Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell and Democratic challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes may not participate in a formal debate ahead of the 2014 general election for McConnell’s Senate seat, but they sure came close at Saturday’s Fancy Farm Picnic.
The annual event, which serves as a fundraiser for the St. Jerome Catholic Church in Fancy Farm, Ky. where the event takes place, is known for being a raucous political heckle-fest, and despite the organizers’ best efforts to tone down the crowd, this year’s lineup didn’t disappoint. Decked out in Grimes and McConnell campaign garb — which the campaigns handed out for free in tents ahead of the event — audience members cheered for their candidates and booed at their counterparts across the political aisle.
The state’s Democratic Governor Steve Beshear kicked off the event by taking a photo of McConnell, joking that he wanted a final picture of the senator before McConnell “retired.”
Grimes, the secretary of state for Kentucky, engaged her supporters in a call-and-response chorus of “Mitch McConnell doesn’t care; I do,” and predictably took jabs at the Senate minority leader for a variety of issues including equal pay (“Only one of us believes women deserve equal pay for equal work”), the minimum wage (“It’s not a minimum wage, it’s a living wage”), and job creation, which Grimes called her “number-one priority.” But Grimes’s overarching theme was McConnell’s long-enough five-term tenure in the Senate. “One of us represents the past,” Grimes said, “One of us represents the future,” adding that “30 years is long enough.”
But despite Grimes’s vocal contingent of supporters, McConnell’s allies could often be heard chanting “We want Mitch” above Grimes’s battle cries.









