distinguished guests, please welcome Minnesota Governor Tim Walz. Good afternoon. It's good to see a few Minnesotans in the house here in Superior. To the folks at Earth Rider, thank you. Thank you for hosting us. Thanks for creating the jobs here. Thank for getting a place to gather with community. To our Labor brothers and sisters who are here to build this project, we're here to talk about thank you every day for building the middle class. Thank you for bringing the dignity that comes with work and the ability to make sure you can take care of your family. And for all of you, let's give a really big Northland welcome to President Joe Biden today. When President Biden comes to the Northland, he doesn't come to give a divisive speech. He doesn't come to belittle people. He doesn't come to try and divide the country. When President Biden comes to the North country, he comes back to show that he adheres to his promises. He's coming back today to show us a billion dollar investment in infrastructure that will connect Minnesota, Wisconsin, the United States, and Canada. This is a president that understands you hear him say it often. America is a country that can do anything when we come together and put our minds to it. He talks about building the middle class from the bottom up and the middle out. This bridge is symbolic of what the president has done. Continue to try and connect us. Continue to try and bring us back together while there's forces out there trying to tell us we can't do this. We should fail. We should be against our neighbor. This president comes and said, I absolutely reject that. This bridge is going to connect Minnesota and Wisconsin, bringing Minnesotans and Wisconsinites together, over beer apparently, which is always a good thing. He's even bringing folks, Republicans and Democrats together with this bridge. Hell, he even brought people who voted for it and voted against it together on this bridge. But this is about what government should be doing. This is what a leader looks like. This is about a generational investment in infrastructure, moving America to the forefront, a clean energy economy, broadband connected through the Infrastructure Act, highways, bridges, making sure our families are safer and commerce can move. This is exciting stuff. You know what? It's not making fun of people. It's not telling us what we can't do. It's simply doing the work. So I want to thank each and every one of you for showing up today. I want to thank you in advance for your patience as we rebuild this bridge. You know how that goes? The cones will be out for a while. But we're going to create thousands of jobs. And we're going to create a country and an infrastructure that our children can be proud of. Previous generations invested. It's our time. Investing in roads and bridges goes a hell of a lot further than investing in tax cuts for the wealthy. And again, when President Biden shows up with Union brothers and sisters, he walks picket lines. He doesn't cross them. And this project is going to have project labor agreements built by Wisconsin and Minnesota skilled craft women and men. And it's going to create those jobs that allow them to live the life that they know they should in the Northland. So I want to thank you all for being here. I want to just say how grateful we are that people are focusing on the things that make a difference in people's lives. And Joe Biden and Kamala Harris wake up every single day making those are the things that got done. So promises made two years ago. Promises kept today. Thank you. Distinguished guests, please welcome Senator Tina Smith of Minnesota. It is great to be here to celebrate the tremendous victory for Minnesota and Wisconsin federal funding for the Blotnik Bridge. You know, this is one of the most important pieces of infrastructure in the entire Midwest. The port of Duluth is the largest inland port in the world. And without the Blotnik Bridge, none of this port works. 33,000 vehicles cross this bridge every day connecting people to jobs and education and opportunities. And 950,000 trucks carry nearly four billion dollars in domestic and international products. Our economy in this part of the country depends on the Blotnik Bridge to deliver goods and services and to keep our supply chains strong. Projects like this folks, they take leadership. And I am here to tell you that this Blotnik Bridge funding would not have happened but for the leadership of our incredible governors, Governor Evers and Governor Walls. And this would not have happened without Senator Klobuchar, Senator Baldwin, and President Joe Biden. You know, some leaders, some leaders talk about infrastructure. They even declare infrastructure weeks, but these leaders delivered. When President Biden took office and Democrats took control of Congress, we knew we had a lot of work to do. You know, four years the United States exported jobs and imported products. For years, infrastructure was just an afterthought and our roads and bridges were crumbling and our drinking water systems were deteriorating and people all over our states were struggling to try to figure out how to connect to broadband. We needed a completely different approach, one that would invest in America and grow the middle class. And that is what we are doing. We passed once in a generation of investments in our country's infrastructure. And that is what we are celebrating today. We're rebuilding our roads and bridges and rail. We're getting clean drinking water and high speed internet. And we are making sure that the iron and steel and the construction materials are American made by Union Labor. This is what this project is all about. This is what the President Biden's infrastructure law is all about. This is about building the foundation for communities that work. And so I am so glad to be here today with all of you to thank you for your hard work because at the end of the day, this is about the hardworking people and Duluth and Superior and the community around the people that are driving the buses and mining the ore and working in the hospitals and making this community work. So my gratitude is to all of you. We are doing the work that we need to do. And I'm so grateful to be here to celebrate this fantastic success. Thank you so much, everyone. Distinguished guests, please welcome Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota. Thank you so much. It is wonderful to be here and welcome back President Biden to Wisconsin and Minnesota. I love being in Superior. It has unrivaled views of Duluth. I think you guys, yes, yes, that was like a little, you know. I think I'm the one to make that joke because my mom grew up in Wisconsin. I still have all my relatives on her side in Wisconsin. My dad grew up in northern Minnesota in Eley and I have warned the President of the United States, it is not time to talk about the NFL playoffs at this particular event. It is great to be here with Governor Wallace and Evers and of course, Senator Smith and Baldwin, my good friends, the mayor of Superior Payne and of course our new mayor of Duluth Roger Reiner. As neighbors, I know we have some differences, but one thing Minnesota and Wisconsin can agree on is funding the Blotnik Bridge in a big way. It is critical to our region, to our state and to our country. Four billion, four billion in goods moving across every single year, tens of thousands of cars and when the President chose to visit here right after his highly lauded state of the Union address two years ago, he called it one of the most important bridges in the Midwest. And now, true to his word, less than two years later, he comes back with the biggest infra grant in the history of America. Right here in Wisconsin in Minnesota. So yes, this is a long time in coming, as you've probably heard this bridge opened in 1961, the same year that a little-known folks singer from northern Minnesota named Bob Dylan played his first major gig, true story. Minnesotans know how important this is as do the people of Wisconsin. In Minnesota, we remember the cracks in our infrastructure when that 35 W bridge collapsed and as I said that day, a bridge should not just fall down in the middle of America. Working together, we got the funding to rebuild that bridge and that's why after decades of trying to pass an infrastructure law under President Biden's leadership, Congress came together across the aisle and got that bill done. That is the bipartisan infrastructure law. As former Congressman Jim Oberstar, who we all channel here today, he's looking down loving this infrastructure big way, as he once said, there is no such thing as a Democratic bridge or a Republican bridge. So we pass that bill and now we are here to deliver to get this bridge done in the president's own words with regard to another major milestone. The Affordable Care Act is a big, effing deal. So this is a historic investment. Yes, in this bridge, but it is also an investment in the economy for the future. This is an investment in our roads. It is investment in this incredible port that we love so much and it is going to build a bridge to the next century. I want to thank for the president for investing in Minnesota and Wisconsin, for bringing us these much-needed safety improvements. I want to thank him for the great union jobs that this project is going to create. So let us build this bridge to an even better Northland. Thanks everyone. Distinguished guests, please welcome Senator Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin. Wow, so hello Superior. Let me start by saying we did it. Yay, this is so exciting. We are finally on the road to replacing the Blotnik Bridge. It's hard to overstate just how excited I am. You know, this is a rumful of people who really understand the importance of this investment. Now, while we may talk a big game when we're talking about Packers vs Vikings, you know, I've been proud to work with leaders on both sides of the state line for years to make this a reality. Superior and Duluth are more than just neighbors. They are the twin ports. The nickname of this region represents the unique relationship between these two great cities and the industries that connect them. When we talk about working together, we often evoke building bridges figuratively. But today we're here to talk both the metaphor and an actual bridge in the bipartisan infrastructure law. I was proud to vote for this legislation because I knew it would make a real difference. Yes, a real difference for Wisconsin families and businesses and I'm proud to report that in just over two years it's doing just that. This investment is creating good paying jobs, fixing our roads and bridges, making sure clean water is coming out of the faucets and connecting more Wisconsinites and Minnesotans with reliable high speed internet. And to do it all, we are growing our made in America economy. I was especially proud to have successfully fought to include strong by America rules so that as we rebuild our infrastructure, we support U.S. workers and Wisconsin workers, manufacturers and businesses. The bipartisan infrastructure law is not just an investment in our infrastructure. It is also truly an investment in our future. There's no better example of that investment than the Blotnik Bridge. Whether it's families taking a road trip, commuters heading to work or goods traveling to the port of Duluth Superior, tens of thousands of vehicles rely on safe passage over the Blotnik Bridge every single day. But the Blotnik Bridge has served the twin ports for more than six decades and the wear and tear is putting safety and our economic future of this region in jeopardy. Two years ago, President Biden visited Superior to talk about the promise of the bipartisan infrastructure law for communities just like ours. Since that day, I have been a little relentless in making the case for this needed investment. President Biden has heard from me, Secretary Buttigieg has gotten, he's on speed dial now by the way, and we've done letters, press conferences, texts, you name it. We've all been busy at work for this. And today, the President is back. Today, the President is back because together, we have delivered for Wisconsin and for Minnesota. Replacing the Blotnik Bridge will not only improve safety and protect our economic future, but it will put Wisconsinites and Minnesotans to work, creating jobs, supporting local businesses across the Northland. I am proud to have done my part to bring home this once in a generation investment for Wisconsin. Thank you to President Biden for visiting us today to celebrate this down payment on our state and our region's future. Just like the partnership that's gotten us to this moment, I am confident that here in the Twin Ports, we're creating something that is built to last. Thank you. Distinguished guests, please welcome Wisconsin Governor Toni Evers. Good afternoon folks, it is afternoon, right? I think, anyway, it's great to be here. And, you know, I am the last speaker before the big guy comes out. And so, the bad news is everything I was going to say has been said. And the good news is everything I was going to say has been said. So, I'm going to narrow it down very quickly for you. I have to thank our neighbors, our folks from Minnesota, that we compete in everything. This one, we work together, got this bridge, it's got union people working on it, who can be better? And Governor Walz brought 400 million dollars to the table. Thank you for that. Minnesota DOT took a leadership on this and the folks that work at the DOT in Minnesota are absolutely great state employees. And of course, we have Senators Colobuch Ira and Smith and all the good who they work to get them federal money here. That's first. Second one, from our side, from the people of Wisconsin, we got 400 million dollars also. And we have the one and only great Senator Baldwin here. And she brought 7.5 million dollars to the table using omnibus money before this happened. And Craig Thompson, I know you're here someplace, Craig. Craig's head ahead of our DOT, extraordinary group of state employees there and the work that they've done. So, thank you. But all these things, all these things that we're doing right now, I can tell you that without Biden infrastructure bill, Biden being the president of the United States, Biden being the most pro-union president they've ever seen. Without Joe Biden, frankly, this wouldn't happen. This would not have happened without Biden. And Joe Biden, thank you so much for the work you do for all the country. But this bridge is a huge issue for the state of Wisconsin. It's a huge issue for the state of Minnesota. And we could not have done it without you. You know, I had my state of the state speech the other night. And I had a chance to talk about all sorts of stuff. But growing our workforce is critically important in our state. And I think it's critically important any place in the country. And this is a perfect example of that. We're investing a billion plus dollars. But at the same time, we're all investing in our future because of the workers that are going to be on that site. The workers that are going to be, you know, it's going to be something that the people of Wisconsin, the workers in Wisconsin will never forget. So this is a historic moment. And I'm so glad I was able to shorten my speech to tell you that. Thank you. Take care, folks. Thank you. Distinguished guests, please welcome owner of Earth Rider Brewery, Tim Nelson. Wow, kids. Well, that's exciting. That's exciting. Welcome, Earth Riders. I am Tim Nelson, founder and owner of manager of Earth Rider Brewery. And it's great to be here. We're on the Duluth Superior Harbor at the base of the Blatnik Bridge. I'm a fourth generation twin ports resident. I deeply understand the importance of the bridge. It connects Duluth Superior community physically, financially and spiritually, I think. My great grandparents immigrated from Scandinavia to Superior in the 1800s. Great grandpa, Nikolai Nelson built a bakery about two blocks south of here. And my grandma remembered having to roll across the bay when she was a teenager. So I founded Earth Rider Brewery at the nexus of the twin ports in Superior, Wisconsin's north end neighborhood for a reason. Our brewing draws inspiration from Lake Superior and the people working on the ships, trains, trucks, and grain elevators right in our backyard. Many of our staff suppliers and customers live and work on either side of the St. Louis River Bay, so we commute daily across the high bridge. Simply put, the bridge is critical to my business. The rebuilding of the bridge will be critical to my business's growth and the growth of the local economy. That matters to the people here. It matters to our future. I'm grateful to our elected federal and state officials, President Biden, and for the bipartisan infrastructure law, and that's going to rebuild the Blatnik. It's a big deal. It's a huge deal for us. So please join me in welcoming the President of the United States, Joe Biden. Thank you. You have a seat, take it. Hello, Wisconsin. Across the bay. Hello, Minnesota. Tim, thank you for the introduction. I got to meet his twins and his wife, and no wonder he's here. I tell you what, they're going to keep him here. Look, I'm honored to be with the two best governors in America in the United States of America today. The governor of Wisconsin, Tony Evers, Tony stand out. And also the governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz. And thanks to the outstanding senators, Tammy Ball when it was constant. And Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith from the state of Minnesota. If I have all three of them on my side, I don't worry about anything. And two great mayors. Mayor Payne of Superior, Wisconsin. Stand up, guys. Folks, I'm here today to talk about something that doesn't get enough attention. The progress we're making to invest in America and American workers, American products, to invest in America. That's what we're doing. Bringing work opportunity in hope to the people of communities all across this country. Just last week, we saw the biggest jump in 30 years and how positive consumers are feeling about the economy. Things are finally beginning sinking. We passed a lot of really good legislation. We knew it was going to take time for it to begin to take hold. But it's taken hold now and turned the economy around. We also just learned that America filed 16 million new business applications since I become president. That's a record. When someone files for new business, it's an example of hope. Something they believe in. They believe that they can get something done and a consequence. You know, intense business right here is that active hope as well started a while ago. And just today, we learned the economy of the United States grew by 3.1 percent last year. I don't want to bore you all the detail, but you know, the experts from the time I got elected were insisting that the recession was just around the corner. Every month it was going to be a recession. Well, you know, we've got really strong growth. Let's see, here's this one's morning's headlines in the Wall Street Journal and other papers. Quote, U.S. shatters expectations. Second headline, U.S. economy boomed in 2023. Third, U.S. economy grew as a shocking pace. I love that shocking pace. But my favorites from the Wall Street Journal, quote, what recession growth ended accelerating in 2023? Folks hear it. By the way, the economic growth is stronger than we had during the Trump administration. My predecessor recently said he was actually hoping for the economy to crash, his quote, hoping for the economy to crash. Can you believe it? Well, he said he's hoping because he hope has happened soon while I'm still president. That's what he's hoping for. Well, thanks to the American people, America now is the strongest growth, the lowest inflation rate of any major economy in the world. It's because of you. We obviously had more work to do, but we're making real progress, building an economy from the middle out in the bottom up and not the top down. I was raised in the household where we had three bedrooms. It was a nice home. Three bedrooms split level home and a new development of 40 homes in suburbia with four kids and a grandpop with us. But the trickle down economics didn't trickle down much in my dad's kitchen table because when we work from the middle out in the bottom up, the poor have a shot, the middle class does really well, and the wealthy still do well. But everybody gets a shot. We all do well. You know, as a secretary of treasury, Janet Yellen, said today, and I quote, the story of the middle class is not separate from the state of the economy. It's at the heart of it. You know what I'm saying? I mean, workers across industries and occupations from firefighters and nurses to factory workers. That's the middle class. At least that's where I come from. That's what it's all about. So I'm here to announce more progress that shows that we can get big things done in America. We start believing in ourselves again. We start investing in America again. Folks, look, our infrastructure used to be the best in the world, the greatest and best in the world. But over a period of time, we stopped investing in America. We stopped it. We stopped investing in ourselves. And we slipped. We're now ranked the 13th best infrastructure in the world. The United States of America, number 13 in the world. How in God's name can we have the strongest economy in the world? We don't have the strongest and best infrastructure in the world. It's not possible. So we're determined to turn that around. We were determined to turn that on a big way. And that's exactly what we're doing. Two years ago, I came in Wisconsin. This is almost this very spot to talk about the historic bipartisan infrastructure law that I signed with the support of your elected officials. The most sweeping investment to rebuild America and American history. You've already invested $6.1 billion in Wisconsin so far. 5.7 billion, 5.7 billion in Minnesota. Two years later, I came back to the black dude bridge. I was here two years ago. The last time I was here, I came with Tammy. And we're now back this time because we knew this bridge needed a lot of work. Tammy didn't let me forget that either. You know that bridge opened in 1961 and a connects Minnesota, Wisconsin, you know, better than anyone in the world. And I over the Lewis Bay. It's a vital link of our nation's economy. Every year, 950,000 trucks use the bridge to carry 3.4 billion tons of goods all the way across America and into Canada. Folks, every day, 33,000 vehicles cross that bridge. The flow of people is so critical to small businesses that rely on it, get customers, employers, goods, businesses. It's critical. And local businesses like this brewery at the base of the bridge. Think what Tim just told us. Tim's family's been here for four generations. His great grandparents moved here from Scandinavia to build a bakery just four blocks from here. And as Tim just said, the bridge is critical to his business, his workers, his customers, to the entire local economy. And it's like that in other parts of the country as well. This bridge is also critical to the largest port on the Great Lakes serving critical industries like forestry, agriculture, clean energy, supporting so many communities. I mean, it really is consequential. But you also know this bridge is in badly corroded condition. It's unsafe for trucks to carry oversize overweight loads causing drivers, monthly detours, increasing costs and delays. It's outdated and designed. Tight curves have led to higher than average car accident rates, traffic congestion. For decades, people talked about replacing this bridge, but it never got done until today. I mean, I'm not proud to announce one billion dollars from the bipartisan infrastructure, all will be used to build this new bridge. A new bridge will increase capacity for large trucks and oversized loads. A new bridge with a modern design, wider shoulders, smoother on an off-brand. A new bridge with a shared path for pedestrians and cyclists. And I want to credit your governors. And I mean, it's the ceiling. The state legislature are coming up with the matching money to invest in this bridge. Otherwise, it wouldn't have gotten done with their own funding. This investment is going to make a huge difference. Less traffic, fewer car accidents, faster commutes to your jobs and schools, and a quicker response time. Some fire trucks and first responders went every minute counts. Goods are going to get shipped quicker and commerce will flow more freely instead of having to detour for up to 10 miles. Here's what else it means. It means that 10,000 new construction jobs, you need jobs. We're investing in America in jobs for American workers built with American products. And that's going to help your congressional delegation, especially Senator Tammy Baldwin. We're making sure that that iron, that steel, that construction material to build this bridge is made in America. This funding is part of a larger $5 billion investment led by the Department of Transportation for 37 major projects across America, including bridges, highways, ports, airports. To date, 40,000 infrastructure problems and projects have been announced all across America. And with the support of these great governors and congressional delegation, we're doing other big things. For example, we're making sure every American, including all of you here, have access to affordable high-speed internet. I want to thank Amy for her leadership in this issue. She's an incredible member. High-speed internet is essential to today's economy. It says essential electricity was when Franklin Roosevelt was president. Not a joke. That's why nearly a century ago, Franklin Roosevelt signed the Rural Electrification Act. I know this sounds like it doesn't matter, but it matters a great deal. He signed it to bring electricity to nearly every home and farm in America, because it became essential, an essential part of the economic growth of the country, an essential way to access the modern life. And so is high-speed internet today. In Wisconsin and Minnesota, we're investing $2.5 billion, $2.5 billion in high-speed internet. And we're going to say more than 600,000 families in these two states, up to $30 a month in internet bills. The household I came from, that matters. Those $30 a month bills will add up when you're living on a fixed salary. We're also investing $1.1 billion in your state to provide clean water and replace pores and spread plants. Every lead pipe is going to be taken out. To turn on your thoughts and then drink clean water without getting sick. You know, a recent study shows that reducing lead exposure for children has the same effect on a student's test scores as reducing the size of a class they're in from 22 to 15. One-tenth the cost it is. It matters. It affects the ability of the brain to function. That's why we're going to eliminate every single lead pipe in America, and I promise you that. We got the money to do it now. And that's on top of another billion dollars to clean up the Great Lakes with provide drinking water for 20 million people. 20 million people. And by the way, it used to make beer, brewed here. It is used to make the brewed beer, and it's fine. Ooh, earth writer, thanks for the Great Lakes. I wonder why this is going to happen. What we're doing in Wisconsin, Minnesota, is just one piece of a much bigger story. Look, 14 million new jobs since I became president. 169 new jobs in Wisconsin. 200,000 in Minnesota. Nearly 800,000 new manufacturing jobs nationwide. Good paying job. An employment has been lowest and below 4 percent for the longest stretch in 50 years. And it's even lower in Wisconsin than in Minnesota where it stands at 3.3 and 2.9 percent, respectively. That's our economic plan. Invest in American. Invest in American product. Build in America. That's what we call bi-denomics. My professor, well, I won't get into my professor. Well, look, my predecessor, though, he chose a different course, trickled down economics, cut taxes for the very wealthy and big corporations, increasing the deficit significantly. That's exactly what happened. That's exactly what happened. And the fact is, well, I won't get into it, but I don't want to get going. He stripped good paying jobs and shipped them overseas. Why cheaper labor rather than pay you a fair wage, ship it overseas, lower wage costs, and then import the product to nine Americans' jobs. He shrank public investment in infrastructure and education. And then the process and the processing hollowed out communities, closing factories, leaving too many Americans behind. Look, I grew up in neighborhoods in many, many of you did in regions where you had that factory that maybe not only employed 600 people or 800 people, but it was a heartbeat of the community. And all of a sudden, one day, a corporation owner decided it was cheaper to send that factory overseas because the labor was cheaper. So we closed the factory, sent it overseas, imported the product from overseas, paid more money for it, and they didn't have to pay as much of a labor. That's what happened. That's how we happened to hollow out American labor for real. Not a joke. You know, anyway, he talked about infrastructure every week for four years. He's going to increase the infrastructure week. Well, we have infrastructure every year. He didn't get, on my watch, instead of infrastructure week, America's having an infrastructure decade. We were rebuilding factories and jobs were coming back to America. For example, you know, when we did a little computer chip that everybody needs for everything from your watch to your automobile, well, guess what? We invented them. We made them more sophisticated. We used to have 40 percent of the market. And all of a sudden, we have nothing. You know that. And so, what I got in a plane and went to South Korea. My staff went, what the hell I was doing. I talked to the prime, the leader of South Korea said, you have a thing called Samsung. You make a lot of these computer chips come to America. Well, not only they, but a total of 50 billion dollars to come to America, building factories in America, in America. To replace the South out of Columbus, Ohio, they call the field of dreams. They're building two of these fabs they call factories. They're like gigantic football fields. And guess what? They hire a whole hell of a lot of people. Not only in building the facility, but working there. You know what the average salary is? 110,000 bucks a year. And you don't need a college degree to have the job. The Midwest is coming back. And these senators right in front of you here, they delivered it. Amy delivered it. Tammy delivered it. Tina delivered it. I mean, it's a ceiling. And you, the American people, supported it. Now, I work with some republics who get the bipartisan law done. And it got done. But I'm sorry to say the vast majority voted against it. But you know what? That's okay. Because we're building projects everywhere, no matter whether they vote it for or not. I promise to be a president for all Americans, whether you vote it for me or didn't vote. We have more work to do. For example, does anyone think that the tax code in America is fair? Raise your hand if you think the tax code is fair. In 2020, 55 of the Fortune 500 Company corporations paid zero in taxes. Zero in taxes. You may have heard me harp on this for a while. Federal taxes on $40 billion in profit, they paid zero cents. But not anymore. What I was able to do is provide for funding all these programs by signing a, getting past the tax of just 15%. You pay more than that. Just getting up to 15%. 15% tax on these 50 corporations making $40 billion. And guess what? There's a consequence we could pay for so many of these investments from making it all across America without the deficit going. And we still brought the deficit down by $7 billion. Look, we have to do more. One of the other things that I want to mention. You know, I've been, I'll say this politely. For my entire career, I have been going after the pharmaceutical corporations. Pharmaceutical corporations in America are the best in the world. They make the best product. But whatever prescription you may be taking now, if I take that prescription for you, I'm going to fly to Toronto, Canada, London, England, any Brazil, anywhere in the world, I will get that prescription by the same company filled for anywhere from one third to one half the cost. We could charge more than any other country in the world, not a joke. And you pay for it, not only in your prescription, but you pay for it because Medicare pays for a great deal of this. So I've been pushing to let Medicare negotiate and save it for me. With the help of your Senate and Congress congressional delegation, I finally won. And guess what? Any of you, I'm not asking you to raise your hand, but you know anybody who has a problem with diabetes, needs insulin? Well, it used to be the average cost that insulin on a monthly basis of close to $400. Now they cannot charge more than $35. And by the way, they're still making 350% profit across 10 bucks to make it, 10 bucks to make it. And the guy who invented it didn't even want to patent on it because he thought it should be available to everyone. I can take it down the list and begin it in 2025. Guess what else happens? Anybody, if you know how parents or grandparents are taking a cancer drug, they may be paying anywhere from $6,000 to $13,000 a month for that drug. They can't do it. And guess what? No one's going to have no seniors going to have to pay no matter how many drugs they have to take more than $2,000 a month period. Period, period, period. And they're still going to make money. They're still going to make money. And folks, I was told that that's an awful thing to do, man. It's a terrible thing to do. Guess what? Not only. It's a saving the individual money. It means you as taxpayers are paying billions of dollars less per month because you don't have to spend that money in Medicaid. You don't have to spend that money in Medicaid because it's a fair price. Look, we now have, before the recession, before the pandemic, we had about 700 billionaires in America. There are 1,000 billionaires now. You know what their average tax rate is? 8%. Raise your hand if you want to trade your tax rate now for 8%. No, I'm not joking. I'm being deadly earnest. It sounds like I'm making this up. 8% what they pay. That's why I proposed the billionaire minimum tax of 25%. That's not even the top rate. If billionaires and big corporations pay it even close to their fair share, because strength and social security in Medicare bring down the cost of child care, elder care, working class, middle class people would all be better off. And it wouldn't cost a penny because they're making $40 billion to be committed. And it's just basic fairness. You know, it's the right thing to do and we can get this done and I'll be damned. In the last year of this administration, I'm going to get it done. How many clothes are this? I'm going on too long, I probably got a little tied up here. This bridge is important, but the story we're writing is much bigger than that. When you see the shovels in the ground and cranes in the sky, the people hard at work in these projects, I hope you feel there's a renewed sense of pride, pride in your community, pride in what we can do, pride in America, pride knowing we can get big things done still together in America. We're the only country in the world that's come out of every crisis we've gotten into stronger than we went in. Not a joke, the only country in the world. For God's sake, this is the United States of America, the United States of America. And the real heroes in this whole story, the American people are starting to speak up. American workers, American people doing the work to bring communities back to the country in ways that are there was before in the future. That's what America does. That's why I've been never more optimistic about the future. You just remember who in God's name are. We're the United States of America. There's nothing, nothing beyond our capacity when we do it together. Let's start working together for God's sake. God bless you all. God bless you, God bless you, God bless you, God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you. God bless you.