While most of the political world’s attention was focused on the Democratic presidential primary debate in Detroit last night, there was some fresh electoral news from Capitol Hill, where yet another U.S. House member said he’s calling it quits at the end of this term. Roll Call reported:
Texas Republican Rep. K. Michael Conaway, ranking member of the House Agriculture Committee, is planning to retire at the end of his current term, according to GOP sources.
Conaway’s decision not to seek reelection in 2020, which he is not expected to formally announce until a press conference Wednesday, leaves an open seat in the deep red 11th District, a part of West central Texas that President Donald Trump won by 59 points in 2016.
If it seems as if you’ve been hearing a lot of retirement announcements lately, it’s not your imagination. Conway’s declaration came just one day after Utah’s Rob Bishop (R) said he’s not running in 2020, either. That came three days after Alabama’s Martha Roby (R) said she won’t seek another term, which came the day after Texas’ Pete Olson (R) announced his retirement, which came the day after Michigan’s Paul Mitchell (R) said the same thing.
In all, so far this year, nine U.S. House members — seven Republicans and two Democrats — have said they’re leaving at the end of this term. That doesn’t include former Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.), who’d announced his retirement before passing away in February, nor does it include a handful of House GOP members who are eyeing statewide campaigns in 2020, but who haven’t yet won their respective primaries.
To be sure, there were even more retirement announcements at this point two years ago, but that’s cold comfort for anxious House Republican leaders — especially since they suffered their worst midterm cycle since the Watergate era in 2018.
The Hill added yesterday, “House Republicans plotting to win back their majority in Congress fear they are on the brink of a massive wave of retirements that could force them to play defense in a high-stakes presidential election year.”
The larger question, however, is what’s driving these retirement announcements.









