Francis Rooney, a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives who expressed concerns about President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukraine, said on Saturday he would not run for a third term.

“I don’t really think I want one (third term)” Rooney, of Florida, told Fox News.

He said he was concerned about an acknowledgment by Mick Mulvaney, the White House acting chief of staff, on Thursday that the Trump administration had held up nearly $400 million in aid for Ukraine to pressure the country to investigate a debunked conspiracy theory about interference in the 2016 U.S. elections.

Trump and administration officials had denied for weeks that they had demanded a “quid pro quo” – a Latin phrase meaning a favor for a favor – for delivering the U.S. aid, a key part of a controversy that has triggered an impeachment inquiry in the House against the Republican president.

“The president was saying no quid pro quo, I was giving the guy the benefit of the doubt…and come to find out there was a clearer quid pro quo admitted to by his chief of staff,” Rooney told Fox.

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Mulvaney’s comments, which the White House later tried to walk back, “are probably going to drive some people just to rethink this just a little more,” Rooney said.

He said he was also concerned with Trump’s removal of U.S. forces in Syria which has allowed Turkey to launch an offensive against Kurdish fighters who were a U.S. ally in the fight against Islamic State.

Rooney also said his decision was based on support for term limits and frustration with partisanship in Washington.

Rooney had tweeted on Friday that he had never endorsed the impeachment enquiry led by Democrats, but since it was underway, “I am in favor of finding out all of the factual information available in this process.”

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The decision not to seek another stint in Congress followed an interview he gave on Friday where he said he was open to voting for impeachment.

“The president has said many times there wasn’t a quid pro quo . . . and now Mick Mulvaney goes up

“The only thing I could assume is he meant what he had to say, that there was a quid pro quo on this stuff. . . . It’s not an Etch A Sketch,” he said.

“I’ve been real mindful of the fact that during Watergate, all the people I knew said, ‘Oh, they’re just abusing Nixon, and it’s a witch hunt,’” Rooney said. “Turns out it wasn’t a witch hunt. It was really bad.”

“I’m used to being open to all points of view and making the best decision I can. But there’s . . . a lot of water still to flow down under the bridge on this thing,” he said.

But he must know, as someone who won in a heavily pro-President Donald Trump district, that he signed on to the end of his career with that statement.

That is likely why, a day after he said it, he announced that he would not campaign