Wednesday, September 21, 2022
Last Day to Register to Vote in Ohio is October 11th
Monday, September 05, 2022
There are Signs of Hamilton County Turnout Being Strong in 2022
There is no easy way to estimate voter turnout. It varies by election and by location. One factor that can be an indicator is voter registration. I've done a simple analysis for Hamilton County of the voter registrations on the current listing and have compared the 2018 voter registrations to the 2022 voter registrations YTD though July.
This data has some limitations. The first seven months of the year is not the height of registration, that happens in September and very early October. My reason for limiting the analysis to the first seven months of year is largely due to is where we are so far. Additional problems come from the current registration listing. This does not include those who are no longer listed as registered in Hamilton County. It also does not include all of the rejected registrations as the time. Also, these registrations may not be new, they could be re-registrations. I chose 2018 to compare as it was the last Midterm election and as one that was very strong for Democrats. That time frame makes 2018 a skewed year as well, but the last Midterm election before that, 2014, was even more skewed as that year was nationally some of the lowest turnout ever, but locally it was influenced by a county wide ballot issue. With all of these flaws in mind, I still see two key inferences to make about this data.Saturday, August 13, 2022
Still Doing This Blog and I Am Sure I Will Piss Someone Off
This is where you might expect me to insert a large microphone graphic and ask a trite question. I'm not going to do that. It has been months since I posted anything. Well, there's not been much I've wanted to post about. I have been plenty angry about things going on in the world, in the United States, in Ohio and right here in Cincinnati. I've used my Twitter account (@cincyblog) to vent most of my indignation. Twitter is find for doing that, just posting angry rants is not what I ever wanted this blog to be about.
This blog is not one thing, but most importantly is for my views and the information that I believe is important. I am not a professional journalist, just in case anyone was foolish enough ask, but I've been doing this for over 20 years. Yeah, I let my 20th anniversary go unnoticed over the last few months. That's not a big deal, even for me. If it were a big deal, I'd have done something. I would have remembered it, for one thing, so other than pointing that out, I am not dwelling on the past.
One of the reasons I started this blog was for me to express myself. I've enjoyed having my own small soapbox. I never did much to cultivate an audience. I am not going to change that much now. I honestly don't do this to get people to like me. You can't express vies that are critical of others and expect for them to like you. I do want to say thank you to those who do read it. There are few of you still around and I thank you for reading.
What brings me to blogging again today is that I need a better means to express myself. My attempts on Twitter just don't cut it. That site is good for somethings, but it is not good for expressing yourself. A couple of sentences is just not how I write. I have this blog as a platform and I need to use it. I can ramble on for thousands of words with no realistic limit and be myself. Twitter is limiting. Don't get me wrong, I am still going to use Twitter (unless Musk mucks it up.) It is still the only real-time social media tool that delivers news. It only works well, however, when it's used to deliver links from other sources with real content, like this blog.
With that in mind, I'm going to deliver from here more often. I will try to link my blog posts out to my various social media accounts, but am not going to go overboard on that. I want to spend more time with ideas. Those ideas may take this blog beyond Cincinnati more often than before. It may also be the case were Cincinnati becomes the template for those ideas. I am going to explore a bit. I will still have political coverage. I will take out the knives on occasion, but won't make that my emphasis.
I won't be holding my punches, but I will do my best to hit the ideas, not someone's nose. I will, however not hold back on my critique of the actions and inactions of people who venture out into the public sphere. I've been attacked for daring to question the motives of people. I am not going to stop questioning people's motives. Feigning righteousness is not a defense and the ends do not justify the means. No-one's views are beyond reproach, but their right to exist is.
Time to have some fun.
Friday, December 31, 2021
The Best and Worst in Cincinnati Politics for 2021
- Democrats Elect Eight to City Council: A new beginning with a good team.
- Aftab Wins Mayor's Race by Large Margin: Positive leadership for the City and the region.
- Smart Move: Democrats refusing to allow cross party endorsements of candidates. They were attacked for doing this, but it was a wise choice and most importantly, it worked.
- Liz Keating Sneaking on Council: Her appointment to City Council in late 2020 was dubious at best, but her tenure on council was as a very moderate candidate, at least in appearances. Getting the Charter endorsement was the kicker that got her enough votes to get the last spot on Council.
- Defeating Both Issue 3 Ballot initiatives:
- In May during the Primary Election far left wing activists tried a massive power grab for a group of unelected social service leaders and their advocates.
- In November everyone saw through Tom Brinkman fronting for an ill conceived Republican Donor backed effort to cripple the city.
- The Republican Party: Anyone with any amount of experience following politics would be able to identify the set of positive circumstances for Republicans heading into the 2021 election: a) A corruption scandal, expanded by the GOP fishing expedition enabled by a Republican Judge, b) an increase in shootings (though not an overall increase in crime), and c) Three sitting Republicans on council as incumbents. Throw in tons of suburban Republican money and they were poised to win some power on council. They still couldn't field enough candidates for a five person majority, let alone anything close to a full slate of candidates. They ended up with one member elected in the last position. That candidate ran publically as a very moderate candidate that likely connected well with moderate women.. The more conservative candidates lost far more significantly. A complete failure. Any other political party would fire people over this.
- Tom Brinkman: The guy is a right wing extremist who is against the the existence of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. He thought somehow he could find a way to waste a ton of money on a fruitless campaign. He didn't even bother creating a website for his council campaign. He knew he was going to lose. He also essentially lost twice. He got his ass kicked in the council race and his Ballot Issue lost big time as well. He wasted a ton of Republican money and that would be a redeeming quality if he did it on purpose, which he did not. He may try to run for something county wide. He may find he won't fair much better, no matter how much GOP money the fat cats are willing to waste on him.
- Issue 3 for a $50 Million power grab: This was a terrible ballot issue that appears to have been crafted to either intentionally fail or to force the City to gut the funding of the Police Department. I list those too extremes because it was a horribly written issue that put all of the big issues onto City Council to figure out and then clean up with no direction. I don't know how any honest group could put if forward as it did they thought it was good policy. It also gave unelected left wing activists power with no checks or balances or the ability of the public to have oversight certain portions of unelected board given this power. I person did not vote for anyone who publicly supported the Ballot Issue. What is sad and likely shows the cynical intent of its originators is that a large group of people felt they had to support this because they support creating more affordable house. This Ballot issue was a really bad way to do that.
- Supporters of Issue 3: Beyond the badly written ballot issue, there were so many puritanical supporters of this issue who viewed getting it passed as a litmus test. Those who did not have absolute support for the issue were vilified and often ostracized by its most vocal supporters. Hell of a way to run a railroad or social movement....
- Independent Progressives: Adding to the Issue 3 fiasco, they lost BIGTIME in the City Council Election. If you are going to run against the Democratic Party, then you better learn to be a unified party with viable candidates that might build up a credible following. Instead, they support 'Socialists' with no viable ways to govern a city. Leftist activists are not good political leaders, they are just attention seekers. Organize a team with common viable goals, not a bunch of crackpots who have a bunch of bad political views that not only are bad policies, they are policies that can't win outside of leftist clubs on college campuses.
- Michelle Dillingham's Campaign: A simple rule to follow when you want the endorsement of a political party, don't work against and criticize that same political party. The Democratic Party in Cincinnati had a clear goal for its candidates, unity. Dillingham did not want to be unified with anyone. Her campaign was about being aggressive and working against certain groups. She did not demonstrate that she wanted to work with other who frankly are not far off on policies. Her crusade against SORTA and the bus service was incomprehensible. Sure, it riled up some parents that may have turned into voters, but attacking public transit is not a winning position for any left of center political candidate.
- Brian Garry Campaign: From passing out intentionally misleading and dishonest campaign literature at the polls to alienating a campaign manager, Brian Garry demonstrated why he would not be a good member of council or any elected office. I hope this is end of him running again. He needs to move on from politics.
- The Charter Committee: They had several solid candidates, but they did not have a wide reaching organization to get support. The de facto political party lacks the infrastructure of the two major parties and it shows. They need to reassess what they are doing and how they approach Cincinnati Elections if they are going to ever have an impact, again.
- Anyone Who Believed That City Council Poll: A political 'poll' made the rounds amongst political circles and many people believed it, especially the Enquirer's Jason Williams and perennial Republican candidate Charlie Winburn. I don't know who conducted or paid for the polls, but the one I saw only included four endorsed Democrats in the top nine. Williams looked like a fool when he had a column that included most of this poll's top nine as his prediction. He is not good political analyst and is a hack columnist. The poll was at best a favorability or name recognition survey, not a true poll, something very difficult to do with an at-large nine-seat race. Here's hoping that people who follow politics take more time to understand the evolving electorate, instead of thinking the election of 15 or 20 years ago is the same as today.
- If you think Democrats are going to do this well in Council Elections every year, you are mistaken. They will have an advantage for the next couple elections, but the electorate will change again. I don't see it getting any more Republican, but moderate candidates have a very doable path to get on council next time around.
- Price Hill and Westwood are no longer Republican Strongholds in City politics. There are a few pockets, but conservative white flight has continued.