At the tender age of 82, Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell is throwing in the towel. While he plans to serve out his current term in office, which ends in 2027, someone else will have to pick up the leadership baton during Donald Trump’s upcoming presidential term. A secret ballot tomorrow will decide who gets to continue the Kentucky Senator’s legacy.
In some ways, McConnell’s political career is impressive. He is, after all, the longest-serving Senate party leader in nearly 250 years of American history, and many people on Capitol Hill and in America’s political class have only good things to say about him, including fellow octogenarian Joe Biden.
From another angle, though, McConnell’s legacy appears bleak. He remains unpopular among the American population at large, with a bare majority of his own party’s voters having a somewhat favourable opinion of him. While the proximate cause of his decision to step down can be found in the growing split between the old “Reaganite” wing of the GOP and the newer, “America First” wing, Republican intra-party drama is perhaps the least important factor when considering the arc of McConnell’s falling star.
In truth, together with Congressional luminaries such as Nancy Pelosi and Biden himself, McConnell is part of an exclusive slice of America’s political elite. Like them, he first entered Congress before a majority of today’s Americans were even born. If he succeeds in serving out his current senatorial term, McConnell will end his stay in the US Senate after 42 years of service. There are two ways to interpret such a long term in office: either as a testament to McConnell’s great skills as a politician and a statesman, or as an indictment of an increasingly gerontocratic and dysfunctional political class.
If one takes a step back and considers where America is at present, one of these interpretations becomes far more plausible than the other. When McConnell entered the Senate, the US was united, prosperous, and close to winning the Cold War. Today, the country is ruinously indebted, internally divided, and facing military overstretch and exhaustion abroad. The percentage of the American population with a positive job approval of Congress hovers around 16% — only slightly above the proportion who say they have personally seen, interacted with, or been abducted by a UFO.
There’s already quite a lot of talk about battle lines being drawn between “pro-MAGA” and “anti-MAGA” candidates battling it out in Congress for the honour of becoming the new Senate leader. No doubt there are still those who think that the big problem here is McConnell himself, or his politics. In his absence, it is surely important to find a replacement with the “right” political opinions (whatever those are is an open question), isn’t it?
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