we made 50,000 patient courses of TPOXX available to jurisdictions.  That’s the treatment that people can use if they do have monkeypox.

Last week, we launched the fourth phase of the national vaccine strategy.  So far, we’ve made over one million vials of vaccine available to jurisdictions, which is nearly enough to reach the entire population that’s most at risk.

And finally, we’ve worked with Bavarian Nordic and Grand River Aseptic Manufacturing in Michigan to establish a second fill-and-finish line for the JYNNEOS vaccines in the U.S.  Once the facility is up and running, it will double our capacity to make more JYNNEOS vaccines.

We’ll continue to do all we can to stop this virus from spreading.  As I’ve said, we all have a role to play, and working together will lead to our collective success.

So, thank you for everything you’re doing.  And now let me turn it over to Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, the Deputy Coordinator for the White House National Monkeypox Response. 

DR. DASKALAKIS:  Thank you, Secretary Becerra.  As you outlined, with greater supply of vaccine, our goal is to be even more intentional and targeted in how we work with states and cities to reach people who could benefit from vaccination and the core educational messages that round out the full package of a monkeypox prevention toolkit.

Given the progress we have made toward making the tools available to end this outbreak, our vaccine strategy is to meet people where they seek services, care, or community, especially in communities of color.

We know that Prides and other large LGBTQI+-focused events can do just that. 

Our pilot to provide special vaccine supply and educational resources at these large events started with Charlotte Pride, like you said, in North Carolina with great success.

It demonstrates the power of partnership between federal, state, and local government with the community to work toward the end of the monkeypox outbreak.

As we approach Labor Day weekend, we responded to local governments and the community to provide additional vaccines for Black Pride in Atlanta and Southern Decadence in New Orleans.  These events will reach a diverse segment of the LGBTQI+ community and help address some of the equity gaps that we are seeing in vaccination among people of color.  

But that’s not enough.  We need to work closely with jurisdictions, advocates, local organizations, and service providers on the ground that really know what may be needed to continuously work together to reach deeper in the community, even when there is no big event in town.

So that’s exactly why today we’re announcing an Equity Innovation Pilot that earmarks an additional 10,000 vials of vaccine for smaller equity interventions that are identified by jurisdictions.

This is an exciting new program that is directly based on our conversations and collaboration with local leaders and groups on the ground about what they may need to reach their communities.

Jurisdictions that have used more than 50 percent of their delivered vaccine qualify for an allocation of vaccine to support up to five smaller equity interventions that reach populations that could benefit from monkeypox prevention. 

So what we mean by an equity intervention is what works in your state, county, or city to reach people who we may not be reaching, especially people of color and members of the LGBTQI+ population.

What it means is: It can be working with a specific group or venue that reaches the right people for monkeypox prevention.  Once these innovative strategies have been reviewed by CDC, vaccines will be supplied to jumpstart these ideas and accelerate reach deeper into communities.

We know jurisdictions have already centered equity in their work, but we want to provide additional support to foster even greater innovation in vaccine outreach and education of the communities most at risk.

This allows jurisdictions to try out new strategies that will better reach communities of color and others over-represented in the monkeypox outbreak.

So, great examples include providing vaccines to clinics and organizations not yet reached by current supply; vaccinating at smaller, high-impact events; and placing vaccine in new places like pharmacy-associated clinics that might be less stigmatizing places for some to walk in to seek vaccine.

So an example that we heard from D.C. is that using pharmacy-associated clinics actually resulted in significant improvements in vaccination equity.  This allows others to explore similar innovation.

Working with new organizations, reaching new communities, leveraging new venues, and addressing trends in the local epidemiology of monkeypox through innovative strategies will help states and cities to better place vaccine where people are and address some of the stigma and barriers that have slowed access for some.

MR. FENTON:  Right, we’re going to move over to Dawn O’Connell to speak next. 

Dawn.

MS. O’CONNELL:  Thanks so much, Bob.  Really appreciate it.

At ASPR, we continue to do everything we can to increase the availability and accelerate the distribution of vaccines and treatments nationwide with a focus on making vaccines available to those at highest risk.

As the Secretary just mentioned, by the end of the current Phase 4 allocation, we will be very near to having enough vaccine to offer two doses to the entire high-risk population.

We have more work to do but are making progress.

To date, we have allocated approximately 1.1 million vials of JYNNEOS vaccine to states and jurisdictions.  Of that, we have shipped approximately 771,000 vials to jurisdictions.

As we continue to distribute vaccines, we are making sure and working closely with states and jurisdictions to understand where vaccines are needed the most.

As of yesterday, 14 jurisdictions have reported that they have used 85 percent of their available supply.  This is no change from last week.

As soon as jurisdictions let us know they have used their 85 percent, they can order more, and our Strategic National Stockpile team will ship those additional vials out immediately.

We are in daily communication with jurisdictions, and we continue to work to streamline our operations to help them get vaccines to those that need them most as soon as possible.

As we continue with our day-to-day response, we also are focused on strengthening our future vaccine pipeline and bolstering our domestic supply chain.

Less than two weeks ago, Bavarian Nordic reached an agreement with Grand River Aseptic Manufacturing — or “GRAM” for short — or “GRAM,” as it is known short — to establish the first U.S.-based fill-and-finish line for JYNNEOS in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Yesterday, ASPR’s Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority announced an $11 million investment in GRAM to purchase additional equipment necessary for JYNNEOS production and recruit and train about 75 additional staff to operate the line.

I had the pleasure of traveling to Grand Rapids yesterday, where I met with company officials and saw firsthand the progress being made to stand up the new line.

In addition to the financial backing, we are providing technical assistance to the Bavarian Nordic and GRAM teams, making sure they have access to all the necessary materials, facilitating connections where needed, and helping clear any roadblocks or hurdles to getting this capacity online as quickly as possible.

We anticipate the Michigan line will be up and running by the end of the year, doubling the current capacity to fill and finish the JYNNEOS vaccine.

Our messages to jurisdictions continues to be: If you need vaccines, if you need treatments, or if you need support for your local response, please let us know immediately.

And with that, I’ll turn it over to you, Kevin.

MR. MUNOZ:  Thank you so much, Dawn.  First question, let’s go to Jeannie Baumann at Bloomberg.

Q    Hi, thanks so much for taking my question.  I was wondering, you know, what you’re doing at CDC to sort of collect data on, you know, vaccine administration.

I know you’ve said that the intradermal is safe and effective, but, you know, we’re going to have some real-world evidence.  And I didn’t know if, at some of these big events, you’re going to be, you know, collecting that data and have a way to sort of do follow-up to see if there are any reactions or adverse events. 

Thank you.

MR. FENTON:  Yeah, let me have Dr. Jenny McQuiston from CDC answer that question.

DR. MCQUISTON:  Hi, thank you.  CDC is certainly interested in looking at vaccine efficacy from the perspective of how well is the vaccine working and also vaccine safety, and we have several systems in place that do gather information about that.

CDC operates a system called VAERS — or the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System — and we’re actively looking at, you know, different types of events that might be reported post-vaccination.  And we are actively gathering information from the different jurisdictions and states and cities about which vaccines they’re administering — whether it’s subcutaneous or intradermal — and we are gathering those data now, as we speak. 

If you look on the CDC website, you’re going to start to see a lot of information about vaccine administration.  Right now, we have some states on board, and we’re actively onboarding the rest.  So I think that we’ll be up to full state reporting in about a week, but you can start to get information now if you go on the CDC website and look.

With respect to the vaccines that are being given out at some of these large venues, I think those systems are going to be in place for people who get vaccinated, whether it’s through a special venue or through a normal jurisdictional clinic.  So I think those same systems will be capturing data.

MR. FENTON:  Thank you.  Kevin, and we’ll take another question.

MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s go to Chris Wiggins at The Advocate.

Q    Thank you for taking my question.  I have two questions.  There’s a report from the Houston area of a patient with a confirmed monkeypox infection who has died.  Do you have any information about that case to share?  And now that somebody has died in the U.S., does that change the messaging to the public at all?

And then looking beyond Southern Decadence, people who attended the events in Charlotte the weekend before last reported not seeing many signs indicating where monkeypox vaccines would be available.  And those who did find information had to walk to satellite locations a distance away from the events, making it inconvenient. 

During a press event at Mecklenburg County, they said that no signage was put out in order to protect people’s privacy.  And so, Virginia also said that they would not be doing onsite vaccination at Virginia’s Pride Fest at the end of September. 

I’m wondering what the administration’s message to localities worried about privacy in regards to onsite vaccination is. 

Thank you. 

MR. FENTON:  Yeah, let me start with Dr. Jenny McQuiston down at CDC to answer the first question and talk about the second.  And then I’ll see if Dr. Daskalakis wants to add anything to the second part of the question. 

So, Dr. McQuiston?

DR. MCQUISTON:  Hi, thanks for that.  Yeah, CDC has been in touch with Texas and Harris County, and we are aware that they are reporting a death in a patient that did test positive for monkeypox.  It’s our understanding this patient also had underlying health conditions and had a number of things going on, and I think that additional investigation is needed to know what role monkeypox may or may not have played in their death.  So we’ll be reporting that out as soon as we have more information. 

I think it’s important to emphasize that deaths due to monkeypox, while possible, remain very rare.  In most cases, people are experiencing infection that resolves over time.  And there have been very few deaths even recorded globally.  Out of over 40,000 cases around the world, only a handful of fatalities have been reported. 

It’s serious, and our hearts certainly go out to this family who have lost a loved one.  And while we are doing further investigations to find out what role monkeypox may have played, it’s important to focus that we have mitigation measures in place to prevent monkeypox.  Get vaccinated.  If you’re sick, go to a doctor.  Get tested.  And if you have severe illness, there are treatments that are available.

MR. FENTON:  And then — 

DR. MCQUISTON:  I think if — if you want me to talk a little bit about sort of the Charlotte event, I’ll start and then I’ll pass it on to Dr. Daskalakis. 

I think that feedback that you provided is actually really extraordinarily helpful.  I mean, Charlotte was a pilot project.  So only about 540 vaccines were administered during the Charlotte event.  And I think some of it was trying to see what might be possible, what might be best practices. 

So the information you provided about signage and making sure privacy was considered, I think, will be really important to inform some of these other events.

MR. FENTON:  Let me see if Dr. Daskalakis would like to add —

DR. DASKALAKIS:  I would love to add a bit to Dr. McQuiston.  So I’ll start by saying that public health is a local experience.  And it’s really important that jurisdictions make their plans based on what they expect in their jurisdiction and what’s appropriate for their population. 

So I think it’s important to also respect sort of the strategy that Charlotte may have had in terms of how to get the word out.  And so, 500-plus vaccines is a great success.  It’s not a clinic.  And so really going to Pride and getting vaccinated — any number, especially that high, I think, is remarkable. 

But I’ll say I’ve also spoken to the folks in Atlanta and the folks in New Orleans, and I think their strategy is a bit different.  And so I think the New Orleans event is going to be right in Armstrong Park.  So you’re going to be very clearly in the middle of the French Quarter, very clear where — where testing as well as vaccines will be available.  They have multiple events. 

Same with Atlanta.  They’ve promoted already, through the networks of Black gay Pride.  And they’re actually building on some great successes in Atlanta.  Fulton County just put out data that actually almost 70 percent of their vaccines, so far in their vaccination effort, have actually been given to people who are Black and brown. 

So I think that this is going to be another great experience where the local public health officials work with their community to identify what’s the best way to get the word out at these big events.  So I think it’ll be really exciting to see how it plays out in different venues. 

Thank you.

MR. FENTON:  We’ll take another question, Kevin.

MR MUNOZ:  Let’s go to Emily Woodruff at the New Orleans Advocate.

Q    Hi, there.  This is Emily Woodruff.  I’m with the Advocate and Times-Picayune.  Thank you for taking my question. 

So I’m wondering if you can tell me about the decision to send vaccines to New Orleans for the event rather than in advance.  I know our state officials advocated for more vaccine — vaccines, you know, as far back as July.  And so, most people here won’t probably have even had their second shot by that time — the event that’s this weekend.  So can you tell me about that decision and just how people should think about their level of protection going into this?

MR. FENTON:  Yeah, well, let me start with Dr. Daskalakis to talk about the different Pride events and also the pilot that we talked about, and the importance of reaching out to people to use them to vaccinate those with — at risk to monkey- — to monkeypox.

DR. DASKALAKIS:  Great.  I’ll start, and I’ll make sure Dr. McQuiston doesn’t have anything else to add.  So I’ll hand the baton to her after. 

So I think the decision to send vaccines to New Orleans, specifically for Southern Decadence, was responsive to the community and the local government.  And so I think we heard loud and clear that given this sort of event and the fact that it does attract many gay, bisexual, other men who have sex with men, and others in the queer community to the — to that space, it was a great opportunity to get folks ready for the event in terms of getting some vaccines on the ground early, but also, a great opportunity to reach people who won’t go to a clinic or a vaccine effort, but will feel comfortable in, frankly, less stigmatizing spaces that can occur in the events. 

I think one of the really important things that CDC has done, in terms of setting this up — along with having people on the ground, as you heard from the governor — is being very clear about what guidance is to people after they get their first shot.  So that first shot doesn’t mean that you’re protected for the event. 

We’re going to talk to them about lots of other strategies that they can reduce risk of acquiring monkeypox, but also make it clear that that shot is not for today; it’s for four weeks from now, plus two weeks after that second dose when you get maximum protection.

Dr. McQuiston, not sure if you have anything to add.

DR. MCQUISTON:  I think the only thing I would add is: Yes, we certainly had a request from Louisiana with — asking for large amounts of vaccine, you know, some time ago.  But I think it was actually the interagency decision to move to intradermal dosing that freed up enough doses that we could begin to plan a much larger strategy and knew that we had enough to provide.  And so I think that that is one of the reasons why — why perhaps the vaccine is coming out now for Louisiana rather than in July.  So I just wanted to flag that.

MR. FENTON:  Thank you.

Kevin, we’ll take another question.

MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s got to Fenit with the Washington Post.

Q    Hi, can you hear me?

MR. FENTON:  Yeah, we hear you. 

Q    Demetre, can you expand more on how this equity-focused vaccine distribution is going to work?  You mentioned how it would apply for up to five — to five interventions.  What kind of interventions are we talking about here?

DR. DASKALAKIS:  Great question.  So, it’s going to be very similar to the allocations for the large events.  It just will allow jurisdictions to work with their community to identify a handful — a little package of interventions and equity strategies that may work for them. 

So, I gave some examples.  It can be really in the eye of the beholder.  Again, what happens in the jurisdiction level really involves that important community engagement and figuring out what will work in their space.  So it means letting the CDC know what that plan is, having them review it, and then providing an allocation to address what the vision is. 

So there’s lots of examples.  So, it can be working in specific venues, specific communities.  For instance, like thinking about, like, the House and Ballroom community as one example — is like one strategy that could be great.  It attracts a lot of — of younger folk who are Black and brown.  So it could be a great strategy to sort of connect with that community. 

Those tend to be smaller events and won’t hit the threshold of 50,000.  So it’s really a way to extend the equity plan to not only look at these larger events, but also more local, smaller events.

MR. FENTON:  Kevin, we’ll take another question.

MR. MUNOZ:  Let’s go to MJ Lee at CNN.

Q    Hi, thank you for taking my question; I have two.  The first is on funding.  I was wondering if you could give us an estimate on how much funding the administration estimates that it needs to do everything that it needs to do to try to contain monkeypox and whether there’s going to be an official request that is made to Congress and whether that’s also just sort of complicated by the outstanding requests for COVID funding. 

And then I had a follow-up on Southern Decadence.  And particularly, I’m interested in hearing from the governor.  You know, you had talked about actions being taken to get vaccines to some of the attendees.  But obviously, as you’ve talked about, there are two doses that are necessary.  There’s a lag time before you get full immunity from the vaccine. 

So just wondering if you could talk to us a little bit about what went into going ahead with the event anyway and risk an outbreak and whether there was any consideration given to canceling the event this year. 

Thank you. 

MR. FENTON:  Yeah, thank you for those questions.  You know, we always want to ensure that we have the resources needed to respond to this event and continue discussions to ensure that those resources will be there through ongoing discussions with Congress and the administration.

Let me turn it over to Secretary Becerra to speak specifically to HHS and anything he wants to add around that area. 

And then we’ll turn over your second question to both CDC and Dr. Daskalakis. 

SECRETARY BECERRA:  Thanks, Bob.  And may ask ASPR Administrator Dawn O’Connell to add a little bit as well. 

But what I’ll tell you is that we continue to try to stay apace, stay ahead of what is needed in the various jurisdictions so we can make sure that distribution works for them in partnership.  And what we’ve done is stayed in communication with our congressional partners to try to keep them abreast of the needs to keep this effort going to be able to stop the spread and end the outbreak. 

And so, what we’re going to do is continue to communicate with Congress.  We have different scenarios that have been played out.  You can discuss the pool of individuals who might benefit from the vaccine — that can be any large number of different types of populations.  Obviously, those highest at risk are those that we’re targeting first and foremost.  But what we’re doing is — in conversations with Congress, is trying to make sure that we can stay ahead of the monkeypox outbreak. 

But let me see if Dawn wants to add anything to that. 

MS. O’CONNELL:  Thank you so much, Secretary.  So our focus and priority remains making sure that we have the tools to end this outbreak as quickly as possible.  And if we were to receive additional funding, among the things that funding might go to are additional purchases of vaccine, additional purchases of TPOXX, making sure that we have the antivirals and the vaccine available for those populations that might need it.  And we can use these tools to end the outbreak as quickly as possible. 

So we’re continuing to look across what those budget numbers might be and — and plan accordingly. 

MR. FENTON:  Thank you.  Let’s go to CDC to talk about Southern Decadence.  And I’ll have — see if Dr. McQuiston could add to the decision to support that effort.  And obviously, it’s a local decision to put on Southern Decadence.  What we’re doing is supporting it.  But she could talk about more of the risks there and — and our efforts to support. 

DR. MCQUISTON:  Thanks so much.  Yeah, it is definitely a local decision whether or not to put on an event like this.  And unfortunately, I think the governor was not able to be on for the full press conference, but what I can speak to is that at — from a CDC perspective, we really look at this as an opportunity to reach individuals that need information about monkeypox — how to keep themselves and their loved ones safe.  And so, that’s the spirit in which we’re leaning into the engagements that we’re having here. 

So not only getting vaccine to people who might not have had it yet and would benefit from it, but making sure that the educational measures, they — all of the information that they need to stay safe is something that can be provided along with it. 

So it’s — it’s an opportunity to meet people where they are.  And one of the things that was discussed: It’s also an opportunity to reach those who might not have equitable access to vaccine in — where they live and where they’re able to access care normally. 

So, Demetre, I’m sure you have something to add to that.

DR. DASKALAKIS:  Thanks, Jenny.  I’ll just add that, you know, I think clear messaging is really the cornerstone of how this outbreak has been approached specifically to gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men. 

And regardless of the event, knowledge is power to allow them to make decisions that will help them prevent transmission or acquisition of monkeypox.

And so I think we have really good evidence, as an example, from a Morbidity and — Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report that was released last week that showed that gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men are actually taking steps in their behaviors to reduce risk.

And so it’s about — less about the event and about the people and their dedication to really trying to keep themselves and their communities safe.  And we’re seeing clear signals that this community is doing that. 

Plus, with vaccine availability, this is a fabulous opportunity for individuals to get their first dose.

So all in all, I think that the decision is local.  But at the end of the day, I think that the community, I think, is speaking with their feet, asking for a vaccine; as well as with their actions, reducing some of the behaviors that can lead to acquisition of monkeypox.

MR. FENTON:  Kevin, we’ll take another question.

MR. MUNOZ:  Last question.  Let’s go to Sabrina Wilson at Fox in New Orleans.

Q    Do you hear me?

MR. FENTON:  Yeah, we hear you.

Q    Yeah, so, with all vaccines, of course, you guys know better than I do that there is a lot of hesitancy.  So how do you get people to embrace taking the shots?

MR. FENTON:  Let me first start with CDC and Dr. McQuiston, and then I’ll ask Dr. Daskalakis to add to that.

DR. MCQUISTON:  No, I appreciate that.  You know, the monkeypox vaccine experience has been one that has been quite surprising to me personally at CDC.  There has been no shortage of individuals lining up, wanting vaccine from the very first moment that monkeypox was reported here in the United States.  It’s been keeping up with that demand that, I think, has been the challenge.

So we’ve not really seen a lot of vaccine hesitancy.  I think as more vaccine gets in arms and people become protected, we’ll be able to focus in on maybe who has elected to not get vaccinated and — and what information can we provide to them that might help change their minds. 

And so, I’m sure Demetre has some ideas on this as well.

DR. DASKALAKIS:  I mean, I think you covered it great, Jenny.  But I’ll say that, you know, really looking at what we’re seeing, in terms of vaccine administration, I want to raise up that Fulton County finding where really taking steps to address equity means that their story is a lot different than other parts of the country.

So, like I said, they actually just put out data that almost 69 percent of their vaccines that have been given so far are in — in people of color.  And it just shows that — that really the way that you build confidence is by really making vaccine accessible and making sure that we elevate voices of people who are getting vaccine and — and speak to the community.

So I think that really our next chapter here is not about vaccine hesitancy but about vaccine confidence and making sure that we build in systems that really improve equity and make sure vaccines are getting not only in arms but in arms of people who really need it.

MR. FENTON:  With that, I want to thank you for joining us today, and especially thank Governor Edwards for joining us today and all the questions as we work together through federal, state, and local government to ensure that we vaccinate those at highest risk.  And the — today’s briefed equity events will also do that.

So, thank you.  Have a good day.

2:39 P.M. EDT

Statement of President  Biden On the Passing of President Mikhail  Gorbachev

Source: The White House

Mikhail Gorbachev was a man of remarkable vision. 

When he came to power, the Cold War had gone on for nearly 40 years and communism for even longer, with devastating consequences. Few high-level Soviet officials had the courage to admit that things needed to change. As a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, I saw him do that and more. As leader of the USSR, he worked with President Reagan to reduce our two countries’ nuclear arsenals, to the relief of people worldwide praying for an end to the nuclear arms race. After decades of brutal political repression, he embraced democratic reforms. He believed in glasnost and perestroika – openness and restructuring – not as mere slogans, but as the path forward for the people of the Soviet Union after so many years of isolation and deprivation. 

These were the acts of a rare leader – one with the imagination to see that a different future was possible and the courage to risk his entire career to achieve it. The result was a safer world and greater freedom for millions of people. 

Even years after leaving office, he was still deeply engaged. When Mr. Gorbachev visited the White House in 2009, he and I spoke for a long time about our countries’ ongoing work to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear stockpiles. It was easy to see why so many worldwide held him in such high esteem. 

We send our deepest condolences to his family and friends, and to people everywhere who benefited from his belief in a better world. 

###

Remarks by President  Biden on the Safer America  Plan

Source: The White House

Wilkes University
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania

(August 30, 2022)

3:37 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Mr. Mayor, thank you.  Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.  Before you walk down, I want the Caseys to come up with me, because where I come from, Scranton is Casey’s Country.  (Applause.)  We — we got raised in the same neighborhood, in Green Ridge, not far from two of the best little candy shops in the — in this — in the whole country.  And I just wanted to let — I — they can’t deny me, that’s why I wanted them up here.  (Laughter.)  I want them to know.  

And by the way, this guy is — has more integrity in his little finger than most people have in their whole body.  That’s why I love working with him.

 SENATOR CASEY:  Welcome home.  (Applause.)

THE PRESIDENT:  And — and, like me, he married way up.  (Laughter.)  Way up.  Thank you very much.  Appreciate it.  (Applause.) 

As my mother, Jean Finnegan Biden, from Green Ridge would say, please excuse my back when I’m speaking.  I apologize. 

And by the way, you know, one of the best things of all of being President of the United States is the Marine Band.  (Applause.)  They’re the best in the world.  (Applause.)  Stand up, guys.  They are the very, very, very, very best.  They can not only play; they know how to fight, too.  (Laughter.)  God love you.  Thank you for being here.  Thank you for being here.

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  President Biden, I love you! 

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you very much.  Thank you.  How are you, baby?  How old are you?  (Applause.)  How old are you?

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Nine!

THE PRESIDENT:  You’re almost double figures.  (Laughter.) 

Well, look, folks.  It’s great to be here in Wilkes-Barre.  I mean that sincerely. 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Hi, Mr. President! 

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Welcome home!

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  We love you!

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, thank you. 

Well, thank you so much.  Mayor Brown, thank you for that introduction and the passport into this great city.  

And, Mayor Cognetti, it’s almost — we’re almost near he- — we’re almost in heaven.  We’re almost in Scranton.  (Laughter.)  Almost.  (Applause.)  Being raised in Scranton, they used to say, “You’re going down the line?” 

At any rate, you know, and what a leadership lineup you have here in Pennsylvania. 

I want to thank your outstanding governor, Tom Wolf.  Tom and I have been friends a long time.  He’s truly one of the best governors in the United States of America.  (Applause.)  Not a joke.  Not a joke.  And a stand-up guy.  A stand-up guy. 

And Josh Shapiro is a champion for the rule of law as your Attorney General, and he’s going to make one hell of a governor.  I really mean it.  (Applause.) 

And by the way, he couldn’t be here today — we spoke — Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman.  He’s — when I say he’s a powerful voice — (applause).  I used to be, in the old days, a pretty good athlete.  And if someone was really big and tough, you’d say, “I wouldn’t screw with him if I had a sledgehammer.”  (Laughter.)  Well, I tell you what, Fetterman is a hell of a guy.  A powerful voice for working people.  And he’s going to make a great United States senator.  He’s going to make a great United States senator.  (Applause.)

And as I said, Bobby Casey — he’s one of my closest friends, one of our great United States senators.

And your congressman, Matt Cartwright, is the real reason I’m here.  (Applause.)  I’m in Cartwright Country.  He knows how to deliver for this district, which is so close to my heart.  

Look, I especially want to thank all the members of law enforcement who are here, many of whom are behind me, for always being there for us.  (Applause.)  And we should always be there for them.  

And by the way, also a group that you need badly — you don’t really appreciate until you need them — is the firefighters.  The firefighters have been with me my whole career.  And let me tell you something, there’s an old expression: God made man, then he made a few firefighters — because you got to be crazy to be a firefighter.  (Laughter.)

And by the way, please sit down.  I’m — I’m sorry.  Please sit down.  I keep forgetting.  I —

AUDIENCE MEMBER: (Inaudible.)

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you. 

But look, when I ran for President, I said I looked at the world the way I looked at it growing up in Scranton, and that wasn’t hyperbole.  I meant that.  The families — what families wanted was — in Scranton, when I was growing up — and my mom and dad and my grandpop — was as basic, basic, basic as it is today: a decent job, the opportunity to be treated with dignity.  Everyone — my dad would say, “Everybody — everybody is entitled to be treated with dignity — just simple dignity.”

The fact is that want — they want to be able to go to good schools, sa- — in safe neighborhoods, a decent place to live, and just a fair shot — just a fair shot for their kids.  You know, a peace of mind knowing your kids can go to school or to the playground or the movies or the high school game and come home safely and not have to think about it.

But for too long, too many families haven’t had that peace of mind.  They watch the news and they see kids being gunned down in schools and on the streets.  Almost every single night you turn the news on, that’s what you see.

They see their neighbors lose their loved ones to drugs like fentanyl, which is a flat killer.

They see hate and anger and violence just walking the streets of America, and they just want to feel safe again.  They want to feel a sense of security.  And that’s what my crime plan is all about.
     
You know, I call it the Safer America Plan, and both your members of Congress voted for it.  It’s based on a simple notion: When it comes to public safety in this nation, the answer is not “defund the police,” it’s “fund the police.”  (Applause.)  Fund the police.

And give them — we expect them to do everything.  We expect them to be — to protect us, to be psychologists, and to be sociolog- — I mean, we expect you to do everything.  I’m not joking.  Everything.
     
You realize more police officer are killed dealing with domestic violence than anything else?  Do you realize that?

The point is: We ask so much of you — so much of you.  

I’ve not met a cop who likes a bad cop.  There’s bad in everything.  There is lousy senators.  There is lousy presidents.  There is lousy doctors.  There is lousy lawyers.  No, I’m serious.  But I don’t know any police officer that feels good about the fact that there may be a lousy cop.  And I’m tired of not giving the kind of help they need.

Folks, look, we’re in a situation in this country where we have to give them additional resources they need to get their job done.

Matt gets it — Matt Cartwright.  And I’m not just — this is not hyperbole.  Matt is the chair of the powerful subcommittee that controls the funding for public safety.  He knows what it means, investing in effective and accountable community policing that builds public trust and strengthens public safety.

I’m old enough to remember when cops used to walk the beat in Wilmington and Scranton, because they knew everybody.  They knew the kid — they knew if something was trouble, they knew whose house to go and knock on the door and say, “Mom, your son just did…”

I’m being — I’m not being facetious.  They knew the neighborhoods.
     
As part of the American Rescue Plan I signed into law last year, which they voted for, we set aside 350 billion — with a “B” — billion dollars for state and local governments all across America, and urged them to use it, like your governor did, to make communities safer.

Here in Pennsylvania, Governor Wolf is using $250 million of that money to reduce crime and violence across the state.  And — (applause) — and Mayor Brown — and Mayor Brown just described how it’s helping to fund community policing here in Wilkes-Barre.

But guess what?  Every single Republican member of Congress — every single one in this state, every single one — voted against the support for law enforcement.

They talk about how much they love it; they voted against the funding.  Flat out.  Flat out.  Every Republican in the House, every Republican in the Senate, every single one.

I know we expect so much from our law enforcement officers, so we need to support them.  That’s why my crime plan to help communities recruit, hire, and train nationwide more than 100,000 additional officers — accountable officers — for community policing.  (Applause.)

And I mean it.  Folks, when it comes to fighting crime, we know what works: officers on the street who know the neighborhood — not a joke — who know the neighborhood; who know the families they’re protecting; who get the training they need to be able to do their jobs well; who work to earn the community’s trust.

And as we hire more police officers, there should be more training, more help, and more accountability.

Without public trust, law enforcement can’t do its job serving and protecting all the communities.

If I can just interject for a moment — my deceased son, Beau, he was the Attorney General of the State of Delaware.  And what he used to do is go down, in the east side, the — called the “Bucket” — highest crime rate in the country.  It’s a place where I used to — I was the only white guy that worked as a lifeguard down in that area, on the east side.

And you know where the — you could always tell where the best basketball in the state is or the best basketball in the city is: It’s where everybody shows up.

And he’d go down and hang out and sit on a bench with my — my grandson, who’s now 17 years old.  And the police used to be in the car — the local city police.  And he’d walk up and bang on the window and say, “Get out of the car, damn it, and meet these people.  Let them see you.  Let them know you.  Let them know who you are.”

Well, the truth was — remember what happened to community policing?  We went from having enough cops on the street, to cities doing well, and then deciding they don’t need more police officers, so they reduced the police forces.  So you didn’t have two cops in every vehicle; you had one cop in every vehicle.  And I don’t blame one cop for not getting out in some certain neighborhoods — not getting out of the car.

And what happens is — it used to be — I can remember that when my son was the Attorney General, he’d go around in the tougher neighborhoods and he would ensure that every single cop gave his cellphone number to the local liquor store owner, the local church, the local grocery store, the local hamburger joint so if there was a problem, they’d pick up the phone and call.  Because what do people not want to do in tough neighborhoods?  They don’t want to be the one identified as turning so-and-so in.

I remember going on the east side in Wilmington, in one of those old Victorian two — three-story apartment buildings, and going up to see a woman whose name — she’s passed away, but I won’t mention her name now — and standing in that rotunda that — that part that stuck out around the building. 

And she said, “Joey, I know — I know what’s going on.  They all plan it downstairs.  I can hear them, but I’m afraid to tell anybody — afraid to tell anybody.”  The gangs.  

And so, I got her — so that — I got a phone number for the local cops.  She’d call.  They promised not to identify her, because they knew there’d be retribution.  And the crime rate began to drop.  For real.  Not a joke.

You got to know people.  You got to know, and you got to be able to trust the police.  And the police had to be able to trust the community.  But we slipped away from that.  And we have a hell of a lot fewer cops today than we did when I wrote that initial crime bill.  But now we got to get back to it. 

And, by the way, I’m not making the case there aren’t bad cops.  There are some really lousy cops.  There are some really lousy doctors.  There are some really lousy lawyers.  I mean it. 

But here’s the point: As we’ve seen too often, public trust is frayed and is broken, and it undermines public safety when it gets frayed.  It literally undermines safety.  Families across the country have to ask why, in this nation, for example, so many Black Americans wake up knowing they could lose their lives just by living their lives.

If you come from neighborhoods like I come from down in Delaware, if you have a 16- or 17-year-old son and he gets a driver’s license, you sit down and say, “Look, if you get stopped, put your hands on the wheel.  Don’t do anything.”  Just — I mean, I’m — I’m being serious.  I’m being serious.

But here’s the point: Simply jogging, sleeping in their homes — you know, whether they made headlines or not, they have a lot of lost souls.  Increased trust makes policing more effective and it strengthens public safety. 

And the communities, by the way, that want the police more than any other community are the tough, poor communities.  Black, white, immigrants — they need the help; they want the help.  It’s not that they don’t want it.  They want the help.

Without that, victims don’t call for help, witnesses don’t step forward, crimes go unsolved, justice isn’t served.

I took executive action, which I’m allowed to do as President — I always admired governors who can take executive action — (laughter) — but all kidding aside, to make some of these reforms for federal officers.  I couldn’t do it for state officers.

One, no federal officer is allowed to use a chokehold.  No federal officer can restrict — there’s restricted no-knock warrants.  We created a national database for officers who have misbehaved and been held accountable so they can’t hide.  My plan will help make sure that state and local governments adopt these same reforms. 

And my plan does something else really important: It addresses the opioid epidemic.  You notice how many people are dying of opioid overdoses now?  And, by the way, laced with fentanyl. 

The Attorney General, Shapiro, can tell you more about that than you’d ever want to know, for a fact.  For real.  And it’s been — he’s been such a strong leader on this.  

But we’re going to impose tougher penalties for deadly fentanyl trafficking that’s poisoning communities across this country.  

This is a key part of the Unity Agenda I’m announcing in my State — that I announced in my State of the Union Address.

We can do this.  We have to do this.  We’ll make America safer. 

My plan also takes commonsense action to reduce gun violence and violence overall.  It builds on the progress we made this summer when I signed into law the bipartisan Safer Communities Act, the most significant gun safety law we passed in 30 years.  It took 30 years.  (Applause.)

And we beat the NRA.  (Applause.)  We took them on, and we beat the NRA straight up.  (Applause.)  You have no idea how intimidating they are to elected officials.  The NRA was against it, which means the vast majority — the vast majority of Republicans in Congress couldn’t even stand up and vote for it because they’re afraid of the NRA.

It’s not unusual.  Every Democrat, Republican, senators — they get afraid of certain interest groups. 

They voted against it.

Law enforcement supported it.  Faith leaders and teachers supported it.  Victims of gun violence and their families supported it.  Young people in this country, like the students of the great — this great university, support it. 

And the NRA and the vast majority of congressional Republicans voted against it — saving lives and keeping America safe.  

But guess what?  We took on the NRA, and we’re going to take them on again.  And we won.  And we will win again.  (Applause.)

But we’re not stopping here.  I’m determined to ban assault weapons in this country.  (Applause.)  Determined.  I did it once before, and I’ll do it again. 

For many of you at home, I want to be clear: It’s not about taking away anybody’s guns.  In fact, we should be treating responsible gun owners as examples how every gunowner should behave.  

 
I have two shotguns at home.  I ca- — it’s a long story, but I’m not opposed to guns.  But I support the Second Amendment.  And I support the Second Amendment. 

But the Second Amendment, as one of the most — one of the most conservative justices in history, Justice Scalia, once wrote, “Like…” — quote, “Like most rights, the rights granted by the Second Amendment are not unlimited.”  They’re not unlimited.  (Applause.)

Right now, you can’t go on and buy an automatic weapon.  You can’t go out and buy a cannon. 

And for those brave, right-wing Americans who say it’s all about keeping America — keeping America as independent and safe: If you want to fight against a country, you need an F-15.  You need something a little more than a gun.  (Laughter.)  No, I’m not joking.  Think about this.  Think about the rationale we use — that’s used to provide this.  And who are they shooting at?  They’re shooting at these guys behind me.

Folks, look, I went to every major school shooting around — in the country since I was the Chairman of the Judiciary Committee all the way through as Vice President and President.  Over 48,000 people died from gunshot wounds in 2021 in the United States of America, over 26,000 by suicide.

When guns are the number-one killer — listen to this — the guns are the number-one killer of children in America — of children.  They’re number one.  More children gui- — die from guns than active-duty police and active-duty military personnel combined.

Hear that again: More children in America die from guns than active-duty police and active-duty military in the United States combined. 

We have to act.  We have to act for those families in Buffalo, Uvalde, Newtown, El Paso, Parkland, Charleston, Las Vegas, Orlando.  I’ve been to every one of those sites, sit down with those parents.  I spent four hours last time.  I met with every single one of the parents and families who have lost someone, seen the looks in their faces.

Think about it.  Think about the devastation that’s occurred.  We have to act for all those kids gunned down on our streets every single day that never make the news.  There’s a mass shooting every single day in this country in the streets of America — every single day.

You have to ask — you have to act so our kids can learn to read in school, instead of learning to duck and cover.  (Applause.)  Literally, schools all across America, kids are showing up with psychological damage done to our kids, not just COVID.  With COVID, what its impact — and how it’s impacting us.  And on top of that, a child going to school — children see this on television. 

You know, we’re living in a country awash with weapons of war, weapons that weren’t designed to hunt — were designed to take on an enemy.  There — that’s what they’re designed to do.  For God’s sake, what’s the rationale for these weapons outside of a warzone?  They inflict severe damage.

When I was recently in Uvalde — I almost hesitate to say this, with some of the kids in here — you know what some of the parents had to do?  Supply DNA.  Supply DNA.  Because AR-15s just rips the body apart.  Could not identify — could not identify the body.  And a 20-year-old kid can walk in and buy one?  DNA to say, “That’s my baby.”  What the hell is the matter with us?

AUDIENCE:  Say it again.

THE PRESIDENT:  No, I’m not joking.  Think about it.  What are we doing? 

And by the way, how many — my dad used to love to hunt in the Poconos when we lived in Scranton.  How many deer or bear are wearing Kevlar vests, huh?  (Laughter.)  Not a joke.  

Do you realize the bullet out of an AR-15 travels five times as rapidly as a bullet shot out of any other gun, five times — is lighter — and can pierce Kevlar?

Imagine being a parent — not just losing a child, but not being able to physically identify the child, or the adult, because they’ve literally been blown apart.

We equip — we equip our service members with the most lethal weapons on Earth to protect all of us, protect Americans.  Butwe require them to receive significant training, extensive background checks, mental health assessments.  They have to learn how to lock up and store their weapons responsibly or they get kicked out.  But we let any stranger — an 18-year-old — walk in — a 20-year-old — and buy an AR-15.

That’s why, back in 1994, I took on the NRA and passed the assault weapons ban.  For 10 years, mass shootings were down — 10 years in a row since I passed that legislation in 1994 as a chair- — as a senator.

But in 2004, Republicans let that ban expire.  And what happened?  Mass shootings in America tripled.  Tripled.

It’s time to ban these.  It’s time to ban these weapons.  We did it before, and we can do it again.

Folks — (applause) — it’s time to hold every elected official’s feet to the fire and ask them: “Are for banning assault weapons?  Yes or no.”  Ask them.  If the answer is no, vote against them.  (Applause.)

Look, I’m prouder that, after seven years, we finally have a Senate-confirmed director of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, responsible for fighting gun crime.

For seven years, the other team would not let us appoint anyone to that job — incredibly important job — to help local law enforcement, federal law enforcement, identify the ballistics — a whole range of things.  For seven years.

We finally got it passed this time out, barely.

Seven years, because didn’t they didn’t want anybody in that job.

My plan gives the Bureau the funding to hire more agents, to stop gun trafficking.

And by the way, there’s a lot of states that don’t allow you to purchase certain weapons in the state.  But just cross the state line and go buy it next door, bring it across the state line.  Keep guns out of —

You know what the Mexicans are — Mexico, which has real problems, causing us real problems — you know what their biggest complaint is?  Can’t we stop gun — gun trafficking across the southern border into Mexico.

There are certain gun dealers that are basically — not gun dealers, they’re wholesalers, providing the weapons to anybody who will have the money.

Folks, look, we can help local law enforcement.  We can solve more gun crimes if we have the — someone heading up, which we finally do, this organization that’s designed to track this kind of behavior.

Finally, my plan invests in crime prevention programs that help keep young people from getting in trouble in the first place.

Under my plan, communities can, one, provide after-school and summer job programs they get paid for.  More access to mental health and drug counseling.  More social workers and housing to keep people off the streets instead of when they get out of — when they get out of jail, they get 25 cent — dollars and a bus ticket, and they end up under the same bridge that they were under before.  (Applause.)

This will help prevent crime and get young people to pick up paychecks instead of a pistol.  At the same time, we need to help people getting out of prison successfully reenter society so they don’t get in trouble again.

If you served your time, you shouldn’t be desi- — you shouldn’t be — you shouldn’t be deprived of being able to — if you’ve served it, you shouldn’t be deprived of being able to get a Pell Grant to go to school.  You should be able to — (applause) — to get a degree. 

What’s the best thing you can do?  Make them productive.  They should get access to good jobs where they can earn a decent living.

All these steps will prevent crime, not increase it.  

Let me close with this: A safer America requires all of us to uphold the rule of law, not the rule of any one party or any one person.  Let’s be clear: You hear some of my friends in the other team talking about political violence and how it’s necessary. 

Think about this now.  Did any of you think, even if you’re as old as I am, you’d ever been an election where we talk about it’s appropriate to use force — political violence in America?  It’s never appropriate.  Never.  Period.  Never, never, never.  No one should be encouraged to use political violence.  None whatsoever. 

And look, you know, if we’re in a situation where — to this day, the MAGA Republicans in Congress defend the mob that stormed to Capitol on January 6th.  Defend them.  You all saw it.  I don’t care how frustrated you are. 

You know, when I showed up, one of the things I learned as President, even though I had been Vice President for eight years and done a great deal on the foreign policy for the administration — I showed up at a meeting of the major democracies called the G7.  And I sat down — it was in England — and I sat down for this three-day conference.  And I said, “America is back.”  And Macron, the President of France, turned to me and said, “For how long?”  “For how long?”  Then we had a discussion with Schmidt [Scholz] and all of them — everything.  It just — “For how long?”  

And one of them said to me, “Imagine, Joe, if you turned on the television in Washington, D.C., and saw a mob of a thousand people storming down the hallways of the parliament, breaking down the doors trying to overturn an outcome of election and killing several police officers in the meantime.  Imagine.  Imagine what you’d think.” 

Think about what the world saw.  Not what we saw — what the world saw.  Did you ever think, in the United States, that would happen?

What I find even more incredible is the defense of it.  Cops attacked and assault — assaulted; speared with flagpole — with flagpoles; sprayed with mace; stomped on, dragged, brutalized.  Police lost their lives as a result of that day.  Police lost their lives. 

One of the officers said it was worse than anything he had experienced in war in Iraq. 

So let me say this to my MAGA Republican friends in Congress: Don’t tell me you support law enforcement if you won’t condemn what happened on the 6th.  (Applause.)  Don’t tell me.  Can’t do it.  

For God’s sake, whose side are you on?  Whose side are you on?  (Applause.) 

Look, you’re either on the side of a mob or the side of the police.  You can’t be pro-law enforcement and pro-insurrection.  (Applause.)  You can’t be a party of law and order and call the people who attacked the police on January 6th “patriots.”  You can’t do it.  (Applause.)

What are we teaching our children?  It’s just that simple. 

But now it’s sickening to see the new attacks on the FBI, threatening the life of law enforcement agents and their families for simply carrying out the law and doing their job.  (Applause.)

Look, I want to say this as clear as I can: There is no place in this country — no place for endangering the lives of law enforcement.  No place.  (Applause.)  None.  Never.  Period.  

I’m opposed to defending the police.  I’m also opposed to defending the FBI.  (Applause.)

Look, there’s no greater responsibility for government than ensuring the safety of our people.  Every parent should be able to know when they — the kid leaves home to go to school or just walk the street they’re going to come home safely. 

We can do this.  We have to do this.  We just need to remember who we are.  We are the United States of America.  (Applause.) 

And when we are united, there is not a single thing we cannot do — not a single thing.  (Applause.)  I mean it.

So, folks, let’s remember who in God’s name we are — I really mean it — what our values are, what we believe. 

“We the People” — that how our Constitution starts — or the Declaration.  “We the People.”  It’s who we are.

And, by the way, no one expects politics to be a pattycake.  It sometimes gets mean as hell.  But the idea you turn on a television and see senior senators and congressmen saying, “If such and such happens, there’ll be blood in the street.”

Where the hell are we?

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Bring back common sense!

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, that’s all I’m looking for.

And folks, do me a favor.  (Laughs.)  Presumptuous of me to say that.  But think about doing me a favor.  Please, please elect the Attorney General to the Senate[Governor}.  (Applause.)  Elect that big ol’ boy to be governor[Senator].  (Applause.)

And, by the way, there are a lot of really — and I mean this, I’m not being solicitous — remember what used to be the criticism of Biden when I was running?  “Biden is too bipartisan.  Biden has too many Republican friends.”

There’s a lot of Republicans I’ve worked with for all the years in the Senate.  I got a lot done.  We respected each other.  When we disagreed, we disagreed on principle, but we then went and had lunch together.  Not a joke.

What in God’s name has happened to that in the United States of America?  (Applause.)  So, folks, let’s bring it back.  We can do this.

God bless you all.  And may God protect our troops.  Thank you, thank you, thank you.  (Applause.)
                                              
4:12 P.M. EDT

Statement by NSC Spokesperson Adrienne Watson on National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan’s Trilateral Dialogue with Japan and the Republic of  Korea

Source: The White House

National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, National Security Secretariat Secretary General Akiba Takeo of Japan, and Director of the National Security Office of the Republic of Korea (ROK) Kim Sung-han will meet at the Headquarters of the United States Indo-Pacific Command in Honolulu, Hawaii on September 1, 2022.  The officials will meet bilaterally on August 31.  After the trilateral meeting, Mr. Sullivan will visit the United States Indo-Pacific Command to discuss our alliances in defense of the free and open Indo-Pacific.

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