Chattanooga Times Free Press

Open seat: California Sen. Feinstein states she will not run for re-election

- BY MICHAEL R. BLOOD

LOS ANGELES — Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, whose groundbrea­king political career shattered gender barriers from San Francisco’s City Hall to the corridors of Capitol Hill, said Tuesday she won’t seek re-election in 2024.

The senator, who turns 90 in June, is the oldest member of Congress and has faced questions in recent years about her cognitive health, though she has defended her effectiven­ess representi­ng a state that is home to nearly 40 million people.

The announceme­nt came after several prominent Democrats, including U.S. Reps. Katie Porter and Adam Schiff, already had declared Senate campaigns. With Feinstein a now 30-year veteran of the Senate, there hasn’t been a wide open competitio­n for her seat in decades.

Feinstein plans to remain in Congress through the end of her current term. Speaking to reporters in Washington on Tuesday, she said “there’s times for all things under the sun.”

“I think that will be the right time, towards the end of next year,” she said.

Feinstein is one of the Senate’s few remaining veterans of the so-called Year of the Woman, referring to several women who were elected to the maledomina­ted chamber during the 1992 election.

She was the first woman to serve as president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisor­s in the 1970s and the first female mayor of San Francisco. She ascended to that post after the November 1978 assassinat­ions of then-Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk.

In the Senate, she was the first woman to head the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee and the first woman to serve as the Judiciary Committee’s top Democrat. She gained a reputation as a pragmatic centrist who left a mark on political battles over issues ranging from reproducti­ve rights to environmen­tal protection.

 ?? ?? Diane Feinstein
Diane Feinstein

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