» House Speaker Ryan decides not to seek re-election,
Top Republican’s retirement roils midterm waters.
House
WASHINGTON — Speaker Paul Ryan anno u nced We d nesday he will retire rather than seek another term in Congress as the steady if reluctant wingman for President Donald Trump, sending ripples through a Washington already on edge and spreading new uncertainty through a party bracing for a rough election year.
The Wisconsin Republican
cast the decision to end his 20-year career as a personal one, saying he did not want his children growing up with a “weekend dad.” Claiming he’s accomplished “a heck- uva lot,” he said the party can point to strong gains as lawmakers campaign ahead of November elections. A self-styled budget expert, Ryan had made tax cuts a centerpiece of his legislative agenda, and a personal cause, and Congress delivered on that late last year.
“I have given this job everything I have,” he said. “We’re going to have a great record to run on.”
But Ryan’s impending
departure also sets off a scramble among his lieutenants to take the helm.
And it will fuel speculation that Ryan is eyeing a coming Democratic surge, fueled by opposition to Trump, that could wrest control of the House from Republicans’ grip. Several GOP veterans have announced plans to retire in recent months and another, Rep. Dennis Ross of Florida, followed Ryan on Wednesday.
r talking with Trump early Wednesday, Ryan, 48, first announced his plans at a closed-door meeting of House Republicans. Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina said an emotional Ryan “choked up a few times trying
to get through” his remarks to colleagues and received three standing ovations.
Moments later, Ryan told reporters that if he were to stay for one more term, his children — now all teens — would only know him as a weekend dad.
“I can’t let that happen,” he said.
The speaker had been heading toward this deci
sion since late last year, said a person familiar with his thinking, but as recently as February he had considered running for another term. His own father died suddenly of a heart attack when he was 16, and though Ryan is in good health, the distance from his family weighed on
him. A final decision was made over the two-week congressional recess, which was partly spent on a family vaca
tion in the Czech Republic. Ryan called extended family and a few close friends Tuesday night and alerted a few staff. On Wednesday morning, after talking to the president, the vice president and fellow GOP lawmakers from Wisconsin, he gathered the rest of his staff before going to the confer
ence meeting, officials. Ryan, who has had a difficult relationship with Trump, thanked the president for giving him the chance to move
the GOP ahead.
For many Republicans, Ryan has been “a steady force in contrast to the president’s more mercurial tone,” said
Rep. Mark Sanford of South Carolina. “That’s needed.”
Ryan, from Janesville, Wis., was first elected to Congress in 1998. Along with Reps. Eric Cantor and Kevin McCarthy, he branded himself a rising “young gun” in an aging
party and a new breed of hard-charging Republican ready to shrink the size of government.