WASHINGTON — Sen. Mitch McConnell was re-elected Tuesday to his Senate minority leadership post, putting to rest months of speculation about whether the top-ranking Republican would face a challenge.
The Kentucky lawmaker was nominated by 2008 Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain of Arizona and Sen.-elect Marco Rubio of Florida, one of several tea party-backed freshmen who won with support from South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint.
DeMint, a staunch conservative, had been mentioned as a possible challenger to McConnell for the Senate GOP leadership position, but he said repeatedly that he wasn't interested in the post.
"I think we have a great opportunity here to demonstrate that we are responding to what the American people clearly would like for us to do: Cut the spending, cut the debt and get private-sector job creation going again," McConnell said after the closed-door vote. "It is our hope that we will be able to work with the administration on all of those issues."
McConnell's re-election, coupled with his endorsement of a DeMint-led moratorium on earmarks — the thousands of local projects stuffed into legislation that add up to billions of federal dollars — further signals a unifying Republican caucus amid messy infighting that could have proved a distraction.
DeMint and McConnell have clashed repeatedly over spending bills and other GOP priorities, and DeMint was poised to force an internal vote Tuesday among incoming Republican senators on freezing all requests for earmarks. DeMint won one of the biggest legislative victories of his career Monday when McConnell agreed to the vote and said he'd support a freeze.
Still, McConnell, lauded on both sides of the aisle as a shrewd tactician, was able to head off a showdown with DeMint over a topic that's unpopular with voters.
DeMint commended McConnell's position on the earmark ban and re-election to the top GOP leadership post.
"There's a lot of unity in the conference now. I think everyone feels good about our leadership team," DeMint said.
Tea party-endorsed freshmen publicly rallied Tuesday behind McConnell.
"Senator McConnell and his team have done a good job of positioning this conference during the last Congress, stood their ground on issues like the health care bill," Rubio said after the closed-door leadership meeting. "They'll do a good job of positioning us moving forward. I think evidence of that is the position they've adopted on banning earmarks. I think it's a real good first step."
(Lesley Clark, David Lightman and James Rosen contributed to this article.)
MORE FROM MCCLATCHY
House panel finds Rangel guilty on 11 ethics charges
Murkowski overtakes Miller in Alaska Senate vote count
Florida Senator-elect Rubio brings his hype to Capitol Hill
Who's Senate GOP leader? On earmarks, it's DeMint
Follow the latest politics news at McClatchy's Planet Washington
Comments