Post-Tribune

Braun launches bid for governor

- By Tom Davies

INDIANAPOL­IS — Republican U.S. Sen. Mike Braun formally launched a committee Wednesday for a 2024 campaign for governor in his home state of Indiana, a move that would forego a reelection bid for his Senate seat.

Braun, the 68-year-old wealthy founder of a national auto parts distributi­on business, is the most prominent of several active potential Republican candidates for the field to replace GOP Gov. Eric Holcomb, who can’t seek reelection because of term limits.

Braun would be heavily favored to win a second Senate term in 2024 from Republican-dominated

Indiana after fueling his successful 2018 Senate campaign with more than $11 million in personal loans to go from being a little-known businessma­n to unseating Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly.

Josh Kelley, Braun’s chief of staff and senior political adviser, acknowledg­ed the campaign filing with the Indiana Election Division and said in an email that Braun “will be making an official announceme­nt of his candidacy very soon.”

Braun campaigned in 2018 as a strong supporter of then-President Donald Trump and has often aligned himself closely with U.S. Senate Republican­s’ most conservati­ve members while bemoaning the Senate’s deliberati­ve pace. He supported the failed attempt by Florida Sen. Rick Scott this month to unseat Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, saying in a statement that “Hoosier conservati­ve Republican­s are sick and tired of the status quo.”

Braun had announced he would vote against accepting Electoral College votes from some states Democrat Joe Biden won in the

2020 election over Trump. But he changed his mind after the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol, saying the violence “changed things drasticall­y” and that he would “vote to get this ugly day behind us.”

He has split recently with fellow Indiana Republican­s, publicly denouncing Holcomb’s decision in March to veto a GOP-backed bill banning transgende­r girls from competing in Indiana girls sports teams.

Braun also split from Indiana GOP Sen. Todd Young, who won reelection in November, by voting Tuesday against a bill protecting same-sex and interracia­l marriages across the country. Braun earlier this year told reporters that the U.S. Supreme Court was wrong with its 1967 decision legalizing interracia­l marriage nationwide, while later saying he misunderst­ood the question.

State Democratic Chairman Mike Schmuhl faulted Braun for his vote on the marriage bill and his opposition to Biden’s COVID19 economic recovery programs.

“Mike Braun has done very little to improve Indiana as a U.S. senator and he surely won’t do it as governor,” Schmuhl said in a statement. “Braun’s half-hearted efforts have been ineffectiv­e, and he’s been more likely to be spotted on national cable TV shows than talking to Hoosiers in real life about solving real problems.”

Indiana’s open governor’s seat has many possible candidates.

Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, who was Holcomb’s 2016 and 2020 running mate, has raised more than $2 million for an unannounce­d campaign, and Fort Wayne businessma­n Eric Doden has raised a similar amount since he kicked off a campaign last year.

Republican U.S. Rep. Trey

Hollingswo­rth alluded to a possible run for other political offices when he announced in January that he wouldn’t seek reelection — and some Republican­s are hoping that former Gov. Mitch Daniels will seek a Statehouse return after he steps down as Purdue University’s president at the end of December.

Braun said two weeks ago that he wouldn’t be discourage­d by the possible Republican field for governor and that he wouldn’t spend his own money again on a 2024 campaign.

Two Republican­s with reported interest in running for the Senate seat if Braun doesn’t seek reelection are U.S. Rep. Jim Banks, who unsuccessf­ully sought a top House Republican position earlier this month, and U.S. Rep. Victoria Spartz.

Discussion­s of possible 2024 statewide Democratic candidates have centered on Donnelly, who is now President Joe Biden’s ambassador to the Vatican, and former state schools superinten­dent Jennifer McCormick, who won election as a Republican in 2016 but has since switched parties after disputes with Republican Statehouse leaders over education policies.

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Braun
 ?? CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP ?? President Donald Trump, left, and Republican senatorial candidate Mike Braun shake hands in 2018.
CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP President Donald Trump, left, and Republican senatorial candidate Mike Braun shake hands in 2018.

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