Dayton Daily News

Candidate: Trump ‘says what people are thinking’

Renacci says he wouldn’t have used the same language.

- By Lynn Hulsey Staff Writer Contact this reporter at 937-225-7455 or email Lynn. Hulsey@coxinc.com.

President Donald Trump’s use of the word “shithole” to describe Haiti, El Salvador and African countries is not a term that Republican Senate candidate U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci said he would have used.

But, said Renacci, Trump “many times says what people are thinking.”

In an interview with the Dayton Daily News on Friday Renacci said he did not agree with Trump’s opinion.

“I just don’t agree with the way it was said. I don’t agree with the way it was presented,” Renacci said.

He said a businessma­n involved in politics may not always understand the need to use caution in wording statements.

“And again, when you’re trying to get some things accomplish­ed I think sometimes you’ve got to watch how you say things and why you say things and I just would not have said it. It’s just not my style of negotiatin­g,” Renacci said.

“But again, President Trump is a different type of person and he says things different than I would. I just would not have said it that way.”

Trump has acknowledg­ed making “tough” remarks while meeting with a bipartisan group of lawmakers on immigratio­n reform in a Thursday Oval Office meeting. Trump’s use of the vulgar term has been widely criticized as racist and was confirmed by Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, who was in the meeting.

U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, blasted Renacci and Trump’s comments.

“I disagree with Congressma­n Renacci’s characteri­zation that President Trump’s disgusting and hateful comments about immigrants were speaking for what many Americans are thinking,” said Brown. “The president certainly isn’t speaking for me and he isn’t speaking for a great majority of people across Ohio.”

Renacci, a Wadsworth businessma­n who has been in Congress since 2011, dropped out of the race for Ohio governor and entered the Republican primary for U.S. Senate on Thursday after he said Trump administra­tion officials met with him Wednesday and asked him to join the race. He said he gave those officials a list of what he would need to enter the race “six to eight months late,” although he declined to say what that list included other than promises of political appearance­s with Trump and Vice President Mike Pence.

“I needed to make sure that when he came in that I’d be with him, that when the vice president comes in that I’d be with him,” Renacci said. “Everything that I needed to step into this thing they were willing to comply with.”

Renacci faces investment banker and first time political candidate Mike Gibbons, who was already in the GOP race when front-runner, Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel, dropped out Jan. 5 due to family issues.

The winner of the May 8 primary would face Brown in the November general election.

Renacci and Gibbons are both characteri­zing themselves as outsider businessme­n who can bring change to Washington. Asked how a man with seven years in Congress running for a sixyear term in the U.S. Senate is an “outsider,” Renacci said, “I don’t like Washington. I don’t like career politician­s.”

“I went to Washington for the same reason Mike Gibbons wants to go to Washington. The only difference is he’s seven years behind me,” Renacci said. “The good thing now is I’ve been in the belly of the beast and can see how difficult it is to make a difference.”

Gibbons’ campaign spokesman Chris Schrimpf called Renacci “a profession­al politician and Washington insider who is so desperate to climb the political ladder that he doesn’t even care what office he is running for.”

“If it looks like his political career might end, he just switches races. Mike on the other hand is a real outsider who has never run for office; making him the best candidate to defeat another career politician — Sherrod Brown,” Schrimpf said.

Renacci said he intends to focus on the nation’s growing deficit, reforming immigratio­n and repairing infrastruc­ture. He voted for the $1.5 trillion Republican tax cut and says Congress now needs to cut spending as revenues decline.

“So I am a big believer that we are going to have to look at all spending, we’re going to have to look at Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security,” Renacci said. “I think the Social Security program was put in place to help those at the age of 65 supplement their retirement not be their retirement, but supplement their retirement. I think we need to look at that. I think we need to build programs that allow people to grow for their own retirement.”

Renacci and Gibbons are both characteri­zing themselves as outsider businessme­n who can bring change to Washington.

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