GOP operatives fret about keeping key state red: 'We've got our work cut out for us'
U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown speaks with President of United Auto Workers Local 1112, George Goranitis in Warren, Ohio, U.S., October 11, 2024. REUTERS/Richard Cowan

Sherrod Brown's return to Ohio politics represents Democrats' best chance in years to reclaim ground in a state that has become reliably Republican, despite the formidable challenge of running in terrain reshaped by Trump's electoral dominance.

Brown, who won more votes in Ohio than his party's 2024 presidential nominee despite losing his Senate seat two years ago, is mounting a special election campaign against Republican Jon Husted to fill the seat vacated when JD Vance became vice president, reported MS NOW. The race, along with the gubernatorial contest featuring Democrat Amy Acton against Trump-endorsed entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, offers Democrats a rare opening in a state that has drifted dramatically rightward.

Ohio Democratic leaders believe Brown's prominence on the ticket substantially improves their competitive position. "There's no doubt that having Sherrod Brown at the top of the ticket makes a huge difference for Democrats' ability to compete this cycle," said state House Democratic Leader Dani Isaacsohn.

Yet the odds remain steep. Trump won Ohio by 11 points in 2024 — the worst performance for a Democratic presidential nominee in the state since the 1980s – and a Democrat has not won an Ohio governor's race in nearly two decades. Republicans acknowledge the challenge Brown presents, but maintain confidence in their ultimately prevailing position.

"Brown is a tough out," conceded a Republican operative close to Husted.

"Trump’s not on the ballot, Gov. DeWine’s not on the ballot. Both of those guys pushed turnout for different reasons, but favorable for Republicans,” the Husted ally said. “We’ve got our work cut out for us. But I don’t know what Sherrod Brown has to run on either.”

The shifting dynamics reflect broader midterm patterns working against the party controlling the White House. Political gravity, combined with voter frustrations over cost-of-living concerns and the absence of Trump himself on the ballot, creates conditions potentially favorable to Democrats despite the state's recent Republican lean.

The Senate race specifically carries national implications. Democratic strategists recruited Brown as part of a larger effort to compete in traditionally challenging terrain — including Alaska, North Carolina, Maine, Texas and Iowa — in hopes of flipping the chamber. Once Democrats lost Senate control in 2024, such opportunities appeared distant, but that calculation has shifted considerably.

Brown's candidacy also tests whether local political figures can distance themselves from national party messaging challenges that devastated Democrats in 2024. Whether Ohio voters will reward his individual brand or remain locked into partisan patterns will significantly influence Democratic prospects nationwide.