logo
Centrist Rep. Don Bacon is done with Congress — but open to a potential presidential bid

Centrist Rep. Don Bacon is done with Congress — but open to a potential presidential bid

NBC News06-07-2025
Congress
In an interview with NBC News, the Nebraska Republican talked about why he's skipping out on a sixth term and his vote for Trump's big domestic agenda bill.
July 6, 2025, 5:00 AM EDT
By Scott Wong and Frank Thorp V
WASHINGTON — Centrist Rep. Don Bacon, one of the most vulnerable Republicans in the House, said this week he doesn't have the 'hunger' for another grueling re-election campaign and won't run for a sixth term next year.
But Bacon, who spent 30 years in the Air Force and specialized in intelligence matters, said he's interested in serving in an executive role down the road, and wouldn't rule out running for Nebraska governor, or even president in 2028.
'I got asked the other day, 'You say you're interested in being an executive — is that governor or president?' I go, 'Yes,'' Bacon said in an interview in his office. 'If there's an opportunity and I can make a difference, a unique difference, I would like to keep serving. I just don't want to do two-year elections.'
Bacon, 61, acknowledged that it'd be incredibly difficult to run for the White House as a current or former House member — James Garfield was successful way back in 1880. And Bacon said he's not sure his brand of Republicanism — Reaganism and a muscular view of foreign policy — can ever make a full comeback in the party, though he said he will continue making the case for it.
'I don't think it would be very easily done,' he said. 'All I know is I have a heart to serve our country, and I have a vision.'
Defense secretary is another option 'if God opens up that door,' he said, though he's not sure a Republican president would nominate him. He said he would not run against incumbent Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, a fellow Republican and close friend who took office in 2023.
Bacon's retirement from Congress is notable because he is one of the few sitting Republicans on Capitol Hill who have been willing to publicly criticize President Donald Trump, who has a reputation for retaliating against his enemies and ending their political careers. Bacon's announcement came just a day after another Republican who's clashed with Trump, Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, said he wouldn't seek re-election in 2026.
The pair of retirements came as both Tillis and Bacon were preparing to vote on Trump's mammoth domestic policy package — what the president calls his 'big, beautiful bill' — as both lawmakers expressed concerns about Medicaid cuts in the package. Tillis voted against it; Bacon voted for it.
But in the interview, Bacon insisted that neither the public feuds with Trump nor the violent threats he and his wife have faced had any impact on his decision to leave Congress.
First elected alongside Trump in 2016, Bacon represents a swing district that includes Omaha and rural areas to the west; in 2024, Democrat Kamala Harris beat Trump in the district by 4.6 percentage points, while Bacon prevailed over his Democratic challenger, Tony Vargas, 50.9% to 49.1%.
Bacon lamented that running in a tough battleground district every two years was an exhausting endeavor, and that he didn't have 'the fire in my belly' to win a sixth race.
'This job requires a 14-hour day during the week, Saturdays, parades and a variety of things, and Sunday sometimes. And do I want to do this for two more years? I just didn't have the hunger to want to work at that intensity level,' said Bacon, who has a large pig figurine sitting on his desk. 'And my wife has wanted me to come home. I'm gone to D.C. four days a week, and I have a chance to be home now seven days a week, and I have eight grandkids within 10 minutes of my house.'
Bacon said he thinks he could have won re-election had he run, even though the party that controls the White House typically loses House seats in a president's first midterm election. On top of that, Democrats are salivating at the chance to attack Republicans for voting for Trump's 'big, beautiful bill,' which slashes Medicaid benefits that are critical to districts like Bacon's.
A Nebraska rural hospital said Thursday it would close in the coming months due to looming Medicaid cuts. Bacon argued the legislation had not taken effect yet and that it included $50 billion for rural hospitals. He said he had to weigh the pros and cons in the bill; he decided that extending the 2017 Trump tax cuts and boosting military and border funding outweighed any negative impacts.
'There's some things I wish were better,' he said. 'But am I going to vote to raise taxes on middle-class Americans? I'm not.'
On the day of the interview, NBC News and other outlets reported that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had ordered a pause in sending a shipment of missiles and ammunition to Ukraine amid concerns about the U.S. military's stockpiles. Bacon, who has a photograph on the wall of him meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has consistently been critical of Trump's handling of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and his 'appeasement' of Putin.
Whoever ordered the weapons pause should be fired, Bacon said.
'If Ukraine falls, the world's a more dangerous place. I really don't understand why President Trump doesn't see that. And if Ukraine goes down, Moldova will definitely fall. I think Georgia is in trouble,' said Bacon, a retired brigadier general who did four tours of duty in Iraq and also spent time in Afghanistan.
'President Trump has done worse than Biden [on Ukraine], and I'm embarrassed to say that,' he continued. 'I don't like it. He seems to have a blind spot with Putin. I don't know what purpose it serves to withhold weapons to Ukraine and not see that Putin is the invader.'
'I do believe that if I was the president,' Bacon said, 'I'd be trying to provide Ukraine with every weapon they needed to convince Putin he has no chance to win.'
Bacon said he was a big fan of former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley when she ran for president in 2024, and he likes Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as potential candidates in 2028.
Asked about JD Vance, who famously dressed down Zelenskyy at a White House meeting in February, Bacon suggested the vice president needed to take a tougher stance toward Moscow.
'He's a contender. I like him personally, but I wish he saw the Russian threat a little better,' Bacon said.
Scott Wong
Scott Wong is a senior congressional reporter for NBC News.
Frank Thorp V
Frank Thorp V is a producer and off-air reporter covering Congress for NBC News, managing coverage of the Senate.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ABC News anchor reveals she was attacked in crime-ridden DC after Trump sent in national guard to clean capital up
ABC News anchor reveals she was attacked in crime-ridden DC after Trump sent in national guard to clean capital up

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

ABC News anchor reveals she was attacked in crime-ridden DC after Trump sent in national guard to clean capital up

An ABC News anchor revealed that she was attacked by a homeless man in DC after the Trump administration ordered the national guard to clean up the capital. Kyra Phillips recounted the 'scary as hell' incident, where she was 'jumped' near the ABC studios in DC by a 'half-dressed' homeless man who mugged her. 'It was within the last two years that I actually was jumped walking just two blocks down from here... And then, just this morning, one of my co-workers said her car was stolen, a block away from the bureau,' Phillips said on Monday. Phillips said she fought back against the man, who she said 'clearly wasn't in his right mind.' 'It was scary as hell, I'm not going to lie, but I fought back. I didn't see any weapons in his hands. I felt like it was my only choice,' the journalist recalled. Phillips added that while the official statistics say crime in DC is down this year, the city's downtown area remains dangerous. 'I can tell you firsthand here in downtown DC where we work, right here around our bureau, just in the past six months, there were two people shot, one person died, literally two blocks down here from the bureau,' Phillips said. 'We can talk about the numbers going down, but crime is happening every single day because we're all experiencing it firsthand, working and living down here.' Phillips' revelation came hours after Trump ordered National Guard troops to deploy onto the streets of the nation's capital, arguing the extraordinary moves are in response to an urgent public safety crisis. Trump said on Monday he was activating 800 members of the National Guard in the hope of reducing crime, even as city officials stressed crime is already falling in the nation's capital. As Trump spoke, demonstrators gathered outside the White House to protest his move. Local officials have rejected the Republican president's depiction of the district as crime-ridden and called his actions illegal. 'The administration's actions are unprecedented, unnecessary, and unlawful,' District of Columbia Attorney General Brian Schwalb said. 'There is no crime emergency in the District of Columbia.' Schwalb, a Democrat, said violent crime in the district reached historic 30-year lows last year and is down an additional 26 percent this year. Trump, in his address, said the statistics were 'phony' and noted that DC police commander Michael Pulliam was suspended last month after he was accused of falsifying crime data to make it appear like violent crime had fallen this year. The city's statistics have come into question, however, after authorities opened an investigation into allegations that officials altered some of the data to make it look better. But Mayor Muriel Bowser stands by the data and said Trump's portrait of lawlessness is inaccurate. Bowser said she would follow the law regarding the 'so-called emergency' even as she indicated that Trump's actions were a reason why the District of Columbia should be a state with legal protections from such actions. 'While this action today is unsettling and unprecedented, I can't say that given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're totally surprised,' Bowser said. About 500 federal law enforcement officers are being tasked with deploying throughout the nation's capital as part of Trump's effort to combat crime, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press. More than 100 FBI agents and about 40 agents with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are among federal personnel being assigned to patrols in Washington, the person briefed on the plans said. The Drug Enforcement Administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Marshals Service are contributing officers.

California GOP rep's town hall descends into chaos
California GOP rep's town hall descends into chaos

Daily Mail​

time9 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

California GOP rep's town hall descends into chaos

A California Republican faced the music of an angry crowd of constituents screaming in opposition to President Donald Trump's agenda during a town hall event in his district. Representing northern California's northeastern corner, Doug LaMalfa, is the latest GOP lawmaker to get viciously booed back home this year. 'That's a lie!' one agitated attended yelled. Other's blurted out that the lawmaker was an '[expletive]' and another labeled him as 'shameless.' Several lawmakers have now been viciously jeered at while facing their constituents and trying to tout what the GOP sees as victories within Trump's 'One Big, Beautiful Bill,' his sweeping tax cut and spending bill that was signed into law last month. The Republican was also grilled about Trump and whether Congress will force the administration to release files on [sexual] offender Jeffrey Epstein . 'The speaker of the House released you guys so you didn't have to deal with releasing the files,' one woman reportedly charged. 'You all left.' LaMalfa admitted it's a 'bad look' for the documents to continually be 'suppressed.' One constituent demanded that LaMalfa 'apologize to the farmers.' The lawmaker shot back that he had no intention of doing so. After the demand, the lawmaker immediately pivoted to speaking about 'due process for Ghislaine Maxwell, due process for the people on January 6...' before the crowd erupted in chaos. Many of those in the crowd were concerned about the cuts to social services contained within the Trump-backed bill, particularly to Medicaid and public broadcasters. '[Expletive]' one constituent screamed while the congressman was talking about the bill. Photos of the town hall show that the event hall in Chico, California, full with some attendees lining the walls. Many held red paper that they waved in disapproval. Since the president has come back into power and taken drastic action slashing federal jobs with DOGE and deporting over a hundred thousands migrants many who oppose the Republican, many Republican town halls have devolved into chaos. Rep. Mike Flood, R-Neb., was also met by a combative crowd earlier this month when talking about the multi-trillion dollar package. The Nebraskan similarly faced a raucous crowd that labeled him a 'liar.' LaMalfa's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Proposed National Guard squad could deploy within an hour to tackle unrest
Proposed National Guard squad could deploy within an hour to tackle unrest

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Proposed National Guard squad could deploy within an hour to tackle unrest

The Trump administration is reportedly considering a Pentagon plan for a 600-strong National Guard"Domestic Civil Disturbance Quick Reaction Force" to address civil unrest in US cities. This proposed force would be equipped with weapons and riot gear, ready to deploy within an hour, according to documents viewed by the Washington Post. Three hundred would be stationed in Alabama and 300 in Arizona. The proposals follow Donald Trump 's deployment of the National Guard to Washington D.C. to tackle perceived crime, though experts note current crime rates are falling. Documents outlining the plans reportedly acknowledge potential political sensitivities, questions about civil-military balance, and concerns about straining resources for other state emergencies.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store