 I was just telling the line last night about the other baker and the P.T.L. Santa's a beautiful woman. She was just saying for the lady. Oh boy. What are you talking about? I was just going to say, I'm going to tell you what I'm going to do. I'm going to tell you what I'm going to do. My house is not here. Now that we're all assembled here, I know we don't need to sing this early in the morning. But one of us here is observing the British. This is an anniversary of your 39th birthday. You guys. I'm going to forget her. I'm serious. I called one of our guys, Paris, dancing for the the economic summit over the weekend. Say happy birthday to him. He's having a traumatic experience. It's his 30th. Oh, yeah. Do you remember back when you thought that was a kind of a marking decided by any point? Yes. So he threw back at me my own thing. He said, I'm celebrating the first anniversary of my 29th. Well, What's happening there? People here. I got two things in mind. One of them is the budget and the other one is trade. Oh, I thought you were. I know we're told all the time that I know Republican alternative is to the house budget resolution. The law prescribes that the president has to submit a budget. I think that's a lot. Good morning, Come in. This man. I heard that. There's more stories. I don't know. I'm going to go ahead and Hello. Yes. Hi, Frank over there. This way, Mr. Bress. Well, I hear you have a little trip to Pakistan, and I'm friend, Joe. Yes? OK, among a number of other nations, I went to Germany to recess in connection with Afghanistan. I wanted to, first of all, bring this letter which the Prime Minister asked me to deliver. Asked me to do so in hopes that it might bypass the usual bureaucracy. So I'll just give you this package. This is the letter the Prime Minister hears the letter from me to you that it elaborates a little bit more on some other self-explanatory material, all right? What I want to convey is, once you read the letter, I think it's not a bad thing. Oh, nice to meet you. Well, it's good to see you. We're sorry we kept you waiting. No, not at all. This opportunity was a great experience for me to meet your personal person. Please. Come in, then. I'd like to recognize Mr. Frank Carly. Nice to meet you. We had? I met you in the American Embassy. We had lunch together. We discussed the double-track decision. That's right. You're right. Good memories. I'm the Ambassador, Frank Carly. You're very nice to meet you. You gave me the answer at the Italian room. I know my time was very short. Hi, Rob. Hi, Frank. How are you? I'm fine. We had a discussion about the recent visit of Moscow as our Secretary of State. I think it was quite a meaningful meeting. Glad to hear you were here. Well, I would say, Mr. President, that we are very happy about the development. These last one and a half, or two years, I graduated in Liga, to where we are now. We are in Norway, very supportive of what we have achieved. And the situation that we now can choose to have a dream. That really is, I think, a great achievement compared to what we have been working for since 2009. And from a Norwegian point of view, it is very clear that we want to support the agreement. We are happy about the development. And we hope that all other European governments, really, I think, find that this is a good solution. Well, I have a question. Get out of my here. Thanks. It's awesome. Thank you so much. The President is something like this. These are better for you. It's easy. Does this mean you're coming around with a gauze? Right. This is a thank you offer. You're going to be in another room. Sorry, sir. You're late. I didn't want to settle a few word problems, but I know you're in the middle of a debate on the Congress trade deal, and that you'll be voting later today on the GEP hard amendment. We've spent countless hours, I can tell you, because I know each of you has in the committees working to craft responsible legislation to enhance our competitive position of world markets. The GEP hard amendment, in my view, moves into precisely the wrong direction by closing out markets rather than opening foreign markets. The brand does as clear violators of international agreements, thus undermining our ability to negotiate new trade agreements to broaden rather than restrict world trade, and it will subject the United States to counter retaliation, which will curtail rather than expand our U.S. exports. I'd like to call on Jim Baker to outline a little more detail of the serious concerns that we have with this and some other provisions in the bill, and then I'd like Bob Micah to share with us the thoughts of a Republican leadership. I'm over here. Well, Mr. President, thank you very much. I don't want to say simply. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Impressive American Sakura. Thank you so much. Good morning. Happy to see you, sir, and to give you thank you very much. This is Bob Micrae. See you. Alright.真的很 nice to meet you. President. Tom Espair. California also. General Layne. I'm the我很 просто anjing on Laude, out in Côte d'Aroles, Mr. Chairman, it's a pleasure to see you. President Stanley Fisher, President of the Federal Bar Association, has been with me to see you and thank you. And you know more than we do. Good enough to give you a little bit of a break to see you. But to see you, Bob Evans, to see your marriage in the VDA, to see you, Greg Baird, and to see you two brothers first. That's it. We all live in the world. That's it. Here's the bureaucracy. Good photo? Yeah. Yeah, everybody. All right. Come up, sir. I think they'll want us to squeeze in close. I don't care. I don't care about you. I'm sorry. Listen, I just thought maybe you might want to have a copy of the draft that proclaims Law Day. Thank you very much. The United Nations Field of Underdraw. And I thank you very much. In this particular year, which is so all-important, what was during this, I don't know, maybe I'm talking more than I need to to go on this. But I have to be delighted to be here today. It's great to be a young people who can't. This isn't a right school business, so we're about our constitution. And the fact that I've read a number of other constitutions from other countries, including the Soviet Union. Be celebrating communism today. If you don't maintain the same provisions as ours, you may not have turned today. I've been able to explain the difference to another with what if we're slowing this year? In this Law Day, we need to deal with all those other constitutions that are documents of government telling the people what they can do. And ours is a document which we can keep telling what it can do. It's so small, although it's three words that almost escapes us, but if you actually analyze it, it's the greatest significance of difference in the country. I know the profession, Mr. President, the side of that very point should be discussed on paper instead of commenting on this country. And that's why Law Day was created. Thank you for supporting this. That's an idea that I didn't write totally. I'm a collector of Soviet stories. The stories that are told by the people of the Soviet Union. And I make sure that I can confirm that they are. And they really feel quite the cynicism among the people about their government. And some of them are just priceless. One of them tries to see the story about a man walking in the street in the evening. And a Moscow soldier calls to him to halt. He starts to run the soldier shoots him. And another Russian says, why did you do that? And he said, curfew. I don't know how long he said it. It isn't curfew yet. He says, I know him. He's a friend of mine. I know where he lives. He couldn't have made it. In the Soviet Union, you have to, well, it takes ten years, but you have to put the money down. Ten years in advance and then wait for the delivery. So this story is of the Soviet citizen. Well, various bureaus and agencies getting the papers and everything and finding the final place, the final stamp. Then he lays down his cash for the car. And they tell him that he can come back in ten years and pick it up. And he says, morning or afternoon. They say, well, we're talking ten years. What difference does it make? Well, he said, the plumber's coming in the morning. This is from the Federal Bar Association. That's our final payment pin. And tomorrow we're having our constitutional forum in Philadelphia during the General Meet. Just a couple of minutes. We had extended invitation. I know your schedule doesn't connect. So we did want to talk to you. Well, thank you very much. You mean about where they sound like? I'm a very member of the Federal Bar Association. Thank you, Mr. President, very much. Thank you. I like you, sir. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you all for coming in. I appreciate what you're doing. We'll have a really good one.