The congressman has defended his vote, saying it will improve local roads, bridges and broadband. On the Democratic side, State Sen. Bacon was one of 13 House GOP members who supported the bill. Kuehl said he had not seen Trump’s statement seeking someone to challenge Bacon until he decided to get in the race, though he echoed the president’s criticism of Bacon’s vote for the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. “And you’ve got to balance your budget, the way we all do.” “If you spend too much money you don’t have, you get inflation,” he said. ![]() His chief criticism of Bacon’s leadership focused on Congress as a whole: He said people in Washington, D.C., move too far from the people who have to live with their decisions. “It’s important because that’s how you get to choose between different ideas,” Kuehl said. In an interview with the Nebraska Examiner on Monday, Kuehl said he wants his bid to encourage more regular people to consider running. It doesn’t mean I don’t respect and love other families and individuals, they are just not my family.” I run my house hold always putting my family’s intentions first and foremost. “The United States should be run like we all run our own house holds. He wrote that ordinary people, good people never get “a seat at ‘their’ table.” He described himself as an “absolute nobody and I’m OK with that.” Kuehl’s post says he’s running because he cares about the country, which he says is broken and divided. “But I do have a few qualities/characteristics that I personally find appealing in others … kindness, being honest, trustworthy, hard working, loyal, unifier, simple, and thankful.” ![]() “Do I think I have a chance of winning? Not really,” Kuehl wrote. The three-term congressman has more than $1 million in campaign cash on hand. In a public-facing Facebook post, Kuehl, who works for White Castle Roofing, said he understands the challenge of running against Bacon. On Friday, Gretna Republican Steve Kuehl filed to run. This image, from Nebraska House candidate Jim Schultze’s Facebook page, shows him filing to run for office at the Nebraska Secretary of State’s Office.īut Bacon won’t go unchallenged in the May 10 primary election. His campaign hoped to press Bacon to be more conservative, answering the call of former President Donald Trump for a Bacon challenger. ![]() Schultze made a splash with the collector-class Darth Vader suit he wears to local Star Wars-themed events. “In the last couple of weeks, with the stress of a full-time job and prepping for a campaign, my body is increasingly telling me ‘no.'” “I’ve dealt with pain and medication since then, so when I made the late decision to enter the race for Representative (NE-02), my heart wanted to say ‘yes,'” he wrote. Schultze told followers of his campaign Facebook page he is facing a degenerative condition that has required eight surgeries in the past four years. He formally withdrew from the race Monday, the Nebraska Secretary of State’s Office confirmed. ![]() Omaha IT professional Jim Schultze announced plans Saturday to withdraw from Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District Republican primary race because of health reasons. Don Bacon, R-Neb., has lost one challenger in his GOP primary to represent the Omaha area in Congress and gained another: a commercial roofing salesman.
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