Normally, I simply ignore your comments, but your post was was nothing but thinly veiled insults aimed at Trump and his supporters.
Nothing but a smarmy way to ask a Trump supporter for reasoning.
I have plenty of reasoning as to why I want to see McConnell flushed, along with a laundry list of others.
I'm not going to waste my time typing out that reasoning to someone who is stuck in the political past, and refuses to see the bigger picture, or why the Republican party needs a serious overhaul.
I agree, it was a stretch to ask for reasoning.
This is pretty much where I am with McConnell.. I think hes been a bit too ready to compromise to the point of leaving too much on the table that was still available in recent years..
That said I've had similar thoughts about most Republican leadership for 20+ years...
Everything doesnt have to be an all or nothing affair like those on the extreme left and the extreme right seem to think it should be..
But I think the Republicans have lost far more than they have gained for the last few decades.. even when they had absolute control of one house or the other..
I respectfully disagree. I am confident that he will go down as the most consequential senate leader of the last half of the twentieth and early twenty-first century. I respected him because he fully understood the art of the possible and had zero patience with the art of the hopeful.
Frankly, I think that is the biggest problem with the current populist movement. "Draining the swamp," for instance, is patently nonsensical if the intent is the removal of elected RINOs. Trump clearly realizes that, even if his supporters are too blind in their faith to understand he is playing them. As I have noted here many times, each of those "RINOs" has a republican constituency.
If, on the other hand, he is talking about the bureaucracy, I have yet to see a bureaucratic reform initiative.
Did I agree with all of McConnel's efforts? Of course not. But, I truly do not know how he could have achieved much more. Unlike his republican counterparts in the Freedom Caucus, he has always taken the business of governing seriously. He has had little patience with stunts like shutting down the government.
With respect to Ukraine, Israel, and the border, he fully realizes all are important to a great power like the United States. The senate compromise bill that would have at least helped the situation in all three areas of national interest was a remarkable achievement for a minority party. Instead, like the result in the Georgia runoff, Donald Trump and his allies have left us with nothing.