Former Ohio Liberty Coalition
(OLC) President Ted Stevenot will challenge Governor John Kasich in Ohio’s May
6 primary election, a January 1 press release confirms.
Stevenot and running mate Brenda Mack, former
president of Ohio Black Republicans Association, are set to formally announce
their candidacy on Tuesday, January 7.
A press conference will be held at 1:00pm at the
Holiday Inn Capitol Square, 175 E. Town Street, Columbus, OH 43215, according
to the release from the Friends of Ted Stevenot campaign
committee.
Several legacy media outlets reported in December that
Stevenot was mulling a primary campaign when paperwork submitted to the secretary
of state’s office became public.
The Ohio Republican Party (ORP), has dismissed conservative criticism of Kasich who lunged to the left after being elected as a
small-government, “Tea Party” Republican in 2010.
Kasich and ORP have insisted Ohio is experiencing a
miraculous economic rebound since Kasich took office, but employment data do not bear this out.
Last year Stevenot and OLC were at the forefront of
the fight over the Obamacare Medicaid expansion, helping channel activists’
opposition into pressure on Republican legislators. Kasich’s Obamacare
expansion was stopped in the Ohio General Assembly largely due to Stevenot’s
leadership.
Stevenot is likely to be treated as an afterthought by
Ohio’s traditional press, though a plurality of Republicans polled for The
Columbus Dispatch expressed disapproval of Medicaid expansion last spring.
Joe Hallett, an editor at the Dispatch, railed against OLC and conservatives in general as “fringe,” “political intimidators”
seemingly “bent on society’s regression” because they opposed Medicaid
expansion. This is a typical tactic of the editors of the lame stream media and
lame stream politicians who label true conservatives and Christians as members
of the “fringe”.
Dispatch publisher John Wolfe and his wife donated a total of
$24,000 to Kasich’s reelection campaign in 2013.
Do you think the Columbus
Dispatch has a conflict of interest in this dog fight?
In 2012 and 2013, OLC played a major role in stopping efforts from Gov. Kasich to raise taxes on energy
companies and Appalachian Ohio property owners for redistribution as a statewide tax
cut, although a watered-down version of Kasich’s plan is likely to pass in the
wake of Kasich’s end-run around the legislature for the Obamacare
expansion.
Stevenot also led OLC’s efforts to help liberty groups
across the state better network in their communities using online tools such as
Facebook, and OLC has been a vocal critic of IRS targeting of conservative
groups.
Stevenot’s announcement comes on the heels of Hamilton
County Commissioner Todd Portune’s decision to challenge Ed FitzGerald in the Democrat primary for governor.
Long considered the Democrats’ de facto candidate, FitzGerald dropped running mate Eric Kearney last month amid a media
firestorm over
Kearney’s unpaid taxes.
Gov. Kasich’s campaign committee, Kasich Taylor for
Ohio, reported almost $4.5 million on hand as of the 2013 semiannual filing
deadline.
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