By Noah Rothman
Thursday,
February 29, 2024
In comments
Mitch McConnell reportedly confided to his friends, the outgoing Republican
Senate minority leader revealed that he is fully aware of the caricature his
critics have made of him. “Democrats hate me because of the court,”
McConnell is quoted in Politico reporter
Jonathan Martin’s retelling, “and Republicans hate me because of Trump.”
By
assigning the hostility toward him to events that actually occurred, McConnell
has been, perhaps, too generous to his detractors. McConnell did wield
all the tools at his disposal to confirm as many conservative justices to the
federal bench as he possibly could. With rare and consequential exceptions, McConnell did refuse
to bend the knee to Donald Trump’s personality cult. If we limit the evaluation
of the grievances with McConnell’s leadership to the Trump era alone, his
critics might come off as rational, if exceedingly partisan. But if we open the
aperture to include the whole of McConnell’s career at the head of his
conference, we discover that, not only was he hated well before the Trump
years, but also the rationale for that hatred appears ridiculous in retrospect.
Long
before Democrats despised McConnell for the acumen he displayed in confirming
the justices Republicans liked, they nursed a burning passion for his tendency
to slow-walk the confirmations Republicans disliked. Indeed, McConnell’s
refusal to offer Democrats even modest concessions on policy once Republicans
were in a position to block Barack Obama’s agenda after the 2010 midterms was a
source of endless Democratic frustration.
The
McConnell-led GOP conference “blocked every serious idea” Democrats put
forward, Obama complained in the summer of 2014. The Senate
conference put a stop to an imperious cybersecurity bill that would have imposed
costly requirements on businesses. It ground progress on sweeping gun-control legislation to a halt. It thwarted passage
of a bill that would impose penalties on firms that take advantage of labor
and manufacturing incentives overseas. It blocked a $447 billion spending spree
cum tax hike retailed as a “jobs bill,” punitive and confiscatory taxes targeting the wealthy, and scores of nominees.
The
Senate GOP’s recalcitrance drove McConnell’s Democratic critics up a wall. The
GOP was willing “to say no to everything,” Obama complained. They had balked at
upwards of 500 bills, and too many nominees to count. The GOP had
become “the party of no,” and McConnell America’s “No.1 obstructionist.” If the American voting public
disapproved of the GOP’s obstructionism, it was difficult to tell from the
election returns. In race after race, Republicans just kept winning.
After
the 2014 midterms, with both the House and Senate in GOP hands, McConnell put
into action a plan he had outlined during the election cycle to
not just block Obama’s excesses but confront him with Republican legislation.
With that, the GOP evolved from the “party of no” to the “party of no, but,”
establishing clear lines for voters that distinguished Republican governance
from the Democratic sort.
It
was right around this time — a time when Republicans occupied 247 House seats
and 54 Senate seats; controlled 69 of the nation’s 99 legislative chambers; and
claimed 33 governors, 25 of whom presided over total control of their state’s
government — that GOP voters determined that Republicans didn’t know how to win
anymore.
Even
before Republicans reassumed control over the House in 2011, McConnell had
become a preferred target of “frequent criticism from the likes of Rush
Limbaugh and the Tea Party for not doing more, not going further,” a January
2011 commentary from the Atlantic’s Joshua Green read. But it was after
Republicans retook total control of Congress that the insurgent Right’s
hostility toward McConnell veered into absurdity.
The
Senate majority leader was “the most effective Democratic leader in modern
times,” Texas senator Ted Cruz proclaimed in 2015. In insurgent outlets such
as Breitbart, chronicling McConnell’s many “caves” to Democratic demands became a regular feature.
“McConnell is completely throwing in the towel,” Limbaugh mourned in a theme that became increasingly common as
the year progressed.
The
offenses that prompted these denunciations were the majority leader’s efforts
to keep the government funded through continuing resolutions, omnibus bills,
and appropriations for individual executive-branch agencies — which is to say,
legislation that could pass the Senate as well as the Tea Party–dominated
House. McConnell’s aversion to government shutdowns was born of bitter experience, but the conclusions he drew about the
counterproductivity of work stoppages in the nation’s capital were not shared
by many in his conference. Those stopgap spending bills passed with the support
of Democratic votes, leading Republicans to conclude that the Republicans “don’t win anymore” and the only available recourse was to “burn it down.”
Only
then did Trump descend the escalator, instrumentalizing this burgeoning
nihilism. It all seems rather quaint in hindsight. Republicans today could only
imagine the kind of “losing” to which the GOP was prone in the pre-Trump age.
Even now, however, insurgent Republicans are committed to the notion that
McConnell is a fifth column within the GOP. “Our thoughts are with our Democrat
colleagues in the Senate on the retirement of their Co-Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell (D-Ukraine),” the House Freedom Caucus proposed following the news of
the GOP leader’s forthcoming abdication. What this sentiment lacks in
comprehensibility, it more than makes up for in passion.
McConnell’s
tenure is not above criticism, though much of it can only be rendered with the
benefit of hindsight. When the leader backed measures such as the Troubled
Asset Relief Program (TARP) and the Gang of Eight’s immigration-reform bill, he
did so with the understanding that those were necessary responses to the
political circumstances that prevailed — an understanding that was
contemporaneously shared by his colleagues. When McConnell backed nominees for
high office that offended the sensibilities of the conservative
movement, he did so on the basis of their electability alone. His goal was only
ever to effectively steward the Senate, even at the risk of sacrificing
ideological consistency.
It
was McConnell’s efficacy as a leader of the Senate conference that irritated
both his Democratic and Republican critics, though for different reasons. He
was a true institutionalist, insofar as the institution always came first — not
its members nor any particular movement. In an age in which all matters of
policy are subsumed into the one overarching feature of the political landscape
— for Trump or against Trump — the leader’s critics might have forgotten the
basis of their long-held hostility toward McConnell. But we should not.
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