 Oh, yeah. Hi, Jim. How are you? Wow, thank you. Thank you. Right over there with the calendar chairs. Good morning, sir. How are you? Fine, thank you. Is that your friend? How are you? Good morning. How are you? Sit here with the president. Hi. How are you? How are you? All right. How are you? Good to see you. How are you? How are you? How are you? I'm a year old, and I have a boy. That's a more heavy lift than a do-it-yourself. Yeah. Whoa, man. That's a damn heavy lift. Michael? Yeah. Yeah. Thank you very much. You're welcome. Thank you very much. You're welcome. Thank you very much. I'll let the markers in so we can find out what's going on. There they are. Grab me. Yeah. What's going on? They said. Hold on. Just like a vacation by the suit. No one forced on me for something. Yeah. What's happening? You know, of course, I'm standing right over here. That's the fiscal year of 2009's budget. I'm just hoping that honors the bipartisan budget program to begin with our next year's program. That's the reform program. It also meets the targets of great and prevalent colleagues, which Congress amended last year. This year. Meet the schedule for the budget resolution for the enactment of the 13 separate and free-standing appropriation targets. And I don't know if I know what we've got to meet really at a time here. I said we've got about five minutes before we go. Before we go. Yeah. There are colleagues or discussion of this then. I was impressed with that. I've been watching this process for the eighth year now, I guess. And this is the first time we've had a budget that would greatly improve our budget in the last decade, in the first six months of the year, as a result of the budget. Thank you all for coming down here this morning. Seven years ago today, I submitted our economic recovery program, which has resulted in 63 months of economic growth. Today I'm sending our fiscal year, 1989 budget to the Congress. This budget fits within the second year of the bipartisan budget agreement that we reached last November. It also meets the deficit reduction targets of Ram Rudman Hollings. And it contains no increases in taxes. And in this budget we have increased funding for drug interdiction and treatment, funding for air traffic safety, education, science and space. And we've increased by 38% the level of funding for the fight against AIDS. While meeting these domestic priorities and our national security needs, this budget does not increase taxes, again consistent with our budget agreement. And these recommendations to the Congress, along with budget reform proposals, improved government management and continued efforts toward privatization will continue the economic growth that we've all witnessed these past five years. And now I'm hoping we can work together through the budget process this year, sticking to our agreement and completing the appropriations process before the end of this fiscal year. Vice President Bush. Mr. President, are you going to call in Senator Dole and Vice President Bush and give him a little lesson on the 11th commandment? I'm not going to talk about anything but the budget. Are you pleased about the way the campaign's going on the Republican side at this point? No comments. Sir, is there anything you can do for Republicans? They move a lot. And I'd say we're doing everything we can. We're trying to find out as much as we can and we'll try to get them located and certainly we want to rescue them. You have a sizable increase in year for education, Mr. President. You have a sizable increase in this budget for education and we want to thank you as long as we've been fighting for it for many years. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. President. Down to business and we're going to ask Jim. There. Thank you. Jim Miller here with some remarks about the budget. Thank you, Mr. President. First of all, copies of all of this have been delivered to your office. If these copies, you surely will have copies back at the office right away. I thought I was just including that $46 billion deficit reduction that was agreed to last November for fiscal year 1989. It hits the Grand Rubin Hollings target of $136 billion. In fact, the deficit would be $130 billion under our estimate and it avoids a sequester. So I feel much better day by day. Lots of long walks, exercise, and obeying a lot of rules that don't like you. That's what they tell me. That's what they tell me. And the interesting thing to me politically is that the path you took in going from there to here is what I seem to have followed. At least I'm waiting right here. The souvenir of your new office. Your time here is very best. We're going up later today to give them the message.