The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci backs congressio­nal term limits

- By Angie Wang The Associated Press

CINCINNATI » The Republican nominee looking to unseat two-term U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown wants term limits that include only two terms for senators.

U.S. Rep. Jim Renacci, of Wadsworth, announced Tuesday he supports a maximum of three terms for U.S. representa­tives and two for senators. Brown, a Democrat, is pursuing his third sixyear term in office.

Without mentioning Brown by name, Renacci said “career politician­s” who hold office for decades are to blame for the stalemate in the U.S. Senate, and new representa­tives with new ideas are the only way to fix what he called “a broken system.”

“Our representa­tives should go to Washington, get the job done and leave,” Renacci said.

Brown, 65, entered the Senate in 2007 after 14 years in the U.S. House. He’s one of Ohio’s bestknown politician­s. But national Republican­s view him as vulnerable this fall, in part because of President Donald Trump’s strong 2016 victory in the politicall­y divided state.

By signing the pledge, Renacci, 59, agreed to cosponsor and vote for the U.S. Term Limits amendment, a joint resolution introduced to the U.S. House and Senate judiciary committees in January 2017. He also promised he would limit himself to two terms as senator, if elected.

U.S. Term Limits is a Washington-based nonpartisa­n organizati­on that advocates for term limits at all levels of government. According to a its poll conducted with consulting firm McLaughlin and Associates, 82 percent of Americans surveyed support an amendment that would institute congressio­nal term limits.

Renacci added that term limits would bring the politician­s’ priorities back to their constituen­ts.

“Right now, they’re making decisions based on the next election instead of the next generation,” he said.

Renacci is in his fourth congressio­nal term. Preston Maddock, a spokesman for Brown’s campaign, pointed out that means he’s in violation of what Maddock called “a gimmick pledge.”

Renacci’s own tenure in Congress is only one way in which the “career politician” strategy risks backfiring this year.

Republican Attorney General Mike DeWine, at the top of the ticket as the party’s nominee for governor, spent 12 years in the U.S. Senate, four years as Ohio lieutenant governor and eight years as a congressma­n. He also served in the state Legislatur­e.

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