McConnell Complains Election Critics Practice ‘Modern-Day McCarthyism’

McConnell Complains Election Critics Practice ‘Modern-Day McCarthyism’

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell complained from the Senate floor on Monday that ongoing criticism of his refusal to advance election security bills is “McCarthyism.”

“This Congress, this entire country, only works when we refuse to let baseless smears displace real debate,” he said. “Benjamin Franklin said we have this republic if we can keep it. Among other things, keeping our republic means we can’t let modern-day McCarthyism win.”

McConnell was referring in part to a New York Times editorial from last weekend that criticized his obstruction, saying, “Abusing the cause of election security to score political points is no way to safeguard the nation.”

He was also complaining about a Friday column by Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank, who called McConnell’s actions “unpatriotic” and wrote, “The Kentucky Republican is, arguably more than any other American, doing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s bidding.”

Those columns follow McConnell’s refusal last week to advance legislation proposed by Democrats to ensure the safety of America’s elections.

McConnell’s obstruction of election security comes even as the body he presides over — the Senate — has recently shown that Russia targeted election systems in all 50 states.

He was similarly unmoved by testimony from former special counsel Robert Mueller, who said in no uncertain terms during his recent Congressional testimony that Russia is currently engaged in efforts to subvert the U.S. elections.

It was McConnell who kneecapped efforts by President Barack Obama in 2016 to present a unified front against Russian election interference. Instead, McConnell pushed the Obama administration to understate the problem so that confidence in Trump’s campaign would not be hurt.

McConnell is in his third year of repeatedly weighing in on Russia’s side against protecting America’s elections. He will continue to be criticized for doing so from individuals and outlets who are concerned with keeping the integrity of America’s most vital civic function.

Joseph McCarthy used demagoguery to excuse un-American behavior. McConnell invokes the specter of McCarthy against his critics — but there are few things more un-American than allowing a foreign power to hurt the country’s elections.

Published with permission of The American Independent.

Advertising

Start your day with National Memo Newsletter

Know first.

The opinions that matter. Delivered to your inbox every morning

John Joyce

Rep. John Joyce

Two hundred and fourteen House Republicans approved a bill by Pennsylvania Rep. John Joyce to restrict California’s authority to protect the environment.

Keep reading...Show less
'Times' Reporter Finds A Way To 'Both Sides' Impeachment

Peter Baker

House Republicans are engaging in a completely partisan, evidence-free impeachment inquiry—but Peter Baker of The New York Times wants to talk about how the White House is treating this as a political issue. And just to get this out of the way right off the bat, the paragraph count before Baker acknowledges that Republicans have no evidence against Biden is seven.

Keep reading...Show less
{{ post.roar_specific_data.api_data.analytics }}