ohio

The Black Vote and Proposition 8

Monday, November 10th, 2008

With all the results in, the other big story in last week’s momentous election, was the successful passing of the three marriage amendments on state ballots this year, which amended state constitutions in Arizona, California, and Florida and defined marriage as between a man and a woman.

In California, black voters came out in record numbers to support Barack Obama. They supported Proposition 8, California’s marriage amendment proposition, in large numbers as well.

According to the 2004 exit poll, approximately 700,000 blacks voted in that year’s presidential election, making up six percent of the electorate. In this most recent election, that percentage climbed to 10 percent, or just over one million voters. This would mean an additional 210,000 pro-Proposition 8 votes.

The measure passed by approximately 500,000 votes.

Deborah Mayes, a 50-something African American from Los Angeles, worked to get the measure passed. She and other members from her church, the Zoe Christian Fellowship, made phone calls and knocked on doors.

“I believe in traditional values. I prayed for it to pass,” Mayes told Pop + Politics.

Mayes is also a supporter of Barack Obama, and was thrilled when he got elected.

“I voted for Obama and I’m glad I did,” she said. “I was hoping America could forget all that’s happened in the past.”

She doesn’t see a contradiction between supporting Proposition 8 and supporting Barack Obama. “I vote values,” Mayes said. “I have never voted straight ticket. I’m not gullible. I’m very value-based.”

In both Florida and Arizona, gay marriage was already against the law, but proponents of “traditional” marriage sought to amend their state constitutions to prevent the courts from declaring the laws unconstitutional.

Florida’s Proposition 2 was unexpected to succeed because it required 60 percent of the vote to pass—and it received 62 percent. Polls leading up to the election had the highest level of support at 55 percent, though some voters were still undecided.

In Arizona, even opponents of the measure weren’t too upset that it passed after Barack Obama was elected president. “I think the country was like, ‘Look, you get Obama, call it a day and go home,’ ” Kyrsten Sinema, a Democratic state representative who led opponents against Proposition 102, told the New York Times.

Before the election, we highlighted some key propositions in swing states to get a better idea of what might draw voters to the polls. The results of those elections are below.

Colorado
Ballot measure name: Amendment 48
It would: change the definition of “person” in the Colorado constitution to include any fertilized egg, embryo or fetus.
Pass or fail? Amendment 48 failed with 73 percent of voters rejecting it.
Key quote: “We knew when Coloradans understood the far-reaching consequences of the amendment, they’d vote no,” Fofi Mendez, the No on 48 campaign manager, told the Rocky Mountain News. The amendment fractured Colorado’s pro-life community, with some prominent groups supporting the measure and others opposing it.

Missouri
Ballot measure name:
Constitutional Amendment 1
It would:
amend the state constitution to make English the official language at all governmental meetings where policy is discussed or decided.
Pass or fail?
Constitutional Amendment 1 passed with 86.3 percent of voters supporting it.

Montana
Ballot measure name:
Initiative 155
It would:
extend state-funded health insurance to uninsured children.
Pass or fail?
Initiative 155 passed with 70 percent of voters supporting it.
Key quote:
“Here is an opportunity for Montanans to rally for the expansion of health care coverage for our state’s children. Montana has one of the highest rates of uninsured children in the nation, and we know that kids without insurance are less likely to get care for common conditions, and especially dental work.” Mike Downing of RiverStone Health told the Billings Gazette. Supporters of the measure were concerned new voters would ignore down-ticket items, but I-155 passed easily.

Nevada
Ballot measure name:
Question 2—People’s Initiative to Stop the Taking of our Land (or PISTOL)
It would:
require land taken by the government under eminent domain laws be valued at its “highest and best use.”
Pass or fail?
Question 2 passed with 61 percent of voters supporting it.

North Dakota
Ballot measure name:
Measure 2—the Income Tax Cut Initiative
It would:
lower taxes for corporations by 15 percent and taxes for individuals by 50 percent.
Pass or Fail?
Measure 2 failed with only 30.2 percent of voters supporting it.
Key quote:
“If they don’t understand the implications of the language, more often than not they’ll err on the side of caution and vote no,” University of North Dakota political science professor Dana Harsell told the Bismark Tribune. According to Harsell, many voters were undecided going into the voting booth.

Ohio
Ballot measure name:
Issue 5
It would:
cap the interest rate of payday loans at 28 percent. The current cap is 391 percent.
Pass or fail?
Issue 5 passed with 63 percent of voters supporting it.
Key quote:
“Ohio voters stripped payday lenders of their permit to fleece working people,” Yes on 5 treasurer Bill Faith told the Ohio State Lantern.

Pennsylvania
The only ballot measure is a bond measure to raise $400 million to make water and sewer improvements.
Pass or fail?
The sewer bond question passed with 62 percent of voters supporting it.

A Palin-Free Daily News Round Up

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

Possible Elder Abuse Very troubling news from Calabasas, CA have reached our ears, eyes and screens. Those inhabiting an expensive assisted living home in the area directly north of Los Angeles may have been suffering flagrant abuses at the hands of those most responsible for caring for them. The LA County Sheriff’s Department has been investigating the death of an 80-year-old from the facility for the last 11 months and may now have concluded the killer may just have been the 20-year-old paid to watch over him.

Silicon Valley Not Exempt from Credit Crisis Up until now, San Francisco- and San Jose-based innovators were confident the financial crisis would not really affect them. But more and more they’ve realized that fewer people are indulging in expensive gadgetry when pockets are shallow, and investors may be shying away from putting their chips in the middle of the tech table.

Bailout Bill Approved Setting in motion what may be the priciest “government economic intervention in history,” the House of Representatives approved the $700 billion bailout originally thrown out last week.

Foreclosure and Desperate Times Unable to cope with the shame and sadness that displacement from her home evinced in her, a 90-year-old woman shot herself twice in the upper body when sheriff’s deputies tried to evict her from her foreclosed Ohio house. She is being treated for her wounds, but her act of desperation may become anthemic to all those enduring the fever of foreclosures running through the country.

Jobs Dropped, Unemployment Rises Further Jobs have plummeted this year, making each month’s statistics more dire than the previous one’s. In September, 159,000 people lost their positions, making it the 30-day period with the highest number of retrenchments seen in five years.

Who Will Pay Ukrainian Ransom? Somali pirates holding a Ukrainian freighter ship hostage said Wednesday they would lower their asking ransom price from $35 million to $20 million or perhaps to as “low” as $5 million. But even then, no one is coming forward to pay up. What good does a decreased amount do if it still goes unpaid to the detriment of those hijacked?

P+P@The DNC: Ohio Delegates Share the Secret To Winning in the Heartland

Friday, August 29th, 2008

The Midwest is ground zero for the election. It’s rural, urban, blue collar, moderate, unionized, independent…and will make the difference between winning and losing.

Whichever candidate wins Ohio is going to win the election. It’s true this year and it’s been true every election since 1896 (with one exception in 1944).

Much is made of Obama’s ability to get the vote out, and Ohio is no different.

“Obama has 300 people on the ground, John Kerry had 16,” said Sally Powless an Ohio delegate from Toledo and a member of AFSCME. ”Kerry went in 17 counties and Barack is going to go after all of them. You can’t just go in urban areas, you have to get support everywhere.”

Some of the loudest applause at the Democratic convention came with rhetoric tailored to the middle class. Other lines that targeted Exxon-Mobil or companies that ship jobs overseas brought delegations to their feet.

So when Obama says he will cut taxes for 95 percent of working families, it’s a reaction to the lay of the land in places like Ohio.

“So many plants have been closed down,” said Jane Ragland, another Ohio delegate from rural Chillicothe about 46 miles south of Columbus. ”We in rural areas have the manpower and we’re in need of employment.”

So when Obama spoke of his heroes like the “woman [who] talk[s] about the difficulties of starting her own business, I think about my grandmother, who worked her way up from the secretarial pool to middle-management, despite years of being passed over for promotions because she was a woman,” he’s relating to the personal experiences of blue collar and women voters.

The personal touch is working.

“I know how he feels,” Ragland said. “I know the stumbling blocks he had before he got to be where he’s at. If he can raise above the odds, we all can. That’s what he has to get across.”

And that message is resonating in Iowa, Gov. Chet Culver said in an interview.

“He’s just got to do what he’s been doing across the county and spread his message,” he said. “It’s a historic moment to see the torch passed to the next generation of American leaders,” and Iowans are looking forward to it.

Ohio, Texas students get front row seats

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

huckabee-bass.jpg

If you are a student journalist or aspiring politician, Ohio and Texas are the places to be. Catie Coleman wrote in a column for the Ohio University at Athens campus newspaper: “With all the visits and press coverage, it feels like OU is at the center of the universe.”

Coleman describes herself as politically minded, yet she writes that she feels overwhelmed— her campus has already received separate visits from Michelle Obama and Bill and Chelsea Clinton. And if she receives one more campaign flyer, she’s “going to scream.”

Coleman’s campus newspaper, the Post, has run dozens of news articles, columns, editorials, informational alerts and letters to the editor about the campaign and Tuesday primary, in which democratic voters in Ohio, Texas, Rhode Island and Vermont choose their presidential candidate. Political analysts have predicted that if Hillary Clinton does not do well in Ohio and Texas, her campaign is over. Even if she has enough delegates to keep plugging away, she needs decisive wins to pacify Democrats who are eager to have a party nominee decided. Likewise, Obama wants to crush Clinton in these two big states to clinch the nomination.

The student media have therefore had plenty of campus visits to write about and student interest to keep them motivated. The Post’s endorsement of Barack Obama is the second most viewed article on their website this week, out-viewed only by a breaking news story on the band Arcade Fire playing two upcoming shows.

The articles and columns cover everything from Clinton’s “win at all costs” campaign tactics to campaigns using the Internet to lure the youth vote. Most of the pieces discuss minute policy details on health care, the environment and the Iraq war, revealing that these students have done their homework.
(more…)

back to ohio

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

computer xray

You in there, Mr Rove?

The news from Nigeria (“The elections were a fraud, a sad spectacle of backwardness from a country riven by cronyism and oil-money corruption!”) appears to be the same as the news coming from Ohio.