Click HERE for Senator McConnell’s Coronavirus Response Portal

Recent Press Releases

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor outlining the week ahead:

“Thursday’s vote to open this debate on trade was important for our country. It brought Middle Class families one step closer to the increased American exports and American trade jobs our economy needs.

“It took a lot of work to get us this far. It’s going to take a lot more to bring these American jobs over the finish line.

“Cooperation from both sides of the aisle will be critical to doing so.

“For instance, we were ready to be in session on Friday to get more of our work done on trade and allow Senators from both parties the chance to offer amendments.

“All the unnecessary delaying and filibustering we’ve seen has left us with less time for debate and amendments on this bill.

“It cost the Senate over a week in lost time.

“We’ve been hearing some interesting suggestions from our friends about their level of cooperation in the minority. I would certainly agree that putting those words into action would be really good news for our country. This week, our colleagues will have the perfect opportunity to prove they’re serious.

“They’ll have a chance to turn the page completely from the Far Left’s strategy of wasting time on trade for its own sake — on an issue that we all know is President Obama’s top domestic legislative priority.

“The Senate will finish its work on trade this week, and we will remain in session as long as it takes to do so.

“I know we became used to hearing these types of statements in the past. But Senators should know that I’m quite serious. I would advise against making any sort of travel arrangements until the path forward becomes clear.

“It’s also my intention this week to address the Highways issue and to responsibly extend the expiring provisions of FISA. The quickest way to get there would be to cooperate across the aisle so we can pass the trade bill in a thoughtful but efficient manner.

“I know that members on both sides are going to want a chance to offer amendments to this bill. They should. I encourage them to do so, both Republicans and Democrats. Now is the time for Senators from both parties to offer those amendments and work with the bill managers to set up votes.

“This is where our Democrat friends’ rhetoric about working cooperatively in the minority will be put to the test.

“The more our colleagues across the aisle try to throw sand in the gears this week, the less opportunity members — including members of their own party — will have for amendments. 

“So I hope they won’t. We have a lot to get done, and now one less week to do so.

“That’s why I encourage members of both parties to bring their amendments to the bill managers, and work to get them pending.

“Let’s process amendments from both sides.

“And then let’s pass this bill so we can boost American jobs and exports by knocking down unfair barriers to the things we make and grow right here, in America.”

McConnell Honors Nation’s Law Enforcement Officers

‘Sadly, the occasion of National Police Week is also the time when we pay tribute to the brave and honorable peace officers who have fallen in the line of duty over the last year.’

May 14, 2015

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor celebrating National Police Week 2015:

“This week we welcome thousands of law-enforcement officers for National Police Week 2015. It’s a time to pay tribute to all the men and women who serve in Federal, State, and local law enforcement across America. And it’s a good time for those of us who benefit from the shield of protection that they provide—and that’s all of us—to express our gratitude.

“Police officers are here to rededicate themselves to the pursuit of justice and to honor fallen officers. We are proud to have them here in Washington.

“I want to especially recognize the many men and women who protect and serve as peace officers in my home State of Kentucky. Today I had the pleasure of meeting with some of Kentucky’s finest. I want to personally thank them for courageously risking their lives in service of people across the Commonwealth.

“Sadly, the occasion of National Police Week is also the time when we pay tribute to the brave and honorable peace officers who have fallen in the line of duty over the last year. And so I want to remember and say a few words about Kentucky’s own Deputy Sheriff Ernest T. Franklin, of the Barren County Sheriff’s Office, who died on April 2, 2014.

“Deputy Sheriff Franklin was killed in an automobile crash on Kentucky Route 90, just west of Glasgow. He was 58 years old and had served with the sheriff’s office for seven years.

“Friends and coworkers recall him as a friendly man who always had a kind word for everybody. He worshipped at Hopewell Baptist Church, volunteered at the local community center and soup kitchen, and was, by all accounts, an excellent chef.

“Deputy Sheriff Franklin put his life on the line every day to protect his fellow Kentuckians. I want to extend my deepest condolences to his family and all who knew and loved him.

“As Deputy Sheriff Ernest T. Franklin is mourned in Barren County, in Frankfort, the Kentucky State Police have created their own unique way to memorialize their fallen fellow officers. This week they unveiled a new statue called ‘The Trooper,’ a figure of a Kentucky State Trooper cast in bronze and 10 feet tall, at the Kentucky State Police Academy.

“The statue is in tribute to members of the Kentucky State Police who have given their lives in the line of duty—that’s 27 troopers and officers. It is quite an inspirational sight: a lone figure in uniform striding forward, ready to defend the property, dignity, and lives of his fellow Kentuckians.

“I know my colleagues in the U.S. Senate join me in holding the deepest admiration and respect for the many brave law-enforcement officers across Kentucky and the Nation. Theirs is both an honorable profession and a dangerous one. It is also a necessary one, because the peace and order of a civil society that we all take for granted could not exist without them.

“Kentucky is grateful for our law-enforcement officers’ service. And we are grateful for the service of Deputy Sheriff Ernest T. Franklin.

“On a related note, I was proud to cosponsor and see to Senate passage this year of the National Blue Alert Act. The bill will establish a national Blue Alert system within the U.S. Department of Justice to help catch those criminals who kill, harm, or threaten law-enforcement officers. The Blue Alert system will be similar to what the Amber Alert system does for abducted children.

“Should law-enforcement officers be killed, seriously injured, threatened, or go missing while in the line of duty, this system would be utilized to widely disseminate information to help identify and apprehend potential suspects.

“Blue Alert will help bring to justice those who harm our police officers, and hopefully help deter future violence. I was pleased to see the House passed the bill earlier this week. And with this bill, we will help protect those who put their lives on the line to protect all of us.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor regarding 21st century American trade agenda:

“I was glad to see our Democrat friends accept our path forward on trade yesterday.
 
“Under our plan, the Senate will avoid the poison pills that had been floated in favor of the very type of bipartisan approach we’ve been advocating for all along. It follows regular order. It allows Senators to express themselves without endangering more American trade jobs for the people we represent.
 
“So this is good news.
 
“It’s good news for bipartisanship.
 
“It’s good news for a new Congress that’s getting back to work.
 
“And it’s good news for America’s Middle Class.
 
“The people we represent deserve the kind of good jobs we could secure by knocking down unfair trade barriers. One estimate shows that trade agreements with Europe and the Pacific could support as many as 1.4 million additional jobs in our country. In Kentucky, they could support more than 18,000 additional jobs.
 
“But we can’t get there without first passing the kind of legislation we’ll vote to open debate on this afternoon.

“It’s the only way to enact the clear standards and guidelines our trade negotiators need to move forward, and that Congress needs to appropriately assert its authority in this area.
 
“So yesterday’s agreement is significant.
 
“I want to thank Chairman Hatch and his negotiating partners for the good, bipartisan cooperation that got us here.
 
“I’d like to thank the President too. No, you’re not hearing things. President Obama has done his country a service by taking on his base and pushing back on some of the more ridiculous rhetoric we’ve heard. He was right to remind everyone that ‘you don’t make change through slogans’ or ‘ignoring realities.’ He should be recognized for it.
 
“The American people sent divided government to Washington. But it doesn’t mean they don’t want us to work together on issues where we can agree.
 
“On this issue, we do agree.
 
“Today’s vote moves us closer to achieving a positive outcome for the people we represent.
 
“And I look forward to continued positive engagement from both the President and members of both parties as we move forward on these bills.