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Parties Expect a Competitive Race for Cramer Seat

After enduring 29 House GOP retirements so far this cycle and a string of bad news this week about its accounting practices, the National Republican Congressional Committee earned at least some reprieve on Thursday night when Rep. Bud Cramer (D-Ala.) unexpectedly announced his retirement.

The sudden opportunity deep in the heart of Dixie came as welcome news to the NRCC, which has suffered from recent headlines about the embezzlement of committee funds by a former employee.

NRCC spokesman Ken Spain was quick to point out that in 2004, President Bush took 60 percent of the vote in the Huntsville-based 5th district, despite the fact that Cramer won his re-election campaign that year with 73 percent.

“In a district that has been a stronghold for Republican presidential candidates for many years, we clearly view this seat as a potential pickup opportunity,” Spain said. “The recruitment process has already begun, and we look forward to competing for the seat in the fall.”

Among the Republicans said to be eyeing the race are state Sen. Arthur Orr; Stan McDonald, a real estate attorney and GOP donor who is the brother-in-law of Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.); Huntsville Republican activist Wayne Parker, who ran for the seat in the mid-1990s; and two Madison County commissioners, Mo Brooks and Dale Strong.

Officials at the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said they, too, have begun the recruiting process and are working with Cramer to find someone who can keep the district in the Democratic column.

State Sens. Parker Griffith and Tom Butler are seen as potential Democratic candidates.

In a statement, DCCC Chairman Chris Van Hollen (Md.) thanked Cramer for his 18 years of Congressional service, and called him “an honorable and remarkable advocate for his constituents.”

In addition to serving in Congress since 1990, Cramer was also the Madison County district attorney.

“I believe that this is a good time for me to step aside and transition to new leadership,” the 60-year-old Congressman said in a statement.

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