Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Senators Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul and Congressman Ed Whitfield made the following comments following a meeting with Paducah Mayor Gayle Kaler, McCracken County Judge Executive Van Newberry, and other local leaders regarding the future of the Paducah DOE site:

“We want to thank Mayor Kaler, Judge Newberry and other leaders from Paducah for traveling to Washington, D.C., to highlight the importance of cleanup and reindustrialization of the DOE site to the community. It was a productive meeting, and the community and delegation are committed to working together to pressure DOE to fulfill its commitment to clean up the site and honor its timetable to finalize their contract for reindustrialization before the end of the year to provide certainty to the community.”

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell welcomed to his office today the Kentucky delegates who traveled to the Nation’s capital as part of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) Children’s Congress. The Kentucky delegates are Jack Mayo, 14, of Henderson, and twin sisters, Jaden and Deven Cannon, 13, of Taylorsville.

“I was pleased to have the opportunity to meet with Jack, Jaden, Deven and their parents during their visit to Washington, D.C. for JDRF’s 2013 Children’s Congress,” said Senator McConnell. “I am proud to support the Special Diabetes Program, which is making great strides in the development of medical technologies to treat this disease, and it is my hope that one day there will be a cure for type 1 diabetes.”

JDRF conducts Children’s Congress every two years and selects students with type 1 diabetes to represent each state and the District of Columbia before Congress. The participants have a unique and empowering opportunity to share with Members of Congress what life with type 1 diabetes is like and discuss the importance of juvenile diabetes research towards the prevention of and a cure for diabetes.

The delegates shared their JDRF scrapbook with the Senator. He said: “I’d like to give a special thanks to Jack, Jaden, and Deven for sharing with me their scrapbook.  These kids have the right attitude – that diabetes won’t keep them from doing what they love – and it shouldn’t.”

 
Kentucky delegates present Sen. McConnell with JDRF scrapbook
 
Deven Cannon, Jaden Cannon, and Jack Mayo meet with Sen. McConnell

Photos attached:  JDRF Kentucky delegates with Senator McConnell in his office in the United States Capitol.

Senate Republicans Call on President to Permanently Delay ObamaCare for All

“…all Americans deserve permanent relief from this onerous law”

July 10, 2013

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and all 45 of his Republican Senate colleagues, including Senator Rand Paul, sent a letter to President Obama urging him to work with Congress to permanently delay the implementation of ObamaCare for all Americans. Last week, the Obama administration announced that after hearing concerns from the business community, it will delay implementation of a key ObamaCare component, the employer mandate, until 2015.

In their letter the GOP senators say to the president, “[W]hile your action finally acknowledges some of the many burdens this law will place on job creators, we believe the rest of this law should be permanently delayed for everyone in order to avoid significant economic harm to American families.”

Below is the text of the senators’ letter, which was written by Senator John Thune (R-SD).
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July 10, 2013

The Honorable Barack Obama
President
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear President Obama:

We write to express concern that in your recent decision to delay implementation of the employer mandate, you have unilaterally acted and failed to work with Congress on such a significant decision.  Further, while your action finally acknowledges some of the many burdens this law will place on job creators, we believe the rest of this law should be permanently delayed for everyone in order to avoid significant economic harm to American families.

In response to questions about the administration’s decision, your senior advisor Valerie Jarrett said, “We are listening,” while referring to the concerns of the business community over the onerous employer mandate that will result in fewer jobs and employees working fewer hours.  We have been listening as well, and as more employers have attempted to understand your burdensome requirements in the Affordable Care Act, the louder their outrage has become.

We are also listening to the views of the American people.  A recent Gallup poll from June of 2013 showed that a majority of Americans disapprove of the Affordable Care Act.  The same survey revealed that for every one person who believes they will be better off under the Affordable Care Act, two believe they will be worse off.  Opposition to your health law is growing, and it will continue to grow as more Americans realize that the law is built upon broken promises and will result in higher health care costs and more taxes. 

Under the individual mandate, the IRS, which is still under multiple investigations for unfairly targeting conservative groups, will play a central role in the implementation of the health care law in our country.  Last fall, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that nearly six million Americans, primarily in the middle class, will have to pay a tax under the individual mandate, which was two million more than previously estimated.   When the Affordable Care Act is fully implemented, the average individual mandate tax will be nearly $1,200, which clearly contradicts your previous statement that the individual mandate “is absolutely not a tax increase.” 

Further, families are facing significant increases in premiums.  Last week, the Wall Street Journal published an analysis of premiums and concluded that under your law some Americans will see their premiums “double or even triple,” which is the opposite of your promise that premiums will go down by $2,500 for American families. 

Given the widely-held belief by the American people that the Affordable Care Act will not fulfill its promises and will result in higher costs for American families, we implore you to listen to the American people.  This law is unworkable and harmful to the economy and to American families, and your actions to delay the employer mandate are an acknowledgement of this fact.  While your recent action provides temporary relief for some, we believe that all Americans deserve permanent relief from this onerous law, so that we can adopt common-sense reforms that will actually lower costs and that Americans support.