The Delaware Gazette

Outside money pouring into Ohio’s Senate race

Sen. Sher­rod Brown, D-Ohio speaks before a cam­paign rally for Pres­i­dent Barack Obama at Ohio State Uni­ver­sity in May in Colum­bus. (Asso­ci­ated Press file)


JOHN SEEWER

JULIE CARR SMYTH

Asso­ci­ated Press

COLUMBUS — Nowhere is as much money being spent on a Sen­ate race this year as in Ohio, where lib­eral Demo­c­rat Sher­rod Brown is seek­ing a sec­ond term, his fate to some degree depen­dent on how well Pres­i­dent Barack Obama does in the state’s tossup pres­i­den­tial contest.

Out­side inter­est groups are flood­ing the state with money. The U.S. Cham­ber of Com­merce, busi­ness and con­ser­v­a­tive groups are pour­ing money into the state in sup­port of Repub­li­can chal­lenger Josh Man­del; and labor, envi­ron­men­tal and other lib­eral groups are spend­ing on behalf of Brown.

Cross­roads GPS, an inde­pen­dent group asso­ci­ated with Repub­li­can strate­gist Karl Rove, the Cham­ber and other Man­del back­ers have spent a com­bined $15 mil­lion against Brown, and plan to spend $6.7 mil­lion more before November.

Their goal is to return the Sen­ate to GOP con­trol after six years of being run by Democ­rats. They need a net pickup of four seats — three if Repub­li­can Mitt Rom­ney wins the White House — and one of their juicier tar­gets is Brown, who voted 100 per­cent with the AFL-CIO in 2010 but only 9 per­cent with the Cham­ber of Commerce.

Envi­ron­men­tal, labor and polit­i­cal com­mit­tees lin­ing up against Man­del, the Repub­li­can state trea­surer, have spent a com­bined $3.1 mil­lion. Even after out­rais­ing Mandel’s cam­paign com­mit­tee by $5 mil­lion, Brown has been sig­nif­i­cantly overspent.

Bran­don Twyman, 22, a movie the­ater worker in Colum­bus, views all the ads as a waste of good TV time.

“Peo­ple want to get their point across, I under­stand that, but at the same time you’re wast­ing mil­lions of dol­lars where mil­lions of dol­lars could go some­where else,” he said. “To me, I don’t think it’s necessary.”

Brown’s sur­prise vic­tory six years ago in this closely divided swing state made him the first Demo­c­rat the state had sent to the Sen­ate since for­mer astro­naut John Glenn’s retire­ment in 1999. A well-known Ohio fig­ure, he’s main­tained a single-digit lead over Man­del in polls, but he’s also strug­gling to break 50 per­cent and could be vul­ner­a­ble if Obama fal­ters badly in November.

His crit­ics try to tie Brown with pres­i­den­tial pri­or­i­ties least pop­u­lar in the closely divided state — includ­ing the health care over­haul and energy poli­cies they paint as anti-coal. One of the most recent TV spots funded by Cross­roads GPS asks: “Who’s the biggest sup­porter of the Obama agenda in Ohio? It’s Sher­rod Brown.”

Before Obama bounced back in the polls, Man­del called Brown a rub­ber stamp for the president’s policies.

Brown defends his vote for Obama’s health care over­haul and his sup­port for the auto indus­try bailout. In a recent ad, he kicked the tire of an auto made of Ohio parts and noted that the bailout had saved more than 800,000 Ohio jobs. It turned out the tire he kicked wasn’t made in the state.

Man­del, from the Democrat-heavy Cleve­land area that tends to pro­duce more mod­er­ate Repub­li­cans, has walked a fine line on the bailout — say­ing it had its effec­tive ele­ments but wasn’t the sav­ior of the industry.

A Marine vet­eran who served two tours in Iraq, Man­del unseated the Demo­c­ra­tic state trea­surer in 2010 in his first statewide elec­tion. Repub­li­cans quickly recruited him to chal­lenge Brown, fig­ur­ing the youth­ful fis­cal con­ser­v­a­tive could tap into the ris­ing anger directed at long­time politi­cians in Washington.

“I’m 34. I look like I’m 19,” Man­del likes to say while campaigning.

He appeals to vot­ers to put a fresh face in Con­gress and paints Brown, 59, as a “career politi­cian” who’s been in office too long.

“Sher­rod Brown has been a politi­cian since Richard Nixon was pres­i­dent,” Man­del said in an inter­view. “If Sher­rod Brown was the answer to our prob­lems, they would have been solved long ago.”

Brown, who began his polit­i­cal career in 1974 as the youngest state rep­re­sen­ta­tive in Ohio his­tory, coun­ters that Man­del is a job-hopper — mov­ing rapidly from city coun­cil, to state leg­is­la­tor, state trea­surer and now Sen­ate candidate.

“Let’s put it this way: I’ve served in four offices in my many years in gov­ern­ment. He is run­ning for his fourth office in less than 10 years,” Brown said. “It’s just one job after another, after another, on his way to being some­thing, and I take this job more seri­ously than that.”

Even before the out­side spend­ing, the two Sen­ate cam­paigns have raised a record-setting $25 mil­lion — $15 mil­lion for Brown and $10 mil­lion for Man­del. That’s more than the entire amount spent in each of the state’s last two Sen­ate races.

Ohio Demo­c­ra­tic Party Chair­man Chris Red­fern cred­its Cross­roads and other con­ser­v­a­tive groups with prop­ping up Mandel.

“The only rea­son Josh Mandel’s cam­paign is alive today is because Karl Rove con­tin­ues to give it CPR,” Red­fern said.

Man­del called that “hog­wash.” He notes that ads against him also are being funded by out­siders, includ­ing the Ser­vice Employ­ees Inter­na­tional Union and the League of Con­ser­va­tion Vot­ers. Major­ity PAC, an inde­pen­dent group sup­port­ing Democ­rats, has spent about $1.1 million.

Man­del is work­ing against a tide of crit­i­cism — for break­ing a promise to serve his four years as trea­surer, giv­ing jobs and raises to polit­i­cal oper­a­tives, and fail­ing to attend meet­ings of an influ­en­tial board he chairs for more than a year.

His office released a report this month say­ing his cost-cutting and stream­lin­ing ini­tia­tives led to a $1.6 mil­lion sur­plus dur­ing the most recent fis­cal year.

AP News Posted by on Aug 22 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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