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Leaving No Republican BehindPosted on Jul 24, 2007By E.J. Dionne My interview with Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland was delayed for a reason that explains why this Democrat is so popular in a state that was once considered a Republican bastion. In the course of his travels Saturday, Strickland discovered that a farm in a heavily Republican area near Cincinnati was celebrating its 200th anniversary as a family-run operation. The governor decided he had to drop by and chat with some folks who probably didn’t vote for him. Strickland is one Democrat who tries to leave no Republicans behind. At a moment of festering polarization in national politics, Strickland is Mr. Consensus. He doesn’t hide his progressive views—he calls himself “pro-choice, pro-labor and pro-universal healthcare”—and yet just about everyone thinks of this ordained Methodist minister as a moderate because he spends a lot of time in places where Democrats don’t dare venture, offering soothing sentiments you’re unlikely to run into on talk radio or the Internet. “If you act with respect toward the people who disagree with you,” Strickland said over the telephone when we finally got around to talking, “they’ll give you a break and won’t cut you off.” Strickland’s political skill only partly explains Ohio’s political transformation. A state that voted narrowly for President Bush in 2000 and 2004 not only elected Strickland as governor in 2006 but also sent Sherrod Brown, an economic populist with a far more liberal public profile, to the United States Senate. The conversion rate among Ohio voters in just two years was staggering. According to exit polling, 30 percent of Ohioans who voted for Bush in 2004 voted for Strickland in 2006; 20 percent of Bush’s 2004 voters supported Brown. Why the big change? Scandals involving former Gov. Robert Taft and former Rep. Bob Ney made even loyal Republicans squeamish. Strickland won a fifth of self-identified Republicans and a quarter of conservatives, while holding on to more than 90 percent of liberals and Democrats, and roughly 70 percent of moderates and independents. If national Democrats reached such numbers in 2008, they’d win the presidency decisively. The new economy has hit Ohio hard. Industrial cities such as Youngstown and Cleveland have suffered under the lash of globalization. Brown’s tough stand against free trade appealed in a place where the loss of well-paying blue-collar jobs makes the promise of a flat world fall very flat indeed. What might Democratic presidential candidates learn from Ohio? As a matter of style, Strickland suggests they understand that “people are desperately wanting to believe that political leaders understand them and that they are trying to deal with their day-to-day lives.” Memo to overly cautious candidates: Strickland also thinks that “the display of genuine emotion is important.” Substantively, Strickland says the economy matters most, although he has been a strong opponent of the Iraq war from the beginning. “The foreclosure problem is huge,” Strickland says. “The people are desperate for jobs.” He sees healthcare and education as central—they were the key issues in his recent budget. These questions “ought to give Democrats a leg up,” but only if they can “talk about these things in a way that gets people to believe you will do something about them.” There’s the rub for Democrats in 2008. Voters want government to work but aren’t sure that it can. They want government to solve problems but worry that it won’t. This creates a strategic paradox: Democrats need to discredit Bush’s government without discrediting government altogether. Strickland, because he has executive power, has advantages most Democratic presidential candidates don’t. In introducing his first budget, he decided not to increase taxes. Confronting a Legislature under Republican control, he chose to deprive the GOP of what would have been its main talking point against him. “I think some of my Republican colleagues were unhappy about that,” Strickland said with a chuckle about his no-tax-increase budget. But he did push successfully for a broad children’s health insurance plan and a freeze on tuitions at state colleges and universities, both of which make voters happy. State Rep. Kevin DeWine, the deputy chairman of the Ohio Republican Party, credits Strickland with introducing “a budget that was pretty fiscally responsible,” but argues that Strickland has not been tested yet. “He’s not had to make a decision where he’s had to expend any political capital,” DeWine said. That’s true. On the other hand, Strickland has capital to spend because he has combined progressive goals with a moderate demeanor and a cheerful approach to potential adversaries. When you talk to him, you realize you’re not in Washington anymore. E.J. Dionne’s e-mail address is postchat(at symbol)aol.com. (c) 2007, Washington Post Writers Group Previous item: Israel's Primal Myth: A Barrier to Peace Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment |
By bear47, July 25, 2007 at 5:57 pm #
Wow! An elected politician who acts as though a majority of ALL the people elected him. AND he seems to act as if he were an employee of the citizens of his state! Amazing in America of 2007.
Report thisEVERY elected politician, at ALL levels is OUR employee. If more of them would ACT that way, we might get this country on track to fix itself.
By Hammo, July 25, 2007 at 2:00 pm #
As a native of the Cincinnati, Ohio area, Dionne’s article strikes a chord.
The state is quite a mix of people and views, and those views seem to have been changing over the last few years.
There was almost a dramatic political upset a couple of years ago when attorney, Iraq war vet and Marine Corps Reserve officer Paul Hackett ran as a Democrat for a Republican-held congressional seat in a special election ... and almost won, in a traditionally overwhelmingly Republican district in the Cincinnati region.
This episode is worth knowing about. Take a look at the article ...
“The hearts and minds of Ohio: Marines’ deaths, recent election linked”
http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewArticle. asp?articleID=3375
Report thisBy farmertx, July 25, 2007 at 11:14 am #
myiq2xu
Cute handle,
Sadly, for this Democrat, you were right about the Democrats’ excesses.
Report thisWelfare for the truly needy is one thing; for anyone too lazy to work, Hell, no. In trying to do some good things, they have gone overboard.
Just as the Republican’s tend to go overboard in the opposite direction.
I doubt that Shrub would have lost in ‘04 regardless; remember Diebolds Magic Voting machines. It’s too bad that, in this day and age, we are still saddled with the Electoral College, else Shrub would have never been in office.
Liable to be as many dead, but I’d wager none in Iraq. And there would be a lot more money left in the Treasury than there is now, thanks to secret no bid contracts and over charges that are settled for pennies on the dollar.
By myiq2xu, July 25, 2007 at 8:59 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
After watching Reagan try to carry out his campaign promises and seeing what it did to his approval ratings, I realized that the majority of Americans are really liberals, whether they realize it or not.
In 1994 I correctly predicted that if the GOP tried to execute their “Contract on America” they would get Clinton (who was then at his lowest approval ratings) reelected.
The GOP is it’s own worst enemy. They did okay as the minority party, acting as a brake on Democratic excess. But when they get the opportunity to run things, they self-destruct.
The worst damage that Osama bin Laden caused to this country was extending the GOP’s reign over this country by 4 years. Except for 9/11, Bush would have been turned out back in 2004, and the GOP would have lost Congress in 2002.
Report thisBy DennisD, July 24, 2007 at 7:07 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
I agree with Thomas #89132
Report thisUnfortunately we tax slaves are offered either a corporately controlled Democrat or corporately controlled Republican to vote for on “election” day. Until enough of us are willing to vote for a third or fourth party candidate expect business as usual.
By PatrickHenry, July 24, 2007 at 3:19 pm #
I think alot of republican senators are going to be “left behind’ in 2008. Democrats too, anyone who keeps funding this insane war/terror complex of the government, wasting the tax dollars when they could be going towards something positive.
We have to begin impeachment on these people to hamsting their anti-liberty activities and never ending war.
Report thisBy vet240, July 24, 2007 at 11:27 am #
The article speaks well of the Governor.
I would take exception with his being able to respect the Republicans and in his ability to get along with the opposition.
I think he is acting as a representative of the people, which is what all politicians had better start doing.
The “Leaders” had better start acting more like “Facilitators” of the American will.
This isn’t a sports venue.
I vote Democratic most of the time. I am not on the team “Democrat”.
We the people had better start demanding that both parties act on our will. Not on the will of the corporatacracy.
In our local paper there was an article about what a terrible mess the Ammunition producers of America will be in when the war in Iraq and Afgahnistan comes to an end!
God help us if we lose the capacity to manufacture ammunition. What has this country become if not a military-industrial complex?
Another article concerned the lack of over-sight of the Pentagons expenditures where billions have been spent on over-runs and im some cased just missing.
Billions that could be spent on health care and education.
If we were to quit spending on war-making materials and start spending on the above mentioned human needs the world would once again see us as an example, and not as a bunch of decadent fools.
Report thisBy farmertx, July 24, 2007 at 11:20 am #
Admit that I was disappointed when I started reading the article.
Report thisFrom the headline, I thought it was about the Bureau of Prisons bus leaving DC for Marion FCI,IL.
Damn...missed again.
By farmertx, July 24, 2007 at 11:18 am #
As a Democrat in a heavily Republican County here in East Texas, I have found that being willing to admit the faults of my party, while pointing out the faults of the opposite party has done more good than if I had just railed against Republican’s period.
Report thisPolitical aims are different in each party, the way they were originally meant to be; Democrat for workers and Republican for business.
Each of these areas need some breaks and attention. But that is the key;each. Not just one side always on top.
When you get down to the basic facts, we are all American’s. That needs to be the consideration for each Party; What is best for America?
Instead, we have political game playing while the real issues are left on the side lines.
Both sides need to get away from pure politics and start thinking about how to keep America on track to being a truely great country.
By THOMAS BILLIS, July 24, 2007 at 10:01 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
Poor deluded EJ of the Kombaya school of politics.You do realize mahatma that is a bear six monthe into a term.The only reason Democrats got elected was corruption and mismanagement of government of historic proportions.I am sure if every democrat would visit a 200 year old farm in Ohio they would be a shoe in at election time.The problem with the Democrats is that they are too wishy washy and listen to EJ Mahatma and do not know how to fight to win elections.How to stand up for Democratic principles.The only reason they have a chance in 08 is That the republicans without the Kombaya logic of Mahatma Dionne have ruthlessly pushed through an agenda that has severely hurt the country.So when the Republicans win they ruin the country and when the democrats win to fix the mess they reach across the aisle.Jesus EJ you must have been a democratic consultant in 2000 and 2004.No wonder Karl Rove eats the Democrats lunch everytime.
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