Recent Press Releases



Washington, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Monday regarding the Supreme Court’s decision in the case of Wisconsin Right to Life v. Federal Election Commission affirming the constitutionally protected right for grassroots lobbying groups to engage in electioneering communications in federal elections:



“Prior to this ruling, citizens were allowed to speak their minds except for just before an election - this ruling corrects that obstacle to free speech. This decision is a victory for free speech and confirmation that grassroots advocacy organizations have the same free speech rights as all Americans. This is a step toward restoring the rights of citizens of every political affiliation to vigorously engage in political debate, whether the government agrees with them or not.



“Americans have a constitutionally protected right to hold their elected representatives accountable and, I hope, with this important decision, we can begin to undo the stranglehold that campaign finance legislation has placed on political debate.”



Background

Wisconsin Right To Life (WRTL) challenged a provision that prevents organizations and corporations from mentioning candidates for federal office during the “blackout” period mandated by Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA). WRTL and its supporters contend that the law is unconstitutional as applied to them as it outlaws advocacy on legislative issues during election season.



In an Amicus brief filed with the Court in the case in Wisconsin Right to Life v. Federal Election Commission, McConnell wrote:



“This case presents the exceptionally important question whether BCRA’s restrictions on electioneering communications can be constitutionally applied to grassroots lobbying ads that do not serve an electioneering purpose. … The government has not identified a compelling interest sufficient to justify the imposition of BCRA’s restrictions on grass-roots lobbying ads during the weeks immediately preceding an election, when constituents are most receptive to political ads.”



Leader McConnell has been a defender of free speech rights, particularly as they relate to political debate. His beliefs on the First Amendment led him to challenge the constitutionality of the BCRA following its enactment.



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‘Today happens to be the birthday of George Orwell, who saw how rhetoric was used in his own day to excuse the inexcusable…I can think of no better example of this than the Employee Free Choice Act.’



Washington, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell spoke on the Senate floor Monday regarding H.R. 800, the measure to strip workers of their right to vote privately for or against a union. Below are his remarks as prepared for delivery.



“More than three centuries ago, settlers in the New World began to put into practice the political ideals that brought them here and for which many of their descendants would later fight and die.



“One of the most important of these was the ideal of political freedom. And one the most concrete expressions of it was the right to vote in secret, without harassment and without coercion. Rejecting the English Parliamentary tradition, several colonies, including all the New England colonies, we established secret elections as the norm.



“And the secret ballot has been standard everywhere else in this country for more than a century. It simply hasn’t been questioned. Americans have come to assume that in everything from electing their high school yearbook editor to their President, their vote is sacred and it’s secret.



“Until now. The so-called ‘Employee Free Choice Act’ is an assault on the centuries-old practice of secret voting. And the fact that we are here in this chamber discussing it at all is a scandal.



“‘The Employee Free Choice Act’ was not written to help employees. It was written to help union bosses, who are angry because their membership has been plunging for decades.



“This bill aims to reverse that trend by stripping workers of the right to vote privately for or against a union. They’d be forced to publicly sign a card instead, exposing them to coercion and intimidation by employers and union bosses alike.



“When union bosses ‘convince’ more than half the employees at a work site to sign a card authorizing a union, they’ll be free to organize.



“Meanwhile, employers would be free to check whether their workers favor labor or management.



“Look: Congress settled this issue 60 years ago when it amended the National Labor Relations Act to provide secret ballots at the workplace. Congress changed the existing law then precisely because of widespread intimidation and coercion at the workplace.



“Now Democrats want to strip that right away from 140 million American workers, rolling back the clock 60 years on employee rights and potentially eroding the broader voting rights that generations of Americans have fought to secure for themselves and their children.



“This is a disturbing development. For years, American voters have been able to depend on Democrats to be loud and persuasive supporters of voting rights. And their sudden conversion is shocking, but its cause isn’t a secret.



“Speaking to a union rally on Capitol Hill last week, the Distinguished Majority Leader gave us a clue into the origins of this anti-Democratic bill. Here’s what he told the unions that showed up: ‘Democrats are in control of Congress now because of you. You made all the difference – and let me start with two words: thank you.’



“Well, are we to expect that blowing these folks a kiss at a pep rally was all they wanted?



“The unions haven’t been coy about their legislative wish list, and according to the Las Vegas Review Journal, ‘The Employee Free Choice Act’ is ‘at the top’ of their wish list.



“The Review Journal is calling this a textbook case of payback. Well, for all you civics students out there, you’re about to see a textbook example of something else: how this kind of thing backfires when it threatens to undermine something that Americans hold dear, and that’s the right to vote without somebody looking over your shoulder.



“Historians tell us that once secret ballots gained near-universal acceptance a little over a century ago, the only Western country that didn’t continue to observe the practice religiously was the Soviet Union.



“Yet even there, communist leaders were careful to maintain at least the formal appearance of secret ballots. An ad that recently appeared in a number of national newspapers illustrates my point. I’ve got it here behind me.



“Leading with the quote, ‘There’s no reason to subject the workers to an election,’ it asks, ‘Who said this?’ We’re given three choices: Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Idi Amin, and American union leader Bruce Raynor. It was Raynor who said it, in defense of the ‘Employee Free Choice Act.’



“No wonder the Communist Party USA endorsed the bill at its national convention in 2005.



“It’s understandable why my good friends on the other side hoped they could introduce this bill quietly, just slip it in, watch it fail with a whimper, then crow about their support for Big Labor at political rallies.



“They knew as well as I do that if voters knew they were looking to roll back a basic protection like the right to vote in secret, they’d be in trouble.



“The polling data is overwhelming on this one: nine out of ten Americans — including 91 percent of Democrats — favor the right to a federally supervised secret ballot election when deciding whether or not to form a union. The main provision in this bill is about as popular as poison ivy.



“Which is why this was supposed to all be quiet.



“Incredibly, my good friend the Majority Leader has even indicated that he doesn’t expect the bill to pass. Last week he was worried that some Republicans who are opposed to the immigration bill would vote for this bill just to delay debate on that one.



“He said such a move would be made out of pure spite, which could only mean that he doesn’t expect — or want — this bill to go anywhere.



“Mr. President: What are we doing here?



“I’ll tell you what: We’re being told to squeeze in a vote on this anti-Democratic bill between two of the most important pieces of legislation in this Congress — in the hope that it will fail.



“Well, it will fail. But not quietly.



“Democrats can’t put voting rights on the table and expect to get away with it.



“So first, Republicans will block this bill.



“But we won’t be quiet about it. We’re not going to forget about it. And we’ll make sure Americans don’t forget about it either.



“We’ll remind our constituents that our friends on the other side didn’t mind promoting a bill that would lead to voter intimidation by employers and union bosses.



“All but two Democrats in the House passed their version of the bill in March. Apparently they have no problem with union bosses following employees to their cars after work and telling them to vote union.



“Apparently they have no problem with these guys following workers home at night and knocking on their doors for a chat.



“I’m not making this stuff up.



“We’ve read about a case in Louisiana where a worker was forced to seek an arrest warrant for a union boss who showed up at his home eight times trying to get him to sign a unionization petition.



“And under this bill, the threat of employer intimidation is just as worrisome. Imagine having to announce in front of the person who writes your review, who sets your bonuses, approves your raises, and controls future promotions that you prefer labor to management.



“This is no different than the days when landowners sent their agents into the fields to tell their tenant farmers how to vote in local elections. It was because of practices like these that the first colonists fled to America in the first place.



“Another reason Democrats wanted to keep this bill quiet is that so many of them are on record opposing any abridgement to the right secret ballots.



“On the first day of this session, the Senate’s Democratic Leadership introduced a bill outlining the purpose of U.S. Democracy-building efforts abroad. Here’s what it said:



It should be the policy of the United States to use instruments of United States influence to support, promote, and strengthen democratic principles, practices, and values, including the right to free, fair, and open elections, secret balloting, and universal suffrage.



“Apparently, our good friends on the other side believe the right to a secret ballot is essential for everyone — except the American worker.



“Time and again, Democrats have expressed their belief that the right to a secret ballot is sacred in a Democracy.



“Six years ago, 16 Democrats in the House sent a letter to a group of government officials in Mexico chastising them for even considering a switch away from secret ballots.



“They wrote: ‘We feel that the secret ballot is absolutely necessary to ensure that workers are not intimidated into voting for a union they might not otherwise choose.’



“Support for the secret ballot in the Senate has been just as passionate. My good friend the Senior Senator from Vermont has called it ‘one of the great hallmarks of this Democracy.’



“The Senior Senator from Connecticut has referred to ‘the sanctity’ of a private ballot.



“The Junior Senator from Iowa went even farther, saying in 2005 that ‘perhaps what we need is a Constitutional Amendment guaranteeing the right of every citizen of the United States a secret ballot and to have that ballot counted.’



“Nine out of ten Americans agree with these Democratic senators. Which is why their party’s effort to roll back this right for workers is so alarming — and why it promises to be so alarming to voters next year.



“Unions have every reason to be worried about their membership, which has been in steady decline for decades. In 2005, only 12.5 percent of workers nationwide belonged to unions. In the private sector, the figure was even more anemic. It’s now less than 8 percent.



“But the price of reversing this trend shouldn’t be one of the fundamental tenets of a free society. Nor should elected officials be complicit in the effort.



“According to the Associated Press, organized Labor spent some $100 million on get-out-the-vote efforts last year, reaching tens of millions of voters by phone and other means on behalf of labor-backed candidates. Labor PACs contributed $60 million for federal candidates, including $40 million from the AFL-CIO.



“And according to news reports, Big Labor explicitly traded their endorsements of prospective freshman Democrats last year for the promise that the candidates would later vote in support for the ‘Employee Free Choice Act.’



“After the election, AFL-CIO’s chief John Sweeney, told a reporter it was ‘money well spent.’ Big Labor had a plan when it poured money into the election last year.



“Look: You don’t need to be John Locke to figure out what’s going on here. The unions are losing the game, so they’ve decided to change the rules.



“But the rule they want to change isn’t some little provision in the labor code. It’s a fundamental right that the citizens of this country have enjoyed without interruption for more than a century.



“This was bold, it was desperate, and it was stupid.



“Republicans will proudly block this bill from becoming law, and we’ll just as proudly remind people who forced a vote on it in the first place.



“Today happens to be the birthday of George Orwell, a great enemy of tyranny who had some harsh things to say about political speech.



“Orwell saw how rhetoric was used in his own day to excuse the inexcusable.



“We now call it doublespeak — or speech that’s meant to conceal the actual thought of the person speaking.



“I can think of no better example of this than the ‘Employee Free Choice Act.’



“This bill isn’t meant to help employees; it’s meant to help unions. It’s not about increasing employee choice, but limiting it.



“I will vote against it. And I strongly urge — and fully expect — my Republican colleagues to join me.”





Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement on Friday welcoming Dr. John Barrasso, who was appointed Friday by Governor Dave Freudenthal to fill the U.S. Senate seat of Sen. Craig Thomas who passed away on June 4, 2007:



“I’ve spoken with Dr. John Barrasso and hope to have him in the Senate as early as Monday. His energy, combined with the excellent staff that served Sen. Thomas so well over many years will allow him to get started right away, in what will be a busy legislative session.”



Over the next week, Barrasso will receive orientation from the Secretary of the Senate, Senate disbursing office, Sergeant-at-Arms as well and other administrative, security and legislative offices.



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