Recent Press Releases



‘These funds, coupled with an updated GI Bill for our veterans will help our troops while in combat, and when they return home to their families’



WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Monday after the President signed the war supplemental funding bill which funds our troops in the field through next spring:



“The supplemental spending request that was sent to Congress last year by the President was unambiguous: the funds were to be spent on our forces in the field, on the men and women fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq. Though it took more than 500 days for the new Congress to get it done, the combat forces serving in Iraq and Afghanistan will now have sufficient funding to carry out their missions through next spring. These funds, coupled with an updated GI Bill for our veterans will help our troops while in combat, and when they return home to their families.”



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“A modernized GI Bill is the best way to honor our commitments to those who risked everything by putting on their country’s uniform”



Washington, D.C. -- U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell commended the Senate Friday for passing the GI Bill, which includes a provision to provide transferability of education benefits from a member of our Armed Forces to their spouse or child. Senator McConnell strongly supported the provision, which was included in the Supplemental Appropriations bill that passed the Senate late Thursday.



“Higher-education costs have risen sharply, and GI Bill benefits haven’t kept up. The men and women in uniform who have bravely stepped forward to defend our country deserve more,” McConnell said. “This legislation gives the members of our Armed Forces the ability to transfer their educational benefits to a spouse or child.”



According to the most senior enlisted member in each service, the transferability of education benefits is one of the most requested benefits by men and women in uniform. The provision supports not just members of the military but also military families. A service member who may not want to pursue higher education could continue to serve, knowing that his GI Bill benefits will benefit a son or daughter when they go to college. Or a spouse could go back to school and start a new career.



“A modernized GI Bill is the best way to honor our commitments to those who risked everything by putting on their country’s uniform. It helps not just the individual soldier, sailor, airman or Marine, but all of us, as we gain a better educated and more successful citizenry,” McConnell said.



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‘We must pass this bill before leaving town and not allow it to be held up by a Democrat filibuster’



Washington, D.C.— U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding the bipartisan FISA compromise:



“Last April, the Director of National Intelligence, Admiral Mike McConnell, warned Congress about a serious flaw in the laws that govern our nation’s terror-fighting capabilities. New technologies had made our old electronic surveillance program dangerously out of date, he said, causing us to miss substantial amounts of vital intelligence on foreign terror suspects overseas.



“In reaction to these concerns, the Senate passed and the President signed a temporary measure, the Protect America Act.



“The Protect America Act lived up to its name: We’re told that from the time of its passage last August until its expiration in February, it allowed us to collect significant intelligence on terrorists and has been critical in protecting the U.S. from harm.



“But the Protect America Act had a signal failing: the telecom companies that may have helped prevent terrorist attacks were not protected from potentially crippling lawsuits. And this was no small thing, since without these companies, America wouldn’t even have an effective surveillance program at all. Bankrupting the telecoms would be like outlawing fire hydrants. You could have the best firetrucks and the best firemen in the world, but you’d still be incapable of putting out fires.



“So, after several months of new negotiations, the House finally devised and approved last week a revision of the original surveillance law that addresses the DNI’s major concerns, including the important telecom protection. As the DNI put it in a recent letter endorsing the House-passed bill:



[This bill] … would provide the Intelligence Community with the tools it needs to collect the foreign intelligence necessary to secure our Nation while protecting the civil liberties of Americans. The bill would also provide the necessary legal protections for those companies sued because they are believed to have helped the Government prevent terrorist attacks in the aftermath of September 11. Because this bill accomplishes these two goals essential to any effort to modernize FISA, we strongly support passage and will recommend that the President sign it.



“Passage of this legislation is long overdue. When the Protect America Act expired in February, the DNI warned Democrat Leaders in the House once again about the need for an updated law. Yet House Democrats were evidently more concerned about the pressure they were getting from left-wing groups like MoveOn.org. They brushed the DNI’s warnings aside, and refused to take up and pass a bipartisan Senate-passed compromise bill that would have easily cleared the House.



“As a result of Democrat intransigence, our intelligence community has been handicapped in its ability to acquire new terrorist targets overseas. This was grossly irresponsible, and many of us said so at the time. But now, more than a year after the DNI made his initial plea, House Democrats have finally done the right thing.



“They’ve acted on the DNI’s warnings by passing an updated surveillance law that meets his original criteria and which meets the criteria that Republicans laid out during last year’s debate; namely, one that gives the intelligence community the tools it needs to protect us; which doesn’t put the telecom companies that make this program possible out of business; and which would get a presidential signature.



“And now it’s time for the Senate to take up this bill and pass it without any further delay.



“This bill isn’t perfect. I would have preferred for the Speaker to allow a vote on the Senate-passed FISA bill. But it does meet the DNI’s criteria. And therefore its passage will mark a serious achievement, though long overdue, in the interest of our national security.



“This hard-fought bill represents the epitome of compromise. And the Senior Senator from Missouri must be singled out for his work. He’s done a service to the Senate and to the nation by patiently working all this out over the course of more than a year.



“He was assisted in that effort by a very able staff: Louis Tucker, Jack Livingston, and Kathleen Rice were invaluable throughout the process to every senator who was involved in this important debate. They also deserve our thanks.



“I will support this bill for all the reasons I’ve mentioned, and I would urge my colleagues to do the same.



“We must pass this bill before leaving town and not allow it to be held up by a Democrat filibuster.”



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