Amy McGrath announces her candidacy to face Senator Mitch McConnell in 2020



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In a three-minute video released on Tuesday, McGrath said McConnell had "little by little, year after year, turned Washington into something we all despise."

"I'm going to the Senate because it should not be like that," McGrath said.

McGrath's candidacy marks a major recruiting blow for Democrats. She emerged as an unlikely juggernaut during her congressional race, bringing in millions of dollars after her campaign was published with a biographical video that went viral and became a Democratic celebrity.

But it was not enough for McGrath to get the best score for Barr, who gained about 3 points in the 2018 election, despite McGrath spending nearly $ 3 million more.

In the race against McConnell, McGrath seems on the verge of presenting himself as a moderate seeking to break out of the partisan stalemate in Washington. In an interview on MSNBC's "Morning Joe" on Tuesday, McGrath said she has followed the Democratic presidential debate and worried that many candidates are positioning themselves too far on issues such as health care.

McGrath will have some work to do. President Donald Trump won Kentucky by nearly 30 points in 2016, and his top-ranked presence in 2020 will likely help to bring Republican voters to the polls.

Meanwhile, McConnell has turned out to be a savvy and unforgiving opponent. In 2014, he beat his well-known rival, Democrat Alison Lundergan Grimes, in a 15-point win.

In "Morning Joe," McGrath acknowledged that McConnell "has been great" after more than three decades in the Senate. But, she added, "it's a different breed".

"The things that Kentuckians voted for Trump are not being done," McGrath said. "He can not do it because of Mitch McConnell."

McGrath brings to the race a compelling biography, as the first Marine woman to fly an F-18 fighter in combat. In the video announcing his candidacy for the Senate, McGrath recalled writing a letter to McConnell as a 13-year-old girl asking him to change the law that at the time prohibited women from participating in such missions.

"He never answered," McGrath remembered.

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