Dayton Daily News

LaRose touts Ohio elections amid skeptics at CPAC

- By Haley Be Miller

Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose joined a national GOP conference on Saturday to tout Ohio elections alongside Republican­s who have amplified claims of election fraud.

The panel, dubbed “They Stole It From Us Legally,” was part of the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference that gives Republican­s a platform to shape policy priorities. LaRose was among four Ohio Republican­s who appeared at the multi-day event, which concluded Saturday night.

LaRose was also a table host for a dinner featuring Kari Lake, a vocal election critic who lost the race for Arizona governor in November.

LaRose’s time at CPAC underscore­d the tightrope he walks on election integrity as he mulls a U.S. Senate run in 2024. The secretary of state frequently touts Ohio’s elections as safe and secure, and his office showed little patience for those who questioned the state’s 2020 results.

He used most of his speaking time to discuss proposed legislatio­n that would centralize voter data and ensure it’s available to the public.

“We run elections so well in Ohio that even the loser knows they lost,” LaRose said. “That’s part of that idea that on election night, you should be able to know you trust and can believe those results.”

CPAC initially presented the panel topic to LaRose’s office as “Easy to Vote, Hard to Cheat,” but organizers later changed the title.

Still, CPAC illustrate­d LaRose’s willingnes­s to associate with Republican­s who have cast doubt on recent elections. His fellow panelists included Lee Zeldin, a former New York congressma­n who objected to the 2020 results, and Abe Hamadeh, who claims election irregulari­ties in his 2022 loss for Arizona attorney general.

The panel’s moderator was Hogan Gidley, a former Trump campaign spokesman who promoted questions about how states counted mail-in ballots in 2020. Gidley is affiliated with the Trump-aligned America First Policy Institute, which is working with LaRose on his election data initiative.

“The policies you want implemente­d, you have to have the people elected you want to implement those policies,” Gidley said on the panel. “It’s getting more difficult in this country to elect those folks if we have countless examples of irregulari­ties, illegaliti­es, anomalies and yes, fraud, in our election system.”

LaRose also jumped at the chance to go after U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown when asked about his Senate ambitions.

“(Brown has) passed himself off as this workingman’s hero,” LaRose said. “Everybody in Ohio knows better. 2024 is the year we beat him. Our party needs to nominate a good candidate that can actually take it to him and finally defeat this guy. It’s something I’m looking at, but no announceme­nt here.”

If LaRose enters the race, he could face a primary with state Sen. Matt Dolan, R-Chagrin Falls, and other possible GOP contenders. Dolan has urged the Republican Party to move on from the 2020 election, and his campaign appeared to take a shot at LaRose’s CPAC debut.

“It’s easy to refute the garbage claims of Stacy Abrams, Sherrod Brown and fringe Leftists without palling around with election deniers and conspiracy theorists,” tweeted Dolan’s campaign strategist, Chris Maloney. “There’s a reason why Republican­s who do tend to lose elections. Voters are sick of it.”

Aside from LaRose, CPAC attendees heard from several other Ohioans: Attorney General Dave Yost, U.S. Sen. J.D. Vance, U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Urbana, and presidenti­al hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy. Yost criticized efforts to allow noncitizen­s to vote during a border security panel.

“Illegals shouldn’t be in the country,” Yost said. “Why are we even talking about voting?”

Yost also pledged to go after a Democratic attorney who’s suing Ohio over its new voter ID law.

Earlier in the week, Vance joined U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas to talk about a range of issues from the origin of the COVID-19 pandemic to the future of the GOP.

Ohio’s new junior senator has shown some willingnes­s to work across the aisle since taking office, particular­ly when it comes to the train derailment in East Palestine. He and Brown introduced rail safety legislatio­n and have penned multiple letters together to find ways to help their constituen­ts.

But that didn’t stop Vance from joking that Democrats working less would be better for the U.S. He also laughed along as Cruz went after the Biden administra­tion for its response to the derailment.

“Democrats don’t give a damn about East Palestine because it’s a blue-collar, red place, and they’re like, ‘To hell with you,’” Cruz said. “If you were a bunch of transgende­r tech workers, you’d have the entire Biden cabinet down there for a listening session and sit-in to feel their pain.”

Vance replied: “That’s right.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose spoke Saturday at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference to tout the security of
Ohio elections and hint he may run for the U.S. Senate.
AP FILE Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose spoke Saturday at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference to tout the security of Ohio elections and hint he may run for the U.S. Senate.

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