Mitch McConnell Doesn't Realize The Republican Party He Knew Is Dead

Mitch is a true swamper, always has been, drifts with the tide. Devoid of principles, loves to lecture about compromising on little things for the greater whole. As for vision? Don’t think so. The conservative Jacksonian version of the GOP will assume control. They should be encouraged by the fact that survey data disclosed if Trump had not tweeted as much and evolved to become more direct without being crass he’d would have been reelected. The problem was his greater then thou narcissistic behavior. The lesson learned should be to speak to be understood, simplify issues, and to embrace the concerns of the working man over the lying country club corporate elite. The Donald accomplished more than any preceding GOP’er had in receiving greater support within the Black and Hispanic community. The question remains who can play the role of being an outsider?
 
Post-policy republicans only know who they want to hurt. It's politics for the lazy.
 
So what's your "solution"? Permanent far Left Democrat entrenchment?
Maybe repubs should stop embracing scumbags, worshipping the wealthy, and find policy that actually works.
And Dumbhshitocrats don't worship the wealthy? Please. As if the Hollywierd bunch are a paragon of virtue?
It isn't a hive mind. There are a lot of actors and staff and talented folks in
Couple of things:

1) His Republican base would have killed him during their Capital insurrection if they had the chance. He could have died alongside Mike Pence
2) There are a lot of things he does not realize. He is an old man from a state that has no say in anything on a national stage. Kentucky is a nothingburger state. No policy or good ideas or futuristic inventions come from there.
3) Who cares what Mitch McConnell does or does not realize. His party wants him dead.


Oh, they would have selfied him to death?

You fucking Nazis and your absurd drama.
Selfied him to death? Uh no, they would have murdered him.


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Sure they would have, Adolf.


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You vermin Nazis have been doing this shit for decades, but now it's suddenly the worst thing ever.

Fuck off, Nazi.
 
“If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think," Holmes offered.

Several things struck me about the framing. The notion of today's Republican Party uniting behind "conservative principles" is just farcical on its face, particularly after McConnell and other party leaders stood by for four years as Trump morphed the party into a vapid zombie cult. Whatever the GOP is today, it isn't tethered to anything resembling ideology or a set of guiding principles, conservative of otherwise. Claiming differently is evidence that McConnell and his brain trust have lost track of the nature of the entity they're trying to steer back into power.

In total, the picture that emerges is one of an ailing Senate leader charging toward the midterms with a decade-old battle plan, but seemingly oblivious to the fact that neither his caucus nor the voters it supposedly represents are even remotely the same army that went to war with the Obama administration. McConnell will undoubtedly make a play to reunite the caucus and the party behind that plan, but nothing about his plan is grounded in the realities of the battlefield that presently stands before us.



He also seems to be oblivious to the fact that Trump is control of the caucus, and will make McConnell the enemy of that caucus, who will promptly throw Mitch under the bus to save their own asses. The whole party are cowards from top to bottom.
The GOP is reaping what it sowed. Trump used to be the problem of America and all Americans (whether they realized it or not).

Well, Trump typically (and quite stupidly) spent his four years in the WH alienating just about everyone other than his base. Any political consultant worth his fee would tell you that expanding your support is the smart move, but Trump thought that he could stoke the fires of division to turn out his base in record numbers. He was wrong, and he lost the election because of his own stupidity. Now he's out of power. That's a simple fact. And what that means is that Trump is no longer America's problem; he's the GOP's problem. And as the old saying goes, if past is prologue (and I believe it is), Trump is going to take a wrecking ball to the GOP. He's going to basically destroy the GOP as a viable governing party on a national level all in the pursuit of his egomaniacal thirst for vengeance.

What's additionally sad in all of this is how we know we would all collectively act if a person like this was in our household or in our work place. If we had someone like Trump in our workplace, we (the collective we) would solicitate management to fire him for disrupting the work force and driving down productivity, not to mention profits. And if a person like Trump was staying in our homes and turning family members against each other as is his tendency, he would be asked to leave in the interest of amity.

But like I stated, Trump is the GOP's problem now. They will have little choice but to deal with it! I'd wish the GOP luck, but it's all going to be bad luck.
 
“If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think," Holmes offered.

Several things struck me about the framing. The notion of today's Republican Party uniting behind "conservative principles" is just farcical on its face, particularly after McConnell and other party leaders stood by for four years as Trump morphed the party into a vapid zombie cult. Whatever the GOP is today, it isn't tethered to anything resembling ideology or a set of guiding principles, conservative of otherwise. Claiming differently is evidence that McConnell and his brain trust have lost track of the nature of the entity they're trying to steer back into power.

In total, the picture that emerges is one of an ailing Senate leader charging toward the midterms with a decade-old battle plan, but seemingly oblivious to the fact that neither his caucus nor the voters it supposedly represents are even remotely the same army that went to war with the Obama administration. McConnell will undoubtedly make a play to reunite the caucus and the party behind that plan, but nothing about his plan is grounded in the realities of the battlefield that presently stands before us.



He also seems to be oblivious to the fact that Trump is control of the caucus, and will make McConnell the enemy of that caucus, who will promptly throw Mitch under the bus to save their own asses. The whole party are cowards from top to bottom.
The GOP is reaping what it sowed. Trump used to be the problem of America and all Americans (whether they realized it or not).

Well, Trump typically (and quite stupidly) spent his four years in the WH alienating just about everyone other than his base. Any political consultant worth his fee would tell you that expanding your support is the smart move, but Trump thought that he could stoke the fires of division to turn out his base in record numbers. He was wrong, and he lost the election because of his own stupidity. Now he's out of power. That's a simple fact. And what that means is that Trump is no longer America's problem; he's the GOP's problem. And as the old saying goes, if past is prologue (and I believe it is), Trump is going to take a wrecking ball to the GOP. He's going to basically destroy the GOP as a viable governing party on a national level all in the pursuit of his egomaniacal thirst for vengeance.

What's additionally sad in all of this is how we know we would all collectively act if a person like this was in our household or in our work place. If we had someone like Trump in our workplace, we (the collective we) would solicitate management to fire him for disrupting the work force and driving down productivity, not to mention profits. And if a person like Trump was staying in our homes and turning family members against each other as is his tendency, he would be asked to leave in the interest of amity.

But like I stated, Trump is the GOP's problem now. They will have little choice but to deal with it! I'd wish the GOP luck, but it's all going to be bad luck.

Alienated everyone huh, Herr Himmler?

Particularly the 75 million who voted for him.

You Nazis are such fucking clowns.
 
“If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think," Holmes offered.

Several things struck me about the framing. The notion of today's Republican Party uniting behind "conservative principles" is just farcical on its face, particularly after McConnell and other party leaders stood by for four years as Trump morphed the party into a vapid zombie cult. Whatever the GOP is today, it isn't tethered to anything resembling ideology or a set of guiding principles, conservative of otherwise. Claiming differently is evidence that McConnell and his brain trust have lost track of the nature of the entity they're trying to steer back into power.

In total, the picture that emerges is one of an ailing Senate leader charging toward the midterms with a decade-old battle plan, but seemingly oblivious to the fact that neither his caucus nor the voters it supposedly represents are even remotely the same army that went to war with the Obama administration. McConnell will undoubtedly make a play to reunite the caucus and the party behind that plan, but nothing about his plan is grounded in the realities of the battlefield that presently stands before us.



He also seems to be oblivious to the fact that Trump is control of the caucus, and will make McConnell the enemy of that caucus, who will promptly throw Mitch under the bus to save their own asses. The whole party are cowards from top to bottom.
Yeah...I was laughing at the 'con-servative principles' phrase too.

I've got to admit. I'm torn here. But it does beg the question, who is the leadership with Senate Republicans, if they throw Mitch overboard?

It can't be Trump, because he's the Messiah of the cult.
 
“If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think," Holmes offered.

Several things struck me about the framing. The notion of today's Republican Party uniting behind "conservative principles" is just farcical on its face, particularly after McConnell and other party leaders stood by for four years as Trump morphed the party into a vapid zombie cult. Whatever the GOP is today, it isn't tethered to anything resembling ideology or a set of guiding principles, conservative of otherwise. Claiming differently is evidence that McConnell and his brain trust have lost track of the nature of the entity they're trying to steer back into power.

In total, the picture that emerges is one of an ailing Senate leader charging toward the midterms with a decade-old battle plan, but seemingly oblivious to the fact that neither his caucus nor the voters it supposedly represents are even remotely the same army that went to war with the Obama administration. McConnell will undoubtedly make a play to reunite the caucus and the party behind that plan, but nothing about his plan is grounded in the realities of the battlefield that presently stands before us.



He also seems to be oblivious to the fact that Trump is control of the caucus, and will make McConnell the enemy of that caucus, who will promptly throw Mitch under the bus to save their own asses. The whole party are cowards from top to bottom.
Paid trolls like you love Asshole republicrats like Bush and McConnell as much as you love that asswipe lover of yours Obama,you are in love with those asswipes bush and Obama because they hate America and are mass murderers of women and children and that is why you hate trump sense he is against wars and have your head up mitches ass sense he is also a fan of warmongers bush and Obama mr asswipe.
 
“If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think," Holmes offered.

Several things struck me about the framing. The notion of today's Republican Party uniting behind "conservative principles" is just farcical on its face, particularly after McConnell and other party leaders stood by for four years as Trump morphed the party into a vapid zombie cult. Whatever the GOP is today, it isn't tethered to anything resembling ideology or a set of guiding principles, conservative of otherwise. Claiming differently is evidence that McConnell and his brain trust have lost track of the nature of the entity they're trying to steer back into power.

In total, the picture that emerges is one of an ailing Senate leader charging toward the midterms with a decade-old battle plan, but seemingly oblivious to the fact that neither his caucus nor the voters it supposedly represents are even remotely the same army that went to war with the Obama administration. McConnell will undoubtedly make a play to reunite the caucus and the party behind that plan, but nothing about his plan is grounded in the realities of the battlefield that presently stands before us.



He also seems to be oblivious to the fact that Trump is control of the caucus, and will make McConnell the enemy of that caucus, who will promptly throw Mitch under the bus to save their own asses. The whole party are cowards from top to bottom.
The GOP is reaping what it sowed. Trump used to be the problem of America and all Americans (whether they realized it or not).

Well, Trump typically (and quite stupidly) spent his four years in the WH alienating just about everyone other than his base. Any political consultant worth his fee would tell you that expanding your support is the smart move, but Trump thought that he could stoke the fires of division to turn out his base in record numbers. He was wrong, and he lost the election because of his own stupidity. Now he's out of power. That's a simple fact. And what that means is that Trump is no longer America's problem; he's the GOP's problem. And as the old saying goes, if past is prologue (and I believe it is), Trump is going to take a wrecking ball to the GOP. He's going to basically destroy the GOP as a viable governing party on a national level all in the pursuit of his egomaniacal thirst for vengeance.

What's additionally sad in all of this is how we know we would all collectively act if a person like this was in our household or in our work place. If we had someone like Trump in our workplace, we (the collective we) would solicitate management to fire him for disrupting the work force and driving down productivity, not to mention profits. And if a person like Trump was staying in our homes and turning family members against each other as is his tendency, he would be asked to leave in the interest of amity.

But like I stated, Trump is the GOP's problem now. They will have little choice but to deal with it! I'd wish the GOP luck, but it's all going to be bad luck.

Alienated everyone huh, Herr Himmler?

Particularly the 75 million who voted for him.

You Nazis are such fucking clowns.

That's 74 million... Bozo...and 82 million voted for Biden, so nobody gives a rats ass what the 74 million losers think.

I can tell you what they better start thinking. Like they've got some fucking sense. Being a shit for brains cult follower ain't no way to go through life son.
 
“If Republicans can reunite behind basic conservative principles and stand up to the liberal overreach of the Biden administration, things will change a lot quicker than people think," Holmes offered.

Several things struck me about the framing. The notion of today's Republican Party uniting behind "conservative principles" is just farcical on its face, particularly after McConnell and other party leaders stood by for four years as Trump morphed the party into a vapid zombie cult. Whatever the GOP is today, it isn't tethered to anything resembling ideology or a set of guiding principles, conservative of otherwise. Claiming differently is evidence that McConnell and his brain trust have lost track of the nature of the entity they're trying to steer back into power.

In total, the picture that emerges is one of an ailing Senate leader charging toward the midterms with a decade-old battle plan, but seemingly oblivious to the fact that neither his caucus nor the voters it supposedly represents are even remotely the same army that went to war with the Obama administration. McConnell will undoubtedly make a play to reunite the caucus and the party behind that plan, but nothing about his plan is grounded in the realities of the battlefield that presently stands before us.



He also seems to be oblivious to the fact that Trump is control of the caucus, and will make McConnell the enemy of that caucus, who will promptly throw Mitch under the bus to save their own asses. The whole party are cowards from top to bottom.
The GOP is reaping what it sowed. Trump used to be the problem of America and all Americans (whether they realized it or not).

Well, Trump typically (and quite stupidly) spent his four years in the WH alienating just about everyone other than his base. Any political consultant worth his fee would tell you that expanding your support is the smart move, but Trump thought that he could stoke the fires of division to turn out his base in record numbers. He was wrong, and he lost the election because of his own stupidity. Now he's out of power. That's a simple fact. And what that means is that Trump is no longer America's problem; he's the GOP's problem. And as the old saying goes, if past is prologue (and I believe it is), Trump is going to take a wrecking ball to the GOP. He's going to basically destroy the GOP as a viable governing party on a national level all in the pursuit of his egomaniacal thirst for vengeance.

What's additionally sad in all of this is how we know we would all collectively act if a person like this was in our household or in our work place. If we had someone like Trump in our workplace, we (the collective we) would solicitate management to fire him for disrupting the work force and driving down productivity, not to mention profits. And if a person like Trump was staying in our homes and turning family members against each other as is his tendency, he would be asked to leave in the interest of amity.

But like I stated, Trump is the GOP's problem now. They will have little choice but to deal with it! I'd wish the GOP luck, but it's all going to be bad luck.

Alienated everyone huh, Herr Himmler?

Particularly the 75 million who voted for him.

You Nazis are such fucking clowns.

That's 74 million... Bozo...and 82 million voted for Biden, so nobody gives a rats ass what the 74 million losers think.

I can tell you what they better start thinking. Like they've got some fucking sense. Being a shit for brains cult follower ain't no way to go through life son.

Sure they did, Herr Himmler.

Do you want to murder 75 million Americans?

Of course you do,
 

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