Daily Briefs

Rep. Mitchell won’t seek 3rd term in Congress


LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Second-term Republican Rep. Paul Mitchell of Michigan announced Wednesday that he will not seek re-election to Congress, citing a desire to focus on his family and expressing frustration with his time in Washington.

The decision was a surprise because Mitchell is 62 years old and was elected less than three years ago to a safe GOP seat. He said his goal has been to address significant challenges facing the country, such as health care, immigration and infrastructure.

“However, it appears to me that rhetoric overwhelms policy, and politics consumes much of the oxygen in this city,” Mitchell said in an emotional speech on the House floor. “The time has come to make a difference for my family — to focus my time and energy upon them, their needs, their goals.”

Mitchell last week criticized President Donald Trump for tweeting that four Democratic congresswoman of color should “go back” to countries “from which they came,” but he opposed a Democratic-backed House resolution that condemned the comments as racist. Mitchell subsequently asked Vice President Mike Pence for a meeting with Trump to discuss the tweets and how the crowd at a Trump rally chanted “send her back” about one of the women, Somali-born Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota. The other three women were born in the U.S.

Mitchell represents Michigan’s 10th Congressional District, which includes the rural Thumb region and portions of Macomb County in suburban Detroit. The district’s voters heavily backed Trump in 2016.

A retired vocational school company CEO, Mitchell spent $2.9 million of his fortune to win a five-way Republican primary in 2016 following the retirement of Rep. Candice Miller. He beat three political veterans and a military veteran.

Mitchell unsuccessfully run for a different congressional seat in 2014 and led the opposition against a 2015 state constitutional amendment that would have increased the sales tax to boost spending on roads.

“It is an honor to stand on this floor, debate issues and represent the people of Michigan’s 10th District,” he said. “I’m proud to be among the 12,500 or so that have had the privilege to serve in Congress.”

 

Statue of slain civil right activist dedicated
 

DETROIT (AP) — A statue of a civil rights activist who was slain in Alabama during a 1965 voting rights march has been dedicated at the Detroit park that bears her name.

The statue unveiled Tuesday shows Viola Liuzzo walking barefoot — with shoes in one hand — and a Ku Klux Klan hood on the ground behind her. Sculptor Austen Brantley, who memorialized the white activist from Detroit, says Liuzzo’s life “tells us ... to take action in our community and our nation.”

Liuzzo, a 39-year-old mother of five, drove from Detroit to Alabama to join 25,000 others in support of a march led by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. She was driving fellow activists between Montgomery and Selma when she was fatally shot by Ku Klux Klan members in another car.
 

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