GOP veterans to leave battleground

Republican retirements leave congressional seats open to party change.

ByABC News
October 18, 2007, 11:07 AM

WASHINGTON -- Thirteen years ago, Rep. Ray LaHood won a congressional seat in a Republican tidal wave that gave his party control of the House for the first time in four decades. Now, the Illinois Republican is part of a new trend.

LaHood is one of a dozen House Republicans, many of them veterans able to hold swing districts by the force of their personality, who have announced they will not seek re-election next year. More than half the retirements are in the Midwest, a perennial political battleground.

That's complicating what already was shaping up as a difficult campaign for the Republican Party. "We've created a big headache," LaHood says.

The Republicans who are stepping down insist they are doing so for personal reasons. Some are running for higher office. LaHood admits that political reality played a part in his calculations. "Let's face it: It's no fun being in the minority," he said. "The prospects of the House turning Republican in 2008 are slim."

Rep. Deborah Pryce, R-Ohio, who's also giving up her seat at the end of her term, hopes her party's political doldrums are temporary. "Right now, it's like we're on stall," she said.

Three of the Republican retirements are in Ohio, home state of House Republican leader John Boehner. In Minnesota, Rep. Jim Ramstad's retirement gives Democrats a 50-50 chance to pick up his seat, according to non-partisan political analyst Charlie Cook.

In Illinois, former House speaker Dennis Hastert is one of three Republicans planning to step down. The Associated Press reported Thursday that Hastert may step down before the end of his term but withhold an announcement so a special election can't be scheduled on the date of the Illinois primary, when many Democratic voters are likely to turn out for favorite son presidential candidate Barack Obama.

"Retirements when you are in the minority are like the flu. They're contagious," says former representative Martin Frost, who chaired the Democratic congressional campaign committee the year after his party lost control of the House of Representatives in 1994.