Mitch McConnell, on the Brink


MADISONVILLE, Ky.-'Well, we expect to win,' Mitch McConnell said, his jowly face set in its usual chelonian glare. McConnell, the Senate minority leader, was standing in the parking lot of a Hertz Rent-a-Car office in this Western Kentucky coal-and-tobacco town, having just participated in its Veterans Day parade with his wife, former Labor Secretary Elaine Chao.


Surrounded by a gaggle of cameras, McConnell reeled off campaign talking points about the glorious world that lay just over the horizon, where Republicans have taken the Senate majority and the Obama agenda has been stopped in its tracks. But, he was asked, what about for him personally-what would it mean to him to be majority leader?


McConnell paused slightly, overtaken by a rare and barely perceptible shyness. 'Look, I-I think we ought to wait until we see what happens Tuesday night,' he said.


On the eve of this year's midterm election, the 72-year-old McConnell's longtime dream of leading the Senate-what began as the improbable ambition of an awkward, polio-crippled boy from the wrong party, and has since suffered numerous setbacks and false starts-seems finally on the verge of being realized. Of the 10 Senate races that have been considered competitive, including McConnell's own, Republicans lead in the polls in seven, according to RealClearPolitics' polling averages. They must win five of the 10 to take the Senate. (This assumes the GOP also wins three Democrat-held seats in Montana, South Dakota, and West Virginia, as they are all but certain to do. Two of the 10, Georgia and Louisiana, may be decided in runoffs in the coming months.)


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Yet McConnell remains a remote and inscrutable figure. He rode in the parade in a silver Thunderbird convertible, sitting alongside Chao atop the back seat in jeans and a windbreaker with his campaign's 'Team Mitch' logo. McConnell has the forced, frozen smile of a man whose face naturally settles into a frown; even when he smiles with his mouth open, his teeth do not show, making him look as if he had forgotten his dentures. Chao occasionally chatted with the driver or passersby, but McConnell simply sat, and smiled, and waved or gave a thumbs-up, head swiveling slowly from side to side as if on a timer. Behind the Thunderbird, McConnell's Democratic opponent, Alison Lundergan Grimes, strode down Main Street with a crowd of supporters chanting, 'Hey, hey, ho, ho! Mitch McConnell's got to go!'


At the side of the parade route, I struck up a conversation with Shawn and Elaine Vanlue, who had driven in from the nearby town of Nebo. He is a 46-year-old disabled Air Force veteran; she is 50 and works for a local hospital. They both despise President Obama-in Shawn's words, 'the whole thing started out with a lie, trying to say he's not a Muslim.' Elaine said she would vote for the candidate who most supported 'Kentucky coal, our gun rights, and our veterans.'


I thought I had them pegged for McConnell voters. (One McConnell bumper sticker reads, succinctly, 'COAL. GUNS. FREEDOM.') But then Shawn began to complain that, for all his years in Washington and power amassed, McConnell didn't seem to be helping the people he knew. 'Kmart done left, Sears done left. What's he doing to bring jobs to the community?' he said. Elaine agreed: 'We need to bring in some new people,' she said. 'I'm leaning more to Alison this year.'


McConnell is not a politician known for his passionate convictions, said Al Cross, a University of Kentucky journalism professor who has followed McConnell's career for three decades. 'His politics are largely a bloodless politics,' Cross told me. 'He's just very good at the game .... He's played every possible angle. He takes nothing for granted. He knows his own vulnerabilities and weaknesses better than anyone-that's one reason he's been able to survive. There's not a lot of love for Mitch McConnell, but there's a great deal of respect and some amount of fear.'


McConnell has won eight elections and lost none, starting as a county executive in the 1970s when Republicans were a small minority in Kentucky. He has steadily built the party into his personal machine-the state GOP headquarters in Frankfort is housed in the Mitch McConnell Building-and Republicans now constitute seven of the state's eight federal representatives, though Democrats still hold the governorship and legislature. Earlier this year, he complained to The New York Times that he doesn't get enough credit for his political mastery: 'It makes you feel a little bit like Rodney Dangerfield sometimes; 8-and-0 is 8-and-0.'


In the Senate, where McConnell has led his party since 2007, liberals revile him for the strategy of near-total opposition to Obama he undertook following the 2008 election. As McConnell told The Atlantic's Joshua Green in 2011, he counseled his caucus not to work with the popular, newly elected president in order to deny Obama's policies-including some that Republicans had previously supported, such as an individual health-care mandate or a cap-and-trade approach to carbon regulation-the cachet of bipartisanship. (Obama, for his part, chafes at the way this strategy has helped make his own leadership appear deficient. At the 2013 White House Correspondents' Dinner, the president joked that his critics fault him for not wooing Congress by, for instance, taking McConnell out for a drink. 'Really?' Obama asked. 'Why don't you get a drink with Mitch McConnell?')






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