2018 Ohio gubernatorial election
The 2018 Ohio gubernatorial election was held on November 6, 2018, to elect the governor and lieutenant governor of Ohio for a four-year term commencing in January 2019, succeeding term-limited Republican incumbent John Kasich and Lieutenant Governor Mary Taylor.[1] Republican nominee Mike DeWine, the state's attorney general, and his running mate, incumbent Lieutenant Governor Jon Husted, defeated Democratic nominees Richard Cordray, former director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and Beth Myers, with DeWine receiving 2,235,825 votes or 50.4 percent of the total, compared to Cordray's 2,071,087 votes or 46.7 percent.[1][2] The election produced the largest voter turnout in Ohio history for a gubernatorial contest, with over 4.4 million ballots cast.[3] In the Republican primary on May 8, 2018, DeWine secured the nomination with 47.7 percent of the vote against state Lieutenant Governor Mary Taylor and other challengers, reflecting establishment preferences amid intraparty divisions.) On the Democratic side, Cordray won decisively with 62.4 percent over Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley and former state Senator Joe Schiavoni, leveraging his prior statewide experience as Ohio's treasurer.) The general election campaign focused on economic issues, education funding, and opioid crisis responses, with DeWine emphasizing his prosecutorial background and Cordray highlighting consumer protection advocacy; minor party candidates Travis Irvine (Libertarian) and Constance Gadell-Newton (Green) received 2.1 percent and 0.7 percent, respectively.[2] DeWine's victory by a margin of 164,738 votes preserved Republican hold on the governorship despite a national midterm environment favoring Democrats, underscoring Ohio's persistent Republican lean in executive races even as Donald Trump faced midterm backlash.[1][2] The outcome facilitated continuity in state policies on taxation and regulatory matters, with DeWine assuming office amid expectations of pragmatic governance akin to Kasich's tenure.[1]Background and context
Incumbent situation and term limits
The incumbent, Republican John Kasich, was ineligible to seek re-election due to term limits established in the Ohio Constitution, which prohibit any person from holding the office of governor for more than two consecutive terms.[4] Kasich had been sworn in for his first term on January 10, 2011, following his 2010 victory over Democrat Ted Strickland, and secured re-election in 2014 against the same opponent by a margin of 64% to 33%. His second term was set to conclude on January 14, 2019, rendering the 2018 election a contest for an open governorship without an incumbent on the ballot. Kasich's tenure concluded with approval ratings in the mid-50s, as a March 2018 poll indicated 54% approval and 31% disapproval among Ohio voters.[5] This standing reflected a polarized legacy: while Ohio experienced job growth exceeding 200,000 positions during his governorship and budget surpluses, Kasich's decisions—such as expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act in 2013, against opposition from many congressional Republicans—drew criticism from conservative factions within his party. His public divergences from President Donald Trump, including on trade policies and environmental regulations, further alienated some GOP base voters, contributing to a perception of moderation that boosted his standing among independents but complicated the Republican primary field's alignment with national party trends. The absence of an incumbent seeking re-election transformed the race into a high-profile open contest, incentivizing candidacies from seasoned officeholders across both major parties, such as experienced prosecutors and former federal regulators who had built statewide name recognition.[6] This dynamic heightened competition, as candidates positioned themselves to inherit Kasich's institutional advantages—like Ohio's Republican trifecta—while distancing from elements of his record deemed liabilities by their respective bases.Ohio's political landscape
Ohio has long been regarded as a quintessential swing state and bellwether in presidential elections, correctly predicting the national winner in every contest from 1964 through 2016.[7][8] This status stemmed from its diverse electorate, encompassing urban Democratic strongholds like Cleveland and Cincinnati alongside rural and suburban Republican-leaning areas, making it a pivotal battleground that candidates heavily targeted. In the 2012 presidential election, Ohio supported Democrat Barack Obama by a narrow 3-point margin, reflecting a temporary Democratic lean amid national trends, yet the state reverted to Republican Donald Trump in 2016 by 8 points.[9][8] At the state level, Republicans maintained the governorship continuously since John Kasich's victory in 2010, securing his reelection in 2014 by 31 points amid a broader GOP wave.[10] Following the 2016 elections, Ohio achieved a Republican trifecta, with the party controlling the governorship and supermajorities in both legislative chambers: 24-9 in the Senate and 65-34 in the House.[11][12] This dominance enabled Republicans to advance conservative priorities without significant opposition, influencing gubernatorial strategies to emphasize continuity in executive leadership while navigating the state's competitive dynamics. The 2018 cycle highlighted Ohio's pronounced split-ticket voting patterns, where voters often diverged between statewide executive races and congressional contests. Republicans retained the governorship but faced Democratic gains, including incumbent U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown's reelection by nearly 7 points and modest pickups in the state House, reducing the GOP majority from 66-33 to 61-38.[13][14] In U.S. House races, Democrats held their four seats without net losses despite national midterm headwinds for the GOP, underscoring voter willingness to support incumbents across parties in a state where presidential bellwether reliability had begun to wane.[14] These patterns compelled candidates to tailor appeals to independent and crossover voters, prioritizing local issues over strict partisan alignment.Economic and social conditions
In the lead-up to the 2018 gubernatorial election, Ohio's economy exhibited robust indicators of recovery from the Great Recession, with the state's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate standing at 4.4 percent in September 2018, down from 5.0 percent a year prior. This reflected broader national trends amplified by federal policies including the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which spurred business investment and contributed to manufacturing sector expansion; Ohio added approximately 10,000 manufacturing jobs between January 2017 and October 2018. Per capita personal income rose to $45,615 in 2017 from $44,090 in 2016, signaling improving household finances amid a state GDP growth rate of 2.2 percent in 2017. These metrics underscored a period of economic momentum, particularly in Rust Belt areas where industrial output rebounded, though gains were uneven across regions. Despite economic progress, Ohio grappled with a severe opioid epidemic that peaked in 2017, recording over 4,000 drug overdose deaths, predominantly involving opioids such as fentanyl and heroin.[15] This crisis, with an age-adjusted overdose death rate of 46.3 per 100,000 residents—among the highest nationally—strained public health resources and heightened voter anxieties about addiction, family disintegration, and emergency services overload.[15] Socioeconomic disparities persisted, manifesting in stark urban-rural divides: poverty rates in Appalachian Ohio counties averaged 17 percent in 2017, exceeding the state average of 13.9 percent, while urban centers like Cleveland and Akron faced entrenched challenges with poverty rates around 30 percent and 18 percent, respectively, amid deindustrialization legacies.[16] Rust Belt recovery offered partial relief in manufacturing hubs, yet southern and eastern rural areas lagged, with limited job diversification exacerbating outmigration and social stagnation.Major state issues
Education funding remained a central point of contention in Ohio, stemming from the DeRolph v. State of Ohio court decisions (1997–2006) that repeatedly deemed the state's system unconstitutional for relying excessively on local property taxes, prompting ongoing legislative efforts to reform distribution without fully resolving inequities.[17] By 2018, the biennial budget for fiscal years 2019–2020 grappled with stagnant state revenues amid the opioid crisis, which diverted funds from education to treatment programs, exacerbating disputes over whether to prioritize expanded school vouchers and charter school options—advocated as enhancing competition and parental choice—or direct increases in per-pupil spending for traditional public schools to address teacher shortages and facility decay.[17] Abortion policy debates intensified due to a series of incremental restrictions enacted since 2011, including requirements for ultrasounds, 24-hour waiting periods, and hospital admitting privileges for providers, which reduced clinic numbers from 18 in 2011 to fewer operational sites by 2018, limiting access particularly in rural areas.[18] Repeated legislative pushes for a "heartbeat bill"—first seriously attempted in 2011 and vetoed by Governor John Kasich in 2016—highlighted tensions between fetal protection measures, which aimed to prohibit abortions after detecting cardiac activity (as early as six weeks), and arguments that such laws imposed undue burdens without exceptions for rape, incest, or maternal health, potentially driving conservative voter mobilization while facing federal court challenges under Planned Parenthood v. Casey precedents.[19] Gun rights discussions were shaped by Ohio's status as a shall-issue concealed carry state since 2004, with ongoing legislative battles over expansions like constitutional carry and stand-your-ground laws, which Governor Kasich vetoed multiple times between 2017 and 2018 citing concerns over public safety amid rising mass shootings.[20] These vetoes fueled perceptions of gubernatorial overreach against Second Amendment advocates, who pointed to Ohio's low violent crime rates (3.9 per 1,000 residents in 2017) as evidence that further restrictions post-Parkland would not address root causes like mental health failures, while proponents of modest controls argued for background check enhancements without infringing core rights.[21] Infrastructure challenges, including Ohio's D+ rating from the American Society of Civil Engineers in 2017 for roads, bridges, and water systems requiring $10.2 billion annually in maintenance, intersected with job debates influenced by the 2017 federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which lowered corporate rates and enabled some Ohio firms to repatriate overseas profits for local investments but yielded limited net job gains (only 0.2% unemployment drop to 4.6% by mid-2018) amid criticisms of favoring high earners over broad wage growth.[22] Resistance to green energy mandates persisted, as 2018 legislative tweaks froze the state's renewable portfolio standard at 8.5% by 2026—down from prior escalations—reflecting utility and industrial pushback against higher costs estimated at $1.2 billion over a decade, prioritizing reliable baseload power from natural gas and coal over intermittent solar and wind amid Ohio's energy-intensive manufacturing sector.[23][24]Primary elections
Republican primary
The Republican primary election for Ohio governor was held on May 8, 2018, to select the party's nominee to succeed term-limited incumbent John Kasich.) Attorney General Mike DeWine, a veteran politician with over four decades in public office, emerged as the clear frontrunner early in the cycle, securing the endorsement of the Ohio Republican Party in February 2018 by a 59-2 vote of the state central committee.[25] DeWine campaigned as a pragmatic conservative, emphasizing his record as attorney general in leading multistate lawsuits against opioid manufacturers and distributors, as well as his experience in state and federal roles dating back to the 1970s.[26] His primary opponent, Lieutenant Governor Mary Taylor, sought to differentiate herself by appealing to a more ideological base, portraying DeWine as too aligned with Kasich's moderate governance and insufficiently aggressive on issues like tax cuts and deregulation; Taylor's campaign highlighted her business background and service under Kasich but positioned her as a change agent within the party.[27] [28] The contest saw limited intra-party conflict compared to more contested fields elsewhere, with initial entrants like state Senator Kevin Coughlin and businessman Greg Hartmann withdrawing before the primary, leaving DeWine and Taylor as the sole major candidates.[27] DeWine's campaign raised significantly more funds, benefiting from establishment support, while Taylor's effort focused on grassroots appeals and criticism of DeWine's ties to Kasich-era policies.[29] Voter turnout was low at around 21%, typical for a primary in a state dominated by Republicans.[30] DeWine secured a decisive victory, capturing 59.8% of the vote to Taylor's 40.2%, with all precincts reporting.[31]| Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Mike DeWine | 494,766 | 59.8% |
| Mary Taylor | 332,273 | 40.2% |
| Total | 827,039 | 100% |
Democratic primary
The Democratic primary for the 2018 Ohio gubernatorial election, held on May 8, 2018, featured former Ohio Attorney General and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director Richard Cordray as the frontrunner against more progressive challengers, including former U.S. Representative Dennis Kucinich and state Senator Joe Schiavoni.[34][35] Cordray, who had previously served as Ohio's Treasurer, emphasized his experience in consumer protection and prosecuting financial misconduct during his tenure as Attorney General and CFPB head, positioning himself as a pragmatic reformer capable of appealing to a broad electorate.[36][37] Kucinich, a longtime advocate for left-wing causes and former Cleveland mayor, sought to mobilize populist discontent by critiquing corporate influence and establishment politics, framing the contest as a battle over the party's progressive soul.[38][39] This dynamic highlighted internal Democratic tensions between institutional favorites backed by party leaders and labor unions and insurgent candidates appealing to anti-establishment voters.[40] In January 2018, prior to the primary, Cordray selected former U.S. Representative Betty Sutton as his running mate for lieutenant governor; Sutton, who had initially entered the gubernatorial primary, withdrew to join the ticket, bolstering Cordray's appeal in industrial regions through her background in labor advocacy and congressional service.[41] Cordray's campaign raised significantly more funds and secured endorsements from prominent figures, including Senator Elizabeth Warren, which helped solidify his establishment support despite Kucinich's name recognition from prior presidential bids.[42] Cordray secured a decisive victory with 62.3% of the vote, while Kucinich received 22.9% and Schiavoni 9.2%, with the remainder split among minor candidates.[35][43]| Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Richard Cordray | 423,264 | 62.3% |
| Dennis Kucinich | 155,694 | 22.9% |
| Joe Schiavoni | 62,315 | 9.2% |
| Others | ~50,000 | 5.6% |
Minor party nominations
The Libertarian Party of Ohio nominated Travis Irvine, an independent filmmaker and resident of Bexley, as its gubernatorial candidate at the party's state convention on August 27, 2018.[46] Irvine positioned his campaign as a "pro-freedom alternative" to major-party candidates, advocating fiscal conservatism through comprehensive tax reform to lower burdens on small businesses and reduce state debt, alongside criminal justice reforms prioritizing individual liberties and opposition to expansive government intervention, including in foreign policy.[46][47][48] The Green Party of Ohio nominated Constance Gadell-Newton, a Columbus attorney and social justice activist, following her announcement on February 2, 2018.[49] Gadell-Newton emphasized environmental protection against industrial pollution, campaign finance reform to curb corporate influence, and broader critiques of economic policies favoring large corporations over public interests.[49][50] No independent candidates met Ohio's ballot access requirements of 5,000 valid signatures from registered voters.[51] In the November 6 general election, Irvine and Gadell-Newton together garnered 2.9% of the vote, drawing support mainly from protest voters expressing dissatisfaction with the Republican and Democratic nominees amid perceptions of entrenched political establishments.[3] This marginal performance threatened the parties' minor-party status, which requires at least 3% in a statewide race to avoid petitioning for future ballot access.[52]General election
Candidates and platforms
The Republican nominees were Mike DeWine for governor and Jon Husted for lieutenant governor, selected after winning their respective primaries on May 8, 2018. DeWine, serving as Ohio's Attorney General since 2011, centered his platform on upholding law and order through stringent enforcement against crime and corruption, promoting economic growth via tax incentives for businesses and workforce development initiatives, and combating the opioid epidemic with a multifaceted approach including lawsuits against pharmaceutical distributors for deceptive marketing, expanded access to treatment facilities, and prosecutorial measures targeting fentanyl traffickers.[53][54] Husted, the incumbent Secretary of State with prior experience in the Ohio House and Senate, complemented the ticket by highlighting his administrative expertise in streamlining government operations and implementing technology-driven efficiencies to support economic stability.[55] The Democratic nominees were Richard Cordray for governor and Betty Sutton for lieutenant governor, announced as a joint ticket on January 9, 2018, following Sutton's withdrawal from the gubernatorial primary.[41] Cordray, former director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau from 2012 to 2017, focused on regulatory measures to safeguard consumers from predatory lending and financial abuses, raising the state minimum wage to improve worker earnings, and broadening healthcare access through expansions in Medicaid coverage and cost controls on prescription drugs.[56][57] Sutton, a former U.S. Representative for Ohio's 13th district from 2009 to 2013 and state legislator, emphasized advocacy for manufacturing and labor interests, drawing on her background representing Rust Belt communities to push for policies aiding local governments and displaced workers.[41] The tickets contrasted in approach, with DeWine-Husted prioritizing prosecutorial stability and market-oriented growth to sustain Ohio's recovery from the Great Recession, while Cordray-Sutton advocated heightened government intervention in wages, consumer safeguards, and health services to address inequality and regulatory gaps.[58][59]Campaign strategies and issues
DeWine's campaign strategy centered on portraying himself as a proven, moderate conservative with deep roots in Ohio governance, drawing on his long tenure as attorney general to underscore competence on law enforcement and public safety. He invested heavily in attack advertisements criticizing Cordray's prior role as Ohio attorney general for delays in testing unprocessed rape kits, which DeWine claimed enabled a serial offender to continue crimes unchecked during Cordray's 2009-2011 term. DeWine's team also assailed Cordray's leadership at the federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, accusing him of regulatory overreach through unauthorized collection of Americans' financial data, though independent fact-checkers deemed some related ads misleading for exaggerating the scope. This approach aimed to neutralize Cordray's name recognition by associating him with perceived bureaucratic excess and state-level lapses, while DeWine highlighted his own proactive record, such as initiating Ohio's rape kit testing program as attorney general. Cordray, positioning himself as a consumer advocate and reformer, focused on rallying urban and suburban Democratic voters by tying state issues to broader national critiques of Republican policies, implicitly benefiting from anti-Trump mobilization efforts that boosted turnout in Democratic strongholds like Cuyahoga County. His campaign emphasized expanding access to health care and treatment programs, but encountered resistance in rural Ohio, where voters prioritized Second Amendment protections and energy sector jobs; Cordray's historical support for gun rights faced scrutiny from progressive primary challengers, complicating appeals in conservative-leaning areas amid rising calls for firearm restrictions post-Parkland. Rural underperformance stemmed partly from these divides, as Cordray's platform aligned less with local concerns over fracking regulations and coal industry viability, contributing to lopsided losses in Appalachian counties. The opioid crisis dominated discussions, with Ohio recording over 4,000 overdose deaths annually by 2018; DeWine leveraged his attorney general lawsuits against opioid manufacturers and cartels, proposing expanded enforcement and recovery initiatives, while Cordray countered by advocating decriminalization of personal possession to prioritize treatment over incarceration, accusing DeWine of over-relying on punitive measures. Economic growth and jobs featured prominently, as DeWine promoted Republican-led tax reforms for business attraction and workforce training programs emphasizing trade skills over traditional college degrees to address manufacturing and skill gaps in a state with 5.2% unemployment entering the cycle. Education emerged as a flashpoint, with debates over expanding school vouchers and charter school oversight; DeWine supported choice mechanisms to boost competition and outcomes, critiquing underperforming public systems, whereas Cordray stressed increased public funding and accountability standards to counter perceived privatization risks.Endorsements and fundraising
The 2018 Ohio gubernatorial election marked the most expensive race for the office in state history, with Republican nominee Mike DeWine and Democratic nominee Richard Cordray collectively spending nearly $45 million on their campaigns.[60] DeWine's campaign expenditures alone set a new record for a single candidate in an Ohio gubernatorial contest, surpassing previous benchmarks despite Cordray occasionally outraising him in specific reporting periods.[61] [62] This financial intensity reflected broader Republican advantages in attracting large-scale contributions from business interests, including significant support from fossil fuel and utility sector PACs, which disproportionately directed funds to DeWine's effort.[63] [64] In contrast, Cordray relied more on periodic surges from individual donors, though these did not offset the GOP's overall edge in cash reserves heading into the general election.[62] DeWine secured key endorsements from Republican establishment figures and navigated internal party dynamics effectively. Incumbent Governor John Kasich, despite tensions with President Donald Trump, aligned with DeWine as his preferred successor amid the GOP primary, bolstering DeWine's appeal to moderate voters.[65] Trump provided an explicit endorsement in May 2018 following DeWine's primary victory and reiterated support during a late October rally, praising him while criticizing Cordray.[66] [67] Major Ohio newspapers, including those in Cleveland and Columbus, also backed DeWine in the general election, citing his experience.[68] Cordray garnered support from Democratic leaders and labor groups. Former President Barack Obama endorsed Cordray and his running mate Betty Sutton in August 2018, highlighting their alignment with progressive priorities.[69] Several unions, including the Ohio Patrolmen's Benevolent Association and aspects of the SEIU, backed Cordray, emphasizing worker protections.[70] However, DeWine countered with endorsements from select trade unions, such as the International Union of Operating Engineers, underscoring cross-aisle appeal in a state with strong organized labor traditions.[71] Outside spending amplified these divides, with pro-DeWine groups leveraging undisclosed funds from business-aligned nonprofits.[72]Debates and media coverage
The major-party candidates, Republican Mike DeWine and Democrat Richard Cordray, participated in three televised debates during the general election campaign. The first occurred on September 19, 2018, in Dayton, hosted by local media outlets.[73] The second took place on October 1 in a town hall format, and the third and final debate was held on October 8 at Cleveland State University, broadcast by public media stations.[74][75] In these forums, DeWine defended his record as state attorney general, emphasizing conservative approaches to public safety, economic development, and opposition to expanding the Affordable Care Act, while highlighting Ohio's job growth and his proposals for vocational training.[76][77] Cordray, in contrast, advocated for progressive reforms including increased education funding, stricter gun controls, and protections for pre-existing conditions under the ACA, while criticizing DeWine's handling of the opioid crisis and environmental issues like Lake Erie algae blooms.[76][78] Exchanges often centered on healthcare costs, drug sentencing laws, and state funding for local governments, with both candidates agreeing on workforce skills gaps but differing on tax policies and regulatory approaches.[78][79] Media coverage of the race was extensive in Ohio outlets, focusing on debate performances, candidate records, and state-specific issues such as opioids and economic stagnation in rural areas, though national publications sometimes linked the contest to broader anti-Trump sentiment amid midterm wave expectations.[80] Local reporting, including from WOSU and the Dayton Daily News, scrutinized mutual scandal allegations, with Cordray's campaign emphasizing DeWine's past associations with controversial figures and DeWine countering with critiques of Cordray's federal tenure.[81] Outlets like NBC News portrayed Democratic prospects as a test of healthcare messaging in swing states, potentially overstating competitiveness given Ohio's recent Republican state-level dominance.[80] The campaign involved heavy advertising, with DeWine and Cordray's committees spending nearly $45 million combined, marking the most expensive Ohio gubernatorial race to date, supplemented by millions from outside groups.[60] DeWine's ads promoted positive economic messaging, touting low unemployment and his plans for infrastructure and job training, while Cordray's highlighted allegations of DeWine's involvement in state scandals and promised reforms to expand access to services.[82][72] This ad war dominated airwaves in battleground media markets, amplifying debate themes on fiscal responsibility and governance transparency.Polling and predictions
Polling throughout the late summer and fall of 2018 indicated a closely contested race between Republican Mike DeWine and Democrat Richard Cordray, with DeWine maintaining modest leads in several surveys from August through mid-October before late polls showed ties or slight Cordray advantages.[83][84] For instance, a September 16–20 NBC News/Marist poll found the candidates tied at 47% each among likely voters.[85] An October 4–8 Suffolk University poll gave Cordray a 46%–40% edge, while a contemporaneous Baldwin Wallace University survey registered a statistical tie with DeWine at 41% and Cordray at 40%.[86] Late October polls, such as Emerson College (October 26–28) showing Cordray up 49%–46% and Gravis Marketing (October 29–30) with Cordray at 48%–43%, suggested potential volatility, though aggregates like RealClearPolitics classified the contest as a toss-up.[83]| Pollster | Dates | DeWine (R) | Cordray (D) | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NBC News/Marist | Sep 16–20 | 47% | 47% | Tie |
| Suffolk University | Oct 4–8 | 40% | 46% | Cordray +6 |
| Baldwin Wallace | Early Oct | 41% | 40% | DeWine +1 |
| Emerson College | Oct 26–28 | 46% | 49% | Cordray +3 |
| Gravis Marketing | Oct 29–30 | 43% | 48% | Cordray +5 |
Results and analysis
Election results
Republican nominee Mike DeWine defeated Democratic nominee Richard Cordray in the general election held on November 6, 2018, securing 2,235,825 votes to Cordray's 2,070,046 for a margin of 165,779 votes.[89][3] DeWine received 50.40% of the vote compared to Cordray's 46.67%, with third-party candidates collectively accounting for 2.93%.[89] The results were certified by the Ohio Secretary of State following county-level canvassing, with minor amendments in Miami County finalized on January 22, 2019; no statewide recount was requested or conducted despite the margin exceeding Ohio's automatic recount threshold of 0.5%.[1][89]| Ticket | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mike DeWine / Jon Husted | Republican | 2,235,825 | 50.40% |
| Richard Cordray / Betty Sutton | Democratic | 2,070,046 | 46.67% |
| Travis M. Irvine / J. Todd Grayson | Libertarian | 80,055 | 1.80% |
| Constance Gadell-Newton / Brett R. Joseph | Green | 49,536 | 1.12% |
| Other | - | 358 | 0.01% |
| Total | 4,435,820 | 100% |