National
Review Online
Thursday,
August 31, 2023
Mitch
McConnell is truly a legend of the U.S. Senate. He’s been one of the most
effective leaders in memory, he deeply understands and cares about the
institution, and he’s had an outsized influence on his party for decades now.
As of
the beginning of this Congress, McConnell set the record for the
longest-serving party leader in the history of the Senate. (To mark the
occasion, he gave a typically thoughtful speech on the prior holder of the
record, the Montana Democrat Mike Mansfield.)
But the
time has come for the Kentucky senator, after his long, impressive run, to make
the decision to step aside from leadership.
McConnell
has now frozen up during two recent press availabilities. His staff
has said he was just suffering from bouts of lightheadedness, and a public note
from his doctor suggested the same. To the layman, the incidents looked more
concerning than that. Regardless, this obviously is not normal and affects his
ability to function as the leading representative of his caucus.
McConnell
has noticeably aged since his bad fall in March, when he sustained a concussion
and broken rib, and he should want, for his own sake and that of his
colleagues, to go out on his own terms.
The
details can be left to McConnell, who deserves a large measure of deference. A
leadership transition doesn’t need to happen urgently, but the wheels should be
turning.
Stepping
aside from leadership would not necessarily require leaving the Senate;
McConnell could, like Nancy Pelosi, remain in office, and he would doubtless
remain influential so long as he is capable of serving. But the job of caucus
leader demands more.
The time
will come for a fuller appreciation of McConnell’s legacy. But his strenuous
opposition to campaign-finance reform, effective resistance to the Obama
agenda, stalwart refusal to fill the Scalia seat prior to the 2016 election,
fruitful cooperation with President Trump on judges, and, lately, strong
support for American leadership abroad when the winds in the party are blowing
the opposite way easily make him one of the most consequential politicians of
our era.
Prudence
and realism have been hallmarks of his leadership and now are called for in
considering his own future.
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