Analysis: Mitch McConnell just sent a VERY clear message to Donald Trump about 2022
And, on Tuesday, McConnell made clear that he believes former President Donald Trump’s ongoing focus on the 2020 election is decidedly detrimental to the GOP’s chances in the upcoming midterm elections.
“I do think we need to be thinking about the future and not the past. I think the American people are focusing on this administration, what it’s doing to the country, and it’s my hope the ’22 election will be a referendum on the performance of the current administration, not a rehash of suggestions about what may have happened in 2020.”
That’s about as close as McConnell will get to outright refutation of Trump and the strategy, such as it is, that the former president is peddling — a hard focus on trying to prove (nonexistent) voter fraud in the 2020 election.
While Trump’s continued attempts to re-litigate the 2020 election have been ongoing for months, that effort went to another level in the last week when Trump suggested that unless the last election was overturned, future elections would be pointless.
That statement brought back bad memories for Republicans who lost not one but two Senate seats in Georgia earlier this year as Trump (and several of his closest allies) were focused almost entirely on the 2020 election — to the detriment of those two runoffs which turned McConnell from Senate majority leader to Senate minority leader.
Which is, of course, true. Midterm elections in a president’s first term have been disastrous for his party — largely because they function as a referendum on the first two years of the term. Trump lost 40 Republican seats — and the majority — in 2018. Barack Obama lost 63 seats — and the majority in 2010.
Trump’s ongoing rhetoric about the 2020 election complicates the desire of McConnell (and other party strategists) to make the 2022 midterms solely about Joe Biden’s and his performance in office. Which is dumb given that Biden’s job approval is stuck in the low to mid 40s — a danger zone for Democrats hoping to win election or reelection next November.
Given that — and Trump’s continued popularity among the base of the party — it is no simple thing for McConnell to wrench the GOP and its candidates toward a focus on the future rather than staying mired in the past.
Much depends on Trump and his whims. And if past is prologue, that’s bad news for McConnell.