Recent Press Releases



‘It’s grossly unfair that a family in Kentucky making $40,000 must pay for the health insurance of a family making double that — especially if the Kentuckian can’t afford it for his own family’



WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Tuesday regarding the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP):



“I support the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. I voted to create the program and believe we need to responsibly reauthorize it.



“In its original form, the State Children’s Health Insurance Program was meant to provide insurance to children from families that earn too much to qualify for Medicaid, but not enough to afford private insurance.



“There is no doubt that we all support providing insurance to low-income children.



“In fact, this program originally passed on a broad bipartisan basis, with 43 Republicans and 42 Democrats supporting it.



“Enacted by a Republican Congress and signed by a Democratic President, this was a model of bipartisanship.



“Two of my colleagues, Senators Grassley and Hatch, reached across the aisle to craft a bipartisan compromise in the last Congress.



“Unfortunately, our Democratic colleagues have gone back on many of the prior agreements that were reached in creating that bill, making this issue more contentious than it ought to be and setting a very troubling precedent for future discussions on health care reform.



“The original purpose of the State Children’s Health Insurance Program was to serve low-income, uninsured, children.



“The bill we’re being asked to consider sanctions a loophole that allows a few select states like New York to provide insurance to children in families earning more than $80,000 – instead of insuring low-income children first.



“This is more than double the median household income in many states, including Kentucky. It’s grossly unfair that a family in Kentucky making $40,000 must pay for the health insurance of a family making double that — especially if the Kentuckian can’t afford it for his own family.



“The bill before the Senate isn’t limited to children either. It preserves loopholes that allow adults to enroll in a program that is intended for children.



“Earlier estimates of similar legislation found that nearly half of the new children added by this bill already have private health insurance.



“Republicans, on the other hand, believe that we ought to target scarce resources to uninsured children, not those who already have coverage.



“Republicans will offer amendments to fix the shortcomings in the bill and to provide a responsible alternative that will return SCHIP to its intended purpose – serving the kids in struggling families who need the help the most.



“Our bill, the Kids First Act, will provide funding increases to state SCHIP programs and help them to find those eligible children who are not yet enrolled.



“And our Kids First idea is better because it closes the loophole that allows some states to extend their program to higher income families, even while they have thousands of lower-income children who are still not covered.



“The Kids First Act truly puts kids first, eliminating nearly all adults from this program designed for children so that more children can be covered.



“Finally, by responsibly allocating scarce resources, our bill increases funding for SCHIP without raising new taxes. We believe Republicans have a better alternative, which I now send to the desk.”



###



WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Monday regarding his vote against the confirmation of Timothy Geithner to be Secretary of the Treasury:



“I have heard from Kentuckians over the last several days on the nomination of Timothy Geithner, and, I want to reassure them that I heard their concerns. While it is the prerogative of the President to choose his cabinet, I can’t, in good conscience, vote to confirm Mr. Geithner given the questions that still remain following his committee hearing.”



###

McConnell on Fox & Friends

January 26, 2009



‘I think most of my members believe if you put money straight in the hands of individuals and businesses that will have a quicker stimulative effect than having the government spend it on projects’



WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell appeared on Fox News program “Fox and Friends” Monday morning. The following are excerpts from the program:



On A Stimulus Package:



“..I think most of my members believe if you put money straight in the hands of individuals and businesses that will have a quicker stimulative effect than having the government spend it on projects, particularly ones that are likely to spend out in year three and year four.”



On Republican Stimulus Proposals:



“We've been offering suggestions. If you want a quick answer to the question what would I do, I'd have a payroll tax holiday for a year or two. That would put taxes in the hands of everybody who has a job whether they pay income taxes or not. And, of course, businesses pay the payroll tax too, so it would be both a business tax cut and individual tax cut immediately. Number two, I would make the money to states a loan rather than a grant. Otherwise you're going to see a lot of mob museums and water slides. Everybody at the state level has been making their list and checking it twice, and we're going to end up with some very embarrassing expenditures.”



On The Democrats’ Trillion Dollar Spending Bill:

“Well the way it's looking in the House at least, a number of things bother me about it. I think it's probably going to fall well short of the mark of what the Speaker just said a year ago, the principle that ought to apply to stimulus, temporary, timely, targeted. A lot of this is going to spend out over a very lengthy period of time and not have much of an impact in the short term.”



“I want to be open minded about it because we haven't actually drafted it in the Senate yet. I think the house package looks pretty bad.”



On the President’s Stimulus Proposal:

“We're looking at the substance of this, and at least the substance, as defined by the Congressional Democrats at the moment, seems to fall well short of what a stimulus package ought to be.”



On The President’s Desire for Republican Support on the Stimulus:



“Well I think the President would like to govern from the center. The question is whether the Democratic leadership in the House and Senate will let him. They have majorities in both the House and Senate. They're going to pull him to the left.



On The Democrats Saying The Economy Will Get Worse Before It Gets Better:



“Well I think there's a political goal there which is to make any kind of improvement, no matter how marginal, appreciated. And to make it look like the new administration got it done. It's a little bit like the rooster taking credit for the dawn. At some point this is going to get over with, and the issue in the short term is, can we, the government, do something effective to help make that shorter?”



###