Recent Press Releases

‘What we really ought to be doing here is concentrating on fixing the financial system…and the housing problem. But not using this crisis as an excuse to go on an explosion of spending.’

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell appeared on ABC’s ‘This Week with George Stephanopoulos’ this morning. The following are excerpts from the program:

On the President’s budget:

“Well, first, let's take a look at the budget the President is offering. That's his responsibility. The majority has a responsibility to lay out their plan, George, for the next few years, and they've done it: It will double the national debt in five years and triple the national debt in 10 years; it taxes too much, it spends too much, it borrows too much, as you indicated.”

“We have already authorized this year in the first 50 days of this administration, spending at the rate of $24 billion a day, or $1 billion an hour. Another way of looking at it, just putting it in context, this $1.2 trillion that we've spent in the first 50 days is more than the previous administration spent after 9/11 on Iraq, Afghanistan and the response to Katrina.”

On using the crisis for a massive expansion of government:

“What we really ought to be doing here is concentrating on fixing the financial system…and the housing problem. But not using this crisis as an excuse to go on an explosion of spending.” “What I have said and our colleagues have said repeatedly, it does what the President's chief of staff -- he was pretty candid about it—they're taking advantage of a crisis in order to do things that had nothing to do with getting us into the crisis in the first place.

“They want to have a massive expansion of health care. An energy tax, which many people are now calling a light switch tax, of another $600 billion.

On GOP alternatives to the President’s spending and tax hikes and debt:

“Well, it will reframe what the Democrats recommend for America over the next five and 10 years. And I assure you, the amendments that we offer will not lay out a blueprint for doubling the national debt in five years and tripling it in 10 years. “

“Through the amendment process, we would absolutely reformulate the Democratic plan. Whether you have a comprehensive approach or whether you offer an amendment approach is something that parliamentarians can debate, but the point is, we're going to have alternatives, just like we had alternatives when they offered the massive stimulus package.

“We would have spent half as much money, we would have fixed housing, and put money back into pockets of taxpayers. So we have offered alternatives all along the way, and we will offer numerous alternatives on the budget when it comes up.”

On bailout funds being used for bonuses and the administration’s response:

“Well, it is an outrageous situation. I wrote Secretary Paulson back in October complaining about the way AIG had been doing its business.

“The point here is, if you're going to take the government as a partner, the message here, I'm afraid, to any business out there that's thinking about taking government money, is let's enter into a bunch of contracts real quick, and we'll have the taxpayers pay bonuses to our employees.

“This is an outrage. And for them to simply sit there and blame it on the previous administration or claim contract -- we all know that contracts are valid in this country, but they need to be looked at. Did they enter into these contracts knowing full well that, as a practical matter, the taxpayers of the United States were going to be reimbursing their employees? Particularly employees who got them into this mess in the first place. I think it's an outrage.”

On the University of Louisville winning the Big East title:

A “big win.”

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‘A lot of people are wondering why, in the midst of a recession, when millions of Americans are losing jobs and homes, the administration is proposing to spend tax dollars like we’re in the middle of the Dot Com boom’

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding the Budget and how it spends too much:

“Yesterday, I noted that in the middle of the current economic crisis, the administration’s Budget spends too much, taxes too much, and borrows too much, focusing primarily on the fact that it spends too much. This morning I’d like to expand a little bit more on that.

“As I noted yesterday, the current Congress is on a remarkable spending binge. In the first 50 days of the new administration, Congress has approved more than $1.2 trillion in spending, which translates into $24 billion a day, or $1 billion every hour since Inauguration Day.

“The Budget continues that trend.

“Earlier this week, Congress approved a government spending bill that increased spending from by 8% over last year, about double the rate of inflation. And now the Budget proposes another spending increase over last year’s budget of at least another 8%.

“A lot of people are wondering why, in the midst of a recession, when millions of Americans are losing jobs and homes, the administration is proposing to spend tax dollars like we’re in the middle of the Dot Com boom.

“According to the administration’s Budget plan, the State Department sees a 41% increase in spending next year. HUD sees an 18% percent increase.

“The Budget also proposes a “slush fund” for Climate Policy that will be larger than the entire annual budgets at the Departments of Labor, Treasury, or Interior.

“Americans want reforms in education, healthcare, energy, and other areas. But they want the administration to fix the economy first. That’s the first priority. And at this point, we seem to be getting proposals on everything but the financial crisis, which continues to cripple the economy.

“This budget spends too much, taxes too much, and borrows too much. But if we want to earn the confidence of the American people for our programs and plans, the first thing we need to get under control is spending.”

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‘Americans want the administration to fix the economy first. Unfortunately, the Budget avoids the issue entirely’

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding the Budget:

“We’ve all seen the numbers: unemployment is at a 25-year high. Millions are worried about holding onto their jobs and their homes. And with every passing day, Americans are waiting for the administration to offer its plan to fix the banking crisis that continues to paralyze the economy.

“Every day it seems, administration officials are unveiling one new plan after another on everything from education to healthcare. Meanwhile, the details of a banking plan —to address our main problem — have yet to emerge.

“We need reforms in healthcare and education and many other areas. But Americans want the administration to fix the economy first. Unfortunately, the Budget avoids the issue entirely.

“It simply assumes that this enormously complex problem will be fixed, and then proposes massive taxes, spending, and borrowing to finance a massive expansion of government. It assumes the best of times. And, as millions of Americans will attest, these are not the best of times.

“Over the next few weeks, the Senate will debate the details of this Budget. But one thing is already certain: it spends too much, it taxes too much, and it borrows too much. This Budget would be a stretch in boom times. In a time of hardship and uncertainty, it is exactly the wrong approach.

“The Budget’s $3.6 trillion price tag comes on top of a housing plan that went into effect last week that could cost a quarter of a trillion dollars, a financial bailout that could cost another $1 to $2 trillion, and a Stimulus bill that will cost, with interest, more than a trillion dollars. Some are now talking about another stimulus. The national debt is more than $10 trillion. And we just passed yesterday a $410 billion government spending bill that represented an increase in government spending over last year of twice the rate of inflation.

“In just 50 days, Congress has voted to spend about $1.2 trillion between the Stimulus and the Omnibus. To put that in perspective, that’s about $24 billion a day, or about $1 billion an hour—most of it borrowed. There’s simply no question: government spending has spun out of control.

“Given all this spending and debt, the cost of the Budget might not seem like much to some. But this is precisely the problem. To most people, it seems that lawmakers in Washington have lost the perspective of the taxpayer. It’s long past time we started to think about the long-term sustainability of our economy, about creating jobs and opportunity for future generations. That will require hard choices. The Omnibus bill avoided every one. And unfortunately, so does the Budget.

“Stuart Taylor, of the ‘National Journal’, recently praised the President in two consecutive columns. Yet he was shocked by the President’s Budget: Here’s what Taylor said about this Budget:

‘… Not to deny that the liberal wish list in Obama’s staggering $3.6 trillion budget would be wonderful if we had limitless resources,’ Mr. Taylor wrote. ‘But in the real world, it could put vast areas of the economy under permanent government mismanagement, kill millions of jobs, drive investors and employers overseas, and bankrupt the nation.’

“There is no question: in the midst of an economic crisis, this budget simply spends far too much.

“In order to pay for all this spending, this Budget anticipates a number of rosy scenarios. It doesn’t explain how the economic recovery will come about. It simply assumes that it will. It projects sustained growth beginning this year and continuing to grow 3.2 percent in 2010, 4 percent in 2010, and 4.6 percent in 2012. While I hope we return soon to this growth, we can’t promise the growth that we hope to have — especially when this growth is far from likely, particularly given a host of new policies proposals in the budget itself that are certain to tamp down growth even more.

“There’s no question this Budget spends too much.

“But even if this growth does occur, it would not be enough to support the spending proposals.

“And that’s why the budget calls for a massive tax hike.

“In fact, this budget calls for the largest tax increase in history — including a new energy tax that will be charged to every single American who turns on a light switch, drives a car, or buys groceries. Unless you’re living in a cave, this new energy tax will hit you like hammer. During the campaign, the President said his plan for an energy tax would “cause utility rates to skyrocket.” He was right: the new energy tax will cost every American household. I can’t imagine how increasing the average American’s annual tax bill will lift us out of the worst recession in decades.

“There’s more.

“A new tax related to charitable giving would punish the very organizations Americans depend on more and more during times of distress. One study suggests that the President’s new tax on charitable giving could cost U.S. charities and educational institutions up to $9 billion a year — money that will be presumably be redirected to the 250,000 new government workers the Budget is expected to create. There is no question this Budget taxes too much.

“Remarkably, the largest tax increase in history and a new energy tax still aren’t enough to pay for all the programs this Budget creates. To pay for everything else, we’ll have to borrow — a lot. This budget calls for the highest level of borrowing ever.

“Now, if there’s one thing Americans have learned the hard way over the past several months, it’s that spending more than you can afford has serious, sometimes tragic, consequences. Yet government doesn’t seem ready to face that reality — not when it’s spending other people’s money, and not when it’s borrowing from others to fund its policy dreams.

“It’s not fair to load future generations with trillions and trillions of dollars in debt at a moment when the economy is contracting, millions are losing jobs, and millions more are worried about losing homes. It’s time the government realized that it’s a steward of the people’s money, not the other way around, and that it has a responsibility not only to use tax dollars wisely, but to make sure the institutions of government are sustainable for generations to come.

“I don’t know anyone who would borrow money from people thousands of miles away for things they don’t even need. Yet this is precisely what our government is doing every day by asking countries like Saudi Arabia, Japan, and China to finance a colossal budget in the midst of an economic crisis.

“The administration has said it intends to be bold. And I have no doubt this budget reflects their honest attempt to implement what they believe to be the best prescription for success. We appreciate that effort. We simply see it a different way: a $3.6 trillion Budget that spends too much, taxes too much, and borrows too much in a time of economic hardship may be bold. The question is, is it wise? And most of the people who’ve taken the time to study this Budget have concluded that it isn’t. Republicans will spend the next few weeks explaining why that is to the American people.

“Americans want serious reforms. But in the midst of a deepening recession, they’re looking at all this spending, taxing, and borrowing and they’re wondering … They’re wondering whether, for the first time in our nation’s history, we’re actually giving up on the notion that if we work hard, then our children will live better lives and have greater opportunities than ourselves.

“Americans are looking at all this spending, taxing, and borrowing and they’re wondering whether we’re reversing the order — whether we’re beginning to say with our actions that we want everything now — and putting off the hard choices, once again, for future generations to make.

“That will be a most important question in this debate.”

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