(National Review) –
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) will be the next target of
conservatives frustrated with party leadership, according to one of the conservative
representatives who pressured House speaker John Boehner in the weeks leading
up to his resignation.
“Next guy in the
crosshairs will probably be McConnell,” Representative Matt Salmon (R.,
Ariz.) said in a text message to Senator Mike Lee (R., Utah),
according to National Journal’s
Sarah Mimms. Lee replied that he doubts that will happen.
Still,
Salmon’s speculation reflects a theory of Boehner’s struggles that is
common among the outgoing speaker’s friends and foes alike — that his
unpopularity among the grassroots stems more from McConnell’s failure to take
advantage of the Senate majority than anything House Republicans have done. If
that’s true, then Boehner’s departure can hardly be expected to ease the
tensions between GOP leadership and the conservative base or preempt more
leadership fights in the future.
“People are frustrated without Republican
leadership, with Boehner and McConnell, and it’s not usually the third or
fourth question that comes up — it’s the first question that comes up,”
Representative Marlin Stutzman (R., Ind.), who voted against Boehner in
January, told National Review last week. “It’s happening at tea-party
events, but it’s [also] happened at Republican breakfasts, it’s happening at
donor meetings — there’s a deep frustration.”
Representative Trent
Franks holds the same view, but believes that it can be relieved by the
elimination of the filibuster rather than a change in
leadership. “Unfortunately, the Republican base and even many esoteric
Republican observers are not truly cognizant of how the Democrats’ insidious
use of the filibuster is beginning to tear the House conference apart,” Franks
said.
Frustration with the
Democratic filibusters has sparked a new debate among GOP
lawmakers over whether to use the nuclear option to eliminate the
legislative stalling tactic. That’s unlikely to happen, given that McConnell
and even conservative firebrands such as Senator Ted Cruz (R., Texas) believe
it is an important safeguard of minority rights.
But it’s also unlikely
that McConnell will face a serious leadership challenge — if he faces any
challenge at all. Cruz offered a sustained denunciation of
McConnell’s job performance on Thursday afternoon, but demurred three
times when asked if he thought Senate Republicans need a new leader. “That is a
question, at the end of the day, for the Republican conference. At least to
date, the Republican conference has been willing to accept leadership’s handing
control of the agenda over to Democrats,” Cruz told reporters. “I hope that changes. . . . I
would be thrilled if Mitch McConnell would actually lead.”
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/424646/john-boehner-resignation-mitch-mcconnell-next
Source:http://www.teaparty.org/gop-rep-mitch-mcconnell-next-in-the-crosshairs-121481/
Comments
The
Senate, like the House only has 20% constitutional conservatives. The other 80% are liberal Democrats and
RINOs. So, they are content with
McConnell. This won’t change until
voters look up legislative scores on Conservative Review Scorecard and insist
that candidates score high on compliance with the US Constitution (as written).
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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