New York Times
By Carl Hulse
March 27, 2015
Senator
Harry Reid, the tough tactician who has led Senate Democrats since
2005, will not seek re-election next year, bringing an end to a
three-decade congressional career
that culminated with his push of President Obama’s ambitious agenda
against fierce Republican resistance.
Mr.
Reid, 75, who suffered serious eye and facial injuries in a Jan. 1
exercise accident at his Las Vegas home, said he had been contemplating
retiring from the Senate
for months. He said his decision was not attributable either to the
accident or to his demotion to minority leader after Democrats lost the
majority in November’s midterm elections.
“I understand this place,” Mr. Reid said. “I have quite a bit of power as minority leader.”
He
has already confounded the new Republican majority this year by holding
Democrats united against a proposal to gut the Obama administration’s
immigration policies as
well as a human-trafficking measure Democrats objected to over an
anti-abortion provision.
“I
want to be able to go out at the top of my game,” said Mr. Reid, who
used a sports metaphor about athletes who try to hang on too long. “I
don’t want to be a 42-year-old
trying to become a designated hitter.”
Mr.
Reid’s tenure has become increasingly combative in recent years and
included a procedural change on nominations that infuriated Republicans.
He also came under fire
for blocking floor debate, and even some of his Democratic colleagues
suggested that he was stifling the Senate. Just this week, he alienated
House Democrats who thought he was sabotaging a compromise on Medicare.
His
departure at the end of 2016 will create an opening both at the top of
the Senate Democratic hierarchy and in a Senate contest that would have
been a megaspending
slugfest in the presidential battleground of Nevada. Conservatives such
as Charles G. and David H. Koch, the billionaire brothers who were a
favorite target of Reid criticism in 2014, would have spared no expense
in trying to oust him.
Senator
Charles E. Schumer of New York, who helped Democrats capture the Senate
in 2006 and has led their political messaging operation, is considered
the favorite to
succeed Mr. Reid as party leader. Senator Richard J. Durbin of
Illinois, the Senate’s No. 2 Democrat, could also be a contender for the
job, but it is unclear how strongly he would pursue it.
In
Nevada, Catherine Cortez Masto, the state’s former attorney general, is
considered a strong Democratic candidate with Mr. Reid out; the
Republican field will be fluid
and is likely to include Michael Roberson, a State Senate leader.
Mr.
Reid had previously insisted he was running and said he was confident
that he could have triumphed next year had he decided to seek a sixth
term. The onetime amateur
boxer noted he might not have even run in 2010 if Republicans had not
made such a point of trying to unseat him.
He
also said he was worried his race would consume campaign money that
would be needed in other competitive states as Democrats try to regain
control of the Senate.
“I
think it is unfair for me to be soaking up all the money to be
re-elected with what we are doing in Maryland, in Pennsylvania, in
Missouri, in Florida,” he said. “These
are big, expensive states.”
First
elected to the House in 1982, the former trial lawyer and head of the
Nevada gaming commission won his Senate seat in 1986 and joined the
leadership about a decade
later. Mr. Reid took over the top job in 2005 after Tom Daschle, then
the leader, lost his re-election bid.
After
a tough election night in 2004, some other top Democrats suggested they
might want to consider a leadership bid, but Mr. Reid had the election
sewn up by the next
day. He is the longest-serving member of Congress from Nevada, and the
second-longest-serving Democratic leader after Mike Mansfield of
Montana.
Like
his chief adversary, Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky,
Mr. Reid learned the workings of the Senate in the trenches as the
vote-counting whip and takes
pride in his floor expertise.
Unhappy
with the slow pace of judicial and executive branch confirmations, Mr.
Reid engineered a change in Senate procedure in 2013 that allowed
Democrats to overcome
filibusters against nominees with a simple majority. The change led to a
flurry of new judges being named to important appeals courts, though
Republicans accused him of changing the nature of the Senate and running
roughshod over the minority.
After
the election of Mr. Obama and Democratic gains in 2008, Mr. Reid did
the deal-making and vote counting required to push through the new
health care law with no Republican
votes and the economic stimulus with just a handful.
“I
am so happy that we were able to get the health care bill passed,” he
said, acknowledging that there were times he wondered why he did not
give up. “Like a fool, I
kept coming back.”
After
opposing a more forgiving immigration policy earlier in his career, Mr.
Reid became a champion of granting legal status to immigrants living in
the country illegally,
an evolution he attributes to his relationship with his state’s growing
Hispanic population. He was crucial to Senate passage of bipartisan,
comprehensive immigration legislation in 2013 — a bill the House did not
take up — and said the advocates for the immigrants
would ultimately prevail.
“We
have won that debate,” said Mr. Reid, who has also made pushing for
expanded use of alternative energy a legislative priority.
His
strict management of the Senate the past few years became an issue in
the 2014 elections as Republicans accused him of stifling debate and
denying even Democrats an
opportunity to push their priorities on the Senate floor. He blamed
Republicans for the legislative gridlock, citing their deep opposition
to Mr. Obama and their determination to deny him any victories.
Mr.
Reid said he believed the Supreme Court decision in the Citizens United
case that allowed a flood of money from superrich Americans into
politics had been a disaster
for Congress, even as he acknowledged that he had to adopt some of the
same tactics himself to keep Democrats competitive. His push for reining
in unlimited spending is likely to be a priority for him in his
remaining months.
Mr. Reid said he had seen one important change for the better in the Senate: an influx of female senators.
“This
place is so much better because of women,” he said. “Men and women are
different, and they have changed the dynamic of the Senate.”
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