The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

McConnell will sell out the people for own gain

- Charles Shor Guest columnist Charles Shor is the former president and CEO of Duro Bag and founder of the Charles L. Shor Foundation for Epilepsy Research.

Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell once legislated on behalf of the interests of Americans.

Today, he is nothing more than an opportunis­t who will sell out the American people to foreign interests and maintain his post as the leader of the Senate Republican conference at the expense of legislativ­e victories. He must go.

Early in his career, McConnell resembled someone more aligned with today’s Republican base. Back then, McConnell supported American jobs and fought foreign imports. He took a hardline on China, pressured South Korea to open its markets, increased minimum export tonnage, promoted tourism, limited textile imports and promoted pharmaceut­ical exports.

McConnell is on the wrong side of policy issues

Today, McConnell’s key characteri­stic is being on the wrong side of each and every policy issue facing the United States. Whether it is immigratio­n where he has pushed multiple times for amnesty for illegal immigrants, the War in Ukraine − which he calls the “number one priority for America” − or federal spending, McConnell is out of step with the majority of Americans and frankly recalcitra­nt towards the priorities of the Republican Party.

One explanatio­n for McConnell’s “evolution” begins with the name Elaine Chao, his wife of 30 years, a perennial D.C. establishm­ent fixture, Secretary of Labor under George W. Bush (20012009), and Secretary of Transporta­tion under President Donald Trump (20172021).

Despite being an early hardliner on China, McConnell did not balk at visiting Beijing in 1993 − just four years after the tanks rolled on Tiananmen Square. He was joined by his new wife and her father, James Chao, a close friend of former Chinese Communist Party leader President Jiang Zemin. The Chaos owned and operated Foremost Shipping

− an ostensibly American company that just so happens to ship 70% of its present-day freight to China and maintains several ties with its communist government.

McConnell has Chou family benefits

Right after Chao became Secretary in 2017, the family purchased ships from government-run enterprise­s. Much of the funding for their fleet has been obtained through banks in China. The Chao family also sponsored and trained Chinese citizens for the shipping industry, even while Chao was calling for cuts to similar training in the U.S. Additional­ly, she directed staff to handle personal tasks and work related to the company, such as arranging interviews, editing Wikipedia pages and planning trips.

Chao used her leadership position to benefit not just herself, but her husband. She assigned a special liaison in the Department of Transporta­tion to work with McConnell directly, opening the door to $78 million in grants for McConnell’s favored projects in Kentucky, convenient­ly timed to coincide with his 2020 reelection bid.

While it is ultimately unclear how much McConnell and his family have profited from their positions of influence, we know the two received a gift in 2008 which was reported on McConnell’s taxes as valued between $5 million and $25 million. He has also received campaign contributi­ons from Chao family members totaling over $1 million.

China isn’t the only place we see his ideology bending in the direction of personal opportunit­y. In September 2019, for example, the senator blocked bipartisan legislatio­n, passed by the House and spearheade­d by Chuck Grassley, that sought to lower prescripti­on drug prices. Why did McConnell block legislatio­n that was favored by 88% of Americans? The answer lies in his financial disclosure­s.

McConnell’s many Big Pharma friends

By December of the same year, $50,000 had been donated to McConnell’s campaign by political action committees and individual­s tied to the pharmaceut­ical industry. Pfizer’s recent decision to contribute an unpreceden­ted $1 million to expanding Kentucky’s Republican Party headquarte­rs suggests that McConnell’s cozy relationsh­ip with the drug companies continues to this day.

What this brief rehearsal of McConnell’s shifting sensibilit­ies and personal ambition shows us is not simply a hero who lived long enough to become the villain, but a man whose position has always depended on supporting whatever policies would benefit him and his inner circle. This could explain why McConnell refused to tap his massive, $600 million war chest to fund Republican candidates that he had not handpicked himself.

McConnell would rather drag down the party than sacrifice his ability to use it as an way to increase his own power and influence. Whenever opportunit­y knocks, Mitch McConnell will be the first to answer, even if it means sacrificin­g American interests at the altar of the almighty yen. It’s time we take away his key to the congressio­nal kingdom and hand it to someone we can trust.

McConnell would rather drag down the party than sacrifice his ability to use it as an way to increase his own power and influence.

 ?? SCOTT UTTERBACK/COURIER JOURNAL ?? Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his wife, Elaine Chao, say goodbye at Fancy Farm 2023 on Aug. 5.
SCOTT UTTERBACK/COURIER JOURNAL Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his wife, Elaine Chao, say goodbye at Fancy Farm 2023 on Aug. 5.
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