Mitch McConnell
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- In full:
- Addison Mitchell McConnell, Jr.
- Title / Office:
- United States Senate (1985-), United States
- Political Affiliation:
- Republican Party
- Notable Family Members:
- son of Addison Mitchell McConnell
- son of Julia Odene “Dean” Shockley McConnell
- married to Elaine Chao (1993–present)
- married to Sherrill Redmon (1968–1980)
- father of Elly
- father of Claire
- father of Porter
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Mitch McConnell (born February 20, 1942, Tuscumbia, Alabama, U.S.) is an influential Republican politician who has represented Kentucky in the U.S. Senate since 1985. The longest-serving Senate party leader, McConnell has been the majority whip (2003–07), minority leader (2007–15; 2021– ), and majority leader (2015–21). In 2024 he announced that he would be stepping down as minority leader later that year.
Early life and education
During his early childhood, McConnell was afflicted with, but eventually overcame, polio. His family moved from Alabama to Louisville, Kentucky, when he was 13. He graduated from the University of Louisville in 1964 and from the University of Kentucky Law School in 1967. From 1968 to 1970 McConnell was a legislative assistant to U.S. Sen. Marlow Cook. He later served as deputy assistant U.S. attorney general in the administration of Pres. Gerald R. Ford (1974–75) and as judge/executive (chief judge) of Jefferson county, Kentucky (1978–85).
Senate
McConnell was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1984, becoming the first Republican since 1968 to win a statewide election in Kentucky. As chairman of the Senate Ethics Committee in 1995, he garnered national attention for resisting Democratic attempts to investigate sexual assault accusations against Republican Sen. Bob Packwood of Oregon. In a speech on the Senate floor, McConnell threatened to launch investigations into Democratic politicians who had faced similar charges in the past, among them Sen. Ted Kennedy. His Democratic colleagues prevailed, however, and McConnell publicly changed his mind about Packwood, who resigned later that year under the weight of evidence against him.
McConnell earned a reputation as a tough opponent of campaign finance reform and campaign spending limits. From the 1990s he consistently voted against a series of such measures, including some sponsored by fellow Republicans. When a popular bipartisan measure sponsored by Republican Sen. John McCain and Democratic Sen. Russell D. Feingold was signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2002, McConnell promptly sued the Federal Election Commission, calling the law a violation of free speech. In a December 2003 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the law.
In subsequent years McConnell showed greater willingness to compromise. In 2005 he served on a bipartisan Senate committee that made recommendations for broad changes to the Department of Homeland Security, the government agency charged with protecting the country against terrorist attacks in the wake of the September 11 attacks of 2001. The following year he introduced a compromise bill that brought the Republican and Democratic parties closer to agreement about which interrogation techniques could be used by U.S. authorities on detainees held as suspected terrorists or terrorist sympathizers.
In 2007, however, as the newly elected Senate minority leader, McConnell opposed Democratic calls to set in place a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq (see Iraq War), arguing that it was not within the power of Congress to make such a judgment. Following the 2008 election of Pres. Barack Obama, McConnell coordinated the Republicans’ efforts in the Senate, opposing (unsuccessfully) Democratic legislation to reform health care and the financial sector.
The Republicans made significant gains in the 2010 midterm elections, and much of their initial focus turned to the federal deficit. In May 2011 McConnell joined other Republicans in announcing that he would not vote to raise the national debt ceiling unless various programs, including Medicare and Medicaid, underwent spending cuts. Without an increase to the debt limit, the government faced defaulting on its public debt. McConnell became a key figure in drafting a bipartisan deal that included significant cuts but no changes to the various entitlement programs. In addition, tax increases, which McConnell and the Republicans opposed, were also absent. Over the next several years, McConnell helped block a number of Democrat-led initiatives, including gun-control measures and increases to the minimum wage. Although some criticized his party’s use of the filibuster, he argued that Democrats refused to negotiate. After the Republicans regained control of the Senate in the 2014 midterm elections, McConnell was named majority leader.
In 2016 McConnell caused controversy when he refused to bring Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland, to a vote in the Senate. McConnell claimed that because it was an election year, the vacancy should remain open until a new president was inaugurated. During the 2016 presidential race, he supported the Republican nominee, Donald Trump, who was eventually elected. One of Trump’s first acts as president was to nominate Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. In April 2017 McConnell oversaw a change to the Senate rules that did away with the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees, and Gorsuch was confirmed by a vote of 54–45. Under McConnell the Senate approved numerous other Trump judicial nominees, including two other Supreme Court justices, Brett Kavanaugh (2018) and Amy Coney Barrett (2020). Both confirmations were contentious, with Barrett’s being particularly controversial as it came in an election year. The majority leader also backed various policies supported by the president, perhaps most notably a massive tax-reform bill that was passed in 2017.
In September 2019 the U.S. House of Representatives launched an impeachment inquiry against Trump following allegations that he had extorted a foreign country to investigate Joe Biden, his political rival (in 2020 Biden became the Democratic presidential nominee). Three months later the House convicted the president on two charges: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. While McConnell stated that he would hold a trial, he attracted controversy when he announced that he was coordinating with the White House about the proceedings. The trial opened in January 2020, and McConnell was credited with keeping the Republicans unified, especially in defeating a motion to call witnesses. In February the Senate easily acquitted the president. Shortly thereafter schools and businesses began closing across the country because of the coronavirus pandemic, and the economy entered a downturn that rivaled the Great Depression. In late March McConnell oversaw the Senate’s approval of a relief bill that was later signed into law.
The 2020 election was held in November amid this health crisis, and Biden defeated Trump; the fate of the Senate remained uncertain as both of Georgia’s senatorial races moved to runoffs. Trump contested the presidential election results, alleging voter fraud despite a lack of evidence. McConnell refused to push back against Trump’s claims and did not acknowledge Biden’s win until mid-December. That development came as McConnell attempted to halt a growing effort among Republicans to overturn the election. On January 5, 2021, both Democratic candidates won in Georgia, creating a 50–50 tie in the Senate; however, with an incoming Democratic vice president as the tiebreaker, Republicans became the minority party. The next day Congress convened to certify Biden’s victory, and McConnell—who remained majority leader, awaiting the swearing in of the new senators from Georgia—gave an impassioned speech against overturning the results, stating that to do so would send the country’s democracy into a “death spiral.” Shortly thereafter the proceedings were halted as Trump supporters stormed the Capitol. It took several hours to secure the building, but the certification eventually took place.
Many accused Trump of encouraging the attack—McConnell later said the president “provoked” it—and on January 13, 2021, the House impeached Trump for a second time, charging him with “incitement of insurrection.” At the time, the Senate was in recess, and McConnell refused to reconvene early to hold the impeachment trial. Instead, senators returned on January 19, and McConnell became minority leader on January 20, the same day Trump left office. On February 9 the Senate trial began, and McConnell later voted to acquit Trump, arguing that they had “no power to convict and disqualify a former officeholder who is now a private citizen”; Trump was ultimately acquitted. However, McConnell subsequently claimed that the former president was “practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of the day.”
Personal life
From 1968 to 1980 McConnell was married to Sherrill Redmon, with whom he had three children. He later wed (1993) Elaine Chao, who subsequently served as secretary of labor under Pres. George W. Bush and secretary of transportation under Pres. Donald Trump.