Recent Press Releases

‘It’s long past time for the administration and its allies in Congress to face the hard choices that Americans have had to face over the past several months. No more spending money we don’t have on things we don’t need. No more debt. Real reform will lower costs and debt, not raise both when we can least afford it.’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding the Democrats’ health care reform proposal which will increase government spending:

“Sometime in the coming days, the Treasury Department will make an announcement that should startle all of us. It will announce that, in the fiscal year that ended just two weeks ago, the federal government spent $1.4 trillion more than it actually had. What this announcement means, is that lawmakers in Washington ran up a federal deficit in 2009 greater than the deficits of the last four years combined.

“This is a staggering statistic. It’s impossible for most of us to imagine sums of money this large, let alone the unprecedented amount of money we’ve borrowed this year alone. But one way to think of it is to realize that, since January 20th of this year, the federal government has borrowed $1.2 trillion or more than $10,500 for every household in the United States.

“Let me repeat that. Just since January, the federal government has borrowed more than $10,500 for every single household in the United States.

“As you can imagine, there’s a limit to how much we can borrow without facing serious consequences, such as dramatically higher interest rates that will further hamper job creation and massive spending cuts and taxes down the road. That’s precisely why Congress sets a limit on how much debt the government can carry at any one time. But the administration has decided to worry about all these things at a later date. For now, it just wants to continue to borrow and spend, borrow and spend, just as it’s done all year.

“But we’re in dangerous territory. And, as a result of all this borrowing, Congress is about to reach the limit on the amount of debt it can legally carry. The administration expected this would happen, and that’s why it recently asked Congress to raise the debt ceiling. Rather than cut spending or implement reforms that would reduce costs, the administration is proposing that we borrow even more to finance its industry bailouts and now its health care proposal. What this amounts to is a public admission that it can’t live within its own means.

“Think about the message this sends to the American people. At a time when millions of Americans are experiencing a financial hangover from overusing their own credit cards, the government is still at it. Rather than pay down some of the principal, the government is asking the credit card company to increase its limit. And what does it plan to buy with the room it gets on its credit card: more government spending programs.

“This is fiscal madness. The primary reason we’re in so much trouble financially is the fact that we can’t afford our current spending patterns. The projected deficit for 2009 is nearly twice as large as the previous postwar record from 1983. Yet, instead of reforming existing programs like Medicare and Social Security in order to make them financially sound and stable, the administration doesn’t want to make the hard choices.

“And this is one of the reasons the administration has a problem on its hands with the American people when it comes to health care. Most of the health care bills the administration supports would raise our debt by hundreds of billions of dollars. And, yet, the administration knows that Americans are concerned about all this spending and debt. Otherwise, it wouldn’t have touted a report last week saying that a conceptual version of one of the several health care bills being discussed in Congress could cut the deficit by some $80 billion over 10 years.

“Leaving aside the fact that this particular bill will never see the light of day, an important question arises: How can an administration that’s asking Congress for a $1 trillion increase on its credit card limit claim with a straight face to be excited about $80 billion in deficit savings?

“ That’s like putting a new Mercedes on the government credit card, and then calling a press conference on frugality because the dealer threw in a complimentary cup holder …

“Americans don’t buy any of it, and that’s why they’re overwhelmingly opposed to the administration’s health care proposals. At the outset of this debate, there was one criterion for success: reform would lower the cost of health care. And yet no one outside Washington believes that creating a new trillion-dollar entitlement will do anything but increase costs and increase our debt.

“We’re heading down a dangerous road. It’s long past time for the administration and its allies in Congress to face the hard choices that Americans have had to face over the past several months. No more spending money we don’t have on things we don’t need. No more debt. Real reform will lower costs and debt, not raise both when we can least afford it.”

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‘The fact is, this proposal will never come before the Senate’

WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement Tuesday regarding the Finance Committee vote on partisan health care reform:

“Sen. Snowe called me this morning to let me know that while she continues to have serious, substantive policy reservations with this proposal, she wanted to keep the process moving. I share her concerns about the direction of this bill once it leaves the committee, and her call for transparency before we vote to proceed to any bill on the floor.

"The fact is, this proposal will never come before the Senate. But what we do know is that the bill written behind closed doors here in the Capitol will be another 1,000-page, trillion-dollar Washington takeover. We know it will slash a half-trillion dollars from seniors’ Medicare, add new taxes and raise premiums. That’s not reform.”

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That’s Not Reform

October 13, 2009

‘At a time of nearly 10 percent unemployment, Americans don’t need higher taxes and higher health insurance premiums. And yet one thing that’s perfectly clear about the administration’s health care proposal is that it promises higher taxes on virtually everyone in America.’

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

“When we started the debate over health care reform, we knew what the American people wanted. First and foremost, they were telling us that health care costs are too high, and that any effort at reform would have to focus on driving those costs down.

“This meant that our measure for success would be fairly simple: Would our reform proposals lead to lower premiums and lower costs, or wouldn’t they? And that’s why an analysis of the Finance Committee bill that was released over the weekend by PricewaterhouseCoopers should give us all pause.

“The report showed that the Finance Committee proposal that’s being voted on today would increase health insurance premiums dramatically. It said that this bill would cause health care costs to go up, not down, for millions of Americans who currently have health insurance.

“This report confirms what many of us have feared: that the bills we’ve been debating won’t reduce costs for the American people, but will actually drive costs up, an outcome that is fundamentally opposed to the original purpose of health care reform as we all understood it at the outset of this debate.

“Specifically, this report shows that premiums for a family policy will rise to about $26,000 in the next decade under the plan proposed by Senator Baucus — about $4,000 more than they would under current law.

“One of the reasons for this is that new taxes on health insurance plans, pharmaceutical companies, and medical device makers, will be passed on to consumers — something many of us, including the independent Congressional Budget Office, have been saying all along.

“The bottom line is this: Americans were asking for step-by-step reforms, of the kind that I’ve called for in nearly 50 floor speeches since June. And the administration’s failure to present such a common-sense plan is the primary reason that Americans overwhelmingly oppose its plans for health care reform.

“Americans wanted lower costs and greater access. They never wanted the administration or Democrats in Congress to vastly expand the government’s role in peoples’ health care decisions, to slash Medicare, to raise taxes and health insurance premiums, and to limit the health care choices Americans now enjoy.

“The American people aren’t happy with any of these things, and they’re not happy with the process they’ve seen here on Capitol Hill. Americans are understandably unhappy that a handful of Senators and White House staffers are about to put the finishing touches on the Democrat proposal behind closed doors, especially after the President pledged to broadcast negotiations on C-SPAN.

“The administration didn’t particularly like what PricewaterhouseCoopers had to say about the Finance Committee bill. It hastily dismissed this report, just as it’s dismissed common-sense Republican proposals and the concerns of ordinary Americans throughout this debate.

“Indeed, the administration and its allies seem to view any opposing view point in this debate as hostile. And it’s perfectly obvious why. The administration doesn’t want to hear criticism because it doesn’t want people to know what its proposals will actually do.

“At a time of nearly 10 percent unemployment, Americans don’t need higher taxes and higher health insurance premiums. And yet one thing that’s perfectly clear about the administration’s health care proposal is that it promises higher taxes on virtually everyone in America.

“Here’s the breakdown. Under this legislation, if you have insurance, you’re taxed. If you don’t have insurance, you’re taxed. If you use a medical device like a hearing aid, you’re taxed. If you take prescription drugs, you’re taxed. If you’re a business owner who can’t afford to provide coverage for your employees, you’re taxed. And the Joint Committee on Taxation and the CBO have both said that many of these taxes will hit the middle class hardest, at a time when unemployment stands at a 25-year high.

“Add all these up and you get a bill that raises taxes, raises premiums, and leads to more government control. You can call this many things, Mr. President. But it’s not what the vast majority of Americans would consider reform.”

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