The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Governor’s race to see record number of women

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS >> A battle for the women’s vote looks to be on in Ohio.

As Democratic Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley joined the race for governor Monday and with Republican Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor expected to join the contest, the battlegrou­nd state could see a record number of female candidates on next year’s ballot for Ohio’s highest state office.

The phenomenon comes a year after Hillary Clinton became the first female major-party presidenti­al nominee and as well-attended marches focused on women’s issues have taken place across the U.S.

Whaley, 41, says she wants to bring back jobs that pay enough to raise a family, hold pharmaceut­ical companies accountabl­e for their role in the state’s opioid crisis and represent those who have become invisible to politician­s in Columbus.

She joins former U.S. Rep. Betty Sutton and former state Rep. Connie Pillich in the Democratic primary, along with state Sen. Joe Schiavoni.

Taylor, a former state auditor, and Attorney General Mike DeWine are widely expected to seek the Republican gubernator­ial nomination. They would join a field that now includes U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci and Secretary of State Jon Husted. Husted joined the race Sunday and has embarked on a crossstate announceme­nt tour this week.

Whaley said she’s pleased to be running with other women in the race.

“We get to talk more about the issues and what we can do for our state, rather than being a siloed woman candidate,” she said.

Mark Caleb Smith, director of the Center for Political Studies at Cedarville University, said Clinton’s Democratic campaign last year “certainly gave women a sense of what is possible.” Another contributi­ng factor, he said, is the increasing­ly more diverse U.S. political class, positionin­g more women with the experience to seek the highest offices.

Throughout history, fewer than four dozen females have served or are serving as state governors. But it’s become increasing­ly common for women to be elected to the office in recent decades.

Still, Smith said, so few women have run for governor before in Ohio that “we have no real tradition of this necessaril­y” to look to as a guide.

“I’m not sure you can assume that if a woman runs for statewide office that she’s necessaril­y going to get a large surge of support (from female voters),” he said.

Ohio’s only woman governor, Republican Nancy Hollister, served 11 days beginning in December 1998. As then-Gov. George Voinovich’s lieutenant governor, she stepped into the job when he was elected to a seat in the U.S. Senate and left the brief vacancy. Hollister served until the term of the next governor, Republican Bob Taft, began that January.

Interviewe­d Monday, Hollister said she doesn’t believe Clinton’s campaign was a primary factor, but that women are simply eager to get engaged and share their skills. She said having many women running would be “super.”

“So a governor has to be able to reach out and touch a number of folks, from urban, suburban and rural agricultur­e (areas). I mean, you have to be multifacet­ed,” she said. “And I think women have great talent for that.”

Sandy Theis, who heads the liberal think tank ProgressOh­io, also said it isn’t all about Hillary Clinton. She cited frustratio­n over policy issues — particular­ly health care and abortion — that are driving a surge in Democratic female candidates at all levels.

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