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President Donald Trump participates in a maternal healthcare event — 5/11/2026

CNBC Television May 11, 2026 1h 15m 14,093 words
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About this transcript: This is a full AI-generated transcript of President Donald Trump participates in a maternal healthcare event — 5/11/2026 from CNBC Television, published May 11, 2026. The transcript contains 14,093 words with timestamps and was generated using Whisper AI.

"doing very well. Most health care plans do not cover these benefits, but today I'm pleased to announce that the Department of Labor is issuing a new rule to formally create a fertility benefit option for employers that can be offered to all employees outside of their normal health insurance plans...."

[0:00] doing very well. [0:02] Most health care plans do not cover these benefits, [0:05] but today I'm pleased to announce [0:07] that the Department of Labor is issuing a new rule [0:10] to formally create a fertility benefit option [0:13] for employers that can be offered to all employees [0:17] outside of their normal health insurance plans. [0:19] It's a big deal. [0:21] They were not properly taken care of. [0:23] Katie Britt knows that better than anybody. [0:25] That's right, sir. [0:26] Who called me and said, [0:29] I must say I shouldn't admit this, [0:30] but the first time I really heard about the fertility [0:32] was through Katie. [0:33] She said, sir, we have to do something. [0:35] And I'm a quick study, [0:37] so I learned everything there is to learn [0:38] in about three or four minutes. [0:39] That's right. [0:41] And I became the father of fertility. [0:43] That is true. [0:45] No, it just made a lot of sense to me. [0:46] She explained it well. [0:48] And I hope you tell that story, [0:49] what happened to you, [0:50] that you were virtually attacked with a bad ruling [0:53] from a court. [0:55] They gave a very bad ruling, [0:56] as you remember, in Alabama. [0:57] You stepped in and saved the day [0:59] and made sure that we had nationwide access to IVF. [1:02] And I've done so much since then, [1:03] and we are so grateful. [1:04] We had something passed within two days after that. [1:07] That's great. [1:07] That's exactly right. [1:08] So it was really pretty amazing. [1:09] You don't see that happen very often. [1:11] But this will be a supplemental option available [1:13] to those who need it, [1:14] much like vision or dental insurance. [1:17] So we're bringing it right down into the mainstream. [1:20] By offering coverage for care at every step, [1:24] the fertility journey is a very interesting one, [1:27] very complex, it was, [1:29] and we're making it much simpler. [1:31] This will hopefully reduce the number of couples [1:33] who ultimately need to resort to IVF, [1:37] because challenges can be identified [1:39] and addressed very early in the process. [1:42] This is a new benefit. [1:43] This is a benefit that so many people have called me about. [1:46] I mean, it's incredible. [1:48] Oz and Bobby, I can tell you, [1:49] we speak about it a lot. [1:50] So many people have called me about, [1:52] we have to do this. [1:53] They've been waiting for it for a long time. [1:56] But this is a new benefit or an option [1:57] that will be a major help for millions of American moms [2:01] that will result in more beautiful American babies. [2:04] We like that. [2:05] To further reduce the cost of fertility care, [2:08] my administration has negotiated unprecedented, [2:11] most favored nation agreements [2:13] with all of the world's leading pharmaceutical companies [2:16] and nations. [2:17] You think that was easy? [2:18] That was not easy. [2:20] The nations in particular, I tell you. [2:22] And it challenged them with tariffs. [2:24] You don't want to give us what you want? [2:26] I'm putting tariffs on your nation. [2:27] Sir, we'll give it to you immediately, actually. [2:31] You think Biden could do that? [2:32] I don't think so. [2:34] Nor did he try, Bobby, right? [2:36] They didn't even try. [2:37] They did not. [2:37] They never tried anything. [2:39] One drug commonly used in IVF has gone from, [2:43] as an example, $966 to $168, [2:49] a difference of 500 percent. [2:52] This is the most incredible thing. [2:54] It's not talked about by the fake news. [2:56] It's sad because it's the biggest thing to happen, I think. [2:58] But we're getting drug prices, prescription drug prices, [3:02] down by four or five hundred percent. [3:04] Or, depending on the way you want to phrase the question, [3:06] you could say four, five, six hundred percent, Oz. [3:09] And you could also say 80 percent, 70 percent, et cetera. [3:13] It all depends on the way you phrase the question. [3:15] I like the 500 better. [3:17] And since we launched that website just a few months ago, [3:21] it's called TrumpRx.gov. [3:24] It's through the roof. [3:25] Is that a correct statement, Oz? [3:27] And, Bobby, will you tell them that was your idea to call it Trump, [3:30] it wasn't mine? [3:31] The President did not propose that thing, [3:33] but everyone else thought it was a great idea. [3:35] It is working spectacularly well, incredibly effective at so many things. [3:38] There is not an American around buying a medication [3:41] who should not check TrumpRx.gov first. [3:44] We propose, Mr. President, it's going to save us [3:46] $600 billion over the next decade, [3:49] the kinds of savings we're going to achieve [3:50] from the most favored nation drug pricing [3:52] that Secretary Kennedy organized. [3:54] And the media doesn't write about it. [3:56] If somebody, if a Democrat proposed it, [3:59] it would be front page news every day for the rest of your life. [4:02] The media, they don't want to write about it. [4:04] Think of it. [4:05] We're reducing drug prices by 500, 600 percent, [4:10] or 80 percent, or 75 percent. [4:13] Anyway, it's all about the phrasing of the question. [4:18] And the media doesn't write about it. [4:19] It's amazing. [4:20] It's so sad. [4:21] It's so biased. [4:22] And that's why the media, [4:25] their approval rating went down just today, 12 percent. [4:28] You're at 12 percent. [4:29] That's why I got elected with 97 percent bad stories. [4:34] I won in a landslide because you have no credibility. [4:36] So I wish the media would write about it. [4:38] It's probably the biggest story. [4:39] Certainly, it's got to be maybe the biggest story [4:42] in medicine, if you think. [4:46] I mean, where you get drug reduction prices of 60, 70, 80 percent. [4:51] A pill that costs $10 in Germany, [4:58] costs in New York City, costs $130, $140. [5:01] Now the pill's going to go to $20 in Germany and $20 for us. [5:04] So we're going to have the lowest prices anywhere in the world. [5:08] And we can't get a story about it. [5:10] They won't write it. [5:11] It's the biggest medical story there is, [5:14] and we cannot get a story about it. [5:16] I think I'm going to ask Walmart for a little help if you don't mind. [5:19] Because you people seem to get very good. [5:22] You get very good publicity. [5:24] I think if you can explain the trick, you'll let me know. [5:28] But since we launched the website just a few months ago, [5:31] over 19,000 Americans have used those fertility medicines [5:34] and discounts and saved more than $15 million [5:38] just in a short period of time, for a matter of weeks. [5:42] The Council of Economic Advisers projects that the number will rise [5:45] to $4.6 billion over a fairly small number of years. [5:53] Nobody's ever seen anything like this. [5:56] And we had to get the countries. [5:57] First, we had to get the companies. [6:01] And the companies were pretty good, [6:03] but they knew I couldn't get the countries. [6:05] So they didn't care that much. [6:06] I think we got the countries. [6:09] I think they said, what's going on? [6:10] And yet, they've done fine. [6:13] They do more business, and they do it from it. [6:16] They made it up in volume, right? [6:17] They made it up in volume, as the old story went. [6:22] There are many other ways. [6:24] Our administration is supporting moms and women. [6:26] We passed the largest working family tax cuts in American history. [6:32] By far, we passed the largest tax cuts, [6:34] not only for women, for everybody, but for women. [6:37] So many working women, we passed the largest tax cuts in history. [6:41] We also made a historic investment in rural health, [6:44] with $50 billion distributed across all 50 states. [6:48] And that gives each state a lot of money over the next five years. [6:52] This $10 billion has already been distributed, [6:55] and you see the results all over the rural part of the United States, [6:59] which I'm proud to say I won by about 80% of the vote. [7:02] And many states are investing and approving maternal health care. [7:07] Every Democrat in Congress voted against this historic funding. [7:11] The Democrats, well, they suffer from Trump derangement syndrome, [7:15] to be honest. [7:16] They don't even know what they're looking at. [7:17] They can't even see straight. [7:19] But I have a new way out. [7:21] I'm going to propose something the opposite of what I want. [7:25] And we will have massive amounts of legislation. [7:29] No, just all I have to do is say, [7:31] we will not build the wall. [7:33] And they'll be there as an example. [7:35] Diabolic. [7:36] No, I'm going to do it, Katie. [7:37] We'll put it in. [7:38] I'm going to go the opposite. [7:40] Whatever is bad, I'm going to go for it, [7:42] and they'll approve what's good, finally. [7:44] No, they've got serious Trump derangement syndrome, [7:47] which actually is a disease. [7:49] I'm hearing it is actually a disease. [7:52] It's an honor. [7:53] Today, we're also enacting groundbreaking childcare reforms [7:56] to improve federal childcare programs, [7:59] including Head Start and Child Care Development Fund [8:02] that goes to each state. [8:04] It's big stuff. [8:06] These reforms will give states more flexible, lower costs, [8:11] increase options, and empower parents to choose [8:14] what care works best for them. [8:16] There's a lot of options that you're going to have. [8:18] Under this plan, you have, I think, pretty much maximum, [8:20] Heidi, I think, maximum options. [8:24] And that's what we were looking for, [8:26] maximum options at the lowest cost. [8:28] And you've got a cost that if you were here a year ago, [8:32] or if you were here, like, during the last administration, [8:34] you're talking about a cost that would be eight to ten times [8:37] more expensive than what we're doing. [8:39] And same exact, same exact prescription, [8:42] same exact medicine, same care at 10%. [8:48] It'll also free up childcare funding for hundreds of thousands [8:51] of additional children to support stay-at-home parents. [8:55] In recognition of this ambitious agenda [8:58] to support American mothers, [8:59] today we're announcing a new website [9:03] that is online right now. [9:04] It's moms.gov. [9:07] Moms.gov. [9:09] You couldn't have put that in the Trump deal? [9:11] You had to give me a new one? [9:13] Competition? [9:15] He wants to make me work so hard. [9:18] So explain moms.gov, would you please, Dr. Oz? [9:22] Well, we're going to have a whole discussion about it, sir, [9:24] a little bit later. [9:25] If we could, we have, we want Katie to speak a bit [9:27] about the first issue you mentioned. [9:29] But moms.gov is a beautiful site. [9:31] Folks ought to check it right now while we're talking. [9:33] Yeah, you really should, and it's pretty incredible. [9:35] Something that Senator Rubio and I tried to do, sir, [9:38] but you're the one who actually did it, along with- [9:40] Well, I like TrumpRx.gov. [9:43] I mean, I love moms, I love moms, but I like TrumpRx.gov. [9:49] You put me in there, I got to make sure. [9:51] He gives me competition now, he wants her to work. [9:54] That's all right, we're only kidding. [9:55] I have to say we're kidding, otherwise I'll do. [9:58] Trump and Oz had a major dispute, it was terrible. [10:01] And Bobby broke him up. [10:02] It was a terrible, terrible dispute, these people. [10:07] I encourage every mom to visit this new page [10:09] where they will find helpful information [10:11] about addressing clinical care, pregnancy resources, [10:15] nutrition tips, TrumpRx, and Trump Accounts. [10:19] Trump Accounts has been amazing for the kids. [10:22] It's Michael and Susan Dell. [10:24] They put in $6 million, $250 million, started it. [10:30] And that's another one that's gone through, [10:32] the Trump Accounts, where young kids, [10:34] they turn 18 or 20 or 21, [10:36] and they feel like a billionaire. [10:39] Used to say a millionaire, now you say a billionaire. [10:41] But they certainly feel rich, [10:44] as opposed to having absolutely nothing. [10:46] It's so popular, so many people are doing it. [10:48] We have people, in one case, [10:50] took over the entire state of Ohio. [10:53] It's putting up the money for every kid in the state of Ohio. [10:57] Supporting the journey of American moms at every stage [11:00] is so important to the success of our nation. [11:02] I'd now like to ask Senator Katie Britt. [11:05] She's the one that got me into this, I have to tell you. [11:08] I hope she always remains loyal to me, [11:10] so I can continue to support her. [11:12] You got it. [11:13] I would hate to go against her. [11:14] You got it. [11:15] That will never happen, Katie, right? [11:17] That's right. [11:17] That's right, sir. [11:18] But to say just a few words, [11:19] she's really a fantastic woman. [11:21] She's a great senator. [11:23] And I got lucky. [11:25] I was supporting somebody else, [11:27] and then I realized that somebody else wasn't very good. [11:30] And I said, who's that young woman I met [11:32] that was so impressive? [11:33] They say, her name is Katie Britt. [11:36] I said, let me talk to her, I endorse her, she won a landslide. [11:41] And you've been winning in landslides ever since. [11:43] So you've been doing a great job, Katie. [11:45] Thank you very much. [11:46] I thought I should explain it to say a few words. [11:49] Katie's going to say, and followed by Monique Pruitt, [11:52] and then Olivia Walton, then Dr. Oz and Dr. Dorothy Fink, [11:58] and Dr. Alex Adams. [12:00] And you'll speak not too long because I am being waited on [12:07] by a large group of generals. [12:10] And that's also important, you know? [12:13] Having to do with the absolutely lovely country of Iran. [12:19] That's the way they pronounce it. [12:20] Well, we will get started then. [12:21] Mr. Okay. [12:22] Mr. President, thank you for your work. [12:24] We are here, guys. [12:25] This is another example of promises made, promises kept. [12:28] I mean, we look at what President Trump did [12:30] when we dealt with this issue in Alabama. [12:32] He stepped up to the plate immediately to make sure [12:35] that we had nationwide access to IVF, [12:37] to making sure that we had comprehensive fertility treatment [12:41] so that men and women, couples who were longing [12:44] for their child, could continue to have that hope [12:46] and also have that reality. [12:48] Today doubles down on that yet again. [12:50] I mean, we see the savings that have happened [12:52] across the country, and I've had more and more people [12:55] come up to me and tell me a story about what has saved them. [12:58] But we also know that there was opportunity [13:00] for continued growth. [13:01] President Trump saw that, and he acted on it. [13:03] So now more people are going to have access [13:05] through their employer, just like they would [13:07] dental or vision insurance. [13:09] And there are people right now who this is out of reach [13:12] because of affordability, and President Trump [13:14] is bringing that back in. [13:15] When you look at the comprehensive nature [13:17] of what we're doing today and coming on the hills [13:19] of Mother's Day, I mean, we are thrilled [13:21] to support mothers everywhere. [13:23] Whether it's that mom that is getting to experience growing life [13:26] for the very first time, or the one chasing toddlers, [13:30] or wrangling teenagers, or being there [13:33] when their adult child calls for advice. [13:36] Moms are the heartbeats of our families, [13:38] our communities, and our country. [13:40] President Trump knows that, and he's made sure [13:42] we've created a comprehensive culture of life. [13:45] That's what you see right now with moms.gov. [13:47] Moms.gov was something that then-Senator Rubio and I talked [13:52] about doing with Senator Kramer and now Senator Schmidt, [13:54] but of course, President Trump is actually [13:56] the way to put it into action. [13:58] It supports moms through the prenatal, postpartum, [14:00] and early childhood development stages of motherhood. [14:04] Also, as we tackle rural health, look, [14:06] I stand up here in front of you not only as a mom of two, [14:09] but also as someone who lives in the great state of Alabama, [14:11] where about 28% of women live in a current maternal care desert. [14:16] The work that we did in the Working Families Tax Cuts, guys, [14:19] that hits it head on. [14:21] We have an opportunity now to reach those [14:23] who haven't been reached. [14:24] When we look at maternal mortality rates, [14:26] we continue to invest both in the research [14:29] that will help us resolve that issue, [14:31] but also in the women that deal with so many issues [14:35] during their pregnancy, we want them to be supportive. [14:38] And then in addition to all of that, child care. [14:41] So we know last year alone, you had about 455,000 women [14:45] leave the workforce due to affordability [14:48] and accessibility of child care. [14:49] We've often said, and the President and I have talked about this, [14:52] if you have or want the opportunity to stay home, [14:54] we want that for you. [14:56] But if you want or need the opportunity to reenter the workforce [15:00] and want to be a part of building back America, [15:02] like President Trump is doing, [15:04] we don't want affordability or accessibility [15:05] to be an impediment to that. [15:07] So not only at his direction, [15:08] and I was proud to lead the effort [15:10] in the Working Families Tax Cuts to modernize the tax code [15:13] to make sure that child care was front and center [15:15] for the first time since Ronald Reagan, sir. [15:17] You're the first one to do it. [15:19] But today, that comprehensive nature of whether you're staying home [15:23] or you're in a faith-based provider [15:24] or you have a child care center that you lovingly send your child [15:28] to during the day as you work to provide for your family, [15:32] today that is easier as a result. [15:34] And we are proud of what that means for the economy. [15:37] We know 24% of young families spend about 24% [15:42] of their annual income on child care. [15:43] So, Mr. President, thank you for all that you've done, [15:46] creating a comprehensive culture of life. [15:48] This is really groundbreaking. [15:50] So do you see now why I endorsed her so soon? [15:52] Yes. [15:54] Yes, for sure. [15:55] I'd be afraid not to. [15:57] She also is married to the largest human being I've ever had. [15:59] He's right there, sir. [16:01] Her husband is great. [16:02] He's an 11-year player in the NFL, an all-star, [16:07] one of the greatest college football players ever at what he does. [16:11] And he's a fantastic person. [16:13] Both two really fantastic people. [16:16] Monique Pruitt speaks about TrumpRx. [16:19] Yes, sir. [16:20] Well, thank you, Mr. President and Senator Britt, [16:23] for all the work and the teams that have done so much around this. [16:26] This is a very important topic, so I'm glad to be here. [16:28] I have personally used TrumpRx and I've saved thousands of dollars [16:31] on my medication. [16:33] As President Trump mentioned, a lot of insurances did not cover this. [16:37] It looks like they will be now, so that's wonderful. [16:39] Thank you. [16:40] Even so, some don't cover the medication portion. [16:43] That can be a separate pharmaceutical cost. [16:45] So TrumpRx has brought a lot of the prices of medications down. [16:50] For me personally, Gonal F has been one of the main medicines [16:54] that people use for ache retrievals. [16:57] And I cannot find it anywhere, on any other website, or for cheaper. [17:02] So, thank you so much to you guys for doing all the work. [17:05] We really appreciate it from the IVF community. [17:07] The President TrumpRx has been amazing, hasn't it? [17:09] The difference in cost. [17:11] It's just incredible. [17:12] I mean, you're talking about something where it goes down five, six, seven times. [17:17] And I tell the story often, my first, I was so proud, my first term, one-eighth of one percent. [17:24] I reduced drug costs during my third year, one-eighth of one percent. [17:28] And that's the first time in 28 years that prices went down. [17:32] And I was so proud. [17:33] That's right. [17:34] Remember that? [17:35] I was there, yes. [17:36] Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to just say that prices have gone down one-eighth of one percent, [17:41] which is the first time in twenty-eight years that prices have gone down for prescription drug prices and others. [17:48] I was so proud of that. [17:50] And now I reduced it by five hundred percent. [17:53] Perhaps that's experience. [17:55] I always knew that, you know, we were being just absolutely decimated. [18:00] But, you know, I was hunted. [18:03] I was the hunter now. [18:04] You know, I was the hunted then. [18:07] And I had to devote a lot of time to that. [18:09] Otherwise, I wouldn't have been too effective. [18:11] If I was out of office, I wouldn't have been—so we—I was hunted by some very bad people. [18:16] Now I'm the hunter. [18:17] It's much better when you're the hunter. [18:19] But these are bad people. [18:20] And they'll give you no support at all, no matter how good it is. [18:25] I mean, as an example, I don't know what the numbers are, but if we go to Congress to get [18:30] something approved, which we get, but you can say that we're going to reduce drug prices [18:36] by 80 percent and we won't get one Democrat drug. [18:41] I don't know how they get away with it. [18:42] That's why we call them the Democrats. [18:44] We have a new name. [18:46] They're Democrats because they're dumb. [18:47] They're dumb people. [18:48] And then they just—they just can't do it. [18:51] I've been waiting so long for them to change, but they just keep losing, and they're going [18:57] to keep losing with their—with their policies. [19:00] But we reduce prices by 70, 80 percent, and it's such a big—it's such a big deal. [19:06] I'd like to ask Olivia Walton, who's here with her very handsome husband, Tom. [19:12] Thank you, Tom, for being here. [19:13] Thank you very much. [19:14] And you're going to speak about maternal health care. [19:17] Mr. President, I'm going to introduce Olivia, if you don't want. [19:20] By the way, before we leave the last topic, as the leader of EMD's Toronto, which makes [19:24] one of the most important fertility drugs this year, just to remind you, because you've [19:27] been giving different percentages, the Monique's price of getting a product is one-tenth of [19:32] what it used to be. [19:34] So one-tenth. [19:35] Forget about percentages. [19:36] That's an easy number to remember. [19:38] And the fact that we were paying ten times more for that same drug in America is embarrassing. [19:42] It changed under the president, and presidents have known it for a long time, but it takes [19:47] guts to take on important lobbyists. [19:49] So why didn't they get it done? [19:51] Well, the main reason is they were intimidated. [19:53] They're scared. [19:54] Or incompetent. [19:55] Or incompetent. [19:56] But I've had plenty of conversations with the president when he says he doesn't care. [19:59] He wants to do the right thing, and this is a good example. [20:01] Absolutely. [20:02] Excuse me. [20:03] Katie Britt's husband's here. [20:04] You can see. [20:05] I just spotted this very large answer. [20:09] Anyway. [20:10] That's a great guy. [20:12] Okay. [20:13] Go ahead. [20:14] So let me speak a little bit about the reality that one in three Americans are under-babied. [20:17] What does under-babied mean? [20:19] That means that you either don't have any children, or you have less children than you would normally [20:23] want to have. [20:24] And to Katie's point, we have a crisis that's causing our fertility rate to drop below 1.5. [20:29] The replacement rate is 2.1. [20:30] So we're way below what we need just to replace the people that we have in America. [20:35] And one of the challenges is that rural America, where there's 60 million people, have a mortality [20:40] rate, a maternal mortality rate when they have babies. [20:43] It's about 30% higher than if you live in an urban area. [20:46] One of the ways the President wanted to address this was creating something in the working [20:49] families tax cut legislation, which is, I think, the most ambitious, fantastic program ever written to help fix the healthcare system. [20:57] The President saved Medicaid in the working families tax cut legislation. [21:01] We also invested with Congress, Senator Britton and her colleagues voted for this of the House, to put in $50 billion into rural healthcare. [21:10] That's $10 billion a year for the next five years. [21:12] All the money went out the door on time, and it's being used for incredibly beneficial advances to help Americans living in rural America have babies safely. [21:20] Your zip code should not determine your mortality rate if you're having a baby. [21:24] That is going to change. [21:25] There's a great program in southern Alabama. [21:27] They call it LA, lower Alabama. [21:29] I love that you know that. [21:30] Yes, I've been there. [21:31] And that is allowing us to use these new ultrasound probes now. [21:36] If you don't have an obstetrician in your county, because in many counties in LA, which is lower Alabama, that is the case. [21:43] We have states, and all the governors are embraced on this, investing a lot of money, training more people to work in rural America. [21:49] And we're also using telehealth tools, so you have big, sophisticated urban centers adopting smaller facilities, clinics, so they can help moms deliver babies wherever they may live. [21:59] You don't have to drive across state to get there. [22:02] Now, as great as this all is, and as fantastic as it has been to have 50 governors, in this case, Mr. President, even the Democratic governors are on board. [22:08] It's such a good offer. [22:10] It's such a beautiful way of keeping your people healthy that everyone's embraced this program. [22:15] We still can't do it by ourselves. [22:17] We have to invest in the American people. [22:19] We have to have governors and private sector partners that make this happen, as well as, and I hope the Secretary can speak to this in a moment, because MAHA is probably vital to this effort. [22:29] You have to get moms healthy enough to do the most creative thing the universe knows, which is making babies. [22:34] So, Olivia, maybe you can take the message around the private sector involvement and how you and your family have gotten involved in this and led the way, and maybe you can talk about MAHA afterwards. [22:42] Sure. [22:43] I would love to. [22:44] And first, thank you so much, Mr. President. [22:45] Thank you, Dr. Oz. [22:46] And thank you, Secretary Kennedy. [22:47] Thank all of you for making maternal health really a national priority. [22:51] It's an honor to be here today with all of you. [22:54] This $50 billion in rural health funds, this really represents a transformative opportunity to invest in maternal health care. [23:02] And, in fact, it's what's given us the confidence to launch Healthy Moms, Healthy Babies America, which is our campaign. [23:09] It is bipartisan. [23:10] Dr. Oz is right. [23:11] Democratic governors across the country are also very interested in doing this. [23:15] We have a simple goal. [23:16] We want to cut the U.S. maternal death rate in half in five years. [23:20] That sounds audacious, but I am confident we can do it. [23:23] I am confident because we have the federal leadership, because President Trump wants to make America the best place to have a baby. [23:30] I'm confident because we now have this $50 billion money that's already going out to the states that we can actually leverage to pay for some of this. [23:38] And I'm confident because, honestly, we know how to fix this. [23:41] The vast majority of infant and maternal death is preventable. [23:46] We know the solutions. [23:48] Maternal health is rural health. [23:50] You heard the numbers from Dr. Oz. [23:52] I'm here today as a mother from Arkansas. [23:54] I have three young kids. [23:55] I live in a very rural state, and I'm thrilled to say Governor Sanders is taking maternal health. [23:59] Head-on has made some incredible progress. [24:02] But in rural America, it is hard to have a baby right now. [24:05] It is hard to get care. [24:06] We have moms driving for hours to get to the OB. [24:10] Most moms don't have the time to do that, and a lot of moms don't have the money to do that either. [24:14] And then after they have the baby, they're not going back for any kind of checkup. [24:18] For those of you who know who've had a baby, what's the standard of care? [24:22] They say, come back in six weeks. [24:24] It's not a good idea. [24:26] You all know how precarious those precious few weeks are. [24:31] You need help sooner than that. [24:32] And by the way, not all this care has to be done by an OB. [24:36] It can be done with doulas and nurses and midwives, folks in your community. [24:40] They can work with a doctor. [24:42] As Dr. Oz said, there is virtual care. [24:44] The solutions really do exist, and now is the time to get serious about this stuff and scale it. [24:50] So we are uniting business leaders with policymakers, health care providers, faith leaders. [24:55] We believe there's a great opportunity for faith leaders to play a bigger role in taking care of babies postpartum. [25:02] And I'm just grateful to be here. [25:03] I really believe. [25:04] I know you're meeting with the generals, and we appreciate you keeping our country safe. [25:08] Investing in maternal health care is the most strategic investment we can make in the future of American prosperity. [25:14] Thank you. [25:15] Hey, Tom, she did very well. [25:17] What do you think? [25:18] I'd give her 10, maybe a 12. [25:20] I'll give her 12 or something. [25:22] So when is she running for office? [25:24] You know, the nice thing, I was just listening, as Olivia was saying, she's so respected. [25:28] And she doesn't need this. [25:30] She doesn't need to come here and go. [25:32] And she goes around and checks hospitals and does things. [25:35] She really doesn't need it at all. [25:38] She could be doing anything she wants, anything. [25:41] And I think it's fantastic. [25:42] And thank you very much. [25:43] It's very kind of thing. [25:44] Thank you very much. [25:45] Thank you, sir. [25:46] Really beautiful. [25:47] Thank you. [25:48] Okay. [25:49] We have Dr. Fink. [25:50] Hello, yes. [25:51] Right here. [25:52] Dr. Fink, how are you? [25:53] So good to see you. [25:54] Nice to see you. [25:55] Go ahead. [25:56] Well, thank you, Mr. President, for your ongoing support of maternal and infant health. [25:58] We recognize that the health, that's why we launched the Perinatal Improvement Collaborative during the first Trump administration. [26:08] Hi. [26:09] An effort that has continued to this day to improve health outcomes for moms and babies. [26:14] Through this nationwide network of hospitals, we are using real data and proven clinical practices to protect mothers and newborns. [26:24] In the Perinatal Improvement Collaborative hospitals, we have reduced maternal mortality by 41.5%, which is truly incredible. [26:33] And this is compared with a 5.9% decline in benchmark hospitals over the same period of time. [26:39] Our goal is to have every hospital in America doing this, and we're thrilled to be partnering with Heartland Forward to make this happen. [26:47] We really want every woman to have a healthy delivery and a healthy baby and to make the United States the healthiest place in the world to give birth. [26:57] Thank you. [26:58] Yes. [26:59] And I'll also add in that you all and the Trump administration have taken his strength and support for American mothers and families. [27:07] With the launch of Moms.gov, we're highlighting all of the policy achievements that have advanced to support moms and babies. [27:17] Moms.gov is a first-of-its-kind resource that offers all sorts of guidance and information to support the health and well-being of mothers and their families. [27:26] Moms.gov also really helps support expecting parents who are navigating difficult or unexpected pregnancies. [27:32] We are committed to supporting women's health throughout motherhood and at every stage of life. [27:37] Supporting women's health is not just a policy, it's a promise. [27:42] Many mothers help build healthy families and that healthy families build a healthy environment. [27:47] So I want to thank you, Mr. President, for the support of women's health. [27:55] Thank you, Doctor, very much. [27:56] Thank you. [27:57] Well done. [27:58] It's well done. [27:59] Dr. Adams, please, about child care. [28:01] Thank you, Mr. President. [28:03] This Mother's Day, we recognize the reality for millions of Americans that child care has become too expensive, too difficult to find, [28:10] and too disconnected from the needs of working families. [28:14] For years, Washington's answer has always been the same. [28:16] More bureaucracy, more mandates, and higher costs for everyone. [28:20] President Trump, you are taking a different approach. [28:22] Under your leadership, we're advancing a child care reform package that puts parents back in charge. [28:28] We're going to do three primary things. [28:31] First, we're restoring parental choice. [28:33] That means bringing faith-based providers back to the table, and it means recognizing the vital role played by home-based providers, [28:40] relatives, and parents who choose to stay home during the earliest years of their children's lives. [28:46] Second, we are cutting unnecessary red tape. [28:49] Red tape that forced providers to close, limited access to care, and made it harder for working families to find the support they needed. [28:56] We're moving away from one-size-fits-all federal mandates, and instead empowering parents to meet their child's unique needs. [29:04] And then third, we're strengthening accountability to ensure taxpayer dollars are protected from fraudsters. [29:10] Under the Biden administration, they essentially backed the Brinks truck up to states and sent the security home. [29:15] We think Americans deserve better. [29:17] We will ensure that these funds go to families who truly need support. [29:21] Our goal is simple. [29:23] More affordable options, more providers, more choices for parents, and more accountability for taxpayers. [29:28] Mr. President, your pro-family agenda recognizes a simple truth. [29:32] Strong families build a strong nation. [29:34] And if I could just add on a personal note, Mr. President, I want to thank you for your leadership and everybody up here for their leadership on fertility issues. [29:41] My beautiful baby girl, Emerson, is a product of IVF. [29:45] And I thank you for your leadership on that issue and sharing the joy of parenthood with many, many more American families. [29:51] Thank you, sir. [29:52] Well, thank you very much, Doctor. [29:53] It's great to know. [29:54] It's been really successful under this administration. [29:58] And again, Katie, you were so helpful. [30:01] Bobby, do you have something to say? [30:03] Very, very briefly, Mr. President. [30:06] I just wanted to stress how what a huge win for the Maha movement and for the pro-life movement. [30:12] Moms.gov is. [30:15] It is one-stop shopping for IVF, for prenatal care, for postnatal care, for nutrition, for baby formula, and, of course, for TrumpRx. [30:26] We have, as Dr. Oz pointed out, a fertility crisis in this country right now. [30:31] We just found out that we've dropped out at 1.57 percent. [30:35] The replacement rate is 2.1. [30:38] A hundred years ago, we were at 3.27, so more than double than we are today. [30:44] We are approaching the cataclysmic rates that Japan and China are now experiencing that is threatening their economy. [30:52] It's a threat not only to our economy, to our national security. [30:56] It's a direct threat to our social security trust fund, to the Medicare trust fund. [31:01] President Trump has directed my agency to find out the cause of the fertility crisis, and that is part of this program. [31:10] We're looking at the impact of metabolic challenges, which directly affect fertility, of obesity, which affects fertility, of endocrine disruptors, of pesticides, of this toxic soup that our young women are walking around today. [31:30] Let's try to figure it out. [31:31] The fertility crisis for women began in 2007. [31:36] For men in 1970, men had twice the sperm count as our teenagers do today. [31:43] This is an existential crisis for our country. [31:46] We had a series of presidents that were trying to discourage childbirth and motherhood in this country. [31:55] We now have a president that is trying to encourage it, and I want to thank you again for your leadership. [32:00] Thank you very much, Bobby. [32:01] And there's another word, autism, that we're very much involved with. [32:06] And I have my own ideas, but Oz and Bobby and everybody, they're really focused on it very hard. [32:13] I think in a certain way, you know, I would like you to look at the payment schedules, Bobby, because I think it's very skewed because of the payment schedules. [32:23] You understand what I mean? [32:24] Yes. [32:25] We're bringing you some ideas. [32:26] I think it has to be. [32:27] I think it's crazy. [32:28] I think that's what's happening. [32:29] You can't pay more for that to a doctor. [32:32] I mean, every person around you is going to have autism. [32:35] That's what's happening. [32:36] So, because I really believe that that's very badly skewed. [32:40] But more importantly, but I would like that done immediately. [32:43] But more importantly, I think that some great progress has been made as to why, you know, what is this thing that's happening all over the world, but here? [32:54] What is it? [32:55] What's going on? [32:56] And there has to be something because, you know, it spiked so much over the last 10 years. [33:01] It's spiked over the last 15 years. [33:04] It's gone up many, many times. [33:06] And I think it's a very important thing to mention. [33:09] I mention it all the time, having to do with other subjects, and then I bring in autism. [33:13] Anything having to do with medical, I always bring in autism. [33:17] On another topic, we're looking very seriously at Natural 7-OH and getting that approved. [33:26] Natural 7-OH. [33:27] And we'll take a look at that very strongly. [33:30] I think us and everybody were looking to see if we can do something there. [33:35] A lot of people are asking for it. [33:38] And thank you very much for the work on that. [33:41] And with that, do you have any questions? [33:43] Mr. President, you mentioned that you were going to be meeting with the generals on Iran. [33:47] You rejected a deal from Iran for the weekend. [33:50] Can you tell us anything about that proposal? [33:52] And what, if any, effort will change to break this down? [33:55] It was just unacceptable. [33:58] You know, a lot of people said, well, does he have a plan? [34:01] Yeah, of course they do have a plan. [34:02] I have the best plan ever. [34:03] I mean, Iran has been defeated militarily, totally. [34:06] They have a little left. [34:08] They probably built up during this period of time. [34:10] We'll knock that out in about a day. [34:12] But I have a plan. [34:13] You know what it is? [34:14] A very simple plan. [34:15] I don't know why you don't say it like it is. [34:17] Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. [34:19] They're very dangerous. [34:21] They're very volatile. [34:22] It's a terrible thing that's happened over there. [34:27] They've killed 42,000 people in the last two months. [34:31] 42,000. [34:32] At least that's what we know of. [34:33] 42,000 people. [34:34] They killed numerous people over the last week. [34:37] But they killed 42,000 people a month ago, a month and a half ago. [34:43] They were unarmed protesters. [34:46] Not at all violent protesters. [34:48] And they started taking them out, shooting them. [34:51] So, we're not going to let them. [34:53] That's the plan. [34:54] You know, people say, what's the plan? [34:55] The plan is very simple. [34:57] The blockade, first of all, was a part of military genius. [35:02] Just like Venezuela was a military genius. [35:04] We have the greatest military in the world, by far. [35:07] And we're stocked up with great ammunition. [35:10] We have much better stuff than we did two months ago when we first did the attack, which knocked [35:15] them for a loop. [35:16] But very simple. [35:19] Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. [35:21] It can't have it. [35:22] And if they did have it, the Middle East would be gone. [35:25] Israel would be gone. [35:26] And they'd hit Europe probably next. [35:28] We're doing this service to the world. [35:30] And this has gone on for 47 years. [35:32] Other presidents and leaders of other countries that have the power should have done it. [35:37] But they didn't do it. [35:38] But it's a very simple plan. [35:41] Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. [35:42] And they won't have a nuclear weapon. [35:44] And they didn't want to go that far. [35:46] If you can believe it, they didn't. [35:49] How stupid. [35:50] Are they stupid people? [35:51] They didn't want to believe it. [35:53] They think that, well, I'll get tired of this, or I'll get bored, or I'll have some pressure. [35:56] But there's no pressure. [35:57] There's no pressure at all. [35:59] We're going to have a complete victory. [36:01] We've already, in theory, had a complete victory from the military standpoint. [36:05] But the military, look, their navy is dead. [36:08] They had 159 ships. [36:10] Right now they have zero, other than the little speedboats that go around that got taken out [36:14] eight a day by us. [36:16] They have no air force. [36:19] They have no anti-aircraft. [36:20] Now, they probably put the shoulder jobs into service over the last three weeks, probably. [36:28] But, essentially, they have no anti-aircraft. [36:30] They have no radar. [36:31] And, frankly, their leaders have been killed at the first level, second level, and half [36:36] at the third level. [36:37] And then they come back, and they want to negotiate. [36:41] And they give us a stupid proposal. [36:43] It's a stupid proposal. [36:44] And nobody would take it. [36:46] Although Obama would have taken it. [36:47] Biden would have taken it. [36:48] What they took was far worse. [36:50] So we stopped him twice. [36:51] We stopped him when I terminated the worst deal probably ever made in the history of our [36:55] country, in terms of defense. [36:57] That was the Iran nuclear deal by Barack, penned by Barack Hussein Obama, that would have [37:05] given Iran a nuclear weapon within a year. [37:07] They would have had it years ago. [37:10] I terminated that in my first term. [37:11] And then, when that beautiful plane right there hit them hard, we really hit them hard. [37:17] And they told me, I want to just tell you this, because they like to say, oh, well, maybe [37:21] it wasn't that hard a hit. [37:22] Iran told me very strongly, because they intend to give us the nuclear dust, as I call it. [37:28] It's easier than talking about other terms, because it's a term everyone knows. [37:31] But the nuclear dust, which is what we hit, they told me, number one, you're getting it. [37:37] But you're going to have to take it out, because the site was so obliterated that there's [37:42] only one or two countries in the world that could get it. [37:46] It's so deep and got hit so hard that there's no way they have the equipment to move it. [37:51] You and China are the only two countries in the world that could take it out. [37:56] So, we talked about it, and they said, you'll have to take it out, because we don't have [38:00] the capability of doing it. [38:02] So, for those people that like to say that those great pilots in those great planes, [38:07] well, we just ordered 22 more of them, new and improved, that those great pilots didn't [38:13] do their job. [38:14] They did their job. [38:16] One o'clock in the morning with no moon, no light, no nothing. [38:19] Every single bomb hit its targets. [38:21] And then, as you know, we shot some incredible things. [38:27] There's things that nobody else has. [38:30] Nobody has a military like we have. [38:32] We shot the tomahawks from a submarine 200 miles away, and that went on top of it. [38:38] But every one of those, including the tomahawks, every one of those weapons and shots hit perfectly. [38:45] And they said to me, just to put it on the record, they said to me, there are only two [38:51] countries in the entire world that could ever get that stuff out of there, because we don't [38:56] have the equipment and nobody else. [38:58] They said, China and the United States. [39:01] So, I just want to let you know, those pilots did an unbelievable job, very dangerous job, [39:07] at one o'clock in the morning. [39:09] Think of it. [39:10] No moon, no nothing. [39:11] We had no light, purposely. [39:14] And every single one of those bombs were right down an air chute in a granite mountain [39:19] and exploded. [39:20] And they are unable to get it, even if they wanted to. [39:25] But we're not going to take a chance. [39:26] So that's part of the deal. [39:27] So, sir, do you say the Marines have agreed to allow the removal of all their enriched [39:32] uranium? [39:33] Yeah. [39:34] Well, they did two days ago. [39:35] They didn't — okay? [39:37] They did two days ago. [39:39] They said, you're going to have to take it. [39:41] We were going to go with them. [39:42] But they changed their mind, because they didn't put it in the paper. [39:45] So when they sent us this document that we waited four days for, that should have taken [39:49] 10 minutes to do — look, it's very simple. [39:52] We get that. [39:53] They guarantee no nuclear weapons for a very long period of time. [39:57] And a couple of other minor things, but they just can't get there. [40:01] So they agree with us, and then they take it back. [40:04] But they said to us that it was so badly obliterated — it was the word they actually used. [40:11] That was my original word. [40:13] Then it got challenged by some of the fake news. [40:15] But — and it wasn't challenged with any knowledge. [40:18] It was just challenged like they were hoping that this wouldn't have been so successful. [40:24] Now, it was obliterated. [40:26] We have the greatest military in the world. [40:29] I built it largely in my first term, and I didn't know I'd be using it quite this much [40:35] in my second term. [40:36] But very simply, when they say, does he have a plan? [40:40] Yeah, I have a plan. [40:41] The plan is very simple. [40:42] You know, in war you have to change. [40:44] You have to be flexible. [40:45] You have a lot of plans, but you have to do different plans in different days. [40:49] But I have a great plan. [40:51] But the plan is that they cannot have a nuclear weapon. [40:54] And they didn't say that in their letter. [40:56] Mr. President, in the leadership changes that you've talked about in Iran, [41:01] is this still a leadership that you believe you can negotiate with and ultimately reach a piece of weight? [41:06] I think so. [41:07] Well, you have two. [41:08] You have the moderates and you have the lunatics. [41:10] And I think the moderates are more respected. [41:15] The lunatics want to fight till the end. [41:17] You know, there will be a very, it'll be a very quick fight. [41:20] But I call them, you have, just like our country, we have lunatics too. [41:25] We have, I call them lunatics. [41:28] I call them stupid people too. [41:30] But in Iran, they have the moderates that are dying to make a deal. [41:33] And then you have the lunatics. [41:34] And I guess they're a little bit afraid of the lunatics, but, and why not? [41:39] The level of ferocity for protests, you know, the people are watching it. [41:46] They want to go out on the streets. [41:47] They have no weapons. [41:48] They have no guns. [41:49] We thought the Kurds were going to give us weapons, but the Kurds disappointed us. [41:53] The Kurds take, take, take. [41:55] They have a great reputation in Congress. [41:57] Congress says, oh, they fight so hard. [41:59] They fight hard when they get paid. [42:01] So I'm very disappointed in the Kurds. [42:04] But they were given, I said it wasn't going to work, by the way. [42:08] I just have to say it. [42:10] I disagreed with what they did. [42:12] They gave it. [42:13] I said, they'll never get there. [42:14] And I was right. [42:15] I like to be right. [42:16] In this case, too bad. [42:17] But we sent some guns with ammunition. [42:21] And they were supposed to be delivered, but they kept it. [42:24] I said, they're going to keep it. [42:25] But what, what do I know? [42:27] I've only been doing this a short period of time. [42:29] What do I know? [42:30] Go ahead. [42:31] For the time being, the ceasefire remains in place. [42:33] What? [42:34] For the time being, the ceasefire remains in place. [42:36] It's unbelievably weak, I would say. [42:41] I would call it the weakest right now. [42:44] After reading that piece of garbage they sent us. [42:46] I didn't even finish reading it. [42:48] They said, I'm not going to waste my time reading it. [42:50] I would say it's one of the weakest right now. [42:53] It's on life support. [42:54] They understand. [42:55] These are all medical people. [42:57] Dr. Oz, life support is not a good thing. [43:00] Do you agree? [43:01] Diagnostic. [43:02] I would say the ceasefire is on massive life support, [43:06] where the doctor walks in and says, [43:08] sir, your loved one has approximately a 1% chance of living. [43:14] Yeah. [43:15] Mr. President, sir. [43:16] Daniel, go ahead. [43:17] Yep. [43:18] One of the best reporters in Washington. [43:20] Go ahead. [43:21] Thank you, sir. [43:22] I'm going to reference this a little early. [43:23] Two questions on healthcare, if I can. [43:24] The Council of Economic Advisers released a report [43:27] saying that the most favored nation drug deals [43:30] will generate about $529 billion in domestic savings [43:34] over the next 10 years across all markets. [43:37] How transformative are these deals? [43:39] And makes people better. [43:40] Yeah, it does. [43:41] How transformative are these deals for millions of Americans? [43:45] And do you believe that the most favored nation drug deals [43:48] are the Republicans' golden ticket? [43:50] I think the Republicans should walk away with the midterms. [43:54] Now, typically, whoever is president, they vote the other way. [43:58] Nobody knows this. [43:59] Do we have a psychiatrist in the group? [44:01] Nobody knows why, because I think we've had the best president. [44:04] A lot of people have said, even some radical left lunatics have said [44:08] that we've had the best presidency, the best first year of any president. [44:11] Look, I stopped eight wars, got the largest tax cuts in history, [44:15] the largest regulation cuts in history, all the things we've done. [44:18] So many, like all of this that we've done. [44:20] Medically, we've done so much. [44:22] You know, we did a thing called Right to Try at my first. [44:26] And I could never understand it when I was a civilian, [44:29] which wasn't so long ago. [44:30] I haven't been doing it that long, but I always used to marvel at the fact [44:34] that if they had a great drug and it had to go through the FDA, [44:39] and the FDA guarded it and said, you can't use it. [44:42] And if a person was terminally ill and the drug was showing great promise, [44:47] the person's terminally ill, they wouldn't give it to the person [44:50] because they didn't want to hurt the person. [44:52] And I said, well, we need something on that. [44:54] And it was very important to me. [44:55] And I had no idea it would be so hard to get, but we got it in total. [44:59] We got it in full. [45:00] It's called Right to Try. [45:02] That if you're terminally ill, you have the right to try a drug [45:07] that has not gone even anywhere near final. [45:10] If it shows even a little promise. [45:12] And we've saved thousands of lives. [45:14] It was very hard to get because the insurance companies didn't want it. [45:17] The doctors didn't want it because the doctors didn't want to be blamed. [45:20] The drug companies didn't want it because if it didn't work, [45:24] they didn't want it on their record. [45:26] So what we did is we said, we're not going to count it on your record. [45:29] If somebody's terminally ill and they take the drug and it doesn't work, [45:31] we're not going to count it on your record. [45:33] We'll have another record. [45:34] You know, a little smaller one that not a lot of people look at. [45:36] But we're not going to count it on your record. [45:38] So Right to Try has been one of the great successes. [45:42] Again, nobody talks about it. [45:43] We've saved thousands of lives on us. [45:46] But you know what is maybe even more important? [45:48] We've learned very quickly that some drugs work and some drugs don't. [45:52] In other words, some drugs take a person who's terminally ill and there are numerous cases. [46:00] And without waiting seven years, ten years. [46:03] By the way, we think we've cut it in half. [46:05] But you do need a period of time. [46:08] Without waiting many, many years, we know the drug works. [46:12] Because we've taken people that were dead. [46:14] We had a person given the last rites. [46:17] God. [46:18] The kids are crying. [46:20] And started them on this drug. [46:22] And the person became better. [46:24] It works. [46:26] You know? [46:27] And some don't work. [46:28] But you learn really fast. [46:30] It's called the ultimate test, I think, right? [46:32] You know? [46:33] They test all these things. [46:34] They use animals all over the place. [46:36] They use everything to test. [46:38] A person is going to die. [46:40] So, they didn't want it because they didn't want to be sued. [46:44] You know, the drug companies didn't want to be sued if it didn't work. [46:47] The country didn't want to be sued. [46:49] So, I got everybody into a room. [46:50] And I said, we're going to do this. [46:51] But if anybody uses it, they have to sign a document. [46:54] They signed a very strong document that they're not going to sue the doctor. [46:58] They're not going to sue the country. [47:00] They're not going to sue the manufacturer, the pharmaceutical company. [47:03] They're not going to sue anybody. [47:05] But we're going to give it a shot. [47:06] It has been — right to try has been so successful. [47:09] It's been amazing. [47:10] Nobody talks about it, but everyone knows how successful. [47:13] Mr. President, there was a young man that we visited on, actually in Los Angeles, who's taking advantage of this program. [47:18] Katie actually spoke to him by phone. [47:20] He's from Alabama. [47:21] He reached out to you directly, and this is the same program that benefited him. [47:25] And just to put numbers on the Council Economic Advisors, it's between 500 and whatever it was, 30 million that she said, and $700 billion in savings. [47:33] So, we estimate at $600 billion in total savings. [47:36] And the impact on the American people, Ms. President, is one in three Americans leave a drugstore without their medication because they can't afford it. [47:42] Even though they've got a doctor's prescription, they know they can make a difference in their lives, that will no longer happen with the most favorite nation drug pricing. [47:48] And we're giving drugs like, as you call it, the fat shot, the weight loss drugs to all beneficiaries of Medicare. [47:55] Every senior in America can get them for $50 starting on July 1st. [47:59] These are just inconceivably good prices. [48:01] And they're so good, in fact, that we actually see the taxpayer money by reducing the downstream effects of obesity, diabetes, and hypertension. [48:07] Mr. President, all possible because you took brave action. [48:11] And again, the question we should be asking ourselves is, why didn't this happen a decade ago? [48:15] Katie, what do you think about that young man? [48:16] Well, that he is, he has a new lease on hope, and it's because of you. [48:21] I talked to his parents, and they said, we feel so good about our country that we literally have the President and Dr. Oz and Secretary Kennedy doing everything possible to give our son a fighting chance. [48:33] They said before, you know, no one was listening, but you, Mr. President, took action. [48:37] And Will Roberts, he, that is such a, he is such a great young man who has inspired so many people. [48:42] We're right to try. [48:43] Nobody talks about us. [48:44] We're with him. [48:45] We have thousands of people. [48:46] But, but it's also, it's like this incredible laboratory of people that are, they're finished. [48:52] They're terminally ill. [48:53] They're not going to live. [48:54] And we weren't given, and this went on for years. [48:57] You know, this went on, Madam Secretary, you're doing such a good job with prices, agriculture. [49:03] How's the beef doing? [49:04] We got to get the beef down. [49:05] We're working on it. [49:06] It's the only thing. [49:07] We got to get the beef down. [49:08] But this was, this was so incredible because, and I marveled at it. [49:15] I marveled at it for 30 years and say, why, I'd have friends that were terminally ill. [49:21] You'd meet people. [49:22] They were really in bad shape. [49:24] They weren't going to make it. [49:25] And they couldn't get a drug that looked like it was going to work. [49:28] They couldn't get it. [49:29] They asked me to get it. [49:30] You have contacts. [49:31] You know, could you get it? [49:32] You couldn't get it. [49:33] You go to jail if you get it. [49:35] And they were going to die. [49:36] They'd die three weeks later, four weeks later. [49:38] And we're saving a lot of people that were gone, that were terminally ill. [49:42] And what we're doing is producing almost immediately. [49:45] You know, you can almost immediately approve these drugs. [49:49] But it was very, you know, look, legally it was a disaster because everybody would be sued. [49:54] The problem is somebody would die and then they blame the drug. [49:57] And then the drug company gets sued. [49:58] The doctors, the country gets sued. [50:00] You know, a member of the family goes crazy and you're settling for millions of dollars [50:06] because you killed somebody that was going to be dead in two weeks. [50:09] So, I did that and I'm very proud of it. [50:12] The other thing, the doctor mentioned the fat drug. [50:15] So, think of it. [50:17] $87 it would sell in London and $1,300 in New York for the exact same box made, I won't name the company, [50:29] made by the same company in the same facility. [50:32] $87 in London, $87 in Heidelberg, $87 in Paris, $1,370 in New York. [50:46] And this went on for a long time. [50:49] And I want to tell you, you know, he could be a famous guy. [50:51] He's begging me not to release his name. [50:53] He's a very highly neurotic, very fat, sort of a fat slob, I would call him. [50:58] But he's a brilliant man. [51:00] We know many of those people. [51:02] He's a brilliant guy, actually. [51:03] But he said, President, what the hell is going on here? [51:07] He didn't need the money. [51:09] He's rich as hell. [51:10] But he just couldn't understand why he had to pay so little in London. [51:13] He went to London and he couldn't understand it. [51:16] He said, this is crazy. [51:17] And it actually motivated me in a certain way because he was very smart. [51:21] He did a study. [51:23] He actually sent his people. [51:24] And he traced this medicine. [51:27] And he found out it was — the box here is the same box as he had in New York. [51:32] It was made in the same plant. [51:34] And it cost, you know, 10 times more here than it did in London. [51:38] And that — there are worse stories than that. [51:42] And I said, that's it. [51:43] It's over. [51:44] We're going to do it. [51:45] That got me really motivated. [51:47] He's begging me not to release his name because he is a well-known person. [51:50] And I've so destroyed his reputation in terms of his physicality that he just doesn't want — I said, you know, you've had a big impact on medicine. [52:00] Because you got — you got to be better than any normal person could have, you know. [52:04] He said, no, I don't want — okay. [52:06] Yeah, please. [52:07] What do you hope to get out of the summit in China? [52:10] And how much has the war in Iran changed in China? [52:12] A lot. [52:13] Look, look. [52:14] I have a great relationship with President Xi. [52:16] We're doing a lot of business, but it's smart business. [52:18] We used to be taking advantage of for years with our previous presidents. [52:23] And now we're doing great with China. [52:24] We make a lot of money with China. [52:26] I have a great relationship with President Xi. [52:29] And I think you can see that with the fact that in Hormuz, they get a big percentage, 40 percent of their oil from Hormuz. [52:37] There's been no ships coming in, no nasty ships coming in that we end up in skirmishes with. [52:44] There's been — he'd like to see it get done. [52:46] He doesn't want to see — I'll tell you what. [52:48] Look, I respect him a lot, and hopefully he respects me. [52:52] He didn't respect our previous government, that I can tell you. [52:55] The guy couldn't talk. [52:58] It was ridiculous how that ever happened. [53:00] Our country has hurt so badly the last four years. [53:03] You know, I say it all the time. [53:05] He was the king of Saudi Arabia, but everybody says. [53:08] We were a dead country a year and a half ago, and now we're the hottest country anywhere in the world. [53:13] And you know that better than anybody. [53:15] You know, you see that. [53:16] Olivia sees that. [53:18] You see it in the numbers. [53:20] Look at the numbers. [53:21] Look at the stock market. [53:22] The stock market is now higher than it was when this war started. [53:25] So I thought that would go down 20, 25 percent. [53:28] I was — it was fine. [53:31] You know, I'm willing to — I'm willing to — it's a terrible expression — take a bullet. [53:36] It's a terrible expression, especially when it's used by me. [53:41] But I am. [53:42] I'm willing to take a bullet for the country. [53:44] And I said, look, the stock market's going to go down, but we're going to have a threat [53:49] of lunatics having — they're lunatics having a nuclear weapon. [53:54] I deal with them. [53:55] I deal with them. [53:56] I say it to them. [53:57] I say, you people are crazy. [53:58] I deal with them. [54:00] They talk differently. [54:01] I say, you're crazy. [54:03] You're crazy people. [54:04] You're nuts. [54:05] You're not having a nuclear weapon. [54:07] They think they can talk me into it, and they don't do very well with it. [54:11] But they know how I feel. [54:13] They can't have a nuclear weapon. [54:14] They would use it within an hour after getting it. [54:17] If the Obama deal wasn't terminated by me, they would have had it six years ago. [54:23] And they would have used it immediately on Israel and also the rest of the Middle East. [54:28] You saw that when they started shooting rockets. [54:30] Nobody thought Saudi Arabia and Qatar and UAE were going to get hit, or Kuwait, Bahrain. [54:37] I think it was a tremendous strategic mistake, and they wasted those missiles. [54:43] We have the patriots that knocked them down every time. [54:46] You know, we had, I told this story, we have, we were shot at one of our great assets. [54:51] Happened to be a ship. [54:52] Great ship. [54:53] 111 missiles going at very high rates of speed. [54:57] Sophisticated equipment. [54:59] And you know, that's all they did is build missiles. [55:01] They had thousands of missiles. [55:03] Who has, who does this? [55:04] Except for people that are looking for trouble. [55:07] We had 111 shot at one of our ships over a very short period of time. [55:13] Out of 111 missiles going at 3,000 miles an hour, all 111 missiles were knocked down into the ocean prior, long prior to arriving at the target. [55:28] And the cool guys, the coolest guys are the guys that do this. [55:31] They're not growing their brain. [55:33] They, they said, missile shot. [55:35] You're going to see it happening. [55:36] Missiles coming. [55:37] They got like about 13 seconds to make a decision. [55:40] It's not like, gee, let's figure it out. [55:42] They make a wrong calculation. [55:44] You know, you lose some, a lot of men, a lot of men and a lot of billion dollars times 10 ships. [55:53] So, but there's a level of coolness that missile shot meant they'd look, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. [56:01] And you know, they're going, heading 47 degrees north, 1300 feet, going 3,000 miles an hour. [56:11] Okay, we have it in our side. [56:14] Fire. [56:15] Boom. [56:17] 10 seconds left. [56:18] Let me tell you, they need smart people. [56:22] These people are smart. [56:23] And they're so smart that they're cool. [56:25] You know, under the calculations, for some people are very tough. [56:29] For other people, not so tough. [56:31] There's, you know, about 1%. [56:33] There's not too many. [56:34] There's not too many people around like that. [56:36] I say, I call, a lot of times I'll call these gunners because they're phenomenal geniuses. [56:42] You know, where did you go to school? [56:44] I went to MIT. [56:45] Where did you go to school? [56:46] I went to the best schools. [56:48] Smart. [56:50] You got to be smart. [56:51] We have the greatest military in the world. [56:53] Okay. [56:54] Mr. President, back to Motherhood, you're one big beautiful bill. [56:57] I like that. [56:58] Because this is about motherhood, not about the beautiful country of Iran. [57:03] Go ahead. [57:04] Thank you all for me here. [57:05] You're one big beautiful bill. [57:06] You funded Planned Parenthood for one year. [57:08] But that expires on this July 4th. [57:11] Would you like Congress to use... [57:12] Well, we're going to see what happens. [57:14] Congress is now negotiating. [57:16] We've been very good for the people that want it, for the people that are here. [57:22] And we'll see how that goes. [57:24] It's been a very thorny, to put it mildly, it's been a very thorny issue. [57:29] It's all under negotiation right now. [57:31] Yes, ma'am? [57:32] We'd like to see that defund. [57:33] Go ahead, please. [57:34] Thank you, Mr. President. [57:36] What do you think about the handling of the Hunter virus by the U.S.? [57:42] I think fine. [57:43] Do you regret the drawing from the WHO? [57:47] No, I'm glad. [57:49] So, we were paying the World Health Organization $500 million a year. [57:56] Look, it's a lot of money, but in the overall scope it's not that much, but it's a lot of money. [58:00] And we weren't being treated well. [58:04] And they were making the wrong diagnoses. [58:07] I was the one that said it came from Wuhan. [58:09] They didn't say that. [58:10] They refused to say that because they were totally owned by China. [58:13] So, I was saying it came from Wuhan. [58:17] They didn't want to say that. [58:18] Now, it's turned out, I think it's been conclusive that it came from Wuhan. [58:21] Yes, yes. [58:22] But I said that on the first day because I saw satellite pictures with body bags all over [58:27] Wuhan, literally all over Wuhan. [58:29] So, I said that. [58:31] They lied to me or they didn't know. [58:33] So, we were paying for, let's say, 350 million people. [58:38] We were paying $500 million a year to the World Health Organization. [58:43] That's a lot of money. [58:44] What the hell are they going to do with that kind of money? [58:46] And China was paying $39 million a year for 1.4 billion people. [58:52] So, I said, you know, you got your story wrong because we should be paying about $10 million, [58:58] not $500 million. [59:00] And they were willing to negotiate, but it was so popular when I pulled out. [59:05] They gave us all wrong information. [59:07] On COVID, they were totally wrong. [59:09] And I looked today and I saw the same doctor that was there. [59:12] He's a good politician. [59:13] I don't know how the hell he kept his job, but he was there telling us about this. [59:17] Now, the one thing with this one is that it's much harder to catch. [59:22] And we've had it for a long time. [59:24] It's been around for a long time. [59:25] People are very familiar with it. [59:27] So, you know, I hope it's fine. [59:29] All I can do is everything that a president can do, which is actually somewhat limited. [59:35] But it seems like it is not easy to spread. [59:42] In fact, it's in certain ways very hard to spread. [59:46] It's been – we've lived with it for years, many years, and we think we're in very good shape. [59:51] We're very careful. [59:52] And Nebraska has done a fantastic job. [59:54] They have a place there that those doctors are unbelievable, the job they've done. [1:00:01] Yeah, please. [1:00:05] Yeah, I'm going to reduce until the – let me tell you. [1:00:09] As soon as this is over with Iran, as soon as it's over, you're going to see gasoline and oil drop like a rock. [1:00:18] Going to be dropping down like a rock. [1:00:21] I mean, already, look, just on the basis of – you know, things have happened. [1:00:27] When it first came about, 20% of the oil came out of Hormuz. [1:00:33] That's a lot. [1:00:35] But, you know, with time, it's like they're going to Texas. [1:00:39] They're going to Louisiana. [1:00:40] They're going to Alaska, a lot of Alaska. [1:00:43] Alaska is, you know, sort of, it seems like very far away from Asia. [1:00:47] But it's actually a relatively short trip by comparison to other locations they have to go to to get oil. [1:00:54] And they're going to Alaska. [1:00:57] In fact, our big problem is we're building bigger docks, docking, you know, to fill up. [1:01:03] But we have – we've become very big on the filling station. [1:01:07] We're a big filling station. [1:01:09] And what's happening is when this first – when people heard about losing Hormuz, they said, [1:01:16] oh, this is – it's genius. [1:01:18] They're finding other locations. [1:01:20] And some of those people – I spoke to them, companies and countries. [1:01:24] Some of those people are going to continue to go to Texas. [1:01:27] They like it better. [1:01:28] They said it's an extra 45 minutes. [1:01:30] They like it better. [1:01:31] And it's sort of amazing, you know. [1:01:35] It found its way. [1:01:36] So a lot of people thought oil would go to $250, $300. [1:01:39] It's not. [1:01:40] I mean, today it's at less than $100. [1:01:42] Think of that. [1:01:43] Now, when this ends, you're going to see a drop like a rock. [1:01:48] How long are you going to suspend that tax? [1:01:50] Until it's appropriate, yeah. [1:01:51] Until it's appropriate, yeah. [1:01:53] Until it's appropriate. [1:01:54] How soon? [1:01:55] It's a – it's a – you know, it's a small percentage. [1:01:58] But it's a – you know, it's still money. [1:02:00] Do you still believe a diplomatic solution is possible with Iran? [1:02:04] Or do you only have military options? [1:02:06] No, I think it's very possible. [1:02:09] Look, I've had to deal with them four or five times. [1:02:11] They changed their mind. [1:02:12] They're very dishonorable people. [1:02:14] The leadership. [1:02:15] Don't forget, it's the third level. [1:02:18] The first level is God. [1:02:19] They were unreasonable. [1:02:20] The second level is more reasonable. [1:02:24] The third level, nobody wants to be president. [1:02:26] You know? [1:02:27] They say, who wants to be president? [1:02:28] There's nobody who raises their hand. [1:02:30] But we're – they just – they changed their mind. [1:02:35] I've had that in business many times. [1:02:37] You know, the mind change, as you call it. [1:02:39] They – these people that – you make a deal, and then the next day they send you a document [1:02:43] that takes – that takes five days to get there when it should have been there in 20 minutes. [1:02:48] You know, it's a pretty simple document. [1:02:50] They will never have a nuclear weapon. [1:02:52] Yeah? [1:02:54] I was speaking to Mayor Lai this morning. [1:02:55] She's the daughter of Jimmy Lai. [1:02:56] And she told me that she's been praying and hoping that you'll be the one that brings her [1:02:59] dad home. [1:03:00] She says, of any administration, she thinks you're the one that could do it. [1:03:04] You said Jimmy Lai. [1:03:05] Jimmy Lai's daughter. [1:03:06] And there's another gentleman, a minister, pastor, as you know. [1:03:10] I'll bring them both up. [1:03:12] I brought it up before. [1:03:14] Jimmy Lai I brought it up. [1:03:16] The other one I just heard about this morning, actually. [1:03:19] And I do bring that up. [1:03:21] You know, we've gotten – I don't know if you've been reading – John Cole, who's [1:03:24] a great lawyer. [1:03:25] He was a tobacco lawyer. [1:03:28] Great, great guy. [1:03:29] I won't say he's an older guy, because he may be offended by that. [1:03:32] But he is. [1:03:33] He's a little older. [1:03:34] He's a little older. [1:03:35] And he's a wise man, actually. [1:03:36] He made a fortune with the tobacco. [1:03:38] He did the first tobacco lawsuit. [1:03:42] And he's a great man. [1:03:43] And he's brought back hundreds of people out of various Belarus. [1:03:49] You know, you read about that. [1:03:51] And the leader has been fantastic. [1:03:54] But somebody has to ask him. [1:03:56] Biden never asked. [1:03:57] We ask. [1:03:58] And we're getting hundreds of people out of confinement and prisons that shouldn't be there. [1:04:04] And hundreds. [1:04:05] And many of them aren't even citizens of the United States. [1:04:09] People that have been captured in some form. [1:04:12] Ministers. [1:04:13] People that are really innocent people. [1:04:15] And they're being held captive. [1:04:18] And I bring up Jimmy Lai. [1:04:20] Now, Jimmy Lai, you know, caused a lot of bedlam. [1:04:24] I don't know. [1:04:26] It's like saying to me, if Comey ever went to jail, would you let him out? [1:04:34] That might be a hard one for me. [1:04:36] Does that make sense? [1:04:37] It might be a hard one for me. [1:04:38] You know, because he's a dirty cop. [1:04:40] But Jimmy Lai isn't that way. [1:04:43] But Jimmy Lai, he caused lots of turmoil for China. [1:04:48] He tried to do the right thing. [1:04:49] He wasn't successful. [1:04:50] Went to jail. [1:04:51] And people would like him out. [1:04:53] And I'd like to see him get out, too. [1:04:55] So I'll bring him up again. [1:04:56] I have brought him up. [1:04:57] And there's another gentleman, a pastor, as you know, with a beautiful daughter and son-in-law, [1:05:04] son-in-law that would like to see him get out. [1:05:06] I'm going to bring his name up. [1:05:07] Mr. President, what about Taiwan? [1:05:08] Do you expect Taiwan to come up in your information? [1:05:10] Yeah, it always comes up. [1:05:12] Yeah, it always comes up. [1:05:14] It's — I used to say Ukraine would — you know, four years, you never even heard the word Ukraine. [1:05:20] It was never going to happen. [1:05:21] And it was handled so badly. [1:05:25] Ukraine — Ukraine should have never come up. [1:05:27] They lost last month 25,000 soldiers — both sides. [1:05:31] 25,000. [1:05:32] They're losing, on average, 25,000 soldiers. [1:05:34] It's like a meat grinder. [1:05:35] It's horrible what's happening. [1:05:37] That would have never happened had the election not been rigged. [1:05:40] That would have never happened. [1:05:42] And Putin and I would talk about it, but there was never any — he would have never done it. [1:05:47] Taiwan — I equated a little bit to that. [1:05:52] You have the right president. [1:05:54] I don't think it'll happen. [1:05:55] I think we'll be fine. [1:05:56] I have a very good relationship with President Xi. [1:05:58] He knows I don't want that to happen. [1:06:00] Very far away. [1:06:03] Very, very far away. [1:06:04] We're just at 9,500 miles. [1:06:07] You know, we're 9,500 miles. [1:06:10] He's 67 miles. [1:06:12] It's a little bit of a difference. [1:06:14] But, you know, there's a lot of — there's a lot of support for Taiwan, [1:06:18] from Japan and from countries from that area. [1:06:21] Do you think we should still be selling them weapons? [1:06:23] The United States — [1:06:25] Well, I'm going to have that discussion with President Xi. [1:06:28] President Xi would like us not to. [1:06:30] And I'll have that discussion. [1:06:32] That's one of the many things I'll be talking about. [1:06:34] We'll have a — you know, he and I have gotten along well. [1:06:37] Other than with COVID, I — you know, I was not — [1:06:40] I was just not accepting of what happened with COVID. [1:06:44] But other than that, he and I have had — he's a great gentleman. [1:06:48] I find him to be an amazing — an amazing man. [1:06:52] And when I say that, the press always says, [1:06:55] oh, that's terrible that he calls it. [1:06:57] You know, he runs 1.4 billion people with a pretty iron fist. [1:07:02] He's — he loves his country, I can tell you that. [1:07:05] President Xi — I look forward to being there. [1:07:07] And if he felt anything, we wouldn't — we wouldn't be doing it. [1:07:11] But a lot of good things can happen. [1:07:14] Now, we'll be talking about — I mean, he'll bring up Taiwan, [1:07:17] I think, more than I will. [1:07:20] But I think that a discussion will be a little bit about — [1:07:25] a little bit about energy and about the very beautiful country of Iran. [1:07:31] And by the way, Iran is a beautiful country, [1:07:34] but it's got people running it now that shouldn't be there, perhaps. [1:07:37] Yeah. [1:07:38] The Press- Mr. President, just a couple questions. [1:07:39] Outside of these amazing benefits from employers for IDF, [1:07:42] there are a lot of women out there who — [1:07:45] either they work part-time or they self-pay for health insurance. [1:07:48] Is there an option for a cheaper IDF than those women? [1:07:51] The President Biden — [1:07:53] And what would you like to know? [1:07:54] For IDF, bring it down to the cost that it says — [1:07:56] The President Biden — [1:07:57] The President Biden — [1:07:58] I don't know. Olivia, could you answer that question, please? [1:07:59] We're trying to make — [1:08:00] The President Biden — [1:08:01] We're putting her through a little training here, Tom. [1:08:03] Let's see whether or not she's got it. [1:08:05] I have no doubt she does. Go ahead. [1:08:07] Just a softball from the President. [1:08:08] And healthy moms, healthy babies, America. [1:08:09] The President Biden — [1:08:10] Let's give this one to Olivia. [1:08:11] We are focused on making America the safest and best place to have a baby. [1:08:16] The IVF question, I think you'd probably be better hit by Senator Britt and Dr. Fink. [1:08:21] Yeah, so what we're trying to do is obviously make sure that people have greater access [1:08:27] and that the affordability goes down. [1:08:29] We did that, obviously, with what you saw from the President last year [1:08:32] in the two different announcements he made. [1:08:34] We've seen, you know, over — [1:08:36] Gosh, I mean, thousands of people have more access with regards to affordability. [1:08:41] I think we've saved about $15 million. [1:08:43] But we know that this is going to go up to the tunes of billions of dollars with what we're doing here. [1:08:48] With being able to allow employers to do this, we think it will ultimately drive down to each and every person. [1:08:54] So that is the point. [1:08:56] The more that people are able — [1:08:57] We want to get — [1:08:58] As Secretary Kennedy said, we want to get to root causes as well. [1:09:01] So we want to make sure that we are treating the entire issue, not just putting a Band-Aid on it and moving on. [1:09:07] We want people who want to bring life into the world to have that opportunity. [1:09:10] We do believe that this will do that. [1:09:12] So a combination of allowing this to be available, but then also the affordability element. [1:09:17] I think it's down, as he said — [1:09:19] I mean, some of these drugs down 80 percent from a year ago, some down 40 percent every year ago. [1:09:24] So it's a really exciting time, and we do think that this will ultimately be able to reach all Americans. [1:09:29] But a lot of people don't realize it's available. [1:09:32] I spoke to people. [1:09:33] They don't know about the Trump — [1:09:37] They don't know about any of these things that — [1:09:40] You know, where you're saving so much money, where they can actually afford it. [1:09:44] You know, when you get prices down to just a tiny fraction of what they used to be, [1:09:49] that's one of the reasons — [1:09:50] I don't need it for myself. [1:09:51] I've got enough publicity. [1:09:53] But I need it to inform the public. [1:09:56] A lot of people — [1:09:57] Like, your question is a good question — [1:09:58] But a lot of people don't know IVF and so many other things that could help them that they assume it's so expensive [1:10:05] It's not within their price range, and they're not going to be able to afford it or even think about it. [1:10:09] And then they hear about these numbers. [1:10:11] And in addition, there's some help that we give them beyond even the low numbers. [1:10:15] Mr. President, only one in three Americans know what TrumpRx.gov does. [1:10:19] It would be a great service. [1:10:20] I know he kids you a lot about this not getting reported appropriately. [1:10:25] But there is no excuse to buy drugs. [1:10:27] Make sure you're getting the best. [1:10:31] And, sir, we've got tens of millions of people who are going to it. [1:10:36] But, you know, there's hundreds of millions of Americans. [1:10:38] So we have got to get Americans to realize — you mentioned fertility. [1:10:42] Fertility drugs are probably a third of the cost of the entire process. [1:10:46] For those to drop by 90 percent dramatically changes the equation. [1:10:49] And there are private companies who are now taking advantage of the whole group of individuals [1:10:53] who can get access to fertility medications and the treatments that go with them. [1:10:57] And as the services get better, we make them more affordable. [1:11:00] We'll have more Trump babies. [1:11:01] Yeah, and we hope that that lays the groundwork, though, so that anyone has an ability to receive these. [1:11:06] And also, remember, this is all on moms.gov as well. [1:11:09] I mean, that's one thing we're trying to do is make sure that we are pushing people to all of these resources. [1:11:13] Because when you either want to have a child or you find out you have a child, you know, sometimes that's a very exciting thing. [1:11:19] Sometimes, you know, it's — you're a little overwhelmed. [1:11:21] We want all of those resources to be in one spot so that we can help these women in their journey to government. [1:11:26] And when people hear how inexpensive it is relative, you know, they can't even think about it. [1:11:31] Now, all of a sudden, they say, I can afford that. [1:11:33] And they get help also in affording it. [1:11:35] There are ways of getting help to afford even those low prices. [1:11:39] How about one more last question? [1:11:40] Please. [1:11:41] Thank you, Mr. President. [1:11:42] What do you say to infectious diseases experts who say they are worried the country may not be prepared to deal with something like coronavirus because of all the HHS, you know, funding and staffing cuts? [1:11:55] Well, I think we take care of that — do you want to answer that? [1:11:58] It's just not true. [1:11:59] Jay Bhattacharya is taking this task on. [1:12:01] Secretary Kennedy is involved with him. [1:12:03] He can speak to it perhaps even better than — in fact, best in the room. [1:12:06] But the country is prepared and the CDC is focused on it. [1:12:09] And the agency is well aware of the opportunities to actually treat this problem, not just try to prevent it in the future, but treat if it happens. [1:12:16] Now, Secretary? [1:12:17] Yeah, I mean, we've had CDC teams on it from day one. [1:12:22] I was speaking with the University of Nebraska since the second day of the outbreak. [1:12:27] I was speaking with Governor Billin of Nebraska. [1:12:30] We had a CDC team at Tenerife. [1:12:34] We had airplanes ready to take the patients, the 17 patients, off the vessel and transport. [1:12:43] Two of them went to Atlanta. [1:12:44] One of those was symptomatic. [1:12:47] They were in a biocontainment lab in Atlanta. [1:12:51] The other 16 are now in Nebraska. [1:12:55] One of them is symptomatic. [1:12:56] He is in the biocontainment lab. [1:12:58] The other ones are being tested and supervised and given plans for going home. [1:13:03] We have this under control, and we're not worried about it. [1:13:08] But the CDC took four days after the WHO issued its, you know, alert. [1:13:15] Why was it? [1:13:16] Why did it take the U.S. audience to issue an alert? [1:13:20] It's not true. [1:13:21] We, as soon as we determined that the virus was out there, we issued an alert. [1:13:26] The alert means nothing. [1:13:27] They acted very quickly. [1:13:28] I saw the alert, too. [1:13:30] Yeah. [1:13:31] Give me a minute. [1:13:32] Those reports were natural. [1:13:33] They acted very, very quickly. [1:13:34] And it looks like, and, you know, I can't bet anybody's life on it, but it looks like it's [1:13:38] just a disease that we've had around in a very small way for a long time. [1:13:44] Not a good one to catch, because, you know, it's a very severe disease if you catch it. [1:13:48] But it's very hard to catch. [1:13:49] Daniel, did you have a question? [1:13:50] One last one. [1:13:51] Senator Britt mentioned the website Moms.gov. [1:13:52] One of the policies that's on there are the Trump accounts. [1:13:54] Right? [1:13:55] They're getting ready to go live this summer. [1:13:56] When you speak to young parents, this is one of the policies they repeatedly bring up about [1:14:01] how impactful it would be for them. [1:14:03] Can you just talk about why Americans need to know about this and how important it is for younger parents that knew their kids? [1:14:09] So we've done more for young parents. [1:14:11] I guess it's a way you could say it. [1:14:13] It's a great, beautiful term. [1:14:14] But we've done more for young parents than any administration ever in history. [1:14:19] And we're going to continue to do so. [1:14:21] This is — look at the people up here. [1:14:23] They're all, like, brilliant. [1:14:25] I'm one of the young ones, you know. [1:14:28] That's right. [1:14:29] I'm a similar age to all of you. [1:14:31] Very similar. [1:14:32] I feel the same as them. [1:14:34] I actually feel — [1:14:35] For sure. [1:14:36] You know, I don't know what this is. [1:14:37] I feel the same as I did 50 years ago. [1:14:41] Yeah. [1:14:42] It's crazy. [1:14:43] Someday there'll be a day when that won't happen. [1:14:45] I'll let Bobby and Oz know, you know. [1:14:48] It's not quite the same. [1:14:50] But I feel literally the same. [1:14:51] I don't know why. [1:14:52] It's not because I eat the best foods. [1:14:54] Maybe they are the best foods. [1:14:55] They are the best foods. [1:14:56] Who knows what the best foods are? [1:14:57] Maybe — maybe junk food is good and the other food is no good. [1:15:00] I know people that eat the best food. [1:15:03] They go to a restaurant. [1:15:04] They have celery and I don't want — and I'll have steak and everything else. [1:15:09] And I say, how are you doing? [1:15:11] Well, it's over for me at a young age. [1:15:15] And all they do is watch — I know many, many people that all they do is watch their weight, [1:15:20] their this, their that. [1:15:22] And they kick the bucket. [1:15:24] And here we are. [1:15:25] I feel great. [1:15:26] Thank you, Daniel. [1:15:27] Thank you very much, everybody. [1:15:28] Thank you, press. [1:15:29] Have a good time. [1:15:30] Thank you, press. [1:15:31] Pull it surprise you're all right here. [1:15:32] Pull it surprise. [1:15:33] Thank you, press. [1:15:34] Thank you, press. [1:15:35] Thank you, press. [1:15:36] Thank you — thank you. [1:15:38] Thank you, press. [1:15:39] Thank you. [1:15:40] You got the bullet going so much. [1:15:41] Thank you, guys. [1:15:42] Thank you, guys. [1:15:43] Thank you, guys. [1:15:45] Why didn't you die? [1:15:46] Why didn't you die? [1:15:47] Why didn't you die? [1:15:48] I don't know. [1:15:49] Thank you. [1:15:50] You know why? [1:15:51] Yeah. [1:15:52] Okay. [1:15:53] Good job.

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