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    Mike DeWine

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    Richard Michael DeWine
    Mike DeWine

    In office
    January 4, 1995 – January 4, 2007
    Preceded by Howard M. Metzenbaum
    Succeeded by Sherrod Brown

    Born January 5, 1947 (1947-01-05) (age 62)
    Springfield, Ohio
    Nationality American
    Political party Republican
    Spouse Frances Struewing
    Residence Cedarville, Ohio
    Alma mater Miami University, Ohio Northern University
    Occupation attorney
    Religion Roman Catholic

    Richard Michael "Mike" DeWine (born January 5, 1947) is a former Republican senator from Ohio.

    Born in Springfield, Ohio, to Jean and Richard L. DeWine,[1] DeWine lives in Cedarville but grew up in neighboring Yellow Springs, Ohio. DeWine earned a bachelor's degree in education from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, in 1969 and a Juris Doctor degree from Ohio Northern University in 1972.

    He and his wife Frances have had eight children, one of whom died in an automobile accident in 1993. Hamilton County, Ohio, Commissioner R. Patrick DeWine is Mike DeWine's son. Ohio state representative Kevin DeWine (R-Fairborn) is DeWine's second cousin.

    Contents

    [edit] Political career

    At age 25, DeWine started working as an Assistant Prosecuting Attorney for Greene County, Ohio, and in 1976 was elected County Prosecutor. In 1980 he was elected to the Ohio State Senate and served one term.

    Only two years later, 7th District Congressman Bud Brown retired after 26 years in Congress; his father, Clarence Brown, Sr., had held the seat for 26 years before that. DeWine won the Republican nomination, assuring him of election in November. He was reelected three more times from this district, which stretches from his home in Springfield to the Columbus suburbs. He even ran unopposed in 1986 during what is regarded as a bad year for Republicans nationally.

    DeWine gave up his seat in 1990 to run for Lieutenant Governor of Ohio as the running mate of George Voinovich. The Voinovich-DeWine ticket was easily elected.

    In 1992, DeWine unsuccessfully ran against the former astronaut and incumbent Senator John Glenn. His campaign used the phrase, "What on earth has John Glenn done?"[2].

    In 1994, DeWine ran for the United States Senate, defeating prominent attorney Joel Hyatt (the son-in-law of the then-incumbent U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum) by a solid 14-point margin, largely on the coattails of Voinovich's landslide reelection bid for governor. DeWine was reelected in 2000, defeating former U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans in the primary and Ted Celeste (brother of former Ohio Gov. Dick Celeste) in the general election.

    DeWine was defeated in the 2006 midterm elections by Democrat Sherrod Brown.

    [edit] Political positions

    [edit] Social issues

    DeWine is pro-life. He sponsored the Federal Marriage Amendment but opposed State Issue 1, Ohio's Defense of Marriage Amendment, due to the technical wording of the measure, which he felt would restrict the rights of heterosexual partnerships as well.[citation needed]

    DeWine is a supporter of gun control laws, and in 2004 he co-sponsored an amendment to renew the ban on common semi-automatic weapons[3]. This earned him 'F' ratings from the National Rifle Association and Gun Owners of America.[4] On July 29, 2005, he was one of only two Republican senators to vote against the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act [5], which banned lawsuits against gun manufacturers, distributors and dealers for criminal misuse of their products.

    DeWine has also broken with his party on issues such as funding for Head Start programs,[citation needed] the federal minimum wage[citation needed] and drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR).[6]

    [edit] 2005 filibuster

    After President George W. Bush nominated White House Counsel Harriet Miers on October 3, 2005, for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court, DeWine said "I think the fact she doesn't have judicial experience will add to the diversity of the Supreme Court... There is no reason everyone has to have that same (judicial) background."[7] Opposition from conservative groups unhappy with Miers' resume ultimately sank her nomination.

    [edit] Senate Committees

    DeWine sat on both the Senate Judiciary and Select Intelligence committees.

    [edit] Controversy and criticism

    DeWine's attack ad against Brown used doctored imagery of 9/11.

    On July 14, 2006, DeWine's campaign began airing TV commercials depicting a smoking World Trade Center. "The senator was notified... by a reporter at U.S. News & World Report that the image of the burning Twin Towers could not have depicted the actual event because the smoke was blowing the wrong way."[8][9] DeWine's campaign admitted that the video was actually a still photo of the World Trade Center with smoke digitally added.[8] He also was criticized for using an emotionally charged image to attack his challenger.[9]

    Another of DeWine's ads suggested that opponent Sherrod Brown didn't pay his taxes for thirteen years. This claim led to the Associated Press reporting on October 19 that, "Several Ohio television stations have stopped airing a Republican ad because state documents contradict the ad's accusation that Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Sherrod Brown didn't pay an unemployment tax bill for 13 years." Brown produced a commercial citing these facts. [10] DeWine's ads were changed to state only that he had failed to pay his unemployment taxes until legal action was taken against him.

    DeWine has also been criticized on the issue of national security. Pundit Bob Geiger has noted that DeWine, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has missed nearly 50% of that committee's public hearings. Rand Beers, an intelligence critic and expert who has served during the Bush and Clinton administrations, asserted that DeWine's attendance at the Committee's closed meetings has not been better, charging that "he is not a particularly active member."[11]

    [edit] 2006 bid for re-election

    DeWine faced conservative Republican challengers William G. Pierce and David R. Smith for the nomination of the Republican Party in the May 2006 primary. DeWine won with 71.82% of the votes.[12]

    DeWine's Democratic opponent in the November 2006 general election was 13th District Congressman Sherrod Brown, who won 78.05% of Democrats' votes in the primary, defeating truck driver Merrill Samuel Keiser, Jr.[13] Iraq War veteran Paul Hackett dropped out of the Democratic race earlier in the election cycle.

    Most political watchers believed DeWine was one of the Senate's most vulnerable incumbents in the 2006 elections. Democrats poured resources into the Ohio race due to considerable anger at corruption in the Bob Taft administration. In addition, many conservative Republicans felt that DeWine was too "liberal" and "out of touch with conservative values" for their liking.

    At first, the GOP worked hard to keep DeWine in office. However, according to an article in the October 16, 2006, edition of The New York Times, top Republican officials on the national level determined that DeWine would probably be defeated and moved financial support from his race to other Republican senatorial candidates they felt were more likely to win.[14]

    DeWine lost by a margin of almost 12%, as below:

    2006 United States Senate election, Ohio
    Party Candidate Votes % ±%
    Democratic Sherrod Brown 2,138,432 55.88% +20.01%
    Republican Mike DeWine (incumbent) 1,686,857 44.08% -15.82%
    Independent Richard Duncan 1,540 0.04% n/a
    Majority 451,575 11.8%
    Democratic gain from Republican Swing

    DeWine did well in most of his home region of western Ohio, but Brown dominated almost all of the eastern half of the state, along with the Lake Erie shore out to Toledo.[15]

    [edit] Post-Senate Career

    Senator DeWine is reportedly exploring a run for Ohio Attorney General in 2010 and accepted positions teaching government courses at Cedarville University, Ohio Northern University and Miami University. In 2007, he joined the law firm Keating Muething & Klekamp as corporate investigations group co-chair.[16] He also advised the Ohio campaign of John McCain's 2008 presidential bid.[17]

    [edit] Footnotes

    [edit] External links

    United States House of Representatives
    Preceded by
    Clarence J. "Bud" Brown Jr.
    Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
    from Ohio's 7th congressional district

    1983–1991
    Succeeded by
    Dave Hobson
    Political offices
    Preceded by
    Paul R. Leonard
    Lieutenant Governor of Ohio
    1991–1994
    Succeeded by
    Nancy P. Hollister
    United States Senate
    Preceded by
    Howard M. Metzenbaum
    United States Senator (Class 1) from Ohio
    1995–2007
    Served alongside: John Glenn, George Voinovich
    Succeeded by
    Sherrod Brown
    Persondata
    NAME DeWine, Mike
    ALTERNATIVE NAMES DeWine, Richard Michael (full name)
    SHORT DESCRIPTION Ohio politician
    DATE OF BIRTH January 5, 1947
    PLACE OF BIRTH Springfield, Ohio
    DATE OF DEATH living
    PLACE OF DEATH
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