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Rep. Schmidt Winding Down Her Political Career, Mum About What's Nex

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  • Rep. Schmidt Winding Down Her Political Career, Mum About What's Nex

    Schmidt winding down her political career, mum about what's next
    By DEIRDRE SHESGREEN

    Gannett News Service
    July 26, 2012 Thursday

    WASHINGTON--Rep. Jean Schmidt's most recent campaign finance report
    is a window into her waning political career: The Miami Township
    Republican ended June with just $152 in the bank. She collected six
    campaign donations in three months. And while her House colleagues
    have been cutting checks for TV ads and political consultants,
    Schmidt's expenses included items such as thank you letters.

    In the nearly five months since Schmidt suffered a surprise defeat
    in Ohio's March 6 primary, the congresswoman has declined repeated
    requests from Gannett's Washington Bureau for an interview.

    "She's unavailable," her spokesman, Barrett Brunsman, said last week.

    Asked for a copy of her congressional schedule, Brunsman also declined
    that request.

    But while her media blackout and her campaign filings provide some
    evidence of a wind-down in Schmidt's tumultuous stint in Washington,
    other signs point to a business-as-usual attitude. Allies say the
    60-year-old lawmaker and marathon runner is not likely to fade from
    the political scene, but there are few hints about what Schmidt might
    do when her term expires in early January.

    In the meantime, Schmidt seems to be cutting a low-profile -- skipping
    the press conference circuit but attending hearings, voting on the
    House floor, and meeting with constituents. She was outside the
    Supreme Court when the justices issued their historic ruling on the
    health care reform law, screaming euphorically when she heard the
    initial -- and erroneous -- reports that the ruling invalidated the
    individual mandate.

    She has also gone on two congressionally sponsored trips abroad: first
    traveling with colleagues from the House Foreign Affairs Committee to
    Taiwan and South Korea, and then going with House Democratic leader
    Nancy Pelosi and others to Afghanistan and Qatar.

    "She seems very active (and) engaged, as far as I can see," said Rep.
    Steve Chabot, R-Westwood, who serves on the Foreign Affairs panel
    with Schmidt. "I see her on the floor voting and participating in
    committee work."

    Another Ohio lawmaker, Rep. Bob Gibbs, R-Lakeville, said that Schmidt
    was clearly floored by her election defeat, but has bounced back
    since then.

    "I think right after the primary in March, it was a tough time,"
    said Gibbs, who sits on the House transportation and agriculture
    committees with Schmidt. But "she came back and from what I've been
    able to tell, she's been running around like she usually does."

    Schmidt made news recently when she opposed an amendment by
    conservatives on the House Agriculture Committee that would have
    doubled cuts to the food stamp program. She voted against those
    reductions and implored her GOP colleagues to do the same, and was
    part of a GOP-Democratic alliance that staved off the deeper cuts.

    Schmidt also used that bill to press for more federal research and
    stronger tools to combat pests that threaten plants and humans --
    such as bed bugs and the Asian long-horned beetle. "My amendments
    wouldaÂ~@| ensure that products claiming to control bedbugs actually
    work, and local health departments would get additional authority to
    justify treatment of bedbug infestations," Schmidt said in a statement
    after the committee approved the farm bill.

    Craig Regelbrugge, a lobbyist for the American Nursery and Landscape
    Association's PAC -- one of Schmidt's six donors in the last
    fundraising quarter -- said that while he has not meet with Schmidt
    personally, her work on the farm bill suggests she has not slowed down,
    despite her lame-duck status.

    "I know she sat through the whole farm bill markup and it was an
    endurance contest," he said of the nearly 15-hour committee session.

    "She does the endurance thing very well."

    It's not clear what Schmidt would like her legacy in the U.S. House to
    be. She continues to be dogged by ethical questions, with her latest
    financial disclosure filing showing that she had received $582,768 in
    legal fees over three years from the Turkish Coalition of America,@
    funds deemed an improper gift by the House ethics committee last summer

    At the end of 2011, she still owed at least $515,000 of those fees
    -- a tab stemming from her tangle with David Krikorian, an Armenian
    American who challenged her in 2008 and again in the most recent
    election. Her last legal expense trust filing showed she has only
    raised one $5,000 donation to repay that debt.

    Questions about her ties to the Turkish-American group contributed to
    Schmidt's defeat in March, when Republican challenger Brad Wenstrup
    bested Schmidt for the GOP nomination. Wenstrup will face the
    little-known William R. Smith in November's general election. Smith
    defeated Krikorian in the Democratic primary.

    As her potential successors gird for the fall contest, Schmidt
    has continued to make the rounds in the 2nd Congressional District
    --attending constituent meetings and other events -- without giving
    any public hint about her future plans.

    "She continues to be actively engaged and going about business as
    usual," said Ed Humphrey, a Clermont County Commissioner who has
    known Schmidt for two decades. He said Schmidt came to his grandson's
    high school graduation party last month, delivering a congressional
    proclamation to congratulate the college-bound boy on a scholarship
    he won.

    But Humphrey said they didn't talk much politics, not touching on
    either her primary defeat or her political future. Instead they talked
    about "her family, my family," he said.

    Chabot and others similarly said they don't know what the congresswoman
    might be planning come January. But her friends and foes alike agree
    that Schmidt isn't likely to fade into the woodwork.

    "Jean is not at an age where I think retirement is something she would
    do for the long term," said Tim Burke, chairman of the Hamilton County
    Democratic Party. "There are lots of options open for her."

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