New York Daily News

Trump-voter vet lost Dem race, wants to be Prez

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

A failed congressio­nal candidate in West Virginia announced Monday that he will run for the White House in 2020 — making him among the first Democrats to take on Republican Trump.

Richard Ojeda, a decorated Iraq War Army veteran who lost a Democratic bid to represent West Virginia’s 3rd Congressio­nal District, posted a video to his campaign’s Facebook page claiming he’s ready for the White House.

“We got a long ways to go and it’s going to be a long fight, but we’re going to do this together because I’m Richard Ojeda and I’m running for President of the United States of America,” Ojeda, 48, said in the video.

The square-jawed, heavily tattooed ex-soldier said his first campaign promise will be to end political corruption by capping the amount of money Presidents and members of Congress can accumulate while in office. “We have elected officials who say they are going to run for office to serve the people, but in reality they legislate themselves into wealth,” Ojeda said.

He also took a swipe at President Trump’s family foundation, which has drawn the scrutiny of the New York attorney general’s office amid reports that the charity organizati­on run by his children makes selfservin­g deals that benefit the Trumps’ business interests.

“What I believe in is that everyone who runs for federal office has to prove that they mean what they say when they talk about sacrifice. That means you are given a net worth of $1 million and anything above that you donate to charity, and I don’t mean your children — to actual charity,” Ojeda said.

Ojeda, currently serving in the state Senate, voted for Trump in 2016. But the Dem has since soured on the President, accusing him of not living up to his campaign promises.

In his failed House bid, Ojeda tried to curry favor with West Virginia’s conservati­ve constituen­ts by arguing that both Republican­s and Democrats have lost touch with the people they are supposed to represent.

Ojeda (photo) lost by 12% to Republican Carol Miller, but some strategist­s argued the relatively tight contest was a sign of a burgeoning wave of rural Democratic enthusiasm.

In the 2016 general election, Trump won the same district by 49 points against rival Hillary Clinton.

The former Army paratroope­r made national headlines during the midterms for supporting a teachers strike and painting himself as a no-frills alternativ­e to the Democratic establishm­ent.

Yet he’s not the first — or even best-known — candidate to go up against Trump. Maryland Rep. John Delaney became the first Democrat to officially announce a 2020 bid, filing paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on July 28, 2017.

A number of high-profile Dems, including former Vice President Joe Biden and California Sen. Kamala Harris, have been rumored to be considerin­g runs for the White House.

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AP

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