The collapse of the Ohio Republican Party in 2006, a collapse
attributable largely to the utter incompetence and lack of
conservative principle of former Gov. Taft and to the corruption
scandals that engulfed his administration, led the way to the
GOP's national defeat that year and in 2008. (Not that Ohio
CAUSED the national problems, but it became particularly
symptomatic of them.)
Would it not be wonderful, then, if Ohio, so long a stalwart GOP
state, were to lead the way back?
Sen. Voinovich's retirement announcement opens up the chance for
a great conservative trifecta in the Buckeye State that could do
wonders to revive the conservative movement nationwide.
A host of big-name conservatives have endorsed Ohio former
Secretary of State Ken Blackwell for chairman of the Republican
National Committee. Imagine if he wins, and then Ohio follows up
in 2010 by electing solidly conservative Rob Portman (former
Congressman and Bush official) as Voinovich's replacement in the
Senate while electing solidly conservative former House Budget
Chairman John Kasich as governor?
I would then say that Ohio had more than made amends -- and that
both it, and the nation, would be tremendously well served.
Whether or not Blackwell is the best man for the job is for the
RNC to decide, although there is every reason to believe he is
among those who could do a truly superb job in that office. But
just the sheer fact of his serious challenge for that post
combined with the chance of a Kasich/Portman ballot bonanza in
2010 is a reminder that despite recent troubles, the Ohio GOP has
produced some of the finest conservative talent around.
Conservatives ought to be thrilled at the prospect.