Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell on Sunday downplayed his party’s Russia acolytes, who’ve echoed many of Russian President Vladimir Putin‘s talking points as his brutal invasion of Ukraine continues.
Appearing on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” McConnell said “the vast majority of the Republican Party writ large, both in the Congress and across the country, are totally behind the Ukrainians.”
“There may be a few lonely voices off the side,” he added. “I wouldn’t pay much attention to them.”
Wouldn’t it be grand if we could simply wish our problems away?
For the record: the GOP’s support for Ukraine has long been in doubt, even before Reps. Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina and Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia started spouting Kremlin talking points publicly. Republicans overwhelmingly supported then-President Donald Trump during his impeachment trial in which he was accused of withholding defense weapons from Ukraine for political gain.
Regardless, McConnell clearly knows Cawthorn’s and Greene’s open embrace of pro-Russian arguments is out of step with a majority of Americans and, thus, politically dangerous. Now he’s simply trying to wipe them from our consciousness.
Wouldn’t it be grand if we could simply wish our problems away?
Unfortunately for McConnell, Republican Russophiles can’t be dismissed that easily, no matter how small in number he claims them to be. Part of the reason the adage “politics stops at the water’s edge” exists is because it acknowledges the outsize power each lawmaker can have in throwing off the country’s diplomatic efforts.








