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Compromise Continues to Elude Statehouse Republicans in the Fight Over a Speaker

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STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
Republicans have repeatedly cancelled work sessions as Kirk Schuring says he's not going to invide a 'three-ring circus.'

Ohio House sessions for this week have, once again, been cancelled due to controversy over who will be the next speaker. As Statehouse correspondent Jo Ingles reports, the fight that’s been brewing among majority Republicans is now affecting the business of the Legislature -- and is quickly becoming a campaign issue.

At the same time as former Speaker Cliff Rosenberger’s Clarksville-area home was being raided by the FBI, acting Ohio Houses Speaker Kirk Schuring held a hastily called teleconference with reporters. He had just sent out a notice of cancellation for House sessions for the rest of this week.

'I still have confidence we will get there, but I am not going to roll the dice and have a three-ring circus.'

Schuring, of Stark County, said he wasn’t totally sure there were the 50 votes among Republicans that he said are needed to name a new speaker, and he said the problem is a faction of the GOP caucus has chosen to break with it.

“This is uncharted territory that we are in right now, and I still have confidence we will get there but I am not going to roll the dice and have a three-ring circus where we don’t know what the outcome will be.”

Schuring wants to be sure the caucus will back Finance Chair Ryan Smith. Smith is running against two other Republicans to take over as speaker until the end of this year. Last week, in a GOP House caucus vote, Smith was the leading vote getter but he didn’t have the 50 needed.

Republican Andy Thompson, who is term-limited, and Dorothy Pelanda, who isn’t running for her seat again, split the remaining votes. Thompson also has the backing of former Speaker Larry Householder who wants to be elected speaker in January, but isn’t vying for the temporary speaker job.

Householder keeps mum
But Householder isn’t saying much right now. I caught up with him as he was rushing into a committee room.

I asked, “You’ve got some people in there who think a lot of your advice. What are you telling them?

“I think we have to do the people’s business,” he responded. “That’s what I’m telling them.”

I followed up on that question as Householder walked into the committee room until the committee chair gaveled that meeting into order.

Householder and winning
Rep. Niraj Antani, a backer of Householder and Thompson, said he remains firm in his choice not to support Smith.

“We need to set aside personalities and personal ambitions and pick somebody who will do the job. And there is also the concern that Speaker Householder won all of the primaries. We need someone who can win general elections, right, to keep the majority.”

Householder backed nearly a dozen candidates in this month’s primary who beat opponents allied with Smith.

Thompson later said he’s running, not because of Householder’s backing, but because he thinks the person in charge of the House for the next six months shouldn’t be the same person who is in charge come January.

“It doesn’t have to be Andy Thompson. It could be somebody else but whoever that is needs to be able to reassure people that there’s not a cloud hanging over them, that there’s no ethical issues that they are contending with.”

No deal
That reference was to Smith, an ally of Rosenberger.

The former speaker resigned in April after being questioned as part of an FBI inquiry into his association with lobbyists. Smith was a controlled measure of livid as he told reporters he has done nothing wrong, has not been questioned by the FBI and has nothing to do with the cloud of suspicion that has accumulating.

'I won't make a deal today, tomorrow or ever with people that act like this. It's despicable. ... I came to Columbus with my integrity. I'm going to leave here with my integrity.'

“I believe I have the votes to win, the necessary votes to be speaker, but frankly in the past week, the tactics that have been used from bullying, to threats, to downright extortion, is embarrassing. And the people who ask me, ‘Should you make a deal?’ Let me be very clear. I won’t make a deal today, tomorrow or ever with people that act like this. It’s despicable. I want nothing to do with it. I came to Columbus with my integrity. I’m going to leave here with my integrity, whether I win or not.”

Smith blamed Householder, ECOT boss Bill Lager and the payday-lending industry for spreading lies. And Smith said he wants a vote taken now.

Dems talk consequences

'It continues to hold the whole state of Ohio hostage.'

Meanwhile Democrats such as Rep. David Leland says the Republican dysfunction has real consequences.

“I mean this scandal has held the whole state of Ohio hostage. It continues to hold the whole state of Ohio hostage.”

The chaos also presents a campaign narrative for the Democrat who wants to be Ohio’s next governor, Richard Cordray.

“It is clear that our Legislature has gone completely off the rails under one party rule. Running state government for those at the top who hire lobbyists and bankroll Republican campaigns has resulted in the dysfunction and corruption that has paralyzed state government and is hurting Ohio families. It needs to end and Betty Sutton and I will end it.”

There’s no word yet on when three might be another vote for speaker. And its unlikely sessions to pass pending bills will be called till it’s resolved.

Jo Ingles is a professional journalist who covers politics and Ohio government for the Ohio Public Radio and Television for the Ohio Public Radio and Television Statehouse News Bureau. She reports on issues of importance to Ohioans including education, legislation, politics, and life and death issues such as capital punishment. Jo started her career in Louisville, Kentucky in the mid 80’s when she helped produce a televised presidential debate for ABC News, worked for a creative services company and served as a general assignment report for a commercial radio station. In 1989, she returned back to her native Ohio to work at the WOSU Stations in Columbus where she began a long resume in public radio.