Los Angeles Times

GOP Rep. Paul Cook to retire

- By Christine Mai-Duc

The congressma­n says he will run for San Bernardino County supervisor.

Rep. Paul Cook (R-Yucca Valley) will retire from Congress at the end of his term and has announced a run for a seat on the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisor­s, according to John Sobel, the congressma­n’s chief of staff.

Cook is the first to announce his retirement in California’s Republican U.S. House delegation, which has been greatly diminished in recent years. In the 2018 midterm election, Democrats took control of half of the 14 remaining Republican seats in California, which has a total of 53 congressio­nal districts.

“Serving in Congress has been an absolute honor, and I’m proud of my numerous victories amid a tough partisan atmosphere,” Cook said in a news release. “Our high desert needs continued strong leadership at the county level, and I pledge to fight for this area with the same dedication and conviction I’ve demonstrat­ed my entire career.”

Cook’s departure from the 8th Congressio­nal District will be the latest in a series of House Republican retirement­s as the lawmakers confront life in the minority. In all, more than a dozen GOP members have announced plans to leave Congress after 2020, including several in Texas.

Cook was mayor of Yucca Valley and served in the state Assembly before being elected to Congress in 2012. He plans to announce a run to represent the 1st District of the San Bernardino County Board of Supervisor­s, a district that does not include his Yucca Valley home. Robert Lovingood, who holds the seat, recently announced he won’t seek reelection.

The four-term congressma­n is not the first to seek a return to local office after leaving Capitol Hill. In 2015, Rep. Janice Hahn announced she would leave Congress to run for a seat on the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisor­s; she won. Los Angeles County Supervisor Hilda Solis was elected to the board after eight years in Congress and a stint as secretary of Labor under President Obama.

Republican­s hold a lead of 4 percentage points in voter registrati­on in the district, which stretches from Mono County to San Bernardino County along the Nevada border. But despite Democrats’ recent interest in making inroads in the district, it’s been long known as a deeply conservati­ve area. President Trump beat Hillary Clinton there by more than 15 percentage points, besting Mitt Romney’s 2012 margin in the district, and Cook won his last reelection fight against a fellow Republican with 60% of the vote.

Cook, not known as a prolific fundraiser in Congress, was out-raised by Democrat Christine Bubser in the quarter ending June 30 — she brought in $204,800 to Cook’s $139,299. Bubser is the only Democrat who had filed to challenge Cook in 2020.

Assemblyma­n Jay Obernolte (R-Big Bear Lake), whose district overlaps with about two-thirds of the 8th Congressio­nal District, is also expected to run. A campaign website paid for by Obernolte for Congress went live shortly after news of Cook’s announceme­nt broke and featured Cook’s endorsemen­t. A call to an Obernolte spokesman was not immediatel­y returned.

A statement released previously by a spokesman for Obernolte praised Cook’s record of service and added that, “Should [Cook] decide to seek a different office,” Obernolte “intends to continue Congressma­n Cook’s advocacy.”

State Senate Republican leader Shannon Grove (R-Bakersfiel­d), whose name was floated when Cook said he was considerin­g retiring, said in a statement that she has “no plans to run” and “will continue fighting to make California affordable for families and businesses.”

Bubser campaign spokeswoma­n Andrea Rothschild said Cook “saw the writing on the wall,” adding that “we have no doubt the voters of this competitiv­e district will reject the dangerous beliefs of career politician Jay Obernolte.”

Marge Doyle, the last Democrat to challenge Cook, took third place in the June 2018 primary with a little over half as many votes as Cook received, leaving voters to choose between two Republican­s.

This month, Rep. Susan A. Davis (D-San Diego) announced would not seek reelection, creating a rare safe Democratic vacancy in Southern California.

 ?? TOM WILLIAMS CQ Roll Call ?? REP. PAUL COOK will run for San Bernardino County supervisor.
TOM WILLIAMS CQ Roll Call REP. PAUL COOK will run for San Bernardino County supervisor.

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