As Senators Head for Exit, Few Step Up to Run for Seats
From The New York Times:
The dearth of candidates for an open Senate seat
reflects what former and current senators and those who once aspired to the
office say is a sad truth: rarely has the thought of serving in the Senate
seemed so unappealing.
Once considered an apex of national politics second
only to the presidency, the “greatest deliberative body in the world” is so
riven by partisanship and gummed up by its own arcane rules that potential
candidates from Georgia to Kentucky, Iowa to Montana are loudly saying, “Thanks,
but no thanks.”
Add to that the cost of getting there — which can
include fighting off special interests and “super
PACs” from your own party, exhausting criticism from the increasingly
partisan news media, and prohibitive campaign expenses — and a Senate seat no
longer seems so grand.
Such weariness is evident not just in the people who
are forgoing a Senate bid but also in the exodus of senators not seeking
re-election. So far, 8 of the 33 whose terms expire in 2014 have decided not to
run again.
Senate retirements are at the highest levels on record. Since the 2010
elections, a total of 30 senators have bowed out. And more could come yet.
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