The beginning of the end for Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) came early last year. The far-right Republican congressman was already a notorious figure in modern American politics, after years of ugly rhetoric on matters of race and immigration, but as 2019 got underway, the Iowan shared a line with the New York Times that was new.
“White nationalist, white supremacist, Western civilization – how did that language become offensive?” the eight-term GOP congressman said. “Why did I sit in classes teaching me about the merits of our history and our civilization?”
His own party’s leaders scrambled to denounce King’s rhetoric, and soon after, they stripped him of his committee assignments. For the last two years, the Republican lawmaker could vote on bills once they reached the House floor, but his presence on Capitol Hill was otherwise rendered meaningless.
Yesterday, King’s own constituents pulled the plug on his toxic career.
Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, who has a long history of racist and outrageous remarks, lost his long-held House seat in a Republican primary on Tuesday, NBC News projected. With 98 percent of the vote counted, King trailed his main rival, state Sen. Randy Feenstra, by 7,866 votes, or 45.7 percent to 35.9 percent.
The incumbent’s primary defeat comes just two years after he narrowly won re-election in his conservative district, defeating J.D. Scholten (D) in 2018 by just 3 percentage points. Scholten was hoping for a 2020 rematch, though given the political leanings of northwestern Iowa, Feenstra is well positioned to succeed King in the U.S. House.









