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Tuesday, January 04, 2022

Bobby Rush Out!

Bobby Rush retiring.

Chicago's longtime resident and U.S. Representative Bobby Rush is retiring from Congress.

Rush, a longtime Democratic lawmaker from Illinois is giving up his seat after decades in office.

>He was the only lawmaker to beat Barack Obama.

co-founder of the Illinois Black Panther Party, was first elected to the House of Representatives in 1992 and famously bested then-state senator Obama in the 2000 House Democratic primary, making him the only person to defeat Obama in any election.

Obama would end up running for the U.S. Senate in 2004 and won. He is most notable for being the 44th President of the United States after winning his 2008 and 2012 elections.

Rush said that the time is now to be a private citizen and escape the circus. Like many longtime Democrats and Republicans in Congress, those who are leaving said that they miss them days when discourse was more civil. 

“I don’t want my grandchildren … to know me from a television news clip or something they read in a newspaper,” Rush, 75, told the Sun-Times.

“I want them to know me on an intimate level, know something about me, and I want to know something about them,” he added. “I don’t want to be a historical figure to my grandchildren.”

Though Rush is retiring from Congress, he intends to remain active in Chicago’s Beloved Community Church, where he serves as a pastor.

Barack Obama went on to become president. Bobby Rush was Obama's biggest backer.

Over his 30 years in Congress, Rush may be best remembered for donning a hoodie on the House floor following the shooting death of Trayvon Martin in 2012. At the time, Rush was escorted off the floor for breaching House decorum. 

Last week, the lawmaker announced that he had contracted a “breakthrough” case of COVID-19, though he noted he did not have any symptoms. 

Rush’s district, which covers much of Chicago’s South Side, is expected to remain in Democratic hands after the November election. He is the latest Democratic lawmaker representing a safe district to give up his seat as Republicans eye taking back the lower chamber of Congress this November.

The GOP needs to win a net of six House seats to regain the majority and polls indicate it is on track to do just that.

“If Democrats thought their retirement crisis would get better over the holidays, they were wrong,” National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Mike Berg said in a statement. “Democrats are abandoning ship as fast as possible because they know their majority is doomed.”

Recent Democrats to announce their retirement include Reps. Lucille Roybal-Allard and Jackie Speier of California, Stephanie Murphy of Florida and Albio Sires of New Jersey.

In all, 16 of the 24 House Democrats to announce they will not run for re-election are retiring from public life, while four are running for the US Senate and four others are running for other offices.

So far, 12 House Republicans have announced they are also not seeking another two-year term.

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