Imperial Valley Press

The evolution of Mitch McConnell

- CARL GOLDEN Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. You can reach him at cgolden193­7@gmail.

When Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell took the floor of the chamber and, in his smooth Kentucky tone, declared that President Trump provoked the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, it was a blunt assessment that a clean and lasting break from the ex-president is critical if the party hopes to remain credible and relevant.

With an eye on the 2022 midterms and an opportunit­y to regain control of the Congress, McConnell made it clear that a comeback by a party dominated by a twice-impeached alleged insurrecti­onist was doomed.

Coming off a major victory in which more than a dozen seats were gained, Republican­s are within striking distance of a House majority. Thirty-four Senate seats will be contested -- 20 currently held by Republican­s and 14 by Democrats -- putting Senate control in play.

For McConnell, who’d remained tightlippe­d and circumspec­t while suffering through the worst excesses of the Trump Administra­tion, his warning that only by breaking free from the cult of Trump could the party restore itself was welcome and overdue.

While McConnell supported the right of the Trump campaign to challenge the election outcomes in several states, he became increasing­ly uncomforta­ble at the president’s traffickin­g in conspiracy theories and his obsessive insistence that he had won a landslide victory that was stolen from him by shadowy outside forces intent on bringing socialism to the country.

He refused to support objections to the official certificat­ion of the election results, understand­ing it would embarrass his party. More than 50 legal challenges had been dismissed for lack of factual basis yet Trump’s team of attorneys slogged on and their arguments grew increasing­ly bizarre.

It was the storming of the Capitol, the spilling of blood in its corridors and terrorizin­g members of Congress that was the last straw for McConnell and convinced him to break with Trump in the most public forum possible -- the floor of the U.S. Senate.

McConnell said the American people had been lied to by its leaders, and that the president himself had provoked a crisis unlike any in modern history. He implied Trump is beyond rehabilita­tion, unfit to lead the party and by any political calculatio­n would inflict irreparabl­e damage on Republican candidates if he remained a significan­t and influentia­l party figure.

McConnell managed to hide his dismay publicly as Trump presided over an erratic and chaotic White House, firing members of his staff, attacking and insulting Cabinet officers and -- in the end -- even turning on his own vice president.

McConnell’s direct accusation -Trump as provocateu­r of unbridled violence -- signaled the Republican

Party must move on, that it cannot afford to defend, dismiss or rationaliz­e the ex-president’s actions.

When Trump left office, his public approval rating stood at 34 percent, slightly higher than that of Richard Nixon, who resigned in 1974 to avoid impeachmen­t and certain conviction for his role in the Watergate break-in.

Trump will maintain a grip on a segment of the party, but over the next four years that support will weaken and his committed base shrink. He’s not one apt to go quietly into that good night, so Trump will likely attempt to control the party’s direction to validate his claim of a rigged election.

There has been speculatio­n he will explore a 2024 candidacy (provided he isn’t barred from office by an act of Congress), create a third party, launch a self-promotiona­l media outlet and encourage his daughter Ivanka to seek a Senate seat in Florida. The unpredicta­ble Trump could do any, all or none.

While McConnell’s warning may have produced a sigh of relief among many party leaders who desired Trump’s departure but held their tongues, it is critical they now step up and join the senator in wresting control of their party back.

Success of an elected leader relies in considerab­le measure on two qualities -- fear and loyalty. Trump no longer inspires either.

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