Sign of a 2022 House GOP Takeover? House Dems’ Former Campaign Chair to Retire

Elections
The sun sets behind the Capitol dome in Washington, D.C., November 6, 2018.
(James Lawler Duggan/Reuters)

In 2016, Democratic congresswoman Cheri Bustos won reelection in her northwestern Illinois district 60 percent to 40 percent, despite the fact that Donald Trump beat Hillary Clinton there. Politico noted she was widely hailed as one of the Democratic Party’s “rising stars.” 

But in 2020 — when Democrats hung on to their House majority by just five seats and Bustos was in charge of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee — she won reelection by just four points. 

Today, Bustos announced that she will retire at the end of this term.

Dave Wasserman of the Cook Political Report calls the news “a blow to Dem prospects for keeping the majority.”

Redistricting probably could have shored up Bustos’s position to win again in 2022, but her retirement could be a sign that Democrats fear they’ll be in the minority in 2023.

In the run-up to the 2018 mid-terms, a large number of GOP incumbents, including then-Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, announced their retirements.

I spoke to a GOP campaign operative this week who pointed to a number of House Democrats now interested in higher office — Cindy Axne in Iowa, Tim Ryan in Ohio, Val Demings and Stephanie Murphy in Florida — as an early sign that Democrats are worried about losing control in 2022. Perhaps they just want the promotion, but the more pure retirements — such as Bustos’s — you see in the next 18 months, the more likely it is that House Democrats think they’ll soon be in the minority.

Articles You May Like

Texas Is the Second State to Say It Will Defy Biden Administration Title IX Revisions on Gender
RFK Jr. fires back at Trump and calls for ‘mano-a-mano’ debate
Stormy Daniels’ Lawyer Just Destroyed Bragg’s Case Against Trump
One Tough Grandma: New Mexico Woman Watching Taylor Swift Movie with Grandchild Gives Career Criminal a Painful Lesson When He Breaks into Her Home (AUDIO)
Austin Tex. Votes to Become ‘Sanctuary City’ For Transgender Minors

Leave a Comment - No Links Allowed:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *