USA TODAY International Edition

GOP field in Ohio clings to Trump

Vance got endorsemen­t, but rivals still tout ties

- Rick Rouan

GROVE CITY, Ohio – In the waning days of a bruising Republican primary for an open U. S. Senate seat, Don Cary was still on the fence.

The 75- year- old had all but disqualified J. D. Vance from his ballot because of the venture capitalist and author’s comments about former President Donald Trump. But Cary said he had to reconsider when Trump set aside those comments to back Vance.

“I wasn’t going to vote for him to be honest with you,” Cary told USA TODAY after a Vance campaign event at a central Ohio brewery last week. Cary said he was considerin­g Josh Mandel or Mike Gibbons before Trump weighed in.

After Trump’s endorsemen­t on April 15, Vance’s campaign is surging. Vance jumped in a Fox News poll from a distant third to leading the pack, though about a quarter of voters are undecided.

Even after Vance won the Trump endorsemen­t, the candidates who fought for the former president’s support haven’t stopped using him in their campaigns. Their websites and advertisem­ents overtly reference connection­s to Trump, who stumped for Vance at a rally in central Ohio two weeks before the state’s primary Tuesday.

A Trump spokespers­on did not respond to a request for comment.

Most of the competitor­s in the crowded field spent the better part of a year marketing themselves as the “Trump candidate.”

Voters have been casting early ballots for weeks.

The Club for Growth has been working in open rebellion against Trump’s endorsemen­t.

The Washington- based conservati­ve group backs Mandel, even as the former Ohio treasurer touts himself as “pro- Trump.”

Jane Timken, who rose to her post

as Ohio GOP chair in 2017 with Trump’s backing, features photos of herself with the former president on her campaign website. Gibbons notes on his website that he raised money for Trump’s campaigns.

“They’re doing what they can. The Trump endorsemen­t was always going to be the biggest thing to happen in this race,” said Mike Hartley, an Ohio- based GOP consultant who is not involved in the race. “When it drops, there’s one person who wins, and everybody else just tries to survive.”

Vance rises after endorsemen­t

Days after giving Vance his endorsemen­t, Trump told a crowd at a rally in Ohio that Vance was the GOP’s best shot to take down Tim Ryan, the northeast Ohio congressma­n running in the Democratic primary for the open Senate seat. “I studied this very closely,” Trump said. “I like a lot of the other people in the race. I liked them a lot. But we have to pick the one that’s going to win. This guy is tough as hell. He’s going to win.”

Vance’s fundraisin­g took off after the endorsemen­t, and his poll numbers spiked.

That hasn’t stopped other candidates from connecting themselves with Trump. A fundraisin­g text message from Timken’s campaign is signed from Kellyanne Conway and includes a photo of the former president with his ex- adviser. Gibbons doesn’t mention Trump in his most recent ad but regularly repeats on social media that he supports Trump- era policies.

In a Fox News poll last month, about 42% of respondent­s said Trump’s endorsemen­t made them more supportive of Vance.

The survey showed Gibbons fading and Timken sitting in single- digits. Gibbons, the front- runner in early March, dropped to third, and state Sen. Matt Dolan, who did not seek Trump’s support, was a few percentage points behind him, according to the poll.

Mandel maintained his support more than the other candidates, but the poll showed Vance sailed past him with 23% support, more than double what he had before the endorsemen­t, and Mandel went down 2 points to 18%.

Mandel’s campaign slogan – “ProGod. Pro- Gun. Pro- Trump.” – hasn’t changed, but he has slowed his mentioning of Trump on social media channels.

“I continue to be a proud supporter of President Trump and the America First agenda,” Mandel posted on social media April 15, the day Trump announced his endorsemen­t. He hasn’t mentioned him since.

The Club for Growth backing Mandel has gone on the attack against not just Vance but Trump.

A Club for Growth ad questions Trump’s endorsemen­t of Vance.

“Look, I love Trump, but he’s getting it wrong with J. D. Vance,” a man says in the ad.

Representa­tives from the Mandel, Gibbons and Timken campaigns did not respond to a request for comment.

Ohio voters sorting it out

The ad highlights comments by Vance in 2016 that were critical of Trump, who said at a rally in April that he looked past those comments to support the candidate he thought had the best shot to win.

Those comments and other candidates’ continued associatio­n with Trump could confuse voters, said Kyle Kondik, an Ohio native and managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball.

“The mixed messages they may be hearing could be a problem for Vance and Trump as they seek to get the word out about the endorsemen­t,” he said.

Retired dietitian Bonnie Boyd told USA TODAY after a Vance campaign event that she didn’t plan to vote for him because of those comments but that Trump’s endorsemen­t changed her mind.

“When I heard him speak, he was good,” said Boyd, 70, of Columbus. “But I couldn’t bring my heart to vote for him if Trump did not support him.”

Hartley, the GOP consultant, said Ohio voters will sort out the difference between Trump’s endorsed candidate and those trying to exploit their associatio­n with him.

“For so long, Ohio had been the center of the political universe. It had been the swing state – not a swing state, but the swing state,” he said. “Because of that, the voters in Ohio are pretty sophistica­ted because for two generation­s, it had been about Ohio.”

Ohio Northern political science professor Rob Alexander said the candidates Trump rejected had little choice but to keep leaning into their connection­s to him.

“Trump is super omnipotent in this campaign,” Alexander said. “He’s everywhere and did really well in the last two campaigns.”

Alexander said Vance could face headwinds in the final days of the campaign now that he is considered the front- runner. Some Republican­s wonder whether Trump made the right choice, he said.

Trump supporter Tim Smith, 71, of Sunbury, Ohio, said after Vance’s stop last week in Grove City, southwest of Columbus, that he was considerin­g a vote for Gibbons but wanted to hear from Vance.

He agreed with much of what Vance said during a 45- minute stump speech and question- and- answer session with a group of about 50 voters packed into a small room in the back of a brewpub. Even so, he remained undecided.

Vance railed against “weak Republican­s” in Washington, a southern border he said is not secure, technology companies “censoring conservati­ves” and the decline of American manufactur­ing.

“The question we’re deciding is what kind of Republican Party we’re going to have: a Republican Party that’s led by people who put the interest of our citizens first or a Republican Party that cares more about China than it does about our own country,” Vance said as he concluded the event. “That’s the debate.”

“The Trump endorsemen­t was always going to be the biggest thing to happen in this race. When it drops, there’s one person who wins, and everybody else just tries to survive.”

Mike Hartley GOP consultant

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 ?? ANDREW SPEAR/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Mike Gibbons, left, and Josh Mandel argue at the FreedomWor­ks forum for Ohio’s Republican Senate candidates March 18 in Columbus. Candidates Matt Dolan, Jane Timken and J. D. Vance also attended.
ANDREW SPEAR/ GETTY IMAGES Mike Gibbons, left, and Josh Mandel argue at the FreedomWor­ks forum for Ohio’s Republican Senate candidates March 18 in Columbus. Candidates Matt Dolan, Jane Timken and J. D. Vance also attended.

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