In their only meeting of the election, Democratic Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes and Republican Minority Leader Mitch McConnell sparred over Obamacare, minimum wage laws, and above all coal, coal, and more coal.
An energetic Grimes attacked McConnell from the start as a symbol of all that ails Washington, including the lack of bipartisan cooperation on major issues in Congress and the 2013 government shutdown, and described the race as “senator of the past versus senator of the future.”
“I’m an independent thinker that does what’s right for the people of Kentucky, not partisan politics,” she said. “I’m not bought and paid for by the Koch brothers or any special interest.”
McConnell in turn blamed high unemployment in Kentucky and a lack of major legislation in Congress on President Barack Obama and accused Grimes of hiding her level of agreement with the White House.
“My opponent has spent most of her time trying to deceive everyone about her own views: She’s been an active partisan Democrat all along,” he said.
He challenged Grimes over her claim that she was a “Clinton Democrat” rather than an Obama supporter, saying “there’s not a dimes worth of difference between a Clinton Democrat and an Obama Democrat.”
The moderator managed to put each candidate on the defensive at times. Grimes refused for the second time in a week to answer whether she had voted for Obama in 2012, saying her decision not to reveal her choice was a “matter of principle.”
“Every Kentuckian has the right for privacy at the ballot box,” she said. “If I as chief election official don’t stand up for that right, who in Kentucky will?”
Photo essay: Life under austerity in Kentucky
Turning to health care, McConnell struggled to explain how he squared his promise to repeal Obamacare with his claim that Kentucky could also keep its popular state health care exchange, which runs on subsidies provided by the law, and the state’s Medicaid expansion, which was financed by federal dollars under the health care law as well.
“It’s a state exchange, they can continue it if they’d like to,” McConnell said. “They’ll have to pay for it because the grant will be over.”
Pressed as to whether he personally supported maintaining the exchange if Obamacare were repealed, he responded that “it’s fine to have a website, yeah.”








