Recent Press Releases

‘Kids First calls for responsible expansion to cover more low-income kids’



Washington, D.C. -- Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell reintroduced Kids First, a Republican alternative to the Democrats’ vetoed State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) on Thursday. Kids First is cosponsored by 18 Senators.



“Our first priority is to ensure that poor children have the healthcare they need. We can forge a bipartisan compromise, and Republicans have an alternative that can serve as a basis,” said McConnell. “Kids First calls for responsible expansion to cover more low-income kids, and to cover them first.”



Kids First would reauthorize SCHIP while focusing on low-income kids who are eligible but not enrolled in the program. It would expand current coverage to include 1.3 million new low-income kids, remove non-pregnant adults from the program and strengthen premium assistance so states can use the money to keep people in private health coverage.



“In Kentucky, the Democrats’ vetoed bill would provide less coverage for kids’ health care in 2008 than our Kids First plan,” McConnell said. “Kentuckians don’t want the money they’ve targeted for poor children going to adults and middle class families who live in other states and can afford insurance on their own.”



Kentuckians would pay $600 million more in new taxes than they would receive in new benefits under the Democrats’ plan – a $600 million wealth transfer from Kentucky to states like New York and New Jersey.



“Until this year, SCHIP had been a bipartisan program and a bipartisan success,” added McConnell. “All of us can agree that providing health care to low-income children is important. Democrats should not use these children as a political pawn for campaign purposes. These kids deserve our best work, and we owe it to them to forge a bipartisan compromise the President can sign.”





Cosponsors

Sen. Wayne Allard (R-Colo.)

Sen. John Barrasso (R- Wyo.)

Sen. Bob Bennett (R-Utah)

Sen. Jim Bunning (R-KY)

Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.)

Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.)

Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.)

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas)

Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.)

Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-N.C.)

Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.)

Sen. Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.)

Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.)

Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.)

Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.)

Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.)

Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.)

Sen. David Vitter (R-La.)



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49 Consecutive Months of Job Growth; Longest Ever



Washington, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement following a record-setting 49 months of consecutive job growth:



“This report is a milestone, showing the American economy has created jobs for 49 consecutive months, breaking the record set under President Reagan. Smart economic policies led principally by a lowered tax burden created the economic environment necessary for sustained growth, and the American workforce took it from there.



“Some in Washington have proposed turning back the clock and socking our hard working families and small business with higher taxes and more regulation. I couldn’t disagree more. I can assure our workers that Republicans will stand firm against any such effort to stop economic progress in its tracks.”



Background

This is the first time the milestone of 49 consecutive months of job growth has ever been reached.



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Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell announced Thursday that the FY ’08 Defense Appropriations bill containing $89.5 million in funding he secured for several Kentucky defense-related projects has passed the Senate. The bill will now go a House/Senate Conference Committee for consideration.



“The work being done in Kentucky at our military installations, defense facilities and universities is vital to our nation’s defense,” Senator McConnell said. “This critical funding will help ensure that these efforts to strengthen our national security will continue.”



McConnell, a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, secured funding for the following Kentucky military and defense facilities:



Blue Grass Army Depot:



$28 million for the Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives (ACWA) program at the Blue Grass Army Depot in Richmond, Kentucky. “The people living near the Blue Grass Army Depot are at risk because the chemical weapons stored there are the most deadly in the nation,” McConnell said. “This additional funding will enable the ACWA program to move more quickly toward the safe elimination of the chemical weapons located at the facility.”

Airport Industrial Center/Technology Park of Greater Louisville:



$12.2 million for Mk 45 Mod 5” Gun Mount Overhauls (BAE Systems). The Mk 45 gun is the most commonly used gun system aboard surface combatants and has been in production with various modifications for nearly four decades.

$8 million for Destroyer Modernization Weapons (BAE Systems). Modification of this system will improve the Navy’s land attack capabilities with longer-range conventional rounds and improved accuracy and range.



$4.8 million for DDG 1000 AGS Pallets (BAE Systems). This funding supports the production of initial ammunition pallets for DDG 1000 ships.



$8.5 million for Phalanx Next Generation (Raytheon). The Phalanx system is a combat-proven system that provides effective terminal defense against rocket, artillery and mortar threats ashore and small boat, aircraft, and anti-ship cruise missiles threats at sea.



$4 million for the McConnell Technology Training Center (MTTC)/Innovative Productivity Inc. (IPI) in Louisville. The facility has provided the Navy with over $600 million in savings, and additional funding will support new projects, including research into more efficient painting and coating of ships to combat corrosion.



University of Louisville:



$4 million to continue the Bio/Nano-MEMS Center for Defense Applications at the University of Louisville. This funding supports research to combine micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) with recent advances in nanotechnology and bioengineering to enhance military capabilities. This funding will support research into this technology at the University of Louisville which could help the Navy accomplish its mission with improved situational awareness, reduced manpower and faster response times.

$1.6 million for the Digital Directed Manufacturing Project at the University of Louisville. Researchers at UofL believe they can help the military produce replacement parts for equipment anywhere in the world, in real-time, on an as-needed basis, reducing maintenance down-time, costs, and the logistics burden.

Fort Knox:



$4 million for Area Surveillance Radar at Godman Airfield at Fort Knox. The facility does not have this radar capacity and pilots currently must see and be seen to avoid mid-air collisions. This is particularly challenging and risky during intense training activities, which frequently are conducted at low altitudes, at night, and under aircraft blackout conditions.

University of Kentucky:



$2 million to continue the Military Fuels Research Program at the University of Kentucky. UK is conducting a military fuels research program with engineers and scientists from the Army National Automotive Center and the Air Force. Researchers at the university hope to develop an industry to produce clean military fuels from secure domestic resources, particularly coal.

$1.4 million for the UK partnership with Ft. Knox to continue to develop a Rapidly Deployable Visualization Center. This money will enable UK and Ft. Knox to expand on their work to develop a virtual reality-based immersive visualization environment to support military operations training in urban terrains.

Western Kentucky University:



$2 million to continue the development of a National Network Security Test Bed. The President’s Commission on Critical Infrastructure Protection identifies the potential for disaster from cyber attacks against critical networks. This funding supports the development of a dynamic test bed to investigate, analyze and evaluate existing and emerging software technologies that can be used to secure the Department of Defense information infrastructure.

Other Kentucky Defense Projects:



$4 million for the Kentucky National Guard marijuana eradication efforts in the Daniel Boone National Forest and eastern Kentucky. Funding for this program is necessary to help the Kentucky National Guard continue its efforts to rid the Daniel Boone National Forest of marijuana.

$5 million for Soldier Portable Solid Fuel Hydrogen Generator Cartridge development at Ensign-Bickford in Graham, Kentucky. This funding will be used to develop a soldier-portable solid fuel hydrogen gas generator cartridge system that will provide an equipped soldier with sufficient energy to carry out a 72-hour mission at full power demand. A replaceable cartridge would lighten carry loads and minimize field logistics.

The FY’08 Defense Appropriations bill will now go the House/Senate Conference Committee for consideration.





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