Nobody in Washington has had a rougher week than Republican Sen. Rick Scott. In the past seven days, the former Florida governor has been obliquely booed by his own party at the State of the Union address, bombed a television interview trying to defend himself, and had President Joe Biden fly to his home turf to keep whaling away at him.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has clearly loved every minute of Scott’s torment. Scott hasn’t kept it a secret that he sees himself as McConnell’s successor atop the Senate GOP caucus. But time and again, his attempts to position himself have backfired, leaving Scott only worse for wear.
Scott’s political pain is self-inflicted. As part of the “Plan to Rescue America” he released last year, Scott called for sunsetting all federal legislation — including Social Security and Medicare — after five years if not reauthorized by Congress. The 31-page document was released without McConnell’s consent, during Scott’s term as chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee. The schism that formed between them has only grown since, exposing a key difference in how the two men function, and why Scott keeps failing.
McConnell rose to power in the Senate by fighting for something deeply important to him that he rightly realized most voters didn’t care about: campaign finance reform. It was — and is — a deeply unsexy topic, but McConnell saw that the free flow of money would help Republicans keep winning elections. His unyielding stance purposefully drew fire away from his fellow GOP senators on the issue, earning their respect and loyalty as the donations kept coming in.
At the same time, McConnell saw how entitlement reform proposals could backfire politically. Former President George W. Bush began his second term in 2005 by going all in on amending Social Security through a plan that would allow privatized investment accounts to exist alongside traditional accounts. The House GOP insisted that the Senate move first on any attempt to privatize Social Security, rightfully wary of backlash in the next election as Democrats hammered the idea. But Senate Republican leadership — which included McConnell, who had backed the broad concept of private accounts — never solidified around any particular plan, as it proved politically toxic, leaving the idea to wither on the vine.
Meanwhile, as a former health care executive and governor, Scott seems to believe that climbing the ranks of the Senate caucus entails demonstrating “leadership” to his colleagues. It’s a vague concept that rings hollow in the corporate world, especially for someone whose tenure as CEO coincided with what the Justice Department called the “largest health care fraud case in U.S. history,” but when has that ever stopped someone who’s convinced themselves they should be in charge?
In this case, Scott has presented himself as the only one willing to make the hard choices and win back a majority for the GOP. When releasing the “Plan to Rescue America,” he argued that it was important that Republicans show what they actually support. Even after his time on the National Republican Senatorial Committee ended with the party face-planting in its attempt to regain the majority and his bid to dethrone McConnell as Senate GOP leader was easily defeated, Scott still ran an ad in Florida spinning the latter loss as part of his bold wiliness to challenge the status quo: “It’s time for Republicans to be bold, speak the truth and stop caving in.”
McConnell, on the other hand, has survived this long by knowing a political loser when he sees one.
McConnell, on the other hand, has survived this long by knowing a political loser when he sees one — and he has to know by now how much Americans cringe when presented directly with GOP policy proposals like ending Social Security. Instead, he turned to the judiciary to enact the conservative agenda during his last stint as majority leader. Back in the minority after the 2020 elections, he counted on Biden’s low polling numbers drag down Democrats ahead of the midterms. Scott’s plan threw a bomb into that strategy, with the resulting shrapnel still damaging Republicans politically.








