White House Issues Transcript of News Briefing by Press Secretary Psaki, Domestic Policy Advisor Rice
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She's kindly offered to stick around and take some questions. I will, as usual, play the role of bad cop when it's time for her to go.
So, with that, I'll turn it over to Susan.
The President has committed the whole of our government to advancing racial justice and equity for all Americans. I'm leading this effort out of the
I have the support of every
Tackling these challenges, though, is personal for me. I'm the descendant of immigrants from
But for too many American families, systemic racism and inequality in our economy, laws, and institutions still put the American Dream far out of reach.
Today, the average black family has just one tenth the wealth of the average white family, while the gap between the white and black -- between white and black in homeownership is now larger than it was in 1960.
These longstanding inequities are compounded by the converging crises we face as a nation. Americans of color are being infected by and dying from COVID-19 at higher rates.
One in ten black Americans and one in eleven Latino workers are currently unemployed. By some estimates, 40 percent of black-owned businesses have been forced to close for good during the COVID crisis.
Black and Latino families with children are twice as likely to be experiencing food insecurity during the pandemic as white families. And black and Latino Americans are 2.8 times more likely to die of COVID-19.
And for Native communities across the country, the overlapping economic and health crises have devastated tribal economies and healthcare systems.
These are desperate times for so many Americans, and all Americans need urgent federal action to meet this moment.
Today,
His economic plans make historic investments in underserved communities and put equity at the heart of our recovery. His ambitious agenda builds on a legacy of Americans forging opportunity out of crisis.
These aren't feel-good policies. The evidence is clear: Investing in equity is good for economic growth, and it creates jobs for all Americans. Economists have estimated that the
So building a more equitable economy is essential if Americans are going to compete and thrive in the 21st century.
We have hit the ground running to embed equity throughout the administration. On day one, the President signed an executive order directing an unprecedented whole-of-government initiative to embed racial equity across federal policies, programs, and institutions. That starts with a review of policies and institutions to redress systemic racism where it exists and to advance equity where we aren't doing enough.
Every agency will place equity at the core of their public engagement, their policy design, and program delivery to ensure that government resources are reaching Americans of color and all marginalized communities -- rural, urban, disabled, LGBTQ+, religious minorities, and so many others.
The President has put equity at the center of his response to the COVID-19 and economic crises. His executive orders signed last week deliver rent relief, student debt reprieve, and emergency food assistance to families across the country, helping all Americans, including black and brown families
And he took steps to make our broken immigration system more humane and secure. He restored the integrity of the census so that our constitutionally mandated accounting of every person in
And even before taking office,
Black families this year will face a poverty rate of 20 percent if
The American Rescue Plan also provides critical relief to Native American communities and tribes. These investments will lift over 8 million black, Latino, and Asian Americans out of poverty and provide relief across sectors where families of color are most disproportionately impacted by this crisis: in food and financial security, healthcare access, and education and childcare.
Today,
He will also sign an executive order directing the
The President will also sign an executive order reinvigorating the commitment of all federal agencies to engage in regular, robust, and meaningful consultation with tribal governments.
And the President will sign a memorandum directing all federal agencies to take steps to combat xenophobia and acts of violence against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders
Again, these are a continuation of our initial steps to advance racial justice and equity through early executive action.
Beyond this, the President is committed to working with
As I've said many times in my personal capacity, and I say again, I believe we all rise or fall together. Advancing equity is a critical part of healing and of restoring unity in our nation. The President will have more to say about all of this later this afternoon.
And I'm happy to take a few of your questions.
Q Ambassador Rice, thank you. You speak about communities of color, right now, that are disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. Of course, they're also less inclined to have faith in the federal government response to the vaccination process. So what specifically -- and I'll follow up with others -- but what specifically is being done right now for communities of color to convince them it's okay to get this vaccine?
And a large part of what our colleagues on the COVID task force are doing -- this is the second part -- is reaching out directly, through targeted campaigns, to get to those very communities where the skepticism is highest.
And that's vitally important because as we -- as communities of color are suffering disproportionately and may have less access to information about the vaccine and the ability to easily go online, in some instances, and get an appointment, we have to take those additional steps to ensure that they are aware of its availability, they can get appointments, and that they understand that the vaccine is safe.
Q Let me ask you -- I have a couple things: One is news of the day, but another one -- there's a lot of day-one promises right now.
Q Okay, fine. Let me ask you, on --
Q -- on
Q Thanks, Jen. Thank you, Ambassador. A housekeeping question if I may, and then a follow-up. Can you speak specifically to what this does, as it relates to immigration and immigrants? Does this cover particularly the prisons and private prisons housing immigrants -- undocumented immigrants, tens of thousands of whom are facing deportation in privately run prisons right now?
Q So not ICE, not anything like that. Okay.
And then -- and then, going back to
And that is why the President has ordered the intelligence community to compile a comprehensive assessment of the nature of this threat and challenge, and its origins and roots, and thus provide policymakers with inputs that will be very important to address this challenge.
The
Q And why doesn't this address the ICE private detentions?
This was -- the Obama-Biden administration took steps to end renewing of contracts for private prisons, the Trump administration reversed that, and we're reestablishing it.
Q Mario Parker,
Q Thank you,
And then the second question: Republican legislators have signaled that they're going to look to roll back some of the voting procedures from the last election. We know that that's centered in some of those swing states in largely black and brown communities. What's the administration going to do about that as well?
With respect to efforts to roll back the access to the ballot: This is something that I expect that the President will address in his remarks today. It's a matter of real concern because we ought to be in the business of encouraging and enabling all Americans
And that's why, you know, we will continue to work with
Q Thank you, Jen. Thank you, Ambassador. These measures here are executive actions, which of course could be overturned and reversed by a future President. Can you talk about what steps could be taken to codify these, to make them permanent, whether it's private prisons or other measures, so they could not be undone by a future President?
So I don't think we should assume that by doing something by executive action, where it may also be appropriate to seek legislation, that we wouldn't do it. We have a very full legislative agenda. The President's first priority is enacting the American Rescue Plan, as well as getting our nominees confirmed. And we'll be focused in the next few weeks on that.
Q Thank you,
The President and his team have been working around the clock over the past six days to make meaningful progress on vaccinating as many people as possible. As we've talked about in this room before, increasing the vaccine supply and building increased cooperation between the federal government and state and local leaders on the ground is key to getting that done.
The President will speak later today on those efforts and provide an update on his team's work to bolster the vaccine supply available so that we can, in turn, get more shots into Americans' arms as quickly as possible.
And I'll also add, as many of you have reported, there are some calls this afternoon with governors to brief them on these plans and give them an update on how we will continue to work together even more efficiently.
A couple other things. Earlier today, the first female Vice President swore in the first female Secretary of the
And this afternoon, the Vice President will make her first visit to a federal agency, the
She will also make the case that
Okay, Jonathan, kick us off.
Q Thank you, Jen. First, on the response to the pandemic -- two matters there. First, could you give us or provide a little more detail as to how much more of the vaccine is going to be distributed and how quickly to these states? We've heard governors sound the alarm that they are desperately low on what they need. And then, can you talk about -- has
We've only been here six days, but we want to take steps as quickly as possible to address that. And part of that will be what the President updates us all on this afternoon. And I would be a very short-lived press secretary if I got ahead of the President. And we're having so much fun in here, so you don't want that to happen.
On the second question on testing: We're constantly evaluating -- of course, our medical and health experts -- steps that need to be taken to keep the American people safe. We announced some travel restrictions, as you know, yesterday. I don't have any additional restrictions to preview or announce for all of you.
I will remind you that tomorrow is the first day of our briefings that will be happening approximately three times a week -- that you can all tune in and learn more from our health experts on our plans.
Q And on another matter -- on impeachment: The President yesterday, in an interview, said that he did not believe that former
As he also said at the time, he hopes -- and I'll quote him here -- "the
So, last night, they delivered the articles. The next step, as you all have reported and people watching at home know, is for the
Q Last follow-up, and then I'll hand it off. On this, though, why is the President so reluctant to express his personal opinion as to what happens here? We understand he's not in the
Q -- but he is the leader of the
Go ahead, Peter.
Q Just a little housekeeping as it relates to what's going on in the
Q Since -- since inauguration?
Q I guess the question is: This is someone
Q Let me ask you, if I can: There seemed to be a little bit of disagreement in terms of the way both
But he has also said many times it will take months and months for a broad swath of the population to be vaccinated. And, as always, he's guided, as we all are, by scientists and medical experts and certainly
Q And for specificity on the vaccine stockpile, yesterday you didn't have a specific number;
Q Do you know the answer, I guess? Do we now -- do we have our hands around that, though?
And we, of course, have that assessment, but we're continuing to dig in every day on where the -- what the issues are: Why aren't -- why isn't the vaccine getting out to states? What is the holdup with vaccinators? Why aren't there more vaccine sites that are getting the supply they need?
But later this afternoon, he'll have more of an update on our additional vaccine supply that we'll make available to states.
Go ahead, Peter. It's a "Peter row" over here.
Q "Pete and Pete." Or Pete and "re-Pete," I guess.
Q Thank you. Yeah, let's do that.
So there are some reports that
Q Peter, I had not actually seen that report before we came out here. As you know, and I'll just repeat, the President's first priority is getting the pandemic under control and doing everything needed, putting all of the necessary resources behind that. But I'm happy to circle back with our team on that specific report.
Q And another question. The President says that he hopes that the
But, you know, I think what the President will continue to do privately in his conversations with members of
Q And then just one more. The riots in Portland and the violence in Portland recently -- there was some discussion earlier about the
Cecilia, go ahead.
Q Thanks, Jen. On COVID relief, we've heard
So, the President and members of our team are hearing many of the same, you know, expressions of support and sometimes expressions of questions about whether packages need -- the package needs to be the same size, whether it's targeted, whether it should be targeted in this way. Those are the same questions that they are hearing privately.
And -- but what they all -- what the President is also hearing privately and what members of our team are also hearing privately is that they expect him to be focused on this package, and they will be as well, and they hear and understand the urgency.
And as you know from covering this quite -- for quite some time yourself, oftentimes things come together right before there's a vote, right? The President kind of alluded to this yesterday, but we feel democracy is working how it should: He laid out his big package, his big vision of what it should look like, and people are giving their feedback, and he's happy to have those discussions and fully expects it's not going to look exactly the same on the other end.
Q And on the stockpile assessment, I want to flip the answer that you've been giving, saying that "it's five days or six days; give us some time to catch up with this." I understand that.
On the inverse, it's been six days. Why don't we know exactly what is in this stockpile? How -- what have been the hurdles, the biggest hurdles in getting that answer?
Slaoui -- you probably heard this -- yesterday defended the program, Operation Warp Speed, saying that this is -- the results were "exceptional." So why has it taken so long --
Q -- six days in?
We do have an assessment -- as I referenced, Tiberius, which is quite a name for this website, I will say. It sounds like a magical creature a little bit, to me. But it provides vaccine information -- publicly available information on vaccine supply that's gone to states and what's been used. It doesn't mean it's perfect. Oftentimes it isn't.
But our concerns and our focus is not just on the supply; that's part of the issue. It is also about ensuring that states have the number of vaccinators they need, so that means people
So there's multiple steps in this process, and our focus is on ensuring not just the supply is at the rate it needs to be and that states have more advance notice -- this is one of the things governors will tell you and have told us, that it is very difficult for them when they find out a day before or a couple days before that they're going to run out of supply or when a next supply shipment is coming. They want more time. That's something we're also working on.
So those are all pieces that are a part of this herculean operational task that our team has undertaken.
Go ahead, Mario.
Q Thanks, Jen.
So he has not only taken actions -- executive orders -- taken actions that fall under the purview of the President, but also he has pushed to find ways to work with
There will be more we have to share on our efforts on climate in the days ahead, but I don't think Leader Schumer has any doubt about the President's commitment to this, and certainly the fact that he has called it a crisis. It is -- he said it is central to the issues he wants to take on, and his presidency speaks to his commitment to the issue.
Go ahead.
Q So two more questions to bring it back just to COVID response for a second. So, first, one of the questions that's come up is, how much money is needed, exactly, to respond to the emergency that we're in? Is it
Do you have an assessment just of how much money is left from
And as I was alluding to a little bit earlier, the way the President thinks about this is what the cost of inaction is. So, if you look ahead, it's critical -- and I talked about this a little bit yesterday -- that we don't get anywhere near the March cliff, which would mean the end of eviction and foreclosure moratoriums; the end of
So this package was designed not with a number in mind -- we weren't trying to get a shock-value sticker value. The President relied on the advice of economists, of health experts, and others
So --
Q But do you have a number right now for how much is -- for vaccine distribution alone, how much you have to spend as compared to what you've asked for?
Q Okay. And to one other issue: The --
Go ahead.
Q Jen, the National COVID strategy of the administration, released just a couple of day ago, says that, quote, "
And in terms of the pace, the guidelines will, of course, be publicized by the
So all of those components will lead to expediting. We're not asking states to do this on their own. In fact, we're asking -- we are trying to reset and be partners here in a more effective way than we've seen over the last 10 months.
Q And health officials seem to be recommending now double masking. Is that something that the
Go ahead.
Q Hi. Regarding the Defense Production Act, what is the timeline for ramping up production of supplies, specifically the specialized syringes? And has the administration been in talks with any specific companies or manufacturers?
Q And is the
Q Can I ask one more on behalf of the radio pool?
Q The administration -- this is for a reporter
Go ahead.
Q I just wanted to circle back to Peter's question. So Dr. Fauci, on Fox today, went back to quoting that "100 million doses in 100 days" number. So did the President misspeak when he said the new goal was 150 million shots in a hundred days, yesterday? Or was he operating under some new update that he got?
I would just remind everyone this has literally never been done before. And what he has asked the team to do, and what the team is focused on doing, is also planning for contingencies. I mean, we're at war with the virus. So, in a wartime theme here, there are a lot of things you plan for, including trucks breaking down; freezers breaking; you know, needing to plan for that; you know, not having vaccinators in a location to be able to put the syringes in people's arms.
Q So the 100 million number, though, would be a more accurate number to be citing?
But, again, it is a goal that was set with contingencies we need to plan for in mind, and he's going to continue to push the team to meet that goal and go beyond it.
Q And I had one other question --
Q -- that I wanted to ask the Ambassador, but I didn't get a chance to, which is: In terms of the racial equity goals, does the
Yamiche, go ahead in the back.
Q Hi, I have a couple of questions. The first is:
Everybody won't be -- won't be eligible this spring, as you all know, even with -- even as
Q And following up on that, in terms of data collection, it's my understanding that something like 50 percent of the vaccinations are coming in without racial data. Is that accurate, or is there something else there? I'm wondering how you'll measure success in vaccinating people of color in vulnerable communities if you don't have the data on
And will we see -- be seeing, kind of, mobile outlooks, mobile, kind of -- mobile -- just mobile outreach to those communities, in terms of vaccines? When might we see that?
But this is going to be hard, and we are not trying to sugarcoat that. And it will be very challenging. This is why everybody
So it is -- it is going to take a multi-faceted approach, and we are open-eyed about the challenge.
Q On the data part of that question: Is it accurate that there's very little racial data, or at least less than 50 percent of racial data coming in on vaccinations?
Q And I know Ambassador
Q -- the question that I was going to ask her, which is: We've seen that, after
I know this -- these EOs are about housing and about criminal justice, but can you talk a little bit about how you're going to measure success and what the federal government's role is on something so big as inequality and racism?
We need to address racial equity in terms of health disparity. We need to address it in terms of access to lending and to loans. We need to address it in terms of biases and discrimination as it relates to housing.
And so what this executive order will do -- it will make it a priority and infuse expertise and personnel to ensure we are addressing issues that impact communities of color across the country every day, and not just every few months when it's an issue that comes up and prompts questioning.
Go ahead, in the back.
Q Thank you, Jen. And thank you for making sure that everybody gets the opportunity to ask questions. I really appreciate that. I've got one on housekeeping, real quick, and then I've got a domestic and a foreign policy question.
So you got some beautiful screens behind you. Your predecessors have rejected multiple requests to bring back the
But we also -- we rely on the advice of our health and medical experts on what's safe -- not just for us, but for all of you. And having everybody sit seat-by-seat wouldn't be safe. I know that's not what you're asking, but we'd certainly be open to taking questions via
I took some questions on Twitter the other day. We're going to try to take some questions from the American people that they ask on YouTube. And so we'll continue to look for ways to not just bring back the daily briefing, but to take questions from more reporters and people.
Q Okay. During the campaign -- this is the foreign policy question. During the campaign,
Q And finally -- finally, this is on behalf of a colleague
And certainly addressing the pandemic, making -- ensuring that people don't worry about the health and safety of their grandparents, of their sisters and brothers, getting kids back to school -- that's not a partisan position; that's a position -- that's a leadership position and one he's taking because he wants to make sure he's delivering for all the American people.
Go ahead, all the way in the back.
Q Thank you, Jen. I'm
Q But the readout from the phone call doesn't mention
And so he looks forward to continuing to consult with our European partners on this issue. And if there's more to share on his conversation with
Let me just get to everybody. Go ahead.
Q Thank you, Jen. This is just following on from Yamiche's question earlier. We heard the President, yesterday, say that anyone
And as I also noted, we do have a sense. There is Tiberius -- my favorite word of the day -- a website that has available information on not just the vaccine that is available in states, but what has been distributed.
So what I was conveying, and I think what a number of our medical and health experts have been conveying, is that we've been here for now six days -- I'll at a certain point stop saying that. But less than a week is not that long period of time. We are assessing every day where the holes are, where the gaps are, what the holdups are. It's not just supply; it is beyond that. It's also having the number of vaccinators we need, the number of vaccine distribution sites we need. Those are all issues, if you talk to any governor, that they will say are challenges to getting the vaccine in the arms of the American people.
And what the President's goal is, is ensuring that there is greater availability in the spring. He will push his team. He pushes his team on COVID and updates on it, even when it's a meeting about other issues. This is his focus every single day. And -- but the fact is, every American is not going to be eligible this spring. We're going to continue to increase supply; that's part of it. And he has said many, many times, it's going to take months and months for a broad swath of the population to be vaccinated.
But he would, if he were standing here today -- one, he'd be a lot taller than me, but he would say there are -- he will defer to health and medical experts to get their assessments on when we can reach the point of herd immunity.
Peter, go ahead.
Q There is a report now that the Chief Financial Officer of
Go ahead, right here.
Q Jen, on contingencies: If these COVID vaccines need to be tweaked or changed because of these emerging variants, how is that going to complicate your rollout effort?
So I don't think I'm going to have a new update or assessment for you from here, but it's something they're looking closely at, and the President will continue to encourage them to be as honest and straightforward with the American people as possible.
Q Just one unrelated question. One of
Q I believe that still stands. Can you give us an update on your position on that?
While the overriding goal of
I don't have anything more for you on the status of temporary protected status. That was a mouthful. I will -- of course, our national security team is doing a review of all of the positions put in place by the Trump administration and will provide an update when we have one.
Go ahead.
So, the vaccine, as you all know, has only -- we did not have the scientific and medical breakthrough until late last year. And now it's incumbent upon this administration, the Biden-Harris administration, to ensure that we are taking secs -- steps to increase access, but also to communicate more effectively with communities of color about the vaccine and the efficacy of it. And that certainly is a primary focus. That's one of the reasons why Dr.
And I will say, from being on the transition, she wasn't a person
Okay, go ahead. Last -- last one, says Jonathan.
Q Thank you very much. If I can ask a follow-up, I'd appreciate it. The Trump administration granted waivers to
Q And then, if I could follow up. Yesterday, former
Okay.
Q Jen,
Q
Q
Q And bipartisan governors, obviously, participating?
Okay, last one. I'm breaking Jonathan's rule, but --
Q Hey, Jen. We just saw that
His intention was also to make clear that
Thanks, everyone.



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