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Ohio Senate candidates, Mike DeWine tie fentanyl to US-Mexico border


Border agents from the United States and Mexico chat while on opposite sides of the border wall near Sunland Park, New Mexico, on Dec. 29, 2021.

Before making his case for a secure southern border, J.D. Vance began his first U.S. Senate campaign ad with a blunt question: “Are you racist?”

State Sen. Matt Dolan used a pencil in another ad to illustrate the small amount of fentanyl that can kill a person. 

Ohio’s Republican U.S. Senate candidates and elected officials have sounded the alarm over the U.S.-Mexico border as the state contends with addiction, overdose deaths and large seizures of drugs. They say a wall, coupled with more agents to patrol the border and comb through shipments, will keep drugs from reaching Ohio.

The issue is a key talking point for the GOP in this year’s elections, with most Republicans placing the blame on President Joe Biden.

In Ohio, substance abuse is a real problem: Law enforcement and recovery specialists are seeing dangerous drugs flood communities, trapping people in a cycle of addiction that sometimes ends in death.



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