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CHARLOTTESVILLE — Sen. John W. Warner yesterday announced that he will not seek a sixth term next year, ending a maverick career in Congress that will have spanned 30 years when he steps down.
"I will conclude my service to Virginia as a senator when I complete this — my fifth — term on January 6, 2009," Mr. Warner told a large crowd of supporters and reporters at the University of Virginia, where he went to law school more than 50 years ago.
Mr. Warner, 80, is a veteran of two wars, a former Navy secretary under President Nixon and a key Republican voice about the Iraq war.
His departure from the political stage opens the door for what many predict could be one of the most watched races in the country featuring political heavyweights such as Rep. Thomas M. Davis III and former Gov. James S. Gilmore III, both Republicans, and former Gov. Mark Warner, who is a Democrat and not related to the senator.
The Washington Times reported yesterday that the National Republican Senatorial Committee representatives traveled to Richmond last week to get opposition research from the state Republican Party on Mark Warner, who told The Times earlier this year he was being courted by state and national Democrats to run for the Senate next year.
Political observers say Mark Warner would be an immediate favorite, should he decide to run. He unsuccessfully challenged the senator in the 1996 Senate race.
Meanwhile, Mr. Gilmore, who recently ended his bid for his party's nomination for the 2008 presidential race, has said he is "certainly interested" in running for the seat.
A congressional source close to Mr. Davis told The Times yesterday, "Tom's running. He didn't want to say more today because it's the senator's day."
Mr. Warner would not say who he plans to support in the race, but many expect that he will throw his support behind Mr. Davis.
The senator cited his age as a primary reason for leaving and said that he will spend the next 16 months dedicating most of his time to bring "cessation" to the fight in Iraq and Afghanistan, conflicts that he described as the "most complex series of problems I have seen in my life."








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