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WASHINGTON, DC -- U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced today that he and Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) placed their resolutions of disapproval regarding the Obama Administration’s anti-coal regulations on the Senate’s calendar, meaning they could come up for a vote as early as this week.

Sen. McConnell and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) filed a resolution of disapproval under the Congressional Review Act (CRA) last month that is designed to stop the White House from imposing anti-jobs regulations that attack new coal-fired energy plants and their workers, while Capito and Senator Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) filed a separate CRA that would prevent the imposition of anti-jobs regulations that attack existing plants and their workers.

The Congressional Review Act provides Congress the ability to eliminate onerous regulations imposed by the executive branch through an expedited procedure for consideration in the Senate.

“These regulations make it clearer than ever that the President and his Administration have gone too far, and that Congress should act to stop this regulatory assault,” Sen. McConnell said. “Here’s what is lost in this Administration’s crusade for ideological purity: the livelihoods of our coal miners and their families. Folks who haven’t done anything to deserve a ‘war’ being declared upon them.”

“EPA’s regulations fail to consider the livelihoods of countless American families and communities who cannot afford fewer jobs and higher energy prices,” Sen. Capito said. ”The Administration bypassed Congress entirely when it developed this rule, and these resolutions of disapproval will give Senators an opportunity to approve or disapprove of these far-reaching regulations.”

If both CRAs are enacted into law, they would eliminate both pillars of the costly power plan even if portions of the plan have already gone into effect.

The Obama Administration’s costly power plan would consist of two major phases of implementation:

  • First, the Administration has proposed and finalized a regulation that attacks existing power plants. In effect, this regulation would result in the closures of coal-fired plants throughout the country.
  • Secondly, the finalized regulation would limit the construction of new coal-fired plants. This portion of the costly power plan would effectively ban coal-fired power plants from being built in the future, thus, eliminating the future potential for coal jobs in America.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and U.S. Senator Bob Casey (D-PA) announced today that their legislation to address the rise of prenatal opioid abuse and infants suffering from opioid withdrawal was approved by the House of Representatives. The bipartisan Protecting Our Infants Act now goes to the President for his signature.

This measure 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 and help improve their public health response to this epidemic.

Nationwide, there has been a staggering 300-percent increase in the number of infants diagnosed with newborn withdrawal since 2000. In Kentucky, that number grew by an almost 3,000 percent -- from 29 infants identified as suffering from drug withdrawal annually to more than 950, and experts believe there are even more cases that go unreported. In Pennsylvania, the number of addicted births covered by Medicaid rose from 883 in 2010 to 1,122 in 2012, according to the Department of Public Welfare.

“Tragically, prescription drug abuse and heroin use has skyrocketed in Kentucky and in other states across the nation, and people, 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 dependent on drugs and suffering is intolerable,” Senator McConnell said. “I am encouraged that Congress has approved the legislation I sponsored with Senator Casey, and I urge the President to quickly sign it into law.”

“Sending this legislation to the President’s desk is an important step forward for vulnerable children who are born dependent on opioids,” Senator Casey said. “Our nation is experiencing a crisis in terms of opioid addiction. It’s incumbent upon members of Congress to work in a bipartisan manner to solve this challenge. I’m pleased that this legislation will now become law and look forward to continuing to press for solutions to this challenge.”

Congresswoman Katherine Clark (MA-05) and Congressman Steve Stivers (OH-15) introduced the measure in the House of Representatives. The Protecting Our Infants Act is supported by the March of Dimes, American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Veterans Day

‘Of course there’s much more to be done. Veterans deserve the very best, and the V.A. crisis will not be resolved easily or quickly. But working together, there’s a lot we can do for the men and women who risk their all for their country.’

November 10, 2015

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

“Like many of my colleagues, I plan to commemorate Veteran’s Day with the people I’m honored to represent here in the Senate. I’ll join Kentuckians at a ceremony in Shelbyville’s Veteran’s Memorial Park.

“Hands will be put to heart as the Star Spangled Banner is played. Heads will bow in reverence as 106 names are read aloud.

“Each, a Kentuckian who made the ultimate sacrifice in service of others.

“Each, a reminder of our enduring debt to America’s men and women in uniform.

“I’m proud to represent the nearly 330,000 Kentuckians who’ve served in the Armed Forces. I’m also proud to represent the many thousands of soldiers and their families who reside in or hail from our great commonwealth — whether at Fort Knox, Fort Campbell, the Blue Grass Army Depot, or beyond.

“I recently had the chance to meet some of Kentucky’s brave soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines who currently serve in Afghanistan and Iraq.

“Sadly, a NATO helicopter had just crashed in Kabul, killing five people, including two American servicemembers. I was honored to take part in a prayer service led by a chaplain from Lexington.

“What an incredibly humbling moment it was. The tragic crash, a stark reminder of the incredible danger our servicemen and women face every day — and a stark reminder of what all Americans owe them.

“Veterans should know that they have many champions fighting for them here in the Senate.

“One of them is Senator Isakson, the Chair of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee.

“Under his leadership, the committee has actively sought to do right by the men and women who never hesitate to do right by us. He’s sent important legislation to the Senate floor that we’ve been able to pass on a bipartisan basis — and that the President has signed into law.

“One law we passed would improve the Veterans Choice Program for instance, while another — the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention for American Veterans Act — would help reduce the tragedies that befall too many of our heroes and the heartbreak that befalls too many of their families.

“Important Veterans Affairs Committee oversight has also been brought to bear on an agency that’s lost the trust of many it serves: the V.A.

“Of course there’s much more to be done. Veterans deserve the very best, and the V.A. crisis will not be resolved easily or quickly. But working together, there’s a lot we can do for the men and women who risk their all for their country.”