3 Reasons to Add Rob Portman to the GOP 2016 Short List

Sen. Rob Portman, the affable Republican from Ohio, wasn’t even a blip on pollster John Zogby’s latest survey of the 2016 GOP presidential field.

The Zogby Analytics finding published on Wednesday by Forbes says that Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) is leading the field with 20 percent support among likely GOP primary voters “followed by ‘establishment’ candidates New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, with 13 percent each.”

Bringing up the rear are Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker with 8 percent, Sen. Marco Rubio (FL) with 7 percent and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal with 4 percent.

Related: Paul and Rubio Take Early Lead in 2016 Spending

Yet Portman suddenly is getting a lot of media attention, now that the National Republican Party has announced its choice of Cleveland, Ohio, as the site of its 2016 national convention – especially given the importance of Ohio in his party’s efforts to win back the White House.

Portman’s home state of Ohio traditionally has been a key swing state and bellwether that President Obama carried twice, in 2008 against Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and in 2012 against former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.

Portman has been around presidential politics for much of his career – primarily in supporting roles or working in the background. He reportedly was on Romney’s short-list of candidates to be his running mate in 2012, before Romney picked Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin.

Related: New Jersey’s Fiscal Woes Imperil An Already-Damaged Chris Christie

Portman told The Washington Post Tuesday that he was “not particularly eager” to run again but that “if nobody running is able to win and is willing to address these issues, then I might have a change of heart.”

“Having been involved in six presidential campaigns, I know what it’s like,” he told The Post’s Robert Costa, adding that he would not make a decision about entering the 2016 GOP sweepstakes until later this year or in early 2015. “Let’s see what happens, let’s see who runs,” he said.

The conservative 58-year-old lawmaker served as White House budget director and U.S. Trade Representative under President George W. Bush. He speaks with authority on spending, tax, deficit, and trade issues.

In nearly16 years on Capitol Hill in both the House and Senate he has co-authored over a dozen bills that became law, including reforms for the Internal Revenue Service. More recently, he came out in favor of same-sex marriage after learning that his son Will is gay.

Related: The One Candidate Who Could Shake Up the 2016 Election

Portman has shown an ability to work closely with Democrats, which he did in 2011 as part of the bipartisan congressional budget Super Committee. Yet he also hews to the GOP no-new-taxes line and faults President Obama for a failure of leadership.