📷 Key players Meteor shower up next 📷 Leaders at the dais 20 years till the next one
WASHINGTON
Mitch McConnell

Grimes, McConnell throw barbs at Ky. picnic

James R. Carroll and Joseph Gerth
The (Louisville, Ky.) Courier-Journal
A record crowd attended the Fancy Farm Picnic in Kentucky on Aug. 2, 2014

FANCY FARM, Ky. — Sen. Mitch McConnell and Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes met Saturday for the first time in a year, sparring on the stage at the annual Fancy Farm Picnic in western Kentucky.

With the crowd a bit better-behaved than in past years, Democrat Grimes hammered on Republican McConnell, listing a series of her contrasting policy positions and urging the crowd to respond that "Mitch McConnell doesn't care" on each one. McConnell for his part took shots at Grimes and a series of gaffes she and her campaign have made over the past year, including a recent statement in which the Democrat's campaign confused Israel's missile defense system with efforts to stop terrorists from tunneling into Israel.

But more than anything, McConnell continued in his campaign's primary election strategy, which is to tie Grimes to Democratic President Barack Obama, who is unpopular in the state.

"Kentucky is under attack from Barack Obama's administration and we need to fight back," McConnell told the crowd.

Grimes noted that Obama was not on the ballot. "This race is between me and you and the people of Kentucky," she said.

A record throng of between 15,000 and 20,000 attended this year's Fancy Farm Picnic, a fundraising event for St. Jerome's Catholic Church, and some 4,000 to 5,000 people attended the political speeches, organizer Mark Wilson estimated.

In the pavilion where the speeches were delivered, the crowd was divided fairly evenly between Grimes backers, in blue T-shirts, and McConnell supporters, in red T-shirts. Grimes' side carried ready-made signs as well as hand-printed ones that said "Gridlock McConnell Stopped Kentucky's Jobs. It's Time To Retire Old Gridlock." Some on the senator's side carried signs with a color photo of Obama on one side and Grimes on the other.

Sen. Mitch McConnell waves to the crowd after his speech at the Fancy Farm Picnic in Kentucky on  Aug. 2, 2014

The crowd was loud and boisterous as always, but the partisans didn't chant throughout the entire speeches, largely complying with the request of church officials, who said some people who want to hear the speeches in recent years have complained that they just couldn't hear.

"When you agree with what they say, cheer. If you disagree, boo," Supreme Court Justice Bill Cunningham urged the crowd. "And then shut up and let them go on with their speech."

The event culminated three days of events in the region that included breakfasts, lunches, dinners and speeches from Paducah to Fancy Farm.

The event was the first time since last Aug. 3 that McConnell and Grimes have met on the same stage, when they last sparred at Fancy Farm.

Democratic Senate candidate Alison Lundergan Grimes speaks during the Fancy Farm Picnic in Kentucky on Aug. 2, 2014

After a coin toss between Grimes and McConnell, the 35-year-old Democrat spoke first, blasting McConnell in an 8-minute populist speech for his positions that she said hurt women, seniors, middle-class workers and young people — all constituencies she needs to win if she is to beat the five-term incumbent in November.

Referring to an instance in which the McConnell campaign made an ad that included Duke University basketball players rather than University of Kentucky players, and a tweet his campaign sent out making fun of her for using the town of Cloverlick in an ad and then having a TV station say it didn't exist, she said "He's been in Washington, D.C., so long he thinks Duke is in Kentucky and Cloverlick is not."

And she tried to turn the issue of coal around on McConnell — an issue he has bludgeoned her with — announcing that she has received the endorsement of the United Mine Workers of America, which refused to back Obama in 2012.

"When it comes to our Kentucky coal miners, Mitch McConnell doesn't care," she said.

Grimes also hit him on the issue of being too long in Washington. "One of us represents the Washington establishment and one of us represents Kentucky. One of us represents the past, one of us represents the future," she said.

McConnell's first jab landed on not just Grimes but also on state Attorney General Jack Conway and Gov. Steve Beshear, who started his speech by taking a "selfie" with McConnell in the background, and saying he wanted "one last photo before the Kentucky voters retire (McConnell) next November ... and retire him they will."

McConnell harkened back to a past Fancy Farm when Conway referred to himself as "one tough son of a bitch," and Grime's recent statement about the "Iron Dome" missile defense system.

"For you out-of-towners, this is the place where Republicans tell it like it is, Jack Conway curses, Governor Beshear yammers on about Obamacare, and Alison Lundergan Grimes unveils her foreign policy agenda," he said.

He then made a crack about Obama playing golf, a favorite subject of the president's Republican critics, and then listed several things Grimes and Obama have in common, punctuating each one with the phrase, "Sound familiar?"

"He was only two years into his first big job when he started campaigning for the next one. Sound familiar? Remember, his campaign raised millions from extreme liberals. Sound familiar?" he said.

And, he suggested that Grimes was a liberal like Obama, who has been to Kentucky only sparingly since being elected. The president doesn't understand the state or share its values, the senator said.

"That's why all these people from the New York Times are out here in Western Kentucky. For Obama and his liberal buddies in the media, coming to Kentucky is like foreign travel," he said.

Featured Weekly Ad