McConnell was upfront with Politico about his plans,
Mitch McConnell has a game plan to confront
President Barack Obama with a stark choice next year: Accept bills
reining in the administration’s policies, or veto them and risk a
government shutdown.
In an extensive interview, the typically reserved
McConnell laid out his clearest thinking yet of how he would lead the
Senate if repugicans gain control of the chamber. The emerging
strategy: Attach riders to spending bills that would limit Obama
policies on everything from the environment to health care, consider
using an arcane budget tactic to circumvent Democratic filibusters and
force the president to “move to the center” if he wants to get any new
legislation through Congress.
The repugicans tried to play this game with President
Obama last year, and it nearly destroyed their cabal. McConnell is
clinging to the idea that the president will cave, but Obama has no
reason to give repugicans anything. He will be closing in on the end of
his term by the time repugicans would take over the Senate in January
2015.
A prolonged government shutdown in 2015 or 2016
would be a disaster for the repugican cabal. Obama will not be blamed
for a government shutdown. The repugicans will take the heat, and the
damage would intense if they pursued this tactic in the middle of a
presidential campaign.
A shutdown would also help likely Democratic nominee
Hillary Clinton because it would hand her the argument for why she must
be elected president, and Democrats need to take over Congress.
It takes a great deal of hubris for McConnell to be
planning how he is going to shutdown Obama for the next two years, while
he is the middle of a reelection campaign that he could easily lose.
McConnell is completely clueless. He continues to
obsess over President Obama while ignoring the voters in Kentucky. Mitch
McConnell demonstrated why repugicans should not be given control of
the Senate, and why he deserves to lose his seat this November.
The easiest way to solve all of these problems is for Kentucky voters to retire Mitch McConnell.
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