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  • - One of life's most underappreciated talents

  • is to know when it's time to move on to life's next chapter.

  • (pensive music)

  • - [Reporter] After 17 years at the helm

  • of the Republican Party in the Senate,

  • Mitch McConnell announced he will step down

  • from his leadership role in November.

  • - I love the Senate. It's been my life.

  • There may be more distinguished members of this body

  • throughout our history, but I doubt there were any

  • with any more admiration for the Senate.

  • (camera shutter snapping)

  • - [Reporter] Now the longest serving party leader

  • in Senate history.

  • - [Crowd] Mitch, Mitch, Mitch!

  • - [Reporter] McConnell cultivated political clout

  • and a reputation as a master legislative strategist.

  • But in recent years, he also faced concerns over his health

  • and a changing Republican Party.

  • - The Senate's gonna be

  • a very different place, unquestionably.

  • - [Announcer] Switch to Mitch for Senator.

  • - [Reporter] Mitch McConnell was first elected to Congress

  • in 1984, flipping a seat in Kentucky

  • where he holds the title

  • of the state's longest-serving senator.

  • He served as the Republican whip for four years

  • before becoming the head of his conference.

  • He would be voted leader eight more times

  • across four presidential administrations.

  • - Mitch McConnell is almost universally respected.

  • That's not that he is universally loved.

  • - Some folks still don't think

  • I spend enough time with Congress.

  • "Why don't you get a drink with Mitch McConnell?" They ask.

  • Really? (audience laughing)

  • Why don't you get a drink with Mitch McConnell?

  • - He's either your greatest asset

  • or your biggest liability on literally everything

  • that came before the federal government.

  • I remember him saying sort of tongue-in-cheek,

  • "It's taken me 30 years

  • to convince everybody I'm an asshole.

  • I'm not gonna turn back now." (laughs)

  • - [Reporter] Wielding brass knuckle tactics

  • to push his agenda, McConnell didn't aim

  • for public popularity

  • or shy away from controversial opinions.

  • - Our top political priority over the next two years

  • should be to deny President Obama a second term.

  • - He is perfectly comfortable

  • being the most unpopular person that he can be,

  • and his view is he's not doing his job if you like him.

  • Like, he's just, there's no good decisions you can make

  • in that role that's gonna satisfy

  • a 60% majority of Americans, just not.

  • - [Reporter] With a decades-long tenure

  • comes many legislative highs and lows for McConnell.

  • - This is a guy who watched John McCain

  • cast the decisive no vote on the repeal of Obamacare,

  • a heartbreaker for the Republican Party.

  • - [McCain] No.

  • - [Reporter] Shortly after that, McConnell was able

  • to deliver on passing a $1.5 trillion tax cut,

  • the largest structural overhaul

  • of the tax system in more than 30 years.

  • - Probably from a legislative perspective,

  • the signature accomplishment of the entire Trump presidency.

  • - [Reporter] Some of McConnell's achievements

  • will last for years to come.

  • During the Trump administration,

  • he pushed through the confirmations

  • of more than 200 judicial nominees,

  • including 53 on appeals courts,

  • and three on the Supreme Court.

  • In 2016, McConnell refused to hold confirmation hearings

  • for then-President Barack Obama's

  • Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland.

  • - We're not giving lifetime appointments to this president

  • on the way out the door to change the Supreme Court

  • for the next 25 or 30 years.

  • - [Reporter] In October, 2020 with Trump in the White House,

  • McConnell and Senate Republicans

  • confirmed Amy Coney Barrett to the high court

  • just days before the presidential election.

  • - A lot of what we've done over the last four years

  • will be undone sooner or later by the next election.

  • They won't be able to do much about this

  • for a long time to come.

  • - [Reporter] The appointment was met with strong criticism

  • from Senate Democrats.

  • - They subjected Judge Garland

  • to an unprecedented partisan blockade,

  • but they're erecting a monument to hypocrisy

  • to rush Judge Barrett onto the bench.

  • - McConnell has cemented a conservative majority

  • on the Supreme Court for at least a generation.

  • - [Reporter] One of the greatest challenges

  • McConnell has faced during his tenure

  • is the rapidly changing Republican Party

  • shifting away from more traditional conservative values

  • and moving toward former President Donald Trump's

  • populist brand of conservatism.

  • - Believe me, I know the politics within my party

  • at this particular moment in time.

  • I have many faults.

  • Misunderstanding politics is not one of them.

  • - [Reporter] Many of McConnell's legislative wins

  • came during the Trump administration,

  • but the pair had a relatively tumultuous relationship.

  • - McConnell has this idea that to win in politics,

  • you must sit and stand firm.

  • And that's absolutely what he did with President Trump.

  • And that's not to say it was always easy.

  • That's not to say it came without any toll,

  • but it did speak to McConnell's sort of internal toughness

  • and ability to persevere

  • as qualities that were important to his leadership.

  • Things really fell apart, though,

  • between McConnell and Donald Trump after January 6th

  • when McConnell did not vote to convict President Trump,

  • but got up and gave a very, very impassioned speech

  • in public view on the Senate floor.

  • - There's no question, none,

  • that President Trump is practically and morally responsible

  • for provoking the events of the day.

  • No question about it.

  • - [Reporter] McConnell's decision to step down

  • follows a series of health setbacks

  • after the leader appeared to freeze

  • during two public appearances.

  • - All right, I'm sorry, you all. We're gonna need a minute.

  • - [Reporter] The Senate Minority Leader

  • who turned 82 on February 20th

  • said it's time for a new season in his life.

  • He will step back from the leadership role in November,

  • but plans to remain in the Senate

  • until his term expires in 2027.

  • - McConnell has been a very strong centralized leader

  • at a time when rank-and-file members want more power

  • to be devolved out into their hands.

  • And so it could mean a weakening

  • of the Senate Republicans' leadership.

  • It's very, very hard to see someone else who's going

  • to bring together all of those different skill sets,

  • the mastery of the Senate rules,

  • the mental and emotional toughness to produce the same type

  • of leadership that we saw with a Senator McConnell.

  • - I have full confidence in my conference

  • to choose my replacement and lead our country forward.

  • - And if you look at what he has done with his leadership

  • from the moment he walked into that office

  • to the moment he walks out, what he's ultimately done

  • has been the most consequential figure

  • over the longest period of time

  • of any Senate leader in history.

  • - [Press Corps Member] What do you say to the-

  • (press corps chattering) (pensive music)

- One of life's most underappreciated talents

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Mitch McConnell: How the Senate Leader Leveraged His Power Over 17 Years | WSJ

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 03 月 02 日
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