The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
CONGRESSMAN WON’T SEEK RE-ELECTION
Lawrenceville lawmaker cites recent political, personal reasons.
WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Rob Woodall will not seek re-election next year, the Lawrenceville Republican announced Thursday, all but ensuring his rapidly diversifying district in suburban Atlanta will become one of the country’s fiercest political bat- tlegrounds in 2020.
Woodall told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that he plans to step aside at the end of the current Congress because of recent political and personal developments. In addition to surviving the narrowest race of his political career last year, Woodall lost his father.
“Doing what you love requires things of you, and having had that family transition made me start to think about those things that I have invested less in because I’ve been investing more here,” he said in an interview.
A low-key and relentlessly sunny policy wonk who has represented Georgia’s 7th Congressional District for five terms, Woodall beat back a challenge from Democratic newbie Carolyn Bourdeaux last fall. His thin margin of victory — just 433 votes separated the two after a recount, making it the closest congressional race in the nation — prompted some Republican grumbling about what they saw as a lack of energy behind his campaign.
Woodall never had much patience for Washington’s political games: He loathed fundraising, eschewed social media and negative campaigning, and didn’t begin running television ads until days before the election.
Bourdeaux, a Georgia State University professor, clobbered him on the fundraising front and characterized him as out of step with the district on immigration and health care. Within minutes of her former rival’s retirement announcement on Thursday, Bourdeaux said she would run again for the 7th District seat.
“I have a very strong case to make that I built the infrastructure — both the fundraising side and the community (relations) — and I’m here to finish this particular job,” Bourdeaux said Thursday.
Woodall said no one pressured him to step aside. But he acknowledged it would have been difficult to run the campaign he wanted with such intense outside interest in the upcoming presidential year.
“There are going to be a lot of cooks in the kitchen in here, and even as adamant as I am about the way I want to run the show, it would have been harder to keep control over a message as outside groups come in on both sides,” he said.
He said he wanted to announce his retirement early in the election cycle to “give the next team time to prepare.”
“There are going to be some keen competitors who are going to get in this race, and they’re going to campaign the dickens out of it,” Woodall said. “This is going to stay a Republican seat.”
Shifting political ground
The 7th District, based in Forsyth and Gwinnett counties, has changed rapidly over the past several decades. Once deeply conservative, it’s now at the center of the demographic shifts that have transformed Atlanta’s wealthy suburbs into political battlegrounds. It’s now majority-minority, and Democrat Stacey Abrams carried Gwinnett by 14 percentage points in last year’s gubernatorial race.
Even before Woodall’s announcement, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee had shortlisted the 7th District as a prime pickup opportunity for 2020.
The upcoming contest is poised to be a crowded and fiery one.
A bevy of Republicans are eyeing the seat. Potential candidates include U.S. Attorney B.J. Pak, a former Gwinnett state legislator; state Sen. Renee Unterman; ex-state Rep. Scott Hilton; and former state Sen. David Shafer. Ex-state Rep. Buzz Brockway, who ran unsuccessfully for secretary of state last year, is also looking at the race, as are state Sen. P.K. Martin, former Woodall challenger Shane Hazel and Mike Royal, a state school board member and former Gwinnett GOP chairman.
On the Democratic side, state Reps. Sam Park and Brenda Lopez are said to be interested in the position, and Snellville attorney Marqus Cole has already announced his candidacy.
“Make no mistake: We are the hottest battleground state in 2020 up and down the ballot, and Republicans are running scared. They should be,” said state Sen. Nikema Williams, the chairwoman of the Democratic Party of Georgia.
But Bourdeaux enters the Democratic side of the contest with a significant advantage. Her campaign committee ended 2018 with nearly $142,000 in the bank, and she built a formidable fundraising network over the past two years.
She said she chose to announce her candidacy early because she wanted “more runway” to fortify relationships with grassroots organizations in the district.
“The last race was so fast and so intense,” she said, adding that she wanted time to “have coffees, have town halls, talk about some key issues with people.”
“There’s just so much more that can be done,” Bourdeaux said.
Republicans were swift to denounce Bourdeaux’s return.
“Carolyn Bourdeaux couldn’t ‘finish the job’ the first time, and it won’t be any different the second time around as voters continue to reject a socialist Democratic agenda that’s becoming more and more extreme with each passing day,” said Camille Gallo, a spokeswoman for the National Republican Congressional Committee.
Woodall’s legacy
Woodall, 48, made the rare move from behind the scenes to the political forefront in 2011 when he replaced his former boss, John Linder.
Unfailingly optimistic about Congress, he often emphasized economic issues and took up Linder’s signature policy proposal, the Fair Tax Act. The bill seeks to replace federal personal and corporate income taxes with a national retail sales tax.
A senior member of the powerful House Rules Committee, Woodall is known for delivering speeches on the intricacies of the federal budget in his trademark preacher’s cadence. He lists his office’s constituent service work as one of his proudest accomplishments.
Woodall isn’t sure about what will come next, but he said spending more time with family is at the top of his list, as is “finding a way to contribute.”
He said he plans to spend his remaining time in Congress pressing for his legislative priorities, including a measure that would tighten billing rules for air ambulances and infrastructure work on the House Transportation Committee.
“Being unleashed is a valuable tool,” he said.