GOP Senate candidates lukewarm on McConnell
August 12, 2017 by admin
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Though Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s Republican colleagues in Washington have largely rallied to his defense amid President Donald Trump’s attacks, some 2018 GOP Senate candidates are hesitant to back the Kentucky Republican.
An informal survey of more than half a dozen Republican candidates in key states such as Montana and Arizona revealed lukewarm support for McConnell to continue as majority leader if Republicans control the Senate after next year’s midterms. Many candidates either said they would want someone else to be their leader, or declined to answer whether they would back McConnell remaining in the job.
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The responses varied among different types of candidates, with top party recruits backing McConnell and more long-shot candidates aligning themselves with President Donald Trump’s criticism of the Senate leader this week.
Speaking at the Rotary Club in Florence, Kentucky, on Monday, McConnell attributed Republicans’ stalled agenda to “excessive expectations” and artificial deadlines from the White House.
Trump has since fired away at McConnell while vacationing at his golf club in New Jersey.
“Senator Mitch McConnell said I had ‘excessive expectations,’ but I don’t think so. After 7 years of hearing Repeal Replace, why not done?” Trump wrote on Twitter Wednesday.
Then on Thursday, Trump declined to endorse McConnell to remain majority leader.
“If he doesn’t get repeal and replace done, if he doesn’t get taxes done — meaning cuts and reform — and if he doesn’t get a very easy one to get done, infrastructure — if he doesn’t get them done, then you can ask me that question,” Trump said.
Some Republican hopefuls positioning themselves as outsiders running against the Washington establishment echoed Trump’s criticism of McConnell.
“I believe that the best way for Sen. McConnell to try to retain his leadership position long term is to find a way to move the president’s policy agenda forward in the Senate,” said Kelli Ward when asked whether she would vote for McConnell to stay on. Ward is challenging Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) in a primary.
Flake’s vocal criticism of Trump has angered the president and his allies, who have threatened to campaign to unseat the incumbent by backing a primary opponent.
Ward wasn’t the only primary challenger to be skeptical of McConnell. Long-shot Republican candidate Danny Tarkanian, who announced earlier this week that he would challenge Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.), also sided with Trump in his spat with McConnell. “Of course I support the president,” Tarkanian told Fox Business on Thursday.
In Montana, where Republicans are looking to unseat Democratic incumbent Jon Tester, Republican candidate Al Olszewski, a state senator, said he would not vote for McConnell to stay on as leader if he’s elected.
“He is very disappointed that the last Senate health care reform legislation was created behind closed doors with few people, and did not get vetted through committee hearings and regular order,” a campaign coordinator for Olszewski said.
Olszewski’s primary opponent, State Auditor Matt Rosendale, would support McConnell. A spokesperson for Rosendale said the Republican leader’s status “is not in question.”
In Missouri, one of Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill would-be challengers, producer and political activist Austin Petersen, said he would not support McConnell. Another Republican hopeful, Tony Monetti, an assistant dean at the University of Central Missouri, declined to comment.
In West Virginia, where Republicans are vying to unseat Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin, Rep. Evan Jenkins supports McConnell staying on as leader. Attorney General Patrick Morrissey’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment, and laid-off coal miner Bo Copley declined to say whether or not he would back McConnell.
Several GOP candidates in other states also declined to weigh in.
“I’d really have to evaluate things on the ground, see who’s even running for the position,” Eric Brakey, a Republican state senator from Maine running against independent Sen. Angus King, said in an interview. “I’m focused on my race.”
In Pennsylvania, Berwick Borough Council member Andrew Shecktor said McConnell should not only step down as leader, but leave the Senate altogether. Shecktor is a long-shot candidate who is running to unseat Democratic incumbent Sen. Bob Casey.
“I feel Mitch McConnell is well overdue not only to step down as Senate Majority Leader, but to leave the Senate and open the spot for a new candidate with fresh ideas,” Shecktor wrote in an email.
With Alabama’s special Senate election primary next week, GOP Rep. Mo Brooks has publicly voiced his frustrations with McConnell. Those only grew after Trump endorsed Luther Strange, who was appointed to fill Attorney General Jeff Session’s Senate seat. Brooks said earlier this week he would not vote for the Kentucky Republican to stay on as majority leader.
In a new ad released on Thursday, Brooks lauded Trump’s attacks on McConnell.
“McConnell and Strange are weak, but together we can be strong,” Brooks says in the ad. “Mr. President, isn’t it time we tell McConnell and Strange, ‘You’re fired?’”
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The Latest: Kenya police use tear gas on opposition convoy
August 12, 2017 by admin
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NAIROBI, Kenya — The Latest on Kenya’s election (all times local):
3:15 p.m.
An Associated Press photographer says Kenyan police in Nairobi have used tear gas on a large convoy of vehicles carrying opposition officials. Police also fired guns into the air.
The photographer says the attack occurred Saturday as the convoy tried to enter Kibera, a slum where opposition supporters have rioted since Tuesday’s disputed election.
The opposition alleges that the vote was rigged. The election commission, however, says there was no tampering and on Friday declared that President Uhuru Kenyatta had won a second term.
Kenyatta has appealed for unity and says he wants to work with opposition leader Raila Odinga.
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2:15 p.m.
A Nairobi man says his 9-year-old daughter has been killed by a stray bullet as protesters clash with police after the country’s disputed presidential election.
Wycliff Mokaya tells The Associated Press that his daughter was on their third-floor balcony when she was shot Saturday morning. The family lives in Mathare, an area of Nairobi with many opposition supporters.
“I was watching her play with her friends when she suddenly fell down,” the father says. “She was my only hope.”
Police earlier Saturday said they shot dead two people in the city of Kisumu during opposition protests.
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1:30 p.m.
A top Kenyan official says life has largely returned to normal following disputed elections, although he acknowledges some “incidents of lawlessness” in several opposition areas where protests are occurring.
Acting Interior Minister Fred Matiang’i said Saturday that “criminal elements have attempted to take advantage of the situation to loot and destroy property.”
Matiang’i is also criticizing what he calls “inflammatory messages” on social media designed to sow discord during the tense election period.
Kenyan police say they shot and killed two people during riots overnight by opposition supporters after President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner in elections overshadowed by fraud allegations. The deaths occurred on the outskirts of Kisumu, a city where opposition leader Raila Odinga has strong support.
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10:40 a.m.
Kenyan police say they have shot and killed two people during riots by opposition supporters after President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner in national elections.
Leonard Katana, a regional police commander, said Saturday that the deaths occurred on the outskirts of Kisumu, a city where opposition leader Raila Odinga has strong support. Katana says another five people were injured by gunfire in Kisumu.
Also Saturday, Kenyan police opened fire to disperse opposition protesters who blocked roads and set up burning barricades in a slum in Nairobi, the capital. An Associated Press photographer saw police firing live rounds in the Mathare area.
Kenyatta on Friday appealed for unity after the Kenyan election commission announced results following several days of vote-counting. Odinga has alleged that the election was rigged.
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