House McCarthy and Pelosi each hold weekly news briefings amid coronavirus budget talks


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On Feb. 27, 2020, Republicans and Democrats expressed a shared desire to avoid partisan bickering and congressional dysfunction in efforts to pass emergency funding to address the coronavirus crisis. During weekly news briefing, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said: “What is certain here is that there’s just no time for politics. Diseases don’t know party lines and I would imagine members of Congress would drop the partisanship to coordinate efforts on keeping our country safe.”

McCarthy said GOP appropriators are working with Democrats on “bipartisan basis to appropriate the adequate amount of money” but he refused to put a dollar amount on it, “It’s not my place to sit here and pick a number,” McCarthy said. “The one thing I would say just exactly what the President said, we will do whatever is needed to make sure we keep this country safe.”

McCarthy said that he trusts the president’s decision not to impose additional travel restrictions on countries like South Korea and Italy, where the coronavirus is rapidly spreading – despite CDC identifying a case where the contagion has spread without a known origin in California, “I know the president has always been forward-looking at this and he gets the most up-to-date information. I would trust him on that judgment,” McCarthy, R-Calif., said. “He was right before on protection of America and gets the updated information and we’ll take that day by day to see where we need to be.”

“This is not a time for name calling or playing politics,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told reporters at her weekly news conference, “The first step the Congress must take is to ensure the government has the resources needed to combat this deadly virus and keep Americans safe.”
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Full transcript
Transcript: Nancy Pelosi Holds News Briefing Amid Coronavirus, Budget Talks

Nancy Pelosi:
Lives are at stake. This is not a time for name calling or playing politics. The first step the Congress must take is to ensure that the government has the resources needed to combat this deadly virus and keep Americans safe and then we go onto some of the provisions that we think need to go with it. But that’s again in your inbox. Earlier this week, yesterday actually I said that the American people need a coordinated whole of government fully funded response to keep us safe from the Coronavirus threat. Unfortunately, and this is purpose of my telling this, unfortunately up until now the Trump Administration has mounted an opaque and often chaotic response to this outbreak. They left critical positions vacant, those in charge of managing pandemics at the National Security Council and the Department of Homeland Security. They left them vacant, they dismissed the people and never filled the slots. They were there from previous administration.

The Trump budget called for slashing almost $700 million from the Center for Disease Control. This was the budget which came out after we knew about the Coronavirus threat, and now it continues to devalue our health needs by ransacking other public health needs, whether it’s the Ebola fund or others. So that was up until now. Now we are trying to work in a bipartisan way and that’s one of the reasons that I was delayed in meeting with you this morning. We’re coming close to a bipartisan agreement in the Congress as how we can go forward with a number that is a good start. We don’t know how much we will need. Hopefully not so much more because prevention will work, but nonetheless we have to be ready to do what we need to do and in that regard we want to make sure that the President cannot transfer any of these new funds.

This is part of the statement from Chuck and me, from leader Schumer and me, the President cannot transfer any of these new funds to anything other than use for the Coronavirus threat, that we perhaps will have interest free loans made available to small businesses which are suffering from the Coronavirus. Some maybe have to shut down because of that. Vaccines, we want make sure that the vaccines are affordable. Affordable and we think it’s important to make that point because of what Secretary Azar said yesterday, “We would want to ensure that we can work to make it affordable, but we can’t control the price because we need the private sector to invest.” Really? This would be a vaccine that is developed with the taxpayer dollars to again prevent and we think that should be available to everyone, not dependent on big pharma.

I guess yesterday when the Secretary made that ill-advised statement, he was wearing his pharma hat which he wore before he came here. Then we want to be sure that state and local governments are reimbursed for the cost incurred while assisting the Federal response to the Coronavirus outbreak. Again, I spoke with the Vice President this morning, made some of these concerns known to him. We have always had a very candid relationship and I expressed to him the concern that I had of his being in this position, while I look forward to working with him about his, when he was Governor of Indiana slashing the public health budget. Having some clinics, one especially a Planned Parenthood clinic close, which was the only place where there, in that Scott County where they could get tested for HIV and AIDS. There was an outbreak.

Again, he will have his side of that story but the fact is that the health professional, the Director of the Health in Indiana at the time, Jerome Adams was the Vice President, then Governor Pence’s State Health Officer, he is now the Surgeon General of the United States. So this is about resources. It’s also about personnel. It’s also about respect for science, for evidence-based decision making. And it’s about having so much of that talent that we are so proud of in our public health sector be available in other countries so that we can get a true and accurate assessment of what is happening in other countries. They may be having the best intentions but they may not have, shall we say, even with most talent they may have, they don’t have the value added that someone from our country could lend.

So in any event we’ll look forward, as I say, to working together in a bipartisan way and hopefully again in a very candid way about our concerns about past performance or statements that are made. Let’s put that in perspective as we move forward to have the adequate funding, the respect for science and evidence-based decision making. And again, reimbursement for state and local government and understanding the impact that this has on our communities. Speaking of community, I had the privilege on Monday having a walk through Chinatown. I always love to go there. I feel very proud of it. I always feel very privileged to and say, oh my poor colleagues when they come home, they don’t have the advantage of this beautiful diversity that I have in my district. But sadly, Chinatown is being very hard hit by the lack of tourism and the rest of the Coronavirus.

So a number of us went there and the press came too, to see us go to Temple, light the candle, have a lunch, dim sum that was, go visit and make fortune cookies in the fortune cookie factory. By the way, fortune cookie machine, which is fabulous, is made in America and fortune cookies are an American phenomenon. It’s not something you really find in China, or at least it didn’t begin there. In any event in the shops and all the rest to so show confidence, not fear in terms of the virus. So again, in every way we want to be fully prepared, but not panicking or fearful of what is happening.

Then today or tomorrow on the floor of the House, we have very important legislation. It is to stop the youth tobacco epidemic that we’re expressing, also is on the public health front, the House will vote on H.R. 2339, strong legislation to combat the growing use tobacco and e-cigarette crisis. More than 5.3 million middle school and high school students are using e-cigarettes, more than twice as many as two years ago. According to US Surgeon General youth e-cigarettes youth is an epidemic. The bill protects our children with strong measures preventing marketing to youth under 21, banning all flavored tobacco products including menthol cigarettes and e-cigarettes.

Big tobacco is just on its usual rampage. It uses flavors like gummy bear, bubble gum and cotton to ensnare and addict our children to tobacco. 97% of youth using e-cigarettes use flavored cigarettes. So here we are, this bill would reduce health disparities that spring from cigarette smoking. This is something, a statement that was put out by the National Medical Association, which is African American Doctors, the National Black Nurses Association, the NAACP, Black Women’s Health Imperative, the Association of Black Cardiologists, the African American Tobacco Control Leadership Council, the list goes on and on. There’s 75 organizations represented public health, of communities of color and teachers in supported the bill from the American Academy of Pediatrics to National Association of School Nurses to Society of Thoracic Surgeons, again affecting lung cancer. This statement says to Congress, “End the sale of flavored tobacco products including menthol cigarettes and flavored e-cigarettes. Support H.R. 2339 to protect our kids.”

I don’t know if you’ve seen this statement. Let me read it. “For decades, big tobacco has targeted African Americans with menthol cigarettes with devastating consequences. Menthol cigarettes have addicted generations of African Americans resulting in high death rates from lung cancer, heart disease, stroke, and other smoking related illnesses. Seven out of 10 African American youth smokers smoke menthol, making them more likely to become addicted smokers. Today, the tobacco industry is using e-cigarettes to hook a new generation with flavors like bubble gum, mint, mango, and menthol. It is a public health crisis affecting over 1.53 million kids.” The NAACP, the National Medical Association, the Black Docs, the National Black Nurses Association, Black Woman’s Health Imperative, Association of Black Cardiologists, the list goes on and on. I repeat those who have signed onto this. So we’re hoping to have a good vote tomorrow on that.

Today’s a very sad day for us because it was one year ago today that we passed H.R. 8 and send it over to the Senate, H.R. 8 Is our legislation, as you know for common sense background check background checks. It’s very sad that the Grim Reaper has decided that more people will die, because he is the Grim Reaper. A hundred people a day, my understanding is, die from gun violence. Not all of them can be saved by this legislation, but many could. So we did H.R. 8 today, one year and then tomorrow, H.R. 1112, the South Carolina loophole that enabled a hate crime to be performed at Mother Emanuel church. Well, this would close that loophole, [inaudible 00:11:19] spill.

So here we are, 90% of the public support common sense background checks. Democrats, Republicans, Independents, gun owners because most of them have engaged in background checks. This would be only a simple matter of expanded to sales on the internet, issues at gun shows. The internet sales have come up about more abundantly since the bill was originally passed. So this is only an expansion of all of that and we would hope that we could save lives for doing that. Anyway, I have some other things to talk about. Perhaps we can do it in the QA&A. Any questions? Yes?

Speaker 2:
What are you telling your members to reassure them, those that are nervous perhaps about a Bernie Sanders nomination?

Nancy Pelosi:
I’ve been very clear in all of this. Our responsibility is to win the House. We know how to win. We’ve demonstrated that in the most gerrymandered voter suppressed political arena you can name and yet we net gained 40 seats in the last election by owning the ground with our mobilization, not yielding one grain of sand. By a message of a bold progressive agenda was a mainstream and non-menacing and having the money, the M’s to advance our cause with our message and our ground game. That was very well managed by then Ray Luján and now it continues to be well managed by Cheri Bustos, our Chair. The most important part of it all those M’s are the members to be, our candidates. They’re absolutely spectacular.

My responsibility is to make sure that those we elected last time return to Congress, keep the majority and add to our numbers. The presidential is its own race and I don’t, contrary to what you may be hearing or writing, we are all unified. Whoever the nominee is of our party, we will wholeheartedly support. Our gospel is one of unity, unity, unity. So I don’t have the experience that you may have described, that hearing from anybody. [crosstalk 00:00:13:45]. I just would like to ask somebody who usually comes to our meetings, Chad?

Chad: Good morning, thank you!

Nancy Pelosi:
To reward those, not those who parachute in for something. Yes, Chad?

Chad:
Good morning, thank you. My question is on Pfizer. It was a real Donnybrook to approve Pfizer a few years ago. Obviously there are more concerns now, especially on the Republican side of the aisle after what happened in the 2016 election and [inaudible 00:14:08] and some of the allegations that the process was abused. How do some of what the concern that mostly Republicans have about Pfizer how does that make that a tougher challenge to get this approved this time? Because you know that’s a unique cocktail of votes that was put together last time on both sides of the aisle to pass it. How does that impose a challenge, and to those concerns by Republicans make it even tougher this time around with that deadline looming in mid-March.

Nancy Pelosi:
Well, we’ll see, as you indicate, there is a deadline of we wanted to have it done by the middle of March, well, March 12th for us from a legislative standpoint, but March 15th is the deadline. And we have the challenge and this is my wheelhouse, I was there for some of the Pfizer revisions in the past. The goal is to have the right balance between civil liberties and national security. I think the bill that was put together in the Judiciary Committee working with the Intelligence Committee does that. There’re others who would like to see some other provisions. We’re just working through that now out of respect for everyone’s point of view, but it is really important that we pass the Pfizer bill. One thing that I’m very happy about because this has been just a painful experience for all these years, is that we will have an end to the data collection by telephone records, et cetera, so that will be out.

There’re many good things that are in the bill that protect, further protects civil liberties and I would hope that we can come to a conclusion on it.

Chad:
Did the Marcum issue being canceled yesterday, did that make it tougher to meet that deadline of the 12th of March?

Nancy Pelosi:
Well, it depends. It’s a postponement and we’ll just go through… Anytime somebody has a suggestion, what does it mean in terms of civil liberties and national security and so we’ll see how that goes and hopefully that will be done expeditiously. Yes, Nancy?

How concerned are you about the stock market drops that we saw this week in response to Coronavirus fears and how much do you think that those market jitters should be taken into account both here on the Hill and on the White House when you are delivering messages about Coronavirus?

Well, we are hoping to work in a bipartisan way to stop the spread, to have serious prevention, science-based, evidence-based decision making with professionals who know the territory of science and epidemiology to do the job.

The market drop, now it’s what? 3000 or 2,500, as of last night, 3000, is disturbing. But again, we want to instill confidence. We want to prevent without panicking people about this, but the market will do what it does with the invisible hand that it always does. It does show some fragility on the part of the market that it would drop so much. But again, it can’t affect what we do, if what we’re there to do is to prevent and not panic people on the subject. President said something so strange that you’d really have to wonder, he said the reason the market dropped is because of the debate the other night. Well, the market had dropped 1800 points before the debate the other night. The market dropped while he was speaking yesterday at his press conference, so let’s not be silly about what that is.

Clearly the lack of ability to get some of the product to sell and the rest has an impact on the bottom line for some of these companies. We don’t like seeing the market drop, that’s for sure. We hope that this will have a turnaround, but it cannot affect how we address the issue. Our issue is public health. Our issue is prevention and we would hope that that would not lower the market, but raise the market because we want to show that decisions have made to put this in good hands now. Yes [inaudible 00:18:36].

Speaker 5:
Later today, your DNC is meeting with House Democratic Cacus on the Super Delegate process. Would you advise your members to support the leader of pledged delegates if that person does not have a plurality [crosstalk 00:18:51].

Nancy Pelosi:
That’s not what the purpose of the meeting is, this is strictly it… don’t read too much into it in your moments. This is strictly a housekeeping meeting. This is just say, this is a date like March 7th coming up is when the names will be sent to the state parties as to who the unpledged delegates are. This is about how we participate in committees and the rest. It’s really just a reading of the rules. It’s not anything about that and the rules are very clear. The person who will be nominated for president will be the person who will have a majority of the votes. In addition to that, though, I will take the opportunity to say what I said over and over again. We’re responsible to win the House of Representatives and that is what we intend to do with our mobilization, with our messaging, with our resources in order to win, and hopefully that victory will also help to win the Senate and to help win the White House.

We also want to help to win state and local government positions as well, with our demonstration that we know how to win. So that’s not what that meeting is about.

Speaker 5:
But should Super Delegates support the leader of pledge delegates, even though the person is not have the majority?

Nancy Pelosi:
You know what? That’s not the issue. The person who will be nominated, will be the person who has a majority, plus one. That may happen before they even get to the convention, but we’ll see. The people will speak and that’s what we’re listening to and it’s a pretty exciting thing, but that’s not what this meeting is about. Don’t read too much into it. It’s merely housekeeping to say, “This is how you can be on a committee. This is when you get a chance to vote.” What do you call them? Unpledged delegates can vote for Vice President on the first ballot. Just technicalities, like reading of the rules, it’s nothing. It’s not political and that’s not… the rules say the majority plus one. [crosstalk 00:20:51].

Speaker 6:
Last question.

Speaker 7:
You just said that it’s your job to put forth an agenda that’s mainstream and I think I heard you say a non [inaudible 00:20:59].

Nancy Pelosi:
That’s right. That’s how we win the House. I’m talking about the House of Representatives.

Speaker 7:
Right. Your agenda differ somewhat from Senator Sanders’s agenda. You’re not advocating for instance, Medicare for all.

Nancy Pelosi: That’s right.

Speaker 7:
So I’m wondering do you believe Senator Sanders’ agenda is mainstream?

Nancy Pelosi:
Well, I think that healthcare is the most important issue in the campaign. There are three issues. Healthcare, healthcare and healthcare. That’s why part one of our agenda and how we won the election last time was to lower the cost of healthcare by lowering the cost of prescription drugs. Second was to build bigger paychecks by building the infrastructure of America in a green way. The third was cleaner government. On the first two, I think we can find some common ground to work with the administration on lowering the cost of prescription drugs, I hope so. Building infrastructure of America, I hope so. Cleaner government, not so. But that’s where we are. Now it’s not unusual for the party platform or the candidates for president to have their own agenda that they would put forth and it’s not unusual for the House of Representatives to have its agenda as well.

We have to win in certain particular areas. We’re not about a popular vote in the country or in particular states in terms of the Electoral College. We are a district by district and that’s how we won last time. We demonstrated that we know how to win. Our impetus in that victory continues, the momentum is there to help us win other positions as well. When we win, we put everything on the table, have a discussion and see where we go from here. But it’s not about causing any division as we go forward. Unity, unity, unity! Whoever our nominee is, we will support, with respect for his or her positions and hopefully with their respect for our positions as well. So we have made a decision to win. As I say to the members, if you make a decision to win, you have to make every subsequent decision to win, no friction, no nothing, just stay on the path to victory, because it’s so very important.

Our country is a great country. It’s a great country. It’s so resilient that it could even withstand one term of Donald Trump. Two terms and the damage that he’s doing to the rule of the law of the court system in our country, the air our children breathe, the denial of climate and the rest, just time will take a toll. So it’s absolutely essential that we win whoever the nominee is will have our whole heart that support. Unity, unity, unity. We’ve made a decision to win. Thank you all very much.

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