Recent Press Releases

- Senate Republican Leader will deliver remarks on the Senate floor Monday outlining his opposition to Sotomayor’s nomination to the Supreme Court -

‘If, however, Judge Sotomayor were to become a Supreme Court Justice, there would be no backstop. Her rulings would be final. She’d be unencumbered by the obligation of lower court judges to follow precedent. She could act more freely on the kinds of views that animated her troubling and legally incorrect ruling in the Ricci case. That’s not a chance I’m willing to take.’



WASHINGTON, D.C.- Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell will formally announce his opposition to Judge Sonia Sotomayor's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court in a floor speech on Monday, July 20. The following are unembargoed excerpts from his prepared remarks:

"From the beginning of this confirmation process, I’ve said that Americans expect one thing when they walk into a court room, whether it’s a traffic court or the Supreme Court — and that’s equal treatment under the law. Over the years, Americans have accepted significant ideological differences in the kinds of men and women that various presidents have nominated to the Supreme Court. But one thing Americans will never tolerate in a nominee is a belief that some groups are more deserving of a fair shake than others. Nothing could be more offensive to the American sensibility than that. Judge Sotomayor is a fine person with an impressive story and a distinguished background. But above all else, a judge must check his or her personal or political agenda at the courtroom door and do justice even-handedly, as the judicial oath requires."



"Judge Sotomayor’s record of written statements suggest an alarming lack of respect for the notion of equal justice, and therefore, in my view, an insufficient willingness to abide by the judicial oath. This is particularly important when considering someone for the Supreme Court since, if she were confirmed, there would be no higher court to deter or prevent her from injecting into the law the various disconcerting principles that recur throughout her public statements. For that reason, I will oppose her nomination."



"In her writings and in her speeches, Judge Sotomayor has repeatedly stated that a judge’s personal experiences affect judicial outcomes. She has said her experiences will affect the facts that she chooses to see as a judge. She has argued that in deciding cases judges should bring their sympathies and prejudices to bear. She has dismissed the ideal of judicial impartiality as an ‘aspiration’ that, in her view, cannot be met even in most cases. Taken together, these statements suggest not just a sense that impartiality is not possible, but that it’s not even worth the effort."



"Judge Sotomayor’s record on the Second Circuit is troubling enough. But, as I said, at least on the Circuit Court, there’s a backstop. Her cases can be reviewed by the Supreme Court. This meant that in the Ricci case, for example, the firefighters whose promotions were unfairly denied could appeal the decision. Fortunately for them, the Supreme Court sided with them over Judge Sotomayor. If, however, Judge Sotomayor were to become a Supreme Court Justice, there would be no backstop. Her rulings would be final. She’d be unencumbered by the obligation of lower court judges to follow precedent. She could act more freely on the kinds of views that animated her troubling and legally incorrect ruling in the Ricci case. That’s not a chance I’m willing to take."



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‘Americans don’t want us to rush something as important and as personal as health care reform just to have something to brag about at a parade or a press conference’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding the importance of getting it right on health care reform:

“For the past several weeks, I’ve come down to the Senate floor just about every day we’ve been in session, and I’ve brought a simple message: Americans want health care reform, and both parties want to deliver that reform. What Americans don’t want is a government takeover masked as a reform that leaves them paying more for less. And they don’t want us to rush something as important and as personal as health care reform just to have something to brag about at a parade or a press conference.

“So it was perplexing to hear the President say yesterday that the ‘status quo…is not an option.’ I can’t think of a single person in Washington who disagrees with that statement. No one is defending the status quo — no one. What we’re defending is the right of the American people to know what they’re getting into: the exact details and the cost.

“That leads me to another distressing aspect of the administration’s approach to this debate — the artificial timeline for reform. The President has said he wants to see a health care reform bill out of the Senate in three weeks and on his desk in October. His rationale seems to be the same as it was during the debate over the stimulus. The economy’s in bad shape, so health care reform has to happen right away.

“Certainly the two are connected. But the problem is that many of the Democrat proposals we’ve seen wouldn’t make the situation better, they’d make it even worse. And due to our current financial situation, we need to be even more careful about how we spend our money, not less. We saw the consequences of carelessness on the stimulus bill. We rushed that, and Americans got burned. We must not make that mistake again.

“But we can start with a point of real agreement: Americans want reform — but they want us to be careful. And artificial deadlines virtually guarantee a defective product. Look no farther than the drafts that are coming out of the House and Senate this week. Both of them are shot through with weaknesses and deficiencies typical of a rush job.

“First, they cost too much. According to early estimates, the House bill would cost more than a trillion dollars over the next ten years — and yet it still wouldn’t cover all the uninsured. It includes a new tax on small businesses that could keep companies from hiring low-wage employees. It creates a new nationwide government-run health plan that could force millions off their current insurance. And one of the worst parts is that advocates of the House bill want small businesses and seniors to pay for it.

“Businesses would pay through new taxes; seniors through cuts to Medicare — cuts that hospitals in my own home state simply can’t sustain.

“I have talked to hospitals in Kentucky who are really worried about the impact these Medicare cuts would have on the services that Kentucky hospitals currently provide to seniors, and I’d encourage all of my colleagues to talk to the people who care for patients day in and day out at hospitals in their own states and see what they have to say. It may be a lot different than what some of the interest groups in Washington are saying.

“Small businesses are worried too. At a time when the unemployment rate is already approaching 10 percent, the new tax on small businesses will inevitably lead to even more job losses. And business groups across the country who have seen details of the House bill are warning that it would almost certainly kill jobs.

“Under the House bill, taxes on some small businesses could rise as high as roughly 45 percent, meaning their tax rate would be about 30 percent higher than the rate for big corporations. It’s worth asking why small businesses — which created about two thirds of the new jobs in this country over the past 10 years — get hit so hard under the House bill. Is it because they can’t fight back as hard as big businesses? Either way, the House bill would lead to some small businesses paying higher tax rates than big businesses, even though the U.S. corporate rate is already one of the highest in the world.

“The Senate bill is just as bad.

“As currently written, the HELP Committee bill would increase the federal deficit by at least $645 billion. If you add all the Medicaid changes the HELP Committee anticipates, it increases the federal deficit by more than a trillion dollars at a time when we’re already spending about $500 million a day just on the interest for the national debt so far this year. It too would kill jobs by requiring businesses to either insure all of their employees or pay a tax if they don’t. It would levy a tax on those Americans who don’t have or can’t afford health insurance.

“It fails to reform malpractice laws. It spends billions of dollars on projects unrelated to the crisis at hand. It forces millions of Americans off of their current plans — despite repeated assurances from the administration that it doesn’t.

“And, like the House bill, it creates a nationwide government plan that could lead to the same kind of denial, delay, and rationing of care that we see in other countries.

“Health care reform is vital, but it’s not easy. And if the House bill and the HELP bill are any indication, it’s certainly not something that should be rushed. Both bills are too expensive, particularly for small businesses and seniors, they’re too disruptive of the health care Americans currently have, and they’re ineffective in addressing the health care problem in its entirety.

“Americans have a right to expect that we’ll take enough time on this legislation not to make the same mistake that was made on the stimulus. The House and Senate bills we’ve seen this week show that we’re not there yet — not even close. We need to slow down and let the American people see what they’d be getting into with these so-called reforms. We all want reform. But we want the right reform.”

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WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Thursday regarding testimony by the CBO Director that partisan health care proposals will increase costs:

“The Director of the Congressional Budget Office confirmed today what we have been saying for weeks: the health care spending plan that some are trying to rush through Congress would actually make things worse.

“Americans want reform that makes health care more affordable and accessible, not a so-called reform that leads to rising costs and a government takeover of the whole health care system. Americans saw what happened when some in Congress rushed through the trillion-dollar stimulus bill earlier this year. They don’t want us to make the same mistakes on something as important and personal as health care.

“Today's CBO testimony should be a wake-up call. Instead of rushing through one expensive proposal after another, we should take the time we need to get things right—especially at a time when hundreds of thousands of Americans are losing jobs every month.”

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