Former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said Tuesday he will not be seeking the GOP's 2024 nomination for Senate, leaving Republicans without a candidate who has had statewide election success.

The Maryland seat became a prime opening for the GOP when Democrat Ben Cardin said Monday he would not be seeking reelection. Democrats have a slim two-person majority in the Senate, and with 20 Democratic senators up for reelection, some in states former President Donald Trump won in 2020, there are fears they might lose control of the chamber.

Even though Maryland is a heavily Democratic state, Hogan won two terms as governor, including in 2018, when he garnered the most votes of any gubernatorial candidate in state history, up to that point.

"I'm getting a lot of calls about that," Hogan, a centrist governor and frequent Trump critic, told The Hill. "I'm getting called by senators, and donors, and I'm getting lots of inquiries from the media, but the thing that surprised me the most was that my wife said, 'Why don't you run for the Senate?'... Read More: Newsmax