The Guardian (USA)

Sherrod Brown in tough election fight as Ohio crash tests Democrats’ chances

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US Senator Sherrod Brown has survived a decade of statewide Democratic losses in Ohio by building a reputation as the rare person in his party who can still connect with the white working-class voters who have increasing­ly shifted to Republican­s.

But as he heads into what could be a tough re-election campaign, Brown is facing a critical test in the aftermath of the train derailment in the eastern Ohio village of East Palestine.

Republican­s, including Donald Trump, argue the federal response shows Democrats have left such regions behind. Brown is under heightened pressure to prove them wrong.

In the early stages of what will be a fierce fight for control of Congress next year, the response to the train derailment in Ohio is emerging as an early barometer of whether Democrats can rebuild support in working-class communitie­s.

Brown has laid the blame for the disaster squarely on the corporatio­n that operated the train that derailed, Norfolk Southern, and positioned himself as a fighter for places like East Palestine.

“It’s the kind of community that’s too often forgotten about or exploited by corporate America,” he told reporters this week. “My job is always to fight for the dignity of work, to fight for these workers, to fight for these communitie­s, to make sure this never happens again. I’ll work with anyone to do that and to get these reforms passed.”

Brown has also made a pair of visits to East Palestine to meet with emergency workers and local residents. And this week, he followed with bipartisan legislativ­e action to call on federal agencies to make long-term medical testing available to residents as well as proposing new federal safety regulation­s and financial consequenc­es for train operators.

As the images of black, billowing smoke from the wreck and concerns of local residents morphed from a manmade disaster into a political battlegrou­nd, there is a growing sense among lawmakers that locals don’t appreciate being used as a political backdrop.

Republican congressma­n Bill Johnson, who represents the area, called on Joe Biden to visit the community. The US president has not made the trip and transporta­tion secretary Pete Buttigieg’s trip there was pre-empted by Trump last week.

The stretches of eastern Ohio industrial towns have tilted increasing­ly to Republican­s over the last decade, contributi­ng to Ohio’s shift from a presidenti­al bellwether to a potential GOP

stronghold. Republican­s have cast it as a forgotten swath of the country – fertile ground for Trump’s grievance politics.

But the region is also familiar ground for Brown, who has become a mainstay in the state’s political constellat­ion with a populist brand. Brown, who wears suits purchased from a union shop near his Cleveland home, has developed an old-school network of union support over a decades-long political career that began in the General Assembly.

David Pepper, a former chair of the Ohio Democratic party, says Brown’s “secret sauce” is his willingnes­s to take his made-in-America, union-strong messaging to the people outside cities.

“That guy is fighting against big corporatio­ns for the little guy,” Pepper said.

For Democrats, he’s proof they can still win in the Buckeye State. But Ohio is both a must-win presidenti­al state for Republican­s and a potential path to a Senate majority, and Brown sits atop the list of seats that could be flipped in 2024.

 ?? Photograph: Alan Freed/Reuters ?? Brown has laid the blame for the disaster squarely on the corporatio­n that operated the train that derailed, Norfolk Southern.
Photograph: Alan Freed/Reuters Brown has laid the blame for the disaster squarely on the corporatio­n that operated the train that derailed, Norfolk Southern.

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