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s Ohioans stumbled numbly
into the fog and headed for work this morning the presidential race still
hung in the balance. The once-mighty GOP governors stumbled a bit last
night, but Ohio delivered for Bush. Ridge, Engler, and ultimately Thompson
failed to leverage their popularity into a Bush win, but Taft and Ohio
Republicans stood tall and the state's crucial 21 electoral votes went
for Bush. If Bush ultimately wins, Taft will likely have a first-class
ticket to the inauguration.
Democrats' and Republicans' massive GOTV efforts succeeded in pushing
the turnout to near record highs. It appears that nearly 70% of registered
voters in Ohio turned out to the polls. While African-American and union
households helped the Democrats' efforts across the state and across the
nation, for the most part Republicans held their own here in the Buckeye
State.
President
Bush won, but not overwhelmingly (approx. 50-46). As noted above, high
voter turnout amongst minorities and union members gave Gore an unexpected
boost.
U.S. Senate
No need to pile on Ted Celeste; DeWine, as expected, won handily (60%).
U.S. House
Pat Tiberi finished strong and bested Mary Ellen O'Shaugnessy roughly
52-43. O'Shaughnessy was unable to rack up high enough margins in urban
Franklin County (Columbus) to offset high Tiberi numbers in suburban and
rural Delaware County.
Ohio Supreme Court
Republicans couldn't pull off the upset of current Ohio Supreme Court
Justice Alice Resnick but held their own with the reelection of conservative
Justice Deborah Cook. The media will likely call this a "backlash" against
the $5 million dollar ad assault against Resnick by outside interest groups,
but it is more likely that the power of incumbency and name recognition
not to mention high D turnout carried the day for Resnick.
Either way, it appears the legislature will need to address the school-funding
issue after all.
Ohio General Assembly
Despite the high number of open seats due to term limits, the election
continued the status quo in the Ohio legislature. With one race likely
to undergo a recount, the Republican majorities remain unchanged (59-40
House, 21-12 Senate). One interesting note: In the 85th House District
18-year-old Minster High School graduate Derrick Seaver appears to have
pulled a stunning upset, defeating Republican David Shiffer by 235 votes.
One consolation for conservatives in this district: Seaver is pro-gun
and pro-life.
In the one of the closest elections this century, Ohio Republicans did
their part but will it be enough?
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