Sen. Mike EnziMichael (Mike) Bradley EnziGOP senators dodge on treatment of White House protesters House GOP lawmakers urge Senate to confirm Vought The Hill’s Morning Report – Can Sanders be stopped? MORE (R-Wyo.) announced Saturday that he will retire from the Senate at the end of his current term, capping off a 22-year career in Washington.
Enzi, 75, who currently serves as chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, made the announcement while speaking at city hall in Gillette, Wyo., where he once served as mayor.
“I have much to get done in the next year and a half,” he said in prepared remarks released by his office.
“I want to be able to focus on budget reform to get control of our national debt,” he said. “I don’t want to be burdened with the distractions of a campaign. After this term I will find other ways to serve.”
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Enzi was first elected to the Senate in 1996 and most recently won reelection in 2014.
An outspoken fiscal conservative, Enzi has been vocal about the country’s fiscal crisis and was a leading proponent of the GOP tax cut plan that passed in 2017.
Before serving as chairman of the Budget Committee, he headed the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, a panel on which he is still a member.
Enzi on Saturday touted his record in Washington, including achieving mine safety changes and pension protections while also joining the fight against the AIDS epidemic in Africa.
“Most of my bills have 15 or less votes in opposition, which is considered very bipartisan,” he said.
Fellow Wyoming Sen. John BarrassoJohn Anthony BarrassoGOP senators urge Trump to back off Murkowski threat House Democrats roll out 0B green transportation infrastructure bill IRS proposes guidance for expanded carbon capture tax credit MORE (R) praised his colleague in a statement, saying Enzi’s “character, courage and credibility have made him a respected moral leader in the U.S. Senate.”
“In four terms in the Senate he has never wavered in his commitment to God, family or Wyoming,” Barrasso said. “The Senate and Wyoming will miss the valued leadership of the trusted trail boss of our congressional delegation.”
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Before coming to Washington, Enzi served for 10 years in the Wyoming state legislature in both the state House and state Senate. He was also the mayor of Gillette for two terms.
Enzi’s retirement creates Wyoming’s first Senate vacancy in over a decade. The Republican field to replace him could be expansive in a state that reelected Enzi by a more than 50-point margin in 2014 and backed President TrumpDonald John TrumpSenate advances public lands bill in late-night vote Warren, Democrats urge Trump to back down from veto threat over changing Confederate-named bases Esper orders ‘After Action Review’ of National Guard’s role in protests MORE by more than 45 points in 2016.
Rep. Liz CheneyElizabeth (Liz) Lynn CheneyOvernight Defense: Senate confirms US military’s first African American service chief | Navy to ban display of Confederate flags | GOP lawmakers urge Trump not to cut troops in Germany Republicans urge Trump to reject slashing US troop presence in Germany Cheney blasts Trump move to draw down troops in Germany: ‘Dangerously misguided’ MORE (Wyo.), currently the third-ranking House Republican, could run, though it would mean leaving her lofty perch in the lower chamber. And a power struggle among House GOP leadership could open a path for her to run for Speaker should the GOP retake the House next year.
Dave Dodson, who unsuccessfully challenged Barrasso in 2018, could mount another Senate bid. Superintendent of Public Education Jillian Balow has also been floated as a possible candidate.
Cheney issued a lengthy statement Saturday praising Enzi following news of his retirement, saying the longtime senator “never forgot where he came from and always put the interests of Wyoming first, constantly championing our Western way of life.”
“I’m privileged to have had the opportunity to work alongside him for the people of Wyoming and am proud to call him a friend,” she said.