Cabinet Room
12:09 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you very much. And today Iโm signing an executive order to ensure that the federal government lives by a very simple rule: Hire American. Weโve been doing it at a level that hasnโt been done maybe ever.
Iโll also be taking firm, disciplinary action against the leadership of the Tennessee Valley Authority, which has sadly and cruelly betrayed American workers. And we have some of those great American workers with us at the table. This is the Cabinet Room, and itโs an honor to have you in the Cabinet Room and at the Oval Office.
Weโre joined by the Vice President; Congressman Tim Burchett, whoโs doing a fantastic job in the state of Tennessee; Secretary of Labor Eugene Scalia; Acting Deputy Secretary of Homeland Secretary, Ken Cuccinelli. Whereโs Ken? Hi, Ken. I didnโt see you down there. Thatโs great. Doing a great job.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Quiet, as usual.
THE PRESIDENT: Keep you busy, right? (Laughter.) Weโre keeping you busy, Ken.
Recently, the CEO of the Tennessee Valley Authority, Jeffrey Lyash, made a disastrous and heartless decision. The TVA announced that it would lay off over 200 American workers and replace them with cheaper foreign workers brought in from overseas.
The Tennessee Valley Authority leadership then ordered the American workers to train their foreign replacements, rubbing salt in their very open wound.
So weโre going to bring in workers. Theyโre going to foreign workers. And people from Tennessee, and some others states right around it, are going to train them โ what to do and how to do it. It doesnโt work that way.
As we speak, weโre finalizing H1-B regulations so that no American worker is replaced ever again. H1-Bs should be used for top, highly paid talent to create American jobs, not as inexpensive labor program to destroy American jobs.
Sitting at the table are six of the TVA workers who were ordered to train the foreign labor flown in to replace them. I want you and your colleagues to know that my administration will not be putting up with โ I happen to know a young woman whoโs been very active over the last couple of years because we were together on Disney and a couple of other things.
MS. BLACKWELL: Yes. Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: And it all seems to be working out pretty well.
MS. BLACKWELL: Thank you so much.
THE PRESIDENT: Youโre doing a great job.
MS. BLACKWELL: Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: And thank you for it.
But thatโs why Iโm formally removing the chairman of the board, James Thompson, and board member Richard Howorth. If the TVA does not move swiftly to reverse their decision to rehire their workers, then more board members will be removed. We have the absolute right to remove board members. And the board makes the decision; I donโt make the decision. I saw there was an ad on television talking about the amount of money that the chairman makes, and itโs a ridiculous amount of money. But we have the right to replace the board, and the board is the one โ the only ones that get the right to then hire a new person.
Furthermore, the board must immediately hire that new CEO who puts the interest of American workers first. The current CEO, Jeff Lyash, is ridiculously overpaid. He earns $8 million a year. Did you know that? Eight million. Heโs the highest-paid government official of any country anywhere in the world.
Now, I donโt know that you call him officially a โgovernment.โ It might be a public-private. It may be something โ a lot time ago, it was established, Tennessee Valley Authority. But he gets $8 million a year. So that was just a succession of deep-swamp things happening, and itโs a disgrace. But he gets $8 million a year, and I can think of about almost 100 percent of the people I know would take that job. (Laughter.) Itโs not a very hard job. I mean, you have not a lot of debt, not a lot of anything, right?
Public service is just that: Those who takes these jobs must be focused on the public good, not on personal profit. He would have taken the job for millions and millions of dollars less, but nobody asked him to do that. Okay? He would have gone for less. You could have had him for $4 million, $6 million, $7 million, $2 million, $1 million, probably $500,000 a year.
But the new CEO must be paid no more than $500,000 a year, which is still a significant amount more than the President of the United States makes. And I donate my salary. Iโve donated it. From what I hear, Iโm the only President to do that. Youโll have to check on that, but thatโs what Iโve heard. Iโm very surprised to hear that. But I donate my full salary; I donโt take it.
The board must work to ensure the CEO does not receive a lavish compensation package upon his departure, too. We donโt want him leaving and then he gets a big check for millions and millions of dollars.
We want the TVA to take action on this immediately: Lower energy prices in the states of Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. I love all those states. Any additional states you can think of there? I donโt know. Letโs see. So weโre talking about of Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Great states, there โ every one of them.
So let this serve as a warning to any federally appointed board. If you betray American workers, then you will hear two simple words: โYouโre fired.โ โYouโre fired.โ Itโs ridiculous. The man is getting $8 million. Itโd be interesting to see how much money he made before this. And I have no idea. Maybe he made more. I donโt know. But I doubt it. But itโd be interesting to see. He got this position โ must have been politically inspired because I can think of probably, almost, everybody in the nation would have liked this position, including every one of the media folks across the table from me. I would say that everybody would have liked this position.
So, with that, weโre getting rid of him in one form or another. Either the board is going to do it, weโre going to do it. But heโs gone. And heโs done not a great job. Heโs done not even a good job, in certain ways. Plants in Kentucky โ he couldโve kept the plant open in Kentucky, if he wanted to, even if they retrofitted the plant. And he didnโt do that, did he, Congressman?
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: No, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: He wouldnโt do that.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: No, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: We asked him to do it. He didnโt want to do it. We said, โThatโs okay.โ And here we are doing what weโre doing today.
So we will get somebody for a much lower price. I want the saving โ much lower salary โ I want the saving to go to the people of these great states in the form of energy savings. And thatโs a pretty substantial number.
So, Kevin, could I ask you to start off and say a few words, please?
MR. LYNN: I certainly appreciate that, Mr. President. My name is Kevin Lynn. Iโm the executive director of Progressives for Immigration Reform and the founder of U.S. Tech Workers. And thank you for paying attention to our ad, Mr. President.
We were founded โ we founded U.S. Tech Workers three years ago to look at the โ and inform the public on the great harm thatโs being caused by the outsourcing and offshoring of our skilled labor jobs. And, Mr. President, I want to thank you for inviting us here. On behalf of U.S. Tech Workers and the Tennessee Valley Authority, we appreciate your willingness to look at the endangered jobs of the Tennessee Valley Authority workers, especially in a time of pandemic and an election year, when youโve been so busy signing documents that affect the welfare of millions of Americans.
Taking time to ensure that these hundreds of workers, under your administration, can continue to provide great services to the American people, as they have since 1933, shows the people of Tennessee and beyond that you stand by your promise to keep American jobs with Americans.
This is a historic moment that Iโm hopeful will reverse the harm outsourcing and offshoring have done to our nationโs productive classes. And it is my hope that Congress will join you, Mr. President, in making sure our workers are more secure in their jobs.
THE PRESIDENT: Good.
MR. LYNN: Thank you, Mr. President.
THE PRESIDENT: So youโre the one that took the ad about me that โ I didnโt know that. (Laughter.) I was just saying, you know, โI think heโs the one that took this, really, vicious ad.โ Like, I hired this guy for $8 million, that I had nothing to do with it. I said, โWhatโs that?โ But, actually, you brought something very important up, because when I looked into it, I said, โThis guy is actually making $8 million a year.โ And you did the ad. So you really made me aware of what was going on with the Tennessee Valley Authority, which has been a โ a feeding pot for a long time. And a lot of deep state, a lot of swamp creatures, okay?
So, thatโs it. So weโre going to make that โ I see. So I think now you realize that it wasnโt about me. I hope you now realize that.
MR. LYNN: I do realize that, Mr. President. (Laughter.) But if I could โ
THE PRESIDENT: I accept โ I accept your apology. (Laughter.)
MR. LYNN: In full disclosure, Mr. President, when we sat down with the Davis Agency constructing the ad, they said, โWhoโs your audience?โ And I said, โJust one person. Heโs the only one thatโฆโ โ
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs smart. (Laughter.)
MR. LYNN: โ โโฆwould do this, and heโs the only one that can come to the aid of these workers in the Tennessee Valley.โ
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Heโs the only one with any guts to do it โ who has guts to do it.
THE PRESIDENT: Iโll tell you, though โ I have to say, Kevin, the end was very appropriate. And while it has nothing to do with me, I can do things with respect to the board, and ultimately, the board controls that decision. This is a very, very old authority done in the โ
MR. LYNN: 1933, Mr. President.
THE PRESIDENT: So it was done during the FDR days. And itโs been โ you know, itโs been getting crazier and crazier just over the years. And they have, basically, nobody watching over them. And the board isnโt watching. You see this happening in public companies also. You see it happening a lot.
But for a essentially โ I would say, for a federal employee to be paid $8 million โ now what weโre doing is weโre looking at the board members, how much are they paid. Because usually what happens is they pay, and then he says, โYou know, I think you ought to get more money.โ And everybody is making a lot of money, and your pricing for electric and utilities starts going up, and people say, โI wonder why.โ
I also see that theyโre doing a lot of things in terms of electric, which is very expensive electric. Theyโre building facilities that are very, very expensive to build and donโt work well. But weโll discuss that separately.
But I appreciate it because you did make me aware of whatโs going on, and itโs a terrific thing weโre doing today. Thank you very much, Kevin.
Please, Stacy. How are you?
MR. WHETZELL: Iโm doing fine. Mr. President, my name is Stacy Whetzell. Iโm the son of a sharecropper.
First, I want to thank you for being the great American President you are and for caring about and looking out for the great American citizens and workers. We thank you for that.
I picked cotton from the time I was big enough to carry my own pick sack until I married. My wife and I have been married 47 years and have 7 children and 14 grandchildren. I began working for TVA in 1975 as a carpenterโs apprentice. Currently, Iโm the system administrator on TVAโs core team thatโs responsible for installing a $20 million computer system. Our team and the entire IT department have been praised and thanked multiple times this summer for the outstanding performance weโve done.
So it was shocking and devastating to be notified on July the 23rd that IT leadership had decided our team and a total of 40 workers would be terminated and our work done to others. This brings the total planned outsourced jobs to over 200 in TVA information technology alone. We believe there are more planned to come.
The three companies chosen to do the IT work are all three foreign companies that depend heavily on H1-B workers. Weโre required to train these โ our replacements, as President Trump said. Apparently, weโre good enough to train but not retain.
Using H1-B workers to replace capable and willing American citizens is turning entire American communities upside down. Left unchecked, it will turn our nation upside down and negatively impact our national security as certainly as our 50-year build-up of dependence on China for manufacturing has. Thank you, President Trump, for beginning to reverse that hive-centric mistake.
American patriots will forever be grateful that youโre also acting and fought the misguided and out-of-control H1-B worker program. I thank you for Americans first and acting to stop this travesty.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, youโre a very powerful speaker. And so powerful that we just got a call โ Mark just brought this in from โ the TVA CEO, and heโs indicated a very strong willingness to reverse course. (Laughter and applause.)
So it must have been Stacy. I think Stacy did a much better job than me. I mean, youโre talking and all of the sudden, I get the note.
So heโs looking to change course and reverse it, and thatโs good. Now, maybe heโll take a major cut in salary, too. Thatโll be phase two, right? So weโll take a look at that. And maybe youโll start looking at that on behalf of everybody, gratis. Right?
MS. HENSON: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Your group. Thatโs great, isnโt it.
MS. HENSON: Yeah, I mean, TVA told me while we were in this process of working on behalf of the workers โ Iโm the union president, IFPTE-Engineering Association. They told me itโs going to take a message โ a stop order from the President in order to keep us from moving forward. And I said, โIโm working on that.โ (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: And you did a good job.
MS. HENSON: So I appreciate you.
THE PRESIDENT: Everybody in this room did a good job.
MS. HENSON: I appreciate you, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: And, Congressman, you have my endorsement.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Thank you, Mr. President.
THE PRESIDENT: Okay? You had it anyway, but you have it now. Itโs a great job.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Well, I appreciate you.
THE PRESIDENT: The only congressman in the room. I tell you, Tim, great job.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Thank you, brother.
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs only phase one. Phase two is โ imagine being paid the $8 million a year to run a thing thatโs pretty easy to run, in all fairness. Itโs not like he built it; he didnโt build it. He went there and heโs been there, and he gets a lot of money, and it shouldnโt be. Five hundred thousand dollars is a lot of money, right?
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Yes, sir. In Tennessee, it is.
THE PRESIDENT: And Iโm willing to say he gets paid more money than I do. I donโt care.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: But, you know, it shouldnโt happen.
So thatโs a start. Thatโs a start. And I think we should find out what board members make, okay? Because โ
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Iโll look into that.
THE PRESIDENT: โ I can almost guarantee you theyโre paid heavily.
Congratulations, Stacy. Really good.
Please, go ahead.
MR. LITTLEJOHN: Yes, sir. Mr. President, thank you. My name is David Littlejohn. I am a soon-to-be father. This November, my wife will be giving birth to my first child. I am a long line โ Iโm the son in a long line of military men and women, so I was born with a heart of service. And with that, I love to serve the people of the Valley.
I was told July 23rd that I would be sent home and to be trained โ training a contractor from a H1-B-dependent contract company. Now, Iโm shaking right now because โ
THE PRESIDENT: Youโre doing great.
MR. LITTLEJOHN: Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: You had a big victory already. (Laughter.)
MR. LITTLEJOHN: Yes, sir.
Iโm shaking right now because this really impacts me and my wife and my unborn child, and I greatly appreciate everyone here to support us.
THE PRESIDENT: I appreciate it, and thank you very much.
MR. LITTLEJOHN: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: And youโll see what happens. Itโs going to be very quick, too. Thank you.
Wendy, please.
MS. TURNER: Yeah. Iโm Wendy Turner, and thank you for having us here. Iโve been a software engineer at TVA for 19 years. Iโm going to change my comments a little. I was (inaudible) saying, you know, for the first time in 19 years, I didnโt know what was going to happen to me and my kids, and I also take care of my mom. But what weโre going to do going forward โ so, thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: And this was โ everybody felt this way in Tennessee Valley Authority then, I guessโ right? โ if you do. Youโve been there for 19 years. So everyone had to feel this way, like thereโs been a big feeling of doubt, right?
MS. TURNER: Right. Yeah.
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs a terrible thing.
MS. TURNER: Yeah.
THE PRESIDENT: Theyโre waiting for it to happen to them.
MS. TURNER: Yeah, and Iโve been training since June. Iโve been training our replacements from a company that relied on โ
THE PRESIDENT: Youโve been training people?
MS. TURNER: Yes. Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: And so, did they let you off yet? Or are you not sure?
MS. TURNER: I got my notice in June that we would be laid off September 1st.
THE PRESIDENT: So youโre training people to take your job at a โ whatever. Right?
MS. TURNER: They told us it would be โ
THE PRESIDENT: And where are the people from that youโre training?
MS. TURNER: All over the place. We โ everything is done remotely or โ
THE PRESIDENT: Are they from other countries?
MS. TURNER: Theyโre here on soil now. I donโt know their status as far as โ
THE PRESIDENT: Because with Disney, they were from other countries, right?
MS. HENSON: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Go ahead.
MS. TURNER: Yeah, so I donโt know. I know the com- โ Accenture is replacing our group, and I know they rely heavily on H1-B workers, but I donโt know for sure where everyone is.
THE PRESIDENT: Okay. Well, weโll make sure that things work out for the three of them because theyโre brave to be here, actually, Sara. So youโll check that out, right?
MS. BLACKWELL: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Letโs see that they get their jobs back โ
MS. TURNER: Thank you very much.
THE PRESIDENT: โ because I hear youโre great workers. I mean, I said I want people, but I also people that are really good workers โ that did a great job. Because, you know, people can be let go; should be able to โ if theyโre not doing a good job. Iโm all for that. I think โ Iโll bet you are.
But I said, โI want people that really do a great job and were unfairly let go.โ Right, Tim?
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Absolutely.
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs, to me, very important.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Wendy. Weโll see what happens. Okay? Weโre going to push it hard.
Chuck, please.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Mr. President and Mr. Vice President, I recognize how busy your schedule is, and I sincerely appreciate your time today. Okay?
Iโm Chuck Charnawskas. Basically, Iโve had the opportunity to work with the really technically competent people of the Tennessee Valley for seven years, okay? Itโs been a great experience. I have a degree in electrical engineering, 45 years of valuable industrial experience, and Iโm a certified security professional here, okay?
Working with the people in Tennessee Valley was how I learned just how important the Tennessee Valley is to 11 million people in seven different states, okay, and how it basically impacts their lives. Itโs absolutely significant. And that is the reason that Iโm really here today.
The TVA basically has the capability to produce 35 billion watts of powers, okay? They have 17,000 lines of high-voltage transmission.
THE PRESIDENT: How does that compare to other big utilities, would you say?
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: It definitely ranks right in the top of them. Thereโs no question about it. And very significant: Tennessee Valley is part of the Southeastern Reliability Corporation, and itโs obviously one of the biggest players in that area.
THE PRESIDENT: Yea, itโs very big. Thatโs a lot.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Very significant in that respect, okay? And in essence here, as a consequence of that, they also basically support 35 dams โ that produce power from 29 โ to do flood control.
Just a couple years ago, they were able to reduce billions of dollars of potential damage by managing the rivers correctly, in that case.
THE PRESIDENT: Right.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: They have three major power plants โ nuclear power plants.
THE PRESIDENT: Whatโs your biggest dam? Whatโs the big dam?
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Probably it would be Chickamauga or โ
MR. HICKS: Wilson. Wilson Dam, in Alabama.
THE PRESIDENT: Wilson in Alabama.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Thereโs the expert, right down there. (Laughter.) So I defer to the expert about that.
But the bottom line of it: As a consequence of this, itโs a very โ a very important player not only in the Southeast region, but for (inaudible) internationally, okay? And today, the TVA receives hundreds if not thousands of potential attacks โ cyberattacks โ testing its network here, right?
Itโs imperative to have experienced, knowledgeable employees to handle that situation, yeah. Okay?
THE PRESIDENT: Good.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: And a fine example of this โ and I just kind of โ you know, itโs a little bit humorous, but the great power outage in 2003 was affected by a software glitch โ okay? โ that impacted and it shut down Manhattan for 24 hours.
THE PRESIDENT: I remember that very well. (Laughter.)
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: I thought you might be related โ or familiar with that. So, as a โ it just really points to the significance of having qualified, vetted people with proper clearances.
THE PRESIDENT: I agree.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: โ dedicated to that job.
THE PRESIDENT: I agree. That wouldnโt happen with you, would it? Huh? It wouldnโt happen.
MS. TURNER: No, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. I appreciate it, Chuck.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: And then just a โ quickly, two other quick points. Basically, this outsourcing agreement could impact โ the Tennessee Valley has always โ our goals are to provide energy, economic development, and protect the environment. This particular outsourcing agreement could impact the Valley by $88 million to these local economies here. And for the individuals that are in there, not only may they lose their primary income, but they may consequently have insurance costs that basically reflect a 3- to 400 percent increase for these families on how they manage it.
And Iโd like โ
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah. And youโre going to lose โ youโre going to lose people when youโre firing people that are โ they live in Tennessee and they live in Georgia and they live in the other states that I mentioned, and itโs not a fair situation.
Go ahead. Letโs โ letโs go, Chuck.
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Final point: The effort here to make America great again โ okay โ reflects the fact that we need to take into repatriate manufacturing companies and companies to take and spend our money domestically and support the domestic product. How can we justify spending these millions of dollars โ for one particular consulting firm, $15 million to โ
THE PRESIDENT: Who is the consulting firm?
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Well, that would be Capgemini (inaudible).
THE PRESIDENT: You spent $15 million a year on a consulting firm?
MR. CHARNAWSKAS: Well, this was a โ
THE PRESIDENT: We just found another nugget of gold. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: Sara doesnโt care about that one, but thatโs a โ (laughter) โ I care about. You spent $15 million to one consulting firm.
MS. HENSON: Itโs not โ itโs not a consulting โ thatโs one of the companies that are picking up. And itโs Capgemini, and thatโs $15 million that โ just for that one company.
THE PRESIDENT: How many are there โ how many are there like that?
MS. HENSON: Thereโs Capgemini, CGI, Accenture, and Tech Systems at TVA โ
THE PRESIDENT: And theyโre paying tremendous amount of money?
MS. HENSON: Yes, sir. And our workers are more than capable.
THE PRESIDENT: Very โ theyโre very political people. You know this is a very political group of people you just named?
MS. HENSON: Really? I just know that โ
THE PRESIDENT: Not to me. Not to me, I donโt care. (Laughter.) I donโt care who they are, but they โ they are very political.
MS. HENSON: Well, I mean, and these people are more than capable of doing the job and have done it with excellence. And TVA says your matrix for your performance is above; it doesnโt make sense. And what youโre doing โ I cannot tell you how much it means to me. And for these workers it โ and Iโm very emotional because TVA is a large racket. They do their thing, and nobody can touch them. And I believe today theyโve been touched.
THE PRESIDENT: Itโs a racket.
MS. HENSON: Theyโve been touched. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: No, itโs a racket. Well, we just found that out. (Laughter.) No, itโs a racket.
I mean โ I mean, I understand it. The four firms that you just mentioned that are paid tens of millions of dollars, theyโre very political firms. You know, they may be good, but theyโre very political firms. And they do it for much less much โ much, much, much less. You could give them half. You could give them 10 percent, theyโd probably do it for. Those are big numbers for a consulting firm.
MS. HENSON: Well, theyโre โ theyโre not the consulting firm; theyโre the ones actually going to take these peopleโs jobs. That โ
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs worse.
MS. HENSON: Yes, it is worse. So I mean โ
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: (Inaudible.)
THE PRESIDENT: Tim, go ahead, please.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Mr. President, thank you โ
THE PRESIDENT: Congratulations.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: โ and Vice President so much for this. My mama worked at TVA after the Second โ during the โ at the end of the Second World War, when dad came home from the Pacific and married her, and then she went into education. But, you know, working people are the backbone of this country. Thatโs not clichรฉ and youโve โ
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: โ youโve highlighted that so much with the trades and other things, and Iโm very appreciative of the fact.
But Iโll you what: Dadgummit, if TVA wants be Duke Electric, let them because Duke Electric, but theyโre not. And they โ they hide behind the governmentโs skirt and they โ they use eminent domain, and their arrogance is beyond belief. You know, when they had the ash spill, people died, and then โ you know, and then they are just these poor country folks that are just pushing them off until they all die off, until those lawsuits go away. Itโs ridiculous.
THE PRESIDENT: No, thatโs right. And, by the way, in Kentucky, when we wanted to have a plant open with a lot of jobs, they didnโt even want to consider it.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: No. No, they didnโt. Itโs their arrogance. Youโre questioning them, and finally we have a President with the guts that understands business and government. And if TVA wants to be a government entity, they need to โ they need to declare it, and quit using โ they hide behind โ you know, they have their โ their โ
THE PRESIDENT: Do you think Joe Biden would do this?
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Heck no.
THE PRESIDENT: He wouldnโt know youโre alive.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Heโd be โ no, heโd โ
THE PRESIDENT: He doesnโt know heโs alive either. (Laughter.)
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: He needs to get out of the bunker.
THE PRESIDENT: No, can you imagine him sitting at this table right now? Wouldnโt have a clue.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: No, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Okay. So go ahead, Tim.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: No, I think you pretty much covered it, Mr. President. Iโm just honored to be here. And I โ
THE PRESIDENT: Well, Iโm honored that youโre here. And youโve done a fantastic job.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: And I thank you for standing up for working Americans.
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, well weโre going to โ and weโre going to get this finished too. So weโll get it finished, Sara.
Thank you very much, Tim.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Gene, please.
SECRETARY SCALIA: Mr. President, thank you for bringing this group together. And this this meeting has, I think, shown a very human impact on individual working โ
THE PRESIDENT: Incredible.
SECRETARY SCALIA: โ men and women of a practice thatโs actually pretty widespread.
And the way itโs worked under our immigration laws for a while now is that a company that wants to bring in workers from overseas โ wants to use the H1-B program for high-skilled workers โ has to file an attestation with us at the Labor Department, saying American workers arenโt going to lose their jobs when I bring in these H1-B workers. And they have to say itโs not going to hurt their wages.
But what companies do is they bring workers in, and then they lease them out to another company. And so youโve got one company bringing them in and then leasing them to TVA. And itโs true, the company bringing them in โ their workers arenโt being affected, but the TVA workers are.
And so I took a look at this, as your Labor Secretary, recently, and I said to my staff โ I said, โWell, if the workers are going to the other company, why doesnโt the other company, where theyโre actually going to be working and supervised, also file an application?โ
THE PRESIDENT: Very good. Right.
SECRETARY SCALIA: โAnd say, โWeโre not going to affect U.S. workers either.โโ And I said to staff, โWhy canโt we do that?โ They looked into it. And, Mr. President, today, youโre going be signing an order โ
THE PRESIDENT: Well, good.
SECRETARY SCALIA: โ that requires that change.
THE PRESIDENT: Good.
SECRETARY SCALIA: So, going forward, when those workers are going to another company, both companies are going to (inaudible) โ (applause) โ and thatโs a change weโll make. Weโll do it together with the Department of Homeland Security.
I just want to mention one other thing weโre doing together. For more than 15 years, the Secretary of Labor has had the authority to initiate an investigation of abuse of H1-B program when he or she finds reasonable cause. That has never been done. That authority has never been used.
But again, we saw โ signed a memo of understanding on Friday with the Department of Homeland Security thatโll change that too. Theyโre going to now share information they have, which I can then use to bring cases when weโre finding the program (inaudible).
THE PRESIDENT: Very good. Youโre going to find a lot. And thank you very much, Gene.
SECRETARY SCALIA: Thank you. And thank you for this order today.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you very much.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Good work, Stacy. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: Right, Stacy? Right? I like that. You like that?
MR. WHETZELL: Weโll take it.
THE PRESIDENT: Linda, please.
MS. MCDONALD: Well, thank you, Mr. President, for being with us today. The concern you show for American workers is greatly appreciated. And my mother made me promise to tell you that Alabama loves and appreciates your leadership. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: I love Alabama.
MS. MCDONALD: So, a promise that my mother made.
My name is Linda McDonald. Iโve lived in northeast Alabama my entire life. My goal was to work at TVA; that was my American Dream. After years of sacrifice and hard work, I achieved that goal. Iโve been working for TVA for seven years now. But โ so, and in that role, I got to see every day โ
THE PRESIDENT: So that was like an ambition of yours to work someday for TVA?
MS. MCDONALD: Correct.
THE PRESIDENT: And you finally got there?
MS. MCDONALD: I did.
THE PRESIDENT: So, whatโs happening?
MS. MCDONALD: Well, June 30th, we were told that we would be outsourced to another company with โ
THE PRESIDENT: All right. Yeah.
MS. MCDONALD: Yeah, so, here I am, faced with โ
THE PRESIDENT: And you had to have these consulting firms making 10, 15 million dollars a year?
MS. MCDONALD: Yeah, I feel like my โ
THE PRESIDENT: And the man that heads it making $8 million a year, right? (Laughter.)
Go ahead.
MS. MCDONALD: I feel like my American Dream was being stolen from me โ
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
MS. MCDONALD: โ and given to someone else. So I just think โ
THE PRESIDENT: Is that the way you view it: โgiven to somebody elseโ?
MS. MCDONALD: It is. It was taken from me, and โ
THE PRESIDENT: Itโs a very interesting way โ
MS. MCDONALD: โ it was then given to someone else.
THE PRESIDENT: โ of viewing it, right?
MS. MCDONALD: So, I thank you for listening to us, because it felt, for so long, like no one was even listening to us. So thank you very much.
THE PRESIDENT: Well, Iโve been hearing about it for a long time. When I was running, I met Sara, and we worked on the Disney situation โ
MS. BLACKWELL: Yes, sir. Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: โ but that was a long time ago. But โ and, you know, this has been happening for a while. So weโre taking care of it.
Thank you very much. Thank you, Linda. Weโll see what happens. You may be very pleasantly surprised. Okay?
MS. MCDONALD: I hope so.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
Jonathan, please.
MR. HICKS: Well, thank you for your time.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
MR. HICKS: My name is Jonathan Hicks. Iโm a โ Iโm from a large family, and weโve had three โ three members of our family who have served in the U.S. military. I grew up in Tennessee, around the Knoxville area, and started my career with TVA in 2001 as an IT intern. During โ as soon as I graduated, I got a fulltime job there, and Iโve been there for โ for 19 years. Iโve been โ
THE PRESIDENT: And that was a big deal, right?
MR. HICKS: Yes. Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: Working โ because thereโs a great prestige to that.
MR. HICKS: Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs true.
MR. HICKS: Iโve spent my time there working for river operations for the โ for their group, and helping them, you know, have programs โ mostly in-house solutions to be able to manage the river and the river systems.
I was told in June โ early June โ that I would be training replacements, that I would be receiving my work notice in September, and that the workers that Iโd be training, thereโs been five or plus that Iโve been training for my one position, and at least four of those seem to be H1-B type workers.
I guess thereโs a concern with the kind of stuff that we do, at least for the river operations, and that theyโre generating a significant amount of power out of all the โ out of all the โ all of these dams. And, you know, is this something that โ that we want to turn over this knowledge, this ability to control these dams and โ you know, whether it be generation, whether it be floodgates โ and hand it over to corporations that arenโt in the U.S., to workers that arenโt necessarily in the U.S. doing this work?
THE PRESIDENT: Are you there now? Are you โ
MR. HICKS: Well, I โ Iโve been put on non-work status. Iโm still employed and still getting a paycheck until September 1st, but Iโve been โ
THE PRESIDENT: What happens on September 1st?
MR. HICKS: Well, Iโve been relieved of my job duties, but September 1st is when I would lose โ
THE PRESIDENT: And you train people to take your job?
MR. HICKS: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: So youโve worked with people to take your job.
MR. HICKS: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: Youโve taught them, like, almost everything you know, but plenty, right?
MR. HICKS: Well, I โ I think thereโs a big โ
THE PRESIDENT: Maybe not. Maybe you held back a couple of secrets. (Laughter.)
MR. HICKS: Well, I think thereโs a โ I think thereโs a big learning curve and thereโs โ for the knowledge that they do there for river operations, I think it takes several years of understanding the job in order to be able to do this.
The people that are taking over the job have never dealt with utilities, theyโve never dealt with power generation, theyโve never dealt with any kind of water management or hydrogenation. And so the โ to say that theyโre ready to go is a misstatement. So โ
THE PRESIDENT: Well, letโs see how out it works out, Jonathan. I think youโre going to be in very good shape. Okay? I have a prediction.
MR. HICKS: Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you, Jonathan.
Please.
MS. MCKENZIE: Itโs โ Iโm so honored to be here.
THE PRESIDENT: Honored to have you.
MS. MCKENZIE: My name is Renae McKenzie, and I actually work for the Engineering Association as an advocate for these IT employees and for other white-collar workers. But Iโve worked really closely with the IT professionals at TVA, with all of this that has been going on.
Iโve had to witness the anguish of the different employees that are performing these knowledge transfers on the software and the applications that they actually custom built themselves.
But so many TVA employees have been there from the beginning of their careers. So to actually witness whatโs happening to them, being replaced by these non-Americans, is very difficult.
But I think one of the hardest things to witness is what TVA is actually doing to themselves. I mean, their mission is about bringing economic development to the Tennessee Valley. And to be taking that โ taking our economy and just giving it outside of the United States is just almost โ itโs unbelievable because of what they stand for and what they were built for. To come out of economic โ
THE PRESIDENT: And you see them going outside of the United States, not just here. You see them go โ
MS. MCKENZIE: Right. Well, if you look at these companies, these companies are based outside of the United States. So โ so when theyโre getting their millions of dollars, I mean, itโs going to France, itโs really going to โ I think one of them is โ
MS. HENSON: India.
MS. MCKENZIE: India, Canada.
PARTICIPANT: Ireland
MS. MCKENZIE: And Ireland. So, yes, our dollars are going to them.
THE PRESIDENT: Unbelievable. And they get us in many other ways too, but weโre stopping it, as you noticed. Thatโs very interesting.
So you would say France, India, Ireland, Canada. Who else?
MS. HENSON: Thatโs the main groups right there. Those (inaudible) countries.
MS. MCKENZIE: Right. Those are the main ones.
THE PRESIDENT: A lot of them โ are a lot of the workers being outsourced โ
MR. LYNN: All these firms: H1-B visa dependent. And 70 percent of H1-B visa workers in the United States come from one country: mainly, India.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: You know, Mr. President, I worry too about the national security. You know, weโre during a pandemic, people are out of work, and our electric grid could be put in the hands of folks that, maybe, their loyalty isnโt to this great country, and that bothers me.
THE PRESIDENT: You know, with TVA, more so than most companies. Youโre right โ youโre talking about controlling all of that energy and power. Itโs โ youโre right. Youโre right about that, Tim. Thatโs a very good statement. Anything else?
MS. MCKENZIE: Just, it โ again, itโs such an honor to be in your presence. (Laughs.)
THE PRESIDENT: Itโs my honor. Itโs my great honor. Do you know the man next to you is Ken Cuccinelli, a legend? (Laughter.)
MS. MCKENZIE: Look, and I tend to be very quiet like him. Just saying.
THE PRESIDENT: Heโs a legend in his own mind. (Laughter.)
Ken โ Ken has done a fantastic job on the border. Unbelievable job on the border. And you might just tell us for a couple of seconds while we have the โ the media here โ Iโm sure theyโll report it very accurately โ how well weโre doing on the border and then maybe get on to make a statement, because I know youโve been working with Gene and everybody very hard.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Yes. And Secretary Scalia really covered the partnership with โ between DHS and Department of Labor to solve this problem. Youโre solving it forcefully today for these folks. Youโre certainly putting the ball in motion to do that. And what weโre โ our two agencies, at your direction from June, are going to do is solve this permanently so that we never have to see this happen again.
But, on the border, weโre seeing success with your leadership with Mexico and the Northern Triangle countries. The relationships you helped us forge last year, in 2019, are bearing fruit at the border during a very difficult time with the coronavirus and that taskforce, of course, led by the Vice President. And the ability since March to enforce the public health order there has changed the nature of our ability to protect the border.
There are still people getting away, more than we would like. But last year, they were running to us; this year, theyโre running from us, at the border.
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs right.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Itโs a bit different. And over 80 percent of the folks that weโre apprehending are being returned to Mexico in under two hours, which is astonishing. Itโs just an astonishing turn.
THE PRESIDENT: It used to take, in some cases, years. Years.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Right. Absolutely.
THE PRESIDENT: Itโs been incredible whatโs happened at the border. And I think the wall is helping you quite a bit, right? We have now about almost 271 miles of wall.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Everywhere that that new system is put in place, the Border Patrol agents are just universal in their praise for both their safety and the way it impedes illegal traffic โ not just people, but drugs, as well, and so forth. So itโs extremely effective, and itโs going up faster and faster and faster.
THE PRESIDENT: They had a human trafficker the other day saying that they used to go out and theyโre trafficking โ human traffic โ mostly women and children, but mostly women, and theyโd bring them across the border, taped up and โ horrible.
And this guy was saying how they used to go up and theyโd make a left turn. Theyโd make a right and then a left into the United States. He says, and now we just keep driving into this massive wall that nobody gets through. Nobody is getting through that wall. That wall is the real deal. And itโs steel, concrete, and everything else. And lots of cameras all over it.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Thatโs right.
THE PRESIDENT: And drones on top of it. And people arenโt getting through. But itโs been an incredible, incredible success.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Itโs a real force multiplier for the Border Patrol and OFO.
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah. And Mexico is helping us a lot. They have โ
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: A lot better partnership.
THE PRESIDENT: โ 27,000 soldiers.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: I remember how people complained about how you were pushing them so hard last year. But the partnership thatโs grown up with Mexico has been the best. We have really had, in decades, if not forever โ
THE PRESIDENT: Itโs what they say.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: โ in cooperating and securing the border.
THE PRESIDENT: They have a very good President who was just here two weeks ago.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: He was. Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: Heโs really doing a good job. And we have 27,000 Mexican soldiers guarding the border. And they donโt play games. They donโt play games. Itโs been pretty amazing. The numbers are way, way down. And we want people to come in, but they have to come in legally, and thatโs โ
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: You got to come in legally. Thatโs right.
THE PRESIDENT: Youโre doing a fantastic job. Thank you very much.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Thank you, Mr. President.
THE PRESIDENT: Appreciate it.
Okay, please. Go ahead. You can finish up.
MS. HENSON: Yeah, I appreciate you so much. I really do. As I said earlier, Iโm the union president for the workers that are represented by this move that TVA has taken. I met earlier with Tim Burchett and he told me how disgusted he was with it. But that was earlier.
Weโve really tried to get our voice heard. Weโve been screaming, โHey! Hey! Help us out.โ
Finally, U.S. Tech Workers came out, kind of put a commercial together, and weโre โ you know, that got your attention, and we appreciate it so much.
Iโve lived my whole life in the Tennessee Valley region, and my uncle was a โ worked at TVA during World War Two. He laid his job aside, and went and served and perished in that war. My mother told me TVA was a great place to work, and I โ Iโve worked there now 35 years.
This means a lot to the people of the Tennessee Valley region, more than you will ever know. I know that consulting companies looked at what to do with this IT work. Theyโre now looking at what to do โ the same consulting companies are looking at what do with the transmission work. That transmission โ that grid has got to be protected at all cost. And weโve got to. We cannot afford to let someone else, who may not have the loyalty to our nation, have the grid.
And I think that some of these workers here at this table, IT workers, thatโs one of the biggest theyโve said to me: Thereโs a large chance that we would be breached. And we canโt do that. And we tried to say all those things โ
THE PRESIDENT: Well, with our people running it, a very small chance, from what I understand.
MS. HENSON: Yes. With the right people running it. right. But you canโt give it to just anybody. And thatโs why these workers at TVA are so important. And I appreciate you and all that you are doing for us.
THE PRESIDENT: Are the people that youโre representing, are they โ because you represent a big group of people โ are they all nervous, like the folks at the table?
MS. HENSON: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: Like Wendy?
MS. HENSON: Theyโre going, โAre we next, Gay? Is this whatโs coming next?โ And my answer is, โNot on my watch, if we can help it.โ
THE PRESIDENT: Tell them no. Tell them no, theyโre not next.
MS. HENSON: Okay. Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Okay? You can tell them. I think we can say that. So thank you very much.
MS. HENSON: Thank you. I just think you bringing TVA back to their mission of service to the people of the Valley, service to people of the Valley and to this nation is โ is a pivotal moment for the Tennessee Valley Authority.
THE PRESIDENT: So, right now, their mission is taking care of a lot of consultants and a lot of people and paying โ paying heads of this whole thing $8 million a year. And youโll find a lot of other things in there that are crazy.
MS. HENSON: Well, people over profit. And thatโs what youโre doing here.
THE PRESIDENT: What do the people of Tennessee think when they hear that the head of TVA โ which has been running for a long time โ and, in all fairness, not a very difficult thing; there are many people who can do it. What do they hear when they hear โ and they think of government, you know? Itโs sort of semi- โ I guess, you call it โ public-private. But thereโs not private, really, when you think of it. So, itโs a board member.
What do they think when they hear that the head person is making $8 million a year? Which is, by the way, I said it before, the most highly paid person anywhere in any country if you call this government, which it sort of is. What do they think when they hear? Do they know he makes $8 million a year?
MS. HENSON: Well, they do now after Kevinโs commercial. (Laughter.) But theyโre pretty shocked. I mean โ in fact, they โ I think the workers even โ I think some of the workers at TVA have been shocked about that. It is a lot of money.
THE PRESIDENT: But people have known. Iโve known, actually, before the commercial because we were looking at it. We sent them notices a year ago and two years ago saying, โWe want some information.โ And, you know, people have known this. I just canโt even imagine that somebody gets paid $8 million a year.
MS. HENSON: Well, the difference โ
THE PRESIDENT: Itโs the most sought-after job. It has to be the most sought-after job in any country in any government. Right, Tim? Youโd take the job. Would you resign from Congress immediately?
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Take it for one year. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: You only need it for one year. You โ
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: I donโt know. You donโt know my wife and daughter, Mr. President. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: Tim would take it. Thatโs โ heโll take it only โ
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: No, theyโre actually pretty thrifty.
THE PRESIDENT: Only for a year. You just need it for one year. Thatโs right. Anyway.
MS. HENSON: So the workers โ they are surprised at that. But, you know, back to the days of Kilgore and having worked there so long โ I tell people I started when I was eight, because I canโt believe how long Iโve worked there now โ
THE PRESIDENT: Right.
MS. HENSON: But the truth is, there are very capable people at TVA that love โ
THE PRESIDENT: Iโll bet.
MS. HENSON: โ the TVA and the mission that theyโre really โ were put together for and would love to take that job.
THE PRESIDENT: I even think they like your President โ your current President, anyway. Iโm not sure about the past President.
MS. HENSON: Tennessee Valley is โ thatโs right. The boats on the lake all say, you know โ
THE PRESIDENT: โTrump.โ Yeah. No, theyโre great people. Say hello to them. Just say hello. Theyโre great people.
Sara, why donโt you just discuss it real quick, and you can maybe work with us in getting it all done very quickly. Okay?
MS. BLACKWELL: Of course, President Trump.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.
MS. BLACKWELL: Thank you for having us and having everyone here and for all youโre doing with regard to immigration. Immigration should be about America, Americans, and the immigrants. Right now โ the way it was, before you started working on it, itโs always been the big business, big tech, and universities. And with you, we are working to make immigration in America for the right reasons.
And Protect U.S. Workers โ I endorsed you in 2016, we endorse you in 2020, and we know for a fact that โSlow Bidenโ and the Democrats will never push towards immigration that benefits Americans, America, and the immigrants. And I think they hide behind: โNationalists are bad, immigrants are kind and good.โ And if we are against the immigration the way it is now, then we are โracists.โ
But the reality is, if you can keep immigration the way itโs going now, the way Joe Biden will push it, the problem is youโre actually benefiting the big tech billionaires and universities, and that is not what immigration is about in this country.
Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Where you come up with the name โSlow Bidenโ? You know, so many people want me to use that term, and I say, โItโs too mean; itโs too nasty.โ (Laughter.)
MS. BLACKWELL: Oh, no! That means Iโm mean.
THE PRESIDENT: And you just come up with that term. And where did that come from? Is that the โ
MS. BLACKWELL: My son, actually, whoโs 11.
THE PRESIDENT: Your son? Heโs 11?
MS. BLACKWELL: Yes.
THE PRESIDENT: If heโs 11, and he said heโs slow and that he shouldnโt be President โ
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: They need to pay your son $15 million in consulting. (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: Great job.
MS. BLACKWELL: Actually, during the rallies in 2016, you met my son. He had a Thor, and he dressed him up like President Trump.
THE PRESIDENT: Oh, thatโs great.
MS. BLACKWELL: Yes. Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Thatโs very nice. Thank you, Sara. Very โ great job youโre doing.
MS. BLACKWELLL: Thank you so much. Thank you.
THE PRESIDENT: Good. Thank you.
MS. BLACKWELL: Thank you for all you do.
THE PRESIDENT: Okay, Mike. Go ahead. Weโll knock it out, Sara.
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you, Mr. President. Iโll be โ Iโll just be very brief.
Four years ago, when you ran for this office, you said the forgotten men and women in America would be forgotten no more. You said that weโd put America first and American workers first, you said that American workers would have a seat at the table in this administration, and weโd deliver real results.
And today, we see all that happen right in front of us. Because of your leadership indicated during this meeting, that the TVA is going to reverse course on their plan to use H1-B visa workers to replace hardworking Americans. And I can see the gratitude and the emotion on faces around the room, Mr. President, and the gratitude that these people feel and all those that will be reading about this and hearing about this in the days ahead.
But I also just want to say, finally, to all the โ all the great Americans who gathered here, who have been willing to speak up: Know that with the executive order the President is signing today, weโre not just solving your problem. What the President is committing to today is to end the abuse of our worker visa program once and for all, and pulling together multiple agencies to do that. And I want to promise you that youโve not only gone out and been a champion for fellow workers at TVA, but youโve been champions for American workers all across this country.
And I know I speak on behalf of the President and our whole administration when I thank you. Thank you for stepping up for American workers and making it possible for this President to keep one more promise to working Americans. God bless you. (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. So weโre going to sign a little document now. Is that okay?
MS. BLACKWELL: I would love that. Thank you, President Trump.
THE PRESIDENT: And itโs very important one, aligning federal contractors and contracting and hiring practices with the interests of the American workers, which is very simple โ which actually just boils down to pretty much what weโre talking about today. Okay?
MS. BLACKWELL: Thank you so much, President Trump.
(The executive order is signed.)
THE PRESIDENT: Here, give that to Sara because she was there very early. (Distributes signing pen.)
MS. BLACKWELL: Thank you so much.
THE PRESIDENT: I have to give โ I have to give one to you. You got us moving here. Thatโs good. Will you pass these around the table, Mike? Weโll just pass them on that side. Youโll pass them on this side. Everybody that doesnโt get it โ (distributes signing pens.)
So here we are.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: (Inaudible.)
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah, Iโll get you one, Tim. Donโt worry.
So, thank you very much everybody. (Applause.)
Weโre going to be โ weโre going to be discussing, very shortly, a immigration bill, which covers this and many other things. Itโll be a very, very comprehensive bill. Thatโs a word that some people love and some people hate, but itโll be very comprehensive only in the sense that itโll cover just about everything.
Itโll be based on merit. It will be โ itโll cover territory that nobody would have thought could have ever been agreed to. And I think itโll be bipartisan, in the sense that people are going to like a lot of the things that are in there. And probably some people wonโt; weโre going to have that. And weโll probably do it maybe a little bit after our convention. Weโll sign it after the convention.
Likewise, weโre going to be doing a healthcare bill โ act โ and itโll be extremely comprehensive. It will cover a lot of things that nobody thought you would be able to get, and โ I mean, in a positive way. And I think itโll be very popular. And it will be a great thing for our country.
In addition, we have many other things. But immigration and healthcare โ it doesnโt get much bigger than that. Immigration will be very merit-based, but itโll be โ itโll be great for the worker, and itโll be great for people coming into our country โ but coming into our country legally and loving our country and wanting to help our country, as opposed to people coming in and they donโt like our country.
You see that, and you see that with certain of our politicians that ran for office. I say, โI donโt think they like our country too much. All they do is complain.โ And you would never tell them to go back to their own country because that would be inappropriate, wouldnโt it? But all they do is complain about our country, and their country is going to hell. So, you know, itโs sort of an interesting phenomenon.
So the โ the merit-based immigration is going to be incredible, and the healthcare bill or act is going to be something that I donโt think anybody in this country thought theyโd ever see. And weโve done much of that. If look at some of the legislation that we passed, Ken, I think you can say very strongly weโve โ weโve gotten things passed that nobody would be possible.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Thatโs right.
THE PRESIDENT: Whether itโs Right to Try โ thatโs where youโre terminally ill and you donโt have a right to use our great medicines because they havenโt been approved โ theyโre in a line of approval and it takes some time. Weโve cut the time in half, by the way, for approval by the FDA. But people are sick.
We have very promising drugs and theyโre not allowed to use them because โ I mean, theyโre terminally ill and they wouldnโt let them use them because of liability and other things, but I got that taken care of. So, Right to Try was a very important one.
Getting Veterans Choice was so important โ having Veterans Choice. Nobody thought we could get that. Hasnโt been done in 50 years. They havenโt been able to get it. We got Veterans Choice. We got Veterans Accountability. Because we have so many other things. So many things.
And on the border, Ken, weโve done things that nobody thought would have been possible. Right? Do you want to name a couple of them?
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: Weโre making enormous progress in the โ especially in the regulatory arena: reestablishing the 140-year-old American tradition of inviting immigrants here who can stand on their own two feet, as โ much like Sara had said. And to add to this country and not โ while not becoming a burden on the country.
Weโve also โ the security that youโve advocated for and pushed us to achieve has been unprecedented on a border that we still have more work to do. But we โ
THE PRESIDENT: Great progress.
ACTING DEPUTY SECRETARY CUCCINELLI: โ the amount of improvement in three years is just extraordinary.
And one more piece of legislation you know is near and dear to my heart that you led is criminal justice reform, which was โ you know, lots of people before you talked about it, and this is the first administration to do it.
THE PRESIDENT: Nobody else couldโve gotten that done. Nobody. And we really thank Ken, but we thank a lot of people that came through.
By the way, some conservative โ very conservative really wanted it and some liberal wanted it. But we got criminal justice reform done. Nobody thought that was possible. The biggest beneficiary is African Americans and Hispanic Americans, I would say โ and Asian Americans โ the three, the groups.
But tremendous benefits and โ you know, itโs really amazing. When we got that done, we had people supporting that that I wouldโve never thought wouldโve supported it. Not for bad reasons, but they wouldโve never supported it, and they actually led the way. Itโs pretty incredible. Criminal justice reform was a big deal. You know that, Tim.
REPRESENTATIVE BURCHETT: Yes, sir.
THE PRESIDENT: So โ and you were helpful actually, and I appreciate it. And thank you very much. Anybody have a question?
Q Yes, Mr. President โ
THE PRESIDENT: Go ahead.
Q Mr. President, on TikTok: You said over the weekend โ
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
Q โ that youโre planning to ban it. I know that you spoke with the CEO of Microsoft after that.
THE PRESIDENT: I did.
Q So can you give us an update on โ
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah.
Q โ where youโre at?
THE PRESIDENT: Yeah. We had a great conversation. He called me to see whether or not โ how I felt about it. And I said, โLook, it canโt be controlled, for security reasons, by China. Too big, too invasive, and it canโt be.โ And here is the deal: I donโt mind if โ whether itโs Microsoft or somebody else โ a big company, a secure company, very โ a very American company buy it. Itโs probably easier to buy the whole thing than to buy 30 percent of it. Because they say, โHow do you do 30 percent? Whoโs going to get the name?โ The name is hot; the brand is hot. And whoโs going to get the name? How do you do that if itโs owned by two different companies?
So my personal opinion was: Youโre probably better off buying the whole thing rather than buying 30 percent of it. I think buying 30 percent is complicated. And I suggested that he can go ahead. He can try. We set a date โ I set a date at around September 15th, at which point itโs going to be out of business in the United States. But if somebody โ and whether itโs Microsoft or somebody else โ buys it, thatโll be interesting.
I did say that if you buy it, whatever the price is, that goes to whoever owns it. Because I guess itโs China, essentially, but more than anything else. I said a very substantial portion of that price is going to have to come into the Treasury of the United States because weโre making it possible for this deal to happen. Right now, they donโt have any rights, unless we give it to them. So if weโre going to give them the rights, then it has to come into โ it has to come into this country.
Itโs a little bit like the landlord/tenant: Without a lease, the tenant has nothing. So they pay whatโs called โkey money,โ or they pay something. But the United States should be reimbursed or should be paid a substantial amount of money, because without the United States, they donโt have anything โ at least having to do with the 30 percent.
So I told him that. I think weโre going to have โ maybe a deal is going to be made. Itโs a great asset. Itโs a great asset. But itโs not a great asset in the United States unless they have the approval of the United States. So itโll close down on September 15th, unless Microsoft or somebody else is able to buy it and work out a deal โ an appropriate deal. So the Treasury of the โ really, the Treasury, I guess you would say, of the United States gets a lot of money. A lot of money. Okay?
Q Mr. President, can you explain why so many of the public health experts on the coronavirus task force are contradicting you on things like why the virus is so widespread in this country, on the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine? Why are so many of these people on your task force contradicting you?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think weโre doing a great job. I think weโre doing great on vaccines. Weโre doing great on therapeutics. Youโll be seeing that very soon. I think weโre โ when you look at a map, this is a map of the โ Iโve got โ I sort of shown that around a little bit, but thatโs โ the red is the area of most concern. (Displays a U.S. map.) Pretty recent map of the โ of the country. And thereโs a lot of โ a lot of people that โ in a lot of areas that have gotten very โ you know, better very fast.
Hydroxy has tremendous support, but politically, itโs toxic because I supported it. If they would have said, โDo not use hydroxychloroquine under any circumstances,โ they would have come out and they wouldโve said, โItโs a great โ itโs a great thing.โ Many doctors have come out strongly in favor of it. They want it very badly. Itโs a great malaria drug.
So, for many years โ
Q But Admiral Giroir says itโs not effective.
THE PRESIDENT: Let me finish my โ let me finish my answer.
So for many years โ itโs, I guess, 60 years itโs been a malaria drug; very successful, as you know. And itโs been also a drug for lupus. And it caused no trouble โ virtually nothing, in terms of causing people to get sick or having problems with anything. You add the zinc and you add the azithromycin โ the Z-Pak, as they call it โ and itโs been very โ I happened to take it myself, the threesome.
I took it myself for a period of two weeks. I mean, I โ I had no problem. I had no problem whatsoever. And, importantly, I, you know, didnโt test positive. Thatโs very nice. Okay? Iโm very happy about that negative.
And so โ so thatโs the story. Itโs โ itโs very highly thought of. Interestingly, a great doctor, from what I understand โ a great doctor from Yale feels very strongly about hydroxychloroquine. The Ford Clinic in Michigan came out with a very, very powerful paper saying itโs very good. Many other โ in France, as you know, they came out with a very positive statement. Many individual doctors have come out with very positive statements.
I will tell you that if I was surrounded by people, as I was at the time โ the reason I took it: You know, we had some people that were relatively near me that tested positive. And I took it for that reason, just because Iโve heard good things.
Q But Fauci says it doesnโt work. Admiral Giroir says it doesnโt work.
THE PRESIDENT: I donโt agree with Fauci on everything.
Q Theyโre on your task force.
THE PRESIDENT: I donโt agree with Fauci. Look, Fauci didnโt want โ and I โ I like him. I get along with him actually great. But he didnโt want to ban people from China from coming into the country, and I overrode him and I did the right thing. He was saying face masks are no good a short while ago. So it doesnโt mean heโs a bad person, because heโs not. Heโs a good person; I like him. But we โ we disagree on things. We disagree on things.
Now, I will say this: Weโve done an amazing job with ventilators. Weโre supplying the world with ventilators. Ventilators are very hard, very expensive, very hard to make, very complex. Very complicated machines. Very โ very expensive.
Q But why does the โ
THE PRESIDENT: Hold it. Hold it.
Q But why does the U.S. have so many deaths?
THE PRESIDENT: Hold it.
Q The U.S. has so many deaths compared to โ
THE PRESIDENT: Hold it.
Q โ so many countries around the world. I โ
THE PRESIDENT: Fake news CNN, hold it. We have done a great job in this country. We havenโt been given โ and not me. Iโm not talking about me. The Vice President, the task force have not been given the kind of credit.
If you look, countries all over the world are exploding right now โ people that you said were doing a wonderful job, so wonderful. But right now, take a look at the countries that are exploding: You have Italy back. You have Spain back. You have France back. You have Germany back. You have a lot of countries, and thatโs not to knock them.
It is a very delicate, very contagious disease. It was released by China. It should never have been allowed to release. There was the source where you could have stopped it. And they did stop it from going into China, although now they say that China is having a lot of problems. Moscow, in Russia, is having tremendous problems.
What China unleashed was a very, very sad situation. With all of that being understood, the United States has done an amazing job, a great job, and youโre going to see that because we have vaccines and we have therapeutics coming very soon.
Yeah, go ahead.
Q Mr. President, why are you not involved directly in negotiations with Capitol Hill?
THE PRESIDENT: I am. Oh, why? The fact that Iโm not over there with Crazy Nancy? No, Iโm totally involved.
Q Have you spoken with her?
THE PRESIDENT: Iโm totally involved. And weโre going to be doing some things that are very good, because we donโt think that she โ look, what Chuck Schumer wants more than anybody โ and I would say Nancy Pelosi would be second โ they want to bail out cities and states that have done a bad job over a long period of time. Nothing to do with coronavirus or China virus, or whatever you want to call it.
They want to bail out cities and states. They want bailout money. They want to trillion dollars in bailout money, and a lot of people donโt want to do that because we donโt think itโs right. The Democrats have run some very bad states and some very, very bad cities, and a lot of people donโt want to give them a trillion dollars to reward them for doing a bad job.
If you look at some of the states โ I wonโt insult anybody by naming those states, but you know what they are. They want bailout money. Theyโre not interested in the people. Theyโre not interested in unemployment. Theyโre not interested in evictions, which is a big deal โ the evictions. They want to evict. A lot of people are going to be evicted, but Iโm going to stop it because Iโll do it myself if I have to. I have a lot of powers with respect to executive orders, and weโre looking at that very seriously right now.
But what the Democrats want, they want โ theyโre slow-rolling it, and all theyโre really interested in is bailout money to bail out radical-left governors and radical-left mayors, like in Portland and places that are so badly run. Chicago, New York City โ you see whatโs going on over there. Bailout cities and states who have been poorly run and spent a fortune doing it, they want a trillion dollars, and weโre really not interested in that.
Okay, thank you very much, everybody. Thank you. Thank you very much.
Q What about the Postal Service, Mr. President? What about the Postal Service? Any message to your postmaster general?
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Jim, very much. Thank you.
END
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