COLUMBUS, Ohio — Republican Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted will succeed Vice President-elect JD Vance in the U.S. Senate, the state's governor announced Friday.
Gov. Mike DeWine's decision ends months of jockeying among top Ohio Republicans for the coveted seat, which Vance had held for less than two years before resigning Jan. 10. Choosing Husted removes at least one top contender from the 2026 governor's race, but DeWine said he still expects the field to be crowded.
He said a large consideration was that his long-serving righthand man has extensive government experience that Ohio's last two U.S. senators — Vance and Cleveland businessman Bernie Moreno, both political novices when elected — lacked.
The 57-year-old Husted is a former Ohio House speaker, state senator and two-term Ohio secretary of state. He has been lieutenant governor since 2019. Husted will serve until Dec. 15, 2026. A special election for the last two years of Vance's six-year term will be held in November 2026.
Standing next to Husted, DeWine called him a trusted partner on key decisions.
''I have worked with him, I have seen him, I know his knowledge of Ohio,'' DeWine said. ''I know his heart. I know what he cares about. I know his skills. And all of that tells me that he is the right person for this job.''
Husted had a reputation for bipartisanship when he led the Ohio House. He said Friday that he would work to find common ground in Washington, but he also vowed to support President-elect Donald Trump's agenda wholeheartedly, including voting in favor of all his Cabinet appointees.
Flanked by his wife, Tina, and his three children, Husted at times grew tearful in accepting DeWine's appointment, noting how much he has loved his work in state government these past 20-plus years.