As Democratic presidential candidates go, Sen. Sherrod Brown brought a lot to the table. He has many years of experience fighting successfully for progressive causes; the senator has a proven track record of earning the support of swing voters without compromising on his principles; Brown appeals to multiple Democratic constituencies; and he’s popular in the Rust Belt, where the party came up critically short in the 2016 election.
And did I mention that he’s from Ohio — and that the candidate who carried the Buckeye State went on to win the presidency in 14 of the last 14 election cycles?
It was very easy to imagine the Democratic senator becoming a top-tier contender, and perhaps even the 2020 nominee. But in the end, Brown decided he didn’t want the job.
Sen. Sherrod Brown announced Thursday he will not run for president.
The surprise announcement comes after a two-month tour through early voting states, which many believed was the building blocks of a presidential campaign.
“I will keep calling out Donald Trump and his phony populism. I will keep fighting for all workers across the country. And I will do everything I can to elect a Democratic President and a Democratic Senate in 2020. The best place for me to make that fight is in the United States Senate,” Brown said in a statement.
To my mind, this is the biggest surprise of the 2020 cycle to date. For other prospective candidates who ultimately didn’t run, there’s a simple explanation: they couldn’t line up supporters, they couldn’t put together a competitive staff and operation, they were significantly out of step with the party’s base and orthodoxy, etc.
Brown, however, is in an entirely different category. For all intents and purposes, he was running, he looked like he’d seriously compete, but he stepped aside anyway.









