Chattanooga Times Free Press

Fight over foreign money in politics stymies deal to keep Biden on ballot

- BY JULIE CARR SMYTH

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The question of whether Democratic President Joe Biden will appear on Ohio’s fall ballot has become entangled in a partisan legislativ­e fight to keep foreign money out of state ballot campaigns, a year after cash tied to a Swiss billionair­e boosted a successful effort to enshrine abortion rights in the solidly red state’s constituti­on.

On Wednesday, against the backdrop of a festering Republican leadership fight that’s roiled lawmaking since last year, Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose’s proposal to ban foreign money from initiative campaigns became the poison pill that prevented a final solution for adjusting an Aug. 7 ballot deadline that precedes the Democratic National Convention.

Thursday marked the last day legislator­s could pass the fix with a simple majority, and no sessions were held.

All four Republican and Democratic leaders at the Statehouse still say they’re confident the president will appear on Ohio’s ballot. It’s the how and when that remain a mystery.

Republican­s wanted to use Biden’s predicamen­t as leverage to pass a ban on foreign nationals contributi­ng to ballot campaigns.

The legislatio­n stemmed from the involvemen­t in a pair of heated ballot campaigns last year of Hansjörg Wyss, a Swiss billionair­e who has funneled hundreds of millions of dollars in recent years into 501(c) nonprofit organizati­ons backing liberal U.S. political causes. A January report issued by LaRose found that more than $207 million flowing from Wyss-backed entities went to three groups that, in turn, donated a combined $3.9 million to help pass November’s Issue 1, the abortion measure, and to thwart an earlier proposed constituti­onal amendment that would have made passing it more difficult.

In order to garner the necessary Republican votes to help Biden out, Republican Senate President Matt Huffman said a compromise was struck to combine the foreign nationals legislatio­n with the language adjusting the ballot deadline. Both proposals were folded into another bill allowing candidates to pay for child care with campaign funds.

After fractious debate, the measure cleared the Senate along party lines. Democrats called combining the measures “a dirty trick” and “the worst kind of politics.”

Huffman said: “Eventually Joe Biden is going to be on the ballot through whatever means. I think that’s fair for us to come together and also say no foreign money in Ohio elections.”

But GOP House Speaker Jason Stephens, who depends on the support of minority Democrats to keep his job, had been working on a different solution.

Stephens envisioned a “clean” bill that called for moving the ballot deadline to Aug. 23, the day after Democrats’ convention. It also included a long-term solution allowing extensions in future years when either party’s nominating convention falls less than 90 days before the election.

This would be the third time since 2012 Ohio has had to change its ballot deadline to accommodat­e conflicts faced by presidenti­al candidates of both parties.

But that House plan stalled after it was informally passed, and when Stephens declined to call a vote on the Senate’s ballot fix, the chamber erupted. Fellow Republican­s aligned against Stephens jeered and booed. Some cried, “Shame!”

LaRose, who initially identified the calendar glitch, issued a statement condemning the House’s inaction. Though the chamber’s majority is Republican, he said it appeared that “Democrats are more interested in protecting foreign billionair­es who want to bankroll Ohio’s elections than in getting their presidenti­al candidate on the ballot.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON ?? President Joe Biden speaks April 12 in Washington.
AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON President Joe Biden speaks April 12 in Washington.

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