Trump pick wins U.S. House special Republican primary election in Ohio
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[August 04, 2021]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Mike Carey, a coal
lobbyist endorsed by former President Donald Trump, won a crowded
primary contest on Tuesday for the Republican nomination to a seat in
the U.S. House of Representatives from Ohio's 15th district.
With 96.5% of precincts reporting, Carey was ahead of his closest
contender, state representative Jeff LaRe, by 37% to 13.3%, results from
the Ohio secretary of state's office showed.
The outcome in Ohio's traditionally Republican 15th District south of
Columbus was being closely watched as a measure of Trump's clout in the
Republican Party, coming just a week after a Trump-backed candidate for
the U.S. Congress suffered a surprise loss to a fellow Republican in
north Texas.
"Tonight, Republicans across Ohio's 15th Congressional District sent a
clear message to the nation that President Donald J. Trump is, without a
doubt, the leader of our party," Carey declared in a statement after his
victory.
Trump also issued a statement thanking Ohio voters and praising the
"Great Republican win for Mike Carey. Big numbers!"
In another crowded primary race for a vacant U.S. seat in the Democratic
enclave of Ohio's 11th District, progressive Nina Turner conceded to
local establishment Democrat Shontel Brown. With 85.9% of precincts
reporting, Brown was leading 50.5% to 44.2% for Turner.
"We have looked across the promised land, but ... we will not cross the
river," Turner told supporters at an election night watch party outside
Cleveland.
Winners of the 15th District Republican primary and the 11th District
Democratic primary are expected to also win their general election races
in November. The two seats were left vacant after former Republican
Representative Steve Stivers' resigned and former Democratic
Representative Marcia Fudge's became Biden's housing secretary.
Democrats currently have a narrow 220-212 majority in the U.S. House of
Representatives.
Carey, a political neophyte, cast himself in the Trump mold. "No
industry has been as targeted by the left wing liberal elites, the fake
news, as the coal industry," Carey told a June rally headlined by the
former president.
An independent fundraising committee backed by Trump spent over $400,000
on advertising for Carey, federal election records show. This included
over $3,000 spent on Monday and Tuesday on calls urging Carey supporters
to cast their ballots.
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Vehicles are parked outside the U.S. Capitol building the morning
the Senate returned to session in Washington, DC, U.S., July 31,
2021. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
Several other contenders also had prominent backers.
LaRe was backed by Stivers, the popular former congressman who
vacated the seat in May.
In northeastern Ohio's Cleveland-based 11th District, meanwhile, the
Democratic Party's schisms were on full display.
With 13 candidates on the Democratic primary ballot, the central
battle was between two Black women: Brown, 46, a member of the
Cuyahoga County Council endorsed by former presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton, and progressive Turner, 53, who was endorsed by
Senator Bernie Sanders.
Brown emphasized her support for Biden's administration, and Brown's
supporters highlighted Turner's past criticism of the president.
Turner was the co-chair of Sanders' 2020 presidential campaign; last
year she compared voting for Democratic President Joe Biden to
eating excrement.
A number of Democratic establishment figures, including House
Majority Whip James Clyburn, campaigned for Brown, while Sanders and
other progressives, including Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
rallied for Turner.
The candidates raised over $6 million, making it the most expensive
special House election this year, according to OpenSecrets.org, the
website for the Center for Responsive Politics.
"Establishment Democrats likely feel that Brown would be more a team
player and reliable vote for leadership than Turner, whereas
progressives see Turner as someone who could help pull the
Democratic House caucus a bit more to the left," said Kyle Kondik,
an election analyst at the University of Virginia.
(Additional reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Cynthia Osterman,
Sonya Hepinstall and Sandra Maler)
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