Blunt retirement shakes up Missouri Senate race
Sen. Roy Blunt’s (R-Mo.) unexpected announcement on Monday that he will not seek reelection in 2022 is setting off a sudden scramble among members of both parties.
For Republican leaders in the Senate, Blunt’s retirement is the latest in a series of blows ahead of the 2022 midterm elections. Four other GOP senators have said that they will not seek reelection next year, fueling Democratic hopes of not only retaining their ultra-narrow majority but expanding it.
But despite its former status as a battleground state, Missouri has shifted to the right in recent years, and Blunt’s retirement creates an opening for a candidate more closely aligned with former President Trump to succeed him. Former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens (R), for instance, has already floated the idea of a run for Blunt’s seat, arguing that his state’s senior senator has been insufficiently loyal to Trump.
No Republican has officially announced a bid for Blunt’s seat, and there are no clear front-runners. If he decides to make a run for the Senate, Greitens would enter the race with plenty of baggage. He resigned as governor in 2018, less than a year and a half after taking office, in the face of multiple scandals and staring down potential impeachment.
Other potential GOP hopefuls include Reps. Ann Wagner (Mo.) and Jason Smith (Mo) as well as Lt. Gov. Mike Kehoe, state Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft, the son of former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, who once held Missouri’s other Senate seat.
In a statement on Monday, Ashcroft left the door open to a potential 2022 Senate bid, saying that he is weighing “how I can best serve the state of Missouri.”
“It is imperative that Republicans take back the Senate in 2022,” Ashcroft said. “Katie and I will be praying and talking to friends and family about how I can best serve the state of Missouri.”
Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, vowed on Monday to “ensure Senator Blunt’s successor will uphold his legacy of free enterprise and small government and we will hold this seat.”
“Any candidate who supports the Democrats’ socialist, big government agenda will struggle to find votes in Missouri, a state that Donald Trump won four months ago by more than 15 points,” Scott said in a statement.
Winning the Senate race in Missouri is likely to be an uphill battle for Democrats, who have lost nearly every statewide race there over the past decade. They are planning to contest the seat in 2022, though there is not yet a clear favorite to win the nomination.
State Sen. Scott Sifton announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination last month and quickly picked up the endorsement of state Auditor Nicole Galloway, the only Democrat currently serving in a statewide elected office. Activist Timothy Shepard has also launched a bid for the Democratic nod.
But two high-profile Democrats have already bowed out of potential bids. Jason Kander, a former Missouri secretary of state who unsuccessfully challenged Blunt in 2016, signaled on Monday that he would not mount another Senate campaign, while former Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), who lost reelection in 2018 to Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), said emphatically that she would “never run for office again.”
“To all that are asking: thank you to the many who have said kind things. But I will never run for office again,” McCaskill tweeted. “Nope. Not gonna happen. Never. I am so happy I feel guilty sometimes.”
Republicans are looking to take back control of the Senate in 2022 after losing it in January following a pair of Democratic wins in runoff elections in Georgia. And while midterm elections tend to favor the party out of power in Washington — the Democrats now hold control of the White House and both chambers of Congress — Republicans are facing a particularly challenging electoral map that now includes a handful of open seats.
In declining to run for a third term in the Senate, Blunt joins Sens. Richard Burr (R-N.C.), Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), who have all announced retirement plans. Two other GOP incumbents, Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), have not yet said whether they will seek reelection next year.
One Republican operative said Blunt’s announcement was “surprising” but “not entirely unexpected,” given the coming retirements of a handful of Senate Republicans and Trump’s repeated threats to support primary challenges to GOP incumbents he views as out of step with his vision for the Republican Party.
Blunt, 71, has been a fixture in Washington for decades. He served in GOP leadership in the House for years before entering the Senate and rising to become the chamber’s fourth-highest-ranking Republican. He was widely expected to seek reelection in 2022 and even said earlier this year that he was still planning to run for a third term.
While Blunt had largely stood by Trump — he voted to acquit the former president in both of his impeachment trials — he still faced potential headwinds within his own party. Greitens hammered Blunt in a radio interview last month for “siding with Mitch McConnell,” the Senate Republican leader from Kentucky whose relationship with Trump has frayed in recent months.
Democrats touted Blunt’s retirement as the latest sign of the GOP’s post-Trump political wounds. Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.), the chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said that Blunt’s announcement amounted to “a broader statement about where the Republican Party is today and the willingness of incumbent senators to say they’ve had enough.”
“I think it actually speaks volumes about what’s happening in the Republican Party right now,” Peters told reporters on a video call. “Sen. Blunt is now the fifth Republican senator to say that he is not going to run for another term, and I think that certainly means that Republicans are viewing their party as in trouble.”
“We will be looking at Missouri, clearly, with a Republican senator retiring,” he continued. “I know that there are a number of very well-qualified folks who are interested in running for the United States Senate.”
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