Recent Press Releases



‘If there is a more important domestic issue facing the nation, let’s hear it. Otherwise, let’s get serious, and work toward a big solution to this big problem.’



WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor Friday regarding the vote to keep the Senate focused on finding a solution to the high price at the pump:



“The Senate just took a defining vote.



“Americans have been crying out, asking us to act to lower high gas prices. And they just heard the official response from the Democrat Leadership in Congress: a few new guidelines for the energy futures market is enough; we don’t need to do anything other than that. That’s it.



“The American people have been telling us for months that the house is on fire, and the Democrats just showed up at the scene with a squirt gun.



“The vote we just took was their response to $4 a gallon gasoline. That’s what a few of our friends on the other side are doing for all those people out there who are standing at the gas pump, hopping mad at what it just cost them to fill up their tank.



“And they’ve told 49 Republicans and more than a dozen Democrats who are open to increased domestic exploration the same thing: ‘Take it or leave it. Speculators — or nothing.’



“Americans are insisting we do more. They want us to do something to cut the price of gas and lessen our dependence on Middle East oil. They don’t want us to quit working until the job is done. And leaving this issue is what the Democrat leadership just voted to do.



“A majority in the Senate wants America to be self-reliant and to find more American energy. But the Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.’



To drive down gas prices, we could be opening up the Outer Continental Shelf today. But the Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could be lifting the ban on the development of vast oil shale deposits in western states that sit on three times the reserves of Saudi Arabia. The Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could have approved incentives for battery-powered electric cars and trucks today. The Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could have voted to open up untapped American oil today. But the Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.”



“To drive down gas prices, we could have voted today for new clean nuclear technology. But the Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could have approved new coal-to-liquid technology today. But the Democrat Leadership says, ‘No, we can’t.’



“Nearly eight in 10 Americans say we should do these things. But the Democrat Leadership and their presidential nominee has the same simple response to every one of them: ‘No, we won’t.’



“A dozen Democrats in the Senate say we should consider these things. But the Democrat Leadership has the same answer for them. ‘No we won’t.’



“The Democrat Leadership just voted to give up on finding a solution to high gas prices. They just voted to give up on trying to find more and use less. They just voted to give up on our effort to consider serious ideas from both sides of the aisle.



“They want us to tell the American people that the Senate’s time would be better spent on other things, that it’s time to move on.



“Well, Republicans have a three-word response for the Democrat Leadership: ‘No. We Won’t.’



“I just voted to keep the Senate on the most important domestic issue facing our nation.



“If there is a more important domestic issue facing the nation, let’s hear it. Otherwise, let’s get serious, and work toward a big solution to this big problem.



“I mentioned yesterday that I recently received a letter from a dialysis center in Kentucky. They were pleading with the Senate to take action now on the high price of gas at the pump. The letter said that some of the rural patients who have to go to this center for treatment three times a week are now foregoing some of their treatments because they can't afford the gas to get there.



“And so I ask my friends on the other side the same simple question I asked them yesterday: If you won’t act now, with dialysis patients cutting back on treatments because of high gas prices, when will you? What is it going to take?



“I know my colleagues across the aisle are stuck between the ‘No, we can’t’ position of their presidential candidate and the Democrat leadership — stuck between them on the one side and the guy at the gas pump with smoke coming out his ears. But for me, that decision’s an easy one: I’m with the guy at the pump.”



###


“When will the Democrat Leadership listen to the 77 percent of Americans who want us to use our own domestic resources to drive down the price of gas and say ‘Yes, we can.’ When will they listen to more than a dozen of their own members and say ‘Yes, we can.’”



WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding Democrat obstruction of serious ideas to help drive down the price of gas:



“When historians look back at the 110th Congress, they’ll say that the most vexing domestic issue we faced was a rapid and dramatic rise in gas prices at the pump.



“And, as is stands today, they’ll have to conclude that the Democratic Leaders ignored the problem by refusing to unlock the domestic energy resources that they put off limits back when gas and oil were cheap.



“And if these historians do their homework, they’ll note the irony in all this. They’ll note that these same Democrats were the ones who took the Majority less than two years ago promising to do something about gas prices that were a lot lower than they are today.



“I recently received a letter from a dialysis center in Kentucky. It was a plea to do something about gas prices. The letter said that some of the rural patients who have to go to this center for treatment three times a week are now foregoing their treatment because they can't afford the gas to get there.



“After reading that, I have a simple question for our friends across the aisle: If you won’t act now, with dialysis patients unable to get into town for treatment, when will you unlock the natural resources that Americans have right under their own feet? What’s it going to take?



“Clearly, this is a serious problem for people. And we have an obligation to address it. But I’m afraid the Democrats who run the Senate just want it all to go away.



“They’ve been going to great lengths to make sure it goes away. They’re cancelling hearings where they’re afraid the issue might come up. And they’re muzzling their own members — more than a dozen of whom favor a balanced solution that includes more domestic production and increased conservation. They’re telling them the same thing they’re telling the American people: ‘No, we can’t.’



“The problem we face, as everyone knows, is that the demand for oil is increasing faster than the supply. And the solution, as everyone knows, is to increase supply and lower demand. Yet this week, the Democrat Leadership in Congress is saying ‘No we can’t.’ They’re saying ‘No we can’t’ produce a single additional barrel of oil at home.



“Instead of increasing supply, they’re trying to distract us with the same blame game they roll out whenever the demands of some special interest group conflict with the will of the people.



“This time they’ve turned their attention on speculators. They say the reason gas prices have nearly doubled since the Democrats took over a year and a half ago is the speculators.



“Republicans have no problem strengthening regulation of the futures markets. But if Congress doesn’t allow any new exploration, it’s perfectly clear what the speculation about future prices will be — not good. The speculators are betting on scarcity. And the Majority is helping to prove them right.



“So here we are.



“After months of frustration, Americans are hearing from the Democrat leaders that Congress is going to do one thing about the single most vexing issue in America today. The Democrat leaders are telling the Americans people that the solution is to write up some new guidelines for energy traders, call it a day, and head home.



“And if we don’t support this timid solution, they’ll go back to the blame game again. They’ll say Republicans voted against lowering gas prices, when the fact is that not a single person in America who doesn’t sit behind a desk on the other side of the aisle thinks this particular speculation provision will do anything to lower gas prices.



“Let’s be perfectly clear: a vote for this narrow bill alone is not a serious vote about high gas prices. It’s an abdication of our responsibilities as lawmakers. And it’s an insult to the American people who are demanding every single day that we do something to ease their pain at the pump.



“This isn’t a theoretical problem. This isn’t a looming problem. It’s an urgent problem. It’s an urgent problem for families that have to struggle to put food on the table or send their kids to school. It’s an urgent problem for the dialysis patients in my state who can’t get treatment because they can’t afford to get into town to the doctor.



“And Americans are hearing the Democrat leadership’s response: ‘No we can’t.’



“The Ranking Member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, my good friend from New Mexico, put it this way: He said that in his 37 years of service in the Senate, he has never seen a bigger problem met with a smaller solution. I’d put it this way: Americans are saying the house is on fire, and the Democrat Leadership is showing up at the scene with squirt guns.



“Let’s put the scope of this bill in perspective. During last year’s energy debate, on the Energy Independence and Security Act, 331 amendments were proposed. 49 amendments were agreed to. And gas prices were $3.06 a gallon. Two years before that, during debate on the Energy Policy Act, 235 amendments were proposed, 57 amendments were agreed to, and gas was selling for $2.26 a gallon.



“And now, with gas prices in some places at more than double what they were then, when Americans are clamoring for dramatic action, the Democrat majority wants us to tighten the leash on a few speculators and then head home until and do nothing else until next year.



“To drive down gas prices, we could be opening up the Outer Continental Shelf. Democrat leaders say, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could be lifting the ban on the development of vast oil shale deposits in western states that sit on three times the reserves of Saudi Arabia. Democrat leaders say, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could be approving incentives for battery-powered electric cars and trucks. Democrat leaders say, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could be voting to open up untapped American oil. Democrat leaders say, ‘No, we can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could be voting for new clean nuclear technology. Democrat leaders say, ‘No you can’t.’



“To drive down gas prices, we could be approving new and promising coal-to-liquid technology. Democrat leaders say, ‘No, we can’t.’



“When will the Democrat Leadership listen to the 77 percent of Americans who want us to use our own domestic resources to drive down the price of gas and say ‘Yes, we can.’ When will they listen to more than a dozen of their own members and say ‘Yes, we can.’



“Americans never imagined they would be paying these prices at the pump. But if the Democrat Leadership has its way, Americans will be paying even more in the years to come.



“And when that time comes, and there’s no one else to blame, they’ll look around and see no one but themselves.



“Then Americans will know who to blame. And I can tell you this: it won’t be the speculators.”



###



‘Just as bravery was required from our Founders who built the Capitol, the bravery of great men is required today to protect and keep it. The names of Chestnut and Gibson will forever be remembered among American patriots’



WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday in honor of the memory of Capitol Police Officer Jacob Joseph Chestnut and Detective John Michael Gibson:



“If you visit the United States Capitol through a certain entrance on the first floor of the East Front, you will see a plaque by the door. The plaque is in honor and remembrance of Capitol Police Officer Jacob Joseph Chestnut and Detective John Michael Gibson, where 10 years ago today they gave their lives in defense of this Capitol.



“Their deaths remind us that, just as bravery was required from our Founders who built the Capitol, the bravery of great men is required today to protect and keep it. The names of Chestnut and Gibson will forever be remembered among American patriots.



“Officer Chestnut, or J.J. to his friends, was 58 and a father of five. An 18-year veteran of the force, he was just months away from retirement. He was also an Air Force veteran of 20 years who had served in Vietnam and Taiwan, where he met his wife.



“J.J. lovingly tended a vegetable garden in the back yard of his house, and neighbors often saw him practicing his golf swing in his front lawn.



“John Gibson also had 18 years of service with the Capitol Police. A friend of his recalls that just a few days before the shooting, John told him he had never had to draw his weapon on the job. 42 years old, he had three children, and was a native of Massachusetts.



“Friends recall John’s ardent love for his Boston sports teams—the Bruins, the Red Sox, and U Mass basketball.



“Officer Chestnut and Detective Gibson were the first Capitol Police officers to die in the line of duty. As we honor them today, we also honor the hundreds of brave men and women of that force who put their lives on the line to protect this house of democracy.



“To the casual tourist, Capitol Police officers may just seem like friendly people who stand guard at the doors. But in truth, they are an elite, highly trained force charged with a critical mission. In moments of crisis, when not just lives but our very system of government is threatened, they stand ready at the front lines.



“We saw again on September 11, 2001, how the Capitol can be a target for terror. And we saw again the bravery of the Capitol Police, who rushed into the building to rescue others when most of us were busy rushing out.



“As my friend the Majority Leader, a former Capitol Police officer himself, knows, police work is both an honorable job and a dangerous one.



“In fact, in the ten years since the loss of Officer Chestnut and Detective Gibson, 24 peace officers in my home State of Kentucky have also been lost in the line of duty. If there is no objection, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that their names be placed in the Record.



“So today the United States Senate remembers J.J. Chestnut and John Gibson. We are grateful for their heroic sacrifice. And we say a prayer for their families, who we embrace as we would our own.”



###





Kentucky Peace Officers Killed in the Line of Duty

July 24, 1998 – July 24, 2008



REGINA WOODWARD NICKLES

JOEY TREMAYNE VINCENT

JASON WAYNE CAMMACK

WILLIAM J. COLLINS JR.

BILLY RAY WALLS III

CHARLES BROWN MORGAN JR.

SAMUEL WILSON CATRON

HOWARD CALLIS

RAY B. FRANKLIN

EDDIE MUNDO JR.

DOUGLAS WAYNE BRYANT

ROBERT T. HANSEL

STEVEN LLOYD HUTCHINSON

LARRY DALE COTTINGHAM

PETER ALAN GRIGNON

ROGER DALE LYNCH

ELMER KISER

DAVID GEORGE WHITSON

JONATHAN KYLE LEONARD

RONNIE K. JONES

GARRY RANDY LACY

RANDY WELLS

ANTHONY SEAN PURSIFULL

JOE E. HOWARD SR.