Mitch McConnell (r-KY) desperately tried to
rewrite history by implying that President Obama and Senate
Democrats were responsible for the campaign of dysfunction and
obstruction that he orchestrated.
McConnell was asked on CNN what the message was that
voters sent to Washington by electing a repugican run Congress. Sen.
McConnell answered, “I think the American people had two messages. They
were certainly upset with their president, and wanted to express that
opposition to what he’s been doing. But they also wanted to do something
about the dysfunction in Washington. I’m not sure that they knew who
was responsible for it, but they want it to stop, and so I think the
message from the American people is that they would like to see a right
of center responsible wingnut repugican majority. That’s what the
Speaker and I intend to provide, and hopefully we’ll have enough
followers to do that.”
He implied to CNN that
Obama and the Senate Democrats were responsible for not getting things
done. The truth is that McConnell blocked or slowed down hundreds of
bills while serving as Minority Leader. Fact checkers who limit the
definition of obstruction to only filibusters are ignoring the wide
variety of procedural tactics that McConnell used to grind the Senate to
a halt, and turn votes that should have taken days into a weeks long
process.
Mitch McConnell has spent most of the Obama
presidency slowing down the Senate and blocking any progress, but now
that the Kentucky repugican is the new Senate Majority Leader he has
completely forgotten the past. McConnell is trying to fool the American
people by selling himself as a man of action that is interested in
getting things done.
Both McConnell and CNN tried to spin the repugican pickup of red state Senate seats into a national repugican
mandate when the reality is that the playing field for the 2014 midterms
was heavily tilted in favor of the repugican cabal. It is faulty
reasoning to assume that one region of the country speaks for the entire
nation.
The repugicans only have 54 votes in the Senate, and
will be facing off with a president who is ready to use his veto pen.
The reality is that it is going to be nearly impossible for McConnell to
pass anything substantial without the support of Democrats and Obama.
McConnell tried to blame Democrats for his campaign of obstruction, but
it will be his job on the line when repugicans fail to pass legislation
under his leadership.
It is this dynamic that will lead to Mitch McConnell having a very short stint as Senate Majority Leader.
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