Here’s a line you can expect to hear in almost every ad for a Democratic candidate for Senate between now and Nov. 8, 2022, courtesy of Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.: “One hundred percent of my focus is on stopping this new administration.”
McConnell is usually pretty careful about what he says in public. The Senate minority leader didn’t get to the head of his caucus by popping off at the mouth like some of his members are prone to do, which is why McConnell’s latest misstep is such a surprise — and such a rare gift for Democrats.
McConnell gave a perfect soundbite that confirmed what everyone had already assumed.
The ironic thing is McConnell’s Kinsley gaffe was the result of him trying to maintain his usual message discipline. Speaking at an event in Georgetown, Kentucky, McConnell was asked yet again about the ongoing fracas across the Capitol. Rather than weigh in on the fight between Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., and the rest of her party over former President Donald Trump, McConnell sidestepped — and fell right into a pit of metaphorical swords.
McConnell was probably hoping the latter half of his statement was what would draw more attention: “I think the best way to look at what this new administration is: The president may have won the nomination, but Bernie Sanders won the argument.” It’s been a common refrain from him and other GOP senators that after campaigning as a moderate, President Joe Biden is basically doing the bidding of his party’s left flank.
Instead, McConnell gave a perfect soundbite that confirmed what everyone had already assumed: Republicans in the Senate under McConnell’s leadership have already decided, much as they did under President Barack Obama, to stonewall anything the president wants to pass.
The Washington Post’s Dave Weigel compared McConnell’s slip to a police interrogation, where repeatedly being asked the same question sometimes leads the subject to make an error. That makes sense; McConnell has gotten so used to dodging questions about Trump and GOP infighting that for a moment he forgot to keep the focus squarely on Biden and not himself.








