First, an apology: We are less than a month into 2021, not even a week into President Joe Biden’s term, and yet somehow this column is already about next year’s midterm elections. No one is more sorry than I am, but I beg you to blame Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, not me.
Portman announced Monday that he won’t be running for re-election in 2022, which came as a big shock to the political commentariat. His “moderate” reputation got a pretty decent skewering from MSNBC’s Steve Benen, so I don’t feel the need to repeat. But what I will say is that Portman’s looming retirement means it might be even less likely that Republicans will offer up concessions for Biden’s agenda in the meantime.
Monday’s announcement makes three Republican senators who’ve said they won’t stand for re-election next year — Portman, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Richard Burr of North Carolina. That means three swing states will have open Senate seats in 2022. It was already going to be a rough election for Republicans on defense. Not only do they have more seats to try to keep, but they’ll also be doing it without former President Donald Trump at the top of the ticket.
Trump’s absence could be a blessing or a curse in each of the states, two of which he won last year. Candidates to succeed Toomey will face an electorate that has gone hard for Democrats in the last two cycles after a surprise win for Trump in 2016. Burr’s North Carolina seat will hinge on the candidates who choose to run — Democratic candidate Cal Cunningham only narrowly lost last year to Sen. Thom Tillis even though several scandals emerged late in the race.
Portman’s seat may prove to be a bellwether — his fellow Ohioan in the Senate is Sherrod Brown, a pro-union liberal Democrat who easily won re-election in 2018. On the flip side, the state also voted for Trump last year, by almost the exact same margin it did for Brown.
All told, it’s likely that we will see more retirement announcements from the GOP ahead of the midterms. Richard Shelby of Alabama will be 88 years old if he runs again. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the oldest member of the Republican caucus, could say goodbye rather than seek an eighth term, which would take him to age 95.
Meanwhile, other members face strong potential challenges — Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards is term-limited and could take on Sen. John Kennedy — while Republicans may find trouble attracting strong opponents to go after Democratic-held seats — Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey won’t run against the newly sworn-in Sen. Mark Kelly, he announced Sunday.
That sets us up for a replay of McConnell’s playbook from 2009 to 2014 — make sure nothing can get done in the Senate.
These are all terrible scenarios for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, whose team has to hold 20 seats and flip one if it wants any chance to take back control of the Senate in two years.








