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Boehner Wants to Continue as Leader

Forging ahead after a wave of losses on Tuesday night, House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) on Wednesday morning sent a letter to GOP Members and Members-elect asking them to keep him on as their party leader in the next Congress.

Boehner said he is “deeply disappointed” by the outcome of Tuesday’s election — which has Democrats on track to gain 15 or more seats — but remains committed to building a lasting Republican majority.

“For this reason, I’m writing today to announce my candidacy for Republican Leader in the 111th Congress, and to request the honor of your vote,” Boehner wrote. “It’s time for the losing to stop. And my commitment to you is that it will.”

Boehner vowed to fight back against Democrats, whose aim is to make Republicans “stand aside for the next two years, abandon our principles, and give the new administration and the Democratic leaders of Congress a free pass.”

“It ain’t gonna happen. It must not happen.”

Signaling a more right-leaning GOP leadership team on the horizon, Boehner warned against viewing Tuesday’s results as a repudiation of conservatism or a validation of big government.

“Instead of throwing in the towel, as our opponents demand, we must redouble our efforts to develop forward-looking solutions to the challenges Americans face — solutions rooted in the enduring principles of reform that define us as a party,” he wrote.

Boehner touted GOP successes during the 110th Congress, which he said included backing a troop surge in Iraq and blocking billions of dollars in proposed new spending by Democrats. However, the months-long protest over the offshore drilling ban was “perhaps the most vivid glimpse of our potential,” he said.

If re-elected as leader, Boehner pledged to “always be straight with you, and I’ll always be open to your ideas. You deserve nothing less.”

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Rep. Frank Pallone waits Feb. 8 for the start of a news conference to introduce legislation to keep arsenic and lead out of fruit juices.
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