This week was a turning point in the brutal competition between Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and tea party challenger Matt Bevin for the Republican Senate nomination in Kentucky. After an array of punishing headlines, one candidate has become so compromised that winning the nomination seems like a long shot at this point.
The question, however, is which candidate.
Both the McConnell and Bevin campaigns are confident that the latest round of coverage, which included plenty of ugly moments for both contenders, will disqualify their opponent from the running. For the incumbent, a difficult bipartisan vote has complicated his ongoing campaign to win over his party’s right flank. For the challenger, a new revelation that he seemingly supported the 2008 bank bailout is opening him up to hypocrisy charges.
Up to this point, McConnell has enjoyed a consistently large lead over Bevin in polls, even as the same surveys show him tied in a general election against Democratic candidate Alison Lundergran Grimes and struggling with low approval ratings. A poll released last week by Wenzel Strategies gave McConnell a 59-17 lead over Bevin and a razor-thin 43-42 lead over Grimes in a general election matchup.
Bevin supporters, for their part, have argued that McConnell’s dominance is mostly due to name recognition and that they’ll be able to make up ground as the May 20 primary nears and voters begin to pay attention. Now they believe they have their best opening yet to start dragging McConnell’s numbers down.
That’s because last week, Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz put McConnell in a tough spot by filibustering a bill to raise the debt ceiling. McConnell and House Republican leaders had already decided, after threatening to do otherwise, that they wouldn’t demand a ransom from Democrats for the move. But by blocking the bill, Cruz forced McConnell to personally line up Republican votes to head off a default crisis rather than sit on the sideline and let the Democratic Senate majority do the dirty work. In the end, McConnell himself voted to end Cruz’s filibuster even as he voted no on the underlying bill.
The episode fed directly into Bevin’s chief criticisms of McConnell — namely, that he too often defies conservative demands to work out bipartisan deals. Even before the vote, outside groups like the Senate Conservative Fund were attacking McConnell for past votes to raise the debt and for undermining Cruz’s attempts to shut down the government to extract Democratic concessions.
The United Kentucky Tea Party, which is backing Bevin, seized on the story and even called on McConnell to leave the race in response.
“My phone has rung off the hook since that debt ceiling vote,” Scott Hofstra, a spokesman for the United Kentucky Tea Party, told msnbc. “A lot of people are very upset about the fact he flipped on what he told the people he’d do.”
All this earned McConnell the title of “Worst Week In Washington” from the Washington Post’s influential political blogger Chris Cillizza. And it’s not like the rest of his headlines were great either.
Fellow Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, who McConnell is relying on to win over tea party voters, gave a lukewarm explanation for his endorsement in an interview with Glenn Beck, even qualifying that McConnell asked for his support “when there was nobody else in the race.” The Louisville Courier-Journal also reported that McConnell had attacked Obama for supporting algae-based biofuels even as McConnell personally requested money from Washington to help fund a biofuel business in Kentucky that donated to his campaign.
McConnell might have had the worst week in Washington, but there’s a pretty good case Bevin had the worst week in Kentucky.









