Recent Press Releases

Obama Administration Should Hit Pause Button on Refugee Entries, McConnell Says

‘Given all this and given all that’s happened in Paris, it simply makes sense to take a step back for now — to press ‘pause’ — so we can determine the facts and ensure we have the correct policies and security screenings in place.’

November 19, 2015

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding Syrian refugees:

“It’s clear that the American people are concerned about the Administration’s ability to properly vet thousands of individuals from Syria.

“More than half of our nation’s governors, governors of both parties, have demonstrated their concern.

“Many members in Congress, members of both parties, have raised concerns too.

“Given all this and given all that’s happened in Paris, it simply makes sense to take a step back for now — to press ‘pause’ — so we can determine the facts and ensure we have the correct policies and security screenings in place.

“That’s the most responsible thing for the Administration to do right now.

“That’s the most reasonable and balanced thing for the Administration to do right now.

“We should also not lose sight of why we are in this position to begin with.

“The Syrian people are fleeing Syria because of a brutal civil war.

“The ultimate solution to this problem is to make a Syria a place the Syrian people can continue to return to.

“But the Administration has never had a coherent strategy to settle this conflict.

“Every single one of us knows that ISIL presents a threat to the homeland, and it’s not contained. So if the Administration is serious about starting to turn this situation around, then it’s going to have to develop a serious and workable strategy that can win strong bipartisan support.”

WASHINGTON, D.C. U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding Guantanamo terrorists:

“Years ago, then-candidate Obama made a campaign promise that has not withstood the measure of time or the realities brought by terrorism.

“He said he wanted to close the secure detention facility at Guantanamo Bay. Ever since, he has pursued policies that willfully avoided the targeting chain of capture, interrogate, build intelligence, and target.

“It turns out, the reality of closing the secure detention facility is a lot harder than making promises on the campaign trail. It’s an incredibly complex issue with grave national security concerns for the citizens of our country and our allies. That fact that the President has never been able to present any kind of serious plan to Congress seems to say a lot.

“We hear he’s finally working on one now. We will of course give consideration to what he sends. We will of course keep an open mind. It doesn’t mean Congress is going to agree with him — it’s going to be a very tough sell because it is hard to understand why indefinite detention for terrorists on United States soil is preferable to detaining terrorists who cannot be released in Guantanamo. This is especially true when one considers the fact that bringing terrorists here presents serious risks that simply do not exist if we keep the terrorists in the secure facility there.

“This much is crystal clear though: If the President wants to be able to import Guantanamo terrorists into Americans’ backyards, he’s going to have to persuade a majority in Congress to change the law.

“Just last week, big bipartisan majorities in Congress voted twice to underline the point.

“We overwhelmingly passed a defense authorization bill with a clear, bipartisan prohibition on the President moving Guantanamo terrorists into our country.

“We overwhelmingly passed a veterans funding bill with a clear, bipartisan prohibition on the President improving military facilities for the detention of Guantanamo terrorists in our country.

“The Senate has voted many times in recent years to enact these bipartisan protections.

“We’ve enacted them in Congresses with split party control.

“We’ve enacted them in Congresses with massive Democratic majorities.

“The President has signed them into law.

“So if the President wants to bring Guantanamo terrorists into the United States, he has to change the law.

“That’s the opinion of the President’s own Attorney General.

“She was asked directly this week if the President could ignore legislation passed by Congress that prohibits him from transferring Guantanamo detainees to American soil.

“This is what she said. ‘The law currently does not allow for that.’

“Let me repeat that. ‘The law currently does not allow for that.’

“This is what the nation’s chief law enforcement officer, a woman appointed by President Obama himself, had to say on his ability to import Guantanamo terrorists into our country.

“This isn’t exactly a revelation to anyone. The fact that the President is now contemplating flouting the law in pursuit of a campaign promise from years ago means that it’s apparently necessary for his own Attorney General to remind everyone that the law is the law.

“There are a multitude of other reasons not to bring these dangerous individuals into our country. I plan to continue reminding my colleagues of them here on the floor.

“If the President ever presents some kind of plan we can actually debate, I’m sure there will be several different views on it. I’m sure we’ll each have a lot to say. I’m sure the President will make his pitch to convince Congress that moving terrorists into American communities is a good idea.

“Like I said, it will be a hard sell. But the President should make his case if he feels passionately about it.

“For now though, we should all at least be able to agree with what one of our Democratic Senate colleagues recently said of the President: ‘He's going to have to comply with the legal restrictions.’”

Senator McConnell’s Bill to Address Prenatal Addiction and Infant Opioid Withdrawal Goes to President for Signature

‘I am encouraged that Congress has approved the legislation and I urge the President to quickly sign it into law’

November 18, 2015

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan held an enrollment ceremony today for Senator McConnell’s legislation to address the rise of prenatal opioid abuse and infants suffering from opioid withdrawal. The Protecting Our Infants Act was signed today by Speaker Ryan and is now being sent to the President for his signature.


Speaker Paul Ryan signs Senator McConnell’s bill, Protecting Our Infants Act, prior to sending to the President’s desk.

The McConnell bill, cosponsored by Senator Bob Casey (D-PA), directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to conduct a departmental review to identify gaps in research and any duplication, overlap or gaps in prevention and treatment programs related to prenatal opioid abuse and infants born with opioid withdrawal. It also instructs the HHS Secretary to work with stakeholders to develop recommendations both for preventing prenatal opioid abuse and for treating infants born dependent on opioids. Finally, this measure encourages the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to work with states to help improve their public health response to this epidemic.

Nationwide, there has been a staggering increase in the number of infants diagnosed with newborn withdrawal since 2000. In Kentucky, that number grew by more than 4,500 percent -- from 29 infants identified as suffering from drug withdrawal annually in 2000 to more than 1,400 in 2014.

“Tragically, prescription drug abuse and heroin use has skyrocketed in Kentucky and in other states across the nation. Americans, no matter their demographic, socio-economic status, age or gender, are dying. One of the most heartbreaking aspects of this crisis is the increasing number of infants who are born dependent on opioids in the form of prescription painkillers and heroin. These infants are the most innocent among us, and for them to start off life suffering from a dependence on drugs is intolerable,” Senator McConnell said. “I’m encouraged that Congress has approved the legislation and I urge the President to quickly sign it into law.”