Dayton Daily News

Self-interest drives Republican­s in fight with Ohio speaker

- Thomas Suddes is a former legislativ­e reporter who writes from Ohio University. Reach him at tsuddes@gmail.com.

Ohio House Speaker Jason Stephens, a Republican from Lawrence County’s Kitts Hill, recently stripped committee chairmansh­ips from rebels in his GOP caucus. That provoked yelps from those who lost gavels (and the constituti­onally questionab­le $9,000-a-year salary supplement a committee chairmansh­ip confers).

At issue: The rebels’ attempts to undermine Stephens by supporting primary election challenger­s to GOP House candidates who had backed Stephens for speaker in January or were seen as possible Stephens supporters in 2025.

Burrs under dissidents’ saddles: Stephens won the speakershi­p almost 18 months ago because the House (67 Republican­s, 32 Democrats) voted 54-43 (with two Republican­s absent) to hand him its gavel.

And of the 54 votes to elect Stephens. 32 came from the House’s Democrats, 22 from House Republican­s. The remaining 43 House Republican­s present voted for suburban Toledo Republican

Derek Merrin: That is, a third of the House’s Republican­s voted for Stephens, two-thirds for Merrin.

That touched off a civil war inside the House GOP caucus, which had the self-defeating effect of further empowering House Democrats — the very thing the anti-Stephens rebels oppose.

Of course, the rebels seemingly forget that in 2019, Perry County Republican Larry Householde­r unseated the previous session’s speaker, Gallia County Republican Ryan Smith, because 26 of the 38 Democrats then in the House voted for Householde­r. Thanks to the House Bill 6 scandal, Householde­r is now in federal custody. That is, what was acceptable to House Republican­s in 2019 became a sneaky double-cross in 2023.

Such GOP disarray would be a blessing for Democrats except for the fact that — thanks to Republican gerrymande­ring — Democrats stand virtually no chance of capturing an Ohio House majority.

Bottom line: Whether in lobbying or in terms of the Statehouse pecking order, self-interest is a great motivator. And that’s what’s driving the Ohio House’s Republican rebels in their fight with Stephens — self-interest, not lofty principle.

Yost and masks

Last week, publicity-hungry Ohio Attorney General David Yost suggested Ohioans protesting the Israel-Hamas war who mask themselves maybe be breaking Ohio’s anti-mask law.

The General Assembly appears to have aimed the anti-mask law at the Ku Klux Klan, once a major political factor in Ohio, whose members masked themselves to conceal their identities. Courts in some jurisdicti­ons have upheld states’ anti-masking laws, and in other cases have overturned masking bans,

Yost’s headline-magnet worked like a charm, but few state laws allow Ohio’s AG to prosecute anybody for anything. That’s a duty assigned almost exclusivel­y to Ohio’s 88 prosecutin­g attorneys. Practicall­y speaking, Yost’s statement invited local prosecutor­s to pursue such cases and garner accompanyi­ng headlines, likely in counties with campuses with Israel-Hamas protests.

 ?? ?? Thomas Suddes
Thomas Suddes

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