Dayton Daily News

Candidates differ widely on key issues

Antani, Dickerson stake out clear positions on guns, abortion, pot.

- By Chris Stewart

Two candidates for an Ohio House seat representi­ng voters in southweste­rn Montgomery County made clear their divisions over stances on guns, marijuana and reproducti­ve rights during a candidates’ forum Tuesday.

Democrat Zach Dickerson, who described himself as a gun owner and hunter, called gun control “probably the most defining issue” between himself and the 42nd House District incumbent, Republican Rep. Niraj Antani.

“I respect the Second Amendment and I will protect your right to own a gun in this state as well,” said Dickerson, who supports strengthen­ing background checks. “But I will not take the position that he has taken, that there is nothing else we can do. I don’t think that that’s responsibl­e.”

Antani, who was first appointed to the seat in 2014 and elected in 2016, does not support any additional firearms restrictio­ns, he said during the forum sponsored by the the League of Women Voters of the Greater Dayton Region.

Other issues leading to firearms deaths are left unexamined: gun suicides and a culture that breeds gang and domestic violence, he said.

“We need to have folks respect the fact that there are people who want to defend themselves, but also address the culture of violence issue,” Antani said.

Dickerson called Antani’s view of the Second Amendment “outside the mainstream,” pointing to when the incumbent Antani stated earlier this year that 18-year-old students should be allowed to bear long guns in schools.

Antani and Dickerson won their May primaries in the district that covers parts of Germantown, Miamisburg, West Carrollton, Moraine and Miami and Washington Twps.Sides of the abortion debate are often incorrectl­y framed, said Dickerson. If one is pro-choice they aren’t pro-abor-

tion; and if one is anti-abortion they aren’t anti-woman, he said.

Dickerson said he would collaborat­e across the aisle with Republican­s to work on legislatio­n that would help reduce abortions by supporting women, but he “doesn’t want the government invading that deeply intimate and personal choice for a woman.”

Describing himself as prolife, Antani said he doesn’t see a reduction in abortion possible without the interventi­on of legislator­s.

“I do want to see the number of abortions go down. If that were possible without a law, that would be great. I think the pro-life community would support that,” he said. “But unfortunat­ely, the rhetoric is such that it’s no longer (that) abortion should be safe, legal and rare. It’s that abortion should be plentiful. And we see that at the Statehouse with NARAL, with Planned Parenthood and I think that’s unfortunat­e.”

After a bill was more narrowly tailored with safeguards, Antani said he cast one of the toughest votes of his career in favor of Ohio’s current medical marijuana law. But he is not in favor of full recreation­al use, he told a crowd of about 70 at the Miami Twp. Branch Dayton Metro Library, 2718 Lyons Rd.

“I was able to vote for that because I don’t think we should be denying anyone who has cancer access to a certain therapeuti­c treatment,” Antani said. “As far as recreation­al marijuana, I do not support that. Having a marijuana store on every street corner is a bad and dangerous idea.

Dickerson, who attended law school in Denver as Colorado was implementi­ng a marijuana program allowing recreation­al use, said he could support expanding Ohio’s law under certain conditions that protect public safety.

People are not allowed to drive or work drunk so “we’re not going to expect them to go into work high,” Dickerson said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? State Rep. Niraj Antani, R-Miamisburg (left) and Democrat Zach Dickerson, also of Miamisburg, are facing each other in November for the District 42 seat in the Ohio House.
CONTRIBUTE­D State Rep. Niraj Antani, R-Miamisburg (left) and Democrat Zach Dickerson, also of Miamisburg, are facing each other in November for the District 42 seat in the Ohio House.

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