COLUMBUS —
Republican candidate Josh Mandel vowed Tuesday to limit himself to two terms in office if he is elected U.S. senator this November, a move that comes as he tries to cast himself as a fresh face and his Democratic opponent as a career politician.
His remarks to reporters at a rare news conference in Columbus were part of what he called a package of proposals aimed to “clean up Washington.”
Mandel, the state treasurer, wants former members of Congress to give up their pensions if they become registered lobbyists. And if senators and representatives can’t make spending and budget decisions on time, they shouldn’t get paid on time either, he said. He’s also proposing 12-year term limits for members of the House and Senate.
“We have a crop of career politicians there who think they can live by one set of rules while all of us throughout the state and the country live by a different set of rules,” he said.
Democratic incumbent Sen. Sherrod Brown is a part of the problem, he said, adding, “There’s a whole crop of career politicians on both sides of the aisle who’ve let us down.”
Mandel, 34, is looking to tap into the rising anger directed at longtime politicians in Washington in the Nov. 6 election. He’s challenging Brown, 59, who began his political career in 1974 as the youngest state representative in Ohio history.
A poll released Monday shows Brown with a slight edge over Mandel, 52 percent to 45 percent.
Mandel’s plan would limit House members to six two-year terms and senators to two six-year terms. Though, he said nothing would prevent politicians from moving from one chamber to the other after their 12 years end.
It’s unlikely the idea would get traction in Washington. Members of Congress have talked of self-imposed term limits, but proposals have gone nowhere.
Mandel said he would adhere to the term limits, even if they didn’t become law.
“I’ve never lived in Washington,” he told reporters. “I’ve never worked in Washington. I don’t plan to spend the rest of my life in Washington.”
Mandel criticized Brown for breaking a term-limit promise when he was re-elected to a seventh term in the U.S. House in 2004.
Brown said in 1992 that he supported a 12-year limit on congressional service. Ohio voters that year had approved limiting lawmakers to eight years.
“Frankly, I’ve watched the state Legislature and ... I’ve changed my mind,” Brown said in 2004. He had argued term limits kept local lawmakers more focused on learning the ropes and being re-elected than dealing with problems such as school funding, health care and the budget.
Brown’s campaign spokesman Justin Barasky called Mandel’s term-limit pledge “a total joke.”
Mandel promised to serve a full four-year term as state treasurer when he was elected in 2010, but he’s campaigning for the Senate, Barasky noted.
“No matter what job Josh Mandel has in elected office, he doesn’t do it,” Barasky said. “He runs for the next one.”
Asked why voters should believe Mandel would limit himself to two Senate terms after he had said he would complete a full term as state treasurer, Mandel said, “I will uphold it. You have my word. I will uphold it.”
World, nation, state
Josh Mandel vows two-term limit if elected senator
- World, nation, state
-
-
Medical examiner: 24 dead in Oklahoma twister
Emergency crews searched the broken remnants of an Oklahoma City suburb Tuesday for survivors of a massive tornado that flattened homes and demolished an elementary school. At least 24 people were killed, including at least seven children, and those numbers were expected to climb.
-
Rescue efforts ongoing as grim scene emerges after tornado
After darkness fell over this tornado-stricken city on Monday night and Tuesday morning, rescuers confronted a strange and grim tableau. Trees were wrapped with aluminum and downed powerlines ran over streams from broken water mains. In a city with so many ruined homes - and at least 51 dead after an enormous twister cranked through the southern Oklahoma City suburb - call after call for victims went without answer. “First responders! Do you need any help?” shouted one nurse who picked through a home without a roof and without a door.
-
2 FBI agents killed during training exercise
Two FBI agents died Friday in an apparent off-shore training exercise.
The agency’s website identified the officers as Special Agent Christopher Lorek and Special Agent Stephen Shaw. They were members of the FBI’s elite Hostage Rescue Team, which is part of the Critical Incident Response Group based at Quantico, Va. -
Just one ticket is good for big Powerball jackpot
One ticket sold in Florida has won the Powerball jackpot, with a final annuity value of $590.5 million, short of the advertised estimate of $600 million.
-
Ohio newspaper editor David Miller dead at 66
Editor David C. Miller of The (Bowling Green) Sentinel-Tribune newspaper in Ohio died Saturday at a hospital in York, Pa., the paper said in a statement. He was 66.
-
Police in NE Ohio report black bear sightings
Police in a northeast Ohio community report a number of black bear sightings.
-
Tornadoes level homes in Okla., hit other states
One of several tornadoes that touched down Sunday in Oklahoma turned homes in a trailer park near Oklahoma City into splinters and rubble and sent frightened residents along a 100-mile corridor scurrying for shelter.
-
Mental illness in youth is a common struggle
Go to a busy street in your community and count the next 25 adolescents who walk, bike, skateboard, stroll or saunter past. Odds are that two of those 25 kids (8.3 percent to be exact) would own up to having experienced 14 or more days in the last month that he or she considered “mentally unhealthy,” according to a comprehensive report on the mental health of American youth issued this week.
-
Imprisoned Ohio Amish complain about schooling
Some of the Amish sentenced in beard-cutting attacks on fellow Amish in Ohio are upset with federal prison education requirements.
-
Feces contaminates 58 percent of public swimming pools
Human feces taints more than half of public swimming pools, a finding U.S. health officials are using to urge better personal hygiene as the summer months approach.
- More World, nation, state Headlines
-



