| Speaker | Time | Text |
|---|---|---|
| Most. | ||
| I read an article last week from CNBC. | ||
| It said, the headline, ACA enhanced subsidy lapse could hit early retirees hardest. | ||
| Middle-class couples in their 50s and early 60s who were too young to qualify for Medicare face the largest dollar increase in premium payments. | ||
| One Idaho couple interviewed by CNBC will see their premiums spike not by 50%, not by 100%, by 300%. | ||
| $15,000 more a year just to have health insurance. | ||
| That's what financial ruin looks like. | ||
| In fact, if these tax credits expire, older Americans could end up spending 30% of their income just on health care premiums. | ||
| Can you imagine? | ||
| What kind of country do we live in? | ||
| What kind of party is this Republican Party that is unwilling to solve this problem, which is staring Americans in the face, frightening Americans from one end of the country to the other? | ||
| And yet Republicans, what are they doing about it? | ||
| Nothing. | ||
| They're on vacation. | ||
| It's unacceptable and morally repugnant. | ||
| Again, the comments on the shutdown you can always find on our website at C-span.org and our app at C-span, now taking your comments as well uh, during this here, but you can finish watching online at C-span.org. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We go live now to the White House, where president Trump is hosting a celebration of Diwali, also known as the annual festival of lights for Hindus, Jains and Sikhs. | |
| Wonderful group of people. | ||
| Thank you very much for coming. | ||
| It's really nice. | ||
| Thank you, come on off the slide over here. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It's all good for the media. | |
| I will tell you this is a serious group of people tonight. | ||
| That's great. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
| Look at all of the wow. | ||
| Look at the people, huh. | ||
| Seriously the biggest business people anywhere in the world, so I think it's a great tribute. | ||
| Whatever they're teaching you, they're teaching you well right, thank you very much and welcome to the White House as we celebrate Diwali, because they said there has to be a very heavy emphasis on the, the Diwali, the beautiful Hindu festival of lights, and that's what it is. | ||
| It's a great festival and it's amazing people. | ||
| I'm pleased to be joined by the director of the National Intelligence and a woman that's done a fantastic job. | ||
| Tulsi Gabbard, wherever you may be, tells me hi Tulsi Fba, dirt Kash Patel, who's really hitting his stride. | ||
| Cash, where's Cash? | ||
| He's hitting his stride. | ||
| That's the way we like an assistant attorney general, Harmee Dylan Armed i'm right here, sir hi Armed and pastor Paula White. | ||
| She's been fantastic. | ||
| She's been with us right from the beginning. | ||
| We're greatly honored to be joined by the Indian ambassador to the United States, Vinay Quatr, and that's very nice, to pronounce it perfectly. | ||
| And his wonderful wife. | ||
| And thank you very much. | ||
| It's a great honor to have you. | ||
| As well as our new ambassador to India. | ||
| This is a nice, easy name, Sergio Gaur. | ||
| Sergio. | ||
| Congratulations, Sergio. | ||
| You're going to do a fantastic job. | ||
| And thanks as well to incredible Indian American business leaders, the biggest in the world, really. | ||
| If you look, if you look at these companies, what they've done, the biggest in the world. | ||
| CEO of IBM, Arvind Krishna. | ||
| And Arvind, congratulations. | ||
| I know you're working hard on a couple of jobs that I'm watching. | ||
| And good luck with them, right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Good luck. | |
| It's amazing what you've done. | ||
| Chairman and CEO of Adobe and Adobe is big stuff. | ||
| And that's Shantanu Narayan. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. | |
| Thank you very much, Shantana. | ||
| Nice to see you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
| CEO of Micron Technology, we know what that is. | ||
| Sanjay Marota. | ||
| Sanjay, nice to see you again. | ||
| and CEO of Palo Alto Networks, Nikesh Arora. | ||
| And I want to thank you very much for great success. | ||
| It's a hell of a group of people. | ||
| And in addition to that, we have a lot of other tremendously successful people gathered. | ||
| On behalf of all Americans, let me also extend our warmest wishes to the people of India. | ||
| I just spoke to your Prime Minister today. | ||
| We had a great conversation. | ||
|
unidentified
|
We talked about trade. | |
| We talk about a lot of things, but mostly the world of trade. | ||
| He's very interested in that. | ||
| Although we did talk a little while ago about let's have no wars with Pakistan. | ||
| And I think the fact that trade was involved, I was able to talk about that. | ||
| And we have no war with Pakistan and India. | ||
| And that was a very, very good thing. | ||
| But he's a great person. | ||
| And he's become a great friend of mine over the years. | ||
| In a few moments, we'll light the Diya as a symbol of faith in the victory of light over darkness. | ||
| It's a beautiful term, light over darkness. | ||
| That's what it's all about. | ||
| It's knowledge over ignorance and good over evil. | ||
| During Diwali, the revelers recall ancient stories of enemies defeated, obstacles removed, and captives freed. | ||
| The glow of the Diya flame reminds us to seek the path of wisdom and to work with diligence and to always give thanks for our many blessings. | ||
| And we do have many blessings. | ||
| Everybody in this room has many blessings. | ||
| And even the, I will say, I'm not going to use the word fake news. | ||
| I refuse to use it. | ||
| The media has some good blessings. | ||
| One of the blessings is that you didn't have to stand in the mud outside anymore. | ||
| You now have a beautiful stone surface, the identical color of the White House. | ||
| For years they had to stand when we had press conference in the mud because it was grass. | ||
| And I decided to take care of that. | ||
| So I think they appreciate it. | ||
| As we look back in the past year and really look up to the next number of years and hopefully decades and centuries, we've had much to be thankful for. | ||
| And think of it, a year ago we were a dead country. | ||
| This country was a dead country. | ||
| And now we're the hottest country anywhere in the world. | ||
| These guys can testify to that because I know this. | ||
| I watched their stock prices and they're like rocket ships, right? | ||
| Do they ever stop? | ||
| Let's keep it that way. | ||
| Let's not talk about it, right? | ||
| Let's just keep it that way. | ||
| It's amazing. | ||
| We have more than $17 trillion here, part of the reason. | ||
| More than $17 trillion of investment pouring into the United States. | ||
| It's going to be, I believe, over $20 trillion by the time the year is up. | ||
| And as an example, the last administration had less than a trillion dollars in a period of their four-year period. | ||
| They had less than a trillion. | ||
| We're going to have 20 trillion. | ||
| We have over 17 trillion already. | ||
| That's investment coming in. | ||
| And I think it's largely for two reasons. | ||
| We had a good election on November 5th. | ||
| But maybe more importantly, of course, it wouldn't happen if that election result didn't happen. | ||
| I think much more importantly, we have tariffs that you build in the United States, you don't have a tariff to pay. | ||
| You build outside and you have to pay a tariff. | ||
| And we're taking in money at a level that no other country has ever seen. | ||
| There's never been a country, I don't think, fellas, you agree with that, there's never been a country with an investment in less than a year, actually, to be exact, less than nine months of $17 trillion, right? | ||
| And I know you're all doing, you're all participating, aren't you? | ||
| So that's really good stuff. | ||
| The economy is roaring, the incomes are rising, and small business confidence is at the highest level in over a decade. | ||
| So the confidence levels, which they do, which means something, they think over the last 10 years, I don't think they go beyond that. | ||
| We have the highest level of confidence in our economy. | ||
| Gasoline prices are way down. | ||
| Grocery prices are way down. | ||
| Energy prices are way down. | ||
| Mortgage rates are down. | ||
| We have a real stiff at the Federal Reserve. | ||
| I can't help that. | ||
| But he's going to be leaving soon. | ||
| And inflation has been defeated. | ||
| But even though his rates are too high, the economy has been amazing. | ||
| Our border is secure, totally secure. | ||
| We had nobody, zero, nobody in the last four months coming through illegally, which is actually hard to believe because they give me those numbers. | ||
| But essentially, it would be just about nobody. | ||
| They actually say zero. | ||
| That's actually hard to believe because zero when you had millions pouring across a year and a half ago, two years ago, but they actually, we have it down to practically nobody. | ||
| And they are coming in, but they're coming in legally. | ||
| And we're forging peace all over the world. | ||
| We're putting America first. | ||
| We're getting everybody to sort of get along. | ||
| And I just got a call from the Middle East. | ||
| We're doing very well there. | ||
| We have many, many countries, as you know, signed on to peace in the Middle East, and nobody thought they'd ever see that happening. | ||
| The Hamas situation, where they're pretty violent people, I would say, that we could put that out in two minutes. | ||
| We're giving them a chance. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You know, they agreed that they'd be very good, very straight. | |
| They wouldn't be killing people, and they have killed people. | ||
| That wasn't the deal we made, but if they don't honor the deal, they'll be taken care of very quickly. | ||
| But I'd rather not have to do that. | ||
| But we have total peace in the Middle East. | ||
| We have levels of friendship with everybody. | ||
| And countries that hated each other now love each other. | ||
| Nobody ever saw anything like it. | ||
| I think you guys are pretty surprised over here, right? | ||
| Barmeet, you're surprised. | ||
| But a lot of people are surprised. | ||
| Are you guys surprised? | ||
| Peace in the Middle East. | ||
| You've been hearing about it for as long as you've been alive. | ||
| And it's been a lot longer than that. | ||
| You're still pretty young. | ||
| But we have peace in the Middle East. | ||
| And so as we light the DIA, we look forward to a new year and a greater peace and a greater everything for all of us. | ||
| And we want tremendous success, tremendous health. | ||
| We're doing a lot of things in the world of health. | ||
| And the autism situation is just crazy when you think of it. | ||
| You go back 20 years, it was one in 20,000. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And now it's one in 12. | |
| Is that hard to believe? | ||
| When I hear that number, it's not even believable. | ||
| And we think we're a little, we think we're on to it. | ||
| Bobby is doing a great job, and Dr. Oz, all of them, they're really working hard. | ||
| Nobody's ever seen anything like that. | ||
| And it's been a very important factor for me. | ||
| I just say you've got to focus on that. | ||
| We think we have a lot of the answers. | ||
| We've announced a lot of the answers, actually. | ||
| But we're looking at many things. | ||
| We've made tremendous progress. | ||
| And maybe the thing we've done the best on is prices for drugs. | ||
| We have favored nations now where other nations, as you know, were paying a fraction, a small fraction of what we were paying. | ||
| This was for many, many years this was happening. | ||
| This was set up 30 years ago where we were paying 10 times more, 12 times more, five times more, always tremendous numbers more. | ||
| And I said, we're not doing that anymore. | ||
| And the drug companies have agreed, and the countries have agreed. | ||
| Now, if I didn't have tariffs, I wouldn't have been able to get it. | ||
| I said, well, if you don't agree, we're going to charge you tariffs for more than the equivalent amount. | ||
| And amazingly, everybody agreed. | ||
| So our drug prices are going to be coming down 100%, 200%, 300%, 400%, 500% in some cases. | ||
| A bill that was $10 in London would cost $120 and think of it, $120 in New York or any place in this country. | ||
| A drug that cost $86 in Berlin cost $1,300 in New York and throughout the United States. | ||
| So we're not doing that anymore. | ||
| So we're just not doing it anymore. | ||
| So I just want to, and I think that's going to be huge for anything, Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, anything having to do with health, because the drug prices are going to be coming down. | ||
| And I tell the story of my last administration, my fourth year, I was so honored because I brought drug prices down. | ||
| The first time in 28 years, prices were brought down by a certain amount. | ||
| I'll tell you what the amount was in a second, but by a certain amount. | ||
| And so at the beginning of the year, to the end of the year, I actually brought them down. | ||
| First time in 28 years that happened. | ||
| And the number was one-eighth of 1%. | ||
| That's all I say. | ||
| But I was proud because first time it ever happened. | ||
| And now I'm bringing prices down 600%, 700%, 900%, 200%. | ||
| So I can't believe I actually had a news conference to celebrate 1 eighth and 1 quarter of 1%. | ||
| But that was, you know, you learned, right? | ||
| So we're doing it. | ||
| And you guys know more about favorite nations than anybody. | ||
| So we're going favorite nations, we're demanding it, and we've got it. | ||
| And as you know, we had five, so we had all, we had the big companies, they were all agreed or close to agreeing. | ||
| But the countries have agreed to. | ||
| Actually, the countries would be generally more difficult. | ||
| If we didn't have the power of tariffs, they wouldn't have agreed. | ||
| They would have said, nope, you've got to pay 10 times more than we're paying. | ||
| We were paying 10 and 12 times more than other countries for the exact same pill made in the exact same lab or factory. | ||
| So it's an amazing thing. | ||
| I think it's an absolute game changer. | ||
| Nobody's ever even heard of a thing like that. | ||
| And you'll see the results over the next year, year and a half. | ||
| And I think it's great. | ||
| So I'd like to ask a person who has really been fantastic. | ||
| We'll ask a few of the people to say a few words. | ||
| You're an international television, so don't get nervous. | ||
| Cash, would you say a few words, please? | ||
| You've done a fantastic job. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Well, thank you, Mr. President. | |
| It's an honor to be a first-generation Indian American whose parents lawfully immigrated to this country. | ||
| And under your leadership, so many more millions of Americans are living that dream. | ||
| And to celebrate it here in the Oval Office on Diwali, which you said rightly so, is a triumph of good over evil. | ||
| It's just an incredible honor. | ||
| It's incredibly humbling. | ||
| Indian Americans around the world and Indians around the world are thrilled that you are such a profound leader in sharing this diversity with the world. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And we can't thank you enough and happy Diwali. | |
| Well, thank you. | ||
| Congratulations on everything. | ||
| And how about a great company, IBM? | ||
| He's taken this company from I was a little troubled, as I remember, a few years ago, like 10 years ago, to being one of the hottest companies anywhere in the world. | ||
| Arvind, could you say a few words? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. President. | |
| In the spirit of Diwali, we should also acknowledge all that the President and the administration is doing to really boost technology, innovation, and that leading to economic growth. | ||
| I want to point out, people forget often how much public and private partnerships in the United States have mattered to boost technology. | ||
| You look at semiconductors, you look at space, you look at the internet, mobile, and hopefully quantum down the road. | ||
| So Mr. President, I'd like to thank you for all that you're doing to boost our technology leadership. | ||
| You have done amazingly and I just think it's incredible. | ||
| I know exactly what you've been through. | ||
| It was a troubled company until you came along and you made it very untroubled. | ||
| You made it a rocket ship. | ||
| So I congratulate you. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| We have a very, very great company, Adobe. | ||
| And Nishante, could you say maybe a few words, please? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
| Thank you, Mr. President. | ||
| And first, it's such an honor to be here in the Oval Office and to celebrate Diwali, which for all of us growing up, as you pointed out, was the victory over triumph over evil, light over darkness. | ||
| I think what you're doing, Mr. President, to have peace and prosperity and investment in this country is just amazing. | ||
| And as a company, I think hopefully everybody here is using Photoshop in order to take all these pictures. | ||
| But I would really like to thank you for your leadership. | ||
| And we will continue to invest in the US to make sure that we continue to drive innovation. | ||
| And your investment has been very large. | ||
| So how much have you invested and do you plan to invest in the European? | ||
|
unidentified
|
As far as our investment is concerned, it's all intellectual property. | |
| It's people. | ||
| So we make everything here. | ||
| So that's the software. | ||
| That's good. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And so we're a $20 billion revenue company now, one of the largest software companies in the world. | |
| And headquarters is Silicon Valley. | ||
| Thank you, Mr. President. | ||
| Fantastic job. | ||
| How much are you investing IBM? | ||
|
unidentified
|
$150 billion over the next five years. | |
| $150 billion, that's good. | ||
| Microan's doing pretty good. | ||
| How's Microan doing? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Okay, pretty good. | |
| Mr. President, really a great honor to be here today celebrating Diwali with these excellent peers of ours from the tech industry. | ||
| And Diwali stands for Light Hope Renewal. | ||
| And the United States is light to the rest of the world. | ||
| And particularly on the renewal piece, I just want to really applaud you and your team in terms of bringing Renaissance's semiconductor manufacturing here to the U.S. | ||
| So Micron is investing $200 billion, $150. | ||
| $200 billion in leading-edge memory manufacturing. | ||
| And in the course of next few years, we'll have 40% of our manufacturing here in the U.S. | ||
| And this will add, over the course of years, 90,000 jobs and $1.5 trillion impact to the economy. | ||
| So we are very thankful to the support that we get from your team and Mr. President, from you, in terms of bringing memory here to the U.S. | ||
| And memory is key with AI today, right? | ||
| Yeah, you always talk about memory. | ||
| I have a good memory. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Those machines have a better memory, right, no matter what you do. | |
| Absolutely. | ||
| That's fantastic. | ||
| Really fantastic. | ||
| Nikashi Palo Alto is a hot one. | ||
| And tell me about that. | ||
| Go ahead, please. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, thank you for having me here. | |
| It's a pleasure and honour to celebrate Diwali with you. | ||
| As my colleagues have said, this is a strife of good over evil and prosperity and what you've done the last nine months in terms of making the United States one of the most business friendly administrations and allowing us all an opportunity to invest not just in technology but in our people. | ||
| It's just amazing. | ||
| We are now the largest cybersecurity company in the world and we just recently recently spent $25 billion in sourcing technology. | ||
| So all cyber security is made in the United States because we believe that the next bastion in the world is going to be a cyber war and we just want to make sure we are prepared as a country and we make sure off our companies and our critical infrastructure. | ||
| Fantastic job. | ||
| It's amazing what you've done. | ||
| And all of these people, to me they mean two things. | ||
| Big investment, but the big investment I like because of jobs. | ||
| It's a tremendous number of jobs that they've produced. | ||
| Would you say a couple of things about your great company, please? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. President. | |
| I'm with Stone Point Capital, Private Equity, which I'm sure you know. | ||
| We just raised a new $11.5 billion fund, and we obviously invest very heavily in financial services technology. | ||
| And so it's actually an honor to be here in the Oval Office with you. | ||
| And as a fellow Winklet member, too, I've always a pleasure to be with you. | ||
| And I got to tell you, you're the best president that I've ever seen. | ||
| And we're so proud of you. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm glad I asked him to say that. | |
| Would you like to say something about the way Jab you're doing? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Right here. | |
| Anybody right here, these are all incredible people that everybody looks in the business world. | ||
| Everybody looks up to them. | ||
| Please go ahead. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Would you like to say something? | |
| Thank you for yours. | ||
| Thank you for your details. | ||
| I love this. | ||
| I didn't ask him. | ||
| I'm not even going to take business. | ||
| We've been in products on the AI and mission learning. | ||
| Thank you. | ||
| And it's going great, right? | ||
| Yes, good. | ||
| How about over here? | ||
| We have some very unshy people are meeting. | ||
| How about saying a few words? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Well, thank you, Mr. President. | |
| It's a tremendous honor to have supported you three times and been part of your administration. | ||
| And on this day of Diwali, I say on behalf of the United States Department of Justice that the message of the triumph of good over evil and knowledge over ignorance and justice over injustice is something that your administration is personifying and it's a tremendous honor to be part of it and thank you very much for including us here today. | ||
| Good and you're at the DOJ and doing a fantastic job. | ||
|
unidentified
|
She's doing a good job catcher. | |
| And Chelsea Winneau is doing a good job. | ||
| What do you think, Chelsea? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yes, sir. | |
| Thank you very much. | ||
| You are doing today what you have done throughout your time in service is bringing people together from all across the country and all different backgrounds and this day is of course very special to so many of us because while it is the celebration of hope and light and renewal, we can never forget that the source of that hope, light, and renewal comes from God's love for every single one of us. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And so today we celebrate God, His love and the blessings that He has shared with all of us. | |
| Fantastic. | ||
| Thank you all very much. | ||
| Anyone like to say anything? | ||
| Would you like to say something, please? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, let me start first of all by expressing a deep sense of gratitude for opening up White House, Oval Office, your home, to mark Diwali's festival of lights, which is celebrated by over one-fifth of humanity. | |
| And as Kas said, you are showcasing the strength of diversity through this celebration. | ||
| So it's truly a great honor. | ||
| Thank you very much for that. | ||
| May I also, on behalf of my Prime Minister and my own behalf, wish you and your loved one a very, very happy Diwali greetings, particularly to over five million strong Indian diaspora in the U.S. | ||
| And may I close by making a wish, which is normally we do for Diwali, we wish that the light of Diwali continues to shine on your success and on the strength of Inter-U.S. partnership. | ||
| Thank you very much, Mr. President. | ||
| Spokeshoe today, he's doing well. | ||
| And your country is doing very well. | ||
| So we're supposed to light something, but I thought maybe because he's had such an outstanding year, I'm going to ask Arvind to maybe do the honors. | ||
| Can you handle it for me? | ||
| I think you'd like to do a better job than me. | ||
| So if you could take care of that, it would be great. | ||
| Well, he's doing a good job. | ||
| I didn't know you were supposed to do that. | ||
| I'm glad I asked him. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Would you like to come with me? | |
| Yeah. | ||
| If you want. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you all. | |
| Thank you. | ||
| The fire of Putin has canceled or put on hold. | ||
| Do you know what happened there? | ||
| And does that affect your decision whether or not to send Tomahawks? | ||
| No, no, I don't want to have a wasted meeting. | ||
| I don't want to have a waste of time, so I'll see what happens. | ||
| But we did all of these great deals, great peace deals. | ||
|
unidentified
|
They're all peace deals. | |
| Agreements, solid agreements, every one of them. | ||
| But this one, and I said, go to the line, go to the line of battle on the battlefield lines, and you pull back and you go home, and everybody takes some time off because you've got two countries that are killing each other. | ||
| Two countries are losing 5,000 to 7,000 soldiers a week. | ||
| So we'll see what happens. | ||
| We haven't made a determination. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm asking the Justice Department to look into the federal investigations into you and look for compensation, and how much are you asking for? | |
| Who's asking for what? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Are you asking the Justice Department to pay you compensation for your federal investigations into you? | |
| Are you asking them to pay compensation and how much? | ||
| Into me. | ||
| I don't get any compensation. | ||
| I do it for nothing. | ||
| I gave up my salary. | ||
| Into me? | ||
|
unidentified
|
No, it's going to be the Justice Department. | |
| Are you asking them to pay you compensation for the federal investigations that happened to you? | ||
| And how much are you asking for? | ||
| Well, I guess they probably owe me a lot of money for that. | ||
| Yeah, that's true. | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's very interesting. | |
| No, I get no salary. | ||
| I gave up my salary. | ||
| It's a good salary. | ||
| Not as much as these guys make, but that's okay. | ||
| It's a lot of money. | ||
| And I don't, as you know, I didn't take it in the first four years. | ||
| I've not taken it in these four years either. | ||
| But as far as all of the litigation and everything that's going to go up, yeah, they probably owe me a lot of money. | ||
| But if I get money from our country, I'll do something nice with it, like give it to charity or give it to the White House while we restore the White House. | ||
| And we're doing a great job at the White House. | ||
| As you know, the ballroom is under construction. | ||
| It's going to be, they've been trying to get it for 150 years. | ||
| And it's really, I think it's going to be fantastic. | ||
| But we'll see what happens. | ||
| I mean, we have numerous cases having to do with the fraud of the election, the 2020 election. | ||
| And because of everything that we found out, I guess they owe me a lot of money, but I'm not looking for money. | ||
| I'm looking for really, I think it's got to be handled in a proper way. | ||
| If it's not handled in a proper way, we don't want it to happen again. | ||
| We can never let what happened in the 2020 election happen again. | ||
| We just can't let that happen. | ||
| And so the way we go, I know Cash is working on it, everybody's working on it, and certainly Tulsi is working on it. | ||
| We can't let that happen again to our country. | ||
| Look at what's happened where you have millions of people being allowed to come into our country, all because of a crooked election, where they come from prisons, they come from jails, they come from mental institutions and insane asylums. | ||
| They're drug dealers. | ||
| The people that they've allowed to come into our country. | ||
| We cleaned them out in Washington, D.C. | ||
| We have a very safe capital right now. | ||
| We have a capital that's as safe as it can be. | ||
| But I don't know. | ||
| I mean, you'd have to ask the lawyers about that. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, a comment and a question, please, for you. | |
| First of all, you have just won billion plus hearts around the globe, including in India, by celebrating the Diwali in the White House right here. | ||
| And my other comment is, Mr. President, I like his question already. | ||
| In February, you and the White House staff welcomed, gave a warm welcome to the Prime Minister of India, Mr. Narendra Modi. | ||
| And after that, I decided to make a short trip to India for you. | ||
| How popular you are in India. | ||
| And I went there in a holiest also festival there. | ||
| Millions of people were there. | ||
| And also, Prime Minister Narendra Modi was addressing a media event. | ||
| 5,000 people, I was one of them there listening to him. | ||
| And when I went to several states in India, what I found out, Mr. President, three people are most popular there. | ||
| Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President Donald Trump, Mr. Kash Patel, and also, with the surprise, our White House press secretary, Carolyn Ler. | ||
| She's doing good. | ||
| She's doing good. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And Mr. President, my question is: you had a great relationship with the people of India when you visited India and with the Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi and also with the Indian American community. | |
| Where do we stand today, all those relations from 45 to 47 in the future, Mr. President? | ||
| Please, thank you. | ||
| We stand great. | ||
| And the people of India love the people of India and we're working on some great deals between our countries. | ||
| I spoke to the Prime Minister Modi today, as I mentioned before, and we just have a very good relationship. | ||
| And he's not going to buy much oil from Russia. | ||
| He wants to see that war end as much as I do. | ||
| He wants to see the war end with Russia, Ukraine. | ||
| And as you know, they're not going to be buying too much oil. | ||
| So they've cut it way back and they're continuing to cut it way back. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, an appeals court recently ruled that you can send the National Guard into Oregon. | |
| Do you feel unfettered to send the National Guard into whatever city you want now? | ||
| Well, I guess so. | ||
| That was the decision. | ||
| I can send the National Guard if I see problems. | ||
| I looked at Portland over the weekend. | ||
| The place is burning down. | ||
| It's burning down. | ||
| We weren't there. | ||
| We didn't spend much time there because we were waiting for that decision. | ||
| But the court, probably that maybe that influenced the court. | ||
| But you look at a place like Portland, it's just, it's ridiculous when they say that there's no problem. | ||
| The place was, it was on fire over the weekend. | ||
| But we did. | ||
| We won the case in Court of Appeals. | ||
| I think it was the Ninth Circuit. | ||
| So that's pretty good. | ||
| And very strong opinion that we have the right to use the National Guard. | ||
| You would think that would be common sense. | ||
| We have the right to use the National Guard to put out trouble. | ||
| Well, that's how I got elected. | ||
| One of the reasons I got elected. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President. | |
| What changed your mind after talking to Vladimir Putin between then and now? | ||
| Why did you think that a Budapest summit might be wasted might be wasted time? | ||
| Well, I didn't say anything. | ||
| I didn't say it would. | ||
| And, you know, you never know what's going to happen. | ||
| But a lot of things are happening on that front, on the war front, with Ukraine and Russia. | ||
| And we'll be notifying you over the next two days as to what we're doing. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Did you hear something? | |
| A lot of things are happening. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Did you hear something from the moment? | |
| Did you get it solved? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, please. | |
| Mr. President, on Ukraine, do you still see a chance for a ceasefire? | ||
| And what is Putin asking for? | ||
| Do you still see a chance for a ceasefire? | ||
| And what is Putin asking for? | ||
| I do. | ||
| It's a vicious, look, it's a vicious war. | ||
| It doesn't really affect us. | ||
| We sell equipment to them. | ||
| We sell equipment to NATO. | ||
| And NATO gives it to Ukraine, but we don't pay anything anymore. | ||
| Biden spent $350 billion. | ||
| The war would have never happened if I were president. | ||
| It would have never, not even a million years. | ||
| And Putin knows that it would have never happened. | ||
| But it did happen, and I came in, and I have to see if I can put it out. | ||
| But it doesn't affect us because we're not losing soldiers there. | ||
| Although, when I first came in, that could have ended. | ||
| It's not going to happen. | ||
| But it could have ended up in World War III. | ||
| That was really out of control. | ||
| So now they're shooting and they're killing people. | ||
| And I think Putin wants it to end, and I think Zelensky wants it to end, and I think it's going to end. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Is that a few words that he reached out to you about meeting on the government shutdown? | |
| Will you meet with them before you leave for Asia on Friday? | ||
| Well, I will actually. | ||
| I'd love to meet with them. | ||
| I just want them to open up the country first. | ||
| You know, the country is so hot right now. | ||
| And they've never voted against continuation. | ||
| They've never voted against. | ||
| They've never done that. | ||
| They're doing this because they have Trump derangement syndrome. | ||
| But I would like to meet with both of them. | ||
| But I set one little caveat. | ||
| I will only meet if they let the country open. | ||
| They have to let the country open. | ||
| The people want to go back to work. | ||
| They want to be served. | ||
| They need the services of some people. | ||
| And a lot of people need the money, the payroll. | ||
| So I'll do it as soon as they open up the country. | ||
| I'd like to meet them. | ||
| So you won't meet the open documentary. | ||
| Just to be clear, you won't meet with them until the government's open. | ||
| The government has to be open, yeah. | ||
| You know how long it would take for them to do that? | ||
| Just say, okay, government's open. | ||
| That's it. | ||
| There is nothing. | ||
|
unidentified
|
How long? | |
| They're not negotiating. | ||
| What they're doing is saying they lost the negotiation when we got the Great Big Beautiful deal done. | ||
| They lost that negotiation. | ||
| Now they're saying, well, we want to get some of the things we lost. | ||
| But the problem is the things they lost are very bad for our country. | ||
| We don't want to have people come over from all over the world, from prisons and all, and have them have their health care paid for. | ||
| We want to take care of people that are American citizens and all. | ||
| So they want $1.5 trillion of money to be wasted and jeopardize the health care of other people. | ||
| We're not going to do that. | ||
| So we're going to, I would love to meet with them. | ||
| We want the country open for us. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, a new poll shows that if Curtis Sliwa dropped out of the New York mayoral race, then Andrew Cuomo would only trail Mondani by four points. | |
| Would you call Curtis Lewa to drop out of the race so that that can happen? | ||
| Well, I looked at the polls, and looks like we're going to have a communist as the mayor of New York. | ||
| It'll be very interesting. | ||
| But here's the good news. | ||
| He's got to go through the White House. | ||
| Everything goes through the White House. | ||
| At least this White House, it does. | ||
| And we'll have to see what happens. | ||
| But if he dropped out, he's not going to win. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And not looking too good for Cuomo either. | |
| But maybe, I don't know, if he dropped up, maybe Cuomo would have a little bit of a chance, but not much. | ||
| Because it looks like the lead is, it's not a great lead, but it's big enough that he should be able to win. | ||
| So, you know, I don't know that I want to get involved. | ||
| It's really a question of would I rather have a Democrat or a Communist? | ||
| And I would rather have a Democrat than a Communist. | ||
| Will you speak to Mom Donnie if he wins? | ||
|
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'll speak to him. | |
| I don't have an obligation to speak to him. | ||
| But look, I love New York. | ||
| I've always loved New York. | ||
| I just can't believe a thing like this is happening. | ||
| I left New York, and we had a mayor, de Blasio, who was a disaster. | ||
| But when I left, it was sort of before he could really take hold. | ||
| And boy, New York was a hot city, and now it's sad to see what's happening, frankly. | ||
| And with the communists in charge, look, you just go back a thousand years. | ||
| I mean, it's been done many times, a thousand years. | ||
| It's never worked once, so it's not going to work now either. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Mr. President, you're building your ballroom right now. | |
| They're also building the Obama Presidential Library. | ||
|
unidentified
|
I'm wondering if you've seen it. | |
| Have you seen pictures of the architecture? | ||
| Yeah, I did. | ||
| It's not too pretty. | ||
| But it's closed. | ||
| It's stopped. | ||
| They ran out of money. | ||
| Me's building a library slash museum. | ||
| You know, you call it some museum, and usually they call it library and museum. | ||
| That's the official name. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And they're stuck. | |
| And he wanted only women and DEI to build it. | ||
| Well, that's what they got. | ||
| And the construction workers are standing out there and saying, we want to be able to build it. | ||
| You know, you have great. | ||
| I built a great building in Chicago, as you know, a big, beautiful building, one of the tallest buildings in the country. | ||
| And we got it built very quickly, very well. | ||
| And we use the construction workers of Chicago. | ||
| They're great workers. | ||
| They're great construction people. | ||
| And I suggest that you get them involved. | ||
| But they're hundreds of millions of dollars over budget. | ||
| And I think it stopped. | ||
| I've been reading these terrible stories. | ||
| But that's the way our country was run under President Obama, too. | ||
| Nobody knew it. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, Mr. President. | |
| Russia remains China's stop crude oil supply in September. | ||
| Are you considering tariffs on China? | ||
| Well, I mean, you read the same papers as I do, but I don't have to read the papers because I'm the one. | ||
| Right now, as of November 1st, China will have about 155% tariff put on it. | ||
| And I don't think it's sustainable for them, so I want to be nice to China. | ||
| But China's been very rough with us over the years because we had presidents that weren't smart from a business standpoint. | ||
| Some were good politicians, some weren't even good politicians, but they allowed China to take advantage of us and every other country to take advantage of us. | ||
| And you see, I made a deal with the European Union. | ||
| I made a deal with Japan, with South Korea, made a lot of these deals that are great deals, and I was able to do it. | ||
| It's really national security. | ||
| I was able to do it because of tariffs. | ||
| And we're getting hundreds of billions, even trillions of dollars paid into the United States. | ||
| We're a very rich country again. | ||
| We'll start paying off debt. | ||
| We'll do a lot of things. | ||
| We'll probably make a distribution out of some of the tariff money. | ||
| I think we're going to make a distribution over the next fairly short period of time to people because we took in so much money from the tariffs. | ||
| Just European Union, $650 billion. | ||
| Japan, $550 billion. | ||
| South Korea, $350 billion. | ||
| That's even a lot of money for you guys, right? | ||
|
unidentified
|
That's not bad, right? | |
| But no, we're taking in a lot of money, and it keeps people like this here because that's why they're coming in. | ||
| I mean, I'm not going to speak for you, but generally, they won't be coming in at Orafa tariffs. | ||
| They come in here and they don't have to pay any tariff. | ||
| If they do it outside, they pay a lot of money, a lot of tariffs. | ||
| The money comes to us. | ||
| And in order not to pay the tariff, they come and they build here. | ||
| That's why we have more plants under construction than we've ever had in the history of our country. | ||
| And you wouldn't think it's complicated, but you would have thought somebody would have done this a long time ago, sitting in this beautiful seat behind what's called the Resolute Desk. | ||
|
unidentified
|
You know that, right? | |
| This is a very famous. | ||
| This is even more famous than any of your desks. | ||
| But you deserve it. | ||
| You deserve very good. | ||
| I'll follow up on her question to you. | ||
| Because the New York Times is reporting that your legal team is seeking $230 million from your own Justice Department now in response to the investigations into you. | ||
|
unidentified
|
It could be. | |
| Is that something you want your legal team to do? | ||
| I don't know what the numbers are. | ||
| I don't even talk to them about it. | ||
| All I know is that they would owe me a lot of money, but I'm not looking for money. | ||
| I'd give it to charity or something. | ||
| I would give it to charity any money. | ||
| But look, what they did, they rigged the election. | ||
| And as you know, we had, in one case, 60 Minutes had to pay us a lot of money. | ||
| George Slavodopoulos had to pay us a lot of money. | ||
| And they already paid. | ||
| They paid me a lot of money because what they did was wrong. | ||
| And when somebody does what's wrong, now, with the country, it's interesting because I'm the one that makes a decision, right? | ||
| And that decision would have to go across my desk. | ||
| And it's awfully strange to make a decision where I'm paying myself. | ||
| In other words, did you ever have one of those cases where you have to decide how much you're paying yourself in damages? | ||
| But I was damaged very greatly. | ||
| And any money that I would get, I would give to charity. | ||
| Thank you, Mr. President. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Is the Democrat Party now more Zoran Mandani's party than it is even leader Schumer's or Lee Brown? | |
| It probably is, yeah. | ||
| Maybe he'll run for president in four years. | ||
| You have a communist president. | ||
| That would be interesting, right? | ||
| I don't see it happening. | ||
| I've always said you will never see, and I always talked about socialism, you will never see a socialist, so-and-so. | ||
|
unidentified
|
And I was right. | |
| I'd say it in his speeches, we will not have socialism in our country. | ||
| And I was right. | ||
| Communism, yes, but society. | ||
| In other words, they skipped socialism and they went down to communism. | ||
| No, he's a communist, and he's going to be maybe the mayor of New York. | ||
| I don't know, maybe, you know, polls are all, but these polls seem to be pretty consistent. | ||
| But he would be, I would say he would be the leader of the party. | ||
| It's not Schumer. | ||
| Schumer's shot. | ||
| He's shot. | ||
| This poor guy, I feel sorry for him. | ||
| I don't know him for a long time, but he's, I think he's mentally gone. | ||
| He's been beat up by young radical lunatics. | ||
| And I think Chuck Schumer is, he's gone zoom. | ||
| I really do. | ||
| I think he's probably not going to run. | ||
| It shows that he's losing in every poll. | ||
| Now, this is hard. | ||
| You know, he wants to meet with me. | ||
| It's sort of hard to be with a guy after I make a statement like that, but I'm just giving the facts. | ||
| I think Chuck is probably finished. | ||
| I know some people, Democrats, that would be good, some good politicians and some reasonable people. | ||
| But I understand that they would not have a chance of getting even the concept of holding the torch. | ||
| They're not going to get it. | ||
| But they have some people that I really believe they're low IQ people. | ||
| They're stupid people. | ||
| And they seem to be leading the party. | ||
| So we'll see what happens. | ||
| Look, the Republicans are strong. | ||
| We have great leadership. | ||
| We're very strong in every way. | ||
| And we're going to keep it that way. | ||
| But we are really a strong party. | ||
| You know, our party's grown magnificently. | ||
| We've gotten away. | ||
| Look at all the union votes I got. | ||
| Nobody thought that was ever possible. | ||
| Look at the election where I won a popular vote. | ||
| I won everything. | ||
| I won all seven swing states. | ||
| If you win three or four swing states, you're doing great. | ||
| 107 by a lot. | ||
| And I think the best thing when you look at districts, 2,700 versus 525, that's big. | ||
| That's why the map shows all red. | ||
| So we wanted a tremendous landslide, and that's because people like our policy. | ||
| I guess they like me, but they like my policies. | ||
| Strong borders, good education, low taxes. | ||
| You know, in the Great Big Beautiful bill, we got the biggest tax cut in history. | ||
| Not only no tax on tips, no tax on Social Security, no tax on overtime, but we got the biggest tax cut in the history of our country in the bill that we just approved. | ||
| And I think people see that and they like it, and that's why we're doing well, but they are not. | ||
| They do not have leadership. | ||
| Thank you very much, everybody. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you very much. | |
| Thank you guys for coming. | ||
| Thank you very much. | ||
| Great question. | ||
|
unidentified
|
Thank you, guys. | |
| Wednesday, the three leading candidates in New York City's 2025 mayor's race, Democratic nominee Zorhan Mamdani, Independent candidate Andrew Cuomo, and Republican nominee Curtis Slewa, face off for a second time, answering questions from moderators as well as New York City voters. | ||
| Hosted by Spectrum News NY1, watch live at 7 p.m. Eastern on C-SPAN, C-SPAN now, our free mobile app, and online at c-span.org. | ||
| The federal government remains closed now, 21 days into the latest shutdown. | ||
| The Senate this week failing for an 11th time to advance a Republican plan to reopen the government. | ||
| Democrats continue to insist on extensions for expiring health care subsidies, something Republicans are resisting as long as the government remains shuttered. | ||
| Some news, Fox is reporting that 13 House Republicans sent a letter to Speaker Johnson asking leadership to immediately take up the Affordable Care Act extensions when the shutdown is over, saying that significant reforms are needed. | ||
| The Post goes on to note, however, that the 13 Republicans still reject Democrats' demand to pair it with federal spending. | ||
| Meanwhile, across the Capitol, the Hill is reporting that Pennsylvania Democratic Senator John Fetterman also appears to be frustrated, telling reporters he would now support Senate Republican efforts to use the so-called nuclear option to end the stalemate if they choose to use it. | ||
| That parliamentary procedure would change Senate voting rules to potentially allow for a simple majority on legislation related to reopening the government. | ||
| Senator Federman says that certain public assistance programs, like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, are running out of money and people, quote, need to eat. | ||
| C-SPAN, Democracy Unfiltered. | ||
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| House Speaker Mike Johnson and other Republican leaders held a news conference on the 21st day of the government shutdown to discuss its impact. | ||
| They also answered questions on the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and addressed the recent death threat against Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries. |