Recent Press Releases



‘We should uphold our end of the bargain and pass a bill that funds our troops and gives us a reasonable period of time to judge this new strategy.’



Washington, D.C. – Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Thursday on the Senate floor regarding the Iraq War Supplemental Appropriations Bill:



“Three months ago, President Bush set a new course in Iraq. He proposed a plan to secure Baghdad and its resident population, and he asked General David Petraeus, one of the best military minds of our generation, to carry out the mission. A Democratic-controlled Congress approved the general without dissent, and wished him well.



“Then something strange happened. Soon after sending General Petraeus into the field of battle, the Democratic Leadership began its own change in course. It decided this new mission was over before it even had time to work.



“We were told in January by some of our Democratic colleagues to listen to the generals. Yet this week, with our top general in Iraq here to report on progress, most of those on the other side of the aisle covered their ears. The Speaker of the House skipped General Petraeus’s briefing altogether.



“This posture may be calculated to impress opponents of the war at home, but it frustrates our troops abroad. And today, the Democratic Leadership does further damage by passing a war spending bill that has no chance of being signed into law — a bill that calls for withdrawing U.S. troops without regard to conditions on the ground. A bill that says we leave in October if the Iraqis have made progress … and that we will leave in July if they haven’t. Either way, we’re gone.



“It shouldn’t be this way. We should uphold our end of the bargain and pass a bill that funds our troops and gives us a reasonable period of time to judge this new strategy.



“The Iraq Study Group has outlined the stakes. They said premature withdrawal would:



almost certainly produce greater sectarian violence and further deterioration of conditions. The near-term results would be a significant power vacuum, greater human suffering, regional destabilization, and a threat to the global economy. al-Qaeda would depict our withdrawal as a historic victory. If we leave and Iraq descends into chaos, the long-term consequences could eventually require the United States to return.



“Bin Laden knows the stakes too. In a letter last year, he said America’s defeat in Iraq would mean defeat in all its wars. Yesterday, the commander of a senior Afghan Islamist group said Bin Laden is personally involved in attacks on Americans in Iraq. General Petraeus went even further. He said al-Qaeda has declared war on all of Iraq.



“I call on my friends in the Democratic Party to have an open mind and listen to the general. We must give this plan for winning the military component of our strategy in Iraq a real chance to succeed. Without it, there is no political solution. Just four months old and operating at half its ultimate strength, the Baghdad Security Plan is already having an affect. Military leaders say the increased violence around Baghdad is a sign that the terrorists are shaken. The latest attacks were meant to be dramatic and visible. They were meant to force our withdrawal, and ultimately, our humiliation.



“George Orwell said ‘the quickest way to end a war is to lose it.’ This is a road we must not take.



“This legislation is tragic. If the Iraqis make progress, we leave. If they don’t, we leave. This is not a choice; it is a mandate for defeat that al-Qaeda desperately wants.



“It is not too late to change course. I ask my colleagues to be as patient as our soldiers and Marines — and, indeed — the terrorists, and draft a bill that does not arbitrarily circle a date on the calendar and trigger withdrawal without regard to conditions on the ground.



“Then, we can tell our troops that help is on the way, that they can finish this mission, and that they will return with honor. If not, if we give up, we will truly have reason to fear. Because if we cannot win the most important battle, how will we ever win the war?”



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Comprehensive legislation will encourage research and innovation in fields of science and technology

Washington, D.C. – Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Wednesday on the passage of S. 761, the America COMPETES Act:

“By passing the America COMPETES Act today we set the path to keeping more of the jobs of the 21st Century right here in America, and ensuring that our children have the skills to keep America at the forefront of innovation and discovery.

“This bill received broad bipartisan support because it is an investment in our children, our schools and in the future of America. Our two parties’ cooperation in passing this legislation shows us how we can and should work together to accomplish important things for the American people.”

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As a child, my parents encouraged me to do better in my math and science classes in school. I’ll admit they weren’t my best subjects. I just couldn’t see—as a kid—how math and science would be that important to me in the future.



As a Senator, however, I’ve come to see how imperative it is for today’s students to master math and science, so America can retain its competitive edge in the global economy of the 21st century.



America currently has the greatest scientific and technological enterprise in the world. We have the finest system of colleges and universities anywhere. But in many ways we have become complacent, while other countries are catching up.



They see that by investing in science and technology, and in the education of their citizens, they can attract jobs and create wealth. We must make the same investment in our future if we are to maintain our leadership through this century and beyond in the global marketplace.



A few years ago, realizing that America was falling behind, a group of Senators approached the National Academy of Sciences, a venerable organization bringing together the country’s leading scientific minds.



We asked them a simple question: “What are the top 10 actions that policymakers in Washington could take to keep America in the lead in science and technology for the 21st Century?”



The Academy turned to its members—leaders of business, government, and academia—and came up with an answer. And the good news is that boosting the number of rocket scientists—along with mathematicians, engineers and computer designers—is not rocket science.



Many of the Academy’s recommendations now form an important bill that the Senate is currently considering, the America COMPETES Act. It will help maintain and improve the United States’ competitive edge over the next century by increasing our investment in basic research, strengthening educational opportunities in science, technology, engineering and math at all educational levels, and encouraging young people to pursue careers in those fields.



This fall, the Academy of Mathematics and Science in Kentucky at Western Kentucky University, in Bowling Green, will open. It will bring together talented high-school students from all over the Commonwealth to study advanced math and science year-round for college credit.



The America COMPETES Act would provide federal support to advanced academies like the Kentucky Academy throughout the nation. It would also allow Kentucky to provide scholarships for students pursuing careers as math or science teachers, and hold summer academies for math and science teachers across the state to help them inspire their students.



At all the major centers for learning across our state, the faculty and administrators understand the importance of emphasizing math, science and engineering to keep Kentucky competitive with the rest of the country and the world.



The America COMPETES Act will help them do that by devoting more federal funding to research and development efforts at universities, creating hundreds of new opportunities for young scientists. These investments will eventually generate new discoveries, new high-tech companies, and new jobs.



America has led the world in innovation for over a century. From the light bulb to the airplane to the integrated circuit, we have given the world the tools to live happier, easier, and more productive lives.



But now countries like China and India are seeing the benefits of brainpower and what it can do to remake their economies. America’s failure to value the importance of a scientific education has put us behind, and Congress can take the lead in beginning to solve it.



The America COMPETES Act is the best way to keep more of the jobs of the 21st Century right here in America, and in Kentucky. With it, we can ensure that our children have the skills to keep America at the forefront of innovation and discovery.



Senator McConnell is the Senate Republican Leader and only the second Kentuckian to lead his party in the U.S. Senate.