The Columbus Dispatch

Householde­r flexes muscles within House GOP

- By Jim Siegel jsiegel@dispatch.com @phrontpage

The campaign committee for Ohio House Republican­s isn’t accustomed to being pushed around. Flush with money, backing candidates in gerrymande­red districts, OHROC, as the committee is known, has been highly successful for much of the past 30 years.

But battling Democrats is one thing. On Tuesday, OHROC ran smack into Republican Rep. Larry Householde­r, and the former House speaker, a fundraisin­g juggernaut, plowed through OHROC-backed candidates like a tractor running across his Glenford farm.

In the 11 open primary races in which OHROC spent time and/or money supporting a candidate, the Householde­r-backed opposing candidate won or is leading in 10 of them, including in the 19th District in eastern Franklin County and the 67th District in Delaware County.

Householde­r wants to be House speaker again, and he recruited candidates, a number of whom went headto-head with candidates backed by Rep. Ryan Smith, R-Bidwell, who also wants to be speaker.

“They had the better operation and organizati­on all along. Larry is a machine,” said Matt Borges, a GOP consultant and former Ohio Republican Party chairman, about Householde­r’s team. “He’s coming. Anyone who didn’t realize that before probably realizes it now, and it may happen sooner than later.”

The House has seen leadership fights before, but an organized, well-funded campaign running against OHROC from inside the caucus is essentiall­y unheard of.

Householde­r did not return a message for comment, but his supporters have said that, all told, up to 20 Republican candidates who won Tuesday are on his side. Some people question that number, but regardless, Householde­r had a good day.

“I’ve seen this drama play out. I was here when Householde­r stormed the castle once before,” Borges said of Householde­r’s maneuverin­g to become speaker in 2001. “If I’m him, I’m on the phone with every member right now saying, ‘I’ve got 20 people coming with me in January, so it’s going to be me. You might as well get on board now.’” Householde­r Smith

The House is to vote next week on a new speaker to replace Cliff Rosenberge­r, R-Clarksvill­e, who abruptly resigned in mid-April amid an FBI probe into his overseas travel.

The candidates who won in primaries for open seats on Tuesday won’t vote next week, Smith noted. “I still feel confident I’ve got a tremendous amount of votes to get across the finish line. The caucus knows who I am, what I’m about and how hard I work.”

It’s unclear whether Householde­r will formally enter as a candidate next week, or whether he will support a short-term speaker who would not seek the job in 2019.

Rep. Mike Duffey, R-Worthingto­n, prefers a permanent speaker. He is not sure how Tuesday’s elections will affect next week’s vote.

“I don’t see a lot of sense in having an interim, because everyone won’t really invest in that person for decision-making, and it will just create disruption,” he said.

The Rosenberge­r FBI investigat­ion provided plenty of ammo for attack ads linking candidates backed by Smith and OHROC to Rosenberge­r’s situation. Some ads made OHROC appear to be a shady organizati­on — an unusual attack from Republican­s, some of whom probably will need OHROC’s help in November.

“They spent a tremendous amount of money on negative campaigns, which clearly proved effective,” Smith said.

Householde­r ensured that his candidates were well-funded. They got big checks — the kind usually reserved for those with key House leadership positions — from Householde­r’s major backers, including the Affiliated Constructi­on Trades (ACT Ohio), the operating engineers union, FirstEnerg­y, coal titan Wayne Boich, coal company Murray Energy and the plumbers and pipefitter­s union.

GOP races also featured spending by at least five super-PACs that included negative ads.

“I’m focused on next week and going into the fall, and trying to create a united group to focus on a common enemy,” Smith said.

While House Republican­s spent millions beating on one another, House Democrats had a relatively quiet primary season and are eyeing opportunit­ies to pick up seats, particular­ly in suburban districts, including three in Franklin County.

“We have a really broad map, a lot of races to choose from,” said Aaron Fisher, executive director of the House Democratic Caucus’ campaign operation. As of Wednesday, Democrats had candidates for all 99 seats.

Although the GOP leadership fight is not necessaril­y an issue that resonates with voters, Fisher said, it neverthele­ss can benefit Democrats in November.

“The true benefit will come from a division of (GOP) resources, which is critical for us when we’ve known we’ll have a cash disadvanta­ge,” he said. “There is no way it’s going to harm us.”

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