McConnell tests the strengths and limits of his power opposing a trio of
Trump's Cabinet nominees
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[February 15, 2025]
By LISA MASCARO
WASHINGTON (AP) — No longer in charge, Sen. Mitch McConnell has been
speaking his mind, the long-serving GOP leader rejecting President
Donald Trump’s more high-profile Cabinet nominees — alone at times,
among the Republicans, casting his no votes.
When it came to Pete Hegseth, now the defense secretary, who faced
allegations of excessive drinking and aggressive behavior toward women,
McConnell said the combat veteran had “failed, as yet, to demonstrate”
he was ready for the job.
The “desire to be a change agent is not enough,” McConnell said.
On Tulsi Gabbard, who was sworn in this week as director of national
intelligence, he said she has displayed “a history of alarming lapses in
judgment,” citing in particular her views toward Russia, China and the
security breach by former government contractor Edward Snowden.
And as Senate Republicans confirmed Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the
Department of Health and Human Services, McConnell, a survivor of
childhood polio who used a wheelchair during the vote, opposed.
“A record of trafficking in dangerous conspiracy theories and eroding
trust in public health institutions does not entitle Mr. Kennedy to lead
these important efforts,” the Kentucky senator said.
This is McConnell unplugged, three weeks into the Trump administration,
and his new role as no longer the Senate GOP leader but one of 100
senators. It is testing the strength, but also the limits, of his
influence on the institution, where he has been a monumental presence
for nearly 40 years.
McConnell is far from an anti-Trump Republican and hardly the face of
the GOP opposition to the White House. He has voted to confirm Trump’s
other nominees and said he expects to support Trump's agenda.
But his opposition to the trio of Trump's most controversial nominees
stands out. Taken together, McConnell's votes against Hegseth, Gabbard
and RFK Jr. provide a window into the type of leader he intends to be
outside the stately leadership office. And it shows the shifts in his
power, as few other Republicans joined him, leaving him often on his
own, with Democrats, unable to stop Trump's choices.
“McConnell’s votes on the Trump nominees reflect, at least in part, the
fact that he is more free to vote in accord with personal preferences
than he was when he was responsible for serving as the leader and voice
for Senate Republicans,” said Frances Lee, a professor of politics and
public affairs at Princeton.
Just two other Republicans, the independent-minded Sen. Lisa Murkowski
of Alaska and Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, also voted against Hegseth.
“Now that he is no longer in leadership, Sen. McConnell enjoys more
freedom to simply exercise his own individual judgment and personal
discretion,” Lee said.
Trump lashed out after the latest votes, calling McConnell “bitter” and
“not equipped mentally” during a lengthy rant in the Oval Office late
Thursday, after Kennedy was sworn into office.
“I feel sorry for Mitch,” the Republican president said.
“He votes against almost everything now. He’s a, you know, very bitter
guy,” Trump said of McConnell, who had been a crucial partner as the
Senate majority leader during Trump's first term.
Together, Trump and McConnell passed shared priorities, notably the 2017
GOP tax bill, but the two also clashed — the president calling the
senator “Old Crow,” which McConnell turned into a badge of honor — and
had a very public falling out after the 2020 election, which Trump lost
to Democrat Joe Biden. McConnell called Trump “morally responsible” for
the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection by a mob of his supporters at the Capitol
but ultimately endorsed Trump's reelection bid.
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President Donald Trump speaks with Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell of Ky., left, as he arrives at Blue Grass Airport in
Lexington, Ky., Oct. 13, 2018, to travel to Richmond, Ky., for a
rally. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)
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Trump did not appear Thursday to understand that McConnell had polio
as a child, a factor as he weighed Kennedy's nomination.
“He’s lost his power,” Trump said. “It’s one of those things.”
When he announced he was stepping down as GOP leader, McConnell said
he would finish his Senate term, which expires after the 2026
election. It’s unclear if he will run again.
To be sure, McConnell is far from marginalized. He commands prime
positions as chairman of the influential Rules Committee as well as
the chairman of the Appropriation Committee’s subcommittee on
defense, where he has signaled he intends to make his mark shoring
up the nation’s military assets and assuring U.S. leadership on the
global stage.
“I expect to support most of what this administration is trying to
accomplish,” McConnell said during a recent interview on CBS' “60
Minutes.”
The senator still faces polio’s lingering effects, particularly in
his left leg. McConnell fell twice recently, on the steps from the
Senate chamber, where he was swiftly caught and steadied by two GOP
colleagues, and a short time later in the private GOP lunchroom. He
sometimes uses a wheelchair as he did this week as a precaution.
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Other senators are watching and weighing the turn of events.
“He seems to be liberated, and I think he’s voting his conscience,”
said Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat.
Blumenthal said while other Republicans are “in a state of trembling
in fear” over primary threats if they don’t fall in line with
Trump’s agenda, particularly from billionaire Trump aide Elon Musk’s
political group, McConnell is not among them.
“Whatever his motivation, he is certainly demonstrating that courage
and conscience still matter,” he said.
New Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, said, “The great part about being a
senator is that you get to decide what’s important to you, what your
priorities are, and he should represent the people who elected him.”
McConnell’s critics have also taken notice. Nate Morris, a
businessman in Kentucky, said this week he is considering a Senate
run in 2026.
“I think President Trump needs less of these weak, career
politicians running for office and more outside businessmen who are
going to fight for his America First agenda,” Morris posted on
social media this week.
Citing McConnell’s opposition to Hegseth, Morris said McConnell
"turned his back on President Trump.”
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Associated Press writers Matt Brown and Darlene Superville in
Washington and Bruce Schreiner in Louisville, Ky., contributed to
this story.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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