Full Text Campaign Buzz October 18, 2012: President Barack Obama’s Speech at a Campaign Event at Veterans Memorial Park in Manchester, New Hampshire — Warns Women of Losing ‘Health Care Choices’

CAMPAIGN 2012

CAMPAIGN BUZZ 2012

THE HEADLINES….

Obama Warns Women of Losing ‘Health Care Choices’

Source: ABC News Radio, 10-18-12

JIM WATSON/AFP/GettyImages(MANCHESTER, N.H.)

As the battle for undecided women voters intensifies, President Obama on Thursday warned that Republican nominee Mitt Romney would give more control over women’s “health care choices” to their employers and politicians if he becomes president.

“You’ve got a state legislature up here that sometimes acts like it knows better than women when it comes to women’s own health care decisions. You know, my opponent’s got the same approach,” Obama told a crowd of 6,000 supporters at an outdoor rally in Veteran’s Park….READ MORE

Remarks by the President at a Campaign Event in Manchester, NH

Source: WH, 10-18-12

Veterans Memorial Park
Manchester, New Hampshire

12:02 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, New Hampshire!  (Applause.)  Are you fired up?

AUDIENCE:  Yes!

THE PRESIDENT:  Are you ready to go?

AUDIENCE:  Yes!

THE PRESIDENT:  I’m fired up.  (Applause.)  First of all, I’m fired up about this weather.  (Applause.)  I mean, I’ve got to say that generally when I look at a trip to New Hampshire in October, I’m not thinking it’s going to look like this.  (Applause.)  But this is spectacular.  (Applause.)

It’s good to be back.  And it’s good to be with a great friend and an outstanding governor — Governor Lynch.  Please give him a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  I love you!

THE PRESIDENT:  I love you back.  (Applause.)

And I love your outstanding Senator, Jeanne Shaheen.  (Applause.)  Jeanne was especially happy because it was her granddaughter, Ellie, who sang the National Anthem today.  Give Ellie a big round of applause.  (Applause.)

Nineteen days, New Hampshire.  Nineteen days.  (Applause.)  In nineteen days, you’re going to step into a voting booth, and you’ve got a big choice to make.  It’s not just a choice between two candidates or parties — it’s about two different visions for this country that we love.

Governor Romney’s got his sales pitch.  He’s been running around talking about his five-point PowerPoint plan for the economy.  (Laughter.)  But as we saw the other night — (applause) — what he’s selling is not a five-point plan.  It’s really just a one-point plan:  Folks at the top get to play with a different set of rules than you do.

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Don’t boo, now — vote.  (Applause.)

They can pay lower taxes; they can keep their money offshore; they can buy companies, load it up with debt, lay off workers, strip their pensions, send their jobs overseas — they can still make money doing it, turning a big profit.  It’s the same philosophy that’s been squeezing middle-class families for more than a decade.  It’s the same philosophy that got us into this mess.

For the last four years, I’ve watched the American people, with their resilience and resolve, overcoming the pain and struggle and dealing with the consequences of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.  We’ve worked too hard to let this country go down that path again.  (Applause.)

AUDIENCE:  Four more years!  Four more years!  Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT:  New Hampshire, we cannot grow this economy from the top down.  This economy grows from the middle out, when everybody has ladders of opportunity; if they work hard they can succeed, they can get ahead.  That’s how we move ahead.  When workers have a decent living, have a little money in their pockets — that means they’re out there as customers buying goods, and that means businesses do better, and that means businesses make more profits, then they hire more workers.  That’s how you grow an economy.  (Applause.)

That’s why we can’t go backward.  That’s why we’ve got to move forward.  That’s why I’m running for a second term as President of the United States.  (Applause.)

On Tuesday, Governor Romney took another stab at trying to sell us this $5 trillion tax cut that favors the wealthy.  He took another swing at it, and he whiffed.  (Applause.)  Instead of telling us how he’d pay for it, he said, I’ll let you know after the election.

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  And then when I asked him about it, he said, I’m a businessman, I know the numbers will work — take my word for it.

Now, I’m going to let you in on a little tip:  When a politician tells you he’s going to wait until after the election, it’s not because their plan is so good that they don’t want to spoil the secret.  (Laughter.)  That’s usually not what’s going on.  (Applause.)  And in this case, just about everybody who’s looked at his tax plan says he can’t pay for it without blowing a hole in the deficit, or raising your taxes — raising taxes on the middle class.

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Don’t boo —

AUDIENCE:  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  —  vote.

So then Governor Romney says he’s got another plan to create 12 million jobs in the next four years.  But when folks started crunching the numbers, his jobs plan fell apart even faster than his tax plan.  The Washington Post called it a “bait and switch.” A bait and switch.

So let’s recap.  He’s got a tax plan that doesn’t add up.  He’s got a jobs plan that doesn’t create jobs.  He’s got a deficit plan that doesn’t reduce the deficit.  Listen, New Hampshire, you’ve heard of the New Deal; you’ve heard of the Square Deal and the Fair Deal.  Mitt Romney is trying to sell you a Sketchy Deal.  (Applause.)

We don’t need a sketchy deal.  We know better, because the last time this sketchy deal was tried was in the previous administration — made the same sales pitch; told you the same stuff:  Look, if we cut these taxes, the economy is going to grow so much, the deficit is going to come down, don’t worry about it. Just like they said we didn’t have to pay for two wars.  It didn’t work, and that’s why you’re not buying.  We have been there.  We’ve tried it.  We’re not going back.  We’re moving forward.  I need your help to finish what we started in 2008.  (Applause.)

Now, I made some commitments four years ago.  I told you I’d end the war in Iraq — and we did.  (Applause.)  I said we’d end the war in Afghanistan — we are.  (Applause.)  I said we’d refocus on the terrorists who actually attacked us on 9/11 — and we have.  (Applause.)  And today, a new tower rises above the New York skyline, and al Qaeda is on the path to defeat, and Osama bin Laden is dead.  (Applause.)

Four years ago, I promised to cut middle-class taxes — and we have, by $3,600.  (Applause.)  I promised to cut taxes for small business owners — and we have, 18 times.  (Applause.)  And by the way, you’ll hear Governor Romney talk about small businesses.  What he doesn’t tell you is his definition of small businesses includes Donald Trump — (laughter) — includes hedge fund managers.

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Don’t boo —

AUDIENCE:  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  — vote.

We got back every dime used to rescue the banks.  And then we passed a law to end taxpayer-funded Wall Street bailouts for good.  We put that in place.  (Applause.)

Four years ago, I said in this great country of ours, nobody should go bankrupt when they get sick, and so we passed health reform — yes, I like the name “Obamacare” — (applause) — so your insurance companies can’t jerk you around anymore.  (Applause.)  So young people can stay on their parent’s plans till they’re 26.  (Applause.)  So women can’t be charged more than men for their insurance — being a woman is not a preexisting condition.  (Applause.)

We repealed “don’t ask, don’t tell” — (applause) — because anybody who is willing to sacrifice and serve this country we love shouldn’t be prevented because of who they love.  (Applause.)

When Governor Romney said we should let Detroit go bankrupt, we said, no, thanks; we’re not going to take that business advice.  (Laughter.)  We reinvented a dying auto industry that’s come roaring back to the top of the world.  (Applause.)

And you may have heard, by the way, Governor Romney trying to claim that I did what he advised.  Did you hear that?

AUDIENCE:  Yes!

THE PRESIDENT:  Unbelievable.  (Laughter.)

AUDIENCE MEMBER:  Malarkey!

THE PRESIDENT:  Everybody in the auto industry knows that’s not what he said.  He just went ahead and said it.

Today, four years after the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes, we’re moving forward again.  (Applause.)  After losing 800,000 jobs a month when I took office, our businesses have now added more than 5 million new jobs over the past two and a half years.  Unemployment has fallen from 10 percent to 7.8 percent.  Home values are back on the rise.  The stock market has nearly doubled.  Manufacturing is coming home.  Our assembly lines are getting back to work.  (Applause.)

We need to keep moving forward.  (Applause.)  We’ve got more work to do.  That’s why I’m running for a second term. (Applause.)

AUDIENCE:  Four more years!  Four more years!  Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT:  Look, we have more work to do, though.  I will not be satisfied until everybody who wants to work hard can find a job.  (Applause.)  And that means we’ve got to have a plan to grow not just the economy and create jobs, but create good jobs, and provide security for the middle class.

So, number one, I want to send fewer jobs overseas, sell more products overseas.  (Applause.)  Governor Romney has no problem giving tax breaks to companies that are shipping jobs overseas, or outsourcing.  I want to reward companies that are investing right here — investing in New Hampshire, investing in Manchester, insourcing, opening new plants, hiring new workers — creating new jobs right here in America.  (Applause.)  That’s what we need to do.

I want to control more of our own energy and how we use energy.  After 30 years of doing nothing, we raised fuel standards, so by the middle of the next decade your cars and trucks will go twice as far on a gallon of gas.  (Applause.)  We’ve doubled the amount of renewable energy we generate from sources like wind and solar, even as we’ve increased the production of oil and natural gas.  So today, America is less dependent on foreign oil than at any time in the last two decades.  (Applause.)  Think about that.  Our oil imports are going down.

So now you’ve got a choice between a plan that reverses this progress, or one that builds on it.  Governor Romney feels comfortable with taxpayers providing oil companies $4 billion a year in taxpayer-funded corporate welfare.

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Don’t —

AUDIENCE:  Vote!  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  We’re not going to boo!  We’re going to vote!  (Applause.)

But you know what, I understand why you wouldn’t be happy with that idea, because we should be taking that $4 billion and investing it in the energy sources of tomorrow.  (Applause.)  We don’t want China to win the race for clean energy technology.  We want that technology developed here in the United States of America.  (Applause.)

And, by the way, those investments not only create good jobs here at home, create new industries here at home, but it also reduces the carbon pollution that’s heating our planet.  Climate change is not a hoax.  Droughts and floods and fires, they’re not a joke.  They are a threat to our children’s future and we’ve got to deal with it in a serious way that also grows our economy.  We can do that.  (Applause.)

Number three, I want the best education system in the world right in the United States.  (Applause.)  Michelle and I are only where we are because of the chance an education gave us.  And today, because of the actions my administration took, millions of students all across the country are paying less for college.  (Applause.)  We took a system that was wasting tens of billions of dollars on banks and lenders — we said let’s cut out the middleman, give money directly to the students.  And as a consequence, young people are getting a better deal.  (Applause.)

Now, Governor Romney wants to reverse some of these choices. He wants to gut some of our investment in education to help pay for this $5 trillion tax cut.  I think we should make sure that we are doing more in education:  Hiring new math and science teachers so that they can get the lead in the technology that’s going to shape our economy in the future.  (Applause.)  Provide job training for 2 million workers at our community colleges.  Work with colleges and universities to keep tuition low.  (Applause.)

That’s my agenda for change.  That’s what we need to do.  We can have that future, but you’ve got to vote.  That’s why I’m running for a second term.  (Applause.)

I suspect we’ve got some teachers in the audience.  Governor Romney said hiring more teachers won’t grow our economy.  Then he said class size doesn’t matter.  He said class size doesn’t matter.  There’s not a teacher or a parent who doesn’t believe this.  Making sure that our kids are thriving in math and science — where we know there are going to be more jobs — that will grow our economy.  Having them be able to get a job as an engineer — maybe start the next Apple or the next Intel — that will create jobs.  That should be a national mission.  That’s what we’re fighting for.  (Applause.)

And, by the way, we want our sons to thrive in math and science and engineering, but we also want our daughters to thrive in those fields, too.  (Applause.)  See, we don’t have to order up some binders to find qualified, talented, driven young women who can learn and excel in these fields right now.  (Applause.)  And when these young women graduate, I want them to receive equal pay for equal work.  (Applause.)

I don’t know why this is so complicated.  (Laughter.)  Governor Romney still won’t say whether or not he supported a law to protect that right, no matter how many times he’s asked.  This is not — this is not that hard.  I’ve got two daughters.  I want to make sure they get paid the same as somebody’s sons for doing the same job.  (Applause.)  Pretty straightforward.  Any confusion there?

AUDIENCE:  No!

THE PRESIDENT:  You know where I stand.  Look, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, this was the first bill I signed into law.  (Applause.)  And I know you want the same thing for your daughters, or sisters, or moms, or grandmas as I do.  (Applause.) And this is not — as I said in the debate, this is not just a women’s issue, this is a family issue, this is an economic issue.
I also believe women should make their own health care decisions.  (Applause.)  I know you’ve got — and it’s not just Washington that sometimes deals with this issue.  You’ve got a state legislature up here that sometimes acts like it knows better than women when it comes to women’s own health care decisions.  My opponent has got the same approach.  Governor Romney said he’d end funding for Planned Parenthood, despite all the work it does to provide women with mammograms and breast cancer screenings.

AUDIENCE:  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  Vote!

AUDIENCE:  Vote!  Vote!  Vote!  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  All right, you guys are getting it.  You guys are getting it.  (Laughter.)

We made sure that insurance companies are providing women with contraception.  He supported legislation that would turn those decisions over to a woman’s employer.  Think about that.  Do you think, like, your boss, or your insurance company, or some politician in Concord or Washington should get control of your health care choices?

AUDIENCE:  No!

THE PRESIDENT:  The health care law we passed puts those choices in your hands where they belong.  That’s where they’re going to stay as long as I’m President of the United States, as long — (applause) — as long as you vote.

AUDIENCE:  Vote!  Vote!  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  All right.  Now, we also have to make sure that we’re using the money we’re saving from ending the war in Iraq, winding down the war in Afghanistan, to put our people back to work here doing some nation-building here at home.  (Applause.)

We’ve got a debate on Monday on foreign policy, and I’m very interested in seeing what Governor Romney has to say about that. (Laughter.)  You know, he said that it was “tragic” the way I ended the war in Iraq.  Last week he said we should still have troops in Iraq.

AUDIENCE:  Booo —

THE PRESIDENT:  Vote.  Vote.  (Laughter.)

AUDIENCE:  Vote!  Vote!  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  Look, one of the great honors of my job is serving as Commander-In-Chief, and meeting the amazing men and women in our Armed Services who serve us every single day.  I think bringing our troops home after doing the job they did in Iraq was the right thing to do.  (Applause.)  Reuniting them with their families was the right thing to do.  (Applause.)  The 33,000 troops that we’ve brought home this year from Afghanistan — that was the right thing to do.  (Applause.)

And every brave American who wears this country’s uniform should know this:  As long as I’m your Commander-In-Chief, I will sustain the strongest military the world has ever known.  And when you take off that uniform, we’re going to serve you as well as you’ve served us — because nobody who has fought for us should ever have to fight for a job when they come home, or a roof over their heads when they come home, or the benefits they’ve earned when they come home.  (Applause.)

And finally, we’ve got to cut the deficit by $4 trillion over the next 10 years.  I’ve put forward a plan to do it, and I’ve worked with Republicans and Democrats already to cut spending that we didn’t need or we could afford, and I’m ready to do more.  But I’m not going to cut things like education.  (Applause.)  I’m not going to cut research that helps grow our economy.

We can’t get this done unless we also ask the wealthiest households to pay higher taxes on their incomes above $250,000 — pay the same rate we had when Bill Clinton was President.  We created 23 million new jobs, and we went from a deficit to surplus.  That’s how you do it.  (Applause.)

Governor Romney said he thinks it’s fair that he pays a lower tax rate than a teacher who makes $50,000.

AUDIENCE:  Booo — vote!  Vote!  Vote!  Vote!

THE PRESIDENT:  Vote!

He is wrong.  I’m not going to ask middle-class families to give up your deductions on a home mortgage, or your deductions for raising a kid, just to pay for another millionaire’s tax cut. I’m not going to ask students who are here to pay more for college, or kick kids out of Head Start, or eliminate health insurance for millions of Americans just to pay for a tax cut we don’t need — tax cut we don’t need.  That’s not who we are.  That’s not what we’re about.  (Applause.)

Governor Romney and, frankly, his allies in Congress, they have banked on this idea that somehow in America everybody is on their own.  If you get — if you don’t have health insurance, hope you don’t get sick.  If you can’t afford to start a business or go to college, he says, borrow money from your parents.  You know what, that’s not who we are.  That’s not what we’re about.

We believe in self-reliance, we believe in individual initiative — but we also believe we’re all in this together.  We understand America is not just what can be done for us, but what can be done by us, together, as one nation, as one people — (applause) — black, white, Hispanic, Asian, Native American, gay, straight, abled, disabled, everybody coming together.  That’s what we’re fighting for.  That’s our vision of America.  (Applause.)

That’s the vision we fought for in 2008.  And because of you we were able to make amazing things happen.  You’re the reason there’s a little girl with a heart disorder who needs surgery but now has the security of knowing she’s going to get that surgery because there aren’t any lifetime limits on her insurance coverage.  You made that happen.  (Applause.)

You’re the reason a young man who’ll never — who thought he’d never be able to afford his dream to go to medical school now is going to have that chance.  You made that possible.  (Applause.)

You’re the reason a young immigrant who grew up here and went to school here and pledged allegiance to our flag will no longer be deported from the only country she’s ever called home. (Applause.)

You’re the reason folks who served us so bravely are now embracing their family again and hearing those words:  “Welcome home.”  Welcome home.  Welcome home.   That happened because of you.  (Applause.)

So in 19 days, New Hampshire, you can keep moving this country forward.  In 19 days, you get to choose between the top-down policies that got us into this mess, or the policies that are getting us out of this mess.  In 19 days, you can choose a foreign policy that takes us into wars without a plan to get us out, or turning the page and ending wars responsibly, and bringing our troops home and focusing on building America.  (Applause.)

In 19 days, you can choose to turn back the clock 50 years for immigrants, or gays, or women — or you can stand up and say we are going to move forward — (applause) — that we’re a country that will continue to be one that treats everybody with dignity and fairness; a country where no matter what you look like, or where you come from, or who you love, you can make it if you try.   (Applause.)

That’s what’s at stake, New Hampshire.  That’s why I’m asking for your vote.  I believe in you.  I need you to keep believing in me.
I’m asking for your help to finish the job.  And if you’ll stand with me, and work with me, and knock on some doors for me, make some phone calls with me, if you’ll vote for me in New Hampshire, we’ll win New Hampshire again.  (Applause.)  We’ll win this election.  We’ll finish what we started, and remind the world why the United States of America is the greatest nation on Earth.  (Applause.)

God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.  (Applause.)

END
12:30 P.M. EDT

Campaign Headlines May 30, 2012: ABC News / Washington Post Poll Romney Rating Rebounds Among Women Voters, Obama’s Personal Popularity Rating Slips

CAMPAIGN 2012

CAMPAIGN BUZZ 2012

THE HEADLINES….

Poll: Romney Rebounds Among Women, Obama’s Favorability Slips

Source: ABC News, 5-30-12

Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Alex Wong/Getty Images

POLL ANALYSIS

A sharp advance among women has boosted Mitt Romney to his highest favorability rating of the presidential campaign – albeit still an unusually weak one – while Barack Obama’s personal popularity has slipped in the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll.

Obama still beats Romney in favorable ratings overall, by an 11-point margin, 52 vs. 41 percent. But that’s down from 21 points last month, giving Romney the better trajectory. And both get only even divisions among registered voters, marking the closeness of the race between them.

See PDF with full results, charts and tables here.

This survey comes after a period in which Romney’s chief GOP competitors withdrew from the Republican race and lined up behind his candidacy. Romney clinched his party’s nomination in Texas on Tuesday night….READ MORE

Campaign Buzz May 15, 2012: New New York Times – CBS News has Mitt Romney Leading President Obama 46 – 43% & Leading Among Women Voters — Obama Campaign Claims Bias

CAMPAIGN 2012

By Bonnie K. Goodman

Ms. Goodman is the Editor of History Musings. She has a BA in History & Art History & a Masters in Library and Information Studies from McGill University, and has done graduate work in history at Concordia University. Ms. Goodman has also contributed the overviews, and chronologies in History of American Presidential Elections, 1789-2008, 4th edition, edited by Gil Troy, Fred L. Israel, and Arthur Meier Schlesinger published by Facts on File, Inc. late 2011.

CAMPAIGN BUZZ 2012

IN FOCUS: NEW YORK TIMES – CBS NEWS POLL HAS MITT ROMNEY LEADING PRESIDENT OBAMA 46 – 43 — ROMNEY LEADING WOMEN’S VOTE & 67% FIND OBAMA’S SUPPORT OF GAY MARRIAGE POLITICALLY MOTIVATED

New York Times/CBS News poll — Full poll report

67% In Survey Believe Politics Is Why Obama Backed Gay Marriage The CBS-New York Times Poll makes unpleasant reading for Team Obama:
The talk of the day in political circles in the United States was the New York Times CBS poll. The poll showed that President Barack Obama’s statement in support of gay marriage may have cost him doubly with the public.
The poll confirmed the Gallup findings that among those affected by the statement there were more whom it affected negatively, making them less likely to support Obama in November.
What the Obama campaign team should find even more disturbing is that 67% of those polled believe that Obama delivered his statement due to political considerations rather than out of moral conviction.
One of the pluses that Obama had going for him was that even when people disagreed with him, they still found him likable and a cut above the average politician. This rejection of the president’s sincerity is a bad sign for him.
Another sign in the wind is the weakening of the routinized halo effect. To appropriate Max Weber, in 2008 Obama was genuinely charismatic to the American voter. Now, that charisma has attenuated and Obama’s allies in the press are trying to provide a routinized charisma by heaping constant praise on him to substitute for the genuine article…. – Israel National News, 5-16-12

  • Obama campaign complains about poll that shows Romney leading: The Obama campaign is not happy with a new poll that suggests Mitt Romney has closed the gender gap. The poll published last night by CBS/New York Times shows Obama trailing former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney 46%-43%…. – USA Today, 5-15-12
  • Romney leads Obama 46 – 43 in new NYTCBS poll: Presumptive Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has a slight edge over President Obama in the race for the White House in the latest CBS News/New York Times poll. According to the survey, conducted May 11-13…. – Politico, 5-14-12
  • New CBS/NY Times poll shows Romney leading Obama among women voters: A new CBS News/New York Times national poll of registered voters shows presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney edging President Obama, 46% to 43%.
    Last month, CBS/NYTimes showed Obama and Romney tied at 46%, with other polls echoing the same outcome.
    However, the most telling result of this new survey was that the key-voting block of women now favors Romney over Obama, 46% to 44%. Obama resoundingly won women in 2008, garnering 56% of the vote to then-Republican nominee John McCain’s 43%…. – Washington Times, 5-15-12
  • Obama’s popularity contest: This week, a New York Times/CBS News poll shows women tilting toward Mitt and voters overall favoring him by 46 percent to 43 percent. But you know how girls are. A month ago, according to a CNN/ORC poll, women loved Obama 55 percent to 39 percent…. – Washington Post, 5-15-12
  • Alarm Grows Among Dems About Obama’s Chances: It has taken months of bad news, but Democrats increasingly believe that President Obama might just lose his re-election bid. The latest wake-up call comes in the form of a New York Times/CBS poll showing Republican Mitt Romney in the lead not just…. – Fox News, 5-15-12
  • The New York Times CBS News poll: 5 takeaways: The New York Times/CBS News poll released Monday shows a highly competitive race, with Mitt Romney leading President Barack Obama 46 percent to 43 percent – a result that’s within the poll’s 4-percentage-point margin of error…. – Politico, 5-15-12
  • Obama campaign: NYT/CBS poll ‘biased’: The Obama campaign is criticizing today’s New York Times/CBS News poll, which suggests that Mitt Romney is leading among female voters and that two-thirds of voters think Obama supported same-sex marriage “for political reasons.”
    Forty-six percent of the 615 surveyed said the would vote for Mitt Romney, against 43 percent for the president. 46 percent of women also said they would vote for Romney, versus 44 for the president.
    But the principle issue for the Obama campaign is the motivation behind his support for same-sex marriage: 67 percent of those polled said he made his decision “for political reasons,” against just 24 percent who said he did so because he thinks it is right.
    “The methodology was significantly biased,” Stephanie Cutter, Obama’s deputy campaign manager, said on MSNBC this morning. “It is a biased sample.”… – Politico, 5-15-12
  • Countering Obama, NY Times stands by poll: The New York Times has sent in its response to the Obama campaign’s heavy criticism of today’s NYT/CBS News poll (see previous post), which the campaign objected to, in part, because it surveyed the same group of people surveyed for a poll last month.
    That now controversial poll has Mitt Romney leading Obama among those surveyed — including women — and shows two-thirds believe the president supported same-sex marriage “for political reasons.”
    “We stand by our latest poll with CBS News on same-sex marriage and its use of a call-back survey of respondents from our most recent poll in mid-April,” Times spokesperson Eileen Murphy explained, via email. “While The Times and CBS regularly conduct fresh random sample surveys on a variety of issues, we occasionally employ a short-term callback method of previous respondents when we are interested in analyzing changes in public opinion on timely subjects, as we did, for example, upon the death of Osama bin Laden. As we pointed out when we published the article, results on subgroups from call back surveys have a larger sampling error.”…. – Poltico, 5-15-12

Full Text Obama Presidency April 6, 2012: President Barack Obama’s Speech on the Jobs Creation, Market & Report at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy

POLITICAL SPEECHES & DOCUMENTS

OBAMA PRESIDENCY & THE 112TH CONGRESS:

On Jobs, Obama and Romney Argue Over Fullness of the Glass

Source: NYT 4-6-12

President Obama speaking on Friday at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy in Washington.

Luke Sharrett for The New York Times

President Obama speaking on Friday at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy in Washington.

President Obama on Friday emphasized the last three months of job creation while Mitt Romney argued that Mr. Obama has been a failed economic steward….READ MORE

POLITICAL QUOTES & SPEECHES

President Obama Speaks at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy

President Obama Speaks at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy

Remarks by the President at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy

South Court Auditorium

10:30 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you so much.  (Applause.)  Thank you, everybody.  Everybody, please, please have a seat.  (Applause.)  Everybody, sit down, sit down.  I was going to head over here earlier and they said, no, no, this place is full of women and they’re still settling down.  (Laughter.)  I said, what do you mean settling down?  What are they doing over there?  Just creating havoc.

Welcome to the White House, everybody.  It is a pleasure to be surrounded by so many talented, accomplished women.  It makes me feel right at home.  Although usually, I’ve got my wingman Bo with me.  (Laughter.)

I want to thank everybody who’s made this Forum on Women and the Economy possible.  I thank Mika for helping moderate today and proving that, on your show every morning, that women really are the better half.  (Laughter and applause.)  Joe is not denying it.  (Laughter.)  He’s not denying it.

I want to thank the members of my Cabinet and administration who are participating today.  And I want to thank all of you who’ve come today lending your time and your energy to the critical cause of broadening opportunity for America’s women.

Right now, no issue is more important than restoring economic security for all our families in the wake of the greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression.  And that begins with making sure everyone who wants a job has one.  So we welcome today’s news — (applause) — we welcome today’s news that our businesses created another 121,000 jobs last month, and the unemployment rate ticked down.  Our economy has now created more than 4 million private sector jobs over the past two years, and more than 600,000 in the past three months alone.  But it’s clear to every American that there will still be ups and downs along the way, and that we’ve got a lot more work to do.

And that includes addressing challenges that are unique to women’s economic security — challenges that have been around since long before the recession hit.  And that’s why one of the first things I did after taking office was to create a White House Council on Women and Girls.  I wanted to make sure that every agency across my administration considers the needs of women and girls in every decision we make.  And today, we’re releasing a report on women and the economy that looks at women’s economic security through all stages of life — from young women furthering their education and beginning their careers, to working women who create jobs and provide for their families, to seniors in retirement or getting ready for retirement.

There’s been a lot of talk about women and women’s issues lately, as there should be.  But I do think that the conversation has been oversimplified.  Women are not some monolithic bloc.  Women are not an interest group.  You shouldn’t be treated that way.  (Applause.)  Women are over half this country and its workforce — not to mention 80 percent of my household, if you count my mother-in-law.  (Laughter.)  And I always count my mother-in-law.  (Laughter.)

Every decision made by those of us in public life impacts women just as much as men.  And this report you all have explains some of what we’ve done to try to lift up the lives of women and girls in this country.  But I’d like to spend some time talking about why we’ve done what we’ve done.

For me, at least, it begins with the women who’ve shaped my life.  I grew up the son of a single mom who struggled to put herself through school and make ends meet; had to rely on food stamps at one point to get us by.  But she earned her education, she made it through with scholarships and hard work, and my sister and I earned our degrees because of her motivation and her support and her impact.  I’ve told this story before — she used to wake me up before dawn when I was living overseas, making sure that I was keeping up with my American education, and when I’d complain, she’d let loose with “this is no picnic for me either, buster.”  (Laughter.)  And that’s part of the reason why my sister chose to become a teacher.

When my mom needed help with us, my grandmother stepped up.  My grandmother had a high school education.  My grandfather got to go to college on the G.I. Bill; my grandmother wasn’t afforded those same opportunities even though she had worked on an assembly line, a bomber assembly line in World War II.  Nevertheless, she got a job at a local bank, and she was smart and tough and disciplined, and she worked hard.  And eventually she rose from being a secretary to being vice president at this bank, and I’m convinced she would have been the best president that bank had ever seen, if she had gotten the chance.  But at some point she hit the glass ceiling, and for a big chunk of her career, she watched other men that she had trained — younger men that she had trained — pass her up that ladder.

And then there is the woman who once advised me at the law firm in Chicago where we met.  (Laughter.)  Once — (laughter) — she gave me very good advice.  That’s why I decided to marry her.  (Laughter.)  And once Michelle and I had our girls, she gave it her all to balance raising a family and pursuing a career — and something that could be very difficult on her, because I was gone a lot.

Once I was in the state legislature, I was teaching, I was practicing law, I’d be traveling — and we didn’t have the luxury for her not to work.  And I know when she was with the girls, she’d feel guilty that she wasn’t giving enough time to her work.  And when she was at work, she was feeling guilty she wasn’t giving enough time to the girls.  And like many of you, we both wished that there were a machine that could let us be in two places at once.  And so she had to constantly juggle it, and carried an extraordinary burden for a long period of time.

And then finally, as a father, one of my highlights of every day is asking my daughters about their day, their hopes and their futures.  That’s what drives me every day when I step into the Oval Office — thinking about them.  Every decision I make is all about making sure they and all our daughters and all our sons grow up in a country that gives them the chance to be anything they set their minds to; a country where more doors are open to them than were open to us.

So when I think about these efforts, when we put together this Council on Women and Girls, this is personal.  That’s what is at the heart of all our efforts.  These are the experiences, the prism through which I view these efforts.  And that’s what we mean when we say that these issues are more than just a matter of policy.  And when we talk about these issues that primarily impact women, we’ve got to realize they are not just women’s issues.  They are family issues, they are economic issues, they are growth issues, they are issues about American competitiveness.  They’re issues that impact all of us.

Now, think about it.  When women make less than men for the same work, that hurts families who have to get by with less and businesses who have fewer customers with less to spend.  When a job doesn’t offer family leave to care for a new baby or sick leave to care for an ailing parent, that burdens men as well.  When an insurance plan denies women coverage because of preexisting conditions, that puts a strain on emergency rooms and drives up costs of care for everybody.  When any of our citizens can’t fulfill the potential that they have because of factors that have nothing to do with talent, or character, or work ethic, that diminishes us all.  It holds all of us back.  And it says something about who we are as Americans.

Right now, women are a growing number of breadwinners in the household.  But they’re still earning just 77 cents for every dollar a man does — even less if you’re an African American or Latina woman.  Overall, a woman with a college degree doing the same work as a man will earn hundreds of thousands of dollars less over the course of her career.

So closing this pay gap — ending pay discrimination — is about far more than simple fairness.  When more women are bringing home the bacon, but bringing home less of it than men who are doing the same work, that weakens families, it weakens communities, it’s tough on our kids, it weakens our entire economy.  (Applause.)

Which is why the first bill I signed into law was the Lilly Ledbetter Act — Fair Pay Act — (applause) — to make it easier for women to demand fairness — equal pay for equal work.  We’re pushing for legislation to give women more tools to pay — to fight pay discrimination.  And we’ve encouraged companies to make workplaces more flexible so women don’t have to choose between being a good employee or a good mom.

More women are also choosing to strike out on their own.  Today, nearly 30 percent of small business owners are women.  Their businesses generate $1.2 trillion last year.  But they’re less likely to get the loans that they need to start up, or expand or to hire — which means they often have to depend on credit cards and the mounting debt that comes with them.  And that’s why, through some outstanding work by Karen Mills and the SBA and other parts of our administration, we’ve extended more than 16,000 new loans worth $4.5 billion to women-owned businesses — (applause) — not to mention cut taxes for small businesses 17 times, so that more women have the power to create more jobs and more opportunity.

We’re also focusing on making sure more women are prepared to fill the good jobs of today and tomorrow.  Over the past decade, women have earned well over half of all the higher education degrees awarded in America.  But once they get out of college we still have a lot of ground to cover.  Just 3 percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are women.  Fewer than 20 percent of the seats in Congress are occupied by women.  Is it possible that Congress would get more done if there were more women in Congress?  (Laughter and applause.)  Is that fair to say, Joe?  (Applause.)  I think it’s fair to say.  That is almost guaranteed.  (Laughter.)

And while women account for four in five degrees in areas like education — which is terrific, because obviously there’s no profession that is more important than teaching — we also have to recognize that only two in five business degrees go to women; fewer than one in four engineering and computer science degrees go to women.  They make up just 25 percent of the workforce in the science and technical fields.  No unspoken bias or outdated barrier should ever prevent a girl from considering careers in these fields.  When creativity is limited or ingenuity is discouraged, that hurts all of us.  It denies America the game-changing products and world-changing discoveries we need to stay on top.

We’ve got to do more to encourage women to join these fields as well — make it easier to afford the education that’s required to make it.  Send a clear message to our daughters, which I’m doing every night:  Math, science, nothing wrong with it, a lot right with it.  We need you to focus.  That’s why our education reform, Race to the Top, has put a priority on science and technology and engineering and math education.  It has rewarded states that took specific steps to ensure that all students — especially underrepresented groups like girls — have the opportunity to get excited about these fields at an early age.  And we’ve helped more than 2.3 million more young women afford to pursue higher education with our increases in the Pell grants.  That’s good news.  (Applause.)

Another example — health reform.  It’s been in the news lately.  (Laughter.)  Because of the health reform law that we passed, women finally have more power to make their choices about their health care.  (Applause.)  Last year, more than 20 million women received expanded access to preventive services like mammograms and cervical cancer screenings at no additional cost.  (Applause.)  Nearly 2 million women enrolled in Medicare received a 50-percent discount on the medicine that they need.  Over 1 million more young women are insured because they can now stay on their parent’s plan.  And later this year, women will receive new access to recommended preventive care like domestic violence screening and contraception at no additional cost.  (Applause.)  And soon, insurance companies will no longer be able to deny coverage based on preexisting conditions like breast cancer, or charge women more just because they’re women.  (Applause.)

We don’t know — we haven’t gotten on the dry cleaning thing yet, though.  I mean, I know that that’s still — (laughter) — that’s still frustrating, I’m sure.  (Laughter.)

So when it comes to our efforts on behalf of women and girls, I’m proud of the accomplishments that we can point to.  Yes, we’ve got a lot more to do.  But there’s no doubt we’ve made progress.  The policies we’ve put in place over the past three years have started to take hold.  And what we can’t do now is go back to the policies that got us into so many of the problems that we’ve been dealing with in the first place.  That’s what’s at stake.

When people talk about repealing health care reform, they’re not just saying we should stop protecting women with preexisting conditions; they’re also saying we should kick about a million young women off their parent’s health care plans.

When people say we should get rid of Planned Parenthood, they’re not just talking about restricting a woman’s ability to make her own health decision; they’re talking about denying, as a practical matter, the preventive care, like mammograms, that millions of women rely on.

When folks talk about doing away with things like student aid that disproportionately help young women, they’re not thinking about the costs to our future, when millions of young Americans will have trouble affording to go to college.

And when something like the Violence Against Women Act — a bill Joe Biden authored, a bill that once passed by wide bipartisan margins — is suddenly called to question, that makes no sense.  (Applause.)  I don’t need to — that’s not something we should still be arguing about.  (Applause.)

Now, I don’t need to tell anybody here that progress is hard.  Change can come slow.  Opportunity and equality don’t come without a fight.  And sometimes, you’ve got to keep fighting even after you’ve won some victories.  Things don’t always move forward.  Sometimes they move backward if you’re not fighting for them.

But we do know these things are possible.  And all of you are proof to that.  This incredible collection of accomplished women — you’re proof of change.  So is the fact that for the first time in history, young girls across the country can see three women sitting on the bench of the highest court in the land.  (Applause.)  Or they can read about the extraordinary leadership of a woman who went by the title “Madam Speaker.”  (Applause.)  Or they can turn on the news and see that one of the most formidable presidential candidates and senators we ever had is now doing as much as anybody to improve America’s standing abroad as one of the best Secretaries of State that we’ve ever known.  (Applause.)  And they can see that every single day, another 500 women, just like yourselves, take the helm of their own company right here in America, and do their part to grab those doors of opportunity that they walked through and open them just a little bit wider for the next generation.

As long as I’ve got the privilege of being your President, we’re going to keep working every single day to make sure those doors forever stay open, and widen the circle of opportunity for all our kids.

Thank you for what you do.  Keep it up.  God bless you.  God bless the United States of America.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

END
10:51 A.M. EDT

White House Releases Report on Women and the Economy

Today, at the White House Forum on Women and the Economy, the President will discuss the importance of restoring the economic security for the middle class and creating an economy that’s built to last for America’s women. The President believes we must build an economy where everyone gets a fair shot, everyone pays their fair share, and everyone plays by the same set of rules. As part of today’s Forum the White House released a new report entitled Keeping America’s Women Moving Forward, The Key to an Economy Built to Last, which examines the ways in which the Administration has worked to ensure women’s economic security through all stages of life – from young women furthering their education and beginning their careers, to working women who create jobs and provide for their families, to seniors in retirement or getting ready for retirement. View the report HERE.

“As a father, one of the highlights of my day is asking my daughters about theirs.  Their hopes and their futures are what drive me every day I step into the Oval Office,” said President Obama.  “Every decision I make is all about making sure they and all our daughters and all our sons grow up in a country that gives them the chance to be anything they set their minds to; a country where more doors are open to them than were ever open to us.”

Today, more than ever, women are essential breadwinners in most American families. Yet women in our economy and our work force still aren’t getting a fair shake, earning just 77 cents on every dollar paid to men.  Women now make up nearly 50% of our workforce, are a growing number of breadwinners in their families, and are the majority of students in our colleges and graduate schools. The President believes that expanding economic opportunities for women and ending discriminatory practices is critical to building an economy that restores security for middle class families, where hard work and responsibility are rewarded, and everyone who wants one can find a good job.

Highlights from the Keeping America’s Women Moving Forward report include an overview of how Administration policies impact women at every stage of their lives:

Yong Women Obtaining Higher Education and Beginning their Careers

 Of the additional 3.4 million students who have received Pell grants since the President took office, approximately 2.3 million are women.

 9.4 million students and families have benefitted from the American Opportunity Tax Credit to help pay for college.

 1.1 million women between the ages of 19 and 25 who would have been uninsured currently receive health coverage under a parent’s health insurance plan or through an individually purchased health insurance plan.

 Women and girls across America are benefiting from efforts to promote Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math, (STEM) degrees and careers because women who hold STEM degrees and jobs earn 30% more, on average, than women in non-STEM jobs.

Working Women Providing for their Families and Contributing to Economic Growth

 More than 16,000 Small Business Administration Loans totaling more than $4.5 billion were granted to women-owned small businesses.

 $62.5 million in monetary relief has been obtained for victims of sex-based wage discrimination by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission since January 2010.

 The Payroll tax cut provided an average of $1,000 of tax relief for nearly 75 million women.

 An estimated 4.9 million women were kept out of poverty in 2010 because of expansions in refundable tax credits such as the Earned Income Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit.

 An estimated 20.4 million women are benefiting from expanded access to preventive services such as mammograms, breast and cervical cancer screenings, and prenatal care at no additional cost.

Senior Women in Retirement and Preparing for Retirement

 24.7 million women enrolled in Medicare received preventive services at no additional cost in 2011, including an annual wellness visit, a personalized prevention plan, mammograms, and bone mass measurement for women at risk of osteoporosis.

 More than 2 million women enrolled in Medicare who hit the donut hole saved $1.2 billion in 2011 due to improvements in prescription drug coverage.

 More than $13.6 billion in payments of $250 each were provided to seniors and veterans as part of the Recovery Act, a substantial percentage of which went to women.

 President Obama has committed to protecting Social Security for an estimated 30 million women beneficiaries.

The White House Women and the Economy Forum will address a wide range of Administration accomplishments while focusing on how critical women are to the nation’s economic success. Chair of the White House Council on Women and Girls Valerie Jarrett will deliver opening remarks and introduce a panel, moderated by Mika Brzezinski of MSNBC’s Morning Joe with Senior Administration Officials, private sector and academic leaders participating. Following the opening panel, the President will deliver remarks to an audience of entrepreneurs, academics, stakeholders, business leaders.  Following the President’s remarks, Senior Administration Officials including Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, Attorney General Eric Holder, as well as the Director of the Domestic Policy Council Cecilia Munoz, Executive Director of the White House Council on Women and Girls Tina Tchen and Katharine Abraham, Member of the Council of Economic Advisors,  will lead a series of breakout sessions on a range of topics including: Women at Work, Education, Health, Women’s Entrepreneurship, and Violence Against Women and Girls.

View more about the White House Council on Women and Girls HERE.