Political Hotsheet
February 1, 2009 11:21 AM

McConnell Says President Should Get Involved

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said he “doubt[s]” the economic stimulus package passed by the House has a chance of passing as is in the Senate.

On “Face the Nation,” McConnell explained that the “Senate is a very different institution” than the House of Representatives and that the majority cannot force bills past the minority.

McConnell indicated that he thinks it is time for President Obama to get involved. “The president indicated that he wanted this to be a bipartisan proposal,” the senator said. “I must say I am surely say that I am proud that he is embarrassed by the product that came out of the house.”

The leader told Bob Schieffer, “I think we need to exercise some discipline here and I think it may be time for the President to get a hold of these Democrats in the Senate and House who have rather significant majorities and shake them a little bit and say look, let’s do this the right way.”

Mr. McConnell stressed that any bill he would support must be “timely, temporary and targeted.” He stressed that the Republican agenda would focus on the housing crisis and providing tax rebates to middle and low income Americans.

He used examples to stress how expensive this stimulus package is saying, “if you started the day Jesus Christ was born and you spent a million dollars every day since then you still would not have spent a trillion dollars.” He added that, “it is more than we have spent on all the wars since 9/11.”

Finally, the leader said he thinks a reasonable agreement can be met and that a stimulus package in one form or another will pass and be implemented. Asked about the threat of a filibuster, Mr. McConnell said a super majority is needed but that the bill will be not purposely be held up.”

Tags:
Mitch McConnell ,
Senate ,
stimulus
Topics:
Face The Nation
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by February 1, 2009 3:42 PM EST
Hey, someone please tell the GOP they lost the election and no longer get to dictate terms or policies. Their obstructionist tactics merely further delay progress and are not helpful. We, the People are interested in actually solving our problems. The GOP''s still only interested in blaming others...for everything
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by cosmotopper February 1, 2009 3:34 PM EST
rkkirch: As long as we continue to play the partisan blame game, the corrupt leadership (on both sides) which put us in this crisis will remain in power. The evidence is abundant and easily gathered to show that both parties created this disaster. We must require of our President that he fulfill his promise to fix what is wrong, regardless of who did it, or who may be embarrassed by it. Phil Gramm wrote the legislation, and Bill Clinton signed it. Treasury Secretary Rubin resigned a few days later to go cash in with Citicorp. The record is obscene, and we as voters stood by silently allowing it to happen. Now we need to fix it.
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by cosmotopper February 1, 2009 3:27 PM EST
It is tragic that President Obama has the trust of the American people, that he said in his inaugural address that the time had come to face difficult choices, and yet in this most critical test, he is allowing the corrupt status quo to prevail in defining the steps necessary to salvage our economy, and our future. Do we really need to sell 15-million new cars this year? No. Do we need to protect banks who''s business is making it possible for people to buy things they can''t afford? No! Do we need to reset our priorities around productivity, and recovering a positive balance of trade? Absolutely! Do we need to prosecute financial executives who deliberately gamed the system so they could skim off exorbitant bonus compensation? Absolutely! We must disenthrall ourselves, and only them shall we save our country.
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by rkkirch February 1, 2009 3:19 PM EST
Senator McConnell: Where were you Pres. Bush was throwing away a trillion dollars on Iraq?
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