Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell praised passage of legislation he introduced to help rural communities harmed by Obama Administration policies that restrict access to rural lending opportunities. His legislation was also co-sponsored by Senators Dean Heller (R-NV), Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), Mike Rounds (R-SD) and Deb Fischer (R-NE). Representative Andy Barr (R-KY-6) also introduced similar legislation in the House of Representatives, where the measure passed earlier this year by a vote of 401-1.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) – created by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act of 2010 – permits certain rural lending practices in areas it deems “rural” or “underserved.” However, as many rural communities have noted, the CFPB’s original definition of rural unfairly excluded a significant number of demonstrably rural areas and neglected to provide rural communities with any input in the process. While the CFPB recently undertook efforts to revise its definition, it once again, neglected to allow input from rural communities themselves.

The Helping Expand Lending Practices in (HELP) Rural Communities Act would create a process to allow areas to petition the CFPB with important local information for reconsideration of their rural status. This would give rural counties across the country a voice when the CFPB has incorrectly deemed them “non-rural.” The bill also takes important steps to address the challenges rural communities face by eliminating arbitrary mortgage origination requirements that will help ensure that rural communities bordering urban areas are still able to access credit services that are essential to rural small businesses and farmers.

“Washington’s bureaucrats at the CFPB have continually struggled to understand rural America, labeling counties in Kentucky, such as Bath County, as ‘non-rural’ and limiting rural lending practices that are helpful to farmers and small businesses,” Senator McConnell said. “While I welcome the CFPB’s recent efforts to improve the rural definition, I remain concerned that rural communities – particularly those in Kentucky – have been left without a voice. Our legislation seeks to correct this by putting into statute a process that allows areas that have been improperly designated as ‘non-rural’ to petition the CFPB with additional local information to reconsider their status and to ensure no rural community is ever improperly designated. It will also help ensure that rural communities have the access to lending opportunities they need to grow their economy. I want to thank Senators Heller, Capito, Rounds and Fischer, as well as Representative Andy Barr, for their support of this important legislation.”

Ballard Cassady, President and CEO of the Kentucky Bankers Association, praised Senator McConnell’s efforts on behalf of Kentucky’s rural community banks: “This legislation will give rural communities a voice in the federal, top-down regulations coming out of the CFPB that they often don’t have a say in. It will provide Kentucky communities with the opportunity to weigh in on the determination of whether an area qualifies as rural or not, and it expands community bank lending opportunities in rural areas. This legislation is crucial in helping rural communities access the credit they need to survive, and we commend Senator McConnell for standing tall for rural Kentuckians by representing their needs in Washington,” Cassady said.

Thomas Richards, Assistant Vice President of the Owingsville Banking Company in Bath County, explained how this bill will specifically help Kentucky rural communities: “The HELP Rural Communities Act addresses a problem that arose from the CFPB’s errant classifications, which originally excluded Bath County from its definition of rural. This bill ensures that no Kentucky rural community will again be misclassified and helps ensure Kentucky’s rural communities will have access to the lending opportunities they need. As a community banker, I truly appreciate Senator McConnell’s efforts to stand up for communities like Bath County in Washington,” Richards said.

Wendell Lyons, President and CEO of the Kentucky Credit Union League, thanked Senator McConnell for his leadership on this issue: “The HELP Rural Communities Act will go a long way to ensure that Kentucky’s credit unions are afforded the regulatory relief needed to serve its rural constituents. It provides a valuable opportunity for rural communities to ensure they are identified as such and are able to access the credit services they need. The Kentucky Credit Union League thanks Senator McConnell for his work to stand up for Kentucky rural communities and the community financial institutions that serve them,” Lyons said.

Charles A. Vice, Commissioner for the Kentucky Department of Financial Institutions, stated, “I am pleased that the HELP Rural Communities Act was passed as part of the FAST Act. The HELP Rural Communities Act creates a petition process for rural areas that have not been designated as rural by the CFPB. It creates a method for community banks and other stakeholders to seek ‘rural’ designation for a specific geographic area under the CFPB’s mortgage rules, and provides the needed flexibility for community banks to provide appropriate loan products to individuals living in rural areas. Community banks are vital to Kentucky’s economy expansion and growth.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today regarding passage of Obamacare repeal legislation:

“For years, the American people have been calling on Washington to build a bridge away from Obamacare. For years, Democrats prevented the Senate from passing legislation to do so. But in just a moment, that will change.

“It will be a victory for the Middle Class families who’ve endured this law’s pain for too long.

“On their medical choices. On the affordability of their care. On the availability of their doctors and hospitals. On the insurance they liked and wanted to keep.

“A new Senate that’s back on the side of the American people will vote to move beyond all the broken promises, all the higher costs, and all the failures. We will vote to build a bridge away from Obamacare and toward better care. We will vote for a new beginning.

“We hope the House will again do the same.

“And then, President Obama will have a choice.

“He can defend a status quo that’s failed the Middle Class by vetoing the bill, or he can work toward a new beginning and better care by signing it.”

Senate Will Vote Today on Bill to Repeal Obamacare

‘Americans are living with the consequences of this broken law and its broken promises every day. Its negative effects are often felt in the most personal and visceral ways. And Americans are tired of being condescended to.’

December 3, 2015

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today regarding the Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act:

“Middle Class Americans continue to call on Washington to build a bridge away from Obamacare. They want better care. They want real health reform.

“For too long, Democrats did everything to prevent Congress from passing the type of legislation necessary to help these Americans who are hurting.

“Today, that ends.

“Today, a Middle Class that’s suffered enough from a partisan law will see the Senate vote to build a bridge past Obamacare and toward better care.

“The Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act we're debating deserves the support of every member of this body.

“Because here’s what we all know.

“Obamacare is a direct attack on the Middle Class.

“It’s riddled with higher costs and broken promises.

“It’s defined by failure.

“It’s punctuated with hopelessness.

“And the scale of its many broken promises is matched only by the scale of its defenders’ rigid and unfeeling responses to them.

“Let’s consider just a few now.

“Americans were promised they could keep their health plans if they liked them.

“It’s a promise Democrats made to sell Obamacare, and it’s a promise they broke.

“Americans could only keep their plans if the President liked them. Millions saw the coverage they liked ripped away as a result of a callous and partisan law.

“Democrats’ response to their broken promise? They tried to dismiss stories about folks losing insurance by saying they had lousy plans anyway—that they should be grateful the government was taking them away.

“The American people took a different view.

“Here’s a note I received from a constituent in Caldwell County when her family lost their plan:

I was lied to by the President and Congress when we were told that the ‘Affordable’ Care Act would not require us to switch from our current insurance provider. My husband and I work hard, pay a lot in taxes and ask for little from our government. Is it asking too much for government to stay out of my health insurance?

“Americans were promised that Obamacare would lower costs, and even bring down premiums by $2,500 per family.

“It’s a promise Democrats made to sell Obamacare, and it’s a promise they broke.

“Just last night, we learned from the government’s own actuaries that Obamacare is leading to higher health care costs. We also know that premiums continue to shoot up by double-digits in many areas, including Kentucky.

“Democrats’ response to their broken promise? President Obama said that Americans who already had health insurance ‘may not know that they’ve got a better deal now [under Obamacare] than they did, but they do.’

“The American people took a different view.

“One Kentuckian wrote me after being forced into an Obamacare plan she called ‘subpar’ with a nearly $5,000 deductible. ‘I cried myself to sleep,’ she said. ’‘I work hard for every penny I earn,’ and this ’is unacceptable.’

“Americans were promised that Obamacare would create millions of jobs.

“It’s a promise Democrats made to sell Obamacare, and it’s a promise they broke.

“Obamacare is leading to fewer jobs, not more of them. In Kentucky, our Democrat Governor once declared it an ‘undisputed fact’ that Obamacare's Medicaid expansion had added 12,000 jobs to Kentucky’s economy. But as Kentuckians now know, he was undisputedly wrong. Not only did those jobs fail to materialize, but healthcare jobs have actually declined in Kentucky since the passage of Obamacare.

“Democrats’ response to their broken promise? I think this headline about the comments from a senior Democrat captures it perfectly: ‘Obamacare allows workers to ‘escape’ their jobs.’

“The American people took a different view.

“A constituent from Somerset wrote to tell me that Obamacare’s mandates were causing her to lose up to eleven hours per week at work, which meant about $440 less in her pocket every month. ‘Obamacare [is] causing us to lose hours [and] lose wages,’ she said, ’Yet expecting us to spend more.’

“Americans were promised that Obamacare wouldn’t touch Medicare.

“Americans were promised that taxes wouldn’t increase.

“Americans were promised that shopping for Obamacare would be as a simple as shopping ‘for a TV on Amazon.’

“Three more promises. Three more betrayals.

“And on and on it has gone.

“For more than five long years.

“Democrats need to understand that it’s time to face up to the pain and failure their law has caused

“They can keep trying to talk past the Middle Class. They can keep trying to deny reality. But they have to realize that no one is buying the spin but them.

“Americans are living with the consequences of this broken law and its broken promises every day. Its negative effects are often felt in the most personal and visceral ways. And Americans are tired of being condescended to.

“They want change and they want a bridge to better care, not Obamacare.

“This bill offers it.

“I think Democrats have a particular responsibility to the millions their law has hurt already to help pass it.

“I think the President has a particular responsibility to the millions his law has hurt already to then sign it.

“That’s the best way to build a bridge to a fresh start—to a better, healthier, and stronger beginning.”