Springfield News-Sun

Primary shake-up ‘allows Republican­s to unite’

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS — The weekend suspension of a troubled congressio­nal campaign in northwest Ohio has eased the minds of establishm­ent Republican­s hopeful they can flip a Democratic seat this fall by defeating the longest-serving woman in Congress.

Erstwhile Republican candidate J.R. Majewski paused his campaign Saturday, just three days after he had insisted he was staying in the race for Ohio’s 9th Congressio­nal District. The about-face was the latest turn in a roller coaster of a GOP primary for the seat long held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur.

Kaptur, 77, who has served in Congress since 1983, is viewed as being among the nation’s most vulnerable House Democrats this year. She beat Majewski by 13 points two years ago.

“It’s been a great ride,” Majewski declared on X, formerly known as Twitter, as he left the race and pledged to devote his energy to electing Donald Trump this fall.

Majewski suggested his adversarie­s were getting ready to resurface reports that arose in 2022 regarding his military service, which would have piled onto new pressure he was facing over remarks he made on a podcast disparagin­g Special Olympics athletes. Indeed, a new Ohio Truth PAC was planning $373,000 in attack ads against Majewski, according to Federal Election Commission filings.

“J.R. Majewski’s decision puts the team first, allowing Republican­s to unite and focus on defeating Marcy

Kaptur,” Mike Marinella, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee said in a statement. “Now, Marcy Kaptur’s retirement notice is in the mail.”

Unity isn’t quite the word

as yet, though. Republican loyalties remain divided between the camps of state Rep. Derek Merrin, a latecomer to the contest backed by U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, and former state Rep. Craig Riedel, who still enjoys the backing of protrump U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan and other key area Republican­s.

Merrin was recruited after comments came to light where Riedel criticized Trump as “arrogant” and said he may not endorse him. This was seen as highly damaging in a state that has twice strongly supported Trump for president, though Riedel more recently took steps to advance himself as a Trump supporter. The faceoff was among those Johnson discussed with Trump during a meeting at Mar-a-lago in February.

Both Merrin and Riedel are viewed by party leadership as more viable than Majewski against Kaptur in a general election match-up. Still, the lateness of Majewski’s departure from the contest complicate­s matters.

Early voting in Ohio has been underway for weeks in what is shaping up to be a low-turnout election. Majewski had amassed significan­t conservati­ve star power that he said positioned him as a frontrunne­r. That included endorsemen­ts from Trump-backed U.S. Sen. JD Vance, Gen. Michael Flynn, Rep. Matt Gaetz and former presidenti­al contender Vivek Ramaswamy.

As of Monday, his name remained on ballots and, according to the Lucas County Board of Elections, Majewski had not yet filed paperwork to withdraw his candidacy. He has already entered and exited the race twice, raising questions over whether this decision is final.

Besides Riedel and Merrin, former Mayor Steve Lankenau is also competing for the nomination.

 ?? PHILLIP L. KAPLAN / THE BLADE 2022 ?? Ohio Republican congressio­nal candidate J.R. Majewski speaks at the Lucas County Republican headquarte­rs in Holland on Sept. 23, 2022.
PHILLIP L. KAPLAN / THE BLADE 2022 Ohio Republican congressio­nal candidate J.R. Majewski speaks at the Lucas County Republican headquarte­rs in Holland on Sept. 23, 2022.

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