Rockefeller Won't Seek Re-Election

RELATED:D.C. Reacts to Rockefeller Retirement Announcement

Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D- W. Va.), chairman of the Senate
Commerce Committee, announced on Friday he will not run for a sixth term in
2014, when his current term ends, calling that "the right moment for me to find new ways to fight for the causes I believe in and to spend more time with my incredible family."

The announcement came in an event at the Culture Center
Great Hall in Charleston, W. Va. The Senator, surrounded by friends and family
and backed by a line of photos on easels chronicling his life in the Senate,
was greeted with a standing ovation as he and wife Sharon Percy Rockefeller,
who introduced him, took to the podium.

The live stream only worked intermittently, with more
buffering than uninterrupted video, which was somehow appropriate since
Rockefeller has long talked about the need for better broadband connectivity in
his home state. C-SPAN was planning to cover the announcement, but it had
trouble connecting to it as well.

Rockefeller has been one of the strongest voices for online
privacy, a cybersecurity bill backed by the White House, inquiries into the
impact of TV, online and video game content on kids, and was instrumental in
legislation to auction broadcast spectrum to help pay for an interoperable 911
emergency communications network.

That still gives him two years atop one of the Congress'
most powerful committees, but opens up that spot, and the Senate seat, in time
for contenders to start vying for it.

Rockefeller spoke at length about his fights for the rights
of kids and the working poor. He said he had dug in to work for his state,
trying to give every child a fair shot in life. To that point, he also talked
about his work for and support of the FCC's e-rate program, which subsidizes
broadband to classrooms. He said that has made a world of difference for
children and their families.

He also said he had pushed for a "bedrock of financial
support" in the tax code not only for the middle class, but also for
working poor in his state and the country. "I'm on the finance committee.
I can do that," he said.

Rockefeller talked primarily about his efforts for the
state, including bringing jobs and businesses to West Virginia and making coal
mining safer, with better pay and health care, and getting $50 million for a
West Virginia airport. "I never stopped asking for more," for the
state, he said.

"Our country cannot be as great as it should be unless
our workers' voices are heard and respected by policymakers," he said. He
said he had been just as single-minded about comprehensive health care reform,
which he conceded was not that popular in West Virginia. "Health care should
be a right, and not a privilege," he said.

He talked about the exhilarating fight to make the Internet safer.
He called the Internet "a large and looming problem," something
Congress does not seem to be tackling.

Rockefeller said he would not stop working for the causes he
was passionate about or the people in his state.

John Eggerton

Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.