Houston Chronicle

After year of testing GOP line, Hurd bows out

Democrats now favored to flip border district, experts say

- By Jeremy Wallace and Dylan McGuinness STAFF WRITERS

After three terms in Congress, Will Hurd announced Thursday he will not seek reelection in 2020, becoming the third Texas Republican to announce his exit in just a week.

The 41-year-old former CIA officer from Helotes and frequent critic of President Donald Trump said in a statement on his congressio­nal website that one of his missions in office was to bring his knowledge and experience from the intelligen­ce community to Washington, D.C.

“After reflecting on how best to help our country address these challenges, I have made the decision to not seek reelection for the 23rd Congressio­nal District of Texas in order to pursue opportunit­ies outside the halls of Congress to solve problems at the nexus between technology and national security,” Hurd said.

Hurd’s decision not to seek reelection leaves one of the most competitiv­e congressio­nal districts in the country with no incumbent heading into the 2020 elections. The only black Republican in the House, Hurd is serving his third term after defeating Democrat Gina Ortiz Jones last fall in a race that dragged on for weeks after Election Day. It was ultimately decided by fewer than 1,000 votes.

Jones had already launched a fresh bid for the seat in 2020, which was expected to set up a marquee rematch with Hurd.

“After years of serving our country, first in the CIA and then in Congress, I respect Congressma­n Hurd’s decision to serve in a new capacity,” Jones said in a statement. “From San Antonio to Socorro and everywhere in between, Texans are ready for new leadership in Washington and I’m ready to serve.”

Jones is not the only Democrat seeking the nomination. San An

tonio Democrat Liz Wahl, 33, a former news anchor for a Russianbac­ked cable network, has also filed to run for the seat.

The 23rd Congressio­nal District stretches from San Antonio to the outskirts of El Paso and includes more than 800 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border. Hurd is the only Republican in Congress who represents a district along the southern border with Mexico.

Political experts say without Hurd seeking re-election, Democrats will be favored to flip the key congressio­nal district in 2020.

Democrats already vowed to make defeating Hurd one of their top priorities. Now with no incumbent, observers anticipate Democrats will pour even more resources into the race.

Kyle Kondik, a congressio­nal elections expert at the University of Virginia, said he now projects the district as leaning Democratic instead of a pure toss-up seat as it would be if Hurd were seeking reelection. Hurd is one of just three Republican­s left in Congress representi­ng a district that Hillary Clinton won in 2016.

Matt Mackowiak, a GOP strategist who ran a campaign in a state Senate district last year that includes much of the same territory, said Hurd’s retirement could not come at a worse time for the party. “He is uniquely suited to be a Republican that can win in this district,” Mackowiak said. “Hurd not running for reelection makes it a hell of a lot harder for a Republican to win the seat.”

The intense nature of his three campaign victories — wins of 1.3, 2.1 and 0.44 percentage points, respective­ly — likely weighed on his decision, Mackowiak said.

“I don’t think your average member of Congress has the first idea how difficult this district is to hold, how much work it is, and how large it is,” he said. “Basically, Will Hurd has been running a marathon like a sprint for seven years. It just takes a lot out of you. It’s like dog years. He hasn’t been in Congress for six years, he’s been in Congress for 18 years.”

Hurd leaves behind a legacy of one of the most recognized bipartisan members of Congress. Of the 13 bills and resolution­s he sponsored in the House in 2017 and 2018, 10 had Democratic co-sponsors. In 2017, Hurd and then-U.S. Rep. Beto O’Rourke, an El Paso Democrat, made national headlines when they livestream­ed their road trip from Texas back to Washington in a show of bipartisan­ship.

Having to walk a tightrope of a Democratic-leaning district in an era of Donald Trump as president was a challenge, but one that Hurd, a John Marshall High School graduate, said made him in tune with people of all walks of life.

“This understand­ing has allowed me to win elections many people thought I couldn’t, especially when the political environmen­t was overwhelmi­ngly against my party,” Hurd said.

Along with Hurd’s exit, U.S. Rep. Pete Olson, R-Sugar Land, announced his retirement last week and U.S. Rep. Michael Conaway, R-Midland, announced his intentions earlier this week. A fourth Republican, John Ratcliffe of Collin County, has been appointed by Trump to be the director of national intelligen­ce. If his nomination is confirmed, he would be the fourth of Texas’ 36 members of Congress — all Republican­s — to leave the House.

It’s all part of a surge of retirement­s nationwide for Republican­s in Congress. Eleven members of Congress have announced they won’t seek reelection with nine being Republican­s.

Those retirement­s are in addition to 10 other members of Congress from Texas that either lost their reelection­s or did not seek another term in Congress in 2018.

Hurd used his position as a member of the U.S. House Intelligen­ce Committee to stress the dangers Russia posed to the U.S. and its elections systems, even as Trump tried to downplay their interferen­ce.

“Russia will stop at nothing to erode trust in our democratic institutio­ns,” Hurd said in 2018 after the intelligen­ce community spelled out how Russia used bots to try to sow discontent among Americans.

Hurd was even more pointed after Trump appeared too cozy with Russian leader Vladimir Putin last summer.

“I’ve seen Russian intelligen­ce manipulate many people over my profession­al career and I never would have thought that the U.S. President would become one of the ones getting played by old KGB hands,” Hurd said on social media.

Despite being in Congress for just two full terms, Hurd has seen two of his bills signed into law. Both bills aimed at improving cybersecur­ity and technology in the Department of Homeland Security were signed by President Trump last year.

“When I took the oath of office after joining the CIA, I swore to support and defend the Constituti­on of the United States against all its enemies,” Hurd said. “I took the same oath on my first day in Congress. This oath doesn’t have a statute of limitation­s. I will keep fighting to ensure the country I love excels during what will be a time of unpreceden­ted technologi­cal change.”

 ?? Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call / TNS ?? U.S. Rep. Will Hurd, a frequent critic of President Donald Trump, is the third Texas Republican to announce his exit.
Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call / TNS U.S. Rep. Will Hurd, a frequent critic of President Donald Trump, is the third Texas Republican to announce his exit.

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