When Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell recently denounced Sen. Rick Scott’s proposed tax increases, the Kentucky Republican said the public shouldn’t worry too much about his fellow Republican’s plan.
“If we’re fortunate enough to have the [Senate] majority next year,” McConnell told reporters, “I’ll be the majority leader.”
At least, that’s the plan. While it’s likely that the current minority leader will have ample support from his own conference, there are some Republicans pushing in the opposite direction. In Missouri, for example, former Gov. Eric Greitens, a 2022 Senate hopeful, has vowed not to support McConnell if elected. Alaska’s Kelly Tshibaka said the same thing.
Even Sen. Lindsey Graham suggested a couple of months ago that if McConnell intends to be majority leader, he’ll have to do more to align himself with Donald Trump.
It was against this backdrop that Rep. Mo Brooks — for now, the Trump-backed Senate candidate in Alabama’s Republican Senate primary — released a new online video this morning, assuring voters that, if elected, he also won’t support McConnell for the top GOP leadership post:
“If elected to the Senate, I will not vote for Mitch McConnell for majority leader, and I will do everything in my power to ensure that Republicans choose a conservative to be leader. America can’t afford a Senate leader who is a weak-kneed, debt junkie, open-border RINO Republican and who, worse yet, sells out America for special-interest-group cash.”
If this sounds at all familiar, when Brooks ran in a Senate special election in 2017, he made “Ditch Mitch“ a key part of his platform. (He finished third in the GOP primary, winning just two of the state’s 67 counties.)
Five years later, the congressman is trying it again.
In all likelihood, McConnell isn’t too nervous about any of this, in large part because most of the candidates vowing to oppose him aren’t expected to win.









