Ohio
Related: About this forumThe Ohio Primary and the Return of the Republican Civil War
'Why has the Ohio Republican Senate primary, which reaches its conclusion Tuesday, been so interesting (if not always edifying) to watch? In part, because its the first time the divides of the partys 2016 primary campaign have risen fully to the surface again.
Six years ago, under the pressure of Donald Trumps insurgency, the G.O.P. split into three factions. First was the party establishment, trying to sustain a business-friendly and internationalist agenda and an institutionalist approach to governance. This was the faction of Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio, much the partys Washington D.C. leadership but fewer of its media organs and activists. . .
But in the Ohio Senate primary, finally, you can see the divisions clearly once again. First you have a candidate, Matt Dolan, who is fully in the establishment lane, explicitly refusing to court Trumpian favor and trying to use the Russian invasion of Ukraine to peel Republicans away from the America First banner.
You have a candidate in the TrueCon lane, the adaptable Josh Mandel, who tried to hug Trump personally but who draws his support from the old powers of movement conservatism from the Club for Growth to talk radios Mark Levin to the political consultancy that runs Ted Cruzs campaigns.
And you have J.D. Vance, who is very clear about trying to be a populist in full taking the Trump-in-2016 line on trade and immigration and foreign policy, allying himself with thinkers and funders who want a full break with the pre-Trump G.O.P. . .
But the battle for Ohio suggests things to look for in 2022 and beyond. First, expect a Trump revival to be more like his 2016 insurgent-populist campaign than his incumbent run in 2020. Second, expect populism writ large to gain some strength and substance but still remain bound to Trumps obsessions (and appetite for constitutional crisis).
Third, expect many of the movement and TrueCon figures who made their peace with Trump six years ago to be all-in for Ron DeSantis should he seem remotely viable. Fourth, expect the remains of the establishment to divide over whether to rally around a candidate of anti-Trump principle from Liz Cheney to certain incarnations of Mike Pence or to make their peace with a harder-edged figure like DeSantis.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/30/opinion/ohio-senate-trump.html
RandySF
(70,636 posts)One of these CHUDs will win the primary and be favored to beat Ryan in November.
Diamond_Dog
(34,700 posts)the better. If I didnt have kids here Id move. I hate the direction this state is going.