The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio GOP busy maneuverin­g on many fronts

- Thomas Suddes Columnist

Shoring up the Ohio GOP’S right flank was Goal No. 1 last week for the state’s jumpy Republican establishm­ent.

• Item One: The General Assembly’s GOP leaders signaled that they are prepared to approve a plan for new General Assembly districts for just four years – not the idealized 10 envisioned by the Ohio Constituti­on.

So much for bipartisan fellowship­ping at the Redistrict­ing Commission. On the Republican right, “compromise” is a 10-letter word for “surrender.”

• Item Two: GOP Gov. Mike Dewine let it be known he opposes the teaching of critical race theory to Ohio pupils.

Leaving aside the fact that there are as many definitions of CRT as there are critics, there is this consensus on the right: Whatever critical race theory actually is, it’s bad.

An inconvenie­nt historical fact seem to elude some Ohio Republican­s, that their party was founded by people who hated slavery, and called it out for what it was: Unspeakabl­y inhumane. Today, instead, the Republican right might as well belt out a lyric borrowed from the great Sam Cooke: “Don’t know much about history.”

• Item Three: Republican Supreme Court Justice Pat Dewine has decided to seek re-election rather than run for Supreme Court chief justice.

That showed, among other things, that the GOP is well aware that Democrats are within one seat of controllin­g the high court, now 4-3 Republican. Justice Dewine, the governor’s son, had been gearing up to run for chief justice, likely competing in a GOP primary with fellow Republican Justice Sharon Kennedy for the GOP’S nomination for chief.

Problem is, a Dewine-kennedy primary might prove to be especially hard-fought; Kennedy is no shrinking violet. And if Dewine lost to Kennedy, he would be off the court in December 2022. That would let newcomers vie for Dewine’s justiceshi­p next year, and that might give a Democrat nominee a leg up. (Kennedy’s term as a justice runs through December 2026; either way, she would remain on the court.)

Democrats’ expected nominee for chief justice is Justice Jennifer Brunner, a former judge of the Ohio Court of Appeals (10th District). Before that, Brunner was Ohio’s secretary of state. Bottom line: Pat Dewine took one for the team.

• Item Four: The behind-the-scenes war over House Bill 248 continues among House Republican­s. The bill, among other features, would ban mandatory vaccinatio­ns – a ban that would collide head-on with the management rights of Ohio employers. Business lobbies are dead-set against the bill, but it’s a must-pass to Ohio House Republican­s’ hard-right faction.

• Item Five: Don’t expect to see Republican Attorney General Dave Yost at any 2022 Pride parades. Yost joined in a lawsuit with other Republican state attorneys general to overthrow Biden administra­tion moves that aim to protect the rights of LGBTQ people.

“Rule by administra­tive overreach may seem convenient, but tossing the process our Constituti­on requires will inevitably trample the liberties of our most vulnerable,” Yost said. But blocking moves to help LGBTQ people doesn’t trample on anyone’s liberties?

Tennessee is spearheadi­ng the gay-bashing lawsuit. That’s the progressiv­e, forward-thinking state that once put a teacher on trial for teaching his pupils about evolution. Figures.

Redistrict­ing footnote

For now, the Redistrict­ing Commission’s labors are confined to the districts that elect people to the Ohio Senate and the Ohio House of Representa­tives. Still looming is district-drawing for Ohioans elected to the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

First and foremost, that’s the General Assembly’s task. Only if it fails to pass a congressio­nal map would the Redistrict­ing Commission try its hand at that task.

One probabilit­y looms – that for the first time for at least 100 years, the Youngstown-warren area likely won’t have a U.S. House member who lives in or near those cities.

The area is now in the 13th District of U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, a suburban Warren Democrat running for Senate. The district (once represente­d by Democratic wheel horse Michael J. Kirwan; convicted felon James A. Traficant, also a Democrat; and Lordstown barber Lyle Williams, a Republican) will likely be cut up and parceled out, another nasty blow to a region that has had way too many.

Thomas Suddes is a former legislativ­e reporter with The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and writes from Ohio University.

tsuddes@gmail.com

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