Archive for January, 2008

Morning Update

It looks like Dennis is going to run two races at the same time.

The Summit County GOP race heats up.

Maybe cities can tell you where to live if you work for them.

Ohio Senate Dems Dump Fedor.

Joe Cimperman Shows Up At Dennis Kucinich’s House

From WTAM

It was admittedly a campaign stunt as Cleveland Councilman Joe Cimperman stopped at Dennis Kucinich’s Cleveland home Wednesday morning. Cimperman, who is running for Kucinich’s congressional seat, delivered a “Welcome Home” gift basket to the Cleveland Democrat.

The basket contained maps and other items that Cimperman says are designed to reacquaint Kucinich with the 10th Congressional District. Cimperman has criticized Kucinich for being absent during his campaign for President.

While Kucinich wasn’t home, his wife Elizabeth did come to the door. She declined to take the basket, saying they didn’t accept gifts from people “wrapped up in Washington special interests.”

Morning Update

If this is the cause of global warming, then why do we want to prevent it?

Martin Sweeney is becoming the worst Cleveland City Council President in recent history.

Ken Blackwell takes on Obama.

The Enquirer wishes Ohio would have followed Blackwell’s lead with optical scan machines.

Victoria Wulsin is using old footage in her new ads.

More 2008 Election Preview

From the PD

The Friday filing deadline for local races brought out a mix of veteran politicians seeking to reinvent themselves, new candidates seeking office and a slew of people looking to make history in an East Side suburb.

Cuyahoga County Domestic Relations Judge James P. Celebrezze decided not to seek re-election, but his family’s name will still be on the ballot.

His daughter, Democrat Leslie Ann Celebrezze, is taking the powerful surname - emblazoned on a federal building in downtown Cleveland - into the contest. She has no opposition in the March primary, but will face a Republican challenger, Patrick R. Kelly, in the November election.

On the judicial slate, several familiar faces will compete for new seats on the bench. Election boards released unofficial candidate filings Friday but must still validate petitions. The race for a seat on the 8th Ohio District Court of Appeals will pit three local judges against each other: Cleveland Municipal Court Judge Larry Jones, Lakewood Municipal Court Judge Patrick Carroll and Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Stuart Friedman.

Of all the candidates seeking office in the county, Common Pleas Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold may have the most personal reason for running. She didn’t like the way her divorce case was handled in Domestic Relations Court, so she is runnig against the court’s veteran chief judge, Timothy Flanagan.

Euclid will be the only municipality to hold council elections in a season dominated by county, state and federal elections. A federal judge blocked City Council elections last fall and ordered the city to restructure its council makeup to give black candidates a fair chance of winning seats.

Several candidates are competing to be the first black City Council member in the East Side city. Among those running is Rose Allen. The candidate for council president previously ran unsuccessfully for a council seat in 1981.

Regardless of who wins the Cuyahoga County recorder’s race, it appears to be the area’s most confused contest.

Martin J. Sweeney, president of Cleveland City Council, filed for the primary. His ambitions for a county office are well known in political circles, but he was banking on incumbent Patrick J. O’Malley not running for re-election.

O’Malley filed to run, leaving Sweeney to reconsider. “If he is running, I am not,” Sweeney said. “I will support him.”

Another Democrat, former Cleveland Councilman Nelson Cintron Jr., also filed to run against O’Malley. And Republican Cathy Luks is also seeking the seat.

In Lorain County, politicians who ran a successful grassroots campaign against a county sales tax increase last year would challenge the two county commissioners who supported the hike.

Commissioner Ted Kalo will face Amherst Councilman Nick Brusky, and Commissioner Lori Kokoski goes up against Martin O’Donnell, Avon Lake councilman. The commissioners are Democrats; the challengers are Republicans.

In March, the three commissioners voted to raise the sales tax to 6.5 percent, but in November, voters overwhelming rejected the quarter-of-a-penny increase.

“It’s a disturbing trend, to see how they’re spending money,” Brusky said.

The Candidates Are Official Now

From the PD

Columbus - Your neighbor probably won’t ask you about it. It won’t grab as many headlines or get a fraction of the attention as the presidential race, but a 2008 political battle that will rage across Ohio began Friday.

It’s the fight for control of the Ohio House, where Republicans hope to hold off hard-charging Democrats and maintain their slim 53-46 edge. And it kicked off Friday as the filing deadline was met for the lower chamber’s 99 House districts that stretch across Ohio.

While Republicans must defend more seats opened by term limits, the House will likely swing on about a dozen or so hotly contested races. Included among those viewed to be the most competitive are a trio of state representative races from Cuyahoga and Lake counties - the 16th, 18th and 63rd House District races.

In the 16th District, which includes Bay Village, Rocky River, Westlake and North Olmsted, Democrats hope to hold onto a seat that they nabbed from under GOP noses in 2006 when Westlake Rep. Jennifer Brady won an upset. Republicans will challenge the freshman lawmaker with Nan Baker, a Westlake City Council member and small business owner.

“It’s a tough seat for us,” Ohio Democratic Party Chief Chris Redfern told reporters recently. “We’re going to hold it because Jennifer’s a great candidate - she’s right on the issues.”

House Speaker Jon Husted called Baker “a wonderful candidate” and said she has been running for the past year and probably has been “doing more events in the district than the incumbent.” Meanwhile, the head of the Ohio Republican Party, Robert Bennett, singled out Brady’s seat as one Republicans would win back while holding serve elsewhere.

A seat left vacant by Republican Rep. Tom Patton’s run for state Senate beckons both parties in the 18th District, which includes Berea, North Royalton and Strongsville. Democratic candidate Matt Patten, a 30-year-old community activist, looks to be fighting an uphill battle to knock off North Royalton Sen. Bob Spada, who was forced by term limits to switch over to the House to continue his political career.

Husted said Spada “has the trust of the district” and predicted that voters would once again elect him.

But House Minority Leader Joyce Beatty said voters who desire change will be tired of Spada.

“I don’t think it’s automatic,” she said. “I think people are tired of politicians switching back and forth.”

In the 63rd District, Republican freshman Rep. Carol-Ann Schindel, who beat Democrat Rep. Tim Cassell, who was damaged by a high-profile DUI conviction, will attempt to hold onto the seat encompassing eastern Lake County. She will face Democratic challenger Mark Schneider, a 32-year-old assistant Cuyahoga County prosecutor.

While some Republicans acknowledge that Schindel’s win was a fluke, Husted said she has “exceeded expectations” during her first term in the Ohio House, pointing to an auditing bill she sponsored.

“She’s working real hard knocking on doors and building key relationships within the district,” said Husted.
Beatty called Schneider a “very talented candidate” and noted he has been campaigning for more than a year. As for Schindel, she “has not really found her way through the Statehouse here,” Beatty said. “I think we need to send her home where she can be more comfortable.”

While these races - and a handful of others across the state - will be hotly contested by parties bent on seizing control of state politics, the truth is that voter turnout will probably be most influenced by what happens on the national level.

“At the end of the day, this is about messaging and presidential politics,” said Scott Borgemenke, Husted’s chief of staff.

and

Washington - Cleveland Democratic Congressman Dennis Kucinich’s run for the White House has led a large field of contenders to run for his congressional seat.

Kucinich continues to seek congressional re-election, even as he continues his presidential bid. He will officially kick off his congressional campaign on Wednesday.

That didn’t stop Cleveland City Councilman Joe Cimperman, North Olmsted Mayor Thomas O’Grady, anti-war activist and former teacher and journalist Rosemary Palmer and former U.N. worker Barbara Ferris - who lost to Kucinich in the 2006 Democratic primary - from filing paperwork by Friday’s deadline to run against him in the March 4 Democratic primary.

Republican Jim Trakas - a former Independence councilman, state representative and Cuyahoga County Republican Party chairman - is also seeking Kucinich’s congressional seat, along with Jason Werner of Olmsted Township, who lost a 2006 GOP primary bid to face Kucinich.

“The good news is, whether in the primary or the general election, the people of the 10th District will have a choice and they will have better quality representation no matter what happens,” Trakas said.

Also, the retirement of longtime GOP Congressman Ralph Regula in the 16th Congressional District has prompted a crowd of potential successors to seek his seat. Republicans in the race include State Sen. J. Kirk Schuring of Jackson Township, Ashland County Commissioner Matt Miller - who got 42 percent of the 2006 GOP primary vote against Regula - and conservative radio talk-show host Paul R. Schiffer of Canton.

Democrats seeking the seat include State Sen. John Boccieri of New Middletown and Canton City Councilwoman Mary Cirelli, a former state legislator and Stark County commissioner.

Regula has said his district could “go either way” politically.

GOP Rep. Steve LaTourette, who represents many of Cleveland’s eastern suburbs, will be unopposed in the GOP primary, although a few Democrats are vying to run against him in November. Former appellate Judge Bill O’Neill of South Russell will face perennial candidate Dale Blanchard, a Solon accountant, in the 14th District’s Democratic primary, as well as John Greene Jr. of Pierpont.

“We need to change Congress, and we need to do it now,” said O’Neill, whose campaign spokesman called the crowded primary “a sign of frustration” with LaTourette and Washington in general.

Two Republicans want the chance to run against Democratic incumbent Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones in the 11th Congressional District. They are Thomas Pekarek of Cleveland and Bob Saffold of Shaker Heights. Tubbs Jones is unopposed in her primary.

Newly minted Democratic Rep. Betty Sutton of Copley Township also won’t be opposed in her primary, although Republicans Frank Chestney of Brunswick, Frances L. Kalapodis of Clinton and David S. Potter of Strongsville will compete to take her on.

In the 17th Congressional District, which includes Youngstown, Warren and parts of the Akron area, Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan of Niles won’t face primary opposition. Republican Duane V. Grassell of Mogadore filed paperwork to run against him in November.

In the 9th Congressional District, which includes portions of Lorain County, Toledo electrician Bradley Leavitt, a Republican who got 26 percent of the vote against incumbent Toledo Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur in 2006, is seeking a rematch. Neither has a contested primary.

But is Ohio moot?

The Ohio road to the White House was paved with candidates Friday as six Democrats and six Republicans filed paperwork to compete in the state’s March 4 presidential primary.

Democrats Hillary Clinton, John Edwards and Barack Obama are in. So are Republicans Mike Huckabee, Rudy Giuliani, and Mitt Romney.

But it’s still unlikely Ohio voters will have a say in picking a nominee because the state’s primary falls too late to matter.

The bulk of the states will throw their delegates behind candidates before Ohio gets its chance. Ohio has 161 Democratic and 88 Republican delegates at stake, but about 50 percent of delegates from both parties will be pledged by March.

Even following the surprising results of Thursday’s Iowa caucus, in which Obama, a U.S. Senator from Illinois, and Huckabee, former Arkansas governor, upended the race with strong first-place finishes, political leaders don’t hold much hope that the race will be undecided two months from now.

“It’s highly likely we will have presumptive nominee by March,” said Doug Kelly, executive director of the Ohio Democratic Party and veteran of five presidential campaigns. “It’s hard to say anything has really changed after one contest. We’ll know more in the next two weeks.”

Candidates are not thinking about Ohio. Instead their campaigns are focused on New Hampshire and South Carolina, which hold the next two major presidential primaries. Candidates are also focused on Feb. 5, dubbed Super Duper Tuesday, when 22 states hold contests.

“We are seeing a little more activity in Ohio, but I don’t see the campaigns heating up until after February 5,” said Kevin DeWine, deputy chairman of the Ohio Republican Party.

Moreso than Kelly, DeWine holds out hope that Ohio’s primary might matter, at least on the GOP side. But both agree on this: Ohio will pick the next president in November.

Cleveland Congressman Dennis Kucinich, a Democrat, filed for both the presidential race and, as expected, for re-election to a seventh term in Congress.

For the first time, he faces serious Democratic challengers in the 10th Congressional District, making the race among the most contested of the short primary season and one that will likely shorten his long-shot bid to become president.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and U.S. Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware also filed for the Democratic primary. Biden filed before he dropped out of the race Thursday after placing fifth among Democrats in Iowa. Edwards, a former U.S. Senator from South Carolina, and Clinton, a U.S. Senator from New York finished second and third respectively. Richardson was fourth.

The other Republican presidential candidates filing in Ohio are Fred Thompson, former U.S. senator from Tennessee, U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona and U.S. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas.

Dozen of politicians in Northeast Ohio also filed for offices ranging from coroner to the Ohio Supreme Court. Most elected officials won’t face serious opposition until the November general election.

Congressman Steve LaTourette of Bainbridge Township, for instance, has no opposition in the primary but will face of one of three Democrats who filed. Among them is Democrat Bill O’Neill, a former appellate court judge.

Voters who don’t follow state politics closely might be a bit confused by a couple of filings. Republican State Rep. Tom Patton of Strongsville and Republican State Sen. Bob Spada of North Royalton are running for each other’s seat.

Spada, who will be forced out of the 24th Senate District at the end of the year by term limits, filed for Patton’s 18th House District seat. He faces no one in the primary but will face opposition in the general. Patton, who wants Spada’s more prestigious seat in the Senate, has no primary challengers, either. It appeared that no Democrats filed for the seat.

GOP Winner and Losers From Last Night

Winners:

Huckabee

Home Schoolers

The Fair Tax

Christian Conservatives

Chuck Norris

Bizzyblog (since he dislikes Romney)

Losers:

Mitt Romney

His Staff

His Organization

The Club for Growth

Hugh Hewitt

Rush

The Editors at National Review who endorsed Romney