Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., at 89 is the oldest member in Congress’ upper chamber and on Thursday became the fourth senator to announce he would not seek another term come the 2014 election. However, he does not see this as a final sendoff from public service. “I’m not announcing a retirement,” Lautenberg said during a press conference on Friday, “I’m announcing today that I will be continuing on my mission to do the right thing wherever I can.”
He added, “It’s an appropriate time to allow someone else to follow.” And that is exactly what Lautenberg is doing. He has cleared the pathway for popular Newark Mayor, Cory Booker, to go after the Senate and make his mark on Washington D.C. As The Cycle host Steve Kornacki pointed out in Salon this week:
“Republicans will come up with a candidate too, but the Garden State GOP’s bench is thin and the state hasn’t sent a Republican to the Senate since (the very liberal) Clifford Case in 1972. Booker, with his broad popularity and limitless treasury, figures to be a reliable caretaker of that Democratic winning streak…
This is his race to lose.”
However, this is not the case with the other senatorial races up for grabs. With the Republicans only needing six seats to win back the Senate, their best options are going after the states that Mitt Romney won in the 2012 election.
One viable option is Iowa. On Jan. 26, Senator Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, announced that he would not be seeking a sixth term. He said “it’s just time to step aside” and that he wants to see a new generation of Iowa political leaders step forward.
By stepping aside he has made Iowa a viable option for Republicans to go after and hope to pick up in the 2014 Senate elections. National Republican Senatorial Committee executive director Rob Collins said on the day Sen. Harkin announced his retirement, “Today’s announced by Sen. Harkin immediately vaults Iowa into the top tier of competitive Senate races for next year.”









