The Columbus Dispatch

Democrat: No Guard in ‘unjust’ Trump war

- By Marty Schladen mschladen@dispatch.com @martyschla­den

ELECTIONS

A Democratic candidate for governor said she would withhold the Ohio National Guard from deployment by President Donald Trump if he engages in an “unjust” military action.

Former state Rep. Connie Pillich, D-Montgomery, on Thursday joined the call from most Democrats for a special prosecutor to investigat­e possible ties between Russia and the Trump campaign. But then she went further.

“Should President Trump act unilateral­ly and enter into an unjust war to cover-up and distract the American public, I, as governor, will not allow the lives of Ohio National Guard troops to be sacrificed in such a conflict,” Pillich said in a statement.

“Absent an affirmativ­e act of Congress supported by both Democrats and Republican­s, I will exercise my authority as governor to declare a state of emergency. Thereby, as commander in chief of the Ohio National Guard, I will stop the deployment of those brave men and women from being used as part of a cover-up war.”

In an interview, Pillich said it is plausible that Trump would use military action to try to make people forget the controvers­y with Russia. In 2015, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan did something similar when he found himself losing an election, she said.

“The president is governing in a very bizarre way,” Pillich said. “He’s governing through distractio­n.”

Pillich, a lawyer and an Air Force veteran, said the Ohio Constituti­on gives the governor the power to declare a state of emergency and become commander in chief of the 18,000-member Ohio National Guard. In that role, she could refuse to deploy Guard members if Trump undertakes what she believes is an illegitima­te military action, she said.

A federal statute sets out the circumstan­ces under which the president can federalize state Guard units, such as when John F. Kennedy did so in 1963 with units in Alabama. The statute appears to be silent, however, on whether state constituti­ons can trump that power.

Pillich and her staff acknowledg­ed that the move she laid out Thursday seems unpreceden­ted and probably would end up in court — a battle Pillich said she is willing to have.

Because she regards Trump as dangerous, Pillich was asked if she believed he should be removed from office. She said she didn’t know, adding that, that would be a question for Congress.

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