McConnell called Trump 'stupid" and 'despicable' in private after the
2020 election, a new book says
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[October 17, 2024]
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) — Mitch McConnell said after the 2020 election that
then-President Donald Trump was “stupid as well as being ill-tempered,"
a “despicable human being" and a “narcissist,” according to excerpts
from a new biography of the Senate Republican leader that will be
released this month.
McConnell made the remarks in private as part of a series of personal
oral histories that he made available to Michael Tackett, deputy
Washington bureau chief of The Associated Press. Tackett’s book, “The
Price of Power,” draws from almost three decades of McConnell’s recorded
diaries and from years of interviews with the normally reticent Kentucky
Republican.
The animosity between Trump and McConnell is well known — Trump once
called McConnell " a dour, sullen, and unsmiling political hack." But
McConnell's private comments are by far his most brutal assessment of
the former president and could be seized on by Democrats before the Nov.
5 election. The biography will be released Oct. 29, one week before
Election Day that will decide if Trump returns to the White House.
Despite those strong words, McConnell has endorsed Trump’s 2024 run,
saying earlier this year “it should come as no surprise” that he would
support the Republican party's nominee. He shook Trump’s hand in June
when Trump visited GOP senators on Capitol Hill.
McConnell, 82, announced this year that he will step aside as Republican
leader after the election but stay in the Senate through the end of his
term in 2026.

McConnell was ‘counting the days’ until Trump left office
The comments about Trump quoted in the book came in the weeks before the
Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. Trump was then actively trying to
overturn his loss to Democrat Joe Biden. McConnell feared this would
hurt Republicans in two Georgia runoffs and cost them the Senate
majority. Democrats won both races.
Publicly, McConnell had congratulated Biden after the Electoral College
certified the presidential vote and the senator warned his fellow
Republicans not to challenge the results. But he did not say much else.
Privately, he said in his oral history that “it’s not just the Democrats
who are counting the days” until Trump left office, and that Trump’s
behavior “only underscores the good judgment of the American people.
They’ve had just enough of the misrepresentations, the outright lies
almost on a daily basis, and they fired him.”
“And for a narcissist like him,” McConnell continued, “that's been
really hard to take, and so his behavior since the election has been
even worse, by far, than it was before, because he has no filter now at
all.”
Before those Georgia runoffs, McConnell said Trump is “stupid as well as
being ill-tempered and can’t even figure out where his own best
interests lie.”
Trump was also holding up a coronavirus aid package at the time, despite
bipartisan support. “This despicable human being,” McConnell said in his
oral history, “is sitting on this package of relief that the American
people desperately need.”
On Jan. 6, soon after he made those comments, McConnell was holed up in
a secure location with other congressional leaders, calling Vice
President Mike Pence and military officials for reinforcements as Trump
supporters stormed the Capitol. Once the Senate resumed debate over the
certification of Biden's victory, McConnell said in a speech on the
floor that “this failed attempt to obstruct the Congress, this failed
insurrection, only underscores how crucial the task before us is for our
republic.”
McConnell then went to his office to address his staff, some of whom had
barricaded themselves in the office as rioters banged on their doors. He
started to sob softly as he thanked them, Tackett writes.
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President Donald Trump brings Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell
of Ky., on stage during a campaign rally in Lexington, Ky., Nov. 4,
2019. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

“You are my family, and I hate the fact that you had to go through
this,” he told them.
The next month, McConnell gave his harshest public criticism of
Trump on the Senate floor, saying he was “ practically and morally
responsible ” for the Jan. 6 attack. Still, McConnell voted to
acquit Trump after House Democrats impeached him for inciting the
riot.
Years of doubts and criticism
In a statement to the AP on Thursday, McConnell referenced two
fellow Republican senators — JD Vance of Ohio, the vice presidential
nominee, and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, both of whom are
strong Trump allies after harshly criticizing him during his first
run in 2016.
“Whatever I may have said about President Trump pales in comparison
to what JD Vance, Lindsey Graham, and others have said about him,
but we are all on the same team now,” McConnell said.
McConnell also had doubts about Trump from the start. Just after
Trump was elected in 2016, as Congress was certifying the election,
McConnell told Biden, then the outgoing vice president, that he
thought Trump could be trouble, Tackett writes.
The book channels McConnell’s inner thoughts during some of the
biggest moments after Trump took office, as McConnell held his
tongue and as the two men repeatedly fought and made up.
In 2017, as Trump publicly criticized McConnell for the Senate's
failure to repeal the Affordable Care Act, Trump and McConnell had a
heated argument on the phone. Weeks went by with no contact. Then
Trump invited McConnell to the White House and called a joint news
conference without telling him first. McConnell said the event went
fine, and “it’s not hard to look more knowledgeable than Donald
Trump at a press conference.”
After the passage of a $1.5 billion tax overhaul that same year,
McConnell said, “All of a sudden, I’m Trump’s new best friend.”
He blamed Trump after House Republicans lost their majority in the
2018 midterm elections, Tackett writes. Trump ”has every
characteristic you would not want a president to have,” McConnell
said in an oral history at the time, and was “not very smart,
irascible, nasty.”
In 2022, as Trump continued to criticize McConnell and made racist
comments about his wife, former Transportation Secretary Elaine
Chao, McConnell told Tackett that “I can’t think of anybody I’d
rather be criticized by than this sleazeball.”

“Every time he takes a shot at me, I think it's good for my
reputation,” McConnell said.
Also in 2022, McConnell said in his oral history that Trump's
behavior since losing the election had been “beyond erratic” as he
kept pushing false allegations of voter fraud. “Unfortunately, about
half the Republicans in the country believe whatever he says,”
McConnell said.
By 2024, McConnell had again endorsed Trump. He felt he had to if he
were to continue to play a role in shaping the nation’s agenda.
“It was the price he paid for power,” Tackett writes.
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