Kentucky businessman and proud America First conservative Nate Morris is taking a blowtorch to the political establishment — and RINO Mitch McConnell is squarely in his sights.
On July 8th, Morris, a ninth-generation Kentuckian and successful entrepreneur, launched his Senate campaign with a fiery video that pulled no punches. In it, he hammered McConnell for betraying President Trump and propping up weak Republican candidates who, Morris warns, would only continue the same tired, swamp-style politics.
“McConnell trashed Trump,” Morris declared, slamming the longtime senator for his two-faced role in the Trump impeachment circus and for blaming the 45th president for the events of January 6th—despite Trump’s acquittal in both trials. “And now McConnell’s boys—Andy Barr and Daniel Cameron—want to keep the betrayal going.”
Morris didn’t mince words. He proudly called himself a “Trump guy” and vowed to fight for real conservatives, not D.C. insiders.
“I built one of the largest trash companies in America,” Morris said with a grin. “So I know a little bit about garbage. And it’s time we throw McConnell and his cronies in the trash.”
Conservative social media lit up in support. One user on X (formerly Twitter) wrote, “Good to know you are a Trump guy, @NateMorris. We need more who will get behind the agenda 77 million people voted for.”
Meanwhile, McConnell—clearly rattled by the grassroots energy behind Morris—responded with a smug swipe:
“I’ve heard one of the candidates wants to be different,” McConnell said. “Well, how do you want to be different from the longest-serving Senate leader in history?”
The answer, Mr. McConnell, is simple: Morris wants to represent the people, not the donor class. He wants to stand with Trump and not throw him under the bus when it’s politically convenient.
Speaking on August 2nd, Morris cut through the noise:
“Career politicians like McConnell have run this country off a cliff,” he said. “Let’s be honest—how many of us really believe it’s a good idea to have a senior citizen who freezes mid-sentence on national TV representing us in the U.S. Senate?”
He’s not wrong. McConnell’s health scares have become a national concern, but the establishment continues to prop him up like nothing’s wrong. It’s the same old swamp game — protect power at all costs, no matter what the voters think.
Trump supporters across the state are lining up behind Morris. One voter, Patrick Marion, told the Associated Press,
> “Mitch has been a RINO for way too long. I don’t think he’s ever really been with President Trump.”
Of course, some Republicans still cling to McConnell’s record on judges and party fundraising. But in this post-2020 GOP, that’s not enough. Voters are demanding loyalty to the movement, not just party credentials.
Nate Morris isn’t just running for Senate — he’s running to shake the foundation of the political class in Kentucky and beyond.
And if his opening salvo is any indication, the Swamp better brace for impact.
