Medina County Dem News
Friday, September 28, 2007(Medina County Democratic Action Committee)
MCDAC Democratic
Newsletter
September 28, 2007
Joyce V.
Kimbler, Editor
Medina County JJ Dinner on
October 6, 2007
The Medina
County Democratic Party Executive Committee
requests your presence at the Annual
Jefferson Jackson Day Dinner & Silent
Auction on Satuday, October 6, 2007.
State Senator John Boccieri candidate
for Congress in the 16th District will be the
speaker. The Dinner will be held at:
Sharon Party & Event Center
6600 Ridge Rd (Route 94), Sharon Center, OH
6:30 - Party Time! Cash Bar 7:30 Buffet
Dinner $40 per person / $320 for a table of
eight Theme: Celebrate our local roots by
bringing township/city memorabilia for display
tables.
Please RSVP by September 28th
by either
Making your reservation
online at www.medinadems.org.
Mailing a check
payable to "JJ Dinner Committee" to Medina
County Democratic Party, P.O. Box 583, Medina,
OH 44256
Clicking on "related document" link
below to download a flyer/RSVP form
Note:
Please consider making a donation of a silent
auction item!
Medina County Gained
Over 25% in Democratic Vote from
2000-2006
A reader sent us a very
interesting Dayton Daily News article link
that shows
that in Medina County between 2000 and 2006,
the Democratic vote as measured by the vote for
Gore in 2000 compared to the vote for Sherrod
Brown increased by more than 25%. The link
takes you to an interactive map which you can
click on to get the vote totals from all three
elections for every county in Ohio. What's
interesting is that the Daily News used the
U.S. Senate race as a comparison. If you used
the 2006 Governor's race, the swing would be
even more pronounced.
One thing that
really helped both Brown and Strickland was
that they campaigned everywhere in Ohio and
didn't "write" off counties based on their
previous voting history. Both men made more
than one visit into Medina County. Strickland,
for example, made three trips into Medina
County between August of 2005 and November of
2006. Such efforts paid off on election day.
Another thing that helped was that in
both 2004 and 2006 Medina County saw a
tremendous grassroots effort led by David
Brown, who co-ordinated the Kerry for President
campaign in 2004 and then both the Brown and
Strickland campaigns in 2006. Although Kerry
didn't carry the county, the experience that
volunteers gained was invaluable and really
helped in the 2006 election.
Dayton
Daily News Article on Democratic Voting in
Medina County
On Sunday, September
23,2007, the Dayton Daily News published
an article that appeared on its
website about Medina County going for Sherrod
Brown and Ted Strickland in the 2006 elections.
The article quotes Medina County Democratic
Chair Pam Miller and the Medina County
coordinator for the Kerry campaign in 2004 and
the Brown/Strickland campaigns in 2006, Medina
attorney David Brown.
The article is
pretty interesting, although to a certain
extent it misrepresents the success of local
Medina County Democratic candidates. Although
the article claims that all the local offices
are held by Republicans, that isn't entirely
accurate. Medina County Democrats have held the
Auditor's office since 1982 and have held the
Medina County Prosecutor's office for all but
four years since 1980. Medina County Democrats
also occupy three of the county six judicial
positions, from 1976 to 1996 held the Sheriff's
office, and from 1980 to 1996 held one of the
three seats on the Board of County
Commissioners.
Putting aside those
discrepancies, the article is an interesting
read, and there are also links to other Daily
News articles on the state of the Ohio
Democratic Party. If you are interested in
Medina County and/or Democratic politics, check
it out.
Voinovich Chooses Bush Over
Ohio's Children
The Senate voted
today on the Reauthorization of the State
Children's Health Insurance Program. Sherrod
Brown voted to invoke cloture while George
Voinovich voted not to invoke cloture. The
motion to invoke cloture passed 69-30, more
than the required 60 votes. Our guess is that
Voinovich will now to try and have it both ways
by voting for the bill on final passage. This
way he can spin it to the press and other media
that he supports expansion of the program
while, in reality, he voted against Ohio's kids
and for George W. Bush on the cloture motion.
Senator Sherrod Brown Votes Against
Iran Resolution
The Kyl-Lieberman
Resolution on Iraq came up for a vote on Wednesday, September
26, 2007. Although the Resolution was amended
to take out some of the more egregious wording,
it still labeled a unit of the Iranian Army a
"terrorist" organization. As Senator Jim Webb
pointed out this Resolution was never discussed
in a Senate Committee and this was the first
time that a branch of the U.S. Government has
labeled a branch of a foreign country's
military a "terrorist" organization. Many
people fear that the Bush Administration is
determined to drag us into a war with Iran
before leaving office. Giving them any sort of
justification to do so is like giving a gun to
a baby.
Regula Bucks Bush on Kids'
Health Insurance
Today, September
25, 2007, Congressman
Ralph Regula voted against what Bush wanted
and for America's uninsured
children. The House passed by a margin of 265
to 159 to approve the Children's Health
Insurance Program Reauthorization Act. This
program, which Bush has pledged to veto, will
expand health insurance opportunities for
American children who lack health insurance.
This is from a Baltimore Sun article
about this bill:
Sen. Edward Kennedy
(D-Mass.), pressing for passage of the bill
today says: "This is all a matter of
priorities. And we can see what the president's
are...Each day we spend $333 million on Iraq.
That's over 23 times what we currently spend on
children needing health care every day. For one
day in Iraq, we could cover the healthcare of
over 256,000 American children.
The
message that Democrats ought to send is real
simple: Republicans like Bush and House
Minority Leader John Boehner care a lot more
for Iraqis and their security than they do for
America's children. It is a very simple message
to send and it is true.
Rush Limbaugh
Calls Anti-War Soldiers Serving in Iraq "Phony
Soldiers"
So how many Republicans in
Congress who muscled through a resolution in
both Houses condemning the Move On ad about
General Petraeus will rush to support a
resolution condemning Rush Limbaugh? On
September 26, 2007, Rush Limbaugh on his radio
show, in response to a caller, referred to
soldiers who are serving in Iraq and who are
against the war as "phony soldiers." Of course,
these "phony soldiers", some of who have died
in combat, have done somthing that Rush has
never done and that is serve in the armed
forces of our country.
This, of course,
will be either ignored by the media or excused
by them because, quite frankly, they are afraid
of Rush and his moronic followers, the infamous
"dittoheads." Far easier to pontificate and
bluster over an ad in the New York Times.
Democrats need to push Congress to pass a
resolution condemning anyone who attacks the
service of any member of the armed forces
serving in Iraq. Want to take bets on how
Republicans like John Boehner will vote on that
resolution?
MCDAC Newsletter Doing
Well
This entry is going to be
somewhat self-congratulatory. MCDAC puts out a
weekly newsletter called the MCDAC Democratic
Newsletter. It goes out to about 1300 email
addresses per week. We use a product called
Campaigner which is produced by Got Marketing.
Recently Got Marketing released a new
version of Campaigner. This new version allows
us to compare how our newsletter is doing to
other newsletters put out by Campaigner. We
analyzed the last 10 newsletters and found out
that we did better in all categories than the
average newsletter produced by Campaigner.
The categories included percentage of
newsletters delivered; percentage opened;
percentage where a link was clicked on by a
reader; and percentage of readers who
unsubscribed. We are happy with this result and
wish to thank all our readers.
Did
GOP Put the Fix In for 2008 Elections in
Ohio?
McClatchy Newspapers put up a
story dated Wednesday, September
26, 2007 on whether voting law changes made in
Florida and Ohio, the two states with
questionable voting for the 2000 and the 2004
elections, will hold down the Democratic vote
in 2008. The article wonders whether the Ohio
voting law changes will result in voter
"caging" in 2008.
Voter caging goes
like this. An organization, say the state GOP,
engages in a targeted mass mailing aimed at
lower income voters. Studies have shown that
such voters are more likely to move and not
have forwarding addresses. If the pieces sent
out in the mass mailing come back as
non-deliverable then that fact is used as the
basis for voter challenges in a general
election. The intent is to drive down the voter
turn-out in Democratic areas by tying up the
polling places with challenges on the day of
the election.
The article notes that a
change made in Ohio law in 2006 requires each
election board to send out a non-forwardable
notice to every voter on its rolls 60 days
before an election. This is sent out at county
expense. Because it is a public document, it
can be obtained by anyone seeking to challenge
voters on election day. This means, as
Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner points out,
that effectively counties are paying for
obtaining data that could be used in a voter
caging project.
One of the enduring
myths promulgated by Republicans is that there
are hordes of low-income and minority voters
illegal voting in elections. Never mind the
fact that there is almost no evidence of such
activity, they believe it. Therefore they
justify laws like the change made in Ohio as
being a measure to combat election fraud. If it
has the supposedly "unintended" effect of
suppressing voting by Democratic leaning
groups, well that is just the price that has to
be paid for election integrity.
Now, of
course, it is possible that the McClatchy
article raises concerns that aren't justified.
The change in Ohio's law, for example, took
place in 2006 and there were no reports of
widespread challenges in last year's election.
Then again, GOP efforts to suppress voting are
usually reserved for presidential elections.
When asked by McClatchy whether the Ohio GOP
would engage in voter caging in 2008 a
spokesman for the party refused to comment.
This is why we believe that Democratic
organizations should encourage the use of
absentee ballots in Ohio. The GOP believes that
their voters are more likely to vote absentee
than are Democratic voters. Therefore, when
they passed the Ohio voting changes in 2006,
they made it relatively easier to cast an
absentee ballot than a regular ballot. One
change, for example, was to allow anyone to
vote absentee without stating a reason. This
means that Democratic organizations could
obtain absentee ballot applications, distribute
them to their voters so that they could vote
before the election and avoid efforts to tie up
polling places on election day.
Other
articles from the MCDAC blog can be read at
http://www.mcdac.blogspot.com
The MCDAC
Newsletter is published by the
Medina County
Democratic Action Committee
Joyce V.
Kimbler, Treasurer
P.O. Box 1213
Medina,
OH 44258
Email: joycekimbler@medinacountydemocraticactioncommittee.org
On
the World Wide Web at http://www.mcdac.org
