Recent Press Releases

Jackie Robinson

April 15, 2008

‘We honor him today for his courage and his example, and for accelerating the march toward equality for all Americans’



Washington, D.C.—U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks [as prepared] on the Senate floor Tuesday honoring baseball player Jackie Robinson:



“Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier on this day in 1947.



“He immediately made his mark on the field and off, winning the Rookie of the Year award in 1947 and suffering painful indignities from fans and opposing players with patience and grace.



“As a young man growing up in Louisville, I always took pride in the fact that Pee Wee Reese, a graduate of my high school, had become a major leaguer and even the captain of his team, the Brooklyn Dodgers.



“But I was even more proud of the fact that it was Pee Wee who walked over to Jackie one day when the taunts were especially tough, put his arm on Jackie’s back, and sent a message to the fans that Jackie Robinson was no different than anyone else they came to root for that day.



“Reflecting on Jackie’s courage, one baseball commentator said this week that it’s remarkable to note that in all the photographs from those years Jackie always seems to be smiling, despite the jeers and taunts and the hatred.



“We honor him today for his courage and his example, and for accelerating the march toward equality for all Americans.”



###




Washington, D.C.—U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Tuesday regarding the Majority Leader’s commitment to move three more circuit court nominees by Memorial Day:



“I was encouraged by the Majority Leader’s commitment to confirming three more circuit court nominees by Memorial Day. That will bring the total for the 110th Congress to 10, and it is a good step toward reaching the goal that we outlined at the beginning of this Congress of reaching the historical average.



“Because of the Majority Leader’s good faith commitment, I’m confident that we’ll have these three additional nominees confirmed by Memorial Day.”



###



Background

The historical average number of circuit court nominees confirmed during the final two years of a presidency when an opposition party is in power in the Senate is 15 to 17.

Pope Benedict XVI

April 15, 2008



Washington, D.C.—U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks [as prepared] on the Senate floor Tuesday regarding his Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI’s visit to the United States:



“This week we welcome his Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI, for his first visit to America as Pope.



“Here in Washington, Pope Benedict will meet the President at the White House, marking only the second time in America’s history that a pontiff has visited the White House. He will offer Mass at the newly opened Nationals Park, and deliver an address at Catholic University.



“Pope Benedict will then travel to New York, where he will address the United Nations, visit Ground Zero, site of the devastating 9/11 terrorist attacks, and say Mass at Yankee Stadium.



“During his visit, the pope will also champion a brotherhood of faith between the religions, by meeting with leaders from the Buddhist, Muslim, Hindu, Jewish and other faiths.



“The pope’s visit observes some important anniversaries. Wednesday, April 16, will be his 81st birthday, and Saturday, the 19th, will mark the third anniversary of his election as pope.



“His visit also coincides with the 200th anniversary of four of the oldest dioceses in the United States, one of which was established in my own state of Kentucky. Two hundred years ago this month, Pope Pius VII carved the Diocese of Bardstown from one of the oldest dioceses in the New World.



“The territory of the Bardstown Diocese once covered a giant swath of land, including what are now the states of Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, Missouri and half of Arkansas.



“The Bardstown Diocese was established alongside the dioceses of Boston, Philadelphia and New York. Its seat was eventually moved to Louisville, Kentucky, and made an archdiocese. But its place in the history of American Catholicism continues to be a point of pride across Kentucky.



“Kentuckians celebrate this bicentennial throughout the year at the St. Thomas Church, considered the ‘Cradle of Catholicism’ in the bluegrass state and still located in Bardstown. A two-story log house that stands on St. Thomas property is the oldest structure related to the Catholic faith in our region of the United States.



“Built in 1795 by Thomas and Ann Howard, the property was willed to the church by Mr. Howard in 1810, and it became the first home of the St. Thomas Seminary, the first seminary west of the Alleghenies. It later served as the residence of Bishop Benedict Joseph Flaget, first bishop of the Bardstown Diocese.



“Bishop Flaget and others who worked to establish the Bardstown Diocese were pioneers of the land as well as of the spirit. Kentucky was the western frontier of the young United States at that time, and frontier life posed many hardships.



“Yet Bishop Flaget successfully made his work and presence felt throughout the diocese, and the St. Thomas Church still cites his influence today, two centuries later.



“The resolve and faith displayed by the founders of that Bardstown Diocese are the same resolve and faith that have enabled so many other Catholic missionaries to attract more than one billion adherents to the Catholic faith.



“As the Bishop of Rome, the Pope’s leadership inspires millions with confidence that mankind can find God’s will amidst the chaos of this world.



“Yet, for all the obvious affection people show him, Pope Benedict would be the first to recognize that he is merely ‘a simple, humble laborer in the vineyard of the Lord.’



“We are honored by his visit. And in Bardstown, Washington or elsewhere, we welcome Pope Benedict XVI to bring his labors to America.”