That snap judgment by McConnell seemed to make sense at the time.
It looked — for all the world — like a fundamentally disqualifying series of acts undertaken by Trump. McConnell seemed to believe that, finally, this was the cataclysmic event that would drive Republicans away from Trump for good.
“Former President Trump’s actions preceding the riot were a disgraceful dereliction of duty,” McConnell said at one point. “There is no question that President Trump is practically and morally responsible for provoking the events of that day,” he said at another. And McConnell closed with this: “The Senate’s decision does not condone anything that happened on or before that terrible day. It simply shows that senators did what the former President failed to do: We put our constitutional duty first.”
Pretty stark stuff, right?
McConnell saw what he believed to be Trump teetering on the edge of a cliff — and moved to shove him off.
And yet, as the days and weeks went by, it became increasingly clear that January 6 wasn’t the end for Trump — not by a long shot. If anything, the former President grew even stronger among the most hardcore base voters in the party following the insurrection.
It’s striking that McConnell, one of the top political minds in the Republican Party, so badly misjudged how January 6 would play with his party’s base. And it speaks to the fact that many Republican leaders remain removed from the beliefs of their party’s base.
Know who speaks the base’s language better than anyone? Donald J. Trump.
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