The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Harassment wave no boon for woman governor candidates

- By Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS » As prediction­s increasing­ly fashion next year’s gubernator­ial race as a faceoff between Democrat Richard Cordray and Republican Mike DeWine, a question smolders: Wasn’t this supposed to be the year of the woman?

In other states, female candidates are seizing on post-Hillary Clinton outrage and a wave of sexual harassment allegation­s against powerful men to bolster their campaigns. In Ohio, a national bellwether state that backed Donald Trump over Clinton last year, the prospects for a female candidate winning the governor’s race don’t appear bright.

Cordray’s long-awaited entry into the Democratic gubernator­ial primary on Tuesday, and his apparent support from former President Barack Obama and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the odds of the three female Democratic candidates — former U.S. Rep. Betty Sutton, Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley and former state Rep. Connie Pillich — winning next year’s primary appear to have gotten longer.

On the Republican side, when DeWine, the state attorney general, and Secretary of State Jon Husted, consolidat­ed their campaigns on Nov. 30, the move was interprete­d as an attempt to intimidate the other two GOP candidates into leaving the race.

One of those candidates is Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, the only woman currently holding a statewide non-judicial office in Ohio and the only Republican woman remaining in any 2018 statewide race.

Energized by January’s Women’s March following Clinton’s defeat, a group of Ohio women in May organized a nonpartisa­n political action committee, The Matriots, to support Ohio female candidates.

Matriots treasurer Sally Crane Cox, a former newspaper publisher, said women have never exceeded 25 percent representa­tion in the Ohio General Assembly and the state has never elected a female U.S. senator or governor.

“What we feel is that issues that have been categorize­d as ‘women’s issues’ can fall under the larger umbrella of ‘economic justice,’ “she said. “The fact that women have never participat­ed fully, or equally, in Ohio politicall­y is the area where we need to concentrat­e right now.”

Asked about the prospect of an all-white, allmale GOP ticket next year, DeWine said he has always placed women in influentia­l roles within operations he leads. He is a former U.S. senator and lieutenant governor.

“I’ll guarantee that when you look at our Cabinet, we’re going to pick from the best and brightest around the state of Ohio,” DeWine said, answering a question on the day he announced Husted would be his running mate. “They’re going to be people that are going to surprise you that are taking jobs, and it’s going to be a very diverse Cabinet.”

Taylor defiantly announced that day that she wouldn’t be forced out of the race.

“The Republican Party talks a lot about diversity, but I believe that it’s time that we stepped up and started reflecting it in our elected officials,” Taylor said in an interview with The Associated Press.

She called the details of how women were treated by powerful men in the ongoing sexual harassment scandals “absolutely outrageous.”

Elizabeth “Liz” Walters, a former Ohio Democratic Party executive director, said the women’s vote — as it always is — will be significan­t next year.

“Women are a very dominant voting bloc in Ohio, generally,” she said. “The Ohio electorate is close to 60 percent women in the general (election), and for the Democratic Party, that’s even higher.”

Walters is concerned that Sutton, Whaley and Pillich are being pushed aside by Cordray, who political analysts think is the Democrats’ best of hope of being elected governor.

 ?? BROOKE LAVALLEY — THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP, FILE ?? Richard Cordray, the former director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, announces that he is a Democratic candidate for Ohio governor at “Lilly’s Kitchen Table” Restaurant in Grove City.
BROOKE LAVALLEY — THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH VIA AP, FILE Richard Cordray, the former director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, announces that he is a Democratic candidate for Ohio governor at “Lilly’s Kitchen Table” Restaurant in Grove City.

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