Trump-backed candidate wins Republican nomination for Ohio U.S. Senate
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[May 04, 2022]
By Eric Cox and Nathan Layne
CINCINNATI, Ohio (Reuters) -J.D. Vance, a
candidate for the U.S. Senate who is backed by Donald Trump, won the
Republican primary vote in Ohio on Tuesday, in an early test of the
former president's sway over his party as he eyes a possible White House
run in 2024.
Trump upended the Ohio race last month by endorsing author and venture
capitalist Vance ahead of the Nov. 8 congressional elections,
catapulting him ahead of former state Treasurer Josh Mandel, also a
staunch Trump supporter.
With almost all ballots counted, Vance led the Republican field with 32%
of the vote, followed by Mandel with 24% and state lawmaker Matt Dolan
with 23%, according to Edison Research.
While Vance's victory is a sign of Trump's endorsement power, every
other major candidate besides Dolan had lobbied for Trump's support
while advocating for his policies and parroting his false claims of
widespread fraud in the 2020 election.
"It was a big night for Trumpism in the Ohio Republican Party. Not just
in Vance's win but in a field that was dominated by candidates trying to
out-Trump each other," said University of Cincinnati political science
professor David Niven.
"It was still a close race. He wasn’t able to shut this race down with a
simple wave of his magic wand."
Vance, author of the "Hillbilly Elegy" book and a former Trump critic,
will face Democratic U.S. Representative Tim Ryan, who won his Senate
primary as had been expected.
"I have absolutely gotta thank the 45th, the president of the United
States, Donald J. Trump," Vance told the crowd at his election party in
Cincinnati, before criticizing unnamed media outlets which he said had
sought his and Trump's defeat. "Ladies and gentlemen, it ain't the death
of the America First agenda."
Trump has not announced his plans for 2024, but he regularly hints that
he intends to mount another presidential campaign.
Ryan, who briefly ran for president in 2020, has focused his campaign on
working-class voters and the rejuvenation of manufacturing while taking
a hardline on China and courting Trump supporters. After winning
Tuesday's primary, he sent out a fundraising ad calling Vance an
"out-of-touch millionaire."
"I want us to be the manufacturing powerhouse of the world. I want us to
help this country leapfrog China," Ryan told a gathering of supporters.
"We can do it by coming together."
Vance led the field in almost all the counties where most ballots had
been counted, from deeply conservative rural counties to suburban areas
that could be crucial to his hopes of beating Ryan. Vance's lead was
especially wide in places like Clermont County, a suburb of Cincinnati,
where he led Mandel 35% to 22%, with almost all ballots counted. Vance
also had a large lead in rural Athens County in southern Ohio, one of
the state's few counties won by U.S. President Joe Biden in 2020.
Nonpartisan election analysts favor Republicans' chances of winning in
November to keep retiring Senator Rob Portman's seat.
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U.S. Senate Republican candidate J.D. Vance, who was endorsed by
former U.S. President Donald Trump for the upcoming primary
elections, gestures on stage during an event hosted by Trump, at the
county fairgrounds in Delaware, Ohio, U.S., April 23, 2022. REUTERS/Gaelen
Morse/File Photo
Tuesday's contests, which included a Democratic
rematch for a U.S. House seat in Ohio and primaries in Indiana,
kicked off a series of critical nominating contests in the coming
weeks, including primaries in North Carolina, Pennsylvania and
Georgia.
The influence of Trump, who has endorsed more than 150 candidates
this year, will help determine whether Republicans, as expected,
reverse their slim deficit in the House and also take control of the
Senate, which is split 50-50 with Democrats owning the tie-breaking
vote.
A loss of control of either chamber would allow
Republicans to block Biden's legislative agenda and also to pepper
his administration with politically damaging investigations.
REPUBLICAN PUSHBACK
Not all Republicans are blindly following Trump's lead. As in Ohio,
where Senate candidates spent an unprecedented $66 million on
advertising, Trump-backed candidates in Pennsylvania and North
Carolina face well-funded Republican challengers.
Some Republicans worry that Trump's picks, like former football star
Herschel Walker in Georgia, could prove too controversial to prevail
against Democrats in November, imperiling the party's bid for Senate
control.
Vance was not the choice of many party leaders in Ohio, and some
have grumbled publicly about Trump's decision. The Club for Growth,
a powerful conservative advocacy group, broadcast ads bashing Vance
and stuck by their pick in the race, Mandel.
In the Republican primary for governor, incumbent Mike DeWine held
off three far-right Republican challengers to win the nomination,
despite criticism from many conservatives for his business shutdowns
and other policies during the pandemic.
DeWine will face former Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley, who won the
Democratic primary, becoming the first woman in Ohio history to
secure a major party's backing for the governorship.
In a closely watched Democratic race, incumbent Shontel Brown
handily defeated progressive candidate Nina Turner in the
congressional district which includes Cleveland. The contest was
seen as a measure of the power balance between the establishment --
represented by Brown -- and more liberal wings of the party.
In Indiana, Air Force veteran Jennifer-Ruth Green beat six
Republican challengers to win the nomination for a congressional
district in a historically Democratic stronghold outside Chicago
increasingly seen as having the potential to be competitive. She
will attempt to oust freshman Democratic Representative Frank Mrvan,
who easily won his primary on Tuesday night.
(Reporting by Eric Cox in Cincinnati, Nathan Layne in Wilton,
Connecticut; Additional reporting by Jason Lange, Rami Ayyub, and
Joseph Ax; Editing by Scott Malone and Alistair Bell)
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