Recent Press Releases

‘Americans want to know that on the issue of Guantanamo the administration is as concerned about safety as it is about symbolism. They’re concerned about the administration’s plans for releasing or transferring some of the most dangerous terrorists alive’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding Guantanamo and the lack of response from the administration on their intentions for the detainees:

“It should be clear to everyone at this point that the administration got ahead of itself by announcing an arbitrary closing date for Guantanamo before it even drew up a list of safe alternatives. So I rise this morning to express my continuing concerns about the administration’s apparent lack of a plan for detainees at this facility and to press the administration for answers on a number of important questions.

“Over the past two weeks, I and others have asked the Attorney General to provide the American people with the assurance that closing Guantanamo will keep the American people as safe as Guantanamo has. We’ve asked a series of questions. So far, these questions have gone unanswered. But the questions remain.

• Which detainees will be released or transferred overseas?

• How do we know these men won’t return to the battlefield?

• Will they be tried in American courts or will we use military commissions?

• Will any be sent to U.S. soil, even though the Senate voted against it 94 to 3?

• Finally, what legal basis does the administration have to release trained terrorists into the U.S.?

“Americans want answers. Unfortunately, the administration seems more comfortable discussing its plans for the inmates at Guantanamo with a European audience than it is discussing these details with Americans.

“Senator Sessions wrote a letter to the Attorney General weeks before his trip to Europe asking about the legality of releasing trained terrorists into the U.S. He sent another one to the same effect on Monday. He still hasn’t heard back.

“During the same trip, Attorney General Holder talked specifics about Guantanamo with European leaders. He said that the administration has identified 30 detainees at Guantanamo who are ready for release and that he would, quote, ‘be reaching out to specific countries with specific detainees.’ And according to reports, the administration has presented at least one country with a list of detainees it would like that country to accept.

“Americans want to know that on the issue of Guantanamo the administration is as concerned about safety as it is about symbolism. They’re concerned about the administration’s plans for releasing or transferring some of the most dangerous terrorists alive. They want to know that these terrorists won’t end up back on the battlefield or in their backyards.

“At the very least, they should know as much about the administration’s plans for these men as our European critics do.

“So this morning I would like to ask the Attorney General to provide Congress with any information he has provided to foreign governments about his plans for detainees at Guantanamo. If the administration will not relate its plans to the American people or their representatives in Congress, it should at least relate the details of its conversations on this issue with foreign leaders. This is not too much to ask.”

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‘Republicans are hopeful that President Obama will choose someone with the same qualities that have always characterized a good judge: superb legal ability, personal integrity, sound temperament, and, above all, an even-handed reading of the law’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Tuesday regarding Justice Souter’s decision to retire and the nomination process for his replacement:

“Justice Souter’s decision last week to retire from the Supreme Court presents us with an opportunity to prepare for an important debate about the role of the courts and the meaning of the Constitution. Of all the Senate’s duties, few have come to enliven our civic life as much as the consideration of a Supreme Court nominee.

“Justice Souter never made a secret of the fact that he prefers New Hampshire to Washington, and the fact that he’s served so long in spite of that preference speaks of a deep commitment to public service. As Justice Souter returns to New Hampshire, we thank him for his many years of dedicated service.

“Now attention turns to the President’s eventual nominee.

“Republicans are hopeful that President Obama will choose someone with the same qualities that have always characterized a good judge: superb legal ability, personal integrity, sound temperament, and, above all, an even-handed reading of the law.

“These are the qualities Americans have always looked for in their judges. Any judge who has them can fulfill his or her judicial oath to ‘administer justice without respect to persons and do equal right to the poor and to the rich.’ And these are the qualities that we should expect of any nominee to the highest court in the land.

“Over the years, there has been a growing tendency among some on the Left to pick or promote judges based on policy and political preferences, and President Obama’s past statements on judicial appointments strongly suggest that he shares this view.

“As a candidate for President, he said that his criteria for a judicial nominee would be someone who would empathize with particular parties or particular groups. This viewpoint was evident again last week when, in describing a good nominee, the President seemed to stress empathy over and above a judge’s role of applying the law without prejudice.

“The problem with this philosophy is that it arises out of the misguided notion that the courts are simply an extension of the legislative branch rather than a check on it. Americans don’t want judges to view any group or individual who walks into the courtroom as being more equal than any other group or individual. They expect someone who will apply the law equally to everyone, so everyone has a fair shake.

“Americans expect, and should receive, equal treatment whether they’re in small claims court or the Supreme Court. And any judge who pushes for an outcome based on their own personal opinion of what’s fair undermines that basic trust Americans have always had and should always expect in an American court of law.

“The President is free to nominate whomever he likes. But picking judges based on his or her perceived sympathy for certain groups or individuals undermines the faith Americans have in our judicial system. So throughout this nomination process, the impartiality of judges is a principle that all of us should strongly defend.

“In a nation of laws, the question is not whether a judge will be on the side of one group or another. It is not ‘whose side,’ the judge is ‘on,’ as a senior Democrat on the Judiciary Committee framed the issue during another debate over a Supreme Court nominee. The issue is whether he or she will apply the law even-handedly.

“Once the President chooses his nominee, Senate Republicans will work to ensure the Senate can conduct a thorough review of their record, and a full and fair debate over his or her qualifications for the job. This is a responsibility we take seriously, and one that the American people expect us to carry out with the utmost deliberation.”

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WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Monday regarding tax reform:

“I certainly support reforming the tax system and agree with the President that we must crack down on tax evasion through the use of tax shelters or abuse of offshore bank accounts. But as to the larger part of his proposal: I cannot endorse a plan that gives preferential treatment to foreign companies at the expense of U.S.-based companies and the 52 million people they employ.

“When even a member of the President’s cabinet says a recession is the wrong time to raise taxes, the administration’s plan—a significant tax increase on companies representing 44 percent of total U.S. private employment—seems particularly harmful to our shared goal of creating more American jobs rather than driving them overseas by increasing the cost of job creation here at home.”

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