Recent Press Releases

-On 44th anniversary, Republican Leader warns against cutting Medicare to fund yet another government program-

‘Unfortunately, the administration plans to use Medicare cuts to fund yet another new government program’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Thursday regarding the importance of getting it right on health care reform:

“The American people are making their voices heard in the debate over health care, and one of the things they’re demanding is that we do something to lower costs. This is why the proponents of a government takeover never fail to mention lowering costs as one of their primary goals. Yet more and more, Americans are beginning to ask themselves a simple question: How can more government lead to lower costs?

“They look at Medicare, a government-run health care program that’s nearly bankrupt, and they don’t understand how an even bigger, more complicated government-run health plan won’t end up in the same condition — and they certainly don’t understand why the administration would propose cutting hundreds of billions of dollars from Medicare to help pay for this massive new government-run plan.

“Yet this is precisely what some are proposing: that we use Medicare as a piggy bank to pay a significant portion of the administration’s plan for health care reform. Well, in my view, it’s a terrible idea, and on the 44th anniversary of this vital program that roughly 40 million Americans rely on each day, I think it’s important to explain why.

“Here’s how one of the proposed cuts would work. Right now, if a senior citizen on Medicare needs surgery, his or her hospital stay will likely be covered by Medicare. And because health care costs go up each year, Medicare provides for annual increases that ensure that hospitals and other providers are able to keep pace with inflation.

“What the administration and some Democrats in Congress are now proposing is that we reduce or even eliminate this annual increase — thus cutting the amount of money we spend on Medicare, a drastic measure that could have a serious impact on our hospitals and the communities and patients they serve.

“It would be one thing if these cuts were being proposed as a way of strengthening Medicare. The simple fact is that Medicare faces significant challenges that must be addressed. When Medicare Part A — the program that pays for hospital stays — was enacted, forty-four years ago today, it was projected that in 1990 this program would spend $9.1 billion on hospital services and related administration. As it turned out, spending in 1990 totaled almost $67 billion — or more than seven times the original prediction. These exploding costs have taken a toll on the program’s bottom line. Today, Medicare is already spending more than it’s taking in, and it’s expected to be insolvent in just eight years. Unfortunately, the administration plans to use Medicare cuts in order to fund yet another new government program.

“America’s seniors don’t want politicians in Washington tampering with Medicare to pay for health care reform. They want us to fix it. I get letters almost every day from some of the nearly 700,000 Kentuckians who have Medicare. They’re counting on it in the years ahead, and they’re worried about its future. In my view, we have a serious obligation to make sure it’s there for them. Unfortunately, the administration’s proposal takes the wrong approach.

“Just yesterday, the Joint Economic Committee completed a study on the administration’s proposed cuts to Medicare. It found that if these cuts were used to restore Medicare rather than to fund a government takeover of health care, the Medicare trust fund’s 75-year unfunded liability would be reduced by 15 percent, or more than two trillion dollars, and that it would delay the trust fund’s bankruptcy by two years. In short, while any savings from a reformed Medicare would strengthen it for a longer period of time were they put back into the current program, this just highlights how important overall reform is to ensuring that Medicare continues to serve our seniors.

“This is why I have argued for weeks that any savings from Medicare should be used to strengthen the program. And this is why I have also repeatedly urged the administration and my colleagues in the Senate to move forward on the bipartisan Conrad-Gregg proposal, which would provide a clear pathway for fixing the problems in Medicare and other important entitlement programs. Conrad-Gregg would force us to get debt and spending under control. It’s the best way to reform Medicare. It deserves the support of every member of Congress.

“Doctors and hospitals across the country are worried about what these proposed cuts in Medicare would mean for them and their patients. Earlier this year, the Kentucky Hospital Association warned that the kinds of cuts being considered in Washington would seriously impact the services hospitals currently provide to seniors in my state. I’d encourage my colleagues to talk to seniors, doctors, and medical professionals in their own states and see what they’re saying. My guess is that it’s a lot different than what some of the lobbyists and interest groups here in Washington are saying.

“Some in Congress seem to be in such a rush to pass just any reform, rather than the right reform, that they’re looking everywhere for the money to pay for it — even if it means sticking it to seniors with cuts to Medicare. If there was ever a program that needed to be put on a sounder financial footing, it’s Medicare. And yet throughout the debate over health care, we don’t seem to be focusing our attention on this vital issue. Instead, the same people who are unwilling to make the hard choices that are needed to fix Medicare now want us to trust them to create a new government program that will inevitably suffer from these same problems. It just doesn’t add up, and Americans are beginning to realize it.

“So on this anniversary, here’s my message: using massive cuts to Medicare as a way to pay for more government-run health care isn’t the kind of change Americans are looking for. Americans want savings from Medicare to be used to strengthen Medicare, not to create a system that would increase long-term health care costs, force Americans off the insurance they have and like, and lead to a government takeover of health care that has the same fiscal problems that Medicare has.

“Forty-four years ago today, President Johnson signed Medicare into law, saying that our nation would never ‘refuse the hand of justice to those who have given a lifetime of service and wisdom and labor’ to their nation. Those of us in Congress have a responsibility to fulfill that vow. And the best way to do so is to work together on reforms that address the real problems in our health care system, problems like the ones we see with Medicare. I’ve been encouraged as lawmakers on both sides and even the President have acknowledged that the reform proposals we’ve seen so far aren’t where they need to be. Strengthening Medicare to make sure it meets the needs of seniors today and in the years to come would be a good place to start.”

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*McConnell includes funding for the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant, Wolf Creek and lock and dam projects*

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell announced Wednesday that the U.S. Senate has approved his request of $397 million in funding for several Kentucky projects. The FY 2010 Energy and Water Development Appropriations bill passed the Senate today and now goes to a House/Senate conference committee, which will finalize details of the bill.

Senator McConnell secured funding for the following projects: $166.632 million for worker health screening and cleanup at the Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant, $123 million for repairs at the Wolf Creek Dam, $105 million for upgrades at the Olmsted Lock and Dam, $1 million for construction at the Kentucky Lock and Dam, and $2 million for an energy independence research program at the University of Louisville.

“Securing funding for the cleanup efforts and medical monitoring at the Paducah plant has been one of my top priorities,” Senator McConnell said. “This money is vital to the continued cleanup at the facility as well as providing much-needed cancer screenings and other medical tests for current and former workers.”

During the debate on the bill, McConnell also highlighted the importance of bringing home funding for Kentucky infrastructure projects.

“Wolf Creek Dam is threatened by seepage under and around the dam, increasing the risk of catastrophic failure and these funds will ensure that the repairs remain on schedule and the project will be completed as quickly as possible,” McConnell said.

“It’s also vital that the funding is available to continue construction at several of Kentucky’s locks and dams – including the Olmsted and Kentucky Lock and Dam projects,” McConnell added. “And I am pleased to bring the funding home to upgrade the outdated locks on the Ohio River in Ballard County and build a new one on the Tennessee River.”

The Energy and Water Development Appropriations bill now goes to a House/Senate Conference for consideration.

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Something’s Missing

July 29, 2009

‘Every week, it seems, the White House hosts an event aimed at showcasing some sacrifice being made by one group or another — every group, that is, except personal injury lawyers’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding the importance of getting it right on health care reform:

“Throughout the debate over health care reform, the administration has made a point of asking various stakeholders to come together and do their part: Doctors and hospitals are being asked to find significant savings; seniors are being asked to make major sacrifices, and so are the states. Every week, it seems, the White House hosts an event aimed at showcasing some sacrifice being made by one group or another — every group, that is, except personal injury lawyers.

“It’s a glaring omission, since everyone knows that the constant threat of lawsuits is one of the reasons health care premiums for families have skyrocketed more than 100 percent over the past decade and the primary reason that many doctors today spend a fortune on malpractice insurance even before they open up their doors for business. To take just one example, neurosurgeons in Miami can expect to spend more on malpractice insurance every year than many families in Miami can expect to spend on a new home.

“This is a serious problem, everyone knows it, and yet we don’t hear a word about it from any of the Democratic-led committees in Congress that are working on reform.

“It’s not because the administration hasn’t raised the issue. Last month, the President himself acknowledged the widespread use of so-called ‘Defensive Medicine,’ or the practice of prescribing drugs or tests that aren’t really needed just to protect oneself from the threat of a lawsuit. During the same speech, the President said we need to explore a whole range of ideas about how to scale back defensive medicine. Well, Democrats in Congress must not have been paying attention to that part of the speech — because I haven’t heard a word about the issue from any Democrat since.

“One exception was the recent suggestion by some in the administration that doctors are performing unnecessary surgeries just to make an extra buck. I think a better explanation is the one the President gave last month, when he said doctors often perform certain procedures just to protect themselves from frivolous lawsuits.

“The costs associated with ever-increasing malpractice insurance and defensive medicine are substantial — and both are passed along to consumers in the form of higher costs for even basic treatments and procedures. And many Americans pay an even higher price when doctors decide that the threat of lawsuits and the cost of insurance just isn’t worth it and decide to close down their practices altogether.

“Every state feels the effect of out-of-control malpractice suits. One study suggests that Kentucky alone is 2,300 doctors short of the national average, a shortage that could be reduced, in part, by getting a handle on malpractice suits. I’ve spoken before about the effects that a culture of jackpot lawsuits has on everyday Americans, on people like Rashelle Perryman of Crittenden County, Kentucky.

“According to an article in the Louisville Courier Journal, Rashelle’s first two babies were born at Crittenden County Hospital, which is about a 10-minute ride from her home. But her third child had to be delivered about 40 miles away. Why? Because rising malpractice rates had forced doctors at Crittenden Country Hospital to stop delivering babies altogether. They just couldn’t afford it.

“When the threat of lawsuits drives insurance premiums so high that many doctors are forced to go out of business; that mothers across the country can’t find a local obstetrician; and that health insurance costs for everyone continue to go up, we have a problem that needs to be addressed. And yet every single one of the so-called comprehensive health care reform proposals that Democrats are currently putting together in Congress ignores this important issue.

“The only people who benefit from the current system are the personal injury lawyers who can end up taking a third of every settlement — and protecting them isn’t what health care reform was supposed to be about. Yet it’s hard to escape the conclusion that this is precisely what’s going on here. If the administration wants to be comprehensive in its approach, it should ask personal injury lawyers to make the sacrifices that America’s seniors, doctors, governors, and small business owners have been asked to make.

“Americans don’t want a government takeover of health care. They want reforms that everyone can understand and all of us can agree on. And nothing could be simpler or more straightforward than putting an end to lawsuits that drive up costs and put doctors out of business. Americans don’t want grand schemes. They want common sense proposals. Medical liability reform would be a very good place to start.”

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