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“The Senate Republicans promised the American people we would vote to repeal Obamacare, and we have done that. But this fight isn’t over. We intend to continue the fight to repeal and replace Obamacare with sensible reforms that would lower the cost of American health care, like medical malpractice, like selling insurance across state lines. This fight isn’t over, so I hope you’ll stay in the fight with us.” 

                         Senator Mitch McConnell

February 2, 2011

McConnell on the Current Health Care Debate

  • Aug 01 2012

    House Votes to Protect American Families and Job Creators From President’s Proposed Tax Hikes

    McConnell: House rejects ‘President’s call for new tax hikes in a slow economy’

    Washington, D.C.– U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Wednesday after a bipartisan majority of the House of Representatives voted to prevent a massive tax hike on American families and job creators:

    “A bipartisan majority of the House of Representatives stood up for small businesses and their hardworking employees today, rejecting the President’s call for new tax hikes in a slow economy. The Republican House has now acted to prevent a massive tax hike and the President’s defense cuts that would be so devastating to our national security. It’s time for Senate Democrats and the President to work with Republicans to solve these problems, rather than telling these hardworking Americans they’re not responsible for their own success while holding political show votes and ignoring the issue altogether.”

  • Jul 12 2012

    McConnell: ‘We Can’t Vote on a Speech’

    Washington, D.C.– U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today regarding the Democrats’ unserious approach to dealing with the failed Obama economy and upcoming massive tax hikes:

    “Something truly remarkable happened in the U.S. Senate yesterday.

    “First, Democrats blocked a vote that a President of their own party called for two days earlier.

    “And last night, the Majority Leader moved to shut down a debate on taxes that hadn’t even begun.

    “Earlier this week, President Obama issued an outrageous ultimatum to Congress: raise taxes on about one million business owners, he said, and I promise not to raise taxes on everybody else.

    “At a moment when the American people are reeling from the slowest recovery in modern times, when the percentage of those who could work are working is at a three-decade low, and just five months away from the economic body blow that will result if tax rates spike, as scheduled, on January 1st, the President’s solution is to take more money away from the very businesses folks are counting on to create the jobs they need.

    “Presumably, so he can spend it on solar companies and stimulus bills.

    “This was the President’s brilliant economic solution to the mess we’re in.

    “Naturally, Republicans opposed it. The way we see it, nobody should see an income tax hike right now — not small businesses, not individuals, nobody. The problem isn’t that Washington taxes too little, but that it spends too much.

    “But rather than just talk about it, we thought we should actually take a vote on it.

    “After all, the President himself boasted Monday that he’d sign a bill to raise taxes on small businesses right away if we passed it. So that’s what we suggested: two votes: one on the President’s plan — once it’s actually written — and one on ours.

    “But the Democrat Majority Leader in the Senate blocked it from happening.

    “Why? Because, as usual, Senate Democrats want to have it both ways.

    “Two years ago, 40 Democrats in the Senate voted to do precisely what Republicans are proposing now: keep everybody’s taxes right where they are, and do no harm. Well, the President apparently doesn’t want any of them to vote that way again now.

    “In other words, he doesn’t want to do what’s right for the economy and jobs. He wants to do what he thinks is good for his re-election. For some reason his advisors think it helps him to take more money away from small already-struggling business owners in this country and spend it on more government. That’s the plan anyway. And he wants everybody to stick with it.

    “So yesterday the Democrat Majority leader did what the White House told him to: he made sure there wasn’t a vote on a proposal that a President of his own party demanded two days earlier — and then offered a vote today on a bill that isn’t even written, and only if Democrats and Republicans give up their ability to offer amendments to the Reid bill.

    “This is the kind of absurdity you get when you’ve got a governing party that’s more concerned with winning an
    election than in facing up to the consequences of the President’s failed economic policies.
    “But it gets even more absurd than that — because the Democrat Majority Leader didn’t just block us yesterday from having votes on whether to raise taxes or not. He wouldn’t even let us have a debate about it.

    “Senators on both sides of the aisle have proposals that would help the American people weather the economic crisis we’re in.

    “Senator Hutchison has an amendment that would extend the relief from the blow of the marriage penalty. Senator Heller has a plan to extend the deduction of sales tax in Nevada. Senator Scott Brown and a whole host of other Republicans have a proposal to repeal the potentially devastating tax on medical devices that’s being used to help fund Obamacare. Senators Cornyn and Crapo have amendments that would lessen the blow of the tax hikes on investments — tax hikes that will directly affect job creation and harm those like our seniors who are living on a fixed income.

    “As for the Democrats, well, even they have some ideas that might do some good for the country. Senator Brown of Ohio has an amendment to extend the research and development credit, which I know has bipartisan support, even if Republicans might differ in his approach. And Senator Begich has an amendment that would extend a popular tax break for investments by small businesses. I don’t fully endorse the specific approach taken by these two, but if they had a chance to offer and debate I think we might be able to work out an agreement and get a result.  But we can’t even have that debate or get a vote on these Democratic amendments, because of the politics.

    “Personally, I can’t imagine why Democrat senators would tolerate this kind of authoritarian approach. It seems to me if Senators Brown of Ohio and Begich really believe in their amendments, they’d fight for a vote on them. It’s hard to believe their constituents sent them here to rubber stamp everything their party leader puts out there, regardless of its impact on their states.

    “We’ll probably have these votes later today, if these Democrat Senators vote to cut off the debate, I’ll leave it up to them to explain to their constituents why they didn’t think these amendments deserved votes.

    “But the larger issue is this: all of these petty political maneuvers betray an astounding lack of concern about not only the economic crisis we’re in, but the threat that’s posed by the fiscal cliff we all know is looming in January.

    “A New York Times article from just this morning suggests that one reason the economy has slowed down so much this summer is that businesses are reacting to the uncertainty about what happens at the end of the year.

    “And yet here’s the Democrat-controlled Senate, blocking votes, blocking debate, and hosting private meetings with the President’s political advisors on political strategy instead of working on serious, bipartisan solutions.
    “Last night, Democrat leaders admitted that the bill they wanted Republicans to turn to hadn’t even been written yet.

    “Think about that: the proposal the President announced Monday with so much fanfare hasn’t even been put on paper yet. And yet Democrats wanted us to move to it. Move to what? A speech? This is the level of seriousness we’re seeing from the Democrat controlled Senate. This is how seriously they take this economy crisis. It’s nothing but a political game to them.

    “If the President has a proposal, we’ll be happy to send an intern down to the White House to pick it up.
    “But we can’t vote on a speech. And, frankly, we can’t continue like this.

    “It’s long past time Democrats at the White House and in the Senate took the lives and challenges of working Americans as seriously as they take politics. It’s time to put childish things aside and get to the business of the people.”

  • Jul 11 2012

    House Votes to Repeal Obamacare

    Republican Leader pushes for repeal vote in the Senate

    Washington, D.C.– U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell released the following statement today following the House vote to repeal Obamacare:

    “The Republican leadership in the House has once again fulfilled its commitment to protect the American people from the tax hikes and mandates in Obamacare that are driving up health care costs and making it harder for small businesses to hire. The President’s health law is the single worst piece of legislation passed by Congress in modern times. I’ve already committed to making its repeal the first order of business in the Senate next year if I am the leader of the Majority. But in the meantime, I have filed a repeal amendment and will work to bring it up for a vote in the Senate.”

  • Jul 10 2012

    President’s Plan for Small Business: You Earn, He Takes

    ‘No one should see an income tax hike next year—not families, not small businesses, no one. We should extend all the income tax rates while we make progress on fundamental tax reform. It’s time to put the failed policies of the past three and half years aside and try something else.’
  • Jul 09 2012

    President Calls for Small Business Tax Hike

    ‘And since the President himself has previously acknowledged that this kind of tax hike is a drag on the economy, today’s proposal is clearly based on a political calculus, not an economic one. But in the Obama economy, we need policies that are designed to create jobs—not designed to protect his.’
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