McConnell fiasco has Trump petrified by his biggest ‘existential fear’

President Donald Trump has been unusually quiet about the health scare surrounding GOP Sen. Mitch McConnell, and according to new analysis from The Daily Beast, this is because the situation is confronting him with his biggest current “existential fear.”

Read more Federal employees blast Trump’s ruthless ‘campaign of fear’: report

McConnell, the former Senate Majority Leader who built a legacy out of hardline obstruction against Democratic legislative priorities, was rushed to the hospital in mid-June after being found unresponsive at his home. Later reports indicated that he suffered cardiac arrest and was given CPR. He has remained hospitalized since then, and despite his staff’s insistence that he is recovering well, their lack of transparency about the situation has prompted rampant speculation that the senator might be near death or dead already, with the details kept quiet to control how his seat is eventually filled.

During the latest edition of “The Daily Beast Podcast,” the outlet’s executive editor, Hugh Dougherty, touched on Trump’s low-key response to the situation, noting that when the president was recently asked about McConnell on Air Force One, he “did not want to dwell on the topic.”

“No, I have no—I have no idea,” Trump said. “I have no idea how he’s doing.”

Dougherty explained that, however a potential McConnell departure would play out, it would be a “dangerous distraction” that Trump desperately does not want to deal with.

“I think Donald Trump is aware that a dangerous distraction from the Senate is really bad, and Donald Trump’s big existential fear of a Democratic Senate is [that] they impeach him,” he said. “That’s what is motivating him.”

Read more The reckoning coming when the MAGA sleeping giant awakens

Dougherty continued, touching on Trump’s obsession with passing the SAVE America Act to impose strict new voter ID laws: “He is desperate for this to happen. Mitch is absolutely an obstacle to this. Whatever state Mitch is in, Mitch is an obstacle to this. But equally, the distraction, the difficulty, the crisis that is created by the departure, in whatever way, of Mitch McConnell from the Senate, he doesn’t need. So I think we can see why he’s been incredibly quiet about this.”

Dougherty also explained why the process of replacing McConnell could become much messier than most people realize. Per Kentucky laws, if McConnell either resigns from office or dies before August 3, Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear would be required to call a special election to fill the seat. In other states, the governor would simply appoint a replacement outright, but the Republican-led state legislature in Kentucky changed those rules in 2024, specifically out of concerns that Beshear would replace McConnell with a Democrat.

Beshear, however, has previously stated that he does not recognize that new law and finds it unconstitutional, and has not confirmed how he would approach replacing McConnell. As Dougherty explained, he could try to ignore the law and name a Democratic replacement, prompting a court battle that could leave the seat vacant for months.

Concerns are also mounting among MAGA Republicans that a special election could see a non-Trump loyalist elected to the Senate, like Rep. Thomas Massie, who remains popular statewide despite being ousted from his House seat by a Trump-backed opponent.

Read more Trump threatens to ‘completely decimate’ Iran in late-night post

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *