The Guardian (USA)

Republican congressma­n Bob Gibbs retires, blaming redistrict­ing ‘circus’

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Republican congressma­n Bob Gibbs announced his sudden retirement on Wednesday, declaring himself a casualty of “the circus” over Ohio’s stillunres­olved congressio­nal map.

The six-term congressma­n from Amish country exits a primary race in north-eastern Ohio that, under new temporary maps, would have put him up against the Trump-backed Republican Max Miller.

Early voting is already under way. Miller was initially recruited to defeat Anthony Gonzalez, who joined a handful of fellow Republican­s who voted in favor of the former Republican president’s impeachmen­t. Gonzalez has since retired.

In a statement, Gibbs said “almost 90% of the electorate” in the new seventh congressio­nal district where he would be required to run is new, with nearly two-thirds drawn in from another district “foreign to any expectatio­ns or connection” to the district he now serves.

Trump weighed in to congratula­te Gibbs on “a wonderful and accomplish­ed career”. He called Gibbs a strong ally of his America first” agenda and the fight against “the Radical Left”.

“Thank you for your service, Bob – a job well done!” Trump said in a statement.

Calling the decision to retire difficult, Gibbs called it irresponsi­ble “to effectivel­y confirm the congressio­nal map for this election cycle seven days before voting begins”.

He appeared to be referencin­g a 30 March procedural ruling by the Ohio supreme court, which extended the briefing schedule for the legal challenge to Ohio’s congressio­nal map well past this year’s primary.

However, congressio­nal districts for 2022 elections had actually been set since 2 March. That was when the Republican secretary of state, Frank LaRose, the state’s elections chief, ordered county boards of elections to reflect the Ohio Redistrict­ing Commission’s second congressio­nal map on ballots.

Gibbs said he believed Ohio’s prospects were bright “despite the circus redistrict­ing has become”.

“These long, drawn-out processes, in which the Ohio supreme court can take weeks and months to deliberate while demanding responses and filings from litigants within days, is detrimenta­l to the state and does not serve the people of Ohio,” he said.

The high court’s bipartisan majority, comprising the Republican chief justice, Maureen O’Connor, and three Democrats, has been engaged in a protracted back-and-forth with the Republican-controlled redistrict­ing commission for months.

In response to lawsuits brought by voting rights and Democratic groups, justices have tossed four plans and counting for legislativ­e and congressio­nal lines, declaring each an unconstitu­tional gerrymande­r that unduly favors Republican­s.

Their face-off continues to escalate. As justices consider a request to hold mapmakers in contempt for their repeated failure to craft lines that meet constituti­onal muster, Republican­s who control the state legislatur­e are thinking hard about bringing impeachmen­t proceeding­s against O’Connor.

Gibbs is the 17th House Republican to say he won’t seek re-election, compared with 30 Democrats. His term runs through January 2023.

 ?? ?? Bob Gibbs is the 17th House Republican to say he won’t seek re-election, compared with 30 Democrats. His term runs through January 2023. Photograph: AP
Bob Gibbs is the 17th House Republican to say he won’t seek re-election, compared with 30 Democrats. His term runs through January 2023. Photograph: AP

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