Trump to Host Zelenskyy at the White House After Breakthrough Mineral Agreement
College Speaker: The Holocaust Was Not Unique
'They Crossed the Line': Tom Homan Issues Threat to Activists Who Doxed ICE...
Rachel Maddow's Very, Very, Very Special Friend
Firearms Policy Coalition Takes to Court to Argue Only Congress Can Create Laws
Guests During the First White House Tour of the New Administration Get a...
Richard Blumenthal Claims Dan Bongino Has 'Zero Experience' to Be FBI Deputy Director
Two Airplanes at Reagan National Airport Narrowly Avoided a Collision
Legacy Media Outlets Really Ought to Calm Down Over White House's Decision on...
Trump, Vance Put the Mainstream Media in Their Place When Taking Questions at...
Shiri Bibas' Family Is Suing Al-Jazeera
Trump Encouraged by GOP Lawmakers to Recognize West Bank As Israeli Territory
Pam Bondi Dismisses Biden-Era DEI Lawsuits Involving Merit-Based Hiring of Firefighters, C...
Harmeet Dhillon Vows to Enforce the Law Against Racist DEI Practices
Pam Bondi Drops the Hammer on States Defying Trump's Trans Athlete Executive Order
Tipsheet

Ryan Speculates Why He's Not Getting Dem Support

Joshua A. Bickel/The Columbus Dispatch via AP, Pool

Ohio Democratic Senate candidate Rep. Tim Ryan thinks he knows why his party has turned its back on him—he’d be a “royal pain in the ass” for Senate Democrats if he won his race against GOP challenger, J.D. Vance.

Advertisement

In an interview with Politico that published Friday, he said he wasn’t even sure he’d back Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) as majority leader if he won.

 

“I will get to the Senate and be beholden to absolutely nobody, right? And I will be, probably, a royal pain in the ass when I get there,” said Ryan. “And that may be a reason why we’re not getting help.”

 

As The Washington Post recently reported, while Democrats are “heaping praise” on the congressman, the national party hasn't helped as much as he has hoped given how competitive the race is. But his pleas for more assistance may be undermining his argument that he'd be independent from party leadership. 

 

Failing to help Ryan sends a larger message that Democrats are giving up on the state, according to some in the party. “I worry that Democrats in Washington send a signal to Republicans, that if they come in big and attack a Democrat, Democrats walk away,” said David Pepper, a former chairman of the Ohio Democratic Party.

Ryan’s not-so subtle requests for more outside help from Democrats could threaten to undermine one key strength of his candidacy: His independence from the Democratic Party.

On Monday night during the second and final Ohio Senate debate, Vance attacked him for his entreaties. “The guy who’s subservient to the national party is Tim Ryan, who has been begging for these guys to come into this race and save him from the campaign that he’s been running,” Vance said from the debate stage. (The Washington Post)

Advertisement

 

 The RealClearPolitics average of polls has Vance up 2.3 points and gives the race a “leans GOP” ranking.  

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement