As President Donald Trump girds for a U.S. Senate impeachment trial, he is entrusting the future of his presidency to someone widely known as a shrewd negotiator who also plays hardball politics at a level unusual even by Washington standards.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a self-proclaimed “Grim Reaper” who long has stood in the way of Democrats’ initiatives, is embracing that role as he suits up for an impeachment trial.
McConnell, the top Republican in Congress, has already said there is no chance Trump, his party’s leader, will be convicted on charges that he abused his office and obstructed a congressional investigation into his conduct. The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives formally impeached Trump on Dec. 18.
Now the Kentucky lawmaker is at loggerheads with Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer over how the trial should be conducted. Schumer has pressed for White House aides to testify, while McConnell wants the Senate to address that question after both sides have made their initial presentations – an approach that could allow the chamber’s Republican majority to quickly end the trial and acquit the president.
McConnell also has mocked the House of Representatives for rushing to impeach Trump but then failing so far to send the articles of impeachment to the Senate for trial.
“Democrats have let ‘Trump derangement syndrome’ develop into the kind of dangerous partisan fever that our founding fathers were afraid of,” he said Friday on the Senate floor.
When McConnell takes a stand, he is difficult to move, said Dick Durbin, the Senate’s number two Democrat.
“He only moves if he’s personally concerned about his own re-election or the election of his majority,” Durbin told reporters on Tuesday, while noting, “2020’s an election year.”
McConnell, like Trump, faces re-election in November, but most analysts think he faces less risk of defeat than the president. First elected to the Senate in 1984, McConnell won his last election in 2014 by a margin of 56 percent to 41 percent.
McConnell says he is working in “total coordination” with the White House in preparing for the trial. Trump, 73, regularly telephones McConnell, according to a former aide to the senator. But on the surface, the 77-year-old six-term senator from Kentucky could not be more different from Trump.
Trump, a former reality television star and real estate entrepreneur, rarely misses opportunities to boast about himself and attack opponents or critics with Twitter posts.
The laconic McConnell eschews Twitter, sometimes sits silently listening in meetings, according to those who have attended, and can repel reporters’ questions by refusing to utter a syllable.
“As he sometimes says, he likes to allow himself the luxury of the unexpressed thought,” said Rohit Kumar, who worked for McConnell from 2007-2013 and was a deputy chief of staff.
Trump and McConnell do share some traits, even as the senator tries to tamp down the president’s inclination for high drama. Both seize key moments to flex their muscles in a way opponents say unduly stretches the bounds of their powers.
Trump, for example, funded construction of some U.S.-Mexico border wall by taking money already dedicated to other programs, an unusual step by a president in defiance of Congress.
In 2016, McConnell enraged Democrats by refusing to consider then-President Barack Obama’s choice of federal Judge Merrick Garland to serve on the Supreme Court following the death of conservative Justice Antonin Scalia. Had Garland been confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate, he would have tipped the court in a liberal direction.
For all of his legendary doggedness, Democrats think McConnell at times can be pressured into bending. Earlier this year, for example, he chafed when Democrats branded him as “Moscow Mitch” for blocking additional election security money. Shortly afterward, the added funds flowed through the Senate.
Brian Fallon, a former aide to Schumer, said in past negotiations, McConnell has shown an “intricate knowledge” of congressional procedure and the ability to cut deals with Democrats, but in a way that they get blamed if voters do not respond well.
Kumar said that McConnell’s reserved style, punctuated by extra pauses of silence, can force those sitting across the negotiating table to fill the uncomfortable void by tipping their hands.
People are “endlessly vexed by McConnell’s patrician, silent nature. He doesn’t need to fill the silence with his own voice,” Kumar said.
McConnell has had frosty relations with Schumer and his predecessor, Harry Reid, a former boxer.
One former senior Senate Democratic aide said that when Reid and McConnell were thrown together in a room, small talk about baseball was the only “safe” territory for two men who never found a path to a good working relationship.
Both McConnell and Schumer served in the Senate during Bill Clinton’s 1999 impeachment trial – McConnell voted to convict the Democratic president and Schumer voted to acquit.
Republican Senator James Lankford said living through those battles should help them fashion a settlement on conducting a trial.
“There’s a handful of people who have been here before, seen impeachment up close and personally. It’s not a theory for them. There’s only been two of these (previously) in the history of the country and they were in one of them,” Lankford said.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Susan Cornwell; editing by Ross Colvin and Alistair Bell)