Two words were so closely associated with Republican Rep. Anthony Gonzales that I started to think they were part of his name: “rising star.” The Ohio congressman was a young former football star with an MBA from Stanford whose political career appeared to have limitless potential.
That is, until January. After Donald Trump helped incite an insurrectionist attack on the U.S. Capitol, the House voted to impeach the then-president, and 10 Republicans in the chamber joined with their Democratic colleagues to hold Trump accountable. Gonzales was one of the 10.
It marked the beginning of the end of his career in GOP politics. The Ohio Republican Party, who previously celebrated Gonzales, called for his resignation from Congress, as if he’d committed some kind of horrible crime. Max Miller, a former staffer in Donald Trump’s White House, announced a primary campaign against the incumbent, and the former president soon after traveled to Ohio to rally support for Miller’s candidacy.
Last night, in a bit of a surprise, the congressman announced that he’d seen enough: Gonzales will not seek re-election in Ohio next year. NBC News reported:
“Since entering politics, I have always said that I will do this job for as long as the voters will have me and it still works for my family,” Gonzalez said in a statement he tweeted late Thursday. “As Elizabeth and I consider the realities of continuing in public service while juggling the increasing responsibilities of being parents to our two beautiful children, it is clear that the best path for our family is to not seek re-election next fall.”
The Ohioan added that while family was at the heart of his decision, and the commute didn’t help, “it is also true that the current state of our politics, especially many of the toxic dynamics inside our own party, is a significant factor in my decision.”
Gonzales went a little further in an interview with The New York Times, which was first to report his retirement, telling the newspaper that Trump is “a cancer for the country.”








