Las Vegas Sun

March 19, 2024

Source: Debbie Dingell to seek husband’s Michigan House seat

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrat Debbie Dingell will run for the House seat currently held by her husband, John, who announced this week that he would retire after the longest congressional career in history, a Democratic official said Tuesday.

Debbie Dingell, 60, is chairwoman of the Wayne State University Board of Governors, a former executive with General Motors and a member of the Democratic National Committee. She was widely expected to seek the southeast Michigan seat in a district that President Barack Obama won easily in 2012.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to publicly discuss the plans by name ahead of a formal announcement.

John Dingell, 87, who was elected to his late father's seat in 1955 and has held it ever since, announced Monday he would retire at the end of his term. The once-powerful committee chairman played a key role in some of the biggest liberal legislative victories of the past 60 years, including the creation of the Medicare program in 1965, the 1970 National Environmental Policy Act and the 1973 Endangered Species Act.

He played a major role in passage of the Affordable Care Act in 2010. Months later, however, Democrats lost the majority in the House and control of the agenda. Partisan divisions have been more pronounced in Congress, limiting bipartisan efforts to pass legislation.

"I find serving in the House to be obnoxious," the congressman said in an interview with the Detroit News. "It's become very hard because of the acrimony and bitterness, both in Congress and in the streets."

In June, Dingell broke the record for the longest-serving member of Congress held by the late Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, but Dingell’s congressional experience goes back even further than his 1955 electoral win. As a congressional page in 1941, he watched firsthand as President Franklin D. Roosevelt called on Congress to declare war on Japan in his "Day of Infamy" address.

Close to 40 House members, Republican and Democratic, have announced plans to retire at the end of their term, with at least half seeking Senate seats, governorships or other office.

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