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McClatchy Washington Bureau
McClatchy Washington Bureau
National
Lesley Clark

McConnell's unwavering stand on the wall boosts his 2020 election prospects

WASHINGTON _ As Mitch McConnell readies for a 2020 re-election campaign, his unwavering support for President Donald Trump's southern border wall gives the senator an important boost from the Republican Party's conservative wing _ activists who have not always been on his side.

Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., a McConnell ally, said he had heard "more compliments" about the Senate majority leader this week than ever before from members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus.

Last month the caucus pressured Trump to reject a Senate spending bill aimed at averting the shutdown because it didn't include money for the wall Trump promised as a presidential candidate.

"Conservatives want Trump to have a win on the wall and Mitch McConnell is standing firm with Trump, even though they know probably deep down, ideologically, he would like to compromise and end the shutdown," Comer said.

McConnell has said consistently for weeks that he won't entertain any legislation that doesn't include wall funding. Conservatives "appreciate he's standing with the president," Comer said.

McConnell made it clear last month that he didn't want a shutdown, telling reporters there was "no education in the second kick of a mule."

But he's the leader of a caucus with 22 Republicans up for re-election in 2020, including 20 from states that Trump won. None of them want to give an inch to a potential primary challenge.

McConnell himself is up for re-election in a state where Trump is more popular than the six-term senator.

He's learned lessons.

"McConnell is going to be seen as backing up the president, that's going to help him at the end of the day with the conservative base in Kentucky, and nationally," said Jason Pye, the group's vice president of legislative affairs for FreedomWorks, a conservative group that in the past raised questions about the senator's loyalty to its causes.

Comer agreed.

"The far right wing of the party has kind of been a problem for him in the past but I think he's solidified with that wing of the party," Comer said.

McConnell in 2014 successfully fended off a primary challenge from now-Gov. Matt Bevin, who has said he will run for re-election this year. He has yet to file the official paperwork, prompting speculation about his plans.

Bevin's 2014 bid drew support from a number of conservative groups, including the Senate Conservatives Fund, the Madison Project and FreedomWorks,. They all questioned McConnell's conservative bona fides.

The conservatives fund at the time ran an ad lambasting McConnell for his role in the negotiations that ended the 2013 federal government shutdown.

"Conservatives asked Mitch McConnell to lead the fight against Obamacare. He didn't listen," the ad said. "Instead, McConnell helped Barack Obama and Harry Reid fund Obamacare."

By resisting Democratic pressure to hold a vote on House spending bills to re-open the government, McConnell is now protecting his caucus members from casting votes that would put them at odds with Trump, said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo., the policy chairman in charge of helping shape Senate Republicans' legislative agenda.

"The majority leader is doing exactly what he should be doing," Blunt said. "There's no reason for us to have a lot of debates that don't lead to any conclusion or take a lot of votes that only create bad feelings if they're not going to create a result." Not to mention votes that opponents could use in campaign ads to hammer incumbent Republicans.

Blunt said to ask senators to take votes that put them "in a position where they're needlessly in conflict with the president in a way that produces no result is not what the members expect the leader to do.

"The leader is right and I don't sense he feels any pressure to move from the position he's in," Blunt said.

Still, there is some pressure. Republicans facing challenging 2020 re-elections in states that Trump lost, including Sens. Cory Gardner of Colorado and Susan Collins of Maine, have called for the government to reopen even without an agreement on the border wall.

Others want the chamber to take a more active role, worried about a perception that the Senate is inert while furloughed federal workers go without paychecks and the Democratic-led House keeps passing legislation that would open parts of the government.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said he supports McConnell's position, noting that among Republicans "There's a lot of support to build the wall."

At the same time, Johnson would like to demonstrate that the Senate is working to improve the situation for affected workers. He and Collins are pushing legislation to pay the roughly 420,000 federal employees who have been forced to work without pay.

"There's frustration with everybody," Johnson said. "That's why I'm trying to put forward something positive that Republicans can be for." Johnson chairs the Senate committee on homeland security and governmental affairs.

Others insisted there is no immediate role for the Senate to play and that McConnell is rightly on the sidelines as Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi remain in an increasingly bitter battle.

"When it comes to strategy and tactics and timing, I'd be hard-pressed to second-guess Mitch McConnell," said Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., who until earlier this month was a member of the House. "Nobody knows this place better than him. Nobody uses the levers better than he does. And he's right, this fight is between Nancy Pelosi and Donald Trump, and they make it clearer every day."

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