Republican US Representative Ken Buck leaving Congress, blames dysfunction

Reuters

Published Mar 12, 2024 02:22PM ET

Updated Mar 12, 2024 04:00PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Republican U.S. Representative Ken Buck will leave Congress at the end of next week, he said on Tuesday, blaming a "breakdown of civility" in a chamber led by his party's slim and fractious majority.

The earlier-than-planned exit of the 65-year-old Colorado lawmaker will reduce Republicans' majority in the House of Representatives to 218-213. That narrow margin has already posed problems for Speaker Mike Johnson, as it did for his ousted predecessor, Kevin McCarthy.

Buck told reporters he had seen heightened dysfunction in U.S. politics for a while.

"I have witnessed this for a while and I think that we are seeing a breakdown of civility, a breakdown of, really, priorities in terms of what the American people want," Buck said, without blaming his own party.

Asked if his exit would make it harder to manage the chamber, he replied, "What could be harder?"

Republican hardliners have repeatedly bucked their leadership on votes, leaving Johnson to lean on a maneuver called suspension of the rules to pass critical legislation like bills averting government shutdowns, relying on Democratic support.