Iowa GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley seeking reelection for 8th term

FILE - In this Tuesday, June 8, 2021 file photo, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, listens during a Senate Finance Committee hearing on the IRS budget request on Capitol Hill in Washington. Grassley, the longest-serving Republican senator, announced Friday, Sept. 24, that he will seek an eighth term in 2022. The 88-year-old, who has been in the Senate for 40 years, said in an announcement posted on Twitter that there is a lot more to do, for Iowa. (Tom Williams/Pool via AP, File) (Tom Williams, 2020 CQ-Roll Call, Inc.)

DES MOINES, Iowa – Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, the longest-serving Republican senator, said Friday that he will seek an eighth term in 2022, giving the party more confidence in holding the seat as they fight to overtake Democrats' one-vote margin.

The senator, who turned 88 this month and has held the seat for 40 years, said in an announcement posted on Twitter that there is “a lot more to do, for Iowa."

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Although Iowa has leaned Republican over the past decade, Grassley's decision now allows GOP Senate strategists more time and money to concentrate on key seats being vacated by retiring Republican senators in Ohio, Pennsylvania and North Carolina.

Grassley waited much longer than usual to announce his plans. He typically announces his intentions to run for another term when declaring victory on election night. This year, he took his time to weigh the obvious factor of his advanced age, though he spent the summer touring Iowa and looking much like a candidate for reelection.

Should he win, Grassley would be 95 at the end of his eighth term. He has told advisers he wants to avoid situations like the final months of late colleagues such as Democrat Robert Byrd of West Virginia and Republican Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, who were physically less able to keep up with the rigors of the office. Byrd died in office at age 92, and Thurmond died five months after leaving office at age 100.

“Who knows? I could die tomorrow,” Grassley told The Associated Press during a July stop in northwest Iowa. “If I announce I’m running, I’m planning on living to be 95. But I might not live that long.”

A bipartisan collaborator throughout his career, Grassley has seen his approval ratings in Iowa dip over the years as the state and national electorate have become more polarized.

Grassley spent months at the negotiating table with Republicans and Democrats in 2009, working to craft expanded health care legislation. But he notably abandoned the negotiations before his 2010 reelection. In 2016, as chair of the Judiciary Committee, Grassley held up the Supreme Court nomination of Merrick Garland, effectively killing the selection by then-President Barack Obama, a Democrat.

Although Grassley has remained a staunch conservative, he at times disagreed with former President Donald Trump, a Republican.

In January, he voted to count Arizona’s and Pennsylvania’s Electoral College votes hours after the insurrection of the Capitol by Trump supporters trying to halt the certification of Joe Biden's victory. He also vocally objected to waivers the Trump administration gave to petroleum companies from the federal Renewable Fuel Standard, a program that helps Iowa farmers.

Grassley faces a nominal primary opponent in state Sen. Jim Carlin. Democrat Abby Finkenauer, a former congresswoman, announced in July that she was running for Grassley’s seat, and Democrat Dave Muhlbauer, a farmer, earlier announced a bid.

Although a Des Moines Register/Mediacom Iowa Poll in June showed 64% of Iowans saying they did not want Grassley to run again, a poll by the same group published this week showed Grassley leading 55% to 37% among likely voters in a matchup between him and Finkenauer.

The seat would be seen as reasonably safe for Republicans even without Grassley on the ticket. Democrats have receded over the past decade and haven't carried the governorship since 2006, nor a Senate race since 2008. Although Obama carried the state in 2008 and 2012, Trump won it easily in 2016 and 2020.