Remember when one of the biggest controversies of the year was whether any of the situations described in Alanis Morissette’s song “Irconic” were actually ironic? Irony is not easily defined and is often mistaken for other things. So let me run a situation by you, and you tell me if it seems ironic to you.
By now, you all know the outcome of last week’s impeachment trial. Probably just as likely, you heard about Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s speech tearing into Trump even though he voted to acquit. As part of his speech, he made sure to remind everyone about the importance of both criminal prosecution and civil litigation to hold Trump accountable. Most recognize that this speech was a politically-convenient way for him to justify the Senate’s failure to convict. But also, it seems ironic for him to be laying the survival of our democracy on a system that, for decades, he has made it his work to weaken or destroy … no?
McConnell is not your average civil justice opponent. He’s the Senate’s leading “tort reformer”. We first noticed this when, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, McConnell led the fight to federalize the nation’s auto insurance system. His bill, euphemistically called the Auto Choice Reform Act, basically would have forced motorists into one of two unfair insurance systems, one of which would have deprived seriously injured victims of adequate compensation.
From the mid-1990s through the 2000s, Sen. McConnell repeatedly introduced his “McConnell Amendment” to health care bills. This amendment proposed that Congress federally take over all 50 state tort systems, all for the purpose of severely limiting the rights of injured patients and nursing home victims to hold facilities, drug companies, hospitals and HMOs accountable in court.
His proposal to replace Obamacare was “tort reform.” His response to the COIVD pandemic was “tort reform.” In fact, in 2020, he blocked COVID relief legislation by insisting on broad and long-lasting corporate immunity provisions (as we covered somewhat humorously last July). Luckily, all of these failed.
So when Sen. McConnell said last week, “He didn’t get away with anything, yet. … We have civil litigation,” was he being ironic or just hypocritical? And will he support the range of cases that are now being brought, including one just filed by House members for compensatory and punitive damages over violations of the 1871 Ku Klux Klan Act?
Hope so. But I’m not holding my breath.
Comments