Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding the Senate Democrats’ willingness to vote for an over-budget THUD appropriations bill that blatantly violates budget reforms already agreed to by both parties and moves the nation in the exact wrong direction:

“You know, there’s not much to say about the President’s speech yesterday, other than that he actually retreated from previous commitments to a more bipartisan, revenue-neutral corporate tax reform, and then tried to sell that rejection of bipartisanship as some quote-unquote ‘grand bargain.’

“I mean, only in Washington. But let me say this: it really would be nice to see the President work with Congress for a change to get some important things done for the American people. Republicans have been eager to do this all along. But it’s almost like he’s got a ‘Gone Campaignin’ sign hanging outside the Oval Office. And, on the rarest of occasions when he does come to the Hill – as he will today – you find out it’s basically just for another internal campaign rally with Democrats.

“So I hope he’ll finally get serious, and make one of his famous ‘pivots’ in a new direction – toward effective policy and away from the never-ending political sideshow. But it’s hard to see, especially when you consider that the President’s party is now attempting to blow up one of the most genuinely bipartisan accomplishments of the Obama era.

“The Budget Control Act that was agreed upon two summers ago represents a commitment from Washington to America – a bipartisan promise to enact $2.1 trillion in spending control.

“Last year, the slightest hint of fiddling with spending caps led to a furious response from senior Washington Democrats. It even led to a veto threat from the White House. But now, Washington Democrats are tired of bipartisanship. The commitments they made have become an inconvenience to their special-interest agenda. So now, they’re threatening to shut down the government if they’re not allowed to break their word.

“That’s what this appropriations debate we’re having is all about. It’s about an attempt to blow up an important bipartisan achievement by busting the spending caps both parties already agreed to. Well, Republicans don’t believe we should be breaking our commitments to the American people. And breaking commitments in order to overspend, as Democrats propose, seems like an even worse reason for them to shut down the government.

“So I hope they won’t. I hope they think about the ‘third way’ offer we’ve made to them too – that we’d happily discuss exchanging some of the particular cuts they don’t like for government reforms. The kind of innovative ideas that can get our economy on track and our government back in the black – not just in the immediate term, but over the long haul.

“This policy discussion has never been more relevant. Especially when we look at what’s happening in Detroit. What’s happening in Europe. When we realize that the real-world consequences of putting off reform are no longer just abstract or hypothetical. They’re here. They’re real. They’re now.

“The experts tell us that the United States is already on a completely unsustainable fiscal trajectory, and that we need to make some big changes today if we want to avoid a similar fate. They also tell us that, unlike Detroit or Greece, America still has some time to chart her own future – but not long.

“That’s why the choices we make today are so important. We can follow the Democrat path to austerity. The path of breaking spending caps wide open and borrowing more money we don’t have, of callously rejecting reform and blissfully denying the future. The path that inevitably leads to European-style austerity. To the decimation of the middle class. To desperation for the least among us.

“Or we can follow the Republican path to reform and growth. A path of smart choices, innovative reforms, and orienting our economy toward the future. A path that not only prevents austerity tomorrow, but leads to more jobs and a better economy today.

“A Democrat path to austerity, or a Republican path to reform and growth. These are the choices.

“Voting for appropriations legislation that blatantly violates budget reforms already agreed to by both parties moves our country in the exact wrong direction. It puts us on the Democrat path to austerity. That’s one of the many reasons I’ll be voting against this spending bill, and that I urge my colleagues to do the same. Because it’s time to get serious about the challenges we face. It’s time to work together to reposition America for growth, and prosperity, and sustainability in the 21st Century.

“And if the President is willing to get off the campaign trail and show some leadership with his party – to convince them of the need for positive reforms, and of the need to actually stick to them – I’m confident we can create a better economy today and leave a better future to our children tomorrow. But it’s up to him. And his visit today offers a great chance to convey this message to his fellow Democrats.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding the over-budget THUD appropriations bill and the President’s campaign road tour where he plans to announce another recycled partisan tax and spending plan:

“Today, the President will continue his campaign road tour in Chattanooga. We hear he plans to make an announcement about corporate taxes. And while I understand he’s looking for headlines here, reports indicate that the policy he intends to announce doesn’t exactly qualify as news. It’s just a further-left version of a widely panned plan he already proposed two years ago – this time, with extra goodies for tax-and-spend liberals.

“The plan, which I just learned about last night, lacks meaningful bipartisan input, and the tax hike it includes is going to dampen any boost businesses might otherwise get to help our economy. In fact, it could actually hurt small businesses. And it represents an unmistakable signal that the President has backed away from his campaign-era promise to corporate America that tax reform would be revenue neutral to them.

“Not only is this a rebuke to one of his party’s most senior Senators – the Finance Committee Chairman – it also represents a serious blow to one of the best chances for true bipartisan action in Washington. I truly hope the President re-considers this plan and consults with Congress before moving any further.

“Now, on a different matter. Two summers ago, Republicans and Democrats came together to agree on a set of spending caps for the following decade. President Obama agreed to it, as did the leaders of both parties in the Senate and the House.

“It was essentially a promise made to the American people that Washington would reduce spending by $2.1 trillion. And I was happy to help lead the effort.

“Well, two years later, Democrats are now trying to find ways to walk away from it.

“They’re pressing to abandon the 2011 agreement in favor of higher spending, as evidenced by appropriations bills like the one we’re considering this week – which hikes up spending by double digits. And the President is now actually threatening to veto bills that live up to that commitment we all made.

“Let me repeat that: The President of the United States – who, during the campaign, took credit for the very savings Democrats now want to walk away from – is threatening to veto spending bills that would actually follow the law and live up to the commitment he himself signed. This represents a stunning shift for Democrats, who just recently were warning against breaking the agreement.

“The Chairwoman of the Budget Committee said last year that we have to be able to count on agreements that have been made, instead of threatening a government shutdown. Yet that’s just what she and her party are now threatening to do – to shut down the government unless an agreement we all made is torn up.

“So if Democrats want to shut down the government because they can’t wiggle their way out of a deal they agreed to, I guess there isn’t much we can do to stop them. But Republicans intend to stick by the commitments made to our constituents.

“That said, there’s also this to remember: Republicans have always said that there may be more effective ways to achieve comparable spending reductions. And if Democrats want to propose smarter spending cuts that achieve the same kind of savings they committed to in 2011, well, we’re ready to listen. Comprehensive government spending reforms would be a good place to start.

“Because Republicans understand that America’s largest fiscal challenges stem from the fact that programs our fellow Americans hope to rely on in their most vulnerable years are going bankrupt. And Republicans are saying that the only way to avert the kind of panicked, poorly-thought out spending cuts and tax increases we’ve seen in Europe is to implement forward-looking reforms today. That’s why it’s always so amusing when the President and his allies try to brand the kind of innovative government spending reforms we favor as ‘European-style austerity,’ as he implied again this weekend.

“Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, what the Europeans are doing in response to the threats from their creditors is essentially the opposite of the approach favored by Republicans. The type of long-term spending reforms we envision are often the only antidote against the kind of austerity we see in Europe. Because European austerity isn’t about protecting future generations from spending cuts, it’s about staying afloat today. And the tax increases Europeans enact under duress – and the kind of pain Detroiters experience under bankruptcy – these are exactly the things Republicans aim to avoid. And we aim to avoid those things by acting intelligently today, while we still have time.

“And unlike Democrats, Republicans aren’t looking for some colorless discussion about raising taxes here or snipping there or moving numbers around on a budget chart. We’d rather have a more holistic, forward-looking conversation – one about modernizing government to meet the challenges of the 21st Century.

“Where we ask questions like:

“How do we modernize entitlement programs so they’ll actually be accessible to Americans when they need them?

“Which government programs should be reformed, updated, or no longer make sense in a 21st Century economy? How can services be delivered in the most efficient and technologically savvy way? And what structural reforms can we implement to ensure the most robust economic growth and job creation for this generation and those to come?

“By addressing the big questions now – by identifying and implementing forward-looking reforms today – we can do a lot more than just reduce the deficit in the short term. We can also create jobs now, grow the economy now, make government work better now, and eliminate the threat of a debt crisis everyone knows is coming. A debt crisis that would usher in the very kind of European-style austerity Democrats claim not to like, but keep accelerating towards. But in order for this to happen, Democrats need to work with us.

“As a first step, they should step back from the brink with their plan to shut down the government. And they need to stop threatening to tear up agreements we all assented to. The Budget Control Act might not be perfect, but at least we were able to secure important spending control for the American people. And if Democrats want to trade some savings for innovative reforms that can serve our country even better over the long term, then there are policymakers ready to talk.

“But Republicans are not going to just give up on the commitments made to our constituents. Not only would that be a betrayal of a promise we all made, but we’ve already seen where the Democrats’ left-leaning policies and European-inspired ideas lead. And more of that is the last thing our country needs right now.” 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – In response to their “blank slate” approach to tax reform, Senate Republican Leadership and Republicans on the Senate Finance Committee today sent a letter to the panel’s chairman and ranking member saying that any comprehensive tax reform legislation should be revenue neutral for the government.

The senators said they were concerned by recent public statements suggesting that tax reform might be used as a way to raise more taxes. In the letter to Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus and ranking Republican member Orrin Hatch, the senators said that the last time Congress comprehensively reformed the tax code, in 1986, there was a bipartisan agreement that the exercise would be revenue neutral.

“We believe that any agreement today should follow this principle, and that any new revenue should be generated solely from the pro-growth effects of tax reform,” according to the letter.

The letter was signed by Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, Republican Whip John Cornyn, Conference Chairman John Thune, Policy Committee Chairman John Barrasso, Conference Vice Chair Roy Blunt and National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Jerry Moran; and Republican Finance Committee Sens. Chuck Grassley, Mike Crapo, Pat Roberts, Mike Enzi, Richard Burr, Johnny Isakson, Rob Portman and Pat Toomey.

The senators wrote that the U.S. faces long-term fiscal challenges due to the projected growth of entitlement spending, not a lack of tax revenue.

“Tax reform should not be used as a pretense for increasing the net tax burden on American families and job creators, particularly in the absence of any serious effort to address long-term spending problems,” said the letter. “If done correctly, comprehensive tax reform can ignite the nation’s economic engine and lead to shared prosperity for all.  We look forward to working with you to ensure that revenue-neutral tax reform is something that attracts broad, bipartisan support and provides the economic jolt that the American economy desperately needs.”

Click here for a copy of the letter.