13 House members seek higher office

Lawmakers are leaving posts at a faster rate than in the past three elections.

ByABC News
May 3, 2009, 11:25 PM

WASHINGTON -- Four months into their new terms in Congress, 13 House members are seeking promotions to the U.S. Senate or statewide office as lawmakers give up their posts at a faster rate than they have for the past three elections.

By comparison, five House members had announced plans to leave their positions by May 2007, the most recent non-election year. Most of the current departures come from the Republican ranks, leaving GOP-held seats open and posing further problems for a party struggling to rebuild after losing the White House and more ground in Congress last year.

"The Republicans have taken terrible beatings over the last four years, and 2010 is shaping up to be another good Democratic year," said Cal Jillson, a political scientist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. GOP members, he added, "are casting about for anything that looks better than what they have."

Seven of the departing House members have jumped into governor's races, in which 38 seats are up for grabs from now until November 2010, compared with 11 last year. Big issues loom for governors from guiding their states out of recession to helping to carve out congressional districts based on next year's Census.

"You can be one of a small Republican minority in the House or have the opportunity to be the CEO of an entire state and affect congressional campaigns for the next decade," said Nathan Gonzales, an analyst with the non-partisan Rothenberg Political Report. "Running for governor may look a lot more appealing."

Nine-term Republican Rep. Nathan Deal was the latest House defection, announcing his candidacy for Georgia governor on Friday.

Republican Rep. Zach Wamp said he entered the Tennessee governor's race in January to press for a "bold and dynamic agenda for the future of the state that doesn't rely so much on the federal government." The eight-term congressman said he was not influenced by GOP losses on Capitol Hill.

Democrat Rep. Artur Davis, seeking to become Alabama's first African-American governor, said his timing was straightforward: Next year marks the first time in 24 years that an incumbent governor has not sought the seat.