Wapakoneta Daily News

Trump-backed lobbyist vs. state lawmaker

- By JULIE CARR SMYTH ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The hottest congressio­nal race

in next week’s off-year election pits a Donald Trump-backed

coal lobbyist against a twoterm state lawmaker in central Ohio.

Political newcomer Mike Carey, the Republican, is favored to win Tuesday’s contest,

but state Rep. Allison Russo is mounting Democrats’ strongest challenge in the Gopleaning 15th Congressio­nal District in years.

The seat opened up in May, when veteran Republican U.S. Rep. Steve Stivers retired to lead the Ohio Chamber of Commerce. A centrist and former campaign chair for House Republican­s, Stivers had held the seat for a decade.

The gerrymande­red district stretches across all or part of 12 Ohio counties, from tiny impoverish­ed Vinton County in the Appalachia­n foothills to the Columbus suburb of Upper Arlington, one of the state’s wealthiest communitie­s.

Buoyed by the former president’s endorsemen­t, Carey won a crowded Republican primary in August in which

Stivers endorsed someone

else. That signaled Trump’s continued sway in a state he twice won by more than 8 percentage points.

However, Russo slightly outraised Carey for the fundraisin­g period ending in midoctober, as national groups

such as EMILY’S List and the League of Conservati­on Voters saw promise in her run and donated. The public

health policy consultant also is backed by 314 Action, which

supports scientists in public office.

Carey, 50, of Columbus, has sought to leverage his lobbying experience in Columbus and Washington with voters, while emphasizin­g that he

has never held elected office and would go to Washington as a “political outsider.” Among the Army veteran’s endorsemen­ts are the National Federation of Independen­t Business-ohio and the Fraternal Order of Police.

Russo, 45, of Upper Arlington, has sought in her TV ads,

many featuring her young daughter, to tie Carey to the legislatio­n at the heart of a

sweeping corruption scandal centered on former Republican Ohio House Speaker Larry Householde­r, House Bill 6 — a claim Carey has fought.

Carey has been vice president of government affairs for American Consolidat­ed Natural Resources, formerly Murray Energy, since 2012. He also

chairs the board of the Ohio Coal Associatio­n.

Murray was among corporate contributo­rs involved in an elaborate $60 million bribery-for-energy legislatio­n

scheme alleged by federal prosecutor­s, though the coal giant has not been charged with a crime in the ongoing probe. Russo’s ad targets statements by Carey that he didn’t lobby on the bill, when he did. He says that’s a mischaract­erization.

“We supported people across the country, and efforts across the country, for Republican­s that supported coal,” Carey

said in an interview in August. “But as far as House Bill 6, look, we were completely

neutral on the bill, because we had companies that were for the bill and we had companies that were against the bill.”

Russo tells voters she would be “a voice for working families” if elected, rejecting

claims in grainy Carey attack ads that paint her as a Democratic loyalist who would vote “100% with Nancy Pelosi”

when she got to Washington.

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