Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Another Really Bad Week for Lee Fisher

Rob Portman sucked all the jobs out of Ohio according to Lee Fisher. PolitiFact calls that FALSE.

Oops.

More bad news for Fisher and his fellow Ohio Democrats come from one of their polling firms:
We'll start rolling out our Ohio poll results tomorrow but there's one finding on the poll that pretty much sums it up: by a 50-42 margin voters there say they'd rather have George W. Bush in the White House right now than Barack Obama.

Independents hold that view by a 44-37 margin and there are more Democrats who would take Bush back (11%) than there are Republicans who think Obama's preferable (3%.)
Ouch! That's gotta hurt!

They Still Don't Get It

One of the things that I have been saying all along is that the Ohio Republican Party doesn't seem to be in a position where they can be taken seriously. They show very few signs of actually getting what Ohio has gone through already and even less indication that they have any clue about what to do if Ohio Republicans gain power.

The latest example of this comes from an outgoing Ohio Senator who plans to introduce a bill that would encourage the Big Ten not to mess with the OSU vs. Michigan game. Seriously? That's the big issue facing the Ohio Senate? Really?

So glad that the Republican-controlled Ohio Senate has handled the problems with our business climate and unemployment.

Message to the Ohio Senate: We still got people hurting out here. We don't give a damn about the whole state of Michigan and apparently, you don't give a damn about what really matters... Please find a clue that you can rent-to-own.

This is like Team Strickland giving Kasich grief because he didn't partake in that stupid video asking LeQuit to stay with the Cavaliers. The rest of us don't care about this stuff when there are real issues that our elected representatives should be addressing.

Boneheads.

Strickland Was For Invacare Before He Was Against Invacare

Showing his true colors, T-Shirt Ted attacked an Ohio company that had the nerve to have John Kasich on its board at one time.

Of course, now we find out that our governor has previously praised the company.  For that story, we go to the Akron Bacon Fishwrapper:
Put another way, the governor has some explaining to do. In other settings, he has applauded Invacare. The $1.7 billion company makes and distributes home and long-term care medical products, doing business in 80 countries, employing 1,300 in Northeast Ohio and 6,200 worldwide. More, the company has been part of an effort promoting Ohio as a good place to locate and operate a business. No surprise, then, that Strickland has pointed to Invacare as a sign of the state making economic progress.

The governor's campaign stressed that the ad targeted Kasich, and not the company. The contention doesn't hold up. If Kasich ''signed off'' on outsourcing as a director, he did so at the urging of the company's executive team. Invacare felt wounded enough to issue a statement over the weekend defending its employment record.
...
When the company recently celebrated its 30th anniversary, local pols applauded loudly for one of the largest employers in Lorain County. U.S. Rep. Betty Sutton joined the cheers. The Copley Township Democrat hardly qualifies as soft on outsourcing or as friendly to recent trade agreements.
It's not hard to follow the thinking of the Strickland camp: Kasich sits on the board. The company outsources. Let's hammer 'em — all the while figuring most wouldn't catch up to the whole truth.
This is just pathetic politicking at its worst...and that is all Ohio has gotten from this governor from Day One.  

It is time for a New Day and a New Way.

UPDATE 1: The Columbus Dispatch picked up the story as well. We actually get Invacare's side of the story on why they outsourced those jobs and if you were listening to the TIB All-Stars Show over the weekend, you will know this already:
Invacare issued a statement defending the moves it made in 2006 and criticizing Strickland for focusing on an Ohio employer that added jobs during the recession.

"The company is very disappointed that its home-state governor would attack it in a campaign commercial," Invacare said.

Company spokeswoman Lara Mahoney said the 2006 restructuring, which moved the production of walkers and manual wheelchairs, eliminating about 200 jobs, was made in response to competition from low-price producers.

Custom wheelchair production and other work remained in Elyria, and Mahoney said the restructuring "strengthened our company" and allowed it to hire back workers in a difficult economy.
Ted Strickland is a total hack and this ad proves it.

Oh, and this bit from Team Strickland deserves a moment of pause:
But Smith defended the ad, saying Kasich has supported policies during his tenure in Congress and afterward that led to outsourcing jobs, and that the ad is criticizing outsourcing.

"This is not an ad about Invacare," Smith said. "It's an ad about Kasich's priorities and judgment. In Congress and on the board of Invacare, he supported outsourcing Ohio jobs. Now, he is asking Ohio voters to elect him to create jobs here in Ohio. If past is prologue, it's clear that he cannot be trusted to do that."
Invacare actually hired more workers during StrickTaft's recession. Do you think maybe it was because Kasich and Invacare's board did what they needed to do in order to stay in business and hire more people? Maybe John Kasich can do that for Ohio when he is governor. Thanks, Team Ted, for making this fact known to us...

UPDATE 2: The Dayton Daily Democrat gets in to the act too.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Rep. Uecker Wants to Strengthen Concealed Carry

Check out this really good idea being presented by State Representative Joe Uecker!

I'd like to see what Governor Strickland and AG Cordray think of this.  Let's get them on the record!

Team Wilson on Pillach's OEC Complaint

Release:
Springfield Township, OH – Mike Wilson, Republican candidate for State Representative, has become aware of media reports that a complaint has been filed against him with the Ohio Elections Commission. The complaint involves a minor technical error concerning the Designation of Treasurer form. This error, which was self-reported to the Ohio Secretary of State, was subject to a similar OEC complaint during the primary and addressed in local media at that time.

In Ohio, the Designation of Treasurer form is filed to establish a campaign committee with the Ohio Secretary of State. The Wilson campaign originally completed the form in October of 2009 and sent to the Secretary of State via regular postal service. Having completed and submitted the form correctly, the primary campaign began fundraising in earnest. In December, a Hamilton County Board of Elections official noticed that they had not received a copy of the form and reached out to the Wilson campaign. The Wilson campaign responded by filing a provisional copy at the Board of Elections in late December. Unfortunately, the original form was lost by the US Postal Service or the Secretary of State’s office. In the intervening period, the strength and popular support for the Wilson campaign was demonstrated through the 208 donations received, more than many state representative campaigns receive the entire year.

After confirming the original form was not received by the Secretary of State, the Wilson campaign self-reported and considered the matter closed. Mike Wilson pointed out, “The Secretary of State’s office said they couldn’t remember the last time they had fined someone for a minor violation like this. I’m disappointed that Representative Pillich is resorting to the same old politics as usual that voters have rejected. This is an attempt by Pillich to change the subject away from her support of the failed Democrat policies that have led to massive job loss in Ohio.”

None of the 208 contributions are in any way illegal and none had to be returned or will have to be returned. The same complaint was filed against the Wilson campaign during this year’s primaries but was later dropped. The maximum potential fine for this violation is $100. The Wilson campaign has been in contact with the Secretary of State’s office and the Hamilton County BOE concerning this matter.
NOTE TO TEAM KASICH: This is why you get out in front of things like this. You can actually say that you aren't hiding something because it has already been an issue previously handled.

Mike Wilson is a stand up guy and I can't believe how desperate Connie Pillich is in trying to make this an issue.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

TIB All Stars -- Show Notes and Live Blog

The TIB All-Stars Show is LIVE and DIRECT at 6PM Eastern...




Click the link to listen; participate in the live blog...

Sneak Preview of the TIB Radio Network



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    Click the "Listen Now!" text above to listen to TIB RADIO.
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    Friday, August 27, 2010

    Kasich/Taylor Responds to Latest Strickland Attack Ad

    Release:
    Columbus -- Today Kasich/Taylor for Ohio press secretary Rob Nichols issued the following statement in response to Ted Strickland’s fourth negative attack ad, this one again attacking trade policies for which he previously voted:
    “Ted Strickland’s hypocrisy is reaching new heights. After using taxpayers’ money to outsource Ohioans’ jobs to El Salvador and twice voting to give China special trade status, he turns around and makes his fourth negative attack ad about these very same things.
    “While Ted Strickland launched two negative attack ads this week, John Kasich and Mary Taylor released their second proposal to help create jobs—a comprehensive plan to cut the red tape that’s holding our businesses back.
    “The contrast we’ve seen just this week is clear. Ted Strickland can’t run on his record of failure, nor does he know how to help Ohio, so all he can do is desperately smear and attack. John Kasich knows we’ve got to revive our economy and create jobs and he’s got the substantive solutions to get Ohio back on track.”
    Background
    1.    Strickland voted for special trade status for China despite claiming he didn’t and despite bashing it.
    In both of the following votes, a “yes” vote is against “most favored nation” (MFN) trade status for China and a “no” vote is for MFN.

    H.J. Res. 373: Disapproving the extension of nondiscriminatory treatment (most-favored-nation treatment) to the products of the People's Republic of China. (U.S. House of Representatives - August 09, 1994)
    Strickland voted No, for MFN; Kasich voted Yes, against MFN
    http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/103/house/2/votes/381/
    H.J. Res. 208: Disapproving the extension of nondiscriminatory treatment (most-favored-nation treatment) to the products of the People's Republic of China. (House of Representatives - July 21, 1993)
    Strickland voted No, for MFN; Kasich voted Yes, against MFN
    http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/103/house/1/votes/347/
    2.    Strickland bashes outsourcing despite doing it himself with state dollars.
    www.morningjournal.com/articles/2010/08/03/opinion/mj3107671.txt

    WMD Turns 7

    Today marks the seventh anniversary of the opening salvo fired here on Weapons of Mass Discussion.

    First and foremost, we would like to thank our loyal readers for coming back every day to find out what the Big Guys with Big Ideas have to say.  without your support, WMD would never have made it this far.

    I would personally like to thank Mark for coming along on this journey as the ride has been a rough one at times, but we made it another year!

    And let me thank all the guest writers and columnists too.  Every contribution to WMD is valued as a prize worthy of distinction and honor.

    Special thanks go out to all of sources.  Whether you were on the record or off, it is your contributions to WMD that make this blog so much fun to do.

    Lastly, while we don't make a living running WMD, if it weren't for the advertisers who spend their money on WMD I highly doubt we'd still be here.  Thanks to all the folks who took out an ad on WMD.

    Thanks again to everybody...

    MATT

    ---

    We've tried a few new things this year: Twitter, Facebook, the E-Newsletter

    We've let a few things go away: Comments by Haloscan, a few of the text ad vendors

    We've changed the template and graphics as we usually do for the blogaversary.  We're not done yet, but would appreciate your feedback.

    Sheriff Spotlight Gets One Right

    I've given this performance audit thing a thought or two and I have come to the conclusion that it is a waste of taxpayer dollars.

    While I find his antics, as reported in the story, to be childish and the sort of rhetoric that is not helpful; I simply must agree with Sheriff Jones that this performance audit is nothing more than passing the buck (or 116,000 bucks, if you like) at a time when the county can ill-afford to spend more money that we really don't have available.

    Look, I get that these are hard decisions and that our commissioners would like to have the very best information possible in order to make the decisions, but the time for that sort of "throw money at the problem" mentality is what got us in to this mess in the first place.

    I know each of our commissioners are people of a certain character and I know they possess the ability to look at the numbers and make the right decisions. This isn't rocket science, after all. The problem with spending this kind of money on something we already know is that it makes those of us who defended the Commission in their fight with Sheriff Jones on the budget issue look bad. And I don't like looking bad one bit...

    How many times do we have to pay other people to study our problems? No more committees. No more special audits. No more consultants. Let's get this done already.

    St. Rep. Morgan Introduces "Ohio Opportunity Zone"

    Release:
    State Representative Seth Morgan (R-Huber Heights) today introduced legislation that will create new tax incentives for business creation in Ohio. The bill will form a new "Ohio Opportunity Zone," which will offer a single, lower tax rate and other business incentives within a designated area.

    "This bill will allow public entities to better collaborate with each other, the state and businesses to challenge the difficult economic time," said Representative Morgan.

    Representative Morgan's idea is to challenge the current mismatch of red tape and taxing authorities and rather allow local development officials and business leaders to ask, what is the right scenario to encourage development of a particular type on a particular parcel of land?

    The legislation will create Ohio Opportunity Zone which is intended to create employment opportunities, preserve jobs and improve the economic welfare of Ohioans. In addition, the bill will encourage a Board of Directors to enter into agreements with businesses who commit to create jobs in the zone in exchange for tax and other business incentives.

    During these financially trying times, it is critical that Ohio provide an economic atmosphere conducive to business development, education and overall job creation and retention. The legislation will create this positive atmosphere, making Ohio's economic future more stable and fiscally sound.

    In Some States Residency Matters to GOP

    Check out this bit of news out the Republic of Texas (Dallas Morning News):
    State Republican Chairman Steve Munisteri says House Democratic leader Jim Dunnam "has actively deceived the voters" of Central Texas about where he lives. State GOP spokesman Bryan Preston goes further, saying Dunnam "has made himself ineligible" by living outside his district for the past eight years.

    Dunnam, though, says Republicans are beating a dead horse. He says although he maintains two houses -- to keep kids in schools he says the GOP tried to rip his family from, in a remap after the 2000 census -- he has been and still is a legal candidate. And he insists he's more than happy to take the matter to the voters on Nov. 2.
    The Ohio Republican candidate for Secretary of State (Ohio's highest election official) wasn't reached for comment...

    The Troops Deserve the Credit

    Republican Leader, my Congressman and a Great American, John Boehner, also known as the Right Knight of Congress, has a great editorial in Human Events about how it is the troops, not President Obama or Congress, that deserve the credit for the success in Iraq.
    It was our last chance—and the only option—to turn around the security environment. That’s why I and my fellow Republicans stood on principle and supported the new strategy in Iraq, fortified by a surge of U.S. troops.

    Not everyone was convinced, however. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D.-Calif.) claimed that the strategy had failed just weeks after it had begun. Her views were echoed by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D.-Nev.), who declared in April 2007 that “this war is lost.”

    Then-Sen. Barack Obama, who campaigned on his opposition to the Iraq war, flatly declared that the troop surge would not work: “I am not persuaded that 20,000 additional troops in Iraq is going to solve the sectarian violence there. In fact, I think it will do the reverse.”

    I’m sure glad our troops proved them wrong. And I’m sure glad President Obama didn’t listen to Sen. Obama.
    As usual, Democrats in Washington are expecting all of us here in Flyover Country to forget all of the soundbites that they tried so hard for us to hear back in 2007.

    Don't let that happen. The brave men and women who went over there to fight for our country deserve more. Those who paid the ultimate sacrifice by giving their lives certainly deserve more.

    This isn't about delivering hits to a political punching bag, but rather about remembering that this fight was important and that there were those who did not want to believe that our armed forces could win there or in Afghanistan.



    And let us not forget the families of our servicemen and women either. Their courage and tenacity is the strength from which our armed forces draw their resolve. And it is with that determination that makes our country the greatest in the world and the beacon for freedom and liberty that shines upon the whole world so that those who live in fear and oppression may see the light and be encouraged by its warmth.

    While Team Obama, and their friends in the Democratic Congress, continues seeking credit for “ending the combat mission” in Iraq, we have to remember that this was made possible by The Surge that Obama and Biden both opposed. let us not forget that it was our troops who have served so courageously in Iraq that deserve the credit for the success of the surge and, along with the Iraqi people, the turnaround in Iraq.

    God Bless our Troops, Their Families... And God Bless America.

    Wednesday, August 25, 2010

    DSCC Not Fighting for Fisher

    In my morning rounds, I caught a Facebook post from our good friend Kyle Sisk (get his insights via Twitter) that I think rings true regarding the level of interest the DSCC has in Lee Fisher's tilting at windmills:
    The DSCC takes sides. They just do. If a candidate & his/her campaign team have a schism the DSCC takes sides. They do not support both. That would send a terrible message & promote dissension in the ranks.

    If the DSCC was "for" Lee then when he fires staff or they leave in the heat of the campaign said staffers would have a hard time finding work on a campaign for city council in Decatur...they would not land softly in a more high profile US Senate race in KY for Jack Conway. To me, ousted Fisher staffers landing in even better jobs after leaving Lee & Peggy Zone's version of "The Titanic" is "exhibit a" that the DSCC is not in this race.
    This might be one of this situations where we read ourselves in to the actions of our "enemies" but I don't think that is the case here.

    The sheer number of castoffs from the Fisher campaign is amazing enough on its own, but the fact that so many of these people wind up getting better gigs really is a story worth noting. while it may appear to be just a footnote in 527 Media stories, Kyle has a point that the real story very well could be that this signals a level of disinterest on the part of the DSCC.

    Who can blame them really? The Fisher for Senate campaign has been a disaster from Day One and not just for Lee. Although, Governor Strickland has fared better thus far, Fisher's roles as Lieutenant Governor and Ohio's Job Czar has been a harbinger hanging around Strickland's neck as well. The Ohio Democratic Party may have backed Fisher in the primary against Jennifer Brunner, but one has got to think they may have buyer's remorse now since Lee Fisher's fund raising efforts have been lackluster (and that is being generous).

    All in all, that the DSCC hasn't blacklisted these staffers is a sure sign of the campaign arm being not willing to fight for Fisher.

    Tuesday, August 24, 2010

    Questions Strickland Should Be Asked...But Won't

    Rasmussen Reports has two polls that suggest questions that Governor Strickland ought to be asked if only we had a media in this state that didn't have an agenda or a candidate / campaign brave enough to make these questions an issue.

    First, 56% of Ohioans oppose the requirement in ObamaCare mandating that every American must purchase health insurance.

    Does Ted Strickland stand with those who think government has no business telling its citizens that they are required to buy health insurance?

    Second, 62% of Ohioans favor extending the Bush tax cuts putting more of the money we worked for back in to our wallets instead of government.

    Does Ted Strickland believe it is a good policy decision to raise taxes during a recession like his Washington buddies want to do?

    Somebody ought to be asking T-Shirt Ted these very important questions...inquiring minds in Ohio want to know!

    UPDATE: Bonus question for Rich Cordray: 51% of Ohioans favor suing the federal government over the health insurance requirement, what say you, Richy Rich?

    Brown County Update: Dennis Varnau is STILL a Sore LOSER!!!!

    Dennis Varnau just cannot accept that he lost. He is one of those arrogant types who think if they fail it must always be someone else's fault. I am sure he would advocate that everyone in life get a trophy and an attaboy. Well, he has been smacked down again. For the umpteenth time, Dennis lost his claim that he should be sheriff by default because the guy who beat him, Dwayne Wenninger, is not qualified to be sheriff. Varnau doesn't care that he clearly did not have the support of the voting public, he just wants the job so bad! Here is the story from Wayne Gates and the fine folks at the Brown County Press:
    An Ohio Appeals Court has ruled in favor of Brown County Sheriff Dwayne Wenninger in the latest twist of a long-running lawsuit.

    Independent Sheriff candidate Dennis Varnau filed a protest in 2008 with the Brown County Board of Elections challenging Wenningers qualifications to hold office.

    That challenge set off a running two year legal battle.
    In the opinion issued on August 16, the three judge panel from the Twelfth Appellate District in Middletown said that Vaunau's arguments "lacked merit" and upheld the request for Summary Judgement of the case that was made by Wenninger's attorneys in Common Pleas Court.

    A Summary Judgement is a decision by a judge that the facts presented do not require a trial.

    Even though the ruling was in Wenninger's favor, Varnau said "This case is not over by a long shot."

    Varnau said that he plans to file a Motion for Relief of Judgement with the court.

    If that motion is denied, Varnau said he will take the matter to the Ohio Supreme Court.

    Dennis the Menace just doesn't get it. This stuff has been heard again and again. Each time, no merit. Each time he loses, he gets more looney. I guess the appeals court judge must be part of the vast conspiracy that keeps Varnau from his goals and his efforts to shed light on the secret cabal of Zionists who run Brown County for the Illuminati Trilateral commission.....geez. Grow up already Dennis! To the OSC? Come on now. Back to the story:
    Wenninger said "I always felt confident we would prevail" and added "I just think he's a sore loser", referring to Varnau.

    Wenninger continued that if Varnau wants to be Sheriff he should "throw his hat in the ring and try again."

    For his part, Varnau said "As a litigant in this case, my opinion is that as a matter of law, Wenninger is not the Sheriff and never has been."

    He added that he disagrees with the Court's decision and "I believe there is nothing in the record that supports giving Dwayne Wenninger a Summary Judgement."

    In his complaint, Varnau said Wenninger lacked the educational qualifications to be Sheriff that are required by Ohio law.

    Varnau also filed a Writ of Quo Warranto, a legal challenge to Wennenger's right to hold the office of Sheriff, in February of 2009.

    In that complaint, Varnau sought to have Wenninger removed from office and to have himself appointed to the position.

    A sore loser who thinks he is entitled to the job, damn the what the voters decided. He doesn't want a new election or a runoff or a special election. He is demanding he be appointed to the post. Give me a break, you self-serving arrogant twit! Look, Dwayne Wenninger's regime has not been perfect, far from it, and I have a few issues with how he and the dept. run. However, I would rather have him than a self serving egomaniacal elitist who thinks he is entitled to the job!

    Kudos to the 12th district for slapping this egomaniac conspiracy jackhole down!

    Dennis the Menace Varnau: He doesn't care what the voters say, he should be sheriff...and he will sue until he gets his way, or til he croaks.

    Here is the decision from the 12th District Court of Appeals:
    wenningervarnau

    Saturday, August 21, 2010

    TIB All Stars -- Show Notes and Live Blog

    The TIB All-Stars Show is LIVE and DIRECT at 6PM Eastern...




    Click the link to listen; participate in the live blog...

    Sneak Preview of the TIB Radio Network



    Listen Now!

      Click the "Listen Now!" text above to listen to TIB RADIO.


      NOTE: In case the JavaPlayer doesn't work, try this one.


      Abominable United Methodist Update: Shawnee Valley District Rumblings!

      As many of you know, we at WMD sometimes cover issues of faith and politics. Well, we have been covering the debacle and depravity that is the United Methodist Church, especially as it relates to the West Ohio Conference of the United Methodist Church, and the violation not only of the Bible, but also of their own Discipline. Well, it appears that the District Superintendent of the Shawnee Valley District of West Ohio, Joe Bishman, is carrying water for those in the WOCUMC who think that the Bible and the Discipline are merely guidelines to be erased and reworded at will. Well, someone is not buying it and has taken the Bishop, Supt., and others to task:
      Second Letter to DSShawneevalley

      Note the sarcasm and the dripping arrogance that the District Superintendent uses when addressing those who disagree with what the conference has done, and basically tells people to get over it. Also, note how the DS basically just says shut up and continue giving us money as means to "respond" to the issue. Disgusting!

      With an arrogant and condescending attitude like this, it is no wonder that "Dr." Bishman will be having a meeting to instruct churches on how to leave the district AND United Methodism.

      Friday, August 20, 2010

      OH-13: Sutton Outright LIES About Ganley on Obama's Religion

      In this fund raising email, Rep. Betty Sutton illustrates that not only does she not read the bills she votes on, but she doesn't read whole articles that she cites to slander her opponent.

      Here is the link to the RollCall piece that Sutton selectively uses in her email. Here is the part where RollCall clears up the mystery:
      In a statement later Thursday afternoon, Ganley sought to clarify his earlier comment about Obama.

      “During an interview earlier today, I was asked a question about President Obama’s religion that I felt irrelevant to the story being written about my campaign for Congress,” he said. “I do not believe President Obama’s religion has any impact on the need for jobs in Ohio’s 13th district. According to the White House, our President is a Christian and I have no reason to believe otherwise.”
      Once again, the Democrats are sticking to their mantra of never letting the FACTS get in the way of a good smear.

      Shameful. Even for a Member of Congress.

      The good people of OH-13 deserve better.

      UPDATE: RightOhio has this story as well...

      UPDATE 2: Alo over at Brain Shavings has some advice for Betty Sutton.

      Butler County: Dueling Complaints Update

      I smell a rat.

      Michael Pitman gives us this quote from Carter
      “The complaint about a flier that we did not circulate or approve for an event that did not happen is an effort to distract voters of Combs’ record of failure to provide jobs, failure to help the economy recover or a lack of work to approve school funding,” said Carter.
      Yet the flier in question appeared on the Journal News site back in February and we're supposed to believe that NOBODY distributed it.

      Come on...

      The event was organized by the party chair, for goodness sakes...and don't tell me that it's okay because she wasn't the party chair back in February. Anybody want to take odds on whether or not that excuse would fly if Dave Kern did this?

      People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.

      DISCLAIMER NOTE: The complaint in this case was filed by former WMD blogger Don Carpenter.

      Thursday, August 19, 2010

      Zack Space is Having a Really Bad Week

      Labor unions are working against him and now the Ohio Elections Commission says that he made false statements about Bob Gibbs. and he's crazy if he thinks he can make this ridiculous charge stick with the FEC.

      Rough week for the Accidental Congressman...

      UPDATE: Here is the press release from Team Gibbs:
      Lakeville, OH - The Ohio Elections Commission today issued a ruling that recent television ads paid for by Congressman Zack Space's campaign committee contained false statements meant to obscure the record of Bob Gibbs.

      "This ruling proves that Congressman Space lied to the voters of the district in an attempt to distort my record of cutting taxes for families and working to create jobs for Ohioans," said Gibbs.  "We cannot trust anything that comes from Space and his campaign, as they have continued to demonstrate that they have no respect for the laws regarding fair and honest campaigning."

      The Ohio Elections Commission found on both counts that Space used false statements in his TV ad.

      "Space has to lie on his campaign ads to hide from the truth that unemployment in the 18th district has doubled since he took office, yet he continues to vote for job-killing legislation like the Cap-and-Trade national energy tax.  We need to put the false attacks behind us and continue on with my message of putting people in the 18th district back to work in quality jobs that allow them to provide for their families," said Gibbs.
      UPDATE 2: NRCC Comment:
      “Today’s ruling confirmed what so many voters already know: Eastern Ohioans cannot trust anything Zack Space says. He’s failed to create jobs, and he sold out his district by supporting a cap-and-trade national energy tax, even though it will crush the area’s economy. It’s clear that Zack Space has spent too much time in Washington with Speaker Pelosi because he has no regard for the values and principles of Eastern Ohio.” – Tory Mazzola, NRCC Spokesman

      OH-09: Rich Iott Introduces Business Partners, Highlights Job Creation in Local Economy

      Release:
      August 19, 2010 - Businessman Rich Iott introduced three business partners who star in campaign television ads that highlight his career as a job creator in Northwest Ohio at a news conference Thursday morning in western Lucas County.

      These business partners are featured in current or upcoming television ads that the Iott for Congress campaign will be airing throughout this fall to share Rich Iott's ideas about congressional reform and priorities in Washington. The businesses have been responsible for well over 100 jobs in the fields of the construction trades, technology, and food processing - all in the Toledo area - and they all hold the promise of many more jobs in the future. These enterprises thrive today because of Rich Iott's business savvy and his commitment to the local economy.
      "Whatever they are trying to do in Washington to help the economy here in northwest Ohio and across the country is not working, and to me, it's obvious why it's not working," said Mr. Iott. "The leaders in Washington appear only to care about helping their own special interests with no regard for the needs of Americans working in the private sector. The public sector does not create jobs, and the career politicians apparently have no idea what is needed to get the private sector working again. All they have done in the last 19 months is create monumental uncertainty and wreak havoc in the economy, picking the winners and losers and leaving all companies unsure about what new regulations and taxes might be coming next. "
      While incumbent Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur claims her 'number one job' is to rob the federal treasury to reward her campaign contributors with millions of dollars, Rich Iott has worked to create many permanent jobs without any handout from the federal government. Rich Iott's campaign will emphasize his strong business experience because Congress is bereft of successful business leaders who understand what the private sector needs to thrive.

      Combs: Butler County Dems Do It Too!

      Release:
      Hamilton, OH–Butler County Republicans today responded to the false statements spread against State Representative Courtney Combs (R-Hamilton), who is running for reelection to the 54th Ohio House District. Bruce Carter, the Democratic candidate, has committed the same offense that his county party is accusing Combs of: failure to include a disclaimer on campaign materials.

      Recently, the Butler County Democrats filed a complaint against Combs for failing to include a campaign disclaimer on a yard sign. In reality, the complaint against Combs is false, as evidenced by the attached photos—which show the disclaimer embossed in the lower left-hand corner.

      Concurrently, Carter circulated the attached fundraising invitation without his campaign’s disclaimer and listed Jocelyn Bucaro, now-chairwoman of the local Democratic Party, as the contact to RSVP for the fundraiser.

      According to Hamilton Journal-News, Bucaro chastised Combs by saying, “It’s ‘Campaign 101. If any of my candidates would have done this, I’d call them out on it.” Dave Kern, Butler County GOP Chairman, was quick to point out the irony of Bucaro’s comments.

      “The desperation of the Butler County Democratic Chairwoman is pathetic,” said Kern. “This is an attempt to remove the focus of the election from the important issues like jobs and taxes to innocuous behavior, which in this case includes both parties and is waste of everyone’s time and tax dollars.”
      UPDATE: Here is the complaint that Team Combs is filing and the offending Carter letter...


      OEC Complaint Combs


      Carter Fundraiser

      Wednesday, August 18, 2010

      Yost to Pepper: "Let's Debate"

      Release:
      Republican candidate for Auditor of State, Dave Yost, today challenged his liberal Democrat opponent to debate him.

      Earlier in the day, the Ohio News Network and WBNS TV invited the candidates for Auditor to debate. The Yost campaign immediately accepted.

      "We've already missed one opportunity to hear what David Pepper had to say when he skipped the Lake County News Herald televised candidate forum," said Matt Borges, spokesman for Yost. "It's time for David Pepper to stop speaking through his spate of confusing news releases and bizarre campaign statements, and come meet Dave Yost face-to-face and defend his record of raising taxes, high unemloyment, and his devastating decision to close jails and let criminals free."

      The ONN/WBNS debate will be held in early October, although no formal date has been set. Yost said he was open to further debates, noting that the race is simply too important to the future of the state to not allow voters to hear directly from the candidates.

      "Anytime, anywhere," Yost said.

      How Will Raising Taxes Put Ohioans Back to Work?

      Republican Leader, my Congressman and a Great American -- John Boehner -- also known as the Right Knight of Congress, asks this very question in an editorial being ran locally.

      Answer: It won't...

      Where are the jobs?

      Boehner on Obama's Ohio Visit

      Statement:
      “Ohioans are looking at President Obama’s ‘stimulus’ policies and they are asking ‘where are the jobs?’ The fact is, the president’s ‘stimulus’ spending spree is not delivering the results he promised it would. More than 130,000 Ohioans have lost their jobs since February 2009, and the states’ unemployment rate remains at a painfully-high 10.5 percent.

      “Worse yet, Gov. Strickland has yet to answer important questions about his administration’s decision to hire a company that outsourced work on a ‘stimulus’ program to El Salvador and other Central American countries. Are there other instances in which Ohio ‘stimulus’ funds were used to create jobs outside of our country? And why was a bipartisan oversight panel not established, as my Republican colleagues and I suggested, to monitor ‘stimulus’ spending and ensure this wasn’t happening? The people of Ohio and the taxpayers of the United States deserve answers.

      “More waste, more debt, and fewer jobs. That’s not the picture of a recovery. It’s the epitome of failure. The simple fact of the matter is that a nation in our fiscal condition should be spending less, not more – and we certainly shouldn’t be hitting small businesses with a job-killing tax increase at the end of this year, as the president has proposed.

      “The American people have had enough of Democrats’ jobs-killing policies. Republicans will continue to listen through America Speaking Out and offer better solutions to help small businesses create jobs and stop the spending spree in Washington.”

      NOTE: According to an analysis by the non-partisan Joint Taxation Committee, half of small business income in America will face higher taxes under President Obama’s plan. Last month, Boehner and House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-VA) sent the president a letter encouraging him to work with them on a number of common-sense solutions to help put people back to work, including the ‘no-cost jobs plan’ Boehner and Cantor first offered President Obama last December at the White House.

      OH-09: Iott Signs No Pork Pledge

      Release:
      Rich Iott, candidate for Ohio's 9th Congressional District, has signed the No Pork Pledge sponsored by Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW).

      CAGW, which advocates the elimination of waste and inefficiency in government through nonpartisan public education programs and lobbying activities, in July named incumbent Rep. Marcy Kaptur their 'Porker of the Month' for "gaming the House Democrats' prohibition on awarding earmarks to for-profit companies and wasting taxpayers' money."

      Upon notice of the award, Iott said:

      "Politicians like Marcy Kaptur, who've been in Washington so long that they actually think this sort of wasteful spending is a good thing, have brought our county to the edge of bankruptcy with a debt approaching $14 trillion. Now is the time to acknowledge that earmarks need to stop and that her so-called 'legislative priorities' are not the priorities of the taxpayers she's supposed to represent.

      "Ohio's 9th Congressional District needs a businessman who understands that "eviscerating earmark reform and wasting taxpayers' money" (as the CAGW called it) is not the way to create economic growth in the district, the state or the nation.

      "When I'm elected, I promise to end 'pay-to-play' corruption, and bring some real-world, common sense business experience to Capitol Hill."

      In following through on that promise, Iott signed the No Pork Pledge which reads:

      I, Rich Iott, pledge to the constituents of the 9th Congressional district of the state of Ohio and to the American people that I will not request any pork-barrel earmark, which is defined as meeting one of the following criteria:

    • Requested by only one chamber of Congress


    • Not specifically authorized


    • Not competitively awarded


    • Not requested by the President


    • Greatly exceeds the President's budget request or the previous year's funding


    • Not the subject of congressional hearings


    • Serves only a local or special interest


    • "When career politicians each try to get their own piece of the pie, it is the taxpayers who are left with an empty plate - and the bill. While I don't need to sign a pledge to remember that my obligation is not to spend taxpayer money on pork, I'm happy to put my commitment in writing so the voters can hold me accountable," Rich Iott said.

      Part of Portman's Problems

      I like Rob Portman a lot, but he has to be smarter about interviews. Take this quote from a Dan Balz Washington Post piece for example:
      But Republicans believe that, as much as Democrats try to make the midterms a choice between Obama's and Bush's philosophies, in the end the election will be a referendum on the president at a time of deep voter discontent.

      "I suppose it's relevant to some people," Portman said when asked whether what happened when Republicans were in power should be a leading issue in this campaign. But he said the Obama administration's policies in combating the recession are more pertinent for voters. "The question is, was the stimulus a good idea? Has it worked?" he said. "Is the health-care bill a good idea? Has it worked?"
      You simply can't wish away the Republican's failures by pinning them on Obama. It IS relevant, Rob, to a great many people...some of them are even voters!

      There is absolutely NO POINT in electing Republicans if they haven't learned the lessons of the past that lead to this mess in the first place. The GOP had lost its way and while I do think SOME Republicans are finding their way again, I do believe that SOME Republicans aren't even looking for the path. Which one is Rob Portman? I don't know...and I really wish Rob would stop playing politician long enough to give us some real answers.

      Yeah, yeah, yeah...I get it. This is about message discipline. Deflect all criticism towards any other villain. That's what politicians do. And that is my point: That is what politicians do. Realizing that Rob Portman has always been a politician, I'd like to think he could be a real person too...

      In the end, Rob Portman IS better for Ohio and the nation than Lee Fisher and on that basis alone, Rob gets my vote, but would it kill us to acknowledge the problems and campaign on the idea that we've learned from our mistakes.

      UPDATE: On the other hand, I really do like this approach...(from the same article)
      Portman does not seem eager to spend the rest of the campaign talking about the past, arguing that "it's an odd campaign to be running against the past rather than providing a vision for the future. And we're going to be providing a vision for the future, [because] that's where people are."
      I do think Portman has an obligation to address any mistakes that were made in Bush trade and budget policy, but dwelling on it isn't the answer either. If I were on Team Portman, I'd develop a statement on what Portman thinks are the problems caused by both Bush AND Obama that includes real solutions. More importantly, I'd want to find a way to do that without a nine-page booklet... This is a step in the right direction:
      As for his days in the Bush administration, he notes that until he arrived as budget director, Bush had never vetoed a spending bill. "We should have done it years earlier," he said.

      His record as U.S. trade representative, Portman said, was one of promoting exports. "Ohio is dependent on exports," he said. "Twenty-five percent of Ohio's factory jobs are now export jobs. One out of every three acres is planted for exports in Ohio. Farmers are dependent on it."

      He also argues that he is a strong advocate for tougher enforcement of existing trade agreements and has been critical of the Obama administration for not responding more to China on currency valuations. "I'm stronger on enforcement than the administration," he said.

      Tuesday, August 17, 2010

      Dems Say Combs Made a Mistake

      Intrepid Reporter "Staff" over at the Fairfield Echo has the story.

      The report filed by Intrepid Reporter "Staff" says that a photo of the offending sign which allegedly does not have the required "disclaimer" is attached, but isn't. Did Intrepid Reporter "Staff" just copy a press release? That would NEVER happen in the 527 Media...would it?

      Anyway, it looks like "Corky" Combs is going to have some sort of fight on his hands with the Ohio Elections Commission. If this charge is true, somebody was asleep at the wheel at Team Combs...

      Kasich/Taylor Announces JobsOhio Plan

      You can find the details of the plan here.

      Before I get in to a few comments, be sure to check out Joe Hallett's and Mark Niquette's story here. A few highlights:
      In the first substantive proposal of the governor's race, Republican John Kasich today proposed replacing the Ohio Department of Development with a private, nonprofit corporation.
      ...
      The board, Kasich said, will be empowered to negotiate incentives and other deals with companies "all the way to dotting T's and cross I's (but) the final decision will remain inside the governor's office."
      ...
      "We're going to take a different approach to an organization that has withered," Kasich said. "If we want to attract business we need an approach that reaches out to business on its terms, speaks its language and understands its needs. . . . The days of trying to connect with business leaders through bureaucrats are over."
      Halltt and Niquette also note a glaring problem:
      Questions immediately surfaced about how JobsOhio would work and whether a private, nonprofit corporation has the authority to oversee the spending of state tax dollars or awarding tax credits and other incentives to businesses.

      The Kasich campaign did not provide specifics, but said the governor's office would retain control over funding decisions and expressed confidence that the plan is constitutional.

      The campaign said there is legislative and judicial precedent for the state using private entities to perform a public purpose, including the Ohio Historical Society.
      On Twitter, RightOhio's Matt Naugle said, "Conservatism is not corporatism." And he is right. But this plan isn't corpratism either. I think this is a hybrid of what we have been doing in Ohio with some good, old fashioned reduction in government overhead.

      The main concern exprerssed by conservatives thus far is that the plan seems to mimic the OBDC. And, it would...because let's face it, any institution that is set up to address these sorts of problems are going to have very similar mission statements. The distinction is in the details of how the two differ. OBDC has to go through the Department of Development which involves layers of bureaucracy and red tape. It sounds to me as if Kasich is wanting to eliminate all of that and give the JobsOhio group direct access to the governor's office. The savings in reduced manpower on the government payroll is enough to give the plan a good look.

      I think this is going to take some time to tell if the plan is really worth doing, butI applaud the Kasich/Taylor team for finally putting forth something with some meat on it.


      UPDATE: Leader Batchelder statement:
      “Since I returned to the legislature in 2007, the need to rejuvenate how our state helps businesses expand has grown exponentially.”

      “Most recently, the Department of Development has been weighed down by bureaucracy and exhibits pursuit of numerous missions that have little bearing on Ohio’s economic development. I support John and Mary’s plan to refocus on what matters most—creating jobs—and look forward to partnering with them in the legislature to quickly enact whatever legislative changes are needed to make this proposal a reality. Ohio’s unemployment is at 10.5 percent, and with the plan before us today, I am confident that we can quickly began reviving our economy and getting Ohioans working again.”

      Monday, August 16, 2010

      L.A.M.E. PAC

      Lies About Mary Ellen:

    • She doesn't live in her district.




    • She supports tax hikes.




    • She wants to restore "responsible" government.




    • She was Speaker of the Ohio House.




    • She is actually a robot.




    • She is the "secret square!"




    • She played some college football back in the day.




    • She is a "fiscal conservative" whatever that means.



    • She is a darling of the Tea Parties.
    • QOTD: BizzyBlog

      The Quote of the Day comes from Tom Blumer of BizzyBlog (third item at link):
      On second thought, maybe that’s bad news: The TOTUS unemployment rate is 83%.
      With numbers like THAT, there is a real good chance that TOTUS won't even vote for POTUS44 in 2012...

      St. Rep. Jordan Asks Inspector General for Review of OSFC Procurement Practices

      Release:
      Columbus—State Representative Kris Jordan (R-Powell) today submitted a letter to the Ohio Inspector General Thomas P. Charles, outlining his concerns about the Ohio School Facilities Commission (OSFC)’s furniture procurement practices and asking for a thorough review of the process.

      “In light of your recent report, Richard Murray’s refusal to resign and Governor Strickland’s refusal to remove him, I believe this issue should be examined in greater detail to ensure there are no other questionable practices by the commission or its director,” wrote Jordan in his letter. “I do not want cronyism to become the norm by which the state conducts its business.”

      Jordan’s concerns outline a common practice of “spec-ing backward” in which design professionals or architects establish furniture specifications that make it impossible for all but one vendor to participate in the bidding process. This tactic eliminates competition from other companies (as required by Ohio statute) and raises the overall price of a project. Jordan listed his concerns surrounding bids in the Hubbard, Elyria, Akron City, and Liberty Union school districts, among others.

      In a June memo, the OSFC outlined steps the commission would take to provide greater oversight of the process. However, Jordan’s letter airs concerns that these steps have not been taken and that the problem still exists.

      Director Murray was deeply criticized this month by the Inspector General after an investigation into multiple improper activities, including encouraging discord amongst union and non-union labor and contractors, participating in inappropriate meetings with union officials and school officials to promote project labor agreements (PLAs), making design and personnel decisions based on his union bias, and promoting PLAs for renovation projects for the Ohio Schools for the Deaf and Blind, among others.

      OH-18: Gibbs - "No Mosque at Ground Zero"

      Statement:
      Lakeville, OH - Bob Gibbs today announced his strong opposition to the building of a mosque on 'ground zero' in New York. "We cannot allow the memories of those who lost their lives on 9/11 to be disgraced by the building of a mosque at ground zero. The President's decision ignores the will of the American people and is insensitive to victims' families," said Gibbs.

      Gibbs also called on his opponent, Congressman Zack Space, to break his silence on the issue and join him in opposing the mosque. "President Obama wants to allow the mosque, and Zack Space's silence is deafening," said Gibbs. "It is time for Congressman Space to finally separate himself from the President and break ranks because this issue is too important to our country and the families who lost loved ones on 9/11."
      This topic has been a hot one on my FaceBook Wall today...

      Seth Morgan on School Funding

      Statement:
      State Representative Seth Morgan (R-Huber Heights) made a statement referencing an Akron Beacon Journal editorial that was released on August 11.

      While referencing Tuesday's defeat of the Norton City School District's bond issue, the editorial called the coexistence of both equally funded and equally available quality education a dream that had not yet been achieved, saying, "The results of the August 2 election show once again that the goal remains elusive."

      Representative Morgan responded, "The governor's 'evidenced based model failed to meet the objective standard of evidence, failed to produce a plan that solved the question of equality and results, and has led to failing levies at the ballot box. Ohio's children are being held hostage by policies and politics that have prevented parents and teachers from making sound decisions based on real evidence."

      Yet to be seen is whether or not the Ohio Evidence Based Model proposed by the governor will solve the education inequality dilemma. With schools depending largely on failing operating levies and the state budget dependent upon short-term federal stimulus dollars, the longevity of the governor's plan has been called into question.

      Thursday, August 12, 2010

      OH-09: Iott Schedules Town Hall Meetings

      Release:
      Rich Iott, candidate for Ohio's 9th Congressional District, announced his District Town Hall schedule today.

      "Last year during the August recess, our representative, Marcy Kaptur, was surprisingly absent at a time when many voters in the 9th Congressional District had questions about the over-reaching health care bill," Iott said. "This year, as voters want answers about the troubled economy and why career politicians are jeopardizing the futures of our children and our grandchildren with out-of-control spending and record debt, she is again conspicuous in her absence."

      "I want to actually represent the people in the 9th District - and I'm not afraid to meet with them to hear their concerns, answer their questions and be accountable to them," he said.

      Schedule:

      August 19, 2010 - Erie County Town Hall
      6:30 p.m.
      Erie County Senior Center
      620 E. Water St.
      Sandusky, Ohio

      August 26, 2010 - Lorain County Town Hall
      7 p.m.
      Kipton-Camden Recycle Center
      417 State St (SR 51)
      Kipton, Ohio

      September 1, 2010 - Ottawa County Town Hall #1
      7 p.m.
      Ida Rupp Public Library
      310 Madison Street
      Port Clinton, Ohio

      September 2, 2010 - Western Ottawa County & Eastern Lucas County
      6:30 p.m.
      147 West Main Street
      Oak Harbor, Ohio

      A town hall meeting for western Lucas County will be announced shortly.

      Butler County Update: Budget Cuts Force Layoffs

      I just learned that a few more good employees of Butler County just lost their jobs due to budget cuts. My question: Why don't the "bosses" DEMAND that the County Commission fix the budget like Sheriff Spotlight does? It works for him to hold the whole county hostage...just saying.

      Wednesday, August 11, 2010

      VIDEO: Meet David Pepper



      Reaction: Meh. It's okay for a YouTube ad. I have a few problems with the content as it relates to the Auditor's actual job, but I like the hard hitting tone.

      More Food Stamp Fraud in Ohio

      This Cincinnati Enquirer piece about a few Food Stamp Fraud raids has some interesting threads in it... I expect we'll be hearing more about Brandon (22) and Ibrahim Shteiwi (24) as somehow weapons dealing came in to play. Also mentioned in the piece were Nazih (54) and Nabih Shteiwi (52) of Fairfield and Ayman Abu-Naffa, 37, of Cincinnati. Quite the cell family affair going on here...

      Cops from Hamilton, Fairfield and Cincinnati were involved in the searches of Sutton Pony Keg in Anderson Township; Mt. Airy Food Mart in Mt. Airy and a residence in the 1300 block of Parkway Court in Fairfield (the Shteiwi's place, I assume).

      OH-18 Poll is Good News

      I'll provide some analysis after the pleasantries are out of the way...

      Release:
      Lakeville, OH - Bob Gibbs, candidate for Congress in Ohio's 18th Congressional district, today released the results of a poll done on August 4 and 5 by On Message, Inc, a polling firm specializing in Congressional races. The results show a deadlocked electorate giving Bob Gibbs and Congressman Space each 43% of the vote if the election were held today.

      "This poll shows that voters were not fooled by the hundreds of thousands of dollars Congressman Space has already spent on false attack ads against me," said Gibbs. "The voters are very aware that unemployment has doubled under Zack Space's watch, and yet he still continues to vote for job-killing legislation like cap-and-trade, and over $1.4 trillion in new taxes on Ohio's families."

      Key Points from the poll:

      Q - Do you think Zack Space has earned another term as our U.S. Congressman?

      Yes - 38%
      No - 48%

      Q - Do you think the country is headed in the right direction, or have we gotten off on the wrong track?

      Right Direction - 20
      Wrong Track - 72

      Q - If the election for U.S. Congress were held today and the candidates were (rotate) Bob Gibbs, the Republican, Zack Space, the Democrat, or Lindsey Dean Sutton, the Constitutional Party candidate for whom would you vote?

      Zack Space - 43%
      Bob Gibbs - 43%
      Lindsey Dean Sutton - 5%
      Undecided - 10%

      "I am going to keep working hard to spread the message that we all, Republicans and Democrats, need to focus on putting people back to work." said Gibbs of the current double-digit unemployment. "When Zack Space first took office, he said 'unemployment is not a problem in southeastern Ohio', and now we are saddled with a major unemployment problem. "Congressman Space has failed the workers of the 18th district, its time for him to go."
      I think the summary from the polling company says it best:
      This election is being driven by the same elements we are seeing across the country; concern over runaway spending, unchecked government and a stagnant economy with no improvement in sight. Only in the 18th these factors cut even harder against the Democrats. The voters are looking to send a clear message and place a check and balance to the Obama-Pelosi agenda. Bob Gibbs is likely to win this race even if he is significantly outspent. In fact, Gibbs is likely to win even if he is outspent two or three to one.
      I still think there is a LOT of work to do in this district. They polled 400 people in a district that stretches quite a bit along the eastern side of the state, so I am not overly willing to put too much faith in these numbers because this has got to be one of the hardest districts in Ohio to get an accurate assessment. But, the news is pretty good. Space has been spending some of his cash and it realyl doesn't seem to be getting him anywhere. The Accidental Congressman shouldn't have gotten re-elected last time, but the Republicans put up the worst candidate possible -- not so this time.

      The poll shows staggering numbers opposed to Cap and Trade, ObamaCare, and the stimulus bills -- all of which Space supported. If Team Gibbs can continue to hammer these points home, I see no reason why he should lose this race. I agree with the pollster, Gibbs should win this election even if outspent assuming the district really does feel this strongly about the issues.

      OH-09: Iott on Latest bailout Bill to Pass in the House

      Release:
      Rich Iott, candidate for Ohio's 9th Congressional District, issued the following statement following passage of HR 1586 - the Education, Jobs and Medicaid Assistance Act:

      "Today the House passed a second so-called stimulus, this time to bail out schools and states.

      "What the career politicians in Washington fail to understand is that the over-spending has got to stop. There are good examples across the country, and right next door in our neighboring state of Indiana, where responsible governments have cut spending and encouraged job growth, resulting in budget surpluses of hundreds of millions of dollars.

      "In May, Toledo voters rejected an income tax for their school system. Their message was clear - that with an 11.6% unemployment rate, they have no more money for failing schools. By Congress passing this bill in Washington today, the tone-deaf politicians have decided to spend tax dollars from all Americans to bail out the schools that local taxpayers refuse to give additional funds to. Even the liberal Washington Post criticized this measure as "more of an election-year favor for teachers unions than an optimal use of public resources."

      "Career politicians in Washington are again substituting their personal preferences for the will of the people they are supposed to represent. They are, again, ignoring what the voters are telling them.

      "The first so-called stimulus failed to do what Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her supporters said it would. Unemployment rose - and so did the debt. You need to look no further than the fact that, 18 months after the first stimulus became law, they're still talking about the need to create jobs.

      "And while that's bad enough, they're planning to pay for this current spending by cutting the Food Stamp program - but not until 2014. So where is the money going to come from to cover the $26.1 billion cost? It's going to come from increased taxation on businesses, 'future' savings in various programs and more borrowing against the future earnings of our children and our grandchildren.

      "And when the time comes to cut the Food Stamp program in order to get the anticipated 'savings,' no one really believes that Congress will do so. In fact, most people will wonder how many times between now and then Congress will actually spend those same projected savings on favors for other special interests.

      "Congress needs to take a serious look at its profligate spending and get its own fiscal house in order, which would serve as a good example to state and local governments to do the same."

      Tuesday, August 10, 2010

      Intrepid Reporter Josh Leaving Butler County

      ...being replaced by Michael Pitman.

      This will be like starting all over...

      Intrepid Reporter Josh isn't leaving Ohio though...he's heading to the Springfield News Sun to cover Clark County.

      Monday, August 09, 2010

      OH-09: Rich Iott signs Contract from America

      Release:
      Rich Iott, candidate for Ohio's 9th Congressional District, today signed the Contract from America, a set of 10 policy items reflecting a belief in individual responsibility, limited government and economic freedom.

      "These 10 principles reflect my core beliefs about the role of government and the responsibilities members of Congress should adhere to," Iott said. "I believe the goals of the Contract from America are vital to ensuring our freedoms and liberties. I'm proud to join with Republicans, Democrats and Independents in supporting these fundamental principles."

      -30-

      The Contract from America:

      We, the undersigned, call upon those seeking to represent us in public office to sign the Contract from America and by doing so commit to support each of its agenda items, work to bring each agenda item to a vote during the first year, and pledge to advocate on behalf of individual liberty, limited government, and economic freedom.


      Individual Liberty
      Our moral, political, and economic liberties are inherent, not granted by our government. It is essential to the practice of these liberties that we be free from restriction over our peaceful political expression and free from excessive control over our economic choices.


      Limited Government
      The purpose of our government is to exercise only those limited powers that have been relinquished to it by the people, chief among these being the protection of our liberties by administering justice and ensuring our safety from threats arising inside or outside our country's sovereign borders. When our government ventures beyond these functions and attempts to increase its power over the marketplace and the economic decisions of individuals, our liberties are diminished and the probability of corruption, internal strife, economic depression, and poverty increases.

      Economic Freedom
      The most powerful, proven instrument of material and social progress is the free market. The market economy, driven by the accumulated expressions of individual economic choices, is the only economic system that preserves and enhances individual liberty. Any other economic system, regardless of its intended pragmatic benefits, undermines our fundamental rights as free people.

      1. Protect the Constitution
      Require each bill to identify the specific provision of the Constitution that gives Congress the power to do what the bill does. (82.03%)

      2. Reject Cap & Trade

      Stop costly new regulations that would increase unemployment, raise consumer prices, and weaken the nation's global competitiveness with virtually no impact on global temperatures. (72.20%)

      3. Demand a Balanced Budget

      Begin the Constitutional amendment process to require a balanced budget with a two-thirds majority needed for any tax hike. (69.69%)

      4. Enact Fundamental Tax Reform

      Adopt a simple and fair single-rate tax system by scrapping the internal revenue code and replacing it with one that is no longer than 4,543 words-the length of the original Constitution. (64.90%)

      5. Restore Fiscal Responsibility & Constitutionally Limited Government in Washington

      Create a Blue Ribbon taskforce that engages in a complete audit of federal agencies and programs, assessing their Constitutionality, and identifying duplication, waste, ineffectiveness, and agencies and programs better left for the states or local authorities, or ripe for wholesale reform or elimination due to our efforts to restore limited government consistent with the US Constitution's meaning. (63.37%)

      6. End Runaway Government Spending

      Impose a statutory cap limiting the annual growth in total federal spending to the sum of the inflation rate plus the percentage of population growth. (56.57%)

      7. Defund, Repeal, & Replace Government-run Health Care

      Defund, repeal and replace the recently passed government-run health care with a system that actually makes health care and insurance more affordable by enabling a competitive, open, and transparent free-market health care and health insurance system that isn't restricted by state boundaries. (56.39%)

      8. Pass an 'All-of-the-Above" Energy Policy

      Authorize the exploration of proven energy reserves to reduce our dependence on foreign energy sources from unstable countries and reduce regulatory barriers to all other forms of energy creation, lowering prices and creating competition and jobs. (55.51%)

      9. Stop the Pork

      Place a moratorium on all earmarks until the budget is balanced, and then require a 2/3 majority to pass any earmark. (55.47%)

      10. Stop the Tax Hikes

      Permanently repeal all tax hikes, including those to the income, capital gains, and death taxes, currently scheduled to begin in 2011. (53.38%)

      DDN Obliterates Another Fisher Talking Point

      In an article about Sen. "Charade" Brown and his "views" on manufacturing, the DDN accidentally blow up an argument that I have to think Lee Fisher wanted to make against Rob Portman.
      Chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Economic Policy, Brown is convinced the U.S. is losing its manufacturing edge to foreign competitors. He ritually complains about “job-killing trade agreements” championed by former Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

      He sees a plummeting number of manufacturing jobs and argues that “since 1987, manufacturing’s share of (gross domestic product) has declined more than 30 percent.”
      The problem for Brown -- and Fisher -- is that the position doesn't stand up to scrutiny:
      At Thursday’s hearing, a key witness said — in very polite terms, and without mentioning Brown by name — that the senator may be basing his arguments on a series of flawed assumptions.

      “When discussing the health of the manufacturing sector, one major issue is whether we should be taking into account the number of people employed in the sector or looking at the amount of output created in manufacturing,” testified William A. Strauss, senior economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. “Interestingly, each leads to the opposite conclusion about the strength of manufacturing in the United States.”

      Strauss ticked off one statistic after another that shows the U.S. remains a manufacturing powerhouse. The nation’s factories, he testified, are just more efficient.

      He said that between 1950 and 2007, manufacturing output in the U.S. increased by 600 percent. Yet the nation today has only 14 million manufacturing jobs, roughly the same number as 1950.

      How can this be?

      Strauss pointed to automation and increased worker productivity, telling the subcommittee that 184 workers in 2009 produced as much as 1,000 workers did in 1950.

      He explained that worker productivity is the main reason why manufacturing’s share of gross domestic product has declined by pointing out that “the greater efficiency of the manufacturing sector afforded either a slower increase or an outright decline in the prices of this sector’s goods.”

      “This allowed manufactured goods to be less costly to consumers and led to the manufacturing sector’s declining share of GDP,” Strauss testified.
      However, I don't think this will stop Brown or Fisher from their strategy...

      Sunday, August 08, 2010

      RINOvich Joins Democrats; Wants to Raise Your Taxes During Recession

      What an idiot. (The Hill):
      Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio), President Reagan’s budget chief David Stockman and former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan have each argued that extending the tax cuts — set to expire at year’s end — would increase the nation’s $13 trillion debt.

      “It’s like tax reductions, you don’t need to pay for them? To me, that’s nonsense,” Voinovich said.
      Listen up, Grandpa Simpson, when taxes are low the economy grows; conversely, when you raise taxes, the economy shrinks. This ain't rocket science, Crying Man.

      Thank God this fool is retiring. Can't be over soon enough.

      Hey Rob Portman! What do YOU think about raising our taxes during a recession?

      Hey Ohio RINOvich Party, aren't you SO glad that you sold the naming rights to the headquarters? RINOvich stench now stains the ENTIRE state party...thanks a LOT.

      Saturday, August 07, 2010

      TIB All Stars -- Show Notes and Live Blog

      The TIB All-Stars Show is LIVE and DIRECT at 6PM Eastern...




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        Thursday, August 05, 2010

        More Trouble for Mike Fox

        Intrepid Reporter Josh has the latest update on the times and troubles for former Butler County Commissioner and former Director of Butler County Children's Services Mike Fox.

        Basically, the charges against Mike have been updated due to a SCOTUS ruling affecting the law under which Fox was originally charged.

        Bottom Line: Mike gets one more week of freedom as the trial gets pushed back...again.

        Wednesday, August 04, 2010

        GUEST COLUMN: "Why Ohio’s Economy is Struggling" by Mike Wilson

        Ohio’s economy is in terrible shape.

        Whether you look at unemployment (10.5% - 43rd), or state GDP per capita ($35,381 - 33rd), our position in absolute terms and relative to other states is bad and getting worse. The reality of these statistics is that the citizens of Ohio are hurting. While going door-to-door, I’ve met with the long-term unemployed who are barely scraping by, and I’ve met with parents whose children moved out of state after college to seek jobs.

        From 1990 to 2000, 720,200 jobs were created in Ohio. From 2000 to 2009, 544,100 were destroyed. This means that only 176,100 private sector jobs were created over a 19-year period - barely 9000 per year in a state of over 11 million people. The unfortunate truth is that it doesn’t have to be this way.

        Ohio has tremendous built-in advantages as a state. We have world-class universities, a well-educated workforce, robust rail, highway, air and water transportation, and a legacy of innovation that is the envy of the country. Entrepreneurs like Thomas Edison and the Wright Brothers were a huge part of what made Ohio great. Today in Ohio, however, Edison and the Wright Brothers would be punished for their success with excessive taxation and burdensome regulation.

        We see the proof of this in the news when venerable Ohio companies like NCR (founded in Dayton in 1884) and US Playing Card (founded in Cincinnati in 1867) leave for other states and take their jobs with them. We didn’t lose these jobs to overseas competition. We lost them to Georgia and Kentucky. In the case of US Playing Card, they moved their headquarters only about 15 miles across the river – just barely enough to escape the suffocating anti-business atmosphere of Ohio.

        Governor Strickland offered NCR tax breaks totaling $31.1 million in an effort to keep them in Ohio. While that unfortunately wasn’t enough, what it shows is a recognition that the tax climate in Ohio matters and it is so out of whack that a $30 million incentive is insufficient to keep a company here.

        In the 2011-12 Ohio budget, we are faced with an estimated shortfall as high as $8 billion. We are in this situation because our political class has failed. During the good times, we spent the windfall in tax revenues. When tax revenues declined in the current recession, the Strickland administration and House Democrats led the charge to increase spending by 9.3% in fiscal years 2009-10. The less we had, the more they wanted to spend.

        This reckless spending was financed mainly though one-time funds including federal “stimulus”, debt restructuring and drawing on the state’s rainy day fund. The remainder came from $1.2 billion in additional fees, and a $900 million tax increase passed in December that was retroactive to the beginning of the year – thus violating the cardinal rule of not raising taxes in a recession.

        In the next budget, we need to take steps to restore Ohio’s competitiveness, and we need to get government off the backs of our job creators – small businesses. To do so, government needs to tighten its belt - something they have utterly failed to do so far. In 2009, the average state employee made more than the average private sector employee in 87 of Ohio’s 88 counties and that’s before accounting for the lavish benefits and gold-plated pensions received by state workers.

        The failure of our leaders in Columbus have driven jobs out of our state and created the 7th highest state and local tax burden in the country. It has made Ohioans poorer. Using budget gimmicks to avoid taking responsibility instead of fixing the problem is the same old politics that everyone is tired of. We need new leaders willing to take on the entrenched interests and balance our budget with spending cuts, not tax increases. It’s why I signed the Taxpayer Protection Pledge and why I encourage my fellow candidates and representatives to do the same.

        Ohio may be in terrible shape, but the right leadership can make it great again. The current leadership has failed. That is why I am running for State Representative.

        Ohio Goober Debates Announced

        Release:
        A consortium of the daily newspapers which represent Ohio ’s eight largest media markets and the gubernatorial campaigns of Governor Ted Strickland and John Kasich have reached an agreement on hosting the 2010 gubernatorial debates. Newspapers included in the consortium are The Akron Beacon Journal, The Canton Repository, The Cincinnati Enquirer, The Cleveland Plain Dealer, The Columbus Dispatch, The Dayton Daily News, The Toledo Blade and The Youngstown Vindicator.

        Debates will be held in the evening in Columbus on September 14 and in Toledo on October 7 at locations yet to be determined. The debates will be televised by a television partner in each city and a live feed will be available to television stations in each market of the state.

        Speaking on behalf of the consortium, Mike Curtin commented, “We are delighted that voters will get a chance to hear the candidates answer questions directly in this important election.”
        Southern Ohio is screwed again...

        Tuesday, August 03, 2010

        Voinovich on Kagan

        Statement:
        WASHINGTON D.C. – U.S. Senator George V. Voinovich (R-Ohio) today announced his opposition to the nomination of Solicitor General Elena Kagan to be an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court. Below are excerpts from his floor speech:

        “As I said last August during the debate on Justice Sotomayor, the role of the Senate in the nomination of a Supreme Court justice is to give its advice and consent on the president’s nomination with the Senate to judge whether an individual is qualified based on a number of factors,” Sen. Voinovich said. “Among these factors are the nominee’s education, legal experience, prior judicial experience, written record, judicial temperament, commitment to the rule of law and overall contributions to the law. Based on my review of Elena Kagan’s record using these factors, I have determined that Gen. Kagan, at this time, does not meet the criteria for membership on our nation’s highest court.”

        “Senate confirmations should not be a simple mechanical affirmation of the president’s selection, especially when the nominee will enjoy a lifetime appointment,” Sen. Voinovich continued. “A senator is duty bound to conscientiously review the qualifications of the president’s nominee and make an independent assessment of the nominee’s qualifications.”

        “I believe a judicial nominee must have substantial experience in the law especially when that nominee is seeking a lifetime appointment to the highest court in our land. After reviewing her background, I believe Gen. Kagan does not have that relevant experience. For example, when the Senate considered Justice Sotomayor’s nomination, there were more than a thousand prior opinions one could review to decide if she was ready for the job; with Gen. Kagan, there are none. When I asked her to name opinions that she worked on with Justice Marshall with which she disagreed, she stated that she could not remember any individual opinion she worked on, much less whether she disagreed with Justice Marshall on any of them,” stressed Sen. Voinovich.

        “Lack of judicial experience should not be an absolute bar on serving as a Supreme Court justice. However, Solicitor General Kagan not only lacks judicial experience, but has limited experience as a practicing attorney with really only the last year as solicitor general and two years as a junior associate making up her entire practice. Additionally, Gen. Kagan has an extremely limited written record, which should make all of us unsure as to what sort of justice she might be.”

        During his tenure in the U.S. Senate, Sen. Voinovich has voted in favor of three prior Supreme Court nominations: Chief Justice John Roberts, and Justices Samuel Alito and Sonya Sotomayor.