With just more than a month left before the hotly contested Senate election in Kentucky, Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes is making sure voters know precisely what she stands for by laying out six issues she vows to take on as soon as her first day in office — if she is elected.
Challenging Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Grimes writes in an op-ed for The Courier-Journal that her Republican opponent has only pledged what he will not do: “Permit votes or even debate” on raising the minimum wage, extending unemployment insurance, or easing student loan debt.
“I prefer to tell Kentuckians what I WILL do,” Grimes writes.
The secretary of state’s six priorities are as follows: Create jobs in Kentucky and raise the minimum wage, end tax loopholes, protect and strengthen Social Security and Medicare, champion equal pay for equal work, sponsor legislation to provide access for veterans to good-paying jobs, and fight to reduce student loan debt for Kentuckians.
After detailing her agenda, Grimes promises she’ll fight for families in the state, concluding, “Thirty years is long enough. Kentucky deserves a new senator.”









