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In January 2022, online observers, principally left-leaning or those critical of the Republican party, seized upon what appeared to be a racially offensive remark made, in passing, by U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. For example, on Jan. 19, journalist Pablo Manríquez tweeted out an excerpt of his question-and-answer exchange with McConnell at a news conference earlier that evening: Soon afterwards, short video clips of the comments emerged on social media. In the footage, an off-screen reporter (namely Manríquez) can be heard asking: Leader McConnell, what's your message for voters of color who are concerned that, without the John L. Lewis Voting Rights Act, they're not going to be able to vote in the midterms? The senior Kentucky senator replies: Well, the concern is misplaced, because if you look at the statistics, African-American voters are voting in just as high a percentage as Americans. By comparing voting rates among African Americans with those among Americans, McConnell appeared to be articulating a wrong-headed and offensive distinction, one which — at least linguistically and logically — implies that Black Americans are in some sense not fully American, not at all American, or are less American than white Americans. (Of secondary relevance here, but worth noting — McConnell also answered a question about voters of color by referring exclusively to Black people, even though the former is an umbrella term that also refers to Asian Americans, Native Americans, Hispanic and Latino Americans, and others). As such, much of the criticism of McConnell suggested that this improper distinction was a kind of racist Freudian slip, or that he was saying the quiet part loud. Whatever the explanation for McConnell's remarks, those social media posts accurately attributed those words to him. Furthermore, although widely shared video clips were taken from a longer answer and news conference, that decontextualization did not distort the meaning or sense of McConnell's comments. He did not, for example, quickly correct himself, or give any indication that he was speaking ironically, or while adopting another persona, and so on. He did indeed say what he was shown saying in those video clips, so we are issuing a rating of Correct Attribution. McConnell was speaking at a news conference held at the U.S. Capitol by Senate Republican leaders, on Jan. 19, 2022. The news conference can be viewed in full here. The relevant question and answer begins at the 13:14 mark. Though the full context does not alter the sense of McConnell's remarks, in the interest of transparency, a full transcript follows: Snopes asked two spokespersons for McConnell why he phrased his response in the way he did, but we did not receive a response in time for publication.
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