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This week on the US Daytime Soaps. General Hospital Nice to see Liz finally confronting her parents for 25 years of absence, however…I do not like the developments of Liz being responsible for Reiko’s fall (though it looked like she just slipped) and her getting her disease. This storyline could…
Hillbilly Elegy author eyes Senate bid in Ohio
J.D. Vance says he is “thinking seriously” about running for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Republican Rob Portman in 2022. Author: DAN SEWELL (Associated Press) Published: 4:09 PM EDT April 16, 2021 Updated: 4:09 PM EDT April 16, 2021
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio Rodney Muterspaw figures J.D. Vance has already shown he s got what it takes to be a U.S. senator.
Vance, the “Hillbilly Elegy” author and a fellow Middletown native, broke out of poverty and family chaos and never forgot his Appalachian roots on his way to success.
“I think he can talk in a way that the average person can understand,” said the retired police chief, who, like Vance, has eastern Kentucky roots. “I’m a hillbilly, and I understand him 100%.”
Ohio News
By DAN SEWELL Associated Press
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) Rodney Muterspaw figures J.D. Vance has already shown he’s got what it takes to be a U.S. senator.
Vance, the “Hillbilly Elegy” author and a fellow Middletown native, broke out of poverty and family chaos and never forgot his Appalachian roots on his way to success.
“I think he can talk in a way that the average person can understand,” said the retired police chief, who, like Vance, has eastern Kentucky roots. “I’m a hillbilly, and I understand him 100%.”
Muterspaw’s view is at the heart of the fiercest political debate in Ohio. With his 2016 book, Vance helped explain to the nation Donald Trump’s popularity among the white Appalachian working class of his upbringing. Now at 36, the bestselling author is considering whether he can win the votes of the people he claims to know so well.