___________________________________________________________________________________________________________

RINO Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell is feeling the heat.
But no one knew how hot Mitch McConnell’s seat was.
And this major shoe just dropped on one Mitch McConnell resignation bombshell.
McConnell tried to shift the blame for the Midterm debacle to Donald Trump and the candidates he endorsed in Senate and Gubernatorial Primaries.
However, Republican voters feel differently.
62 percent of GOP voters want McConnell out as the Republican Leader in the Senate.
Newsmax reports:
A full 62% of Republican voters want Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., replaced as the party’s leader in the U.S. Senate, according to Rasmussen Reports survey results released Wednesday.
Two-thirds of self-identified conservative voters also want Senate Republicans to choose a new leader, Rasmussen said.
More Democrats (58%) and unaffiliated voters (63%) agreed that McConnell should be replaced. Only 21% of likely voters overall believe he should remain as GOP leader.
Other polling data shows McConnell with just a seven percent approval rating among the public at large.
For the first time since McConnell took over the Republican Senate caucus in 2007, he faced a challenge for his leadership post.
Ten Republicans – led by conservative Missouri Senator Josh Hawley – voted against McConnell.
Hawley led the opposition to McConnell by noting that he deserved his fair share of blame for the Midterm disappointment.
In a Washington Post op-ed, Hawley argued that McConnell depressed the conservative base by cutting deals with Joe Biden to impose gun control, the Green New Deal, and corporate welfare bailouts.
“The problem isn’t principally the tactics; the problem is the substance. For the past two years, the Republican establishment in Washington has capitulated on issue after issue, caving to Democrats on the Second Amendment and on the left’s radical climate agenda (“infrastructure”). These Republican politicians sided with Big Pharma on insulin and advocated lowering tariffs on our competitors overseas,” Hawley declared.
McConnell was also the one who decided Republicans should not campaign on an affirmative agenda of conservative policies that they would enact if Americans handed them back the majority in the Senate.
McConnell has been a target of conservative ire for years.
Every deal that grew the government, eroded freedoms, and handed Democrats massive wins bore McConnell’s fingerprints.
That frustration boiled over to the surface in the wake of a disappointing Midterm election result.