McConnell plows through farm bill speech with no mention of Trump hours before expected arrest

Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., gave a policy-heavy speech in Louisville, Kentucky, on Thursday morning, hours before another top Republican, former President Donald Trump, is due to turn himself in at the Fulton County, Georgia, jailhouse. 

Unsurprisingly, Trump’s name and impending arrest did not come up in McConnell’s remarks. 

Speaking at the Kentucky Farm Bureau Country Ham Breakfast, McConnell blamed high inflation rates on the federal government’s spending during the COVID-19 pandemic, discussed Congress’ effort to reauthorize the Farm Bill and championed the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure deal struck under President Biden in 2021. 

It’s a stark contrast to the media circus surrounding the former president’s impending appearance in Georgia. Reporters and protesters from both sides are already gathered after Trump declared on Truth Social that he would “proudly get arrested” Thursday.

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The Georgia charges, relating to Trump and his co-defendants’ alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 election, make up the former president’s fourth criminal indictment in less than six months. 

McConnell has so far avoided weighing in on Trump’s criminal cases. 

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The relationship between the two top GOP figures ruptured in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack. Since then, Trump has waged open war on McConnell, criticizing him in public and recruiting GOP senators to challenge his leadership role. 

But none of those topics made it into McConnell’s speech on Thursday. Instead, the Kentucky Republican projected confidence that Congress could reauthorize the farm bill, a sweeping must-pass package that outlines priorities from food stamp programs to rural broadband, despite some issues setting agricultural spending limits by the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30. The farm bill must be reauthorized every five years and is set to expire by the end of 2023.

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“The Democrats are really not interested in rural America anymore,” McConnell said. “But somehow we’ll put that together. Oh, not before Sept. 30, but we’ll all put that together and look out as best we can for our rural and small-town America.”

McConnell also said he was “proud of” the bipartisan infrastructure bill he helped shepherd through Congress, though the majority of Republicans on Capitol Hill voted against it.

“It is a much-needed gift, not just to Kentucky, but to our whole country,” McConnell said.

He also touted a recent Supreme Court case that limited the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulatory power over carbon emissions.

Fox News’ Kelly Phares contributed to this report.

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