Sherrod Brown seeks return to U.S. Senate
Ohio's Sherrod Brown is seeking a return to the U.S. Senate.| AP

The key primary elections today in Ohio involve races, the results of which could determine the makeup of the US Senate and the House after the Midterms in November.  Democratic former Sen. Sherrod Brown is running to reclaim his old job as U.S. senator, while pro-labor Rep. Marcy Kaptur is trying to hold onto her gerrymandered congressional seat in the November elections.

Turnout in the primaries today may be low because the really important decisions will be made in November when the Democrats face off against Republicans. Voters may be waiting for November because there are few competitive races on the ballot now.

But the fireworks will be set off in the runup to the fall election, especially at the top of the ticket: Former progressive Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown, who lost his seat in the Trumpite tide two years ago, seeks a return to the Senate. His opponent, appointed Sen. Jon Husted, the former lieutenant governor, became a senator when former Sen. JD Vance became Trump’s VP.

Brown’s return to the Senate is vital to workers, progressives, and the Democratic Party. If he doesn’t beat Husted, who has toed the Trump line, the chances of an anti-MAGA Senate takeover shrink considerably.

Multibillionaire Trump backer Vivek Ramaswamy, a so-called “entrepreneur” who briefly co-chaired Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, with hacksaw-wielding fellow billionaire Elon Musk, wants to be the Buckeye State’s next GOP governor.

His Democratic foe is Dr. Amy Acton, the state Public Health Director under departing GOP Gov. Mike DeWine. Unlike Ramaswamy, she’s worked with both parties, especially during the coronavirus pandemic. 

But will low-key competence sell in a state whose residents are suffering economically and hurt by Trump’s tariffs and climate policies? And, since Ohio is now increasingly Republican, the state’s building trades unions have endorsed Ramaswamy.

And Emilia Sykes, one of the two African-American women Democrats from Cleveland, is in a toss-up race thanks to redistricting, after a 51%-48% win two years ago under the old district lines. She has no primary foe but she doesn’t have a safe seat anymore.

And the re-mappers, a supposedly non-partisan commission which wasn’t, did their best to try to unseat Democrat Marcy Kaptur, a staunch pro-worker lawmaker and the longest-serving woman in Congress. The redistricters threw her into a seat whose voters went 54%-44% for Trump in 2024.

Kaptur has raised more than $3 million so far, more than all the other candidates on the ballot, from both parties plus independents, combined. But analysts say the seat leans Republican, and it—and labor’s support—may not be enough to save her.

All this will be on the November ballot, which didn’t prevent the Government Employees, who have 56,000 members in Ohio, from jumping into eight races now, including backing Brown and Dr. Acton in the gubernatorial contest.

Five of the others are incumbent Democrats: Sykes, Kaptur, and Reps. Greg Landsman, Joyce Beatty, and Shontel Brown. The sixth is incumbent Republican Mike Turner, whose district is dominated by Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and its AFGE civilian workforce. He’s also a co-sponsor of the Protect America’s Workforce Act, HR2550, to restore the 37 federal worker union contracts the anti-worker GOP Donald Trump regime arbitrarily trashed.

The other AFGE-backed congressional Democratic hopeful is military veteran Adam Miller in the largely Republican 15th District in East Central Ohio. He faces a progressive Ohio State professor, Don Leonard, in the primary. Both are given no chance in November against GOPer Mike Carey.

But in an indication that organized labor is not totally unified, virtually all the Ohio building trades unions, and their coalition, ACT Ohio, back Ramaswamy in the gubernatorial tilt. The latest were the Laborers, just days before the primary.

“The candidates we are endorsing deserve your support because they will fight for working families in Ohio and nationwide,” AFGE District 6 President Arnold Scott said in a press release. “These elected leaders have fought to protect workers’ jobs and union rights, safeguard and improve health care and retirement benefits, and eliminate barriers that make it harder for everyone to achieve the American Dream.”

“Our endorsement reflects a focus on outcomes: the highest quality work product, delivered safely on time and on budget by Ohio’s skilled trades,” said Matthew Szollosi, ACT Ohio’s executive director, when it and five-member unions backed Ramaswamy last October. “Ramaswamy has shown a willingness to listen, engage, and recognize the role that our members, contractors, and training programs play in producing exceptional results for taxpayers and investors across the state.

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CONTRIBUTOR

Mark Gruenberg
Mark Gruenberg

Award-winning journalist Mark Gruenberg is head of the Washington, D.C., bureau of People's World. He is also the editor of the union news service Press Associates Inc. (PAI). Known for his reporting skills, sharp wit, and voluminous knowledge of history, Mark is a compassionate interviewer but tough when going after big corporations and their billionaire owners.