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GOP Rep. Chris Jacobs to retire after backing assault weapons ban

A headshot of Rep. Chris jacobs, next to the American flag.
House of Representatives

Republican Rep. Chris Jacobs said Friday that he will not run for another term in Congress amid backlash over his support for new gun control measures.

Jacobs, who represents suburban Buffalo, told reporters he has decided to retire instead of facing what he said would be "an incredibly divisive election," just days after voicing support for a federal assault weapons ban.

"The last thing we need is an incredibly negative, half-truth-filled media attack funded by millions of dollars of special interest money coming into our community around this issue of guns and gun violence and gun control," he said, according to footage of his announcement. "Therefore today I am announcing I will not run for the 23rd Congressional District."

Jacobs said last week that he would vote for an federal assault weapons ban if he had a chance, sparking backlash among state conservatives.

"I want to be completely transparent of where I am in Congress. If an assault weapons ban bill came to the floor that would ban something like an AR-15, I would vote for it," he said, according to Spectrum News 1.

He also said he believed it was "perfectly reasonable" to raise the age limit to purchase semi-automatic weapons to 21.

Jacobs currently represents New York's 27th Congressional District, but had been running for the newly redrawn 23rd District, which includes large swaths of new voters.

Gerard Kassar, who chairs the New York State Conservative Party, welcomed Jacobs' decision in a statement, saying the party had been "perplexed" by Jacobs' "recent stance on Second Amendment rights, a position well outside the mainstream of the Republican Party, the Conservative Party, and the voters of NY 23."

"We agree that it's the best interest of all three — and of Congressman Jacobs himself — that he forgoes a run for reelection and returns to civilian life. We wish him only the best in his future endeavors," he said.

On Sunday, word came that Buffalo developer Carl Palladino, a former Republican New York gubernatorial candidate, had qualified for the ballot.

WBFO's Marian Hetherly contributed to this story.

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