Click HERE for Senator McConnell’s Coronavirus Response Portal

Recent Press Releases

‘We should not adjourn until we have closed this gap, until we have fixed this outdated law’



Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and Senator Christopher Bond, Ranking Member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, introduced an updated terrorist surveillance law Wednesday to modernize the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and called for its passage before Congress adjourns for August recess. Leader McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor Wednesday.



“Yesterday the Director of National Intelligence came to Capitol Hill and implored Congress to pass vital legislation to protect Americans before we leave for recess. He was echoing the warnings of the entire intelligence Community, which has assured us that the threat is real and that the need is urgent.



“The latest National Intelligence Estimate makes clear that the greatest terrorist threat to the United States is Al-Qaeda. Their intent to attack us is undiminished since 9/11. They’ve gained recruits and strength in the Middle East. They continue to adapt and improve their capabilities. And we must continue to adapt and improve our ability to detect their movements and their plots swiftly, with every tool of intelligence we have.



“One of the most effective tools we have in this important work is our electronic surveillance program. Ever since the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, was written in 1978, the principle has been clear: terrorists operating abroad and plotting attacks against us are fair targets of surveillance.



“But over the years, advances in technology have created an absurd and unintended consequence: intelligence analysts are now required to seek a warrant for tracking the communications of terrorists. The original intent of FISA was to give us access to terrorists, but its effect has been to slow that access down. In a significant number of cases, intelligence professionals are now forced to obtain court orders to collect foreign intelligence concerning foreign targets located on foreign soil.



“The targeting of a foreign terrorist overseas should not require a FISA warrant. That was never the intention of the original legislation.



“The facts here are not in dispute: our nation faces an alarming intelligence gap, a situation in which the Intelligence Community every day is missing a significant portion of what we should be getting in order to protect the American people. We should not adjourn until we have closed this gap. We must act quickly, in a bipartisan manner, and let the appropriate committees come back and review FISA and other matters related to the legislation in a more comprehensive manner.



“We should not return in September knowing that we have failed in our duty, and we pray that we don’t have cause to regret our inaction. Let there be no doubt: if we had had the foresight in August of 2001 to enact a law that would have exposed the plot that was being hatched against us then, the vote to approve that law would have been cast unanimously and without hesitation. None of us would have shrunk from that duty. Six years later, that duty remains.



“There is little that we do here in the Senate that can immediately and decisively improve the security of this country. But by passing a FISA modernization bill that the President can sign before we go home for recess, we will have done just that. We need to act on this legislation now. We should not adjourn until we have closed this gap, until we have fixed this outdated law."



###


‘It is not fair to manufacture a false impression of someone through insinuation and innuendo and then use that falsehood to defeat him’



Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell introduced a Sense on the Senate resolution Wednesday saying, ‘the nomination of Judge Leslie Southwick to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit should receive a vote by the full Senate.’ He delivered the following statement (as prepared) on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding the nomination of Judge Southwick:



“Mr. President, in 1992 a Mississippi lawyer named Leslie Southwick wanted to serve his country in the armed forces. At forty-two, he was too old to do so. But service to others is a duty that Leslie Southwick had always taken seriously, whether in the Justice Department, or on the state bench, or with Habitat for Humanity, or in doing charity work for inner-city communities.



“So in 1992, forty-two year old Leslie Southwick sought an age-waiver to join the U.S. Army Reserves. The country had the good sense and good fortune to grant his request.



“Leslie Southwick continued to serve in the armed forces after he was elected to the state court of appeals in 1994. He conscientiously performed his military and judicial duties, even using his ‘vacation time’ from the court to satisfy the required service period in the Mississippi National Guard.



“In 2003, Lieutenant Colonel Southwick volunteered for a line combat unit, the 155th Separate Armor Brigade. His commanding officer, Major General Harold A. Cross, notes that his decision ‘was a courageous move; as it was widely known at the time that the 155th was nearly certain to mobilize for overseas duty in the near future.’ Colleagues like Attorney Brian Montague were not surprised: ‘Despite love of wife and children,’ Leslie Southwick volunteered for a line combat unit over a safer one ‘because of a commitment to service to country above self-interest.’



“In August of 2004, Leslie Southwick’s unit mobilized in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. His commanding officer states that he distinguished himself at forward operating bases near Najaf. Another officer, Lieutenant Colonel Norman Gene Hortman, Jr., described his service in Iraq:



Service in a combat zone is stressful and challenging, often times bringing out the best or worst in a person. Leslie Southwick endured mortar and rocket attacks, travel through areas plagued with IEDs, extremes in temperature, harsh living conditions . . . –the typical stuff of Iraq. He shouldered a heavy load of regular JAG Officer duties, which he performed excellently. He also took on the task of handling the claims of the numerous Iraqi civilians who had been injured or had property losses due to accidents involving the U.S. military . . . This involved long days of interviewing Iraqi civilian claimants, many of whom were children, widows and elderly people to determine whether the U.S. Military could pay their claims. Leslie always listened to these Iraqi claimants patiently and treated them with the utmost respect and kindness. He did this not just out of a sense of duty but because he is a genuinely good and caring person. His attitude left a very positive impression on all those that Leslie came in contact with, especially, the Iraqi civilians he helped. This in turn helped ease tensions in our unit’s area of operations . . . and ultimately, saved American lives.



“Lieutenant Colonel Hortman concludes that Leslie Southwick ‘has the right stuff’ for the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals: ‘profound intelligence, good judgment, broad experience, and an unblemished reputation.’ He adds, ‘I know him and can say these things without reservation. Anyone who says otherwise simply does not know him.’ Stuart Taylor writes in the National Journal that Leslie Southwick ‘wears a distinctive badge of courageous service to his country,’ and that he ‘is a professionally well-qualified and personally admirable’ nominee to the Fifth Circuit.



“Judge Southwick does not seek thanks or notoriety or charity for his military and other civic service. He asks to be judged fairly--to be judged on the facts, to be judged on his record. It is the same standard he has applied to others as a judge, a military officer, a teacher, and a mentor.



“It is a standard for which he is well known and admired. By that standard, he is superbly fit to continue serving his country, this time on the Fifth Circuit. His colleagues know this, as do his home-state senators.



“His peers with the State Bar know this; they honored him as one of the state’s finest jurists, declaring him ‘an example of judicial excellence; a leader in advancing the quality and integrity of justice; and a person of high ideals, character and integrity.’



“The American Bar Association knows this; it has twice given him its highest rating, ‘well-qualified,’ and in so doing found him to be exemplary in the areas of ‘compassion,’ ‘open-mindedness,’ ‘freedom from bias and commitment to equal justice under law.’



“Even Democrats on the Judiciary Committee know this; just last fall all of them—again, all of them—looked at his record and approved him for a lifetime position on the federal bench.



“But it appears Democrats on the committee may now apply a different standard to Judge Southwick. A member of the Democratic Leadership who serves on the committee states that what is ‘determinative’ is whether a judicial nominee is perceived to be fair.



“The notion that perception rather than reality will be dispositive in evaluating a nominee is at odds with the principle of the rule of law. And it is not fair to manufacture a false impression of someone through insinuation and innuendo and then use that falsehood to defeat him. In the case of Judge Southwick, the sudden ‘perception’ about his fairness is driven by those who do not even know him, and it is disproved by his long record and by those who know him well.



“All nominees deserve to be treated with dignity. But a selfless public servant and veteran like Leslie Southwick deserves to be treated with respect. And it is disrespectful for the same Members of the Judiciary Committee who unanimously supported his nomination last fall to now turn around and unanimously oppose him. The only change in Judge Southwick’s credentials between then and now is that the American Bar Association, hardly a conservative group, has increased its rating of him from ‘well-qualified’ to ‘unanimously well-qualified.’



“A party-line committee vote would not be a ‘perceived’ flip-flop or a ‘perceived’ injustice, but an actual one. It would make clear that despite the promise of a new start on judicial nominations, the Senate Majority will, when push comes to shove, treat judicial nominees unfairly based only on a manufactured perception.



“This sad standard is not only unjust but unwise. As we all know, once established, precedents in the Senate are difficult to undo. Establishing a ‘third party perception’ standard on the Southwick nomination will be bad for this Congress and future ones, regardless of who is in the White House and which home-state senators support a nomination.



“Because such a decision will affect us all—and for the worse—it is appropriate for the Senate collectively to express its view on whether it wishes to go down this path, whether it wishes to undo the good work and good will that brought us back from the precipice a few years ago. It is for that purpose that I have offered the Sense of the Senate on the Southwick nomination. I encourage my colleagues to review it, to review the record, and to think long and hard about what they want to do.”



###



The Kids First Act

August 1, 2007



‘Our alternative will add 1.3 million new kids to the SCHIP program by 2012. By contrast, the Finance Committee bill actually begins reducing kids’ coverage in 2012, and results in fewer children having SCHIP coverage in 2017’



Washington, D.C. –Senator Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and Republican Leader Mitch McConnell introduced an alternative to the SCHIP legislation on Wednesday, titled the Kids First Act. The alternative proposal would focus the program on low-income children without raising taxes. Leader McConnell made the following statement Wednesday regarding the Kids First Act.



“The State Children’s Health Insurance Program was created to target the health-care needs of poor children whose families made too much to be eligible for Medicaid, but were still in danger of not being able to afford private health insurance.



“SCHIP is in many ways successful, as last year, 6.6 million children had health care coverage thanks to it, including more than 50,000 in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. From 1996 to 2005, the rate of children living without health insurance in America dropped by 25 percent.



“So as the Senate turned to debate the reauthorization of this federal/state partnership, I had hoped that all of my colleagues would focus on SCHIP’s true goal: covering children.



“Unfortunately, that’s not what the Finance Committee’s bill does. This bill is a dramatic departure from current SCHIP law that will significantly raise taxes, increase spending and lead to government-run health care.



“At a time when the people of America have made clear that they want us to reduce government spending, Democrats are going to spend $112 billion of the taxpayers’ money. And part of this increase will go toward people that SCHIP was never meant to cover, as this proposal will allow more adults to piggyback onto a children’s health program.



“So Senators Lott, Kyl, Gregg, Bunning and I have proposed an alternative measure I hope all of my colleagues will consider. Our Kids First Act will refocus SCHIP to help the people it was designed to help: low-income children.



“The Kids First Act will reauthorize SCHIP for five years, and would ensure that children enrolled in SCHIP stay covered by adding $14 billion in funding above and beyond the baseline SCHIP budget.



“Our alternative will add 1.3 million new kids to the SCHIP program by 2012. By contrast, the Finance Committee bill actually begins reducing kids’ coverage in 2012, and results in fewer children having SCHIP coverage in 2017.



“Our alternative also provides $400 million over the next five years for states to spend on outreach and enrollment for low-income children who are eligible but not on SCHIP, so we can enroll them. This money will help guarantee that SCHIP dollars go towards the low-income kids the program is meant to help.



“The Kids First Act takes several measures to make health insurance more affordable and cost-effective. For instance, it encourages premium assistance to aid parents in buying private health insurance for their children.



“It also includes the Small Business Health Plan legislation we considered in the 109th Congress. Of the 20 million working Americans who do not have health insurance, nearly half work in firms of 25 or fewer.



“Small Business Health Plans would allow those firms to band together across state lines, increase their bargaining power and afford better health-care coverage for their employees.



“Finally, our alternative ensures that the taxpayers’ dollars are spent appropriately by decreasing the number of adults who can take advantage of the program.



“While considerably less expensive to the taxpayers than the Finance Committee’s bill, it’s worth noting that many states, including Kentucky, would fare better next year under the Kids First Act than under the committee bill.



“Our plan is fiscally responsible and focuses government assistance on those who really need it. It reauthorizes and improves upon a program that works, instead of transforming it into a license for higher taxes, higher spending, and another giant leap toward government-run health care.



“It can receive a presidential signature, and it deserves this Senate’s support.”



###