It was probably Dana Milbank who sent Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) over the edge. The Washington Post columnist’s latest installment, published in the print edition over the weekend, described the Senate’s top Republican member as “a Russian asset.”
Milbank quickly added, “This doesn’t mean he’s a spy, but neither is it a flip accusation. Russia attacked our country in 2016. It is attacking us today. Its attacks will intensify in 2020. Yet each time we try to raise our defenses to repel the attack, McConnell, the Senate majority leader, blocks us from defending ourselves.”
The columnist called McConnell’s tactics “unpatriotic,” adding that the Kentucky Republican is “doing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s bidding.”
It was against this backdrop that “Moscow Mitch” spent some time trending on Twitter last week.
The Senate majority leader — who is, incidentally, up for re-election next year — isn’t known for his emotional displays, but as Roll Call noted, McConnell “got riled up” yesterday while trying to defend his opposition to election-security measures.
“Let me make this crystal clear for the hyperventilating hacks who haven’t actually followed this issue. Every single member of the Senate agrees that Russian meddling was real and is real,” said McConnell. “We all agree that the federal government, state governments and the private sector all have obligations to take this threat seriously and bolster our defenses.”
McConnell called the criticism of his action on election security “modern-day McCarthyism” repeatedly during his fiery speech.
I can appreciate why the GOP leader was bothered. It can’t be fun to be a conservative critic of Russia for many years, only to be accused, even tongue-in-cheek, of being “a Russian asset.”
But there are certain factual details that McConnell can’t explain away with indignation.
We know, for example, that McConnell received a classified briefing about the Russian election attack in 2016, but he balked when asked to endorse a bipartisan pushback effort in response the adversary’s interference.
We also know that leading U.S. officials — including Republicans appointed by Donald Trump — continue to warn lawmakers about the ongoing Russian threat, urging Congress to do more to prepare a defense ahead of the 2020 cycle.
We also know that McConnell has rejected a series of recent proposals intended to bolster our domestic defenses. Some of those measures were written by Democrats; others were bipartisan; but the Senate majority leader hasn’t been willing to advance any of them.









