Ramaswamy’s Celebrity and Trump Ties Give Him a Jump in Ohio Governor’s Race
On Monday morning, as Vivek Ramaswamy was soft-launching his campaign for governor of Ohio, Dan Merenoff sat at a coffee-shop counter in Delaware, a suburb of Columbus, weighing the prospect of Mr. Ramaswamy, a political celebrity but a governing novice, running the state.
“I’d still like to read a little bit more, because he was backed by Trump for a little bit, and then all of a sudden that changed gears,” he said.
Mr. Ramaswamy, 39, is expected to formally announce his campaign for governor late this month, according to a spokesman, a move that follows a brief appointment to the second Trump administration that ended before Inauguration Day. He has never occupied a government office in Ohio, or even run for one. He moved his investment firm out of the state, to Texas, last year.
Still, as long as Mr. Ramaswamy is a Trump ally in good standing, he appears to have a leg up.
To many Ohioans, he needs no introduction after two years of dogged scrambling across the landscape of Republican politics, a blur of Fox News hits and county committee meet-and-greets that has made him one of the party’s most visible figures.
“There’s a lot of momentum behind him,” said Barbara Orange, the executive chairwoman of the Lucas County Republican Party.
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