The Columbus Dispatch

House Dem campaign chair won’t seek post

- Alan Fram

WASHINGTON – The chairwoman of House Democrats’ campaign arm said Monday that she won’t seek the post again for the next Congress, days after her party’s unexpected loss of seats in last week’s election triggered recriminat­ions among Democrats.

Illinois Rep. Cheri Bustos’ decision to not seek a new term atop the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee comes with party members upset and divided over why that happened. Their candidates widely outraised their Republican rivals in many races and Bustos’ committee spent aggressive­ly in Gop-held districts around the country in hopes of making their majority even larger.

Both parties and nonpartisa­n political analysts expected Democrats to pad the size of this year’s majority by perhaps 15 seats. While they are on track to retain House control, seven Democratic incumbents were defeated and they’d ousted no Republican representa­tives, leaving it all but certain they will have a narrower hold on the chamber.

Caucus leader hopes to stay

Also Monday, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., asked his fellow Democrats to give him another two years in one of his party’s top jobs, leading the chamber’s Democratic caucus. Jeffries is considered a top contender to succeed Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., once she steps aside, and his decision was the latest indication that she so far faces no serious challenges for her post.

In a letter to his Democratic colleagues, Jeffries called for unity, saying, “We can only maximize our effectiveness on behalf of the American people if we have the gavel.”

Even before Bustos’ announceme­nt, several Democrats said privately that she would have little support to retain her post, which is an elective position chosen by House Democrats.

Her tenure has included clashes

with progressiv­es angry that she moved to protect incumbents – including conservati­ve Democrats – by denying contracts to political consulting firms that helped challenger­s in party primaries.

In a statement, Bustos said her committee had achieved its “primary objective” of keeping House control. She said that with President-elect Joe Biden in the White House, she would focus on “exciting legislativ­e possibilit­ies in the years to come.”

Pelosi said Bustos “shaped a mainstream message, mobilized effectively and attracted the resources to do so” and called her “a leader of great integrity and inspiratio­n.”

Bustos, 59, a four-term lawmaker, narrowly won her own reelection in a closely divided rural district she won by 24 percentage points two years ago. Her win came after an eleventh-hour $1 million expenditur­e for her by the House Majority PAC, which was resented by some Democrats. That committee is aligned with House Democratic leaders.

By Monday afternoon, Democrats’ only gains were three Gop-held, open districts from which Republican lawmakers are retiring.

House Democrats currently have a 232-197 advantage, plus one independen­t and five vacancies.

 ?? HOUSE TELEVISION VIA AP, FILE ?? Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-ill., won’t seek another term as chairwoman of the House Democrats’ campaign committee.
HOUSE TELEVISION VIA AP, FILE Rep. Cheri Bustos, D-ill., won’t seek another term as chairwoman of the House Democrats’ campaign committee.

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