New York Daily News

Quitting as GOP leader

Mitch will leave Senate role he’s held since ’07

- BY DAVID GOLDINER AND TIM BALK

Mitch McConnell, the 82-yearold Kentucky conservati­ve who has led the Republican Party in the U.S. Senate since 2007, will step down from the role after this fall’s elections, he said Wednesday.

The iconic GOP lawmaker, who led the party through a turbulent era of transition, said he will serve out the rest of his final term, which runs through the 2026 election.

“To serve Kentucky in the Senate has been the honor of my life,” he said on the floor of the Senate. “To lead my Republican colleagues has been the highest privilege.”

“This will be my last term as Republican leader of the Senate,” he added.

McConnell’s team said health woes did not force him to make the decision. But he admitted the recent death of the younger sister of his wife, Elaine Chao, prompted some soul-searching.

“The end of my contributi­ons are closer than I’d prefer,” McConnell said. “One of life’s most under-appreciate­d talents is to know when it’s time to move on to life’s next chapter.”

Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer embraced McConnell on the floor of the Senate after McConnell spoke, and praised his rival for setting aside politics.

“We both came together … at critical moments when our country needed us,” Schumer said in a statement.

There was no immediate word on who might be favored to replace McConnell as Republican leader in the Senate. Sen. John Thune (R-South Dakota) is McConnell’s top lieutenant but more right-wing pro-Trump figures will likely see an opportunit­y to take control when McConnell departs.

McConnell hopes one of his final legislativ­e achievemen­ts will be pushing through a $60 billion aid package for Ukraine that is so far being blocked by Republican­s in the deeply divided House.

The courtly old-school conservati­ve was known as a wily master of the Senate and its arcane rules, which helped him roll up an impressive track record of political wins.

He engineered the effective conservati­ve takeover of the U.S. Supreme Court, delivered tax cuts for the wealthy and big business, and blocked immigratio­n reform that many Republican­s believe would change the country for the worse.

McConnell sought to manage the still-ongoing transforma­tion of the GOP from a traditiona­l conservati­ve party dominated by business interests to a populist group run by right-wing adherents of former President Donald Trump.

His rocky relationsh­ip with Trump was the defining factor of McConnell’s later years in office. He worked with Trump after his election to the White House to enact a huge tax cut and to install three conservati­ve U.S. Supreme Court justices, who delivered a historic ruling rolling back abortion rights.

But McConnell couldn’t stomach Trump’s attempt to overturn his loss in the 2020 election, and he denounced Trump as being “morally and practicall­y responsibl­e” for the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Still, in a sign party loyalty trumped all else, McConnell effectivel­y blocked Trump from being convicted in the Senate for his actions on Jan. 6, a decision that critics say allowed the former president to quickly regain his grip on the GOP.

Recent reports say McConnell is considerin­g endorsing Trump for president in 2024 despite their bitter difference­s.

 ?? ?? Longtime Senate Republican powerhouse Mitch McConnell of Kentucky will quit his run in the leadership position after the fall elections.
Longtime Senate Republican powerhouse Mitch McConnell of Kentucky will quit his run in the leadership position after the fall elections.

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