Rep. Bob Hunter, after 20 years in office and with a diagnosis of prostate cancer, says he won't seek reelection next year. The Abilene Republican is optimistic about radiation treatments ahead, but says between that and an upcoming project at Abilene Christian University, he'll bow out. At least three people have their eye on the chair in HD-71, all of them Republicans: Abilene Mayor Norman Archibald; Rob Beckham, who lost a challenge to then-U.S. Rep. Charlie Stenholm in 2002 (Beckham got 47 percent overall, but narrowly beat the Democrat if you only count voters in Hunter's district); and former mayor Gary McCaleb, vice president and a management professor at ACU. Hunter says he knows of several others who are interested, and says he won't endorse a potential successor.
It's a two-county district -- Taylor and Nolan -- and has a strong Republican flavor to it (Nolan still elects Democrats to local offices, but went strongly for Bush and for statewide Republicans in 2004; Taylor was Republican top to bottom, with the exception of Stenholm, who got 50.49 percent of the vote).
Keeping score?
Hunter is the ninth current member of the House to say he won't run for reelection. With the death earlier this year of Rep. Joe Moreno, D-Houston, at least ten members of the next House will be freshmen. Our list, in addition to those two, includes Reps. Bob Griggs, R-North Richland Hills, Peggy Hamric, R-Houston, Suzanna Gratia Hupp, R-Lampasas, Terry Keel, R-Austin, Joe Nixon, R-Houston, Richard Raymond, D-Laredo, Jim Solis, D-Harlingen, and Carlos Uresti, D-San Antonio. Five -- Hamric, Keel, Nixon, Raymond, and Uresti -- are dropping out to seek higher office in next year's elections.
Three senators won't be back: Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin, Jon Lindsay, R-Houston, and Todd Staples, R-Palestine. Staples is running for higher office; the other two are hanging up their running shoes.