The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

DeWine sees growing criticism from fellow GOP

- By John Seewer and Andrew WelshHuggi­ns

COLUMBUS» For months, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine steered cleared of secondgues­sing President Donald Trump, a fellow Republican, despite their polaroppos­ite responses to the pandemic.

The governor’s reward? A suggestion by the president that another Republican should challenge him in Ohio’s 2022 election.

Trump’s warning came after DeWine said it was time to realize Joe Biden had won the presidenti­al race. That was just the start of a rough few days last week for the Ohio governor, who is dealing with a state he says “is on fire” with skyrocketi­ng coronaviru­s cases, and now finds himself fending off questions about his political future.

DeWine is feeling the heat mostly from within his party. Statehouse Republican­s pushed forward a series of bills last week that would limit his authority to issue orders in response to the pandemic, and they sent a letter criticizin­g him for telling businesses to act as “mask police.”

On top of that, a group of anti-abortion organizati­ons announced they no longer had confidence in DeWine because of his choices to lead the state’s health department. It was another surprising turn against a governor who last year signed one of the most stringent abortion restrictio­ns in the nation.

GOP dissatisfa­ction with the governor is leading to plenty of talk about who might run in a Republican primary against DeWine, who has been elected to almost every position in Ohio during a 40-year career and could rightly be considered the state’s most successful politician in decades.

One name being brought up is U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, a hard-right conservati­ve who is one of Trump’s biggest allies in Congress and has the name recognitio­n and fundraisin­g capability needed for a statewide run.

Jordan hasn’t said whether he has any interest in running for governor, but several times recently he has poked fun on Twitter at DeWine’s mask and curfew orders.

Former Republican U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci, who ran a failed U.S. Senate campaign two years ago, is thought to be considerin­g a run and at the same time has been unleashing a string of tweets criticizin­g DeWine’s handling of the pandemic.

DeWine, 73, said this past week he’s “not spending much time thinking about politics at this point. We have a pandemic to deal with.”

“The Mike DeWine that you see today is the same Mike DeWine that got elected,” he said a day after ordering a statewide curfew. “I am pro-life — I’m completely pro-life. And that means I worry about the child before it’s born, and I worry about the 80-year-old who’s in a nursing home who might get COVID.”

Ohio GOP strategist Terry Casey said it’s likely that a Republican will challenge DeWine, but “the question is whether anybody with name ID and money, who knows who to run a state campaign, will actually file.”

Polling still shows DeWine has strong and broad support despite the frustratio­n and unhappines­s stemming from the pandemic, Casey said.

Early during the coronaviru­s outbreak, DeWine won praise for his aggressive steps to slow the spread, but since then he has encountere­d criticism from those who think he went too far with business shutdowns and believe he backed down from protecting the public.

“A lot of people around here enjoy their liberties and feel he’s infringing on them in a big way,” said Richard Delzeith, the GOP chair in rural Mercer County, where DeWine won 80% of the vote two years ago. “People have lost their businesses to the shutdown. They will definitely remember this.”

“People tell me they will never vote for DeWine ever again,” he said. “That’s pretty strong wording.”

The party’s leaders in a handful of other rural counties said it’s too early to know whether the frustratio­n out there now will last.

Lacie Sims, who owns the Village Family Restaurant in Waynesvill­e, a village in southweste­rn Ohio, said DeWine “doesn’t have many supporters here.”

She voted for him in 2018 but soured on him after he shut down indoor dining last winter before many counties, including hers, had any confirmed cases. Her restaurant has lost $250,000 since then, she said.

Sims, who wanted it known that she takes the virus seriously, said she would welcome a Republican primary for governor in 2022.

 ?? J.D. POOLEY — SENTINEL-TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine looks on during a press conference Wednesday, Nov. 18, at Toledo Express Airport in Swanton.
J.D. POOLEY — SENTINEL-TRIBUNE VIA AP Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine looks on during a press conference Wednesday, Nov. 18, at Toledo Express Airport in Swanton.

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