Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s (R) re-election bid in his home state of Kentucky clearly isn’t easy. He’s facing a deep-pocketed primary challenger, for example, and Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes (D) is waiting for him in the general election. What’s more, polls show McConnell struggling with Kentucky voters — especially women.
The Republican senator is clearly aware of the problem, and is taking steps to shore up his support. McConnell’s campaign, for example, recently boasted about his support for the Violence Against Women Act, despite the fact that McConnell voted against it three times. The GOP leader has also struggled to explain why he voted against the Lilly Ledbetter Act and the Paycheck Fairness Act.
But a Democratic source emailed overnight to highlight a recent “Women for Team Mitch,” event in Kentucky, featuring testimony from women speaking up on McConnell’s behalf. One in particular stood out.
Allison Ball, a lawyer from Prestonsburg, recounted McConnell’s call for former Sen. Bob Packwood, to be expelled from the Senate after he was accused of sexual harassment. […]
“The way Sen. McConnell responded to that situation was perfect,” she said. “He called for the expulsion of that senator, he stood by those women.”
Hmm. That’s not quite how I remember it.
In fact, it McConnell’s handling of the Packwood harassment scandal is supposed to be evidence of his support for women and women’s interests, we should probably take a moment to get the details right.
It doesn’t take too much Googling to find this New York Times editorial from 1995.









