Jose Luis Magana/AP

House Defense Champion Rep. Bill Young to Retire

The House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee chairman and longtime defense hawk will step town after more than 40 years in Congress. By Kevin Baron

Rep. Bill Young, the Florida Republican from Tampa and longtime friend of defense spending, will not seek re-election next year, ending a congressional career dating to 1970.

“It’s my time,” Young said, according to a press release issued by his office.

The Tampa Tribune broke the news, saying of the 82-year old, “Young seemed increasingly out of step with the changing climate of Washington.”

Young is a former chairman of the full House Appropriations Committee, controlling the purse strings of the entire federal government. But he is perhaps best known for turning Tampa into a hub of defense contracting. In 2007, the Tribune listed the extensive political pork Young brought to the state -- $116 million in the defense spending bill alone. In 2010, the Center for Public Integrity said that number rose to $140 million, highlighting Young’s pork prowess as well as the coziness of his staffers to the industry they were charged to fund and oversee.

From his office’s perspective, Young was a proud job-creating machine for his home district. “The defense programs Congressman Young has brought to Pinellas County have created thousands of new jobs here, and have helped create a world-class research and technology sector in the Tampa Bay area.”

Last year, Young voiced his opposition to the ongoing war in Afghanistan.