Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is taking aim at a fellow Kentuckian, Rep. John Yarmuth, after the Democratic lawmaker urged the upper chamber to nix the legislative filibuster.
McConnell, in an op-ed for the Courier-Journal in Louisville, said that Yarmuth, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, “doesn’t seem to know Kentucky,” and criticized him over a recent op-ed in which he called the 60-vote requirement for most legislation in the Senate a “minority veto.”
“It’s really ‘Kentucky’s veto.’ The filibuster stops radical schemes like the Green New Deal and socialized health care that would devastate the Bluegrass,” McConnell wrote.
McConnell added that the legislative filibuster gives him a “big seat at the table” — even though Democrats have a majority in both chambers and control the White House.
“If Yarmuth had his way, Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi [D-Calif.] would have a free pass to leave Middle America out in the cold,” he added.
Yarmuth, in an op-ed last week, described the Senate GOP leader as “panicking” over growing support among Senate Democrats for getting rid of or at least significantly changing the filibuster.
“Eliminate the minority veto, make voting easy for everyone, give statehood to the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Time is running out. Let’s make hay while the bright sun of democracy is shining. This is a bet worth making. Ditch Mitch and the minority veto,” Yarmuth added.
McConnell turned several of those issues back around on Yarmuth, arguing that the Democrat wanted the Senate to get rid of the filibuster in order to pass a “radical” agenda. McConnell has warned that the 60-vote requirement is the only thing standing in the way of the ideas pushed by progressives, although some of those, like the Green New Deal, don’t have the support to pass even without the filibuster.
“Yarmuth left no ambiguity in his radical ambitions. It starts with restrictions on gun ownership and packing the Senate with new Democrats. Then comes HR 1, a complete federal takeover of elections that overturns Voter ID and other Kentucky laws,” McConnell said.
For Senate Democrats to deploy the “nuclear option” and gut the filibuster, they would need all 50 of their members to support the change. Activists got a win on Friday night, when Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) opened the door to supporting the “talking filibuster,” but several senators are viewed as wary and Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin (W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.) are both on the record against nixing the 60-vote threshold.
Yarmuth hit back at McConnell’s new op-ed on Twitter, saying on Monday that he was “proud to support such ‘radical ambitions’ as ending gun violence, making it easier for Americans to vote, and increasing the likelihood that the Senate will actually pass legislation supported by the overwhelming majority of Americans and Kentuckians.”