In his first remarks since Republicans claimed control of the Senate in Tuesday’s midterm elections, Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell pointed to the upside of divided government and delivered a tacit rebuke to his party’s more extreme members.
“I always like to remind people that divided government is not unusual in this country,” McConnell said at a press conference Wednesday. “When the American people choose divided government I don’t think it means they don’t want us to do anything, I think it means they want us to look for areas of agreement.”
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McConnell, who is likely to ascend to the role of majority leader next year after his party picked up at least seven seats in the upper chamber, said the government would not shut down or default on the national debt with Republicans at the helm in both houses of Congress. And he declined to commit to repealing the Affordable Care Act, suggesting he is already positioning himself as a moderate bulwark against tea party leaders like Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who has made no secret of his desire to push the Senate to the right.
While pledging cooperation with President Barack Obama in the new Congress, McConnell was hard-pressed to find many points of agreement with Obama. McConnell suggested there was bipartisan interest in pushing forth international trade measures and passing comprehensive tax reform, a perennial unicorn in Washington, D.C. But on immigration reform, a key policy priority for Obama, McConnell said unilateral action by the president would be “a big mistake.”
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