Sanders, AOC back Kentucky progressive, look to spoil centrist Dem's gains against McConnell
Just as a new poll showed Kentucky Democrat Amy McGrath pulling into a statistical tie in her U.S. Senate election fight against the incumbent, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, some other news emerged that could spell trouble for her campaign. McGrath's
chief Democratic primary challenger -- state Rep. Charles Booker --
received endorsements Tuesday from two big-name fellow progressives:
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont and U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. "As
Louisville has become an epicenter of national tragedy and protests due
to the police murders of Breonna Taylor and David McAtee, Charles has
shown leadership by showing up on the frontlines," Sanders wrote in a
statement, according to the Courier Journal of Louisville. "He was
an endorser of our campaign for president and supports progressive
policies such as criminal justice reform, Medicare for All and getting
big money out of politics." Ocasio-Cortez said Booker would make the Senate “a better place.” "I'm proud to endorse him. Let’s go,” she added. Booker,
who will compete against McGrath in the Democratic primary June 23 for
the right to face McConnell in November is running to the left of
McGrath, a former U.S. Marine Corps fighter pilot who has positioned
herself as a moderate in a state that presidential candidate Donald
Trump won by 30 points in 2016. “I’m running for U.S. Senate
because, in this crisis, Kentucky needs a real Democrat to take on Mitch
McConnell,” Booker, in his first statewide TV ad, said this week,
according to the Lexington Herald Leader. “Someone who will fight to
guarantee health care and living wages for all, and not help Trump just
get his way.” In the same ad, Booker also calls McGrath a "pro-Trump Democrat." McConnell,
78, is Kentucky’s longest-serving U.S. senator, having held his seat
since January 1985. His campaign responded Tuesday to news of the
Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez endorsements of Booker.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., is neck-and-neck in
a new poll with Democratic candidate Amy McGrath -- but McGrath is
facing a primary challenger who's endorsed by two big-name progressive
Democrats.
"Amy McGrath has been running an inauthentic, extreme
campaign for nearly a year, and she is still unattractive to Democratic
voters," McConnell campaign manager Kevin Golden told The Courier Journal,
still seemingly more concerned with McGrath than Booker. "It's not
surprising that Democrats are already looking for a replacement." Booker
has raised $700,000 just in June and more than $315,000 in the first
three months of the year, but McGrath, who is backed by the Democratic
National Committee, raised nearly $13 million in the first quarter of
the year.
U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., is joined onstage by
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., in Des Moines, Iowa, Nov. 9, 2019.
(Getty Images)
“Amy
McGrath spent over 20 years serving her country and doing what’s right
above partisan politics and that’s what she will do for Kentucky,”
McGrath spokesperson Terry Sebastian told the Herald Leader.
“Working families want to hear solutions not partisan rhetoric. That’s
one of the many things that makes her different from Mitch McConnell.” Booker is also backed by 16 House Democrats in Kentucky’s Legislature. McGrath has a one-point lead over McConnell in a new RMG Research poll conducted over May 21-24.
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