The Guardian (USA)

The Democrats must keep the Senate at all costs – and the coalmine canary is Ohio

- Katrina vanden Heuvel

Breathless coverage of the presidenti­al horserace has begun, and it seems all but inevitable: we’re heading towards a Trump-Biden rematch. Democrats need to maintain their razor-thin Senate majority if they hope to enact President Biden’s secondterm agenda – or, God forbid, fend off Trump’s.

That prospect hinges on a few incumbents facing tough re-election fights. The most critical, must-win seat belongs to Sherrod Brown, a senator from Ohio.

The son of a doctor father and activist mother, Brown received his political education in union halls in the House district he was elected to represent at the age of 23, and has touted “the dignity of work” ever since. He refused to register for a congressio­nal healthcare plan for his first 18 years in the US House of Representa­tives, waiting until everyday Americans had access to a federally subsidized plan, too. He opposed free-trade deals from Presidents Clinton and Obama and proudly called himself a “Labor Democrat” before unions were cool.

Over three terms, Brown has maintained his record as, by one measure, the 12th most progressiv­e member of the US Senate, even as his constituen­cy has grown increasing­ly more conservati­ve. Brown won a third term in 2018 by seven points in a state that voted for Trump by eight points in the election that came before and the one that came after.

Despite decades in Washington, Brown still strikes Ohioans as not only likable, but familiar. He wears a canary pin on his lapel, given to him by a steelworke­r to commemorat­e the struggle for workers’ rights. He loves telling people he drives a Jeep Cherokee made in Toledo. He brags about his wife, the Pulitzer prize-winning writer Connie Schultz, and his rescue pups, named after Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the labor organizer Walter Reuther. It seems that every profile ever written describes Brown as “rumpled”, “authentic” or “gravelly-voiced”.

Unlike his fellow Ohio senator, JD Vance, Brown does not just play a populist for the press. When GM shuttered its Lordstown, Ohio, plant in 2019, putting thousands of auto workers out of work, Brown called local UAW leaders immediatel­y to help. More recently, he led efforts to expand union protection­s for Ohioans building electric vehicle batteries.

And while Biden has taken heat for failing to visit East Palestine, Ohio, following the February 2023 train derailment that spewed hazardous toxins into the air and displaced thousands of residents, Brown has visited the town six times. He’s currently urging the White House and Fema to issue an emergency declaratio­n to get residents recovery resources they desperatel­y need.

As one voter, a 56-year-old veteran who lives outside East Palestine, told the Washington Post: “He’s always around when something is going on.”

That seems to be his MO on Capitol Hill, too. As chairman of the Senate banking committee, Brown has found issues that align his pro-worker philosophy with popular, timely policies – including some that are even palatable to his Republican colleagues. Since the East Palestine disaster, he has partnered with Vance on railroad safety legislatio­n. He is also working with Senator Tim Scott to crack down on fentanyl trafficker­s and punish failed banking executives by the end of this term.

If Brown’s legislativ­e stock is high, his electoral stakes are even higher. Democrats have 23 Senate seats up for re-election, and – assuming the vicepresid­ent, Kamala Harris, is still there to break the tie – they can only lose one to keep their majority. Though Republican

 ?? Photograph: Tony Dejak/AP ?? ‘Unlike his fellow Ohio senator, JD Vance, Brown does not just play a populist for the press.’
Photograph: Tony Dejak/AP ‘Unlike his fellow Ohio senator, JD Vance, Brown does not just play a populist for the press.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States