Republican Rep. Mike Rogers, who is chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, has pulled off a rare feat in a bitterly divided Congress: He's created a working, productive relationship with Democrats in overseeing the nation's 16 spy agencies.
California Democrat Dianne Feinstein, his Senate counterpart, describes Rogers as "a positive leader, which we need."
She adds: "We don't need more negative."
Rogers laments the partisanship that he says has crept into the national security arena - a region he feels should be a political "neutral zone."
The question now is whether Rogers sticks around in the House or fulfills GOP hopes and runs for the U.S. Senate seat from Michigan.
Rogers - a seven-term House member - says he's weighing a Senate run but has made no decision.
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