Alabama’s US Sen. Richard Shelby says he won’t seek reelection

Sen. Richard Shelby said he will serve out his current term and will not seek another term. (Al Drago/Bloomberg)
Alabama U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby said Monday he won’t run for reelection in 2022, but he will serve out the last two years in his term.
The top Republican on the powerful Appropriations Committee said he won’t seek a seventh Senate term. He has served in Congress for 42 years.
“During my time in the Senate, I have been given great opportunity, having chaired four committees: Appropriations, Rules, Banking and Intelligence,” Shelby said. “In these positions of leadership, I have strived to influence legislation that will have a lasting impact – creating the conditions for growth and opportunity.”
Shelby, 86, has been a key to several major budget deals, working alongside Democrat Patrick Leahy, who now chairs the committee after the Democrats took the majority this year. Leahy, in a statement Monday, called Shelby among his “dearest friends.”
With Shelby’s pending departure, Maine U.S. Sen. Susan Collins is next in line to be the top Republican on the Appropriations Committee – a point she emphasized in her reelection campaign last year.
Shelby has been a reliable ally of Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, who now will have one less incumbent running for reelection as Republicans try to retake the majority in the chamber.
Shelby’s announcement will set off a scramble, especially among Republicans, for his seat in GOP-dominated Alabama, where former President Donald Trump won 62% of the vote last November. Shelby is the fourth GOP senator to announce he won’t seek reelection in 2022. Ohio’s Rob Portman, Pennsylvania’s Pat Toomey and North Carolina’s Richard Burr have previously said they will retire at the end of their terms.
Shelby was first elected to the House and then the Senate as a conservative Democrat. He was reelected in 1992, the same year Democrat Bill Clinton was elected president. But Shelby chafed at the fiscal policies of the new administration, and immediately after the 1994 midterm electoral tidal wave gave the Republicans control of the Senate, Shelby switched parties. He has since been reelected by comfortable margins.
Shelby has been a major benefactor of Alabama’s military and space industries and a leading opponent of the Export-Import Bank. The former Banking Committee chairman also worked to roll back Dodd-Frank banking regulations on smaller banks.
With his departure, Alabama will lose one of the most senior members of the Senate representing its interests. The state’s other senator, Tommy Tuberville, took office in January after trouncing Democrat incumbent Sen. Doug Jones in the November election.
Jones – the first Democrat in the U.S. Senate from Alabama in more than 20 years – won a 2017 special election for the seat previously held by Jeff Sessions. In that election, Shelby said he would not vote for the Republican nominee, Roy Moore, who had been accused of inappropriate behavior by a number of women. Moore later blamed Shelby for his defeat.