BREAKING: WANTED – DEAD OR ALIVE! Kentucky voters are DONE with the games over Mitch McConnell.
Kentuckians are tired of the circus over their ailing senator and just want him to go away. Weeks after the 84-year disappeared from public view following some kind of medical calamity, voters across the state are demanding something that should not be controversial: a straight answer.
“People that deserve to have power usually don’t want it, and people that have power are tough to give it up,” one angry Kentucky voter told MS NOW yesterday.
"We got old people trying to stay in their place, in their power, and designing who gets their seat after them," another said, as frustration boiled over the continuing circus.
“Give up this fight. Give up. You’re not representing us well so don’t represent us at all,” another woman said.
Another man said he’d like to see someone “in the middle” between old and young, but he didn’t expect that to happen.
The reporter revealed that he’s spoken to dozens of voters in the past two days, and every single one wanted to see term limits or age limits imposed on Congress.
The exchanges captured a growing mood in Kentucky, where voters are watching a parade of Republican senators, former aides and political insiders emerge with reassuring stories about conversations they supposedly had with McConnell while offering little actual information about the senator's condition.
Meanwhile, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has publicly called for transparency and urged McConnell's office to "end the crazy speculation."
"I publicly and privately urged the last administration to address the public’s concerns with the former president’s health," Beshear wrote on X yesterday. "I’m calling on Sen. McConnell to do the same and provide voters an update on his own health."
Beshear ended the post by urging McConnell to "end the crazy speculation" and "just tell us what's going on."
For weeks, Kentuckians have been asked to accept carefully worded statements while basic questions go unanswered. McConnell remains invisible. His office has provided no meaningful update. Republican allies continue to insist everything is fine.
At some point, people no longer give official pronouncements from people they don't trust the benefit of the doubt. And anger showing up in Kentucky is less about one senator than a political culture that increasingly treats voters as an inconvenience, brushing their questions aside and feed them bullsh*t on the regular.
McConnell spent decades mastering the rules of Washington. Now, his final political drama is unfolding far from the Senate floor, where the people he represented are asking a simple question and getting everything except an answer.
This has gone on too long, and we know why.
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