McConnell, Top State Elected Republican Leave Effigy Hanging KY Protesters Out to Dry As Worker Gets Fired

A man seen participating in the hanging of Democrat Gov. Andy Beshear’s effigy on Sunday at the Kentucky Capitol has been fired by his employer, a local automotive dealership. The business, Neil Huffman Automotive Group, said that “there is no place for hate or intolerance” at any of its dealerships.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell condemned the act, saying that he was a “strong defender of the First Amendment” but that the “action toward Governor Beshear is unacceptable. He also said that “There is no place for hate in Kentucky.” McConnell had not previously made any tweets regarding the protests.

The top state Republican, Attorney General Daniel Cameron also tweeted a response, saying that, “This is sickening, and I condemn it. We have to learn to disagree without threats of violence.” He had stood up against some of the restrictions placed by the Governor previously.

The words “Sic semper tyrannis” – a Latin phrase, meaning “Thus always to tyrants,” was also placed on the effigy and a local report attempted to establish a connection by saying that it was a phrase that was widely believed to have been yelled by John Wilkes Booth after assassinating President Abraham Lincoln in 1865.

The phrase is included on the Virginia flag as well as being that state’s motto, which is a fellow commonwealth state to Kentucky.

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