海角破解版

漏 2025 海角破解版

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to and operated by 海角破解版.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Ohio has its first 2026 Democratic candidate for Secretary of State

a man with blonde hair wearing a blue shirt smiles at the camera
Courtesy
/
Bryan Hambley for Ohio campaign

Winning elections for statewide offices in Ohio has been lately, in one election cycle after another.

There is currently one Democrat holding a statewide office 鈥 Ohio Supreme Court Justice Jennifer Brunner.

Ohio had one Democratic senator until the November 2024 election, when longtime incumbent .

A Democrat hasn鈥檛 been in the governor鈥檚 office since Ted Strickland, elected in 2006, lost to Republican John Kasich in 2010.

Next year, in 2026, Democrats will have another chance to break the GOP domination in Ohio, but it could be a steep, mountain goat climb in a state that has given its electoral votes to Donald Trump in three straight elections.

Maybe it is time for Ohio Democrats to try something else, something different.

Like an oncologist who wants to run for Ohio Secretary of State.

An oncologist like Bryan Hambley, who believes GOP legislators and statewide officials can put their thumbs on the scale of elections with partisan gerrymandering and voter suppression tactics.

鈥淚鈥檓 running for Ohio secretary of state because I am tired of watching people being disenfranchised by that office and by the legislature,鈥欌 Hambley said. 鈥淥hio voters don鈥檛 like to be cheated.鈥

Hambley, who lives in the Warren County portion of Loveland, is a hematology oncologist for UC Health, who specializes in leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma.

His wife Jana is a trauma surgeon, and they have two young children, ages 5 and 7.

What drove him to declare his candidacy for Ohio Secretary of State 鈥 more than a year before the Feb. 2026 filing deadline 鈥 is what the present secretary of state, Republican Frank LaRose, has done to confuse voters through deceptive ballot language.

Hambley that LaRose鈥檚 office has twice written confusing ballot language through the Ohio Ballot Board, which LaRose controls.

In 2023, the ballot board approved misleading ballot language for the reproductive rights amendment, and in 2024 鈥減urposefully misconstrued the outcome for the anti-gerrymandering initiative," Hambley said.

In 2023, the abortion rights amendment was approved by voters, but, in November, the Citizens Not Politicians amendment was defeated.

鈥淣o Secretary of State should use their authority over ballot language to voters to get the result they want,鈥 Hambley said.

By defeating the Citizens Not Politicians ballot issue, the Republicans have preserved a redistricting system that gives them the advantage they need in the Ohio General Assembly, Hambley said.

鈥淏ut first, they had to sabotage the ballot issue itself,鈥欌 he said.

The Ohio Ballot Board 鈥 three Republicans, two Democrats 鈥 is controlled by LaRose and includes State Sen. Theresa Gavarone, a Bowling Green Republican and a lawyer who considers herself the legislature鈥檚 authority on elections.

It was Gavarone, now the Ohio Senate majority floor leader, who worked with LaRose last year to craft ballot language for Issue 1 that the Citizens Not Politicians group considered to be misleading.

And it is Gavarone whom many in her party believe will be the GOP candidate in 2026 to replace LaRose, who is term-limited out next year.

Gavarone, 58, came up through the ranks in the traditional way 鈥 Bowling Green city council; appointment to the Ohio House and elected twice; appointment to the Ohio Senate in 2019, elected in 2020 and 2024.

The only really non-political part of her resume is that she and her husband own a Philly cheesesteak restaurant in Bowling Green called Mr. Spots.

Hambley鈥檚 resume is mainly focused on treating serious blood diseases.

But even as active as Hambley has been as an oncologist, he has always found time to help the Democratic Party, particularly in Warren County.

鈥淏ryan is the first in the door and last to leave,鈥 said Kelly Sakalas, chair of the Warren County Democratic Party. 鈥淗e spent countless hours volunteering and knocking on doors supporting reproductive rights, fighting against gerrymandering, and supporting Senator Sherrod Brown.

鈥淲e are lucky to have him here in Warren County, and Ohio will be lucky to have him as their Secretary of State,鈥 Sakalas said.

But, good candidate or not, Hambley will be battling a mighty strong tide that has been breaking for the Republicans in Ohio for the better part of three decades.

David Niven, a professor of political science at the University of Cincinnati, said it is clear the Ohio Democratic Party doesn鈥檛 have a deep bench of well-known, well-funded statewide candidates.

鈥淚s it theoretically possible for a Democrat in Ohio running in one of the undercard races to out-perform the ticket?鈥 Niven said, 鈥淵es 鈥 but LeBron James is pretty busy right now.鈥

Still, Niven said, that is not to say that political newcomers like Hambley shouldn鈥檛 take a shot at it.

鈥淚t is, of course, enormously important that thoughtful people step up and take a stand,鈥 Niven said. 鈥淥hio Republicans have enjoyed an all but free pass to do whatever they want for some time in Ohio 鈥 and their maneuvers on the mechanisms of voting are easily among the most extreme in the nation.鈥

a woman in a white lab coat stands at a podium holding up a blue N-95 face mask
Tony Dejak
/
AP
Then-Ohio Department of Health Director Amy Acton speaks during a news conference at the MetroHealth Medical Center in Cleveland on Feb. 27, 2020, as Gov. Mike DeWine watches.

Hambley will not be the only physician on the ballot in next spring鈥檚 primary election 鈥 Amy Acton, who was Ohio鈥檚 director of public health during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, is .

With a little over a year to go before the filing deadline, Hambley knows there may be one or more other Democrats jumping into the primary.

That does not worry him a bit.

鈥淪ome things are out of our control,鈥 Hambley said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to spend time worrying about things we can鈥檛 control.鈥

Given how dedicated he is to his medical practice, he said turning his attention to politics was a hard decision to make.

鈥淚t was tough,鈥欌 Hambley said. 鈥淏ut, in the end, I don鈥檛 think our responsibilities as citizens end at the hospital door. I will give it my best.鈥

Howard Wilkinson is in his 50th year of covering politics on the local, state and national levels.