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Is Ohio Turning Blue?
Human Events Online ^ | 08-12-05 | Gizzi, John

Posted on 08/12/2005 9:44:15 AM PDT by Theodore R.

The Real Meaning of Buckeye Special Election Is Ohio Turning Blue? by John Gizzi Posted Aug 12, 2005

In the wake of a Democratic candidate’s narrow loss in the August 2 special election in Ohio’s most Republican U.S. House district, pundits have begun pondering whether the Buckeye State is turning blue.

The problem for Republicans seems to be the stench that has begun to envelop the administration of Ohio GOP Gov. Robert A. Taft.

Republicans have held the Ohio governorship for 16 years and in the last two presidential elections the state has been indispensable in providing an Electoral College majority to George W. Bush. If Democrats can take back the governorship in 2006, however, they would improve their chances of taking the state’s electoral votes in the 2008 presidential contest. In another tight red state-blue state race, that could give the White House to Hillary Clinton or whoever happens to be the Democratic nominee.

The chances of this calamity’s taking place have been enhanced by the investigation into coin dealer Thomas Noe, a Republican contributor, into whose enterprises the state, under two Republican governors, has invested millions of state employee pension funds. In May, the state froze Noe’s assets.

On July 22, the Toledo Blade reported: “Tom Noe stole millions of dollars from the state and used a ‘Ponzi’ scheme to fabricate profits within the state’s $50 million rare-coin investment, Ohio’s attorney general said yesterday.”

“There was an absolute theft of funds going on,” the paper quoted GOP Atty. Gen. Jim Petro as charging.

This week, Noe’s lawyers denied the charge in a court motion, saying that Petro’s court motion was “page after page of speculation, setting forth no evidence of wrongdoing on the part of defendant’s Thomas Noe, Inc., or Thomas Noe.”

After Noe received state funds as investments in his coin business in 1998, according to the Blade, he made $7,000 in contributions to then-Secretary of State Taft, who was running for governor. In total, Noe has given $22,190 to Taft. In 1998, he also gave $2,000 to then-Gov. George Voinovich (R.), who was running for the U.S. Senate that year. In addition, he has given $7,500 to Sen. Mike DeWine (R.-Ohio).

“I think it shows that Tom Noe has become radioactive very rapidly, and politicians want to disassociate themselves from him as rapidly as possible,” John Green, director of the University of Akron’s Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics, told the Dispatch.

In late July, Brian Hicks, formerly Taft’s chief of staff and now a Columbus lobbyist, pleaded no contest to charges he did not report taking gifts, in effect, from Noe in the form of undercharged stays at Noe’s $1.3-million vacation home in Islamorada, Fla. According to the Blade, Hicks paid $300 to $500 to rent Noe’s condo, when he should have paid $1,500 to $2,800. Taft himself is now under investigation by the Ohio Ethics Commission for failing to report up to 60 golf outings he received over several years.

The political fall-out from what is increasingly dubbed “the mess in Columbus” has already worked to the detriment of the Republicans. With Democrats sensing their best chance at capturing the governorship in two decades, their leading candidate, Rep. Ted Strickland, has raised a whopping $1 million since announcing for governor two months ago. Moreover, in the special election for Congress August 2,,Democrat Paul Hackett narrowly lost (52% to 48%) to Republican Jean Schmidt in the 2nd District (suburban Cincinnati), the most Republican of Ohio’s 18 House districts. In both debates and mailings, Hackett tied former state legislator Schmidt to Taft and corruption in Columbus.

‘Chicken Hawk’

In focusing on the special election, national media outlets such as ABC News and the Washington Post made much of the fact that the 43-year-old Hackett, a U.S. Marine reservist who had served a seven-month tour of duty in Iraq, was critical of President Bush’s handling of the Iraqi war and the current occupation. At different points, Hackett was even quoted as referring to Bush as a “chickenhawk” and “S.O.B.”

“He did that to draw attention to himself, but Iraq was by no means a big issue here—Taft and taxes were,” said Portsmouth lawyer Eddie Edwards, a Republican activist in the 2nd District. In contrast to his anti-Bush salvoes that were highlighted in the national media, Edwards noted, the Democratic hopeful actually seemed to embrace Bush and the U.S presence on the campaign trail. One Hackett TV spot featured footage of Bush himself, and said: “There is no higher calling than service in our armed forces”—leading Ohio Republican Chairman Bob Bennett to denounce the spot as “a blatant attempt to dupe voters” into thinking Bush endorsed the Democrat. Asked by the Cincinnati Enquirer what his exit strategy for Iraq would be, Hackett echoed Republican Schmidt that the U.S. must “finish the job.”

“I opposed the war, but we’re there now and can’t just leave,” said Hackett. “I propose that we get serious about training the Iraqis and marry them to American units, so that they can defend their fledgling democracy.”

Hackett and the Democrats hit hard at Schmidt as a “rubber stamp for failed policies,” tying her to Taft and noting that she voted for his unpopular sales tax increase. In their final debate July 26, Hackett mentioned Taft’s name in the same sentence with Schmidt 12 times and used the term “rubber stamp” seven times. The Hackett campaign’s two district-wide mailings linked Schmidt to Taft and taxes. The Democrat may also have benefited from last-minute reports that Schmidt, as a state legislator, had lobbied Gov. Taft’s office on behalf of an Internet lottery company owned by one of her contributors, Roger Ach (in whose failing on-line gaming company the controversial Noe was an investor).

Hackett carried four counties that Bush had won handily last year, but Schmidt survived through a big win in her home county of Clermont and by carrying strongly Republican Hamilton County. Taft and “Coingate” nearly cost Republicans a safe House seat. Will they cost them enough to make Ohio “blue” in ’08?

John Gizzi is Political Editor of HUMAN EVENTS.


TOPICS: Politics/Elections; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: bobtaft; brianhicks; columbus; corruption; democrats; gwb; hillaryclinton; jeanschmidt; jimpetro; liberalism; mikedewine; oh; paulhackett; pessimism; republicanis; tedstrickland; toledoblade; tomnoe; wishfulthinking
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To: new yorker 77

I got my colors mixed up.


21 posted on 08/12/2005 10:09:10 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Koran 9:123 "Make war on the infidels who dwell around you.")
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To: Theodore R.

Is Ohio turning blue? Possibly. It definitely has become a battleground state, where it was almost a given for the "red" column before. Illinois should have been a salient warning as to what could happen. Not merely a surrender to RINOs, but to RINOs who did not believe in the integrity of the Republican party, RINOs that would jump ship and become Democrats in an eyeblink. All to punish something, I know not what.

Maybe some people would sooner not be reminded of their own conscience.


22 posted on 08/12/2005 10:10:37 AM PDT by alloysteel ("Master of the painfully obvious.....")
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
By 2008 Florida will be solidly blue as New York tax policies drive more retirees to declare their summer homes to be their primary residences.

That's what people said about Florida prior to 2004 too. It didn't happen, and Bush took Florida by well over 300,000 votes. Florida is safe ground, because the Florida GOP, unlike the Ohio GOP, actually does its job well.

I'm sure plenty of people from the cesspool known as New York will come to Florida, but I don't think they'll be able to override the natives, who happen to like their non-socialist state the way it is. If New Yorkers try to turn Florida into another New York, there will be a backlash.

23 posted on 08/12/2005 10:10:49 AM PDT by SunnyD1182
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To: Theodore R.
In the wake of a Democratic candidate’s narrow loss in the August 2 special election in Ohio’s most Republican U.S. House district, pundits have begun pondering whether the Buckeye State is turning blue.

If that's the case then why did the Democrats run ads connecting their candidate so closely to Bush - even using clips of speeches?

24 posted on 08/12/2005 10:11:02 AM PDT by Republican Wildcat
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To: Theodore R.

"Is Ohio Turning Blue?"

It will, if it holds its breath long enough.


25 posted on 08/12/2005 10:12:11 AM PDT by Xenalyte (Lord, I apologize . . . and be with the starving pygmies in New Guinea amen.)
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To: Theodore R.
"Is Ohio Turning Blue?" No, just the Governor... and he probably always has been.
26 posted on 08/12/2005 10:18:18 AM PDT by FearNoMan
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To: Theodore R.

I'm not buying it. The dems ran a "Republican Light" candidate, spent a ton of resources and, and. . . . .LOST!!! It is just amazing to me that the dems have to try and characterize a loss as a victory to make themselves feel good. From what I have read 52-48% in a special election is a wide margin given the low turnout associated with such elections. Honestly, this strikes me as pure and simple MSM wishful thinking. I will put forth this proposition, if the margin was 60-40% the MSM STILL would have characterized it as being "closer" than it should have been.

The story to the MSM is that 2006 will be like 1994. The MSM just can't get over the fact that the stories they are reporting just aren't matching reality.

As for Ohio turning from dem to Republican on a local level, perhaps that is what is needed for the Ohio GOP to wake up and kick out the RINO's. But, that doesn't mean Ohio is going Red in National Politics.


27 posted on 08/12/2005 10:18:51 AM PDT by FlipWilson
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To: KarlInOhio

Its a special election. Margins are usually closer when the turnout is lower. Don't buy the MSM BS.


28 posted on 08/12/2005 10:21:04 AM PDT by FlipWilson
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To: KarlInOhio
Ha! Rose Kennedy was listed as a Florida resident when she died to avoid the Massachusetts death tax

Meanwhile, Ted is demanding everyone else pay. Don't you DARE touch his millions, though! You'll be looking at an Arkansaside-type Chappaquiddick!

29 posted on 08/12/2005 10:21:16 AM PDT by concerned about politics ("A people without a heritage are easily persuaded (deceived)" - Karl Marx)
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To: SunnyD1182

Not to mention the fact that mid-westerners also migrate to Fla in HUGE numbers. 95 comes down the East Coast from NY, but 75 comes down the West Coast from the mid-west. My parents have retired to the West Coast and I can assure you, it is not trending blue.


30 posted on 08/12/2005 10:23:40 AM PDT by FlipWilson
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To: SunnyD1182
I'm sure plenty of people from the cesspool known as New York will come to Florida, but I don't think they'll be able to override the natives,

I have 2 relatives who are retired school teachers (Hey! If I could pick my relatives, I would, ok? They're on my husbands side!).
They moved from NY to Florida, and were some of the kookiest left wing activists you could ever meet. I blocked them over and over from our e-mail list.
After they moved to Florida, and were there about a year, they became not only Conservative Republicans, but actually started attending church! I kid you not.
Life must be a heck of allot different down there than it is in NY!

31 posted on 08/12/2005 10:28:06 AM PDT by concerned about politics ("A people without a heritage are easily persuaded (deceived)" - Karl Marx)
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To: SunnyD1182

I had my post removed because I mixed up red and blue. I meant that Florida was moving toward the conservative column. If you read that context of my post it was obvious that's what I meant. Rush also very often says the opposite of what he means, but we all know what he means.


32 posted on 08/12/2005 10:30:26 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Koran 9:123 "Make war on the infidels who dwell around you.")
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To: Gipper08

Hackett is a lib and he came within 4 points, even while literally and publicly calling the President a POS. RINO corruption has taken its toll in Ohio and I wouldn't be surprised to see Democrats swept into the governor's house and Senate there in 2006.


33 posted on 08/12/2005 11:03:12 AM PDT by youthgonewild
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To: youthgonewild
Hackett is a lib and he came within 4 points, even while literally and publicly calling the President a POS.

He campaigned as a close friend and advocate of Bush. Behind the scenes, away from the voters, he called Bush a POS.
He got caught.
At the last minute, the word got out. We're lucky it did. He was a flaming wacko liberal trying to deceive the voters that he was more a Republican than a democrat. As a matter of fact, he never publicly mentioned he was a democrat! He ran like a Republican, and he almost got away with it.

34 posted on 08/12/2005 11:23:57 AM PDT by concerned about politics ("A people without a heritage are easily persuaded (deceived)" - Karl Marx)
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To: youthgonewild

You are talking about a special elction in August which will have a turnout around 25% and a Democrat who never ran on the issues but on his service to the United States. Most people are not like those here on this board. They don't care about politics right now because they are sick of it.


35 posted on 08/12/2005 11:24:03 AM PDT by nascaryankee
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Comment #36 Removed by Moderator

To: Theodore R.

No!
Is Ohio Turning Blue?
Human Events Online Gizzi, John
THIS is why they shouldn't make these guys write too often or in the summer of odd years.


37 posted on 08/12/2005 1:40:40 PM PDT by jmaroneps37 (The ratmedia: always eager to remind us of why we hate them.)
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To: concerned about politics
After they moved to Florida, and were there about a year, they became not only Conservative Republicans, but actually started attending church! I kid you not. Life must be a heck of allot different down there than it is in NY!

Have you spent any time in the South ? When two New Yorkers meet they ask, "Where do you work ?". When two Southerners meet they ask, "What church do you go to ?". It is the center of the social life of any Southern community. When the service is over the Southern church doesn't empty out like an office at 5pm Friday the way a suburban Catholic church does. People socialize.

38 posted on 08/12/2005 2:15:41 PM PDT by Sam the Sham (A conservative party tough on illegal immigration could carry California in 2008)
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Comment #39 Removed by Moderator

To: FlipWilson

"From what I have read 52-48% in a special election is a wide margin given the low turnout associated with such elections."

I don't know what you're reading, but 52-48 is a close election, especially in a district where President Bush won 64% of the vote. Any decent Republican should have been able to win this running away. Instead, RINO Taft and his RINO lackey Jean Schmidt nearly cost us a safe seat. And who knows what will happen when Schmidt's close friend Larry Householder gets indicted. We could still lose this seat.


40 posted on 08/13/2005 7:27:01 PM PDT by conservative_2001 (Defeat Jean Schmidt and Paul Hackett in 2006!)
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