Mitch McConnell already faced a tough general election challenge, but with the Senate minority leader getting his first primary challenger today, the Kentucky Republican finds himself fighting back against attacks from both the left and the right to keep his seat.
With wealthy investment banker Matt Bevin kicking off his campaign today, McConnell swiftly launched a harsh TV ad against his new opponent. Bevin fired back in his own ad, saying the senior senator’s 30 years in Washington were enough.
In the new ad, McConnell’s massive 2014 re-election operation wasted no time in taking the gloves off against Bevin on his first day on the campaign trail in a six-figure buy designed to heavily target GOP audiences.
McConnell’s ad brands his opponent “Bailout Bevin,” criticizing him for getting $200,000 in Connecticut state grants to help his company rebuild after a 2012 fire, failing to pay taxes, and for liens against his company.
Bevin is president of the Connecticut-based bell foundry Bevin Brothers Manufacturing, which recently resumed production after a fire last year, and also a partner at Waycross Partners investment management firm. Bevin has lived in Louisville since 1999, but lived in New Hampshire before that, something McConnell’s campaign has used to claim his ties to the state are thin.
The GOP leader’s allies boast they have plenty of ammo where that came from to use against Bevin, and this first salvo from Team McConnell is likely just the tip of the iceberg in what will be a long, expensive, and nasty campaign, in both the primary and the general election.
Bevin’s campaign responded with its first TV ad, painting McConnell as a relic with a flimsy conservative record, with Bevin asking “after thirty years in Washington, is his leadership really the best we can do?”
An announcer points out that “McConnell has voted for higher taxes, bailouts, debt ceiling increases, congressional pay raises, and liberal judges,” while touting Bevin as a “successful businessman, father of nine, military veteran,” and conservative Republican.
With several statewide announcement stops this week, Bevin’s touting support from the United Kentucky Tea Party, and two prominent national conservative groups both said Wednesday morning they were open to backing McConnell’s challenger, which their deep pockets and donor lists could give Bevin an important boost if they jump in.
The Senate Conservatives Fund, once led by former South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint to back conservatives and oust incumbents in primaries, said in a statement their super PAC would consider supporting Bevin, after calling McConnell the “least electable Republican senator running for reelection in 2014” earlier this month.
“We’re open to supporting Matt Bevin’s campaign and will be waiting to see if the grassroots in Kentucky unite behind him,” said SCF Executive Director Matt Hoskins. “The only way to defeat Mitch McConnell is to inspire the grassroots to rise up and fight for their freedoms. We will also be watching to see if Mitch McConnell debates the issues or if he conducts a dirty smear campaign. If McConnell doesn’t respect the voters enough to defend his own record, he doesn’t deserve to be in the Senate.”
The anti-tax Club for Growth, also said they’d met with Bevin and would be monitoring how the campaign plays out.









