Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor calling for action on American energy jobs:

“Too often in Washington, our friends on the Left seem to operate under a very dangerous assumption — that good intentions are more important than a good outcome.

“I say it’s dangerous because we see all the time how liberal Washington policies that aim to alleviate problems like poverty or wage stagnation or other social or economic problems just seem to make things worse.

“And yet despite the evidence, the policies never seem to change. More money just gets thrown at the same failed programs, year after year, with barely any thought as to whether or not they actually work.
Obamacare is a case in point. Here’s a big-government bill that Washington Democrats thought they could just pass and – poof – health care would magically be made affordable for everybody.

“Yet for millions of Americans, just the opposite happened. Contrary to the assurances, Obamacare has upended lives and businesses across the country. It’s forced painful choices for people who could barely get by as it was.  

“It’s a mess.

“So you’d assume Washington Democrats would step back and take a long hard look at the accumulating evidence and start thinking about ways to keep this thing from pummeling even more Americans.

“But you’d be wrong. They just keep doubling down. When the web site crashed, they called it a glitch. When people started losing their doctors and their plans, they told them to live with it.

“When Americans started sharing their Obamacare horror stories, they basically called them all liars.

“And that should tell you everything you need to know how about how much Washington liberals care about middle-class Americans.

“They’re captive to the most extreme ideologies of the Left, and they don’t even try to hide it anymore.

“Forget reason or economics or sound argument. It’s all about ideology with these guys.

“We saw all this on vivid display a couple nights ago with the Democrats’ all night talk-a-thon on global warming.

“The reason for the all-nighter was pretty obvious — it was a command performance for a left-wing activist donor out in California. And the fact that taxpayers were basically subsidizing the whole thing was bad enough.

“But what about the basic substance of the issue Democrats were talking about the other night?

“It’s just one more case where good intentions trump the impact their proposals would have on ordinary Americans.

“See, the Obama Administration seems to think that if it just wishes really hard and issues enough regulations, it can single-handedly reduce global carbon emissions – without bringing Beijing and New Delhi onboard.

“It’s an alternate universe where ‘victory’ means U.S. emissions going down by some negligible amount – and where China and India don’t simultaneously eclipse that tiny emissions reduction with expanded energy production of their own. 

“It’s a universe where the massive economic consequences of acting so recklessly basically don’t matter.

“And it’s a universe where middle-class Americans somehow don’t take the hit to our economic output on the chin

“In other words, it’s the kind of thing that could only make sense to a party blinded by an extremist ideology.

“Of course, Washington Democrats love to pull out the old straw man and say, either you support our approach completely – even if it won’t actually solve the problem it purports to – or you hate the environment.

“Kind of like when they said, either you vote for Obamacare or you hate affordable health care.

“Well, our constituents remember how that worked out. And our constituents are quite capable of seeing the complexity in the world that so often eludes our friends on the Left – they’re capable of caring deeply about the environment, for instance, while disagreeing with the Administration’s ideological crusade here. 

“Of course, every ideological crusade needs an enemy.

“And in the Administration’s ‘War on Coal,’ Washington Democrats appear to have found their foil.

“It’s not some fat cat.

“It’s not some Wall Street titan.

“Nope. This time, it seems to be middle-class Kentucky families.

“Miners who struggle every day just to put food on the table.

“The kinds of Americans who work hard so the rest of us can have a better life.

“Well, it’s unfair. It’s wrong.

“And where Washington Democrats seem to see faceless adversaries, I see human beings.

“People who are hurting.

“I wish my Democrat colleagues would join me sometime as I travel around Kentucky listening to their concerns.

“At one recent listening session, a miner named Howard Abshire had this message for President Obama:

‘Come and look at our little children, look at our people, Mr. President. You're not hurting for a job; you've got one. I don't have one.’

“Another miner, Gary Lockhart, said his biggest worry was just trying to keep a roof over his family’s head and food on the table. And when it comes to his fellow miners, here’s what he had to say:

‘Many of these men, who have never asked the government for any kind of assistance in their lives…[are] having to go home and tell their families that their pay’s going to be cut to practically nothing. [That] there'll be very little Christmas this year, no vacations, nothing extra.’

“And miners aren’t the only ones affected by all the pain out there in Coal Country. I’d like to read you a letter I received from Bill Staggs, a businessman and pastor from Pikeville:

‘We have had to lay off employees due to the closings of mines and the [effect] they have had. Our business is losing thousands of dollars due to the negative impact of the EPA. As a pastor... our benevolence to the community has increased fivefold with help for food, power bills, clothing and just the day to day living expenses that families need.’

“Americans may not always know it, but they owe a lot to coal miners like the ones I represent in Kentucky. And whether it’s watching a TV show, drying a pair of jeans, or saving some leftover takeout for tomorrow, we often probably have a miner to thank for the electricity that makes it all possible. That’s also true if we plan to keep the lights on all night long.

“So I hope our friends on the other side will remember to be thankful for the electricity that makes all-night talk-a-thons possible. Honestly, I still don’t get the point of their stunt.  They didn’t introduce legislation or schedule votes on the national electricity tax they seem to want so badly. And remember, they control the Senate, so they can bring it up for debate whenever they want.

“But here’s the point. Republicans care deeply about the environment. We also care deeply about creating jobs and growing the middle class. And we don’t think our country should have to sacrifice one priority for the other.

“The American people don’t either.

“So it’s time for Washington Democrats to drop the billionaire-approved ideological crusades – to quit with all the talk and get on board with sensible, forward-looking action to create jobs. We’ve tried the Left’s wish-upon-a-star approach already, and real people have been hurt. Now let’s try some things that will actually work.”

At Sen. McConnell’s Request, Senate Passes Pediatric Research Legislation

Sen. McConnell asked consent to pass this legislation. There was unanimous consent and the bill now goes to the President.

March 11, 2014

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding the bipartisan Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act:

“As a survivor of polio as a child, I have always empathized with children battling life-threating or disabling disorders. 

“I also have a special place in my heart for those who work day in and day out to help kids who are battling childhood diseases.

“That’s especially true when these researchers and physicians are working with children in my own home state of Kentucky — at places like the University of Louisville, University of Kentucky, and Kosair Children’s Hospital
                                         
“And that’s why I have long been a strong supporter of pediatric medical research.

• I co-sponsored and helped shepherd the Childhood Cancer Act of 2008 through the Senate. 

• I also voted for the Combating Autism Act of 2006, and as Republican Leader, helped to secure its reauthorization in 2011.

“These weren’t partisan initiatives. They were areas where the two parties have generally worked together to advance the common good. Maybe that’s why we don’t hear much about them. But I think we all agree there is more that can be done.

“Late last year, the House passed bipartisan legislation – which I strongly support – to shift funding from lower priority programs to pediatric research: including childhood cancers, autism, down syndrome, Fragile X, and the countless other disorders and diseases that affect our children and don’t yet have a cure. 

“These efforts could be paid for using taxpayer funding of the Republican and Democrat political conventions.

“And frankly, it’s hard to imagine that there would be any objection to moving these funds to something we can all agree is a high priority – pediatric research.

“Thanks to the leadership of Leader Cantor, the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act – which was named in honor of a young girl from Virginia – passed the House on a wide bipartisan majority, with nearly 300 votes. After it arrived in the Senate, I asked my colleagues on the Republican side to pass it and send it to the President for his signature, because I saw the positive impact designating these funds would have on pediatric research. All Republicans agreed to pass this bill back on January 7th — and today marks the 63rd day that Senate Democrats have failed to act. 

“It is well past time we pass this bill out of the Senate and send it to the President for his signature. 

“Look: this is the type of bipartisan legislation that should move easily through the Senate.

“We should be able to pass this measure today, and I hope we will with this consent.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding the Senate Democrats’ climate change talk-a-thon and the need for legislation that would promote American jobs:

“The Democrats who run the Senate spent a lot of time talking last night.

“I’m not sure what any of it accomplished. The reviews seem pretty terrible.

“The AP dubbed the talk-a-thon ‘a lot of hot air about a lot of hot air,’ and said ‘the speeches were about little more than theatrics.’

“Maybe, as some speculate, Senate Democrats were just trying to please the Left Coast billionaire who plans to finance so many of their campaigns.

“Because the talking Senators didn’t really introduce new legislation.

“I didn’t hear the talking Senators announce votes on bills already pending before the Senate.

“They basically just talked. And talked. And tossed out political attacks at a party that doesn’t even control the Democrat-run Senate.

“No wonder the American people have such a low opinion of Congress.

“The so-called ‘talk-a-thon’ perfectly illustrated something else too: the emptiness of today’s Washington Democrat majority.

“I remember a time when Democrats could say, with some legitimacy, that they were a party for working people.

“Those days seem to be receding further and further into the rearview mirror.

“Because whether it’s addressing the opportunity gap in the Obama Economy or building the Keystone Pipeline or last night’s, whatever that was, Washington Democrats keep opting for the empty political stunt over reasonable, substantive solutions for the Middle Class.

“And here’s the thing: We need two serious political parties in this country, debating serious ideas. When we see Washington Democrats throwing seriousness out the window like this, it’s just bad for everyone.

“So if Washington Democrats are actually serious about all the talk last night, they should follow it up with action. Democrats control the Senate. Bring up the cap-and-tax bill and let’s have a debate.

“But, as the AP noted, despite all the bravado, ‘Democratic leaders made it clear they have no plans to bring a climate bill to the Senate floor this year.

“And the reason they won’t isn’t because of obstructionism or whatever else they might want to claim: it’s because too many members of their own party would vote against it.

“Remember: Washington Democrats couldn’t even pass that bill when they controlled the Senate with a filibuster-proof majority.

“More importantly, the American people don’t want a national energy tax that would make their utility bills even higher.

“Look: Americans have wildly differing opinions about how Washington should be approaching environmental policy. That much is clear. But one thing we should all be able to agree upon is this: imposing massive restrictions on our own economy, devastating the lives of our own mining families, and imposing higher energy bills on our own seniors that makes about zero sense while huge carbon-emitters like China and India continue to ramp up energy consumption.

“Global carbon emissions would hardly be affected anyway, but millions of lives here sure would be. The American Middle Class sure would be.

“So, Left, Right, and Center. We should all be able to agree that this is simply nonsensical.

“What we should all be working for is an all-of-the-above energy strategy that will utilize more of our domestic resources to create jobs and meet America’s energy needs. It’s a smart and focused approach that accommodates both our economy and our environment, and it’s one Republicans support strongly. Democrats should too.

“Democrats should also work with us to pass the legislation that would allow Congress to actually vote on environmental regulations – to ensure Washington’s rules strike the right balance between protecting the environment and creating jobs.
 
“That legislation is so important to my home state of Kentucky. Case in point, I spent this past weekend with hundreds of coal miners and their families at a rally in eastern Kentucky, and I heard from them how the Administration’s ‘War on Coal’ is hurting so many who struggle every day just to get by. It’s a War that’s taking away hope and destroying jobs.

“And let’s be honest: the most immediate crisis in the Obama Era is a jobs crisis. It always has been.

“If only our friends on the other side were willing to talk a little less and work with us a little more, there’s so much we could get done on that front. There’s so much we could be doing to create jobs and grow the middle class today.

“We could build a Keystone Pipeline that would create thousands of American jobs right away…

“We could increase U.S. exports and expand American jobs with trade legislation…

“We could reform our tax and regulatory structures to free small businesses, so they can grow and hire and enrich their communities.

“And we could pass the dozens of House-passed jobs bills just sitting on the majority leader’s desk — so many that even House Democrats are starting to complain.

“Those are the kinds of things we could get done once Washington Democrats show they’re ready to work with us.

“Talk is cheap, we know that.

“And America’s Middle Class is tired of all the talk. 
 
“They want action. Let’s provide it on jobs.”