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Report Urges Capitol Security Overhauls
National Guard members near the Capitol on Thursday. A task force has called for more police among other measures to secure the complex.
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Republican Sen. Roy Blunt
of Missouri said he wouldn’t
run for re-election in 2022,
the latest in a series of retire-
ments planned by veteran law-
makers as the GOP reorients
itself following the loss of the
White House and both cham-
bers of Congress.
Mr. Blunt, a close ally of
Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell, announced his de-
cision in a video and press
statement Monday, surprising
his colleagues and heralding
the end of a long political ca-
reer that included senior lead-
ership roles in both chambers.
Mr. Blunt is the No. 4 Sen-
ate Republican. A former his-
tory teacher, he served as Mis-
souri’s top election official
before being elected to the
U.S. House in 1996 and the
Senate in 2010. He built a rep-
utation as a deal maker, nego-
tiating bills to boost medical
research funding and mental
health services.
Mr. Blunt’s last race, in 2016,
was made challenging by the
rise of former President Donald
Trump, whose frequent calls to
“drain the swamp” created tur-
bulence for long-serving Repub-
licans. A string of Republicans
who competed successfully in
that cycle have said they won’t
run again, including Sens. Pat
Toomey of Pennsylvania, Rob
Portman of Ohio, Richard Burr
of North Carolina and Richard
Shelby of Alabama.
In 2016, Mr. Blunt’s Demo-
cratic challenger, former Mis-
souri Secretary of State and
Army veteran Jason Kander,
attacked the Republican as a
Washington insider. Mr. Blunt
narrowly defeated Mr. Kander.
Mr. Blunt’s departure paves
the way for a crowded and
competitive GOP primary.
Last
week,
before
Mr.
Blunt’s announcement, former
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens
said he was weighing a possi-
ble political comeback in
2022. Mr. Greitens, a Republi-
can, resigned from the gover-
norship in 2018, plagued by le-
gal troubles and a sex scandal.
Other Republicans consid-
ered possible contenders in-
clude Missouri Secretary of
State Jay Ashcroft, Reps. Ann
Wagner, Billy Long and Jason
Smith, state Attorney General
Eric Schmitt, state Treasurer
Scott Fitzpatrick, and Lt. Gov.
Mike Kehoe, as well as retired
Nascar driver Carl Edwards.
Former Democratic Sen.
Claire McCaskill, who lost re-
election in 2018, made it clear
she wouldn’t run for office
again. Mr. Kander also tweeted
that he wouldn’t run.
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