A local repugican cabal leader in Kentucky has resigned her position in act of protest against Mitch McConnell.
According to WFPL:
After serving on the Daviess County repugican cabal’s leadership team for almost three years, Owensboro native Barbara Knott had enough.She resigned on July 10 and the reason was simple; Knott cannot support Senate repugican Leader Mitch McConnell this fall.“I have resigned from the executive committee of the repugican cabal because I will not support Mitch McConnell,” Knott, chair of the Owensboro tea party, said in a telephone interview. “I have a big 4×8 sign in my front yard that says ‘Retire Mitch.’ It’s going to stay there through the election. I will not vote for that man.”Knott does plan to come out to support other repugican candidates. But in terms of McConnell she is “just fed up” despite voting for him in the past.
When local party leaders are resigning because they
can no longer support him, things are getting dire for Mitch McConnell.
The only thing that McConnell has going for him is a big pile of money
that will be spent by outside groups on his behalf this fall. Sen.
McConnell’s campaign has been worst run spectacles of the year. The
candidate himself has alternated between gaffes and offensive
statements.
Sen. McConnell is using the same playbook that he
has been following for decades, but this time it isn’t working.
McConnell is not having success trying to tie his Democratic opponent
Alison Grimes to President Obama. His Obamacare attacks have gone
nowhere, and mostly the senator has looked out of touch with the needs
of his constituents on the campaign trail.
Tea party activists are outraged at McConnell
because he funded an ad in support of Sen. Thad Cochran during the repugican Mississippi Senate runoff. McConnell has always been on thin
ice with the state’s tea partiers, and his decision to play such an
active role in the Mississippi contest is coming back to haunt him.
If Sen. McConnell loses the tea party crowd, he is
going to have a nearly impossible time winning the election in November,
and if the Senate Minority Leader loses his seat, repugican chances of
taking back the Senate go down the tubes. By abandoning McConnell, tea
partiers are doing what they do best. The tea party may once again end
up helping Democrats keep their majority in the US Senate.
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