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THE WHITE HOUSE | |
Office of the Press Secretary | |
___________________________________________________________ | |
___________________________________________________________ | |
___ | |
For Immediate | |
Release | |
9:44 A.M. PDT | |
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT | |
ON TRADE | |
Nike, Inc. | |
Beaverton, Oregon | |
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Oregon! (Applause.) Well, who | |
arranged this day? (Applause.) Every time I come to | |
Oregon this is what it looks like. (Laughter.) Yeah! It | |
never rains in Oregon, does it? | |
AUDIENCE: No! | |
THE PRESIDENT: Never. | |
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Don't come to California. (Laughter.) | |
THE PRESIDENT: All right. Well, listen, it is wonderful | |
to see all of you. First of all, please give Mark another | |
round of applause for his hospitality. (Applause.) And | |
thanks to everyone at Nike for hosting us today, here in | |
“Federer Platz.” (Laughter.) You know, the White House is | |
cool. (Laughter.) We’ve got a basketball court -- | |
May 8, 2015 | |
actually, it's a tennis court that we repainted some lines | |
-- (laughter) -- when I came into office. So it's a | |
combination basketball-tennis court. There is a putting | |
green that President Eisenhower put in. Can you imagine, | |
by the way, if I had put in a putting | |
green? (Laughter.) Things have changed. (Laughter.) | |
But you’ve got all that and the 18th tee box from Pebble | |
Beach. (Applause.) Come on. I’m sure some of my staff is | |
running around right now in the Michael Jordan and Mia Hamm | |
buildings -- (laughter) -- they want to be lab rats for | |
your new gear. (Laughter.) | |
But it is wonderful to be here. Please give it up for two | |
people who fight every single day for Oregon workers -- | |
your Representatives in Congress -- they do a great job -- | |
Earl Blumenauer and Suzanne Bonamici. They are both | |
here. Give them a big round of | |
applause. (Applause.) Yay! And there are two people who | |
couldn't make it here today, but they’re doing a great job | |
and you should give them a round of applause as well, and | |
that's Senator Ron Wyden and Representative Kurt | |
Schrader. (Applause.) | |
So it is great to be at the world headquarters of such an | |
iconic company -- a company that helps athletes succeed | |
from the individual to the world stage. And as you’ve | |
heard, I’ve come to Oregon to talk a little bit about trade | |
-- which initially may have had some people thinking, what, | |
is Mariota going someplace that we didn’t know | |
about? (Laughter.) He’s going to be great. He’s an | |
outstanding young man. He’s going to be terrific -- and | |
from Hawaii, by the way. (Applause.) Local boy. | |
But this is important, and I want to tell you why I think | |
trade deals and our willingness to go out there and compete | |
on the global stage is so important. | |
Before I came out here, I had a chance to meet with | |
some small business owners from across Oregon, whose | |
workers make everything from bikes to tea to stationery to | |
wine. And they know how important this is to | |
them. Sometimes when we talk about trade, we think of | |
Nike, or we think of Boeing, or we think of G.E. -- we | |
think about these big multinational companies. But those | |
small business leaders came here today because they | |
understood that these markets outside the United States | |
will help them grow, and will help them hire more folks -- | |
just as all the suppliers to Nike or Boeing or G.E. or any | |
of these other companies understand this is going to be | |
critical to their growth and their ability to create new | |
jobs. | |
In fact, that’s why Ron Wyden is not here -- because he’s | |
in Washington, D.C. as we speak quarterbacking this effort | |
on behalf of Oregon’s small business owners and workers. | |
Now, small businesses are the backbone of our | |
economy. Eventually, like Nike, they grow sometimes into | |
really, really big companies. They employ millions of | |
people; 98 percent of exporters are small | |
businesses. They’re the ones who make Made in Oregon and | |
Made in the USA mean something. And they represent | |
something essential about this country -- the notion that | |
if you’ve got a good idea and you’re willing to work at it, | |
you can turn that idea into a business, you can growth that | |
business, and eventually, who knows what might happen. You | |
can give other people a chance to earn a living even as you | |
do well. That’s America’s promise. And it’s up to us to | |
keep that promise alive. | |
Now, that promise was threatened for almost everybody just | |
about seven years ago, when the economy nearly collapsed, | |
and millions of Americans lost their jobs and their homes | |
and their life savings. But thanks to the hard work of the | |
American people and entrepreneurs like the ones who are | |
here today -- and some pretty good policies from my | |
administration -- (laughter) -- we’re in a different place | |
today. (Applause.) We're in a different place today. | |
This morning, we learned that our economy created 223,000 | |
new jobs last month. (Applause.) The unemployment rate | |
ticked down again to 5.4 percent -- which is the lowest | |
it’s been in almost seven years. (Applause.) That’s 3 | |
million new jobs over the past 12 months -- nearly the | |
fastest pace in over a decade. And all told, over the past | |
62 months in a row, America’s businesses have created 12.3 | |
million new jobs. | |
I should add, by the way, 62 months ago is when I signed | |
the Affordable Care Act. So, obviously, it hasn’t done too | |
bad in terms of employment in this country. (Applause.) I | |
just thought I’d mention that. (Applause.) Since there | |
were a lot of predictions of doom and gloom, I would just | |
suggest those who were making those predictions go back and | |
check the statistics. (Laughter.) Just | |
saying. (Laughter.) | |
So small businesses deserve a lot of credit for that. In | |
fact, over the past several years, small businesses have | |
created nearly two out of every three new American | |
jobs. And the question is, how do we build on that | |
success? We’ve got to be relentless in our efforts to | |
support small businesses who are creating jobs and helping | |
to grow the economy. | |
And that’s been the purpose behind many of the policies | |
I’ve fought for as President. I’ve cut taxes for small | |
businesses more than a dozen times. I’ve pushed for | |
investments in infrastructure and faster Internet. It’s | |
why we’ve made health care more accessible, affordable, | |
portable -- to give people the freedom to change jobs or | |
launch that startup without worrying about losing their | |
health insurance. | |
And passing trade agreements is part of that agenda if | |
those trade agreements are the right kinds of trade | |
agreements; if they make sure that they’re growing our | |
businesses, and helping American workers by selling goods | |
Made in America across the rest of the world. | |
And I’ve been talking a lot about this lately, because I | |
view smart trade agreements as a vital piece of middle- | |
class economics. Not a contradiction to middle-class | |
economics, it’s a part and parcel of it. | |
I believe that our country does best when everyone gets a | |
fair shot, everyone does their fair share, everybody plays | |
by the same set of rules. And that means making sure | |
everybody has got a good education. It means making sure | |
that women are getting paid the same as men for doing the | |
same work. (Applause.) It means making sure that folks | |
have to have sick leave and family leave and that they can | |
balance work and family in a fair way. It means, working | |
to increase the minimum wage all across this country -- | |
because folks who have some of the toughest jobs oftentimes | |
get the lowest pay. | |
That’s all part of middle-class economics, but, you know | |
what, so is trade. We strive to make sure our own economy | |
lives up to high standards, but in a lot of parts of the | |
world, the rules are unfair. The playing field is | |
uneven. That puts American businesses and American workers | |
at a disadvantage. So the question is, what should we do | |
about it? | |
Some folks think we should just withdraw and not even try | |
to engage in trade with these countries. I disagree. We | |
have to make sure America writes the rules of the global | |
economy. And we should do it today, while our economy is | |
in the position of global strength. (Applause.) Because | |
if we don’t write the rules for trade around the world -- | |
guess what -- China will. And they’ll write those rules in | |
a way that gives Chinese workers and Chinese businesses the | |
upper hand, and locks American-made goods out. | |
That’s the choice we face. We're not going to be able to | |
isolate ourselves from world markets. We got to be in | |
there and compete. And the question is, are we going to | |
make sure that the rules are fair so that our businesses | |
and our workers are on a level playing field. Because when | |
they are, we win every time. When the rules are fair, we | |
win every time. (Applause.) | |
So this is why I’m such a strong supporter of new trade | |
agreements. They're going to help our workers compete and | |
our businesses compete. This is not a left issue or a | |
right issue, or a business or a labor issue. It is about | |
fairness and equity and access. And like other issues that | |
we’ve waged slow, steady fights on over the last seven | |
years, this is also a question of the past versus the | |
future. | |
So the Trans-Pacific Partnership that we’re working on, | |
it’s the biggest trade deal that we're working on right now | |
-- has to do with the Asia Pacific region. And it reflects | |
our values in ways that, frankly, some previous trade | |
agreements did not. It’s the highest-standard, most | |
progressive trade deal in history. It’s got strong, | |
enforceable provisions for workers, preventing things like | |
child labor. It’s got strong, enforceable provisions on | |
the environment, helping us to do things that haven’t been | |
done before, to prevent wildlife trafficking, or | |
deforestation, or dealing with our oceans. And these are | |
enforceable in the agreement. | |
And Nike operates in the Pacific region, so they understand | |
the competitive pressures they're under. Nike has | |
factories all around the world. And let’s face it, Mark I | |
think doesn't mind me saying it that some of these | |
countries, they don't have the standards for wages and | |
labor conditions that we have here. | |
So when you look at a country like Vietnam, under this | |
agreement, Vietnam would actually, for the first time, have | |
to raise its labor standards. It would have to set a | |
minimum wage. It would have to pass safe workplace laws to | |
protect its workers. It would even have to protect workers’ | |
freedom to form unions -- for the very first time. That | |
would make a difference. That helps to level the playing | |
field -- (applause) -- and it would be good for the workers | |
in Vietnam, even as it helps make sure that they’re not | |
undercutting competition here in the United States. | |
So that’s progress. It doesn’t mean that suddenly working | |
conditions in Vietnam will be like they are here at | |
Nike. (Laughter.) Or here in Portland right away. But it | |
moves us in the right direction. | |
And if Vietnam, or any of the other countries in this trade | |
agreement don’t meet these requirements, they’ll face | |
meaningful consequences. If you’re a country that wants in | |
to this agreement, you have to meet higher standards. If | |
you don’t, you’re out. If you break the rules, there are | |
actual repercussions. And that’s good for American | |
businesses and American workers, because we already meet | |
higher standards than most of the rest of the world, and | |
that helps level the playing field. | |
And this deal would strengthen our hand overseas by giving | |
us the tools to open other markets to our goods and | |
services and make sure they play by the fair rules we help | |
write. The truth is, we have one of the most open markets | |
in the world. Folks are already selling stuff here. We | |
got to be able to sell there. That requires us to enter | |
into trade agreements to open up their markets. | |
I hear Oregon wine is actually pretty | |
good. (Applause.) Somebody told me that the pinot noir in | |
Oregon is top-notch, right? I’ve got some winemakers right | |
here. (Applause.) Well, I want to make sure Japanese wine | |
consumers have the opportunity to partake -- (laughter) -- | |
in our excellent Oregon wine. | |
We got some Oregon beef producers and ranchers around here. | |
(Applause.) Beef is really expensive in Japan. Let’s make | |
sure they try some Oregon steaks. (Applause.) It’s good | |
stuff. | |
And that’s one of the best things that can happen for our | |
businesses and our workers -- opening up markets that have | |
previously been closed, particularly markets where they’re | |
already selling stuff here. There’s a lack of | |
reciprocity. It’s not a fair deal right now. We want to | |
make it fair. | |
Now, I want to acknowledge -- because this looks like a | |
very well-read and informed crowd -- (laughter) -- that | |
there have been a bunch of critics about trade deals | |
generally and the Trans-Pacific Partnership. And what’s | |
interesting is typically they’re my friends, coming from my | |
party, and they’re my fellow travelers on minimum wage and | |
on job training and on clean energy. On every progressive | |
issue, they’re right there with me. And then on this one, | |
they’re like whooping on me. (Laughter.) | |
But I tell you what. I’ve run my last election, and the | |
only reason I do something is because I think it’s good for | |
American workers and the American people and the American | |
economy. (Applause.) I don’t have any other rationale for | |
doing what I do than I think it’s the best thing for the | |
American people. And on this issue, on trade, I actually | |
think some of my dearest friends are wrong. They’re just | |
wrong. And here’s why. | |
First of all, they say that this trade agreement will cost | |
American jobs. And they’re really basing this on some past | |
experience, looking at what happened in the ‘90s, over the | |
last 20 years, as there was a lot of outsourcing going | |
on. And you know what, past trade agreements, it’s true, | |
didn’t always reflect our values or didn’t always do enough | |
to protect American workers. But that’s why we’re | |
designing a different kind of trade deal | |
And the truth is that companies that only care about low | |
wages, they’ve already moved. They don’t need new trade | |
deals to move. They’ve already outsourced. They’ve | |
already located in search of low wages. | |
What this trade agreement would do is open the doors to the | |
higher-skill, higher-wage jobs of the future -- jobs that | |
we excel at. It would make sure our manufacturers who are | |
operating at the higher end of the value chain are able to | |
access these growing markets. And the fact is, over the | |
past few years, our manufacturers have been steadily | |
creating jobs for the first time since the 1990s -- under | |
my administration. After more than a decade away from the | |
top spot, business leaders around the world have declared | |
the United States is the world’s number one place to invest | |
for a third year in a row. (Applause.) Third year in a | |
row. | |
So the point is, outsourcing is already giving way to | |
insourcing. Companies are starting to move back here to do | |
more advanced manufacturing, and this is a trend we expect | |
to continue. This trade deal would help that. | |
Just this morning, as Mark may have mentioned, Nike | |
announced that, with the Trans-Pacific Partnership, it will | |
make new investments in advanced manufacturing -- not | |
overseas, but right here in the United States. And far | |
more Nike products would be made in the | |
U.S.A. (Applause.) And that means thousands of new jobs | |
in manufacturing and engineering and design at Nike | |
facilities across the country, and potentially tens of | |
thousands of new jobs along Nike’s supply chain here at | |
home. That’s what trade can do. (Applause.) | |
Look, I’ve spent six and a half years trying to rescue this | |
economy -- six and a half years of trying to revitalize | |
American manufacturing, including rescuing an American auto | |
industry that was on its back and is now fully | |
recovered. So I would not risk any of that if I thought | |
the trade deals were going to undermine it. The reason I’m | |
for this is because I think it will enhance it and advance | |
it. So that’s point number one. | |
Point number two -- when you ask folks specifically, what | |
do you oppose about this trade deal, they just say | |
“NAFTA.” NAFTA was passed 20 years ago. That was a | |
different agreement. And in fact, this agreement fixes | |
some of what was wrong with NAFTA by making labor and | |
environmental provisions actually | |
enforceable. (Applause.) I was just getting out of law | |
school when NAFTA got passed. (Laughter.) | |
Number three -- you’ve got some critics saying that any | |
deal would be rushed through; it’s a secret deal, people | |
don’t know what’s in it. This is not true. Any agreement | |
that we finalize with the other 11 countries will have to | |
be posted online for at least 60 days before I even sign | |
it. Then it would go to Congress -- and you know they’re | |
not going to do anything fast. (Laughter.) So there will | |
be months of review. Every T crossed, every I | |
dotted. Everybody is going to be able to see exactly | |
what’s in it. | |
There’s nothing fast-track about this. This is a very | |
deliberate track -- (laughter) -- which will be fully | |
subject to scrutiny. And I’m confident when people read | |
the agreement for themselves, they’ll see that this is the | |
most progressive trade deal in history. | |
Number four -- critics warn that parts of this deal would | |
undermine American regulation -- food safety, worker | |
safety, even financial regulations. They’re making this | |
stuff up. (Applause.) This is just not true. No trade | |
agreement is going to force us to change our laws. This | |
agreement would make sure our companies aren’t | |
discriminated against in other countries. | |
We already treat companies from other countries fairly | |
here. But our companies don’t always get treated fairly | |
there. So sometimes they need to have some way to settle | |
disputes where it’s not subject to the whims of some | |
government bureaucrat in that country. That’s | |
important. We want our businesses to succeed in selling | |
over there because that's how our workers will get more | |
jobs here in the United States. | |
And then finally, some critics talk about currency | |
manipulation. Now, this has been a problem in the | |
past. Some countries, they try to lower their currency so | |
that it makes their goods cheaper, makes our more | |
expensive. There was a time when China was pretty | |
egregious about this. When I came into office, I started | |
pounding on them. Every time I meet with them, I’d be | |
talking about currency. And we pushed back hard, and China | |
moved. In real terms, their currency has appreciated about | |
30 percent since I came into office. And we're going to | |
keep on going after it. But that’s not an argument against | |
this trade agreement. If we give up the chance to help our | |
businesses sell their stuff in the world’s fastest-growing | |
markets, that doesn't do anything to stop currency | |
manipulation. | |
So the fact is, some folks are just opposed to trade deals | |
out of principle, a reflexive principle. And what I tell | |
them is, you know what, if you're opposed to these smart, | |
progressive trade deals, then that means you must be | |
satisfied with the status quo. And the status quo hasn’t | |
been working for our workers. It hasn’t been working for | |
our businesses. And there are people here who will tell | |
you why. | |
I’m going to just give you a couple of examples of small | |
businesses who I had a chance to meet with today. Egg | |
Press is a Portland-based greeting card | |
company. (Applause.) Really nice. They sell their cards | |
in Australia, which is a member of this Trans-Pacific | |
Partnership agreement. Their CEO, Tess Darrow -- where’s | |
Tess? Raise your hand. I saw her. There she | |
is. (Applause.) So Tess says that if they could more | |
easily reach customers in Japan, as well, they’d sell half | |
the volume that they do here in America. That’s a lot. | |
Right now, the logistics of exporting to Japan are too | |
complicated. Products end up being held up for months at | |
the border. This agreement would help solve some of those | |
problems so Tess can sell more greeting cards in Japan -- | |
presumably in Japanese. (Laughter.) Is there going to be | |
-- there will be a translation process, I assume. Yes, | |
absolutely. I’m teasing. (Laughter.) | |
So the trade deal would help eliminate barriers, and | |
simplify customs, and hold countries accountable for | |
getting products delivered swiftly. The more Tess sells, | |
the more she can grow, the more she can hire here in | |
Oregon, here in the United States. | |
Oregon Fruit Products -- makes canned fruits, berries, | |
other products -- depends on exports for 20 percent of its | |
annual sales. Right now, it exports to four members of | |
this partnership that we're putting together: Japan, | |
Australia, Singapore, and Canada. Unfortunately, selling | |
in these countries right now can mean dealing with unfair | |
rules designed to prevent our products from being offered | |
in their markets. Under this agreement, that would | |
change. Exporting becomes simpler, more consistent. That | |
means more people around the world eating Oregon berries | |
all year long. Berry tasty. (Applause.) | |
Sokol Blosser Winery -- (applause) -- we got a lot of | |
drinkers here. (Laughter.) It’s a winery, family-run in | |
Dayton, Oregon. One of its top export markets is | |
Japan. Right now, there are high tariffs on American wine | |
in that country. Under this trade partnership, those | |
tariffs would be eliminated, and wineries across America | |
could see their sales grow overseas. The brother--and- | |
sister team that runs this vineyard -- wave, guys -- | |
(applause) -- they say, “If we can make it easier to do | |
business with countries that are already our trading | |
partners, countries that are allies, that’s a good thing.” | |
They’re right. This deal would be a good thing. So let’s | |
“just do it.” (Laughter and applause.) It took a while | |
for you to catch that, didn’t it? (Laughter.) I thought | |
that was pretty obvious. (Laughter.) | |
So, listen, I know a lot of folks who are skeptical about | |
trade. Past trade deals didn’t always live up to the | |
hype. Labor and environmental protections weren’t always | |
strong enough. I saw for years, in Chicago and towns across | |
Illinois, manufacturing collapsing, jobs drying | |
up. Outsourcing is real. Folks didn’t just make that | |
up. Some of our manufacturing base shifted over the last | |
25 years, and it wasn’t good for manufacturing and it | |
wasn’t good for those communities, and it wasn’t good for | |
workers. That’s the truth. It had benefits -- other jobs | |
were created, we got cheaper goods. But there was real | |
displacement and real pain. And so, for many Americans, | |
this is not an abstraction; this is real. | |
But we’ve got to learn the right lessons from that. The | |
lesson is not that we pull up the drawbridge and build a | |
moat around ourselves. The lesson is, is that we’ve got to | |
make sure that the trade deals that we do shape are ones | |
that allow us to compete fairly. | |
So when I took office, I decided we could rethink the way | |
we do trade in a way that actually works for working | |
Americans. I didn’t think this was the right thing to do | |
just for companies. If I didn’t think this was the right | |
thing to do for working families, I would not be fighting | |
for it. If any agreement undercuts working families, I | |
won’t sign it. I ran for office to expand opportunity for | |
everybody -- the all-American idea that no matter who you | |
are, or where you come from, or how you started out, or who | |
you love, in America you can make it if you | |
try. (Applause.) | |
So, yes, we should be mindful of the past, but we can’t | |
ignore the realities of the new economy. We can’t stand on | |
the beaches and stop the global economy at our | |
shores. We’ve got to harness it on our terms. This | |
century is built for us. It’s about innovation. It’s | |
about dynamism and flexibility and entrepreneurship, and | |
information and knowledge and science and research. That’s | |
us. So we can’t be afraid of it; we’ve got to seize | |
it. We’ve got to give every single American who wakes up, | |
sends their kids to school, rolls up their sleeves, punches | |
in every day the chance to do what they do best: dream up, | |
innovate, build, sell the best products and ideas in the | |
world to every corner of the world. (Applause.) | |
Because, Nike, we do not just have the best athletes in the | |
world. We also have the best workers in the | |
world. (Applause.) We also have the best businesses in the | |
world. And when the playing field is level, nobody beats | |
the United States of America. (Applause.) Nobody beats | |
the United States of America. | |
Just do it, everybody. Thank you. God bless you. Thank | |
you, Oregon. Thank you. God bless America. (Applause.) | |
END 10:14 A.M. PDT |
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