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In Ohio, Mandel's Senate bid faces Dems' scrutiny

October 9, 2012 RSS Feed Print

By DONNA CASSATA, Associated Press

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) — Josh Mandel, the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate, declines to take a stand on the 2009 bailout of the auto industry and reserves judgment on vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan's plans for Medicare.

"I have not come out in support or opposition to the bailout," he said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.

The federal government's decision three years ago to help Chrysler and General Motors is considered crucial in Mandel's home state of Ohio, where some 850,000 are working due to the auto industry. The economy has been on the upswing in the state, with unemployment at 7.2 percent in August, below the national average of 8.1 percent that month.

Pressed for his opinion of the bailout, Mandel said twice: "It depends on who you talk to."

Mandel barely had moved into the state treasurer's office after his November 2010 win before he was running against first-term Sen. Sherrod Brown, a populist Democrat facing strong Republican headwinds statewide.

Democrats say Mandel lacks the experience and substance to earn a seat in the venerable institution. But Ohio is the ultimate battleground prize in the presidential election, and the fate of the Senate candidates is linked closely to President Barack Obama and Republican rival Mitt Romney.

A Republican surge could carry Mandel to victory. Four weeks out, polls show Obama and Brown with a slight edge.

At a recent campaign stop, Mandel joked about his boyish appearance.

"I look 19 years old," the 35-year-old Mandel said. "Twenty," yelled one woman at the small gathering on East Main Street in the heart of southern Ohio's Ross County. Adding to the levity, Mandel riffed on what year he'll be shaving.

For all the good-natured ribbing, this is serious business for Republicans, underscored by a sign on the wall at the GOP storefront — "We need your help taking back America" — as well as the placards along a winding stretch of U.S. 23 south of Chillicothe that urge Ohioans to "Vote Josh Mandel, Change Washington."

Early in this election, Republicans had a wealth of possibilities for gaining majority control of the Senate since Democrats were defending 23 seats — with several vulnerable incumbents — to the GOP's 10. The Republican options have narrowed considerably with the implosion of Republican Todd Akin in a Missouri race against Sen. Claire McCaskill, the retirement of Sen. Olympia Snowe in Maine and surprisingly competitive races in Indiana and Arizona.

Republicans counter that Democratic-leaning Connecticut could elect Republican Linda McMahon, giving them another option for gaining Senate control. Republicans need a net gain of four seats to take charge, three if Romney wins the presidency. Ryan as vice president would break any tie votes.

Mandel is the GOP hope in Ohio after the Republican wave of 2010 elected John Kasich governor, sent Rob Portman to the Senate and churned out multiple wins in the U.S. House and state Legislature. The onetime city councilman, state legislator and Marine who did two tours in Iraq is intent on continuing the trend against the 59-year-old Brown.

"He seems like a nice kid," said Mary Jane Hatmaker, 81, of Chillicothe after hearing Mandel's presentation.

Democrats scoff and say the kid can't handle the truth and hasn't done his homework.

"Josh Mandel should be ashamed of himself for ... ignoring his job as treasurer so he could run a campaign that's ranged from dishonest and embarrassing to downright dirty," said Justin Barasky, a spokesman for the Brown campaign.

While Mandel won't take a stand on the auto bailout, he eagerly blames Brown and the government's effort for causing the loss of pensions for nonunion employees at Delphi Corp., a former General Motors subsidiary.

"Talk to Delphi employees, tens of thousands who were stripped of their pensions because of a process that Sherrod Brown supported," Mandel says.

In an editorial board meeting with The Columbus Dispatch in August, Mandel called Brown "un-American" for backing the bailout. Ohio's Republican senator at the time, George Voinovich, also backed the bailout.

Tags:
Associated Press,
politics

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