Recent Press Releases

Washington, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding the Administration’s proposed IRS rule designed to stifle American free speech:

“Today’s an important day.
 
“It’s the last day of the so-called comment period when Americans can officially register their opinions on the IRS’ latest effort to suppress free speech.
 
“So far, nearly 100,000 comments have come through.
 
“Nearly every one I’ve seen is opposed.
 
“Just to put things in perspective, that’s basically the largest number of comments ever for a rule like this.
 
“Even the head of the IRS said he saw more comments on this proposal than ever before ‘on any regulation.’
 
“And that was about 70,000 comments ago.
 
“So people are making their voices heard. Loudly. And the message they’re broadcasting is pretty clear.
 
“Leave. The First Amendment. Alone.
 
“Get out of the censorship and harassment business.
 
“Stick to the job you’re actually supposed to be doing.
 
“And let’s be clear.
 
“The folks who are logging opinions like these run straight across the political spectrum.
 
“Labor unions are upset.
 
“Business organizations are upset.
 
“Civil liberties activists are upset.
 
“Taxpayer groups are upset.
 
“Grassroots groups right across the political map are upset at what they view as an assault on their First Amendment rights. All you have to do is read their own words.
 
“One group of primarily left-leaning First Amendment advocates said the new regulation would ‘impose serious burdens on free speech and hinder the democratic processes it serves.’
 
“An official with the ACLU described the IRS’ proposed regulation as creating ‘the worst of all worlds.’
 
“The proposal, he wrote, could ‘seriously chill legitimate issue advocacy from nonprofits on the right and left,’ and would ‘disproportionately affect small, poor nonprofits that cannot afford the legal counsel to guarantee compliance...’

“And here’s what one labor union had to say: ‘Given the history of misuse and abuse of the IRS’ immense powers in the not-so-distant past, it is disappointing and disturbing that this fundamental principle has been forgotten and that this… [regulation] is the IRS’ proposed response to its recent missteps.’
 
“So Left, Right, or Center — folks understand what a threat this rule poses to our most cherished of civil liberties.
 
“They also realize that a group the Administration favors today could easily become a group the IRS targets tomorrow.
 
“That’s why this fight is so important – why it’s so inappropriate to hand this kind of power to any Administration. I don’t care what party the president’s in. And that’s why I, along with several of my colleagues, recently sent a letter to the new Commissioner of the IRS explaining in some detail just why the agency’s proposal was such a bad idea.
 
“In that letter, we also reminded Commissioner Koskinen of something else too: the ball’s in his court on this one.
 
“He could stop this rule tomorrow. And given the comments he made about restoring integrity to the IRS when the Senate voted to confirm him, that’s just what we expect out of him. In fact, that’s the essentially mandate on which he was confirmed.
 
“So here’s the choice before him.

“He can either fulfill that mandate to the American people by restoring integrity to an agency they no longer trust. He can be a hero and say no to those who are pressuring him to crack down on the First Amendment rights of ordinary Americans – just like the IRS Commissioner who stood up to Nixon.
 
“Or, he can serve political masters over in the White House. He can implement regulations that will erode our most fundamental civil liberties – regulations that would almost certainly lead to the harassment of conservative groups today, and quite possibly to the harassment of Left-leaning groups in the future. In fact, a recent letter Representative Camp received from the Treasury Department appears to suggest that unions in particular may have a lot to fear from this proposal.
 
“So now is the time to act.
 
“America’s free speech advocates are standing up with one voice.

“Thousands upon thousands made their voices heard in the opinion process.
 
“Millions more, I suspect, are right there with them in spirit.
 
“Some who oppose this rule picked the President in the last election. Some voted for his opponent. Some may have even cast a ballot for another person entirely. But what unites us is our love of the liberties that have allowed Americans to disagree civilly for centuries. Commissioner Koskinen: Do the right thing. Stop this regulation.”

Washington, D.C.U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding the need for President Obama to put the Middle Class above liberal ideology:

“Earlier this year, I came to the floor to pose a simple question about President Obama’s final years in office.

“Did he want to be remembered as a Hero to the Left, or as a Champion for the Middle Class?

“I asked the question this way because, for the past several years, the Left has basically had its run of the White House. And during that period, the politically-connected and the already-powerful have clearly prospered. 

“But the Middle Class? They feel like they’ve been shut out altogether, as household income has plummeted and families that were just struggling to pay the bills have gotten left behind by a President and a party that claimed to act in their name. 

“So I wanted to know: did the President plan to continue down the same ideological road he’d taken us on, or would he change course and embrace effective proposals that would make a real difference in the lives of Middle Class Americans? Would he reach across the aisle to jump-start job creation and make the economy work for the Middle Class again?

“Well, over the last few months, we appear to have gotten our answer.

“Once more, the real concerns of ordinary Americans have been pushed aside in favor of the preoccupations of the Left. Yet again, we’ve seen the truth of the old saying that a liberal never lets the facts get in the way of a good theory. Once again, we’ve seen how liberal policies end up hurting the very people they claim to help.

“Nowhere is this more apparent than in the debate over the minimum wage.

“As a recent CBO report makes clear, the President’s bill basically amounts to a terrible real-world tradeoff: helping one group of low-wage Americans by undercutting another group of low-wage Americans.

“How is that fair?

“Americans are crying out for jobs. Job creation is the top issue in this country. Our unemployment and underemployment rates have remained abysmally high more than half a decade after this president took office.

“And what’s the White House’s solution? A bill that might sound good in theory, but could cost as many as a million jobs.

“The CBO recently released another report — this one on Obamacare. And it’s a similar story.

“2.5 million fewer Americans in jobs, thanks to Obamacare. Huge disincentives to work, thanks to Obamacare.

“That’s what the CBO said.

“Of course, Washington Democrats – the same folks who promised you could keep your health plan if you liked it – they told Americans not to believe their own eyes, that Obamacare would simply ‘liberate’ them from jobs.

“It’s just unbelievable.

“Especially when you consider that the law’s medical device tax alone is projected to kill as many as 33,000 jobs.

“And that 60 percent of business owners and HR professionals recently surveyed said that Obamacare will negatively impact jobs. As a member of that group recently put it, ‘small businesses have an incentive to stay small’ under Obamacare.

“That’s because Obamacare can punish businesses that choose to hire more workers.

“In my home state of Kentucky, the tension between the priorities of the Left and the needs of real people is on full display.

“That’s because the Obama Administration has trained its sights on some of our most vulnerable citizens.

“One Administration advisor actually used the words ‘War on Coal’ to essentially describe what the Administration is doing – or in his view, probably should be doing – to hard-working miners who just want to put food on the table.

“His words, not mine.

“And here’s why: because according to the liberal elites in Washington, these folks are standing in the way of their theories.

“A practical approach that actually takes the concerns and anxieties of these people into account would promote clean energy even as it acknowledges the real-world benefits of traditional sources of energy.

“The point is this: the Administration has broken faith with the Middle Class and it’s stirred up strong emotions, especially among those of us who actually want to see a better life for those struggling to make it in our states.

“Almost everyone feels let down. A lot of folks are really angry.

“And it’s a real tragedy — not only because of the missed opportunities and the human cost of these policies. 

“But also because, when the President ran for office, he promised a different approach…

“It’s tragic because the very folks he talks about helping are the ones who seem to suffer most under his presidency.

“And it’s tragic because it appears as if he’s answered the question I posed in January: that he’s prepared to double down on the Left and throw in the towel on the Middle Class.

“How else can you explain the obsession with all these peripheral ideological issues, at a time when Americans are demanding good, stable, high-paying jobs and a new direction? At a time when folks’ wages are stagnant, but their costs always seem to be rising? At a time when younger Americans seem resigned to a harder life than their parents had?

“How else do you explain why the President has refused to sign off on projects like the Keystone Pipeline that would create thousands of jobs? Or why he refuses to push his own party to join Republicans and support trade legislation that could create even more?

“This can’t be the legacy the President really wants to leave. But it’s the legacy he’ll be ensuring for himself if he doesn’t change.

“There’s still time to alter course. There’s still time for the President to acknowledge that there’s just no reconciling the demands of his base and the concerns of the middle class. That it’s one or the other.

“Because the real solution here is liberating the private sector, the real solution is to implement policies that will increase wages for all, instead of pursuing policies that essentially seek to distribute slices of a smaller pie to some.

“Of course, making a turn toward authentic job creation might make the Left mad, but it’s the only way to get the gears of our economy working again, and college graduates off their parents’ couches and onto a path of earned success.

Maybe the President will show some change of heart up in Minnesota today. Maybe he’ll recognize, for instance, that killing thousands of high-tech jobs in the medical device industry isn’t worth the pain it is causing. 

“Who knows. I sure hope so.

“Because if you’ve entered the sixth year of trying to fix an economy and you’re still talking about emergency unemployment benefits then it’s time to recognize that your policies just haven’t worked for the Middle Class.

“That it’s time for a fresh start.

“I’d also like to highlight one more dividing line between the dreams of the Left and the well-being of our constituents. It’s a topic I spoke about yesterday – Medicare Advantage.

“As I asked then, why would the Administration want to raid a program that’s working, like Medicare Advantage, to fund a program that doesn’t, like Obamacare? Why would Senate Democrats vote time and time again to do that? They must have known that taking $300 billion from Medicare Advantage to fund Obamacare would have real world impacts on seniors – like losing the choices, coverage, and doctors they now enjoy.

“It’s not fair. It’s not right. And several of my colleagues will be coming to the floor to speak more about this issue today.”

McConnell Calls for Senate Consideration of Iran Sanctions Legislation

‘This bill is the best mechanism we have to keep the Iranians at the table until we get the right outcome, and ensure that they’re sticking to their end of the agreement.’

February 26, 2014

Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor calling on Majority Leader Reid to allow a vote on the bipartisan Iran sanctions legislation:

“I’d like to start this morning with a few words about an issue that should be of grave importance to all of us — and that’s the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran.

“It is no exaggeration to say that this is one of the most significant foreign policy challenges of our time, and one we simply have to get right.

“That’s why a strong bipartisan majority has sought to pass legislation here in the Senate that puts teeth into the negotiations that have followed November’s interim agreement.

“And that’s why Republican senators — and hopefully some Democrats senators as well — will continue to press the Majority Leader to allow a vote on this legislation before these negotiations end.

“The Nuclear Weapon-Free Iran Act is a perfectly reasonable bill.

“It doesn’t disrupt ongoing negotiations. It simply provides an incentive for Iran to keep its commitment under the interim agreement.

“It says that if Iran doesn’t keep its word, then it faces even tougher sanctions than before.

“In other words, it puts teeth into the talks that are already taking place.

“And it’s a recognition of the success we’ve already had as a result of prior sanctions.

“After all, there’s good reason to believe that sanctions are what brought the Iranians to the table in the first place.

“So it just stands to reason that if the Iranians break this interim deal, they should face even tougher sanctions than before.

“That’s especially true given the fact that we’re running out of tools here short of the use of force.

“This bill is the best mechanism we have to keep the Iranians at the table until we get the right outcome, and ensure that they’re sticking to their end of the agreement.

“We should not fall victim to Iran’s efforts at public diplomacy.

“And let me just repeat that strong bipartisan majorities in both houses of Congress agree with that concept.

“So there’s simply no good reason for the Majority Leader to prevent a vote on this crucial legislation.

“There is no excuse for muzzling the Congress on an issue of this importance to our own national security, to the security of Israel, our closest ally in the Middle East, and to international stability more broadly.

“This is that rare issue that should unite the two parties in common purpose. And there’s no question that it would if the Majority Leader would simply drop his reflexive deference to a President whose foreign policy is focused on withdrawing from our overseas commitments.

“A foreign policy that, at worst, poses a serious threat to our own security and that of our allies.

“So once again I call on the Majority Leader to allow the Congress to serve its purpose and express itself in our nation’s policy toward Iran. Let our constituents speak on this all-important issue on which so many of us from both parties agree.

“In the Joint Plan of Action, the President made clear that he opposes additional sanctions. Let Congress speak.

“Let’s stand together for a forward-deployed, ready and lethal force that makes our commitments real in the eyes of friend and foe alike.

“Let’s hold Iran accountable. Let’s do the right thing, approve this legislation, and send it to the President’s desk.

“The clock is ticking. The time to act is now.”