Politics

Trump-endorsed Senate pick Bernie Moreno wins Ohio GOP Primary : NPR

Ohio Republican Senate candidate Bernie Moreno speaks during a Buckeye Values PAC Rally in Vandalia, Ohio, on March 16.

KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images


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KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images


Ohio Republican Senate candidate Bernie Moreno speaks during a Buckeye Values PAC Rally in Vandalia, Ohio, on March 16.

KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI/AFP via Getty Images

Ohio GOP Senate Candidate Bernie Moreno has won his party’s primary, according to a race call by The Associated Press.

The former car dealership owner beat out other primary challengers in a three-way race that tested former President Donald Trump’s influence with Ohio GOP voters.

Ohio State Sen. Matt Dolan, who ran against Moreno, received key endorsements from GOP establishment politicians, including Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and former U.S. Sen. Rob Portman. Moreno’s other primary rival, Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, declared his support for the former president. But it was Moreno who received Trump’s endorsement late last year. The former president has a strong record of support within the state. He won Ohio handily in the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections.

Moreno will go on to challenge Democratic incumbent Sen. Sherrod Brown. The Senate race could help determine who controls the Senate next year, given that Democrats now hold the chamber with a narrow margin.

Trump’s influence on a bitter primary battle

It’s a first-time win for the 57-year-old Moreno, a Cleveland-area businessman, who once owned a network of luxury car dealerships. Moreno, whose family immigrated from Colombia to the U.S. when he was a child, put more than $5 million of his own money into the race. But he was also boosted by a late addition to the many ads in this campaign from a political action committee aligned with U.S. Senate Democrats. The Super PAC “Duty and Country” spent some $2.7 million on ads touting the Trump’s endorsed candidate as “too conservative for Ohio.”

In recent polls, Moreno and Dolan traded off the lead, although when LaRose first entered the race, he had been considered the front-runner. But he later seemed to lag behind as he waged a campaign with far less money and lacked high-profile endorsements.

Moreno faces an incumbent Democrat who’s served in the U.S. Senate since 2007, but Brown is also seen as one of the most vulnerable candidates seeking re-election in the U.S. Senate this year. He’s the only Ohio Democrat who’s been elected multiple times statewide even as Ohio has trended more Republican.

He won re-election in 2018 by almost seven percentage points, as Republicans swept other statewide offices. But Brown has acknowledged that this will be his toughest campaign yet.

While the race turned into a bitter battle over who is the strongest Trump-aligned candidate, it was also fueled by money.

Dolan and Moreno both had around $2.4 million in their campaign accounts as of their last FEC filings. Dolan loaned his campaign $2 million, and Moreno loaned his campaign $1.2 million. LaRose, who doesn’t have the personal wealth the other two do, neared the end of the primary race with just under $600,000 on hand.

Brown, who didn’t have a primary opponent, raised about $6.6 million in the last few months. Brown’s cash-on-hand total is some $14.6 million, nearly three times that of the other three candidates combined.


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