Transcripts
Karine Jean-Pierre White House Press Briefing on 10/07/24

Karine Jean-Pierre White House Press Briefing on 10/07/24

Karine Jean-Pierre holds the White House press briefing on 10/07/24. Read the transcript here.

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Karine Jean-Pierre (00:04):

Good afternoon, everyone.

Multiple speakers (00:08):

Good afternoon.

Karine Jean-Pierre (00:11):

Today is a solemn day and a day of remembrance. One year ago, on October 7th, Hamas launched a heinous attack against Israel. On a day that was supposed to be a joyous Jewish holiday of singing and dancing, Hamas terrorists streamed across the border from Gaza into Israel and massacred more than 1,200 innocent people, including 46 Americans at a music festival. They committed horrific attacks of sexual violence. In many cases, these terrorists recorded their acts of barbarity and carnage, chilling, documenting the unspeakable, atrocities they committed for others to see. This morning, the president and the first lady lit a Yahrzeit candle to remember all those who were massacred by Hamas in what was the deadliest day for the Jewish people since the Holocaust.

(01:20)
The President and the First Lady were joined by Rabbi Aaron Alexander of Adas Israel Congregation for the candle lighting in remembrance of the victims of the October 7th attacks. The rabbi recited, God Full of Mercy, a Jewish prayer for the soul of a person who has died. It is recited during burial services and memorial services. Rabbi Alexander is a family friend of the Goldberg-Polin family. Hersh Goldberg-Polin was abducted by Hamas on October 7th and held hostage for almost 11 months until he was murdered by Hamas. The President also issued a statement mourning those who were killed and recognizing the more than 250 innocents, including 12 Americans, who were taken hostage. The President has met with many of their families and grieved with them. As he said this morning, they have been through hell. So many families have lost loved ones on October 7th and will never be the same.

(02:34)
President Biden and Vice President Harris have stood strongly in support of the people of Israel, and they made clear again today they’re fully committed to the safety of the Jewish people, the security of Israel, and its right to exist. As both the president and the vice president said, we must bring the hostages home that who are being held in. President Biden continues to work around the clock to try to reach a ceasefire and hostage release deal that would not only bring the hostages held by Hamas home to their families, but also end the fighting and alleviate the suffering of the Palestinian people in Gaza, many of whom have been living in hellish conditions, and enable a much-needed surge of humanitarian aid in Gaza.

(03:27)
As we reflect on the past year and all that has happened since October 7th, we also mourn the loss of innocent life in Gaza, where tens of thousands of Palestinians have lost their lives. As a result of the conflict that Hamas terrorism has unleashed. President Biden will never stop working to end the suffering of all people, and he continues the work to build the conditions for a lasting peace in the region, so that after this conflict is over, Israelis and Palestinians can live securely side by side in a lasting peace with equal measures of safety, opportunity, and dignity.

(04:10)
Now, moving on to the hurricane, Hurricane Helene, President Biden and Vice President Harris continue to use every tool available to help communities devastated by Hurricane Helene. Over the weekend, President Biden ordered another 500 active duty troops to move into Western North Carolina, in addition to the 1000 troops the president previously ordered to deploy to the state. This is on top of the more than 6,100 National Guardsmen and over 7,000 federal personnel all working together with their state and local counterparts to help people begin their road to rebuilding. Over the last few days, the administration has contacted nearly 450 state and local officials across the region to offer further support. And to date, the president and this administration has helped thousands of Helene survivors just jumpstart their recoveries, providing over $210 million in direct financial assistance with more coming every day. As the president has said, when it comes to this whole of government response, we are sparing no resource here.

(05:29)
Unfortunately, scam artists and bad faith actors and others who are putting politics over people are promoting misinformation about our efforts, including falsehoods about federal assistance. This is wrong, dangerous, and must stop immediately. Elected officials at every level and on both sides of the aisle have also called for an end to these conspiracy theories. False information following a disaster can discourage people from seeking critical assistance when they need it the most. Everyone, especially those in positions of power, must do everything they can to encourage survivors to register for assistance, not discourage them by allowing these falsehoods to fester.

(06:14)
Finally, the President was briefed yesterday and again today on the potential impacts of Hurricane Milton, which forecasts to become a Category 5 storm and make landfall Wednesday on the western coast of Florida. As with Helene, FEMA and other federal agencies are actively pre-positioning life-saving resources in advance of the storm. And earlier today, the president approved the governor of Florida’s request for an emergency disaster declaration, which unlocks additional federal resources to help the state respond to the storm. To everyone in the path of Milton, the time to prepare is right now. Visit ready.gov or go download the FEMA app to make a plan today. The time is right now. Please, please, please listen to local officials. It could save your life.

(07:10)
Now, the Biden-Harris administration is committed to preventing, detecting, and responding to health emergencies globally. On September 27th, Rwanda’s Ministry of Health announced an outbreak of Marburg Virus Disease, MVD, and the Biden-Harris administration is working closely with the government of Rwanda to end the outbreak as quickly as possible. As we have all experienced in recent years, health emergencies are a global issue we must address together. CDC assesses that the risk of the infection with this virus in the United States is low, and there are currently no confirmed MVD cases outside of Rwanda.

(07:48)
Since learning of this outbreak, the United States has committed to making nearly $11 million available to address urgent health needs in Rwanda and surrounding countries. And although there are currently no FDA-approved vaccines or drugs against MVD, the United States also contributed investigational vaccine and therapeutic doses, which arrived in Rwanda this weekend, just one week after we learned of the outbreak. In addition, to keep Americans safe, we are implementing additional precautions for a small select group of travelers arriving in the United States from Rwanda, including additional health screenings. These measures will advance ongoing efforts to protect public health and reassure the traveling public that the risk of MVD spreading during air travel is minimized.

(08:37)
And today we saw the Supreme Court decision and what it means that women in Texas could still be denied critical emergency medical care because of the state’s dangerous and extreme abortion bans. We have seen and have heard the horrific stories of women being denied the care they need because of these laws. Also today in Georgia, the State Supreme Court reinstated an even more extreme abortion ban. All of these laws were made possible when the former president handicapped three Supreme Court justices to overturn Roe v. Wade. They are creating chaos and confusion for women and doctors. The administration has been clear that all patients, including women experiencing pregnancy loss and other pregnancy related emergency, must be able to access the emergency medical care they need, and that is required by federal law.

(09:32)
The stories we hear of women being denied care they need in emergency situation is completely unacceptable. That’s why the Biden-Harris administration has taken a number of important steps to make it easier for women to file complaints if they are denied this essential care and investigate and enforce federal protections under EMTALA. But our fight is not over. After the Supreme Court’s order earlier this year, HHS issued a letter reminding hospitals and provider associations of their obligations under EMTALA, including providing abortion care as a necessary stabilizing treatment. We will continue to make those obligations clear. We will also continue to fight Republican elected officials’ extreme, extreme agenda. And we’ll continue to enforce federal law support hospitals complying with the obligations and defend the administration’s long-standing view that women have the right to access the emergency medical care that they need. And with that, [inaudible 00:10:37]. Thank you for your patience, y’all.

Speaker 1 (10:38):

Sure. If I could just follow up on two of your toppers, first on the abortion access rulings today, not much is going to change with the shape of the courts immediately after November, so what other avenues can the administration pursue in the little time that you have left?

Karine Jean-Pierre (11:01):

As you know, when Roe v. Wade was originally overturned because of the Dobbs decision that was done more than two years ago, the president and the vice president took action. The president on that same day announced some executive actions that he was moving forward with, obviously with the whole of government approach here. And so we’ve taken actions. We’ve taken this very seriously. I don’t have anything to preview to you right this time at this moment, but we’re going to take this very seriously as we have for the past two years.

(11:33)
And look, it is important. It is important for people to be very aware of what’s at stake here. It is important for us to continue to voice what we’re seeing here, women being denied care and their lives being put at risk. And so we’re going to continue to fight. As you know, there’s EMTALA. There’s measures that the DOJ is using to protect doctors and also women who are looking for that care that they should be making about their own body themselves. And we’re going to continue to call out these extreme agendas that we’re seeing from the other side, from Republicans. Look, I don’t have anything to preview today, but it is important to call this out. It is important to say how dangerous this is and how this is a freedom that has been taken away from women.

Speaker 1 (12:25):

Just follow on storms, what’s the confidence that FEMA is prepared to handle what could be two major disasters at the same time? Can you talk a little bit more about what they’re doing specifically with Milton while they’re still handling Helene? And then finally, there was a report, I believe it was NBC, just as we were coming out, that Governor DeSantis is dodging calls with Vice President Harris and President Biden. Is that an issue?

Speaker 2 (13:00):

Is politics starting to sink into this?

Karine Jean-Pierre (13:02):

I mean, that’s really for the governor to speak to, right? You’ve heard me mention, I believe in the gaggle last week when we were heading to Florida and Georgia, we invited the governor to come and survey the damaged areas with the president. Obviously we were in Florida, we invited the governor of Florida to come. It was his decision to not attend or not be there with the president. The president has reached out around Hurricane Helene. He reached out. It is up to the governor. It is really up to the governor. We know, I can say, and I think you’ve heard this from the FEMA administrator, she has been able to speak with the governor. She spoke with him yesterday in regards to Milton, that hurricane coming shortly.

(13:48)
And so, we have been in touch with state and local officials in order to be able to help the people of Florida who are dealing, who are going to be impacted, who were impacted certainly by Helene. And we’re going to continue to certainly pre-position on the ground. And we’re going to support. We’re going to support the communities with whatever they need and whenever. That is our commitment. That is our commitment to the folks who are going to be impacted. So, we’ve been in touch with state and local officials in Florida and we’re going to ensure that we meet in advance what their needs are going to be. And FEMA’s on the ground supporting that, so that’s important. It’s up to the governor. It is up to him. We are doing our part in the Biden-Harris administration, working. Obviously FEMA’s work is on the ground, all hands on deck, whole-of-government robust approach here. And so, again, that’s for Governor DeSantis to speak to.

Speaker 2 (14:48):

But is it accurate that the president and vice president have made outreach efforts and they have not been answered?

Karine Jean-Pierre (14:55):

You’ve asked us. We have made outreach, and regarding certainly hurricane Helene, and as I mentioned, the good thing is the FEMA administrator was able to connect with the governor yesterday. I think that’s important.

(15:10)
But look, we’re going to do the work. We’re going to continue to talk to local and state officials. That is important as well. We’re going to pre-position as this hurricane, hurricane Milton is coming towards, as it seems towards Florida, category five. That’s nothing to joke about. That is very, very serious. And so, we’re taking this serious, as the president has done many, many times when we’ve seen these types of storms coming our way. So, we’re going to do our job. Do our work here.

(15:40)
Go ahead.

Speaker 3 (15:41):

Thanks, Karine. We’re learning that DeSantis refused to take a call from Vice President Harris, specifically around Hurricane Milton. Can you just talk about that and any communication around this new hurricane?

Karine Jean-Pierre (15:53):

Look, that is something for the governor to speak to himself. If you have the president and you have the vice president reaching out to offer up assistance, provided to your constituents, the people who live in your state, to make sure we are doing everything that we need to do from a federal response, and we’re reaching out, offering our support, that’s for the governor. The governor, it’s up to him if he wants to respond to us or not. But what we are doing is we’re working with state and local officials to make sure that we are pre-positioned, to make sure that we are ready to be there for the communities that are going to be impacted. We are doing the job that is needed, that we believe is needed for to protect the communities and to make sure that they have everything that is needed. You heard me talk about the declaration. We approved that for Florida. That’s moving forward. And so, we’re taking this very, very seriously. That’s for the governor to speak to. That is.

Speaker 3 (16:51):

Trump and some of his Republican allies have been spreading misinformation about the federal response to Hurricane Helene. So, what exactly is the White House doing to combat that misinformation? And can you just talk about the impact it’s already having on the ground?

Karine Jean-Pierre (17:03):

It’s a great question. Combating misinformation and disinformation is always, always critically important. It is. You heard the lay down that I gave at the top. The reason I did that at the top is because we wanted to make clear that things are available to the public, folks who are impacted. And that misinformation, disinformation is indeed dangerous. It gets in the way in what we’re trying to do here. It does. And there’s been a lot of falsehoods. Let me just fact check a couple of things because it’s really important. Again, it is wrong. It is dangerous. And I also called out. They’re important people, people who have power, privilege, who are spreading these falsehoods, and they need to stop. They need to stop doing that.

(17:53)
So, disaster relief. This is a falsehood. Disaster relief funds used on immigrants illegally in the U.S. The fact is no money is being diverted from response needs. That’s the fact.

(18:06)
Another falsehood, FEMA confiscating Helene survivor property. That’s false. That is not true. The fact is FEMA cannot seize your property or land.

(18:17)
Another falsehood that’s out there, FEMA will only provide $750 to disaster survivors to support their recovery. That is a falsehood. That is not true. The fact is this is an upfront payment for urgent needs, like food and medication. Many survivors will qualify for more assistance.

(18:37)
Another falsehood, FEMA, FAA are restricting airspace in North Carolina. That is not true. That’s false. The fact is there are no airspace restrictions in North Carolina. So, we’re going to continue to combat these. It’s important to combat them. But people who have a microphone and a podium should not continue to spread this falsehood. It is dangerous. It is incredibly dangerous.

Speaker 3 (19:03):

Is the administration tracking that having an impact on the ground in terms of people not seeking the aid they need, because is that happening?

Karine Jean-Pierre (19:12):

But that’s a concern. That is a concern. And people who need help should seek help from the federal government. There is assistance out there. I talked about hundreds of millions of dollars are already being provided to impacted areas, and now we have hurricane Milton coming. We can’t have this. We cannot. This needs to stop. This needs to stop. If you care about your constituents, if you care about the people, if you care about Americans, you shouldn’t do this. You shouldn’t spread these falsehoods. It is dangerous.

(19:45)
Go ahead.

Speaker 4 (19:45):

Thank you, Karine. Did the president get an update from President Herzog when they spoke this morning about the Iranian response?

Karine Jean-Pierre (19:54):

So, just a couple of things on that. And look, the president, what you saw the president do is honor and commemorate lives that were lost, as I said at the top, and the president called President Herzog because he believed it was appropriate person for the president to call to express his condolences. It was a meaningful and important conversation. And so, that’s what they spoke about. It was focused on commemorating this incredibly sad day.

Speaker 4 (20:30):

Okay. So, there was not a detailed conversation about Iran?

Karine Jean-Pierre (20:32):

I don’t have anything beyond that. It was about offering up his condolences and what the Israeli people must be going through right now.

Speaker 4 (20:41):

Hamas reiterated over the weekend that they see Netanyahu as being the stumbling block to a ceasefire deal. It seemed like the President’s own remarks recently in the briefing room here kind of left open the opportunity for taking that analysis away as well. Does the president feel like he needs to speak with Prime Minister Netanyahu?

Karine Jean-Pierre (21:06):

As the president said himself, there will be a call shortly, soon. I don’t have anything to preview for you at this time. As you know, you hear us say this many, many times, they have decades-long relationship, and in those conversations that they do have, it’s very honest, it’s very frank, and that will continue. I don’t have anything else beyond what the president stated at this podium on Friday or many times before about this particular issue.

(21:33)
Look, we believe the best chance at getting these hostages home is through a ceasefire deal. That’s what the president’s directing his team to continue to work on, and that’s going to be our focus.

(21:46)
Go ahead.

Speaker 5 (21:47):

Karine, just given the projected path and strength of Milton that you were talking about, is any consideration being given to the president perhaps skipping his trip to Germany and Angola?

Karine Jean-Pierre (21:58):

So, the president is monitoring this very, very closely. I just talked about how he’s gotten updates about the hurricane and obviously continuing to get updates on what is happening on the ground after the horrible hurricane, Hurricane Helene. And so, that will continue. I don’t have anything to share about a change in travels or his schedule. And so, certainly if that were to be, we would share that with all of you.

Speaker 5 (22:27):

Is that something that has been discussed at all, the possibility of a schedule change?

Karine Jean-Pierre (22:30):

What I can say is that we are monitoring the hurricane, Hurricane Milton. As you just heard me at the top, it’s going to be a category five. Our job right now is to make sure we make it very, very clear to folks who are on the ground to please listen to local officials, to please be ready and take this very, very seriously. And FEMA and other federal agencies are preparing or pre-positioning on the ground to offer up assistance and to be ready, to be ready for when the hurricane hits. I just don’t have anything to share about any change in schedule.

Speaker 5 (23:07):

Just a quick question on the Middle East. Is the White House currently doing anything to actively push the Lebanon ceasefire proposal that you all announced a couple weeks ago?

Karine Jean-Pierre (23:18):

So look, what I can say is that, look, when it comes to the proposal that you just stated, the 21-day proposal, what we believe is ultimately, ultimately, and the Israelis have said this themselves as well, is that there needs to be an agreement that allows civilians to safely return to their homes on both sides of the border over the long-term. So, we’re going to be having regular consultations with the Israelis, with the Lebanese, and others regarding the right moment to press for such an agreement. But ultimately, that’s where we need to be in order for both sides, both civilians on both sides to return home.

Speaker 5 (23:58):

When you say you’re looking for the right moment to make a push for that proposal, are you saying that moment is not now, that you’re not actively pushing for that right now?

Karine Jean-Pierre (24:06):

I mean, we are in regular conversations. As I said, we continue to have those discussions with Israelis and the Lebanese on this particular issue. We believe that we need this. We need to have a space. You heard me speak about this, to have some space, some diplomatic dialogue in order to get there. And so, that’s what you would need, is a ceasefire, in order to get there. We’re going to have those conversations and we’re certainly… When the right moment to press for such an agreement, we will do so. But the conversation, those discussions continue.

Speaker 5 (24:41):

Okay. But it would be correct to say that the White House is not currently actively pushing on that proposal?

Karine Jean-Pierre (24:46):

What I can tell you is we continue those consultations with Israelis and the Lebanese. That’s what I can share.

(24:51)
Go ahead.

Speaker 6 (24:51):

Thanks, Karine. Following up on the President’s trip, can you just explain a little bit why the president is taking these trips now, and there’s less than a month before the election? What is he trying to accomplish?

Karine Jean-Pierre (25:02):

I mean, look, you’ve heard us talk about the importance of this travel, as he’s going to be going to Germany obviously, and also Angola. The President’s certainly looking forward to that travel. I mean, each of them is very different than the other, but we think it serves as a powerful symbol, a powerful symbol of the U.S.-Germany partnership as you think about the German piece of this trip, and our close cooperation on the world’s most pressing challenges, and to ensure our people have every opportunity for safety and prosperity. And what this visit is going to do, it’s going to underscore the deep commitment and that transatlantic security resolute support. If you think about Ukraine and the self-defense of Ukraine, that’s going to be a big part of this visit and continuing that support, continuing to do everything that we can to stop the Russian aggression. And so, that

Karine Jean-Pierre (26:00):

… that is going to be certainly a big part of that. Continuing contributions to meet the NATO pledge also is going to be a big component of that. And so, this is important. As we see what’s going on in Ukraine, as we continue to see Russia’s aggression, to have that conversation. You have seen the president’s leadership when it comes to Ukraine and what he’s been able to do to make NATO stronger, to have more than 50 countries to support Ukraine in their fight against that aggression of Russia. And so, that’s a big part. Certainly will be a big part of that trip.

(26:35)
And when it comes to Angola, there’s going to be a bilateral meeting that the president will have. And this speaks to the U.S.-Africa relationship that we want to continue, that we want to strengthen. And so, that’s what you’re going to see. There are very two important relationships that is very much connected to what this president has done over the three and a half years if you look at his global leadership. And the president’s very much looking forward to it.

Speaker 7 (27:01):

Let me put it this way-

Karine Jean-Pierre (27:02):

Yeah, sure.

Speaker 7 (27:02):

… he could have taken these trips after the election. He could have taken them in December or January before he leaves office. So what is so urgent about this moment that he needed to do it in October?

Karine Jean-Pierre (27:12):

I appreciate that, but there’s not a lot of time. There really isn’t. Three months is going to fly by. There’s not a lot of time. And so, the president wanted to get this done. We had said, as it relates to Angola and going to the continent, the president had made a commitment and a promise to go to Africa to continue to show his commitment to that relationship. And that’s what the president wanted to keep that promise. And so, three months is not a lot of time. And so, this was the right period of time to go to get that done.

(27:42)
And we’re also going to go to Germany, as I talked about, the continuing that NATO pledge, continuing what we’re doing for Ukraine as they’re fighting against Russia’s aggression. All of these things are really important to our relationships with those partners, but also to what we’re trying to do on behalf of this country, on behalf of Americans. And so, it’s three months. It’s not a long time. As you know, that’s going to fly by. That’s going to fly by.

(28:11)
Go ahead.

Speaker 8 (28:13):

Karine, the other day the president said that if the Israelis strike back in Iran, they ought to do so in a proportionate fashion. He said that he did not believe they should strike nuclear sites. And then he seemed to suggest he didn’t think they should strike energy sites either. So what, in the president’s view, would be proportionate?

Karine Jean-Pierre (28:38):

I’m not going to get into… I appreciate the question. I’m not going to get into what’s proportionate, not proportionate, get into that back and forth.

(28:46)
What I can say is we are continuing to have discussions with the Israelis about their response, obviously, responding to Iran’s attack, almost 200 missiles that went flying into Israel, that we were able to, obviously, at the president’s direction, with the U.S. military aiding in the defense of Israel, which the president was really proud to be able to have done that. Our commitment continues to be very clear on Israel’s security. That’s ironclad. Those conversations continue. I just don’t have anything to add beyond what the president stated.

Speaker 8 (29:23):

From the best we can tell, the president hasn’t spoken with Prime Minister Netanyahu since around August 21st. That’s a long time given the degree of high activity the Israeli forces have been involved in. And it would seem to suggest that, at this point, they don’t have a whole lot to say to each other. But tell us why you think they’ve gone that long.

Karine Jean-Pierre (29:51):

So, look, I would say this: In the past year, the president and the Prime Minister have spoken more than a dozen times in the past year. And they’ve seen each other, as you know, I think you might’ve been with us at those moments when they’ve seen each other. And we have said, National Security Advisor has said this, the president said this himself during, especially, as you said, during these past week or so in these high-stake moments, if you will, the president’s team has been in touch regularly, regularly, practically daily with the Israeli government. And so, we’ve been in close communication and close contact. And that continues. That has been the case for the past year. And so, that’s certainly going to continue. And, look, the president is going to speak to the prime minister. He has said that. And once we have a call to speak to, we will certainly do that.

(30:48)
Go ahead, John.

John (30:50):

Thanks, Karine. When the president came here into the Briefing Room late last week, he said that he expects the election will be free and fair, but he also said, “I don’t know whether it will be peaceful.” What can the administration do? What is the administration doing proactively to prevent that possibility of the election not being peaceful in any way, either leading up to November the 5th or in the aftermath?

Karine Jean-Pierre (31:19):

So, look, I’m not going to get into specifics from here. I think the president was asked a question and he answered it very straightforward and very directly. And I think the president and myself and many others have spoken to what we saw on January 6th of 2021. And so, obviously, there’s always concerns.

(31:42)
And not only that, you know that Americans care about our democracy. They care. They care about preserving and protecting the democracy. And I think that’s something this president has promised to do and will continue to do this in his remaining couple of months in this term.

(31:59)
I’m not going to get into specifics here. I think the president, as I said, was asked a question. He answered it directly. But he also said this is going… I think this is really important, that he believes this is going to be a free and fair election. And so, I’m going to leave it there. I’m not going to get into details.

John (32:17):

Separately, in regards to the relationship or lack of a relationship between the governor of Florida and the leadership of this administration, does it make a coordinated response to tropical weather that much more difficult if the governor is not speaking to the vice president or to the president?

Karine Jean-Pierre (32:36):

So here’s what I can say. We have been talking to state and local officials on the ground. And I think that’s important. Over 15 local officials from communities along the likely path of the storm as we think about Hurricane Milton. And so, we have FEMA on the ground. Administrator Criswell is going to be in Florida if she’s not there already assisting, guiding, providing that help. She has spoken. She spoke to the governor yesterday.

(33:05)
And so, look, we’re going to do our job. We’re going to do what we need to do to make sure communities have what they need as this hurricane is coming our way, potentially category five. And so, that’s not going to stop the federal assistance. That’s not going to stop the job that this president wants to see his team do. We’re going to have a robust, all of government, if you will, federal response to this. And you have seen that. You’ve seen that over the last three and a half years. When it comes to these natural disasters, we are going to make sure that we are there for the American people. And anything else, I would have to leave it to the governor, to his actions, to how he wants to move forward in this. That is for him. That is a question for the governor.

(33:53)
Go ahead, Karen.

Karen (33:54):

Thanks, Karine. You used the phrase incredibly dangerous a couple times talking about the misinformation on the hurricane.

Karine Jean-Pierre (33:59):

Yeah, it is.

Karen (34:00):

And given how widespread it has been over the past few days and how much of an effort FEMA and the administration has made to combat that, how concerned is the president that what we’re seeing now with this storm is perhaps a preview of the misinformation we might have on election day or in the days following that?

Karine Jean-Pierre (34:18):

So, look, misinformation, disinformation is a problem across the board. And we have to combat it. It is something, whether it’s the election, whether what we’re seeing currently right now with hurricane, Hurricane Helene that just came through. And obviously, Milton is on its way sadly. We have to combat that.

(34:38)
And I’m saying they’re dangerous. Yes, because they are. They’re critically dangerous to have this misinformation, disinformation. And that’s why at the top I called out, you have some powerful people out there who continue to spread conspiracy theories. It is not helpful. It is not helpful to what we’re trying to do as we’re trying to assist Americans on the ground in trying to figure out how the best way to respond, what their needs are.

(35:07)
And so, yeah, it’s not ideal. It is dangerous, in fact. And let’s not forget, I do want to say this, when dealing with Hurricane Helene, you heard from Republican governors, Democratic governors speak to their response. South Carolina Governor McMaster, “Federal assistant has been superb. We were asking for everything we need.” And Virginia Governor Youngkin, “Incredibly appreciative of the rapid response.” Governor of Georgia, Governor Kemp, appreciated presidents call offering any “other things we need”; thanked president for giving aid to more counties.

(35:49)
There’s a bipartisan response to Hurricane Helene. And you see that, you hear that from elected officials on both sides of the aisle. They’re very thankful for what the federal government has done and continues to do. But you have this misinformation, disinformation that wants to tear it apart. And this is a time for communities to come together, for all of us to come together. It doesn’t matter if you have an R or a D behind your name; it is a time to come together to actually deliver for these impacted communities. So yeah, it’s dangerous.

(36:23)
Go ahead.

Speaker 9 (36:23):

Thanks, Karine. On the Boeing strike, Boeing is returning to wage talks, and just wanted to see if the White House is participating in any of those conversations, if there’s anything you can share on?

Karine Jean-Pierre (36:36):

So, look, as we’ve always stated, collective bargaining is something that this president believes in. It has worked. You’ve seen that work over the past couple of years under this administration, what we’ve called for it. I don’t have anything to share beyond that. We always believe that it is important for both sides to come to the table in good faith and to make sure that the workers certainly get their fair share.

Speaker 9 (37:01):

On the upcoming foreign travel, you mentioned that the trip that Biden is going to Germany and Angola, but you were asked if it was talked about maybe being pulled down. Just wanted to clarify that the trip is happening?

Karine Jean-Pierre (37:20):

I don’t have any changes to the president’s schedule. That’s what I’ve said. And the president’s looking forward to going on the trip. Certainly. Certainly. And you all know. You all will be the first to know if that changes.

Speaker 9 (37:32):

And do you expect a call with Bibi before the election or is Biden holding out until vice president… Holding out until after the election?

Karine Jean-Pierre (37:39):

President said he was going to call the Prime Minister. I don’t have anything else to share on timing.

(37:43)
Go ahead, Nadia.

Nadia (37:44):

Thank you, Karine. I was wondering whether you could comment on remarks that former President Trump made this morning linking migration, crime, and genetics and, more specifically, this sentence, quote, “We’ve got a lot of bad genes in our country right now,” end quote.

Karine Jean-Pierre (38:05):

Well, that type of language is hateful. It’s disgusting. It’s inappropriate and has no place in our country. I just talked about misinformation, disinformation, and how we have seen a bipartisan response when it came to Hurricane Helene and how we’re trying to bring our country together. It is important to bring people together. And tearing people apart, tearing communities apart is dangerous. And this comes from the same vile statements that we’ve heard about migrants poisoned the blood. That’s disgusting. And so, this president, this vice president, we’re going to continue to forcefully reject this kind of vile, disturbing, hateful, hateful speech. It has no place, no place in this country. And we have

Karine Jean-Pierre (39:00):

… have to respect the rights of all. Respect the rights of all of us coming together, that’s what we want to see, not tearing communities apart, bringing it together. Go ahead.

Speaker 10 (39:14):

Thank you, Karine. A few questions on China. Could you please share what message President Biden sent to President Xi on China’s National Day in the past weekend? And are they planning to talk by phone very soon? What’s the main purpose of this phone call considering the upcoming government transition in the United States?

Karine Jean-Pierre (39:32):

So to your question, on the National Day, the President certainly conveyed the same message that he has done in the past couple of years, which is congratulating the Chinese people on occasion of PRC National Day on October first. As it relates to a call, I just don’t have anything to share with you at this time. Go ahead.

Speaker 11 (39:54):

The president wrote a letter to congressional leadership asking them to add additional funding to the disaster relief effort. And I wondered if there was any more conversations behind the scenes happening to bring them back early.

Karine Jean-Pierre (40:06):

So look, first, the letter’s focused on SBA’s disaster loan program, which could soon run out of funding. And so the president wanted to alert Congress on that. That’s what the letter primarily focused on. And in addition, the FEMA Disaster Relief Fund faces a shortfall at the end of the year. And so the president’s letter was urging Congress to speed up and provide that funding. And that’s what the president wants to see and that’s what the president was calling for.

(40:39)
We want Congress to move appropriately at appropriate speed to get this done. And here’s the thing, in the past, Congress has been able to take quick action, even when there is a recess, to address urgent problems. So this is nothing new. This is nothing new at all. And so the president wanted to be very, very clear about where we are and what the needs are and wanted to show to Congress, in this letter, the urgency of them acting. They need to act.

Speaker 11 (41:11):

Does he believe they should come back early?

Karine Jean-Pierre (41:13):

As I stated, this is not the first time Congress has been able to take action and to act on when it comes to urgent problems, urgent matter. They’ve been able to do that during recess. What we are going to continue to do is lay out the urgency of this getting done. We’re talking about SBA disaster loan program. This is important, important to communities, especially communities that are impacted. Go ahead in the back.

Speaker 12 (41:37):

Thank you. I have questions on two topics. The first, one you mentioned the Supreme Court case regarding emergencies and abortions. The administration has not done much to enforce its interpretation of that law that hospitals have to provide abortions in medical emergencies, particularly for hospitals that patients have reported that’s not happening. Can you talk about the administration’s efforts to ramp up enforcement in that area in the next couple months?

Karine Jean-Pierre (42:06):

Yep. So I would refer you to HHS. This is on their purview, so I would refer you to them.

Speaker 12 (42:11):

And on the storms that are coming and also on Helene, Florida and Georgia both have voter registration deadlines today. Some of the states that are in the path of the storm have them upcoming. Is the administration going to ask the states to extend those deadlines or are you doing anything to prepare for storm damage to exist around election day that make it difficult for people to go vote?

Karine Jean-Pierre (42:36):

No. Understand, and I’ve gotten this question multiple times in variations, so look, this is why it’s important to do this type of response that we’re doing. We want to make sure that the communities are getting the response, they’re getting the recovery from this disaster, and we want to make sure that their voices can be heard in November. So I would certainly refer you to state election officials and certainly CISA as well to speak to that specifically. I just don’t have anything else to share. But this is why, this is what we’re trying to do, trying to combat this misinformation, disinformation, working closely with local and state officials to make sure these communities have what they need so that we can get them back on their feet is so critical. Is so, so critical. As it relates to that specific question, I would have to refer to the state.

Speaker 12 (43:31):

Are you seeing misinformation about the storm and voting or just the storm response in general?

Karine Jean-Pierre (43:35):

What I’m saying, misinformation, disinformation. I’m speaking to our response on the ground, right? We’re trying to get funding on the ground. We’re trying to make sure that people who have been affected can reach out to FEMA, can reach out to federal government asking for assistance. And that is something that’s really important and that’s the misinformation, disinformation that I’m speaking to. And so what our focus is is making sure that that recovery, that response is getting to communities because we do want to make sure, we want to make sure that communities, they’re able to have their voices heard in November.

Speaker 12 (44:13):

Thank you.

Karine Jean-Pierre (44:13):

Okay. Go ahead.

Speaker 13 (44:13):

Thank you, Karine. Congratulations on the promotion.

Karine Jean-Pierre (44:15):

Thank you.

Speaker 13 (44:16):

You’re not leaving us in the briefing room, are you?

Karine Jean-Pierre (44:18):

Unless you want me to. Do you want leave the briefing room?

Speaker 13 (44:20):

No, sure don’t.

Karine Jean-Pierre (44:22):

All right. Okay.

Speaker 13 (44:23):

So the arms dealer that President Biden freed in a prisoner swap, Victor Bout, is now according to the Wall Street Journal, selling weapons to the Houthis. Does President Biden think that is a problem?

Karine Jean-Pierre (44:34):

So look, a couple of things. I can’t confirm that report today, I believe, in the Wall Street Journal. I do want to put out a couple of facts here that is important to note. Look, securing the release of Americans who are being held hostage and wrongfully detained is a big priority. Is a priority for this administration. And I would note that we have been extraordinarily successful in getting that done. It is a top priority to get these Americans, again, wrongfully detained and held hostage. And it’s not easy. It is not an easy thing to do. There are some difficult decisions that we have to make. We’ve been very transparent about that. Very transparent.

(45:21)
As you’re talking about Victor Bout, that was related to Brittney’s release. And so even then, a year and a half ago, we were clear about decisions that have to be made on a number of occasions and it’s incredibly difficult. And we’ve been transparent about it. We’ve been very transparent. So look, we’re going to continue to do what we can, do everything that we can to bring Americans home who are wrongfully detained and held hostage. And again, frankly, we have had an extraordinary record of doing just that, and that’s going to be the president’s top priority.

Speaker 13 (45:59):

And on this issue of funding, the administration has money to send to Lebanon without Congress coming back, but Congress does have to come back to approve money to send to people in North Carolina. Do I have that right?

Karine Jean-Pierre (46:15):

Here’s what I’m going to be very clear about. The president and the vice president has had a robust whole of government response to this. Hundreds of millions of dollars, I said it at the top, more than $200 million that we have directly put towards survivors here for disaster help. And that’s because of this president’s commitment to make sure that we are there for communities that are impacted. We take this very seriously again. We take this very seriously and before the hurricane hit, we pre positions more than 1500 federal folks on the ground to help.

(46:57)
And so we have made sure that every state has gotten their storm requested emergency declaration. They requested it, and we made sure they received it. We’ve taken this very seriously, more than $200 million that we have provided to the impacted areas. But instead, people want to do disinformation, misinformation, which is dangerous. Which is dangerous. Because then when folks on the ground hear that, they may not want to ask for the help that they need. That is there for them. That is there for them. That’s our focus here.

Speaker 13 (47:31):

But President Biden is fond of saying, “Show me your budget and I will tell you what you value.” If he’s got money for people in Lebanon right now without Congress having to come back, what does it say about his values? There’s not enough money right now for people in North Carolina who need it. That’s not misinformation.

Karine Jean-Pierre (47:50):

Wait. No, that is. Your whole premise of the question is misinformation, sir.

Speaker 13 (47:56):

Excuse me? Which part?

Karine Jean-Pierre (47:56):

Yes, yes. It’s misinformation.

Speaker 13 (47:58):

Is there money that’s sent to Lebanon right now?

Karine Jean-Pierre (48:00):

I just mentioned to you that we provided more than $200 million to folks who are impacted in the area, and I just shared with you that people are deciding not to-

Speaker 13 (48:10):

[inaudible 00:48:11].

Karine Jean-Pierre (48:11):

… people are deciding not to-

Speaker 13 (48:13):

President Biden sent a letter to Congress that there’s not enough money to help people in North Carolina.

Karine Jean-Pierre (48:17):

… We’re talking about the SBA disaster loan.

Speaker 13 (48:19):

That’s money for people in North Carolina.

Karine Jean-Pierre (48:20):

And that’s important, and people in North Carolina need that.

Speaker 13 (48:23):

The president’s the one saying this right now.

Karine Jean-Pierre (48:24):

Wait, this is nothing new. Peter, this is nothing new. Congress comes together. They provide money, millions of dollars for disaster relief. We’re asking them to do the job that they have been doing for some time. Been doing for some time.

Speaker 13 (48:39):

And I’m reading from a letter that President Biden sent to Johnson, McConnell, Schumer and Jeffries. The president’s letter is not misinformation. Would you agree?

Karine Jean-Pierre (48:43):

No. The way you’re asking me the question is misinformation. There is money that we are allocating to the impacted areas and there’s money there to help people who truly need it. There are survivors who need the funding. Who need the funding.

Speaker 13 (48:58):

You can’t call a question that you don’t like misinformation. That’s very unfair.

Karine Jean-Pierre (49:00):

I actually said we have the money available to help survivors of Hurricane Helene and also Hurricane Milton. Now, there’s going to be a shortfall, right? Because we don’t know how bad Hurricane Milton is going to be, and so we’re going to need additional funding. We’re going to need additional funding.

Speaker 13 (49:21):

That’s exactly what I just asked about and you said it was misinformation.

Karine Jean-Pierre (49:24):

No.

Speaker 13 (49:24):

Yes.

Karine Jean-Pierre (49:24):

You’re asking me is why Congress needs to come back and do their job. That’s what you’re asking me. Congress needs to come back and do their job and provide extra assistance, extra funding to Disaster Relief Fund. That’s what Congress needs to do, and we’re going to continue to urge that. You may not want that, but that’s okay. That’s what this president wants and that’s what the vice president wants. Thanks everybody.

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