Recent Press Releases



‘We can work together to secure the future of the Medicare program while implementing reforms that decrease costs and improve coverage’



Washington, D.C.—U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell issued the following statement today on the Bush Administration’s proposed legislation required by the 2003 Medicare Modernization Act to bring fiscal stability to the Medicare program:



“Medicare is a critical source of health insurance for millions of America's seniors. Yet because of demographic changes like the coming retirement of the Baby Boom generation, the program needs to be strengthened so it can continue to serve the needs of older Americans and the disabled. This point was driven home by the Medicare Board of Trustees’ recent report to Congress.



“This afternoon, the President sent Congress legislation that includes common sense solutions to address some of the challenges facing Medicare. It includes limits on frivolous medical liability lawsuits - which drive up health care costs and have caused good doctors to limit their medical practices in places like my home state of Kentucky. This plan would also limit the premium subsidies to those who can afford them. Most importantly, this plan does not include any benefit cuts that could limit seniors’ access to health care.



“We should use this opportunity to show the American people we can work together to secure the future of the Medicare program while implementing reforms that decrease costs and improve coverage. This legislation can and should be a bipartisan accomplishment.



“I have designated Sen. Gregg to introduce this legislation. As Ranking Member of the Budget Committee, Senator Gregg has focused on entitlement reform and long term fiscal responsibility, making him the natural choice to take the lead on this issue.”



###



‘I’m wondering why this new bipartisan spirit that we experienced here in December, and again in January, is breaking down on a matter that is extraordinarily important to protecting the American people’



Washington, D.C.—U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding the decision by the House Democratic leadership to leave town without passing the overwhelmingly bipartisan Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which extends liability protection to telecommunications companies and gives our intelligence professionals the tools they need to protect America:



“We have a serious crisis confronting our country as a result of the House of Representatives’ refusal to take up the Senate-passed Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.



“We know for a fact the following: we know that the United States Senate approved yesterday with 69 votes a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act crafted by Senator Rockefeller and Senator Bond. It came out of the Intelligence Committee 13-2.



“This is about as bipartisan as it ever gets around here.



“We know in addition to that, Mr. President, that this bill is the only bill that can pass the House of Representatives. They took up yesterday a 21-day extension of existing law, and it was defeated; defeated because there were 20 to 25 House Democrats who didn't want the bill at all—[they] want it to die. [They] want to walk away from it and leave the American people unprotected.



“In fact, there is a bipartisan majority for the Senate-passed bill in the House, and that is the only bill for which there is a bipartisan majority in the House.



“Now we've all learned that the House of Representatives is going to close up shop and simply leave town, arguing that somehow allowing this bill, this law to expire will not harm America.



“Now we know, Mr. President, that at the heart of this struggle is retroactive liability for the communications companies who stepped up in the wake of the 9/11 disaster at the request of their government to help protect us from terrorism.



“As a result of that, there are numerous lawsuits pending against these companies, I assume largely by the American Civil Liberties Union. The CEOs and the boards of directors of these companies have a fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders. These lawsuits have the potential to put them out of business.



“As a result of doing their duty and responding to the request of the President of the United States to help protect America, they run the risk of being put out of business.



“That is what is before us. This retroactive liability problem continues. It is not solved by continuation of existing law. In addition to that, with the law expiring, it hampers opportunities prospectively in the future to surveil new terrorist targets overseas.



“So the notion that somehow no harm is done by allowing the law to expire is simply incorrect.



“In fact, it borders on outrageous.



“Now, this was going to be another example of bipartisan cooperation on behalf of the American people.



“We saw it at the end of the year last year when we passed a bipartisan AMT fix without raising taxes on anybody else. We passed an energy bill without a tax increase and without a rate increase. We met the President's top line on the appropriations bill. And, yes, we appropriated $70 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan without any kind of micromanagement. And at the beginning of this year, we came together, it was a bit challenging in the Senate, but we came together and passed a bipartisan stimulus bill to try to deal with our slowing economy, and we did it in record time. In fact, the President had a signing ceremony just yesterday.



“So I’m wondering why this new bipartisan spirit that we experienced here in December, and again in January, is breaking down on a matter that is extraordinarily important to protecting the American people.



“It is absolutely irresponsible, Mr. President, for the House of Representatives to simply throw up their hands and leave, particularly when the only measure that enjoys a bipartisan majority in the House is exactly what enjoyed a bipartisan majority in the Senate. It's the only measure that can pass the House.



“So the refusal of the House Leadership to take up and pass the only bill that could possibly pass is an act of extraordinary irresponsibility. Nothing else would pass over there.



“So, Mr. President, I don't know why the House is even thinking about leaving town. They have an important responsibility to help protect the American people. The opportunity is right before them, and they won't take it.”



###




Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell on Thursday delivered the following speech on the Senate floor about the killing of the terrorist responsible for the death of Kentuckian, U.S. Marine Colonel William Richard Higgins:



“An important mile marker in the War on Terror was passed late Tuesday night. A terrorist by the name of Imad Mugniyah, one of the world’s most wanted murderers and a top commander of Hezbollah, was killed in Damascus. With his death, long-delayed justice has finally been served.



“News reports are still coming in, and so far no one has claimed responsibility for his death. But we know one thing for certain: As Sean McCormack, a spokesman for the State Department put it, ‘The world is a better place without this man in it.’



“Let me describe for my colleagues just a few of this murderer’s many heinous crimes. American officials accuse him of plotting the 1983 bombing of a U.S. Marine compound in Beirut, killing 241 soldiers.



“He is accused of masterminding a car bomb which exploded at an American embassy in Beirut, also in 1983, killing 63 people.



“American prosecutors charged him in the hijacking of a TWA jetliner in 1985. He is also accused of shipping arms to violent, radical terrorist groups.



“And then there is one brutal act that struck deep in the heart of my hometown of Louisville, Kentucky. Imad Mugniyah was behind the brutal kidnapping, torture and murder of U.S. Marine Colonel William Richard Higgins.



“Colonel Higgins was a Kentuckian, born in Danville. He graduated from Southern High School in Louisville, participated in ROTC at Miami University in Ohio, and served multiple tours in Vietnam.



“Over a 20-year military career, he received numerous medals and awards, including the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, the Defense Superior Service Medal, the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star with combat ‘V’ and the Purple Heart.



“On February 17, 1988, Colonel Higgins was captured by armed terrorists in Lebanon while serving on a UN peacekeeping mission. He was held, interrogated and tortured.



“A year and a half after his capture, terrorists released a grisly videotape of Colonel Higgins’s lifeless body, hung by the neck, which played on television sets around the world.



“In Louisville, we built a memorial to Colonel Higgins on the grounds of his alma mater, Southern High School.



“We were outraged then, and we are still outraged now, to see what happened to this good and brave man at the hands of thugs.



“Now, at long last, we know justice has been brought to his murderers.



“In an essay titled ‘My Credo,’ Colonel Higgins once wrote: ‘As an officer of Marines, I believe it is my charge to set the example.’



“Well, Colonel, the high-school students in Louisville who pass by your memorial every day will always remember the example you set. You served your country with pride, and now may rest in peace.”



###