Mitch McConnell’s time in the Senate will be remembered as sad and cynical | Moira Donegan
He was once a moderate. As his party moved right, so did he - presiding over an ever-more partisan, acrimonious Senate
For a moment, it looked like his face was going to fall off. At a press conference at the Capitol last July, Mitch McConnell, a senator for Kentucky since 1985 and the Senate Republican leader since 2007, abruptly stopped speaking, mid-sentence. He curled his lower lip inward, like a small child about to cry, and his eyes drifted to the side. He gripped the podium tightly and seemed to sway, as if uneasy on his feet. A few seconds later, he recovered, and began answering press questions again, without acknowledging the episode.
A few months prior, McConnell, now 82, had suffered a fall, and had been concussed as a result. He'd been away from the Capitol for six weeks. Once, in 2020, he'd appeared with dramatic purple blisters on his hands and around his mouth, which were never explained. There had been rumors of other falls, but that's all they were - rumors. Maybe, the thinking went, the episode at the press conference was just the after-effects of McConnell's recent concussion. But then again, maybe not.
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