Recent Press Releases

Washington, D.C.Leaders of the U.S. House and Senate held a ceremony commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the Civil Rights Act and honoring the King family with a Gold Medal Ceremony. Following are Sen. McConnell’s remarks delivered during the ceremony, which took place in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda:

“America, as we know, is a land of promise and opportunity. It’s a conviction that unites all of us as Americans, and it’s one we repeat often.

“But for too long in this country, that wasn’t the case for a large segment of our population. And for nearly a century after the end of the Civil War, millions of African Americans continued to be systematically denied the most basic of American freedoms. A cancer of intolerance and injustice was allowed to metastasize while many with the power to stop it weren’t looking. Or didn’t want to.

“A pastor with a booming voice and potent message helped change all that.

“Through the power of his words and the force of his example, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. made those who may have wanted to look away focus on what he once called ‘the long night of racial injustice.’ He inspired a generation of young people to action. And he confronted the defenders of segregation head on — not with violence, but with reason, argument, and an unwavering confidence in the justness of his cause.

“Dr. King knew that his role was not just to expose or to confront injustice, but to prepare the country to actually do something about it. And by the time the Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed, the country was ready — thanks to him and the countless many who took up his cause, convinced, as he once put it, that ‘civilization and violence are antithetical…’

“Dr. King and his followers may have had to brave jail cells, and fire hoses, and in the case of Dr. King, pay the ultimate price.

“But the sacrifice was never in vain. Change came. Because when Dr. Martin Luther King led marches, people noticed. They listened. And Washington acted.

“Without the mighty strength of this man, convinced of the rightness of his cause, speaking truths for which he – and those who loved him – paid so dearly, the course of our nation’s history would have been less just. 

“So Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. deserves as much credit as any President or Senator for the passage of the landmark legislation we commemorate today. But it’s also fitting today to recognize those others who worked so hard to make the Civil Rights Act possible. Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and many Senators – whose essential role in this fight is sometimes overlooked.

“Every time I walk into my office, I’m reminded of the heroic role that one of my predecessors as Senate Republican Leader, Everett Dirksen, played in this great effort — and his famous words when the votes were secured for passage: ‘Stronger than all the armies,’ he said, referencing Victor Hugo, ‘is an idea whose time has come…[And] the time has come for equality of opportunity in sharing in government, in education, and in employment. It will not be stayed or denied. It is here.’

Near that portrait of Dirksen hangs a portrait of my role model as a young man, John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky. Cooper was another Republican who worked tirelessly to overcome the aggressive effort to derail the Civil Rights Act. For months, adversaries in the segregationist camp held up the bill. But on June 10, 1964, Dirksen, Cooper, and their Republican and Democratic allies in the effort — men like Hubert Humphrey and Mike Mansfield — finally prevailed.

“I can still remember watching Senator Cooper round up the necessary votes. It’s a powerful memory — and it was a powerful lesson in how determined men and women can use the Senate to achieve our Founding purpose.

“At important moments in our history, the Senate has served an outsized role in leading us toward the more perfect union we all desire. 

“I believe the Senate can be that place again — and that it must if we’re to stay true to the vision of the man we honor today.

“And it’s true that politicians sometimes need leaders like Martin Luther King to help focus their attention first.

“So we thank you, members of the King family, for giving us this opportunity to thank Dr. King — and you — for that work and that legacy, and for the ideal that inspired him, which we all renew today.

“May we all continue to draw inspiration from the vision and the memory of this great man — and from the leaders who helped translate that vision into law.”

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell cosponsored legislation introduced by Senator John Barrasso (R-WY) that would prohibit the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from implementing their proposed rule expanding federal authority over waterways across the country.

“This proposed rule by the Obama Administration would have a devastating impact on Kentucky’s farmers, coal industry, landowners, and other small businesses; it would also have a harmful effect on jobs,” Senator McConnell said. “I have heard from Kentuckians across the state and from various different industries on this issue. All are concerned this is another power-grab by the EPA to essentially regulate every ditch and pothole in our state.”

Dave Maples, President of the Kentucky Cattlemen’s Association, said, “The EPA’s proposed rule would essentially allow the EPA to regulate even more of our producers’ property under the Clean Water Act, calling into question our longstanding practices and placing further regulatory and economic uncertainty on Kentucky producers and their families.  We commend Senator McConnell for once again fighting back against the EPA and for standing up for Kentucky cattlemen and livestock producers.”

Bill Bissett, President of the Kentucky Coal Association, said, “We commend Senator McConnell for fighting back against another EPA assault on the coal industry and those that indirectly rely on it.  This proposed rule would essentially allow the EPA further into our backyards and businesses, meanwhile creating even more regulatory uncertainty and economic burdens.”

Bob Weiss, Executive Vice President of the Home Builders Association of Kentucky said, “On behalf of the 6,000 member firms of the Home Builders Association of Kentucky I would like to personally thank Senator McConnell for once again standing tall for the housing industry in our state.  The proposed regulation regarding the Waters of the U.S. would become a detriment for any of our members to begin new building projects for fear of violating a rule that is ill conceived and ill designed.  The result of this EPA rule would certainly result in a loss of construction jobs in the state. Senator McConnell’s co-sponsorship of the Barrasso bill designed to stop the implementation of the EPA rule is applauded by all who build in the Commonwealth.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate Floor regarding Senate Democrats blocking solutions to protect the Middle Class from the consequences of the Obama economy:

“Last summer, I said it felt like the White House had hung a ‘Gone Campaignin’’ sign outside the Oval Office.

“President Obama didn’t seem the least bit interested in passing serious, bipartisan solutions for the Middle Class.

“It was all campaigning, all the time. On the rarest of occasions when he did come to Congress, it was for internal campaign rallies with his party.

“Well, it’s only gotten worse. Since last summer, he’s barely picked up the phone. And his bill-signing pen is starting to rust.

“Here’s the reason. This summer, the Democrat-controlled Senate seems to have put out a ‘Gone Campaignin’’ sign of its own.

“That’s why the Democrat Senate has become a veritable graveyard for good ideas.

“Most people assume the purpose of the Senate is to pass legislation to help the American people. But, these days, the Democrats who run the Senate seem to think their role is actually to bury good legislation. They’re more interested in pleasing their Far-Left political patrons – patrons who appear to oppose everything that could actually help the American Middle Class.

“Case in point, the Republican-led House of Representatives has already passed hundreds of pieces of legislation this Congress – legislation introduced by members of both parties, including dozens of jobs bills – that remain stuck in the Senate.
 
“That means President Obama hasn’t had to sign or veto them. And the Senate Majority Leader has been all too happy to protect him from choosing between helping the Far-Left fringe and the vast American Middle.

“In other words, Senate Democrats are on a mission this summer: to obstruct solutions for the Middle Class at every turn, and to prevent almost any serious legislating from occurring at all.

“Over in the House, the minority party has been offered more than 160 votes on their amendments since last July.

“Here in the Senate, the Democrat leadership has blocked all but 9 of ours.

“And it’s not just Republican amendments getting squashed either. 

“The Democrats who run the Senate are so scared of legislating these days that they’re now blocking virtually every amendment on both sides. It’s gotten to the point where one House Democrat, a Congresswoman from Texas, has now had twice as many roll call votes on amendments since last July – 15 – as the entire Senate Democrat caucus combined. Between 55 Senate Democrats, they’ve had to split 7 amendments.

“In other words, the Majority Leader is treating his own caucus even worse than he’s treating us. Even committee work can no longer escape the Democrat Majority’s political obsession. The Majority shut down the committee process on important legislation that should have been bipartisan – bills about patents and appropriations.

“This is the kind of stuff that makes Americans so mad at Washington.

“I mean, how do you justify stifling the voices of so many Senators — and the tens of millions of Americans they were sent here to represent? You can’t. It’s indefensible. And it’s gotten worse and worse under current Democrat leaders. 

“Of course, every now and then, when we push hard enough, we’re able to force our Democrat friends to allow a few bipartisan ideas through. Like the job training and workforce development bill we expect to pass tomorrow.

“But that’s the rare exception.

“Instead, we usually just see game-playing on important issues.

“On energy, the Democrat leadership blocks every attempt to provide relief to the blue collar families who’ve been bulldozed by the Administration’s elitist War on Coal Jobs. They won’t let us help the millions of Americans who struggle every day with high utility bills. And they won’t allow a serious vote on shovel-ready projects like the Keystone Pipeline either. Senate Democrats have blocked just about every effort to move forward on those issues. And in so doing, the Democrat leadership embarrasses the handful of Democrat Senators who still call for action on energy and Keystone — even veteran members who chair committees. It just shows what little influence those members actually have under the current Democrat leadership.

“And it all lays bare a simple truth about today’s Democrat Senate: If the Far Left hates it, it ain’t happenin’.

“That’s true with health care too.

“The Middle Class is being pummeled by Obamacare. A recent study showed that an average 27-year old Kentuckian from Taylor County saw his premiums skyrocket by almost 60 percent this year. Constituents like him are looking to Washington for leadership and solutions. But Senate Democrats won’t even allow sensible, bipartisan health care solutions to come to a vote.

“Instead, we just get more politics. Like the legislation we hear may be coming up later this week – a tactic designed by the Democrat campaign committee to make Americans forget that Democrats voted to raid Medicare by $700 billion to fund new Obamacare spending. Get this: Senate Democrats are actually trying to distract from their votes to raid Medicare by making it even harder to save and strengthen Medicare. But Americans won’t forget that the sponsors of the proposal were the very same people who voted to raid Medicare in the first place through Obamacare.

“And they won’t forget what happened last week either, when Republicans advanced a series of bills aimed at increasing flexibility in the workplace and boosting upward mobility.

“We thought Democrats might want to work with us in a bipartisan manner to move those bills forward – but apparently the Far Left won’t let them. The Democrat leadership won’t even consider legislation I introduced that would help more Moms and Dads work from home while caring for young children. My bill aims to bring tax policy in line with what life’s really like for working parents – and it would help young families save on child care costs too. But like I said, Senate Democrats have just ‘Gone Campaignin’’

“For the Democrat leadership, helping the Middle Class seems to be far from priority one.

“But the Middle Class needs help now. And the only way to offer working moms and struggling college graduates real solutions is to break through the Senate Democrat logjam.

“There are two ways to accomplish that. Either our friends on the other side can get serious about working for the people who elected them, or the people who elected them can make the decision for them.”