The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)
Doctor groups divided over 2018 governor’s race endorsement
COLUMBUS » Doctors in Ohio sparred Monday over which candidate in the state’s fall governor’s race is best for health care.
In July, Republican Attorney General Mike DeWine landed the coveted endorsement of the Ohio State Medical Association, the state’s largest and oldest physician group.
Monday nearly 200 doctors and medical students affiliated with the liberal Physicians Action Network objected to that decision, calling Democrat Richard Cordray the better choice.
“We find it disappointing that the Ohio State Medical Association would reject so many of their own positions and endorse a politician whose career opposes what the association and we as physicians value,” the Cordray backers wrote.
Their letter cited DeWine’s opposition to the federal Affordable Care Act and an earlier statement that the Medicaid expansion would be “unsustainable.” DeWine later clarified that he would preserve the expansion, but with improvements, if elected. The key shift helped secure the medical association’s endorsement.
“While Mike DeWine may have genuinely had a change of heart regarding Medicaid and pre-existing conditions, the importance of the OSMA’s advocacy for doctors and our patients, as well as the fickle nature of politics, requires caution and healthy skepticism,” the network’s doctors wrote.
The dispute comes two days before DeWine and Cordray face off in the first of three gubernatorial debates. The event Wednesday will take place in Dayton, with subsequent debates in Marietta on Oct. 1 and in Cleveland on Oct. 8.
The medical association endorsement of DeWine noted his record of public service and government experience held by his running mate, Secretary of State Jon Husted. It also cited DeWine’s support for increasing treatment options for opioid addiction, lowering prescription drug costs and reducing physician administrative burdens.