Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sanders: Mcconnell obstructio­nist

Candidate challenges leader to debate issues

- By Bruce Schreiner The Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders on Sunday branded Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell as an obstructio­nist for blocking Democratic efforts to reduce gun violence, bolster election security and raise the federal minimum wage.

In a speech to cheering supporters in Louisville, Sanders challenged Mcconnell in his home state to “have the guts” to debate those bills. Accusing Mcconnell of defending the interests of wealthy campaign donors, Sanders also challenged his Kentucky colleague to “listen to the pain” of his constituen­ts struggling to get by on low-wage jobs.

By lashing out at Mcconnell, the Vermont senator took aim at the most powerful Republican in Congress and the second biggest target for national Democrats, behind President Donald Trump. The president easily carried Kentucky in 2016 and remains popular in the state.

“Sen. Mcconnell, it is time for you to end your obstructio­n,” Sanders said. “It is time for the Senate to do its job and vote.”

Mcconnell has attached himself to Trump in positionin­g himself for his 2020 reelection bid. The senator has vowed to bury the House Democrats’ agenda and live up to the nickname that he’s embraced — the “Grim Reaper.”

Sanders touted Democratic measures to raise the federal minimum wage for the first time in a decade, to $15 an hour, to enhance gun safety laws and to beef up protection for election systems from outside interferen­ce. He said efforts to deal with health care, criminal justice, immigratio­n and the “rigged” tax system have been stymied in the Senate.

“Today I say to Sen. Mcconnell, if you want to vote against any of that legislatio­n, that’s fine,” Sanders said. “You have the right to come back to Kentucky and tell the people why you voted the way you did. But you don’t have the right to stop democracy in the United States Senate. You don’t have the right to prevent debate and votes on the most important issues facing the working people of this country. Stop your cowardice. Have the guts to debate the issues.”

He also challenged Mcconnell to allow a Senate debate on environmen­tal legislatio­n meant to curb climate change.

Three weeks after mass shootings in Texas and Ohio, Sanders urged Mcconnell to “listen to what the American people want” and not allow the National Rifle Associatio­n “to dictate gun policy in this country.”

Congress is on a summer recess, but Mcconnell has asked Senate committee chairmen to review possible gun bills for considerat­ion when lawmakers return to Washington in September.

Mcconnell has defended efforts to stymie Russian interferen­ce in

U.S. elections, saying he helped steer more than $300 million to states to enhance voting systems before the 2018 election.

Some of Sanders’ harshest criticism came while making a pitch for a federal minimum wage increase. He called on Mcconnell to “stop turning your back” on constituen­ts struggling with low-wage jobs.

Ahead of Sanders’ visit to Kentucky, Mcconnell’s office referred to a recent op-ed by the senator that denounced the agenda of progressiv­es. The Republican leader referred to the Green New Deal — the sweeping Democratic proposal to combat climate change — and “Medicare for All” as “job-killing” and “dangerous” ideas.

“They would raise your taxes and give the federal government vast control over your life,” he wrote. “That’s why President Trump and I are fighting hard to stop them. As long as I’m Senate majority leader, these socialist schemes will never become law.”

While Mcconnell’s office didn’t immediatel­y weigh in on Sanders’ speech Sunday, other Republican­s came to the senator’s defense.

“Bernie Sanders is running on a platform which would devastate Kentucky: skyrocketi­ng taxes on families and businesses, the eliminatio­n of its coal industry and throwing millions off their current health insurance plan,” Republican National Committee spokesman Kevin Knoth said in a statement.

 ?? Bruce Schreiner The Associated Press ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders meets with striking telecommun­ications workers on Sunday during a stop in Louisville, Ky.
Bruce Schreiner The Associated Press Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders meets with striking telecommun­ications workers on Sunday during a stop in Louisville, Ky.

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