Cleveland
Plain Dealer...
Mandel says
Brown a career politician
December 18, 2011
Ohio
Treasurer Josh Mandel says U.S.
Sen. Sherrod Brown has been seeking public office since Nixon’s
administration
In
a gushing interview on radio’s Rick
Amato Show — guest-hosted by conservative Howard Kooligan — Republican
Ohio
Treasurer Josh Mandel made disparaging remarks about U.S. Sen. Sherrod
Brown,
the Democrat he hopes to unseat next year.
Some
of those remarks have already
gone through the Truth-O-Meter and we won’t rehash them here, but a
simple
declarative statement Mandel made shortly after calling Brown a
“radical
extremist” caught the attention of PolitiFact Ohio.
Mandel
said that Brown “has been
running for public office since Richard Nixon was president.”
That’s
a long career -- one that
crosses the tenure of eight presidents. PolitiFact Ohio thought it
would be
worth checking given that Mandel, who is much younger than Brown, has
gotten
off to a pretty early start on his political career as well.
We’ll
say right off the bat that
Mandel is correct.
Richard
Nixon resigned as president of
the United States on Aug. 9, 1974. Meanwhile, the 21-year-old Brown was
already
a candidate to represent the 61st District of the Ohio House of
Representatives. Brown won the general election that November and took
office
on Jan. 3, 1975.
After
eight years in the Statehouse,
Brown went on to serve as Ohio Secretary of State for another eight
years
before losing re-election to Bob Taft. After two years out of office,
Brown was
elected to Congress. He served in the U.S. House of Representatives
until being
elected to the U.S. Senate in 2006.
So
Mandel is clearly labeling Brown as
a career politician. Is a long political career a bad thing? That’s not
for
PolitiFact to say. But it’s worth noting that Mandel, 34, could find
himself in
a similar position as Brown, 59, if he continues in politics.
Mandel
started running for political
office at age 25 when he sought a seat on the Lyndhurst City Council.
He was
elected in 2003 and has held some form of public office ever since
(interrupted
twice by tours of Iraq as a Marine).
After
three years on council, Mandel
ran successfully for the Ohio House of Representatives, where he served
two
terms. He was elected Ohio Treasurer in 2010, but will leave before his
term
expires if he beats Brown.
All
of which means that if he remains
in politics, in 25 years a young upstart Democrat might make light of
the fact
that Mandel has been running for public office since George W. Bush’s
first
term.
We
can’t predict how long Mandel will
keep running for office, but we can say that his statement about Brown
is
accurate. On the Truth-O-Meter it rates True.
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