Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today congratulating Brian Duffy, of Louisville, Kentucky, for being elected commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars:

“I want to take a few moments to congratulate a fellow Kentuckian and a good friend of mine who has recently taken up the leadership reins of America’s oldest and largest war veterans’ organization. This summer, Brian Duffy, of Louisville, was elected commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

“Brian is the first Operation Desert Storm veteran to lead the VFW. His election is good news, not only for his fellow Desert Storm veterans, but for veterans of every generation. That’s because Brian lives to serve his fellow veterans — he’s been doing so for decades as a proud member of the VFW for 33 years.

“Let me give just one example of what Brian’s done for the veterans of Kentucky. He is the founder of the Bluegrass chapter of an organization called Honor Flight, a group that flies World War II and Korean War veterans to Washington to visit the Memorials that were built in dedication of their military service.

“The program provides transportation and food for the veterans of this bygone era, whose numbers unfortunately continue to shrink year after year. Without Honor Flight, many of these veterans would never be able to see the World War II Memorial or Korean War Memorial. It’s important that they know, more than six decades later, America still deeply respects and honors their service and sacrifice.

“My father served in World War II. I’ve had the pleasure of meeting many of his contemporaries when they come to Washington to make this important trip. Hundreds of Kentucky veterans have completed this journey, thanks to Brian and subsequent leaders of Bluegrass Honor Flight.

“That’s just one way Brian has worked to see that America stands up for its veterans, just as they have so bravely stood up for their country. It’s one reason why I know he’ll make an excellent commander-in-chief for the VFW.

“Brian served in the U.S. Air Force as a jet engine mechanic on F-4 Phantom fighter aircraft before becoming a flight engineer aboard C-141 Starlifter transport aircraft. He has deployed to Grenada and Panama as well as Operations Desert Shield and Storm.

“Brian and his wife, Jean, who has also served in leadership posts for the VFW, live in Louisville and have two children, Tara and Andrew. I am sure his family is proud of Brian, along with many Kentucky veterans — particularly his fellow VFW members at Post 1170.

“Let me also congratulate my good friend Carl Kaelin, whom I’ve also worked with for decades on behalf of Bluegrass State veterans, for his appointment to serve as chief of staff to the commander-in-chief. Carl and Brian will make quite a team. Kentucky and the nation are grateful for their leadership and service.

“Brian has previously served the VFW as its junior vice commander-in-chief. He also served as its senior vice commander-in-chief. I know Brian is a huge hockey fan, so he’ll know what I mean when I say that his election as commander-in-chief makes quite the hat trick, to the benefit of Kentucky veterans and veterans across America.

“In Brian’s own words, the VFW is ‘an organization of doers’ and ‘an organization comprised of patriots.’ Both of these descriptions aptly fit the VFW’s new chief. Under Brian’s leadership, I am sure the VFW will continue to pay it forward to every veteran who has raised his or her right hand and taken an oath to defend a nation dedicated to the preservation of life and liberty.”

McConnell: Obamacare is failing the Middle Class

‘Americans were told that Obamacare would increase choice and competition. The opposite is proving true.’

September 8, 2016

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today on the realities that Americans are facing because of Obamacare:

President Obama said something interesting just days before signing his namesake health takeover into law. In explaining the need for Obamacare, he said this:

“[W]hat's happening to your premiums? What's happening to your co-payments? What's happening to your deductible? They're all going up. That's money straight out of your pocket.”

“So,” he said, “the bottom line is this: The status quo on health care is simply unsustainable.”

Simply unsustainable.

That was the President’s view on the state of our health care system before Obamacare.
Here’s his view on our health care system six years later.

"Too many Americans still strain to pay for their physician visits and prescriptions, cover their deductibles, or pay their monthly insurance bills; struggle to navigate a complex, sometimes bewildering system; and remain uninsured."

The President wrote that just last month. It sounds an awful lot like what we heard from him years ago, in a pre-Obamacare world.

It throws the reality of his partisan law into stark relief. It’s not only that Obamacare is failing to live up to the many promises invoked to sell it, it’s often making things worse.

Just pick up any paper or turn on the news and you’ll see that more troubling projections are rolling in when it comes to Obamacare.

In fact, each day seems to bring more forecasts of skyrocketing premiums and dwindling choices. It’s a trend hitting Americans across the country. For instance, here’s the headline people in my home state recently awoke to: “Get ready to pay more for health insurance in Kentucky.” The story goes on to warn of Obamacare premium rates that could skyrocket by as high as 47 percent. Nearly 160,000 people are expected to be impacted.

Here’s a letter from a Louisville man who recently contacted my office. “How,” he asked, “are working class Americans, like myself, able to budget for such drastic changes?” “The so-called Affordable Care Act,” he said, “is unaffordable.”

He and other Kentuckians are hardly alone in feeling this way.
Take Illinois, where premiums could soar by as much as 55 percent…
Or Tennessee and Montana, where some rates could skyrocket by more than 60 percent…

Or Minnesota, where premiums could rise by an average of more than 50 percent…

Minnesota’s Democratic Governor said he was “alarmed” by these “drastic increases,” and called them “reason for very serious concerns.”

Even my friend the Democratic Leader referred to Obamacare’s premium increases yesterday as, quote, “huge.”
He’s right.

He was right to mention Obamacare’s “tax increases” too. This partisan law raised taxes that hit the Middle Class after Democrats promised it wouldn’t.

So these “huge” premium increases aren’t the only reason Obamacare is raising costs for the Middle Class. Premiums aren’t the only reason that Americans recently cited health costs as their number one financial concern.

It isn’t hard to see why Americans might be hurting.
Taxes are up.
Co-pays are up.

Deductibles are outpacing wages.

And now, with more and more insurance companies pulling out of the Obamacare state exchanges, Americans are being left with another big problem: fewer coverage options.

The Obama Administration used to promise us that the Obamacare marketplace would “provide more choice and control over health insurance options” and result in “a significant increase in competition and an array of options for consumers everywhere.”

But that’s not the reality for many Americans today.

Obamacare has forced out so many insurers that about one in five Obamacare customers will be forced to find a new insurance company this fall. More than half of the country could have two or fewer insurers to choose from in the exchanges next year, and about a third of all counties in the U.S. — along with seven entire states — are set to have just a single insurer offering plans in their area. That includes one county in Arizona that, until just last night, would have had no options in the exchange at all. I know this is something that Senator McCain has been deeply concerned about and he’s introduced good legislation to address it.

Obamacare co-ops continue to collapse at every turn too, with less than a third expected to offer plans next year. When these co-ops collapse, they can cost taxpayers millions and disrupt coverage for thousands of enrollees. They can force patients to start over on their deductibles mid-year, even find new doctors.

These are the latest reverberating echoes of the president’s most famous broken promise “if you like your health care plan you can keep it.”

Here’s a Kentuckian from Campbellsburg, who wrote to me after losing his insurance.

“I lost my health insurance that I had for many years because of Obamacare. Instead of something affordable, I face the possibility of struggling to purchase an Obama health plan that costs two to three times what I had been paying.” To top it off, he said, the “process of trying to find coverage has been a nightmare.”

And here’s something to keep in mind when Democrats try to spin the American people on Obamacare.
For all of this chaos and pain for Middle Class families, Obamacare still has not even achieved its stated purpose of universal coverage. Not even close. Tens of millions still remain uninsured.

And those who do have insurance are now discovering that simply having health insurance isn’t the same thing as having health coverage.

Take one New Jersey man who’s suffered for years from chronic migraines and needs medication to help alleviate the pain. The moment Obamacare placed him on Medicaid, he lost access to each of his doctors which meant waiting four months to see a new doctor and get a prescription to the medication he needs.

“You have a card saying you have health insurance,” he said, “but if no doctors take it, it's almost like having one of those fake IDs. Your medication is all paid for, but if you can't get the pills, it's worthless.”
***
According to a Gallup poll released just this morning, many more Americans report that Obamacare has hurt rather than helped their families—and many more Americans say that Obamacare will make their family’s health situation worse rather than better over the long run.
Is it any wonder?

Americans were told that Obamacare would allow them to keep the health plans they liked.

They couldn’t.

Americans were told that Obamacare would drive down health care premiums by $2,500 per family.

It hasn't.

Americans were told that Obamacare would not raise taxes on the Middle Class.

It did.

Americans were told that Obamacare would increase choice and competition.
The opposite is proving true.

And remember the promise “if you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor”? It’s been broken too. In fact, the Obama Administration recently erased references to “keeping your doctor” from its website.

These predictable consequences are not just flukes or quirks of Obamacare. They are not just small wrinkles in the system that will work themselves out with time.
They represent fundamental flaws built into this law’s original design.
Republicans warned about Obamacare’s consequences repeatedly from the start.

Democrats mocked us for doing so, and rammed through their partisan law anyway.

I invite Democrats to now consider following the lead of one of the president’s own former health care advisers, who recently penned an op-ed titled “How I was wrong about ObamaCare.”

The problems Democrats caused for the Middle Class aren’t going away until Obamacare does. So if Democrats are serious about helping the Middle Class, they’ll work with us to build a bridge beyond Obamacare to better care. Anything else is just more hollow rhetoric.
Today, six years on, Obamacare is failing the Middle Class — but the president still hasn’t offered a serious solution to fix it.

He’s now trying to convince Americans that the solution to his bloated, unwieldy, and expensive law is to make it more bloated, more unwieldly, and more expensive. In other words, more of the same — just worse.

His preferred presidential candidate says the same thing. So do congressional Democrats.

How can anyone conclude, after reading all these stories about how Obamacare is hurting the Middle Class, that what we need now is more Obamacare in the form of a government-run plan?

Look.

Democrats can continue to spin us on how great this law is. They can continue to tell Americans to “get over” this law and its pain for the Middle Class. They can continue to laugh at Americans who lose their plans. They can continue to crow about exploiting, quote, the “stupidity of the American voter” to push this partisan law on the Middle Class.

Or they can work with us to move beyond the failed experiment of Obamacare. They can prove that they are finally willing to put people before ideology.
Because this much is clear.
Obamacare is a direct attack on the Middle Class.

It hurts the very people it was supposedly designed to help.

It raises costs, crushes choice, and is now crashing down all around us.

It simply isn’t working.

To quote what President Obama said six years ago, “the bottom line is this: The status quo on health care is simply unsustainable.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today after Senate Democrats once again blocked the compromise conference report for anti-Zika efforts and support for our national defense, veterans:

“Last night, Senate Democrats blocked critical funding — for veterans, for pregnant mothers and babies, and for service members. It’s not the first or the even the second time they’ve put partisan politics ahead of the health and safety of the American people. It’s now the third time.

“Why Democrats would filibuster critical funding for Zika control — at a time when cases are growing — is inexplicable.

“Why Democrats would filibuster critical funding for defense — at a time when threats are growing — is inexcusable.

“In case colleagues across the aisle have missed it, here’s the latest on the spread of Zika.

“There are now more than 2,700 cases in the U.S.

“More than 30 of those are likely local mosquito-borne cases.

“Yet, instead of acting with urgency to approve funding to combat Zika, Democrats have chosen once again to filibuster it.

“And in case colleagues across the aisle have missed this too, here’s the latest on the global challenges facing us.

“North Korea continues to show signs of aggression with its recent test launch of another missile.

“Iran continues to provoke our ships in the Persian Gulf, actions the commander of U.S. Central Command called “very concerning.”

“And ISIL continues to inspire and call for terror attacks around the globe, from a wedding in Turkey to a church in France to a nightclub in Orlando.

“Yet, instead of acting with urgency to approve funding to confront these threats, Senate Democrats have chosen once again to filibuster this defense bill as well.

“It really makes you scratch your head when the Democratic Leader boasts of how he's led such a "cooperative minority."

“In what sense?

“Democrats have used the filibuster to blow up a bipartisan appropriations process two years in a row now.

“They’ve bragged openly about their “Filibuster Summer” strategy…they’ve filibustered to protect executive overreach that even fellow Democrats claimed to oppose…they’ve even filibustered legislation designed to help the victims of modern-day slavery, if you can believe that.

“Now, once again, they're filibustering to block funding for Zika-control, for veterans, and for our men and women in uniform.

“We hear the Democratic Leader say he wants his party to do away with the filibuster if Democrats win back control of the Senate.

“If he's so concerned about its abuse, maybe he should stop abusing it himself.

“Stop filibustering critical resources for Zika. Stop filibustering help for veterans. Stop filibustering the funding our men and women in uniform count on.”