Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell released the following statement after meeting with President-elect Trump’s intended nominee for Secretary of Defense, General James Mattis:

“The next Commander in Chief will assume office at a time when significant threats to our national security are evident: the efforts and intentions of dissatisfied nations to expand respective regional spheres of influence, such as China, Russia and Iran, and North Korea’s willful efforts to pursue a long range ballistic missile capable of delivering a nuclear weapon. And fifteen years after September 11, 2001 America remains at war will al Qaeda, its affiliates and ISIL.

“Less evident is the daunting imperative for the next administration to craft a national security strategy which marries objectives to capabilities in pursuit of protecting our vital interests. This necessary task has been further complicated by the Obama administration’s current policies of drawing down America’s conventional forces to irresponsibly low levels.

“The nation is fortunate that President-elect Trump will nominate retired General James Mattis to meet these tasks, as his preparation for this mission is comprehensive. General Mattis has committed a lifetime to the study of strategy and operations, has led U.S. Central Command, and has commanded forces in Iraq, and Afghanistan. General Mattis is almost uniquely suited to advising the next President in how best to protect our country—at a time when expertise in strategy is a paramount requirement of our next Secretary of Defense.

“Early next year, the Senate shall consider the requirement in law that the Secretary of Defense not be appointed within seven years of relief from active duty. Civilian control of the military remains a central aspect of our federal republic, and over the course of our nation’s history much has occurred to bring scrutiny to the conduct of military affairs, not least of which is expansion of congressional oversight and the evolution of the all-volunteer force. General Mattis has lived a life of fidelity to our nation and its constitution. I have every confidence that he will continue to do so if confirmed by the Senate.”

Majority Leader McConnell Pays Tribute to Vice President Biden

I don’t always agree with him, but I do trust him implicitly. He doesn’t break his word. He doesn’t waste time telling me why I’m wrong. He gets down to brass tacks and keeps sight of the stakes.’

December 7, 2016

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks today on the Senate floor recognizing Vice President Joe Biden and his years of service in the U.S. Senate, as a Senator from Delaware and as the Vice President of the United States:

“It’s great to see the presiding officer back in the Senate.

“It’s good news for everyone when he’s in that chair.

“Good news for him, because the rest of us have to call him Mr. President.

“Good news for the rest of us, because he has to let someone else talk.

“The amazing thing is, the man we honor today wasn’t always a talker. He suffered from a debilitating stutter for most of his childhood. He was teased for it. But he was determined to overcome it. So he did. With hard work. With determination. With the support of his family. It’s classic Joe Biden. He’s never stopped talking since.

“He cites overcoming that stutter as one of the most important lessons in his life.

“It led him down a path few might have foreseen.

“Winning election to the county council…

“Securing an improbable victory for the U.S. Senate…

“Becoming our nation’s 47th Vice President…

“The presiding officer would be the first to tell you that he’s been blessed in many ways. He’s also been tested, knocked down, pushed to the edge of what anyone could be expected to bear.

“But from the grip of unknowable despair came a new man — a better man: stronger and more compassionate, grateful for every moment, appreciative of what really matters.

“Here in the Senate, he heeded the advice of Mike Mansfield. ‘Your job here is to find the good things in your colleagues,’ Mansfield told him. ‘And, Joe, never attack another man’s motive, because you don’t know his motive.’

“Look for the good.

“Don’t attack motives.

“It’s the basis of a simple philosophy — and a powerful one.

“Vice President Biden says he views his competitors as competitors, not enemies, and he’s been able to cultivate many unlikely friendships across the aisle.

“With Jesse Helms. With Strom Thurmond. With me.

“Over the years, we’ve worked together on issues of mutual interest, like Burma and — regarding the vote we took just a few moments ago — 21st Century Cures and the Cancer Moonshot.

“We’ve also negotiated in good faith when the country needed bipartisan leadership. We got results that would not have been possible without a negotiating partner like Joe Biden. I don’t always agree with him, but I do trust him implicitly. He doesn’t break his word. He doesn’t waste time telling me why I’m wrong. He gets down to brass tacks and keeps sight of the stakes.

“There’s a reason ‘get Joe on the phone’ is shorthand for ‘time to get serious’ in my office.

“The vice president is a likeable guy too.

“He’s got a well-developed sense of humor. He doesn’t take himself too seriously either.

“When The Onion ran a mock photo of him washing a Trans-Am in the White House driveway, shirtless, Americans embraced it and so did he.

“’I think it’s hilarious,’ he said. ‘By the way, I have a Corvette — a ’67 Corvette — not a Trans-Am.’

“See what I mean?

“Joe Biden may exist in the popular imagination aboard an Amtrak, but this son of a used-car salesman will always be a muscle car guy at heart.

“And what a road he has traveled.

“From New Castle to the Naval Observatory, from Scranton to the Senate.

“His journey in this body began by the side of those who loved him.

“Hand on the Bible.

“Heart in a knot.

“Swearing the same oath he now administers to others.

“It’s a journey that ends now by the side of those who care about him still — those, like his wife Jill, who understand the full life he’s lived.

“Here’s a man who’s known great joy, who’s been read his last rites, who’s never lost himself along the way.

“’Champ,’ his father used to say, ‘the measure of a man is not how often he is knocked down, but how quickly he gets up.’

“That’s Joe Biden right there.

“Unbowed…

“Unbroken…

“Unable to stop talking.

“It’s my privilege to convey the Senate’s warm wishes to the vice president on this Delaware Day as the next steps of his long journey come into view. There are many here who feel this way in both parties.

“I’m reminded of something the presiding officer said when he addressed the University of Louisville several years ago. It was one of the McConnell Center’s most popular lectures ever. And, as I sat behind him, he offered his theory as to why that might be.

“’[I think you’re all here today because] you want to see whether or not a Republican and Democrat really like one another,’ he said.

“’Well,’ he continued, flashing a smile, ‘I’m here to tell you we do.’

“It was true then.

“It’s true today.

“So I hope the presiding officer won’t mind if I conclude with some words directed to the chair.

“You’ve been a real friend, you’ve been a trusted partner, and it’s been an honor to serve with you.

“We’re all going to miss you.

“Godspeed.”

75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor

‘Today I ask my Senate colleagues to join me in remembering all those who served and sacrificed so much, and in thanking our men and women in uniform who are stationed around the world this holiday season.’

December 7, 2016

‘Today I ask my Senate colleagues to join me in remembering all those who served and sacrificed so much, and in thanking our men and women in uniform who are stationed around the world this holiday season.’