The Columbus Dispatch

Mandel joins race for Portman Senate seat

- Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS – Republican Josh Mandel, a Marine veteran and former state treasurer, says he will make a third run for the U.S. Senate in Ohio, taking a protrump message in a bid for the seat being vacated by the GOP’S Rob Portman.

Mandel, 43, planned to launch his campaign Wednesday against the backdrop of a second round of impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the former Republican president.

“This impeachmen­t of President Trump is a complete sham and got my blood boiling to the point where I decided to run for the United States Senate,” Mandel said in an interview. He said he believes charges against Trump are unfounded and the proceeding is unconstitu­tional.

Mandel was the first statewide official in Ohio to back Trump in 2016 and he raised $500,000 for him in 2020, he said. His campaign will focus on common themes of economic freedom, individual liberty and the “America First” agenda.

“When I go to Washington, I’m going to go there to pulverize the uni-party,” he said. “The uni-party is what I call this group of Democrats and Republican­s who sound exactly the same and are more interested in getting invited to the cocktail party circuit than they are in standing up for the Constituti­on.”

Mandel faces likely competitio­n in a GOP primary from Jane Timken, who left her position as head of the Ohio Republican Party last week to explore a run, among others.

At least two Democrats, veteran U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, who represents the blue-collar Mahoning Valley, and former state health director Amy Acton have also signaled serious interest in the coveted open seat after Portman won it handily twice. The Ohio Legislativ­e Black Caucus says it is working to recruit a Black candidate.

Mandel abruptly abandoned his last Senate campaign in January 2018, citing unspecified health issues being experience­d by his then-wife, Ilana. His sudden departure ended his bid for a rematch against incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown, who defeated Mandel in 2012 and went on to a decisive 2018 victory.

The pair divorced in June, but Ilana Mandel said she will work to help him get elected.

“He and I remain close friends and committed parents to our three children,” she said in a statement released by the campaign. “A few years ago, Josh sacrificed a career opportunit­y when our family needed him to be home with us full time. I’m happy that he once again has a chance to serve and I fully support him.”

Timken has close ties to Trump. He personally backed her takeover of the state party four years ago from a state chair allied with then-gov. John Kasich, a Trump detractor and presidenti­al rival.

“With the support of President Trump, I stepped up to get rid of the Kasich regime and completely transforme­d the party into a well-oiled, unified, pro-trump machine that won conservati­ve victories and advanced an America First agenda at every level,” Timken stated in a Tuesday column for The Cincinnati Enquirer.

State Republican­s have done well during her four years, and Trump carried Ohio by 8 percentage points in 2020. She would be well-connected and well-funded for her first statewide elective run.

But Mandel enters the race as a tested statewide candidate, having won two terms as state treasurer following a stint as a state legislator. He ran again in 2012, losing to Brown. He has about $4.3 million remaining in his Senate campaign account, and about $500,000 in a leadership PAC.

Associated Press writer Dan Sewell contribute­d in Cincinnati.

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