New York Post

Salute Mitch McConnell

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Mitch McConnell announced Wednesday he’ll step down as Senate GOP leader in November after 17 years. That’s a record, but McConnell will go down in history far more for the excellence of his leadership than its longevity. Senators have long been known for their oversized egos; wrangling a pack of them, even of the same party, is basically herding cats. And that’s on top of outsmartin­g the opposition Democrats, who through McConnell’s tenure have been far more unified — not least because the media and the DC culture unite to push the same left-of-center agenda of ever-bigger government and everhigher federal taxation and spending.

Frankly, GOP leaders in the pre-McConnell years were a sad bunch, either too clubby or too overwhelme­d by the job’s challenges — and far too ready to seek “unity” in a way that relentless­ly advanced Democrats’ agenda. McConnell became a hate figure for the left by putting a firm stop to that.

And, yes, he earned whining on the right with his practical attention to the needs of his members and keeping the Senate and the government functionin­g — and his refusal to embrace cockamamie schemes that might win a quick or dramatic victory at the price of destroying the GOP brand.

Not that he was unwilling to fight: In the face of daunting Dem majorities in the early Obama years, in particular, he played a weak hand masterfull­y to frustrate the president’s radical agenda.

Perhaps his proudest achievemen­t is his successful protection of the third branch of government, the judiciary, from the left’s decades-long drive to colonize it.

Dating at least to the 1987 Bork nomination, Dems have innovated ever-dirtier smears and other low tactics to block strict constituti­onalist judicial nominees, and to ram through every progressiv­e possible.

McConnell fought fire with fire, invoking the “Biden rule” (first declared by then-Senate Judiciary chief Joe Biden) to block Barack Obama’s bid to place Merrick Garland on the Supreme Court after the death of the great Justice Antonin Scalia, then extending Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s “no filibuster­ing judicial nominees” rule to ease the confirmati­on of Donald Trump’s three excellent high-court picks.

And he saved the courts honorably — never stooping to the character assassinat­ions that the left now routinely deploys against Republican high-court nominees. He also took a principled stance after the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, declaring Trump “morally responsibl­e for provoking the events of that day,” while voting against conviction in the Senate for the simple reason Trump was no longer in office, which impeachmen­t clearly requires.

These last 17 years, Mitch McConnell has honorably done more to advance Republican causes, while also preserving the core institutio­ns of our nation’s government, than anyone else in Washington. His party, and the entire country, should applaud his service.

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