Dayton Daily News

HUSTED TO DECLARE

Secretary of state joins growing field of GOP candidates.

- By Laura A. Bischoff Contact this reporter at 614-224-1624 or email Laura.Bischoff@coxinc.com.

Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted will launch his candidacy Monday.

Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted, a Republican with deep ties to the Miami Valley, is announcing today that he’s running for the GOP nomination for governor.

Husted is slated to make the announceme­nt via a video message to supporters this morning and then will appear Monday morning at the University of Dayton Arena — the first stop on a statewide tour.

“I’m running for governor because I want to help Ohio — and more importantl­y its people — win the future,” Husted said. “We need to create more prosperity, more jobs, better paying jobs. We need to help people get the skills and training and the education to compete and win those jobs. And we need to get the federal government out of our lives, from our poverty programs, our health care programs, our job training programs, so we have the ability to innovate and solve problems.”

Husted, 49, joins U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci of Wadsworth and Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor of Green, who have already made their formal announceme­nts. Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine of Cedarville has said he is running but has not made an official announceme­nt.

Despite the crowded field, Husted said he’s been doing the work that it takes to win. “I love to compete. It’s what I’ve done my whole life,” he said. “But this campaign is not about me, it’s about fighting for all those people that I’ve encountere­d and gotten to know all those years.”

Husted declined to go into detail about how he might manage Medicaid, the state and federally funded health care program for 3 million Ohioans, or what tax changes he might push. His vision is to foster economic growth, which will bring jobs and tax revenues to provide services to the needy, he said.

One policy issue he did talk about was opioid addiction, saying Ohio needs more treatment beds and health care providers to deal with the crisis.

“Unfortunat­ely, right now, the only category Ohio is number one in is opioid deaths. I promise you if we can be number one in job creation or education, we will no longer be number one in opioid deaths,” he said. “We need to help people out of the despair and the trouble that they’re experienci­ng in their lives.”

Husted has a long history in Ohio Republican politics, starting more than two decades ago when he served as an aide to then Montgomery County commission­er Don Lucas. He represente­d Kettering in the Ohio House and Senate from 2000 to 2010, serving as House speaker from 2005 to 2009. He was elected Secretary of State in 2010 and again in 2014.

He lives in Upper Arlington, a Columbus suburb, with his wife Tina and their two children. His son from a previous marriage is graduating from University of Dayton today.

Husted grew up in Montpelier in Williams County, and he said when he arrived on UD’s campus as a 17-yearold he thought he was bulletproo­f. When the equipment manager for the Flyer football team gave him jersey number 63 — too high for a running back — his protest was greeted with a response that it didn’t matter because he wouldn’t be playing anyway.

“I’ll show you,” Husted responded and he did, playing cornerback on the 1989 Division III national championsh­ip team and contributi­ng with an intercepti­on in the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, which was won by the Flyers 17-7.

Although he had a football coaching offer at the University of Toledo, Husted took a job as a deputy campaign manager on Republican Pete Davis’ congressio­nal challenge to incumbent U.S. Rep. Tony Hall, D-Dayton.

“That’s where it all started for me as an adult,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States