Mitch McConnell was heckled with chants of 'retire' at the annual Fancy Farm picnic in Kentucky days after he froze during a Capitol Hill press conference

Mitch McConnell
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.
  • Mitch McConnell was heckled at the annual Fancy Farm picnic in Kentucky this past weekend.
  • Booing is not unusual at Fancy Farm, but McConnell spoke after a much publicized health scare.
  • The veteran GOP leader has committed to serving in his leadership role through the 2024 elections.

As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Saturday stepped onstage at Fancy Farm — the premier political event in Kentucky — he was repeatedly met with jeers to "retire."

Such a reception is not unusual for McConnell, one of the most polarizing figures in US politics.

And the reception is definitely not unusual at the Fancy Farm picnic, where Democrats and Republicans have their most fervent supporters cheer and boo candidates from opposing parties during the oft-raucous event.

But McConnell is at a political crossroads, as the 81-year-old veteran lawmaker fights to flip the Senate back into GOP hands after losing control of the chamber after the dual Senate runoff elections in Georgia in January 2021. And while McConnell has steered the Republican Senate caucus since 2007, questions about his longevity as a party leader escalated after he froze mid-sentence during a Capitol Hill press conference in late July.

McConnell, first elected to the Senate in 1984, was reelected to seventh term in 2020, so he isn't facing voters again this year or next.

But during McConnell's speech at Fancy Farm, he went into attack mode against Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear of Kentucky, who's seeking reelection to a second term against GOP state Attorney General Daniel Cameron.

"We are dominant, but we haven't completed the job. We haven't completed the job," McConnell said of the rise of the Republican Party in the onetime Democratic-heavy state. "What Frankfort needs … is a governor who wants to go in the same direction. It's the last big step to make in our state."

McConnell lit into Beshear, criticizing him for his support of COVID-19 restrictions and remarking that the moderate governor "speaks liberal with a California accent," while also trying to link him to President Joe Biden — an unpopular figure in the Bluegrass State.

While McConnell was making many of his more pointed political statements, the boos continued.

Similar to Sen. Dianne Feinstein — the 90-year-old California Democrat whose previous monthslong health-related absence blunted her party's efforts to fill critical court vacancies — the advanced age of many of the country's top leaders has come into heavier scrutiny in recent years.

Biden, 80, is running for reelection to a second term, despite the reluctance of some Democratic voters who may support his policies but express concern about his age.

Many of the country's top political leaders, as explored in Insider's "Red, White, and Gray" series, often point to their tenure in office as a key reason for their effectiveness. And they're not ceding the spotlight anytime soon.

Despite his health scare, McConnell's office said that he remained committed to serving as the party's leader through the 2024 elections.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/7yeRtlN

No comments

Powered by Blogger.