Medina County Dem News
Friday, November 23, 2007(Medina County Democratic Action Committee)
Tom
Wolfe to Retire from Elections Board, Party
Scheduled
Tom Wolfe, former
County Chair and longtime member of the Board
of Elections, is retiring from the Board. A
retirement party for Tom is being held Friday,
November 30th, from 4:30 to 7 at the Eagles
Hall in Medina. Stop in and pay tribute to Tom
for his years of outstanding service on behalf
of the Democratic Party.
Governor
Ted Strickland Coming to Medina County on
December 8, 2007
Special
Announcement: Mark your calendar
now!
Governor Strickland will join Medina
County Democrats for a fundraiser on Saturday,
December 8th, 11:00 AM, at Rustic Hills Country
Club, Medina. Donation: $50 per person;
Chairman's Circle Donation: $150 per
person.
All proceeds go to the Medina County
Democratic Party.
Reservation deadline is
December 4th. Send checks to Medina County
Democratic Party, P.O. Box 583, Medina, OH
44258.
Medina County Democratic Party
Holiday Brunch
DEMOCRATS…LET'S GET
TOGETHER!
PRE-HOLIDAY BRUNCH
SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 1, 2007
10:00 AM
COPPERTOP, AT
CHEROKEE HILLS GOLF COURSE
5740 CENTER RD.
(RT. 303), VALLEY CITY
$16 PER PERSON;
CHILDREN 3-12, $8; 3 AND UNDER FREE
FEATURED
SPEAKER:
CONGRESSWOMAN BETTY SUTTON
IN
KEEPING WITH THE SPIRIT OF HOLIDAY GIVING,
PLEASE BRING NON-PERISHABLE FOOD ITEMS OR
HOUSEHOLD SUPPLIES TO BE DONATED TO THE
COMMUNITY SERVICES CENTER IN
MEDINA.
RESERVATIONS DUE BY NOVEMBER
27TH
CALL 330-722-6655 OR SIGN UP AT
WWW.MEDINADEMS.ORG OR CONTACT PAM MILLER AT
330-725-7487 OR PAM450@BRIGHT.NET
PAY AT THE
DOOR OR SEND CHECKS TO:
MEDINA COUNTY
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
P.O. BOX 583
MEDINA, OH
44258
VOLUNTEER FOR ROBIN WEIRAUCH –
ELECT ANOTHER DEMOCRAT TO CONGRESS
Who:
Robin Weirauch, Democratic Congressional
Candidate (http://www.robinweirauch.com/)
What: We don't have to
wait until '08 to help elect another Democrat
to the U.S. Congress!
When: Three Week
Countdown to Tuesday, December 11, 2007 –
Special Election Day!
Where: U.S. Congress,
District 5 (Ashland, Crawford, Defiance,
Fulton, Henry, Huron, Lucas, Mercer, Paulding,
Putnam, Sandusky, Seneca, Van Wert, Williams,
Wood, Wyandot)
Why: For our communities, our
state, our nation!
Hi Friends,
We are
21 days from victory! We have lot left to do to
elect Robin Weirauch to Congress. Here are a
few ways to help elect Robin and improve The
Democratic Party's strength in
Congress.
1. December 1st – We are
having a HUGE canvass in the district on the
first Saturday of December. The canvasses start
at 10 AM. We will direct you to a canvass near
your county. Want to walk and talk the entire
weekend? We'll find a home for you to stay!
2. More Canvass Opportunities! –
December 2nd, 8th and 9th – we need volunteers
to talk to voters about Robin whenever
possible. Bring friends!
3. Get Out the
Vote – GOTV twice in two months! Can politics
be any more exciting?! Volunteer Election Day
Weekend (December 8 – 9) and/or Election Day
(December 11). We have a lot of voters to talk
to, and the most effective way we can achieve
this goal is by talking to them face-to-face
and over the phone!
We appreciate
everything that you do. Now, let's ELECT Robin
WEIRAUCH to CONGRESS!!
If you can help
this special election cycle, please contact any
of the following:
Megan Joyce (NE Ohio
Field Director)
614-207-1714
(c)
megan@ohiodems.org
Michell Domkee
(NW Ohio Field Director)
614-207-5702
(c)
michell@ohiodems.org
Courtney
Foley (Weirauch Field Director)
202-276-5305
(cell)
419-352-1787
(office)
Courtney.foley@gmail.com
Medina
County Off-Year Voting
Statistics
According to the Medina
County Board of Elections website 37,414 voters
voted in the 2007 general election. The BOE
also shows the county as having 124,107 voters.
Based on those two figures, the turnout was
30.1%. The figure for the total number of
voters is misleading, however.
There
are 23,040 registered voters in Medina County
who didn't vote in either the 2004 or 2006
general elections. There are also 74,247 who
voted in either of those two elections.
Assuming that voters who have missed voting in
both a presidential and gubernatorial elections
aren't going to vote in an off-year election,
it makes sense to take them out of the equation
when figuring the turn-out for 2007.
If
you remove the 23,040 "missing" voters from the
equation, you get a voter universe of 101,067.
Using that figure, the turn-out increases to
37.1%. If you calculate the turn-out based on
the voters who actually voted in either the
2004 or 2006 general elections, the turn-out
increases to 50.3%.
What's interesting
about off-year elections is that both political
parties aren't seeing a very large percentage
of their voters voting in them, if 2005 is any
guide. In 2004 Democratic voters in Medina
County numbered 16,195 while Republican voters
numbered 16,416. In 2006 Democratic voters
numbered 15,207 and Republican voters numbered
15,555.
In 2005, however, the turn-out
for Democratic voters dropped to 4019 and the
turn-out for Republican voters dropped to 3258.
If either or both political parties had turned
out their voters anywhere close the 2004 or
2006 general elections, the results would
probably have been dramatically
different.
Republican, Democrat Tied
in Seville Council Race After Official
Count
James Lovejoy, a Democrat, and
Leslie Miller, a Republican, were tied after
the official count in their race for Seville,
Ohio Village Council. Each of them has 291
votes. There will now be a recount by hand, and
if they are still tied after the hand recount,
a coin flip will determine the winner.
Lovejoy ran a very aggressive campaign
for Village Council while Miller, an incumbent
council member, was not nearly as visible.
There were three people running to fill two
spots on the Council.
This is the only
race in the county in which a recount will be
conducted. You can read the story about it in the Medina
County Gazette.
NLRB Gives Workers
the Shaft
Harold Myerson, who has a
column that appears in the
Washington Post, wrote on November 21, 2007
about some recent rulings by the NLRB. The NLRB
was established during the Franklin Roosevelt
administration to protect the rights of workers
to organize unions. Unfortunately, since Bush
as been president and controlled the
appointment process, it has become, to use
Myerson's phrase, "The National Labor Ruination
Board."
As Myerson points out, there
are two recent rulings that show just how far
the Board will bend logic and reasoning to
arrive at employer friendly decisions. In one
case the Board ruled that even if 51% of
employees sign union cards saying they want
representation, the employer must post a notice
informing the employees that if 30% of them
sign a petition saying they don't want a union,
the wishes of the 51% will be ignored and an
election will take place. The Board reasoned
that the cards might have been the result of
"group pressure."
In another case,
however, the Broad ruled that if there is a
union in place, and 51% of the workers sign
cards saying they don't want the union to
represent them any longer, that is fine, and no
election has to be held. In other words, cards
that help unions are bad, but cards that help
employers are good.
Most social
liberals deplore the conservative attempts to
pack the courts because of what it will do to
the Roe v. Wade decision. Roe, however, is not
the real reason why conservatives are trying to
pack the courts. The real reasons are to help
corporations avoid laws that hamper their
freedom of action and to help the Federal
government increase its ability to monitor and
control people. Roe is just the excuse that
conservatives give to the religious right to
get their help.
2008 Primary &
Caucus Schedule
A blogger named
"Connecticut
Bob" has
taken the time to put together the primary and caucus schedule
for both
the Democratic and Republican Parties. It is an
interesting document. The caucuses apparently
start on January 3rd with Iowa, but might be
the 14th, and the primaries apparently start on
January 15th with Michigan, but might actually
start on January 22nd with New
Hampshire.
UPDATE: There are now reports
out that New Hampshire's primary will be on
January 8, 2008.
New Poll on
Character Traits of 2008 Presidential
Candidates
The AP and Yahoo have a
new poll out in which respondents
were asked to rate presidential candidates from
each party in terms of character traits such
being decisive, honest, experienced, ethical,
and strong. In each of these traits, Clinton
and Giuliani lead their respective parties.
What is interesting about this poll is that the
two leading candidates for their parties in
terms of being likeable are Obama and Giuliani.
Between those two, Obama was viewed as more
likeable than Giuliani by a 54% to 46% spread.
The article about the poll points out,
though, that likeability, if there is such a
word, ranks relatively low on a list of
character traits that voters consider important
for a presidential candidate. Interestingly in
this election year, according to the article,
Democrats are concentrating more on personal
characteristics and Republicans more on policy.
Back in 2000 we were told by a lot of
supposedly knowlegeable people in the media
that Bush would beat Gore because people liked
him better than Gore. According to this
article, and this poll, that is just one more
example of how wrong the media can be when it
comes to analyzing politics. Too often, what is
supposedly objective reporting is nothing more
than the reporter's own biases disguised as the
opinion of others.
Republican Praise
for Democratic Medina County Auditor
Kovack
Mike Morse, former president
of Medina City Council, and a Republican, wrote
a letter to the editor of the Medina County
Gazette praising Mike Kovack, the Democratic
Auditor of Medina County. You can view the
letter here.
How Iraq War
Has Hurt U.S. Diplomatically
Anne
Applebaum of the Washington Post is a columnist
who seems to be somewhat sympathetic to the
Bush Administration. Therefore, we were struck
by a column that appears in the Post
dated Tuesday, November 20, 2007, in which she
points out the ways in which the Iraq War has
damaged the diplomatic efforts of the U.S. She
starts off by noting that militarily things
seem better in Iraq, but she then goes on to
state that most Americans don't realize what
this war has done to our standing in the world.
This is a quote from her
column:
Though I don't especially
want to perpetuate any stereotypes about the
mainstream media, I have to say that this
optimism is totally unwarranted. Not because
things aren't improving in Iraq -- it seems
they are, at least for the moment -- but
because the collateral damage inflicted by the
war on America's relationships with the rest of
the world is a lot deeper and broader than most
Americans have realized. It isn't just that the
Iraq war invigorated the anti-Americanism that
has always been latent pretty much everywhere.
What's worse is the fact that -- however it all
comes out in the end, however successful Iraqi
democracy is a decade from now -- our conduct
of the war has disillusioned our natural
friends and supporters and thrown a lasting
shadow over our military and political
competence. However it all comes out, the price
we've paid is too high.
When
America was first formed and for about a
hundred years thereafter we pretty much tried
to influence the rest of the world by example,
not by military force. Even after we began to
emerge as a world power, and fought the war
against the Spanish in the 1890s, we were
usually reluctant to throw our weight around.
We only got into WWI when a ship was attacked
and Americans were killed. Then, after that
war, we ignored the League of Nations and
concentrated on ourselves. We only got into
WWII after Pearl Harbor, and might not have
even declared war on Germany and Italy except
they declared war on us.
After WWII,
though, we became convinced that we had to be
involved with the rest of the world. So we took
the lead in establishing the United Nations,
helped rebuild Europe with the Marshall Plan,
conducted on the most benign occupations by a
conquering power in world history in Japan, and
helped form N.A.T.O. to counteract Soviet
expansionism. In most of those efforts,
however, we worked in concert with others and
didn't try to go it alone.
Bush decided
on a different approach. Unlike his own father
in the first Gulf War, and unlike Clinton in
Kosovo. he decided, along with Tony Blair, to
pretty much go it alone in fighting the Iraqis.
He pressured the U.N. and Congress to support
him and invaded a country that had done nothing
to the U.S.
His approach has been a
disaster. We have alienated our natural allies.
We have appeared hypocritical to the rest of
the world. We have violated our own ideals. We
have sacrificed priceless lives and over half a
trillion dollars in the sands of Iraq. We find
ourselves in a situation which has no easy way
out, and in which no matter what we do, our own
self-interest will be jeopardized.
Meanwhile Bush and his supporters will
see columns like Applebaum's as weak and her
arguments as meritless. They will continue to
see what Bush has done as being both right and
necessary. They will continue to enable him to
drag down America's standing in the
world.
Will Clinton be Electable in
Ohio?
That's the title of a
column that appeared in the
Sunday, November 18, 2007 edition of the
Columbus Dispatch. The column appears to have
its impetus from a poll that was released by A
Quinnipiac University poll of Ohio voters. The
poll showed that 44% of Ohioans had a favorable
view of Clinton and 44% had an unfavorable view
of her. The poll also showed that 56% would
either definitely vote for her or might vote
for her, while 41% said they would never vote
for her.
There were significant
differences between Democrats and Republicans,
as might be expected, and some differences
between men and women, which might also be
expected. What is somewhat unexpected is that
35% of independents polled said that they would
never vote for her. The reason that this is
unexpected is that in most national polls
independents are expressing attitudes much
closer to Democatic ideals than to Republican
ideals.
Another unexpected result, this
one more pleasing to Clinton, is that only 52%
of white, born-again evangelicals say that they
would never vote for her while 45% of the same
group would either definitely vote for her,
(24%) or might vote for her, (21%). The reason
why this is unexpected is that in 2004 CNN Exit
poll this group favored Bush over Kerry by 78%
to 21% and constitued 23% of the poll sample.
If Clinton can improve on Kerry's percentage
with this group by 24% points or anything close
to it, then she will win Ohio, and win it
comfortably.
Here's something else to
consider when analyzing this whole
favorable-unfavorable view thing about Clinton.
In 2004, again according to the CNN exit poll,
Bush, who carried the state had 47% of the
electorate viewing him unfavorably. Again, if
Clinton keeps her unfavorable rating in the low
40s, she will do just fine.
More
Medina County Voter Stats
Yesterday,
November 17, we posted an article that gave some numbers on
Medina County primary voting for both the
Democratic and Republican parties. In three
categories: Increase in party identification
among voters registering in the four years
between the 2002 and the 2006 primaries; switch
in party identification between the two parties
in that same period; and party identification
among 18-30 year old voters who registered
between the two primaries and then voted in the
2006 primary, Democrats did better than
Republicans:
Increase in party
identification: Democrats had 1467 while
Republicans had 1405;
voters who switched
parties: Democrats had 866, while Republicans
had 167; and
18-30 year old voters who
registered after the 2002 primary and then
voted in the 2006 primary: Democrats had 404
while Republicans had 366.
The
Democratic Party has more female than male
voters, 8743 to 7155, while the Republicans are
just the reverse. Medina County Republicans are
made up of 8398 men to 7945 women. These
figures mean that women make up 55% of the
Democratic Party in Medina County while men
make up 51% of the Republican Party in Medina
County. Thus women voters are slightly more
important to Democratic candidates in primaries
than male voters are to Republican candidates
in primaries.
It will be interesting to
see if Clinton being on the 2006 ballot
increases the number of women who take
Democratic ballots just as it will be
interesting to see if McCain and Giuliani being
on the Republican ballot increases the number
of men. There was a poll out recently that
showed that while Clinton as a candidate took
women voters from the Republicans, Giuliani
took male voters from the
Democrats.
Clinton, Obama, Edwards
Fighting Door to Door in Iowa
The
New York Times has an articleout dated Sunday, November
18, 2007, about Hillary Clinton increasing the
time she is spending in Iowa. Although she has
a huge lead in national polls, she doesn't have
such a lead in Iowa. There the campaign is a
lot closer. According to the article, a large
share of Clinton's support comes from Democrats
who have never participated in the caucus
process. This is from the
article:
More than 60 percent of
those who have identified themselves as Clinton
supporters, senior strategists say, have never
participated in the Iowa caucuses. It is a far
higher share than the campaign had been
anticipating, which suggests that many of the
reliable rank-and-file Democrats have chosen
another candidate. So the Clinton campaign is
working to expand its universe of supporters to
women who have never
participated.
This is what the
major campaigns are doing to counteract the
fact that her opponents are doing well in
Iowa:
In the final seven weeks of
the race, all campaigns are increasing their
efforts here, placing new advertisements and
investing more resources. To fight the new push
by the Clinton campaign, rivals are also
planning to spend nearly all their time in Iowa
in December, hoping to raise doubts about her
candidacy. While the Obama and Edwards
campaigns have been gradually building for
months toward this moment, the Clinton campaign
has bolstered its activity here in recent
weeks, hiring 100 new workers to concentrate on
a person-to-person drive to explain the quirky
process of the caucuses, with a goal of having
50,000 in-home visits by
Christmas.
The article has a
graphic up which shows the
favorability rating for each Party's top five
candidates and, where they exist, the
favorability rating for the same candidates
nationwide. What is interesting about this is
that Clinton's favorability ratings for Iowa
are less than for the nation as a whole while
both Obama and Edwards have favorability
ratings for Iowa that are ahead of their
favorability ratings nationwide. Below are the
names of each of the top three Dem candidates
with the first number being their national
favorability rating, the second number being
their Iowa favorability rating, and the third
being the percentage of Democrats who say they
will vote for that candidate in the
caucuses:
Clinton: 79%, 52% and
25%
Edwards: 44%, 73%, and 23%
Obama:
56%, 72%, and 22%.
You can see that
Clinton's and Edwards' favorability ratings in
Iowa are both the reverse of what they are in
the United States as a whole. This suggests
that Clinton's name recognition and generally
positive national publicity are not nearly as
effective for her in Iowa as they are in the
U.S. as a whole. It also suggests that once
people actually hear Edwards' and Obama's
message, they like them better.
If
Clinton was the lose both the Iowa caucuses and
the New Hampshire primary, the race for the
Democratic nomination would get a lot more
interesting. On the other hand, if she wins
both of these early contests, with all the
publicity that she would gain from those wins,
then the nomination race may be
over.
Medina County Primary Voting
1998-2006
Here are the numbers for
the voters voting in primaries from 1998-2006
in Medina County with the first column being
the year, the second column being the number of
Republican primary voters and the third column
being the number of Democratic
voters:
1998/ 10144/ 6856
2000/
18814/ 8641
2002/ 11464/
6341
2004/ 12231/ 14033
2006/
12191/ 11675
There are several
interesting things about these numbers. First,
the Republican Party since 1998 has only picked
up 2,147 in gubernatorial primaries while the
Democratic Party has picked up 4,819 voters.
Second, both parties had their highest
turnouts during presidential election years,
the Republicans in 2000 and the Democrats in
2004.
Third, while the difference
between the Republicans and Democrats in the
1998 primary was 3288 by 2006 that difference
was 516. That figure is even more significant
when you remember that while the Democratic
primary for governor was a lopsided contest
between Strickland and Flannery, the Republican
primary for governor was a hotly contested one
between Blackwell and Petro.
Fourth,
the combination of Bob Taft as governor and
George Bush as president could be driving down
the Republican primary turnout.
Fifth,
having a Democrat from a "red" area of Ohio,
Strickland, being the leading candidate for
Governor in 2006 helped the voter turnout in
Medina County for the Democratic Primary.
Between 2002 and 2006 the voter turnout in the
Democratic Primary increased by 5,334 votes.
Compare that to the decrease of 515 from the
1998 to the 2002 primary when we had two
Cuyahoga County candidates, Fisher and Hagan as
the leading candidates for Governor.
It
will be fascinating to see what happens in the
March 2008 presidential primary in Medina
County since both parties should have contested
primaries for president. Since the highest
turnout for a primary was in 2000 when McCain
was running against Bush, and since McCain will
be on the ballot in 2008 there could be a big
Republican turnout. On the other hand, since
Clinton is the first woman to have a realistic
opportunity to win the nomination of a major
political party there could be a big Democratic
turnout. Of course, it is not an either-or
situation since voters who occasionally vote in
party primaries come from ranks of independents
and not the other party.
This is shown
by the fact that from 2002 to 2006 only 886
voters went from voting Republican to voting
Democratic in primaries even though the number
of Democratic voters increased by over 5,000.
Clearly most of the increase came from
previously non-affliated voters voting in the
Democratic primary since only 1467 voters who
registered after the primary election of May,
2002 but before the May, 2006 primary took a
Democratic ballot in that primary. Those
figures mean that 27.5% of the increase turnout
for the two Democratic primaries of 2002 and
2006 came from new Medina County voters while
72.5% came from voters who were registered
before the 2002 primary. No matter what,
though, the numbers from the March 2008 primary
will be interesting to analyze.
Why
Can't Our Harvard MBA President Pay for His War
With 500 Billion Dollars?
What many
Americans don't realize is the huge increase in
defense spending that has taken place over the
last decade, and especially during the term of
the Bush Administration. In 1996 military
spending by the United States, according to
information provided by the Congressional Budget
Office,
was 266 billion dollars. For fiscal year 2008,
even without funding for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the defense budget will be over
$500 billion dollars.
Most of this
increase has come since September 11, 2001.
From fiscal year 1996 to fiscal year 2001, the
defense budget went up by 40 billion dollars.
From fiscal year 2001 to the present, it has
gone up almost 300 billion dollars. No matter
how you look at it, that's a lot of money.
What has to be kept in mind is how much
money we spend compared to the rest of the
world. The following is from the website called
Global Issues and concerns
2005:
The US military spending was
almost two-fifths of the total.
The US
military spending was almost 7 times larger
than the Chinese budget, the second largest
spender.
The US military budget was almost
29 times as large as the combined spending of
the six "rogue" states (Cuba, Iran, Libya,
North Korea, Sudan and Syria) who spent $14.65
billion.
It was more than the combined
spending of the next 14 nations.
The United
States and its close allies accounted for some
two thirds to three-quarters of all military
spending, depending on who you count as close
allies (typically NATO countries, Australia,
Canada, Israel, Japan and South Korea)
The
six potential "enemies," Russia, and China
together spent $139 billion, 30% of the U.S.
military budget.
Now, Bush is
telling the Congress and the American public
that he needs an additional 140 billion to pay
for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Why? Why
does he need the additional money on top of the
500 billion or so that Congress has given him
for defense for fiscal year 2008?
One of
the reasons that was given for electing Bush
president in 2000 was that he would be
America's "First MBA President." Well, here's
our suggestion: take that ballyhooed Harvard
MBA and come up with a way to pay for his war
out of the 500 billion dollars that the
Democratic Congress has already given
him.
Newsletter
prepared by:
Medina County Democratic Action
Committee
Joyce Kimbler, Treasurer
P.O.
Box 1213
Medina, OH 44258
MCDAC Website
