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Recent Press Releases

Following Agreement on Budget Numbers, Senate to Consider Bipartisan Troop Funding Bill

These brave men and women aren’t poker chips in some Washington political game, they are the sisters and fathers and daughters and neighbors who voluntarily and selflessly put themselves in harm’s way so that we might live free.’

November 4, 2015

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

“We live in a time of diverse and challenging global threats.

“It’s a time when we see ISIL consolidating its gains in Iraq and Syria.

“It’s a time when we see the forces of Assad marching alongside Iranian soldiers and Hezbollah militias.

“It’s a time when we see Russian aircraft flying above them in support.

“And it’s a time when commanders tell us that additional resources are required to ensure the safety and preparedness of our troops.

“I think it’s time to finally support the men and women who volunteer to protect us.

“The last excuse not to do so — the setting of a topline budget number — has been cleared away. There’s no reason our colleagues shouldn’t join us in moving forward now.

“These brave men and women aren’t poker chips in some Washington political game, they are the sisters and fathers and daughters and neighbors who voluntarily and selflessly put themselves in harm’s way so that we might live free.

“They are the men and women we will salute this month on Veteran’s Day.

“It’s not enough just to support those who defend us then. We need to support them now.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding Senator Ernst’s resolution of disapproval on the ‘Waters of the U.S.’ rule:

“The Administration’s so-called ‘Waters of the U.S.’ regulation would grant federal bureaucrats dominion over nearly every piece of land that has ever touched a pothole, ditch, or puddle at some point. It would force the Americans who live there to ask federal bureaucrats for permission to do just about anything with their own property.

“We’re not talking about just a few acres falling under bureaucratic control here and there. According to an analysis by the American Farm Bureau, we’re talking about centralized federal control extending to nearly 92 percent of Wisconsin, 95 percent of California, 98 percent of New York, 99 percent of Pennsylvania and — if you can believe this — 100 percent of Virginia.

“This isn’t some clean-water regulation, it’s an unprecedented federal power grab that clumsily — and poorly — pretends to masquerade as one.

“It’s obvious why Waters of the U.S. would be a left-winger’s dream.

“It’s equally obvious why Democratic leaders would want to pretend this rule is about clean water, rather than admit what it’s really about.

“Because the true purpose and scope of this regulation is basically indefensible.

“Thirty-one states have already filed suit against it.

“Two federal courts have already ruled that it is likely illegal.

“And one court found that the rule was so flawed that it had to be the result of ‘a process that is inexplicable, arbitrary, and devoid of a reasoned process.’

“That’s why we considered the bipartisan Federal Water Quality Protection Act yesterday.

“The legislation is a bipartisan and it’s simple. It says that the EPA’s resources should be used to actually protect the lakes and rivers we all cherish, rather than for the Administration to launch arbitrary ideological attacks on middle-class homeowners and family farms.

“This bipartisan legislation would have required America’s clean-water rules to be based on the kind of scientific, collaborative process the American people expect — not some ‘arbitrary’ or ‘inexplicable’ process that’s ‘devoid’ of reason like we had with WOTUS, but a balanced process that actually takes the views of those it affects into serious consideration.

“I thank the Senator from Wyoming for his impressive work on the bill. A bipartisan majority of the Senate voted to support it. But most Democrats chose an ideological power grab over sensible clean-water rules yesterday.

“To many Kentuckians, this regulation feels like just the latest in a sustained Obama Administration regulatory assault on their families.

“Well, the Senate is going to pursue another avenue today to protect the Middle Class from this unfair regulatory attack.

“Our colleague from Iowa has introduced a measure that would allow Congress to move forward despite the Democrat filibuster. It would overturn the regulation in its entirety. A majority of the Senate voted to support this bill yesterday. We’ll vote on final passage later today. And because this measure cannot be filibustered, we expect it to pass.

“I ask my colleagues who voted against bipartisan, common-sense clean-water legislation yesterday to think differently today — work with us to protect the Middle Class instead of defending an ‘inexplicable, arbitrary’ regulation that’s probably illegal and almost certainly violates the Clean Water Act.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today congratulating Governor-elect Matt Bevin and other incoming officeholders on their wins last night:

“Let me begin this morning by congratulating Kentucky’s Governor-elect and the entire Republican ticket on a big win last night.

“I remember when the Republican nomination was hardly worth having in Kentucky, so it says something when we see spirited competition for it. The Governor-elect and I certainly are no strangers to spirited competition, but we’re also conservative Kentuckians happy to see change come to Frankfort.

“Yesterday’s election was a statement about where the people of my state want to see us headed, and it’s not down the road of government control and big labor. They want fresh ideas, growth, innovation, opportunity, and greater control over their own lives and destinies. They want a change in direction. Here’s something they certainly don’t want: more of this Administration’s top-down, Washington knows best approach to everything from health care to how best to use our natural resources.”