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Former Congressman Darrell Issa Will Challenge Indicted Congressman Duncan Hunter

Former Congressman Darrell Issa Will Challenge Indicted Congressman Duncan Hunter
Former Congressman Darrell Issa Will Challenge Indicted Congressman Duncan Hunter

Issa is expected to announce his challenge at a news conference Thursday morning in the San Diego County district, according to two sources familiar with his decision. He had been publicly mulling for months whether to make a bid to return to Congress, and started an exploratory committee in August.

“I have received such a tremendous outpouring of encouragement from supporters inside the district, and around the state and across the nation,” Issa said in August in a statement posted to the committee’s website.

Issa will likely bill himself to Republicans as a safer alternative than the incumbent. Hunter was indicted last August. He and his wife, Margaret, are accused of spending more than $250,000 in campaign funds on personal expenses — including a vacation to Italy, fast food runs and plane tickets for a pet rabbit — and then lying to the Federal Election Commission. Hunter has remained defiant and has called the indictment a politically motivated attack. His campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Issa’s looming challenge.

Hunter, a Trump ally, managed to win reelection last year despite the release of the indictment, a 48-page document that detailed how the Hunters lived beyond their means and in at least two instances used the U.S. military to justify their spending. He defeated his Democratic opponent, Ammar Campa-Najjar, by 3 points in a district that went for Trump by 15 points in 2016. Campa-Najjar has pledged to challenge Hunter again and win.

Issa is just the latest Republican planning to challenge Hunter as California conservatives fear that the incumbent lawmaker will be convicted. Five other candidates, including Carl DeMaio, who hosts a conservative radio talk show and is openly gay, have thrown their hats in the ring, though three of those candidates are expected to appear in support of Issa on Thursday.

Issa is perhaps best known in Washington as the hard-charging former chairman of the House Oversight Committee who used his position to investigate the Obama administration’s handling of the attacks in Benghazi, the Internal Revenue Service’s targeting of conservative groups and the “Fast and Furious” gun-trafficking scandal. In 2018, Issa announced he would not run for reelection in the 49th Congressional District, after narrowly winning against his Democratic challenger in 2016.

Trump tapped Issa last September to head the U.S. Trade and Development Agency, but Issa’s confirmation stalled this month in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee after the top Democrat on the panel raised concerns about an incident the FBI included in Issa’s classified background check. That delay, paired with polling released last month showing DeMaio leading other Republicans, propelled Issa’s decision to run, according to Republicans familiar with his thinking.

This article originally appeared in

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