The race for the United States Senate seat in Ohio, between Democrat Rep. Tim Ryan and Republican author J.D. Vance, is neck and neck. The “Morning Joe” field team recently had the opportunity to catch up with Rep. Ryan in Ohio. He graciously allowed me to speak with him during stops across the state. During one of the longer stops in Toledo, I asked Rep. Ryan the difference between Vance and himself.
“I am an Ohio guy,” Rep. Ryan told me. “I have been here my whole life. I never left. I never gave up on Ohio. And J.D. has.”
“We are here to fight,” Rep. Ryan added. “That is why I ran for office in the first place, representing working-class communities. You just do not give up. And now the tide’s starting to shift. We are landing high-tech companies. We are building electric vehicles, batteries, and solar panels here in Toledo. It is an exciting time to be part of it. I just want to make it that everyone gets in on it. The question is, do you want somebody in the Senate who will cut and run and give up on you, someone who is going to go in with the crowd? Or do you want someone who is going to stand up and fight? It is a clear distinction in this race.”
Ohio is a GOP stronghold, and Rep. Ryan’s campaign is offering his party a potential model for appealing to working class voters, forcing Republicans to expend resources to try and beat him. If Rep. Ryan is successful, he could provide a blueprint for how Democrats can win back voters in this important region of the country.
Rep. Ryan is a local, an Ohioan who places the health, safety, education, and prosperity of young Americans to heart.
“I think these races are about the future,” Rep. Ryan said. “That is the beautiful part about being an American voter. Every couple of years you get a chance to pull the lever one way or the other. It is a vote on how you feel in the present moment, but what you want the future to look like.” Building resiliency, grit and determination in our youth is key, he added.
“How do we get them the skills that they need in high school?” Rep. Ryan asked. He believes, at the end of the day, that enabling young people to thrive and have an enjoyable life is a worthy goal for all Americans. He does not believe that fancy titles are what make young people fulfilled in life. He looks to the example set by his hardworking grandparents. They had good jobs that brought joy to their lives.
Rep. Ryan’s wife recently retired after teaching fourth grade for 20 years. “The one thing Andrea taught me more than anything is as a teacher, and I think as a leader, is you have to love the kids,” Rep. Ryan said. “That must be the foundation. It is back to the brain science.” He said that if kids are in fight-or-flight mode and do not feel secure, they cannot focus and learn. Once they feel safe, secure, loved, and cared about, their minds open-up and they can function better.
Rep. Ryan has broken with his party at times. He was opposed to President Biden’s student-debt forgiveness plan and believes Democrats were wrong pushing for Americans to get college degrees. He agreed with former President Donald Trump’s tough stance on China trade policies. He criticized President Biden for considering rolling back those tariffs. The lawmaker also clashed with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi over the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package, which he voted against. Rep. Ryan said the bill was too costly and not targeted enough to help people hurt by the pandemic.
While his views on some issues align more with Republicans than Democrats, he was critical of GOP leadership. In 2016, he called then-Republican nominee Trump’s proposal to ban Muslim immigrants “anti-American”.
“I look at my grandparents,” Rep. Ryan said. “They had good jobs and gardens. They went dancing. They had a few cocktails. They watched sports. They went to church. They had joy. Now it is a grind for the ‘exhausted majority’. It is 12-hour days.” Rep. Ryan feels the exhausted majority of people in the United States are asking themselves kitchen table issues, with a growing sense of desperation. They are asking themselves if they will be able to pay for their health care bills. Rep. Ryan does not want that for his kids. He does not think anyone else does, either.
Ryan was significantly influenced by his grandfather’s work ethic, civic-mindedness and commitment to family. “It was everything,” Rep. Ryan said. “My grandfather was an usher and would be painting the church rectory while I was out on the playground. If I had a game, he was always in the stands. If our family needed something, he was there.”
Now that he has children of his own, Rep. Ryan realizes that he did not fully appreciate his grandfather’s dedication, sacrifice, and community engagement. He is now filling his grandfather’s shoes. He jokes that he has the same job as his grandfather, except he has a title.
Meanwhile, Ohio is struggling with the drug crisis. Rep. Ryan takes this public health and public safety crisis seriously. Provisional data from the CDC reveals that more than 107,000 drug-overdose deaths occurred in the United States last year, most of them involved synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl. That drug, often made from chemical components sent from China and illicitly manufactured by Mexican drug cartels, is far more potent than morphine or heroin. More than one million deaths from drug overdose have occurred since 1999.
“It needs to be a whole of government approach,” Rep. Ryan said. “You need a strong border. You need to know who is coming in and out of your country. You have to be tough on China, where the fentanyl arises, and then comes through Mexico, where it is processed. You must have that security piece.”
Rep. Ryan is deeply troubled by the explosion of fentanyl-related death across the United States and in Ohio. According to Harm Reduction Ohio, his home state saw 5,174 overdose deaths in 2021. Fentanyl, or one of its super-potent analogs, were involved in 80 percent. The CDC reported that barriers prevent many people with opioid use disorder from obtaining treatment. Experts believe these barriers are stigma, structural challenges, and lack of addiction-treatment infrastructure. These factors impede access to medications used to treat opioid use disorder.
Rep. Ryan chimed in about recent reports of multi-colored fentanyl smuggled into the United States. “This rainbow fentanyl that we are now hearing so much about is frightening,” he said. “We have tried to let our kids know as much as we could. It is not 1970 or 1980. It is a whole different ballgame from the recreational drugs that permeated our culture for a long time. You try one of these things now and your life could end.”
For example, two young people died of overdose at Ohio State a few months ago. They stayed up late studying and decided to take Adderall to keep them awake. The stimulant was laced with fentanyl.
The field of behavioral health includes mental health and substance use disorders, and I believe Rep. Ryan understands how these problems exacerbate each other. He said he believes mental health and trauma-informed care are essential to keep American youth healthy.
“We have learned so much about the impact of adverse childhood experiences, through all the research performed over the last 20 to 30 years,” Rep. Ryan said. He advocates for programs like Centering Pregnancy. That program, championed by midwives and nurse practitioners, supports pregnant women. Ryan places emphasis on programs that keep stress levels down during pregnancy.









