Morning Sun

Mitch Mcconnell is still the crucial Republican leader

- Hugh Hewitt Hewitt hosts a nationally syndicated radio show on the Salem Network and is a political analyst for NBC.

Sen. Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., will remain majority leader until noon Wednesday, with the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden. At that moment, Mcconnell will then become the equal in influence of any minority leader in Senate history. No doubt he is already planning how to wield that power for the GOP and the good of the country.

Rule-of-law conservati­ves owe an enormous debt to Mcconnell for protecting the Constituti­on and its separation of powers, checks on administra­tive agencies and robust individual rights, particular­ly those of free exercise of religion, speech and property.

In 2016, Mcconnell refused to be railroaded by the chattering class into consenting to President Barack Obama’s filling of the Supreme Court vacancy caused by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. Again defying liberals’ condemnati­on, Mcconnell joined with then-senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassle, R-iowa, in 2018 and Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham, RS.C., in 2020 in guiding the Supreme Court nomination­s of Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett to confirmati­on. Mcconnell has also kept a laser focus on the appointmen­ts of appeals court judges, ensuring that the Constituti­on’s protection­s of American freedoms will be preserved for decades.

Mcconnell is, as I have also written, the indispensa­ble man to the GOP because of his canny, farsighted understand­ing of both legislativ­e and political processes. Under Mcconnell’s tent, every Republican colleague will be heard and a course thrashed out. As any serious center-right conservati­ve should, he keeps an ideologica­lly diverse caucus together, valuing Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of

Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah as much as he does any three among the most conservati­ve senators.

Over the coming months in a Democratic­controlled Senate, Mcconnell will know when to yield the 60 votes necessary to the new president’s program, and when to rally the Republican caucus to oppose excess. With National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman Rick Scott of Florida, Mcconnell will help recruit and equip candidates who can regain a GOP majority. Too often, media analysts have underestim­ated Mcconnell’s ability to win elections, most recently in November. He will head his caucus in the minority for now, but this consummate “master of the Senate” can be expected to lead the institutio­n again, perhaps in two years’ time.

Other Republican voices will also matter a great deal, of course. On national security, soon-to-be former secretary of state Mike Pompeo and national security adviser Robert O’brien will help steer the party as a whole. On domestic policy, Govs. Ron Desantis of Florida and Doug Ducey of Arizona are examples of successful Republican governance, both in crises and in times of growth. The House is full of GOP promise: The leadership team of Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy of California and Reps. Steve Scalise of Louisiana, Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Tom Emmer of Minnesota will be poised to help Republican­s retake the House in the 2022 midterms, if redistrict­ing follows its historical path of favoring the party that controls the most state legislativ­e chambers — which the GOP does, easily.

The only thing that can deeply injure the Republican­s is division. And the party’s unity is essential in an increasing­ly unstable era at home and abroad.

“All periods of history are periods of transition, but some are more transition­al than others,” wrote Lord Robert Blake in his magisteria­l biography of Benjamin Disraeli. Blake was referring to the years of political upheaval in Britain between the two Reform Acts of 1832 and 1867, but he could have been describing the past few decades — the past several years in particular — when the world has undergone a period of transition “more transition­al than others.”

The era has seen the fall of the Soviet Union and the rise of a Chinese Communist Party with ambitions equal to any ever nursed by Vladimir Lenin. The technology revolution of the 1980s has led to Big Tech, or “surveillan­ce capitalism,” as retired Harvard University business school professor and author Shoshana Zuboff describes the increasing menace of Silicon Valley’s unfettered and unregulate­d power. The rise of radical Islam remains a scourge, but now the world has witnessed Sunni Arab state reconcilia­tion with Israel, with the potential to transform the Middle East.

Mcconnell and reliable Senate Republican allies, such as Sens. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, John Cornyn of Texas and John Thune of South Dakota, will have to keep the caucus focused on real enemies of freedom both foreign and domestic — and far away from the party’s fever-swamp conspiraci­sts. Those who have admired Mcconnell and his masterly Senate GOP leadership while in the majority know where their trust must be placed now if they want the republic of freedom safeguarde­d for their grandchild­ren.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington in 2014.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington in 2014.
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