Ahoy! Set Sail to Owning the Libs on the Townhall Cruise
Well, Look Who Addressed That Unite the Kingdom Rally Last Week
CBS News Host Tried Goading Two Medal of Honor Recipients Into Bashing America....
All Stephen Colbert Had To Do Was Not Suck; He Couldn’t Do It
Abortion Advocates Went From 'Safe, Legal, and Rare' to Emotional Blackmail in the...
Speaking the Same Language
DEI Is Not Disappearing. New York Is Just Renaming It.
The Doomsday Scenario Quietly Died. Nobody Covered It.
Let’s Bring Back the Sounds of Our Childhood Summers
Here Are the Races To Watch in Tomorrow's Texas Run-Offs
U.S. Forces Launch Self-Defense Strikes Against Iran
Trump Mega-Supporter Dies After Brutal Assault
Democrats Use Fallen Heroes As Props To Bash Trump On Memorial Day
Florida Trio Gets Prison Time for $2.2M Medicare Fraud and Money Laundering Conspiracy
That Blood of Heroes Never Dies
Tipsheet

McConnell Previews Next Session: “We’re Going to Function”

McConnell Previews Next Session: “We’re Going to Function”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) – who handily and impressively won re-election last night – spoke to reporters today about how the federal government will function after Republicans retake majority-control of the US Senate next session.

Advertisement

“[The American people] are obviously not satisfied with the direction of the administration,” he began. “But at the same time, I’ve heard a lot about dysfunction in Washington.”

And therefore, he said, he’s already been in contact with leaders from both parties to smooth the transition.

“Earlier today I got a call from the president, [Sen.] Reid and the Speaker – and Ted Cruz too, which I thought you’d be interested in,” he said, “all of whom I think have the view we ought to…look for areas of agreement.”

At which point he gently reminded the public that Republican control of both chambers of Congress does not necessarily augur gridlock and partisanship. Specifically, he invoked the fact that President Ronald Reagan and House Speaker Tip O’Neill worked together in the 1980s to save Social Security “for a generation,” and President Bill Clinton and Congressional Republicans successfully passed welfare reform and a balanced budget the following decade.

But that cannot happen, he cautioned, unless the Senate returns to regular order.

Advertisement

“From an institutional point of view, the Senate needs to be fixed,” he said. “The committees need to be relevant again.”

He also mentioned several areas where Congressional Republicans and the president can work together to move the country forward. He explicitly mentioned passing the Keystone XL pipeline, expanding international trade agreements, and securing tax reform as well within the realm of possibilities. Moreover, he also left the door open to repealing certain elements of the Affordable Care Act – namely, the medical device tax and the individual mandate.

“There are obviously going to be areas of disagreement…that’s not unusual since the founding of the country,” he said. “But we’re going to function.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement