Obama_July_7_2015._AP_photo.jpg

President Barack Obama

Obama guidance, press schedule Sept. 30, 2015. Meeting with state lawmakers

SHARE Obama guidance, press schedule Sept. 30, 2015. Meeting with state lawmakers
SHARE Obama guidance, press schedule Sept. 30, 2015. Meeting with state lawmakers

Below, from the White House……

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 29, 2015

DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2015

In the morning, the President and the Vice President will receive the Presidential Daily Briefing in the Oval Office. This meeting is closed press.

In the afternoon, the President will deliver remarks to state legislators at the White House. This meeting in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building is pooled press.

In-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: FOX

Print: Washington Times

Radio: VOA

EDT

9:30AM In-Town Pool Call Time

11:00AM THE PRESIDENT and THE VICE PRESIDENT receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

Oval Office

Closed Press

4:10PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks to Democratic State Legislators

Eisenhower Executive Office Building

Pooled Press (Pre-set 3:45PM; Final Gather 4:00PM – Stakeout Location)

Briefing Schedule

12:30PM Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest

The Latest
TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew faced hostile questions from Democrats, Republicans concerned about the company’s ties to China’s government, security, user data collection.
Will Cousineau took the witness stand after securing letters from the feds granting him immunity and making clear he’s not a target of an investigation. Then he listened as prosecutors played a December 2018 call he’d participated in and which was secretly recorded by the FBI.
The Cubs reduced their spring training roster to 41 players.
We are immersed in various forms of psychological misery. Much of what ails our society arises from our poverty of human connections.
With early voting underway, mayoral hopefuls Brandon Johnson and Paul Vallas were urged to not only focus on public safety, but also on ‘environmental violence.’