Recent Press Releases

McConnell: Industrial Hemp Research to Advance in Kentucky

At McConnell’s Request, Obama Administration Clarifies Industrial Hemp’s Eligibility for Federal Research Grants

September 19, 2016

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced today that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) issued guidance clarifying that industrial hemp research programs are eligible for existing federal research grants.

Last year, Senator McConnell led a bipartisan Congressional letter urging Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to clarify conflicting information regarding industrial hemp’s eligibility for federal research grants. Additionally, Senator McConnell secured a measure urging the Secretary to clarify the Agency’s authority to award federal funds to industrial hemp research projects deemed compliant with the 2014 Farm Bill in the Senate FY 2017 Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations bill. Senator Rand Paul was a signatory of the bipartisan letter and supports the language included in the appropriations bill.

The announcement from USDA that certified pilot programs for industrial hemp are now eligible for National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) federal grant funding, is a welcome clarification that will hopefully provide ample support to a number of pilot programs in Kentucky.

“USDA determining that industrial hemp research projects are eligible to compete for federal funding through existing grant programs is a good development for Kentucky farmers and helps ensure that industrial hemp pilot programs can continue with federal assistance,” said Senator McConnell. “It also demonstrates that the federal government agrees that this is a crop worth researching. Senator Paul and I have heard from countless Kentuckians regarding industrial hemp’s potential to expand agricultural opportunities for farmers and grow our economy and we look forward to continuing to work with the Kentucky Commissioner of Agriculture Ryan Quarles, researchers in the state, and our colleagues in Congress to ensure that hemp research continues to move forward and that Kentucky remains the lead state in demonstrating how industrial hemp could once again be a cash crop for Kentucky.”

“Historically, Kentucky was a leader in hemp production, and it is already staking out its position at the head of the pack once again,” said Senator Paul. “I’m pleased to see the USDA respond to Kentucky farmers’ concerns by officially leveling the playing field for industrial hemp pilot programs.”

Background:

This clarification builds on Senator McConnell’s work in the 2014 Farm Bill, legislation which gave state agricultural commissioners and universities the federal authority to cultivate industrial hemp for pilot programs and therefore. Senator McConnell secured a long-awaited federal victory for industrial hemp production in Kentucky by crafting this language in order to give then-Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner James Comer the authority to implement industrial hemp pilot programs.

In 2013, after long discussions with then-Agriculture Commissioner James Comer on the history of hemp production in Kentucky as well as the potential future economic benefits of again producing industrialized hemp in the state, Senator McConnell and Senator Paul agreed that researching its production for future viability as a cash crop could be a positive development for Kentucky’s farm families and economy. Senator McConnell began working with Comer while he was Kentucky’s Commissioner of Agriculture to make sure that a measure to allow for federal recognition of industrial hemp research in Kentucky made it into the 2014 Farm Bill. Comer’s leadership in paving the way forward for industrial hemp in our state continues today with current Commissioner Ryan Quarles' efforts to continue the growth of industrial hemp production/research in Kentucky. There are 10 colleges and universities participating in hemp research in Kentucky. For 2016, over 4,600 acres have been approved for industrial hemp production and research among 179 program participants.

Senator Rand Paul first brought hemp to Kentucky’s attention when he cosponsored legislation in the 112th Congress that would have excluded industrial hemp from federal regulation under the Controlled Substance Act. Currently, the Controlled Substance Act does not distinguish industrial hemp from marijuana, treating both as Schedule I drugs. Industrial hemp lacks the high quantities of the psychoactive ingredient THC found in marijuana. Senator Paul, along with Senator McConnell, cosponsored this legislation when it was reintroduced in the 113th Congress.

McConnell: Obamacare is a Direct Attack on the Middle Class

‘What we’re seeing with Obamacare may be shocking, but it’s not surprising, because these are the inevitable consequences of this partisan law — a partisan law littered with broken promises.’

September 14, 2016

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today on how Obamacare is hurting people across the country:

“Let me start by stating the obvious: Obamacare is a direct attack on the Middle Class.
Premiums are shooting up by double-digits…

“Co-pays are spiking and deductibles are skyrocketing…

“Co-ops are collapsing and insurers are withdrawing…

“We all know the statistics.

“They’re shocking.

“And yet, they still do not truly capture the toll this partisan law is taking on the Middle Class.

“Because behind every premium increase headline is a family budget stretched to its limits and behind every co-op collapse is agonizing uncertainty about where a family will find insurance. This is what too often gets lost in the debate over Obamacare, especially amongst our Democratic friends, perhaps because it helps them rationalize away the pain of this law. But this is not some theoretical discussion, these are people’s lives that their law is hurting.

“That’s why I shared the story of the mom in Louisville who said her family’s health care costs would consume nearly a fifth of their budget this year. “I wish someone would explain to us,” she wrote, “how a hard working middle class family paying this much for health insurance became a loser under Obamacare.”

“That’s why I shared the story of the Campbellsburg man who just lost the health insurance he’d had for many years. “Instead of something affordable,” he wrote, “I [now] face the possibility of struggling to purchase an Obama[care] health plan that costs two to three times what I had been paying.”

“That’s why I shared the story of the small businessman in Lexington who may have to end his decades-long practice of providing insurance to his employees at no cost — thanks to, as he wrote, “the cynically named Affordable Care Act.”

“I shared stories from other states too.

“There’s the New Jersey man with chronic health issues who lost access to his doctors the moment Obamacare placed him on Medicaid. “You have a card saying you have health insurance,” he said, “but if no doctors take it, it's almost like having one of those fake IDs.”

“He reminded us that having health insurance under Obamacare is not the same thing as actually having health coverage.

“There’s the woman from Ohio who lost her plan after Obamacare forced out her insurer. “They fine you if you don’t have insurance,” she said, “then they take your options away.”

“She put words to the frustrations of millions.

“I explained how Obamacare is chasing out insurers in states like Ohio, Arizona, and Alabama…throwing thousands off their plans all over again.

“I explained how Obamacare’s co-ops are failing in states like New Hampshire, New Jersey, and Connecticut… massively disrupting coverage for thousands more.

“I explained how Obamacare is shooting premiums up by almost unimaginable amounts in states like Minnesota, Illinois, and Montana…forcing more Americans to make impossible financial decisions.

“So I invite Democrats to recognize that Obamacare’s human toll is evident from north to south, east to west.

“That includes states like California, where — according to what the Democratic Leader told us yesterday — Obamacare is supposedly “working wonderfully.”

“But is it really?

“Is it “wonderful” that premiums in California are set to spike by more than three times the average of recent years? Is it “wonderful” that Obamacare is causing huge double-digit increases in the Golden State while reducing access to doctors and hospitals at the same time? The Los Angeles Times quoted a left-wing activist summarizing the situation this way: “We’re paying more for less.”

“Indeed, before those massive increases had even been announced, polling showed Californians more concerned about the cost of healthcare than whether they even had insurance. Two-thirds reported that they worried “very much” about rising health costs, and a majority credited Obamacare for causing costs to go up “a lot” for average Americans.

“It’s similar to what Americans said nationwide, when they cited health care as their biggest financial worry.

“That was ahead of wages, college costs, even job loss.

“No wonder even some on the Left have taken to calling Obamacare the “Unaffordable Care Act.”

***
“What we’re seeing with Obamacare may be shocking, but it’s not surprising, because these are the inevitable consequences of this partisan law — a partisan law littered with broken promises.

“Democrats said that premiums would be lower.

“Remember?

“Democrats said that co-pays and deductibles would be affordable too.

“…They were wrong.

“Democrats said that Americans could keep their health plans.

“Remember?

“Democrats said that Americans could keep their doctors.

“…It wasn’t true.

“Democrats said that Obamacare wouldn’t touch Medicare. Democrats said that taxes wouldn’t increase on the Middle Class. Democrats said that shopping for Obamacare would be as a simple as shopping ‘for a TV on Amazon.’

“…Wrong. Wrong. Wrong again.

“Democrats have broken one promise after the next on Obamacare but now — get this — they’re asking Americans to trust them to “fix” the same mess they created.

“They say they have the perfect solution too. It’s more Obamacare.

“No, really…Seriously…I’m not kidding…

“Democrats actually think they can pull another fast one on the American people. They’re actually pushing government-run Obamacare 2.0 as some kind of solution. And they’re doing it with a straight face.

“So look.

“We already know what we could expect from a Democratic-run Congress next year on Obamacare.

“More broken promises…More stonewalling…More of the same…

“Obamacare’s attack against the Middle Class is a nationwide phenomenon. It’s hurting the very people we were sent here to represent. And the only way to deliver true relief for the Middle Class is to finally build a bridge away from Obamacare.

“That’s why we passed a bill to repeal this partisan law and sent it to the President — because the Middle Class deserves better than the pain of Obamacare.

“And I think even President Obama, if he’s being honest with himself, should be able to recognize that too. Here’s what he said himself last month, “Too many Americans still strain to pay for their physician visits and prescriptions, cover their deductibles, or pay their monthly insurance bills; struggle to navigate a complex, sometimes bewildering system; and remain uninsured."

“That’s not the description of a law that’s working. It’s time to leave this failed experiment in the past and move toward the real care Americans deserve."