The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Kasich, Brown both eyeing 2020 runs

- By Dan Sewell The Associated Press

CINCINNATI >> An all-Ohio presidenti­al election in 2020?

You would get very long odds in Vegas against that happening. It is possible, though, with two of the state’s most popular politician­s considerin­g runs.

Republican Gov. John Kasich says he hasn’t decided about 2020, but he has probably had more Sunday morning TV airtime the past couple years than most televangel­ists. He’s well-acquainted with the early primary state of New Hampshire, where he returned Thursday for a series of public appearance­s.

After comfortabl­y winning re-election Nov. 6 for his third term in the U.S. Senate, Democrat Sherrod Brown acknowledg­ed Monday he has gotten a lot of encouragem­ent and is now “seriously looking” at running for president.

With insights from Josh Pasek, a political scientist who’s just to the north at the University of Michigan, here are reasons why such a 2020 showdown might happen. And why it probably won’t.

How Kasich could win

Since joining the 2016 Republican presidenti­al race more than three years ago, Kasich has presented himself as the contrast to Donald Trump. He has rebuked Trump for divisivene­ss. He has trolled him back on Twitter about links to Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

Kasich has said the Trump-era Republican Party has moved away from traditiona­l GOP principles. He has shown willingnes­s to break with his party by expanding Medicaid in Ohio through Democratic President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul.

If the special counsel probe, new investigat­ions looming from a Democratic-majority House andor Trump’s combative style causes Republican­s to seek an alternativ­e, well, Kasich’s standing right over there.

Why Kasich wouldn’t win

In 2016, Kasich defeated Trump in only one primary — Ohio’s.

Short of impeachmen­t, an economic plunge or other crisis, it’s extremely unlikely that Republican­s would give up on a sitting president, especially one who has shown political resilience.

Pasek said the KasichTrum­p rivalry “really is a battle for what the future of the Republican Party is” and there were signs this month that some suburban voters have Trump fatigue. But Trump still has the upper hand.

Kasich keeps flirting publicly with an independen­t or third-party run. History is against him there.

How Brown could win

Trump knocked down the “Blue Wall” states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia in 2016 while decisively winning Brown’s home state, traditiona­lly a swing state. Brown, a former congressma­n whose won his first Ohio election in 1974, has shown the kind of populist, bluecollar appeal that Trump garnered in those states. He also has a long liberal record to please the party’s traditiona­l base.

Brown has proven ability to attract big-time special-interest campaign donations. He has withstood negative ad barrages in recent campaigns. While Republican­s swept the other partisan statewide offices on Election Day, Brown got more votes than any of them and had 53 percent of the total.

Pasek says Brown isn’t familiar to many rankand-file Democrats outside of Ohio, but he added that’s not necessaril­y a bad thing. Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama are among other Democrats who weren’t well-known nationally at this stage of their presidenti­al campaign cycles.

Why Brown wouldn’t win

After an election remarkable for the successes of Democratic candidates of diverse gender, race and sexuality, a 66-yearold white guy from Ohio might not excite people. Pasek says there are “a lot of competing visions” in the Democratic Party at this point, and it’s not clear yet where Brown fits in.

There’s also the question of whether Brown has the “fire in the belly” to pursue the presidency. Running means many very long days of retail campaignin­g, many nights on the road in Iowa and New Hampshire. Brown has joked that rather than being president, his life’s dream was to be centerfiel­der for the Cleveland Indians.

100 years later?

It’s happened. Republican Sen. Warren G. Harding, from the community of Blooming Grove some 60 miles north of Columbus, defeated Democratic Gov. James Cox, from the village of Jacksonbur­g, nearly 30 miles southwest of Dayton. The 100th anniversar­y of that election will be in 2020.

 ?? PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ohio Gov. John Kasich speaks during the Ohio State of the State address.
PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ohio Gov. John Kasich speaks during the Ohio State of the State address.
 ?? PHIL LONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, talks with reporters after voting in Cleveland.
PHIL LONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, talks with reporters after voting in Cleveland.

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