Schumer Trashes McConnell: His Role in History 'Will Go Down Poorly'

Chris Menahan
InformationLiberation
Sep. 02, 2024

In an interview released Monday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer thanked Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell for selling out his base and helping President Biden shove through his legislative agenda but still trashed him by insisting his "role in history" will "go down poorly."

Schumer also said McConnell may be able to salvage some of his legacy if he spends his remaining time pushing back against members of his own party who, in the words of Punchbowl News, mirror the "isolationists who enabled the rise of Nazi Germany in the 1930s."

From Punchbowl News, "Schumer riffs on McConnell’s legacy":
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer says he's been "more friendly" with Minority Leader Mitch McConnell in recent years, and it's not difficult to see why.

Schumer credits McConnell for helping deliver GOP votes for the major bipartisan legislative accomplishments of Joe Biden's presidency — even the ones McConnell didn't personally back. And Schumer agrees with the widespread belief in Washington that Ukraine wouldn't have gotten another aid package from Congress if it wasn't for McConnell.

But for Schumer, that's not enough to reorient McConnell's legacy as the Kentucky Republican is preparing to step down as GOP leader in a few months.

In an interview at the DNC in Chicago, Schumer told us that despite McConnell's more recent efforts to push back against Donald Trump and his worldview, the longtime Senate Republican leader will be remembered as an enabler of the once-and-potentially-future president.

"[McConnell's] role in history, in my opinion, will go down poorly," Schumer said
, citing McConnell's decades-long and ultimately successful push to tilt the Supreme Court to the right. "Not just on Roe, but on issue after issue where they're so far out of touch with the American people... Even when McConnell thought Trump was wrong, he went along with him too many times."

OK, so what? It goes without saying that McConnell doesn't care much what Schumer thinks about what his legacy will be. Don't forget how bitterly the two men fought during the Trump administration — especially on judicial nominees, which led to change in the institution's rules.

It's one that McConnell happens to be proud of — from reshaping the federal judiciary to defeating campaign finance reform efforts and ultimately winning the most recent battle over Ukraine aid.

But McConnell has told us that his "top priority" in the remaining two years of this term will be to push back on his party's Trump-inspired foreign policy doctrine — one he's said reminds him of the isolationists who enabled the rise of Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Schumer sees this as a "constructive role" for McConnell after leaving the GOP leadership suite.

In Schumer's judgment, McConnell can "salvage" his legacy in the history books on this front.

"He can salvage some of that reputation — and I'm not trying to tell him what to do — by trying to get the old Republican Party back," Schumer said. "He will ally with us in not being isolationist. He feels that passionately."
McConnell last year heaped praise on Schumer for a speech he gave lamenting a rise in anti-Semitism that followed Israel's decision to commit genocide in Gaza.



I don't know if McConnell will have much of a legacy at all but he does deserve credit for keeping Schumer's buddy Merrick Garland off the Supreme Court.

If he wanted a real legacy, he should have spent his years in Congress fighting for the American people instead of pandering to people who hate him.

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