Bunning was raised in a household supportive of the
Democratic Party. While attending Xavier University, he joined the
Republican Party.
Local and state positions in 1983 First elected to office in 1977, Bunning served two years on the non-partisan city council of
Fort Thomas, Kentucky, before running for and winning a seat in the
Kentucky Senate as a Republican. He was elected minority leader by his Republican colleagues, a rare feat for a freshman legislator. Bunning was the Republican candidate for
Governor of Kentucky in
1983. He and his running mate
Eugene P. Stuart lost in the general election to Democrat
Martha Layne Collins.
House of Representatives In 1986, Bunning won the Republican nomination in
Kentucky's 4th congressional district, based in Kentucky's share of the
Cincinnati metro area, after 10-term incumbent
Republican Gene Snyder retired. He won easily in November and was reelected five more times without serious opposition in what was considered the most Republican district in Kentucky. After the Republicans gained control of the House in 1995, Bunning served as chairman of the
House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Social Security until 1999.
First Senate term In 1998,
Senate Minority Whip Wendell Ford decided to retire after 24 years in the Senate—at the time, the longest term in Kentucky history (a record later surpassed by Mitch McConnell). Bunning won the Republican nomination for the seat, and faced fellow Congressman
Scotty Baesler, a Democrat from the
Lexington-based 6th District, in the general election. Bunning defeated Baesler by just over half a percentage point. The race was very close; Bunning only won by swamping Baesler in the 4th by a margin that Baesler couldn't make up in the rest of the state (Baesler barely won the 6th). Bunning was one of the Senate's most conservative members, gaining high marks from several conservative interest groups. He was ranked by
National Journal as the second-most conservative United States Senator in their March 2007 conservative/liberal rankings, after Sen.
Jim DeMint (R-SC). Among the bills that Bunning sponsored is the
Bunning-Bereuter-Blumenauer Flood Insurance Reform Act of 2004.
2004 Senate race Bunning was heavily favored for a second term in 2004 after his expected Democratic opponent, Governor
Paul Patton, saw his career implode in a scandal over an extramarital affair. The Democrats chose
Daniel Mongiardo, a relatively unknown physician and state senator from
Hazard. Bunning had an estimated $4 million campaign war chest, while Mongiardo had only $600,000. However, due to a number of controversial incidents involving Bunning, the
Democrats began increasing financial support to Mongiardo. Therein when it became apparent that Bunning's bizarre behavior was costing him votes, the Democrats purchased additional television airtime on Mongiardo's behalf. During his reelection bid, controversy erupted when Bunning described Mongiardo as looking "like one of
Saddam Hussein's sons." Public pressure compelled him to apologize. Bunning was also criticized for his use of a
teleprompter during a televised
debate with Mongiardo where Bunning participated via satellite link, refusing to appear in person. Bunning was further criticized for making an unsubstantiated claim that his wife had been attacked by Mongiardo's supporters, and for calling Mongiardo "limp wristed". Bunning won by just over one percentage point after the western portion of the state broke heavily for him. Mongiardo retained a narrow lead with as much as 80 percent of the vote counted. However, he could not overcome Bunning's lead in the western portion of the state (which is in the Central Time Zone) as well as
George W. Bush easily carrying the state.
Second Senate term As was expected in light of Bunning's previous career as a baseball player, he was very interested in Congress's investigation of steroid use in baseball. Bunning was also outspoken on the issue of
illegal immigration, taking the position that all illegal immigrants should be deported. Bunning was also the only member of the
United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs to have opposed
Ben Bernanke for Chief of the
Federal Reserve. He said it was because he had doubts that Bernanke would be any different from
Alan Greenspan. In April 2006,
Time magazine called him one of America's Five Worst Senators. The magazine dubbed him 'The Underperformer' for his "lackluster performance", saying he "shows little interest in policy unless it involves baseball", and criticized his hostility towards staff and fellow senators and his "bizarre behavior" during his 2004 campaign. Bunning reportedly blocked the move to restore public access to the records of past United States Presidents which had been removed under
Executive Order 13233. In January 2009, Bunning missed more than a week of the start of Congress. Bunning said by phone that he was fulfilling "a family commitment six months ago to do certain things, and I'm doing them." Asked whether he would say where he was, Bunning replied: "No, I'd rather not." In February 2009, at the
Hardin County Republican Party's Lincoln Day Dinner, while discussing conservative judges, Bunning predicted that
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg would likely be dead from
pancreatic cancer within nine months. Bunning later apologized if he had offended Ginsburg with his remarks and offered his
thoughts and prayers to Ginsburg. In an NPR interview in July 2019, Ginsburg noted that he was dead, and she was "very much alive". Bunning was the only senator to miss the Senate's historic Christmas Eve 2009 vote on the
health care reform bill; he cited family commitments as his reason for missing the vote. The bill passed without any Republican votes, 60–39. On February 25, 2010, Bunning objected to a proposal of
unanimous consent for an extension of
unemployment insurance,
COBRA, and other federal programs, citing that this extension was not
pay-as-you-go. He proposed an amendment which sought to find the funds to pay for the bill from the
Stimulus Bill of 2009, and declared that he supported the unemployed, but that a bill such as this only adds to the growing deficit and that it should be paid for immediately. Senator
Bob Corker joined Bunning, while other senators worked to cease his objections until 11:48 p.m.
EST. When Senator
Jeff Merkley urged him to drop his objections to vote on a 30-day extension of benefits, Bunning responded "tough shit." On March 2, Bunning finally agreed to end his objection to the bill in exchange for a vote on his amendment to pay for the package. It failed 53–43 on a procedural vote. The extension of unemployment benefits then passed by a vote of 78–19.
Aborted 2010 re-election campaign In January 2009, when asked whether Bunning was the best candidate to run or whether there were better GOP candidates for Bunning's Senate seat, National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman
John Cornyn said: "I don't know. I think it's really up to Senator Bunning." Bunning replied: "Anybody can run for anything they choose. I am gearing up, and I look forward to the challenge of taking on whoever comes out of the Democrat primary in May of 2010."
Kentucky State Senate President
David L. Williams was reportedly considering running against Bunning in the primary. Bunning responded by threatening to sue the
National Republican Senatorial Committee if they recruited a candidate to run against him in the primary. He also attacked NRSC Chairman John Cornyn: As of the end of September 2008, Bunning had $175,000 in his campaign account. By comparison, all other Republican senators facing competitive 2010 races had at least $850,000 at that point. In mid-April, KYWORDSMITH.com reported that of the $263,000 that Bunning collected during the first quarter of 2009, over 77% ($203,383) was received from out of state, while over 10% ($28,100) was actually untouchable for another 13 months as it was contributed exclusively for use in a general election. Bunning had two fund raisers scheduled in the first half of April. In an April 2009 poll, Bunning's approval rating was just 28%, and he trailed the four most likely Democratic candidates in hypothetical contests. 54% of voters in the state disapproved of Bunning's performance.
Kentucky Secretary of State Trey Grayson announced on April 30, 2009, that he would form an exploratory committee to run for Bunning's seat. It was speculated that this was a precursor to Bunning's retirement. "He (Bunning) told Trey to do this", one senior congressional official said of Bunning. "Why else would he tell his main rival to prepare for a run?" However, Bunning said at a Lincoln Day dinner in Kentucky on May 9 that he still planned to run: "The battle is going to be long, but I am prepared to fight for my values." In a press conference on May 19, Bunning called fellow Kentuckian and
U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell a "
control freak": "If Mitch McConnell doesn't endorse me, it could be the best thing that ever happened to me in Kentucky." On July 27, 2009, Bunning announced he would not run for re-election in 2010, blaming fellow Republicans for doing "everything in their power to dry up my fundraising." On April 14, 2010, in a further show of disdain for GOP leadership and insiders, Bunning announced his support for outsider candidate
Rand Paul over establishment favorite Trey Grayson.
Committee assignments •
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs •
Subcommittee on Financial Institutions •
Subcommittee on Securities, Insurance and Investment (Ranking Member) •
Committee on the Budget •
Committee on Energy and Natural Resources •
Subcommittee on Energy •
Subcommittee on National Parks •
Subcommittee on Water and Power •
Committee on Finance •
Subcommittee on Health Care •
Subcommittee on Energy, Natural Resources, and Infrastructure (Ranking Member) •
Subcommittee on International Trade, Customs, and Global Competitiveness ==Jim Bunning Foundation==