{mosads}Rahall has been the top Democrat on the House Transportation Committee since 2010. He said Friday that he was sad to see Rockefeller leaving the Senate.
“I still remember Jay’s first inaugural as governor,” Rahall said in a statement. “He told us, ‘My name is Rockefeller, but that will not pay our bills.’ He gave us more than his family name. He pledged his heart, mind and strength to us that day. For almost half a century, Sen. Rockefeller’s service to his state and its families has never wavered from that commitment.”
Republicans moved quickly to argue that Rahall was too liberal for West Virginia, which has voted for GOP presidential candidates since former President Bill Clinton’s campaign for reelection in 1996.
“West Virginians are ready to send Nick Rahall packing,” National Republican Congressional Committee Spokeswoman Katie Prill said in a statement. “At every turn Rahall has supported President Obama’s anti-coal, anti-job policies over West Virginia families. So why wouldn’t he take a long shot run for the Senate? It will keep him busy before he inevitably joins the unemployment line when he is retired in 2014 for constantly voting against West Virginia.”
Rahall was first elected to Congress in 1976. He represented West Virginia’s 4th district through 1993 before moving to the state’s 4th district in redistricting.
-This post was updated with new information at 1:27 p.m.