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GOP Rep. Upton, who voted to impeach Trump, will not seek reelection

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), one of 10 Republican lawmakers who voted to impeach President Donald Trump, will not seek reelection in November after more than three decades in office.
Upton, who has represented parts of southwestern Michigan since 1987, announced his decision on the House floor Tuesday morning.

“As a former Boy Scout, I believe in leaving the campground better than one found it,” Upton said. “Even the best stories have a last chapter. This is it for me.”
Upton noted that he had worked with seven presidential administrations and seven House speakers, and said that “none of them would call me a rubber stamp.”
“If it’s good policy for Michigan, it’s good enough for all of us,” he said.

That history of crossing the aisle, however, grew increasingly untenable in a polarized Congress. Upton received blowback from much of the Republican base after voting with Democrats to impeach Trump last year over the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection. He remained steadfast that it was Congress’s role to hold Trump accountable and blasted the former president for having “expressed no regrets” for the attack on the Capitol.






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Upton also later backed the bipartisan infrastructure bill and received death threats afterward for helping President Biden score a legislative win.
On Tuesday, he cited his work on the infrastructure bill as one of his achievements, noting that it had “passed 69-30 in the Senate but then hit the rocks here in the House, barely surviving Trump’s opposition despite his call for a proposal twice as expensive with no pay-fors.”

Because of redistricting in Michigan, a new map forced Upton into the same seat as Rep. Bill Huizenga, a pro-Trump Republican. Trump initially endorsed a state lawmaker who was challenging Upton in his former district, then endorsed Huizenga when it became a member-on-member race.
Of the 10 Republicans who voted to impeach Trump, Upton will become the fourth to leave Congress rather than seek reelection. Others include Reps. John Katko (N.Y.), Adam Kinzinger (Ill.) and Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio), who in September cited “the toxic dynamics inside our own party” as part of the reason for his decision.
The six other Republicans who voted to impeach Trump who are running again — including Reps. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) and Peter Meijer (Mich.) — face tough primary challenges.

 
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