Springfield News-Sun

2 more House Dems retiring, underscori­ng 2022 obstacles

- By Gary D. Robertson, Marc Levy and Jill Colvin

RALEIGH,N.C.— Two longtime Democratic congressme­n with a combined six decades of experience announced Monday that they plan to retire at the end of their terms, another worrying sign for the party’s uphill climb to keep control of the House in next year’s midterm elections.

Rep. David Price, 81, the longest-serving member of North Carolina’s congressio­nal delegation, and Rep. Mike Doyle, 68, the longest-serving member of Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal delegation, said they will not seek reelection next year.

The news comes just days after Rep. John Yarmuth of Kentucky, the influentia­l chair of the House Budget Committee, announced his own decision to retire, bringing to a dozen the total number of House Democrats who have revealed plans to retire or seek other office.

While all three men cited various motivation­s — the realities of redistrict­ing and a desire to spend more time with their families among them — the decisions underscore the challenges Democrats face as they try to hang on to their razor-thin majorities in both chambers of Congress. The party that wins the White House typically loses congressio­nal seats in the following midterm elections, and more members are expected to depart as they contend with the reality that they could find themselves in the minority.

But that didn’t seem to be the case with Monday’s departures.

“I believe the time has come to pass the torch to the next generation,” Doyle said at a news conference at his Pittsburgh office.

In addition to passing the torch, he said the COVID-19 pandemic had accelerate­d his thinking about retiring with his wife. And he noted that redistrict­ing will likely bring substantia­l change to his district’s boundaries, most likely pushing it outside Allegheny County in the southweste­rn part of the state.

“You know, this is going to be a brand-new district, new people, new counties maybe, and a good starting point for a new member of Congress to get acclimated in that district and go from there,” he said.

Doyle was first elected in 1994 in a district that currently includes all of Pittsburgh and some of its increasing­ly liberal-leaning suburbs. He has easily fended off primary challenges from the left while handily winning reelection against token Republican opposition, and he wasn’t seen as vulnerable.

“I just think he felt it was time,” Doyle’s former campaign strategist, Mike Mikus, said of the decision.

In North Carolina, Price has represente­d the 4th Congressio­nal District in the Raleigh-durham area for all but one term since joining the House in 1987. As the state’s only member of the powerful House Appropriat­ions Committee, he has steered money to state projects and chairs the panel’s transporta­tion, housing and urban developmen­t subcommitt­ee.

Price’s announceme­nt comes as state lawmakers are starting to redraw North Carolina’s House district boundaries based on 2020 census figures. Even with Republican­s in control of the General

Assembly, almost any reconfigur­ed district drawn in the heavily Democratic region of the state would have made Price a heavy favorite to win next year. He has won reelection with at least two-thirds of the vote during every general election since 2012.

“So while it is time for me to retire, it is no time to flag in our efforts to secure a ‘more perfect union’ and to protect and expand our democracy,” Price said in a news release announcing his decision.

Price had been considerin­g retirement for some time, according to his former chief of staff Asher Hildebrand, and might have stepped down earlier if Donald Trump had not been elected president in 2016. Elected officials with experience, such as Price, were able “to see the country through a moment of considerab­le perils,” Hildebrand said.

Hildebrand also noted that it’s highly likely that any district drawn in Price’s region will remain in Democratic hands, so “this decision will have no bearing on the House majority.”

Both retirement­s will likely set off intense scrambles for Democrats seeking to succeed them. “These opportunit­ies don’t come around very often,” Mikus said.

Western Pennsylvan­ia is already in line to lose a House seat because of lackluster population growth. Democrats in Pittsburgh hope to keep two Democratic-leaning congressio­nal districts, and Doyle’s departure opens the possibilit­y of splitting Pittsburgh to help make that happen.

 ?? ?? Rep. David Price
Rep. David Price
 ?? ?? Rep. Mike Doyle
Rep. Mike Doyle

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