For the GOP nomination it's a fight between a newbie from Cleveland named Tom Ganley--who has a large fortune from his auto dealing companies--and veteran Congressman/US Trade Rep/Director of Office of Management and Budget Rob Portman from Cincinnati. While Portman enjoys the backing the Republican Party leadership and all the perks and advantages that entails, Ganley is tapping into the anti-government feelings popularized by the "Tea Party" movement.
In a lot of ways, this primary is the epitome of the struggle going on in the GOP and the rest of our political structure. Across the board, issues are being increasingly polarized over bigger government vs no government, with no one considering the idea of a middle ground.
Incumbents are being pooh-poohed simply because they're a part of government--regardless of their actual accomplishments or lack thereof. Compromise candidates like the "Blue Dog" Democrats are getting caught in the middle: too liberal for their constituents, too conservative for party leadership. GOP incumbents such as Arlen Specter are finding it necessary to change parties just to have a chance of staying in office--because they've become too "establishment" and "liberal" for the GOP base.
The Portman/Ganley showdown is another sign of this. Government veteran, or government outsider? Political operator or commercial giant? Seasoned legislator or successful executive? Those are some of the choices GOP voters will have to decide in May, and the results could be quite interesting for the future of this country.
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