Los Angeles Times

Citing polarizati­on, Ohio GOP senator won’t run in 2022

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CINCINNATI — U.S. Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) said Monday that he won’t seek reelection in part because it’s gotten “harder to break through the partisan gridlock and make progress,” and plans to end a career in federal government spanning more than three decades.

Portman’s announceme­nt comes the same day the U.S. Senate is receiving the House impeachmen­t article against former Republican President Trump. While some GOP senators have criticized the decision to go ahead with the trial next month despite Trump having left office, Portman said last week that he would listen to both sides before making a decision on how to vote.

“We live in an increasing­ly polarized country where members of both parties are being pushed further to the right and further to the left, and that means too few people who are actively looking to find common ground. This is not a new phenomenon, of course, but a problem that has gotten worse over the past few decades,” Portman said. “This is a tough time to be in public service.”

He said that Trump did not help the polarizati­on.

Portman, who turned 65 last month, is among establishm­ent Republican­s who clearly struggled with supporting Trump.

Once dubbed “The Loyal Soldier” in a front-page profile story in his hometown Cincinnati Enquirer, Portman usually supported Trump in carefully worded statements.

After Trump called the presidenti­al election rigged, Portman said Trump had a right to an investigat­ion into any irregulari­ties.

But in the immediate aftermath of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, Portman said Trump needed to go on national TV to address his supporters and tell them to refrain from violence.

“Both in his words before the attack on the Capitol and in his actions afterward, President Trump bears some responsibi­lity for what happened,” Portman said.

Portman was elected handily twice to the U.S. Senate, but was considered likely to face primary opposition in 2022.

Portman, who served in the administra­tions of George W. Bush and his father, the late George H.W. Bush, was under considerat­ion by both John McCain and Mitt Romney to be their running mates in their respective presidenti­al bids. Portman also helped them and other GOP presidenti­al candidates practice for debates by playing their Democratic rival.

He was elected to Congress to represent southern Ohio in a 1993 special election and won six more elections before being tapped by President George W. Bush to serve as U.S. trade representa­tive in 2005. He traveled the globe, negotiatin­g dozens of trade agreements. Bush then nominated him to be his White House budget director in 2006.

Portman stepped down in 2007, then returned to politics in 2010 with a successful U.S. Senate run, and won again in 2016, both times by landslide margins in a traditiona­l swing state.

Generally voting with his party, Portman broke ranks in 2013 to announce support for same-sex marriage. He said his son Will had earlier come out as gay to him and his wife, Jane. They have three children.

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