Warning: Undefined array key "rbname" in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 14
Hello !
Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Home Front: Politix
Ohio Democrat Curses Voters Who Oppose Health Care Law
2010-09-24
[Fox News] The head of the Ohio Democratic Party is brushing off his description of Tea Partiers and other opponents of President Obama's health care law as "f--kers," saying he shares a penchant for blurting with Vice President Biden.
There's therapy for that ...
"It is what it is," Ohio Democratic Party Chairman Chris Redfern told Fox News regarding his Monday appearance at an endorsement event by the United Steelworkers for several Ohio Democrats, including Gov. Ted Strickland.

"Vice President Biden and I have a way with words," Redfern said, conjuring up the vice president's description this spring of the signing of the health care law as a "big f---ing deal."

He also suggested the audience could handle it.

"Look, I was speaking to 40 grizzled steelworkers," Redfern said.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Republicans run ahead in Ohio
2010-09-07
John Kasich leads Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland by 49 percent to 37 percent, with 4 percent preferring some other candidate and 10 percent undecided. For the Senate seat being vacated by the GOP's George Voinovich, former Bush cabinet member and congressman Rob Portman leads Democratic Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher by 50 percent to 37 percent, with 3 percent preferring another choice and 9 percent undecided.
Link


-Short Attention Span Theater-
Let's give a drunk driver the run of the governor's mansion. What could possibly go wrong?
2010-06-01
Columbus Dogpatch Dispatch

How an "honors inmate" working at Gov. Ted Strickland's residence in Bexley was able to obtain enough alcohol to record a blood-alcohol level more than three times the level at which an Ohioan is presumed drunk and require hospital care remains a mystery.
An unlocked liquor cabinet is suspected, along with a lack of supervision.
But Strickland told reporters yesterday that he hopes the decades-old program allowing inmates to work at the Governor's Residence will survive.
"It was a one in a million thing--nobody coulda seen it coming."
"You don't give up on individuals," the governor said. "You certainly don't give up on rehabilitation."...

The governor suggested yesterday that Hoaja, who had been working as a cook at the Residence, might have been trying to "sabotage himself" to get kicked out of the program.
"It was a cry for help."
Strickland, a former prison psychologist,...
"I mean, a guy with six DUIs going after booze--I sure didn't see that one coming!"
Link


Economy
Hugo Boss, union talk on Ohio plant closing
2010-04-16
Hugo Boss and union leaders have met with a federal mediator without reaching an immediate agreement on the planned closure of a men's suit factory near Cleveland, which could cost 375 jobs.

The union wants to prevent the scheduled April 27 shutdown of the Brooklyn, Ohio, plant and avoid big pay cuts. The union says the plant is making money, but Hugo Boss says it's not globally competitive.

The union says it made an offer on Thursday designed to save jobs and enable the company to maintain global competitiveness. The company says the sides had a thorough discussion and an open exchange of ideas.

The sides expect to meet again April 21.

Gov. Ted Strickland attended a union rally on Wednesday, and actor Danny Glover made a return appearance to back the workers.
Link


Home Front: Politix
GOP's Brown branded turncoat for jobs bill vote
2010-02-24
A month after being crowned the darling of national conservatives, Republican Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts is being branded "Benedict Brown" for siding with Democrats in favor of a jobs bill endorsed by the Obama administration.
Looks like politics don't work on him. Don't say you weren't warned. As long as he keeps healthcare takeover at bay.
He told everyone up front who he was. He's a moderate Republican. It was him or Coakley ...
Like the four other GOP senators who joined him, the man who won the late Democrat Edward Kennedy's seat says it's about jobs, not party politics. And that may be good politics, too.

The four other GOP senators who broke ranks - Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine, George Voinovich of Ohio and Christopher "Kit" Bond of Missouri - also were criticized on Tuesday. But Brown was the big target on conservative Web sites, talk shows and even the Facebook page his campaign has promoted as an example of his new-media savvy.

"We campaigned for you. We donated to your campaign. And you turned on us like every other RINO," said one writer, using the initials for "Republican-In-Name-Only."

The conservative-tilting Drudge Report colored a photo of Brown on its home page in scarlet.

The new senator responded by calling into a Boston radio station.

"I've taken three votes," Brown said with exasperation. "And to say I've sold out any particular party or interest group, I think, is certainly unfair."

The senator said that by the time he seeks re-election in two years, he will have taken thousands of votes.

"So, I think it's a little premature to say that," he said.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky wasn't particularly perturbed about Brown's vote, saying his election last month has "made a huge, positive difference for us and for the whole legislative agenda."

"We don't expect our members to be in lockstep on every single issue," McConnell added.

Political observers said each of the five Republican senators had solid reasons locally for voting as they did, to cut off a potential Republican filibuster on the bill.

The measure featured four provisions that enjoyed sweeping bipartisan support, including a measure exempting businesses hiring the unemployed from Social Security payroll taxes through December, and giving them a $1,000 credit if new workers stay on the job a full year. It would also renew highway programs through December and deposit $20 billion in the highway trust fund.

It faces a final Senate vote Wednesday.

Snowe and Collins hail from economically ailing Maine, and they can't stray too far from the Democrats who populate much of New England. And Voinovich and Bond also are from states hard hit by the recession.

The latter two also have the ultimate protection from retribution: They're not seeking re-election this fall.

"When you have decided to retire and you are a free agent, you can pretty much do what you want," said Peverill Squire, a political scientist at the University of Missouri-Columbia. And Squire doubted that Bond, retiring after 24 years in the Senate, would have paid much of a political price even if the famous appropriator were seeking re-election.

"He's had no shyness in trying to send money," he said.

While conservative columnist Michelle Malkin used her blog to accuse Voinovich of being a traitor, even suggesting he got some unspecified goody for his vote in favor of the "porkulus" bill, Ohio's governor defended him.

Gov. Ted Strickland, a Democrat, praised the senator for "standing with the people of Ohio over the majority of his party."

For Voinovich, a Republican from a Democratic stronghold, the party defection was nothing new. The two-time Ohio governor and former Cleveland mayor has sprinkled his political career with independent votes that can agitate the GOP. Former President George W. Bush famously visited Ohio in 2003 in an attempt to secure Voinovich's support for a tax cut package.

Voinovich still voted no.

Snowe and Collins, meanwhile, "survive in New England by a unique set of rules," said Dante Scala, political science professor at the University of New Hampshire.

He said: "The way they survive with voters in their homes states is by making it clear that, first and foremost, they're the servants of their constituencies, not the party label. So, they'll make a point of defying their party and going their own way."

Brown got little such leeway, despite campaigning as an "independent Republican" and publicly eschewing national supporters.

National Republican groups, as well as "tea party" members and an array of conservative special interests, all claimed a share of the credit for his upset win in the battle to succeed the legendary Kennedy.

They felt especially justified after funneling millions to Brown's campaign, including $348,000 on late television ads paid by the California-based Tea Party Express.

"You've already turned out to be as big an idiot as Obama," said one Facebook poster. "Enjoy your one term as senator."

One local political scientist believes the vote was anything but dumb, considering Brown faces re-election in less than three years.

"Scott Brown knows that he's going to be judged differently in 2012 than he was in 2010," said Jeffrey Berry, a political science professor at the senator's alma mater, Tufts University. "He's facing a different electorate, with more Democratic voters, and Barack Obama at the top of the ticket, in what is still a blue state."
Link


Home Front: Politix
Ohio politicians' pockets are bulging as they up the ante on access
2010-02-22
If you want Ohio politicians to give you the time of day, the annual fee -- as totaled by one of the wisest of Capitol Square's magi -- is now more than $130,000.

In 2008, it would have been $119,000.

That's a 9.2 percent increase over two years -- far more than the all-items Consumer Price Index, which over the past five years has climbed an average of 2.6 percent a year, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

What the fundraising frenzy means is that the hidden surcharge for Ohio politics (passed on to Ohio taxpayers as anti-consumer laws, bulging utility bills and sweetheart public contracts) is going through the roof.

The fund-tracker, who prefers not to be named, is a Statehouse lawyer-lobbyist of long standing, a gentleman of the old school -- i.e., a member of an endangered species. He saves every single fundraising invitation he gets. He also keeps track of the price of the cheapest single ticket to each of those events. Then he runs a total.

For the year that ended Jan. 31, the total cost of one ticket to each event would have been $130,388. For the comparable 2007-08 period, the tab would have been $118,880.

"Maybe the politicians don't know we are in hard economic times, or maybe it's an inflation factor," he wrote me.

He's correct on both counts.

First, some officeholders don't know how the rest of Ohio lives. You don't see hard times in Columbus bars and bistros; you see high times, and people (generally, men) telling each other how great they are. And most officeholders get top-shelf health insurance, courtesy of taxpayers, and will collect cushy, guaranteed pensions. (Health insurance is "socialism" only when you don't want someone else to have it.)

Second, inflation is a factor, though it's maybe not so much "price inflation" as "threat inflation." Obviously, political campaigns cost lots of money, especially for TV ads. But this is also key: A "mine's bigger than yours" campaign fund can spook potential challengers.

So the collection basket gets passed. For instance, the Republican Senate Campaign Committee in Ohio, according to Gongwer News Service, plans an April fundraiser. If you'd like to be a "gold sponsor," that'll be $5,000. Silver ($2,500) and bronze ($1,000) sponsorships are also available. And for $500, well, they'll let you in the door.

Meanwhile, term limits have touched off "everyone for her- or himself" fundraising. So first-termers from Anytown, Ohio, hold fundraisers at such swank sites as the Athletic Club of Columbus, or the Capital Club, in the headquarters building of Huntington Bancshares.

Few if any attendees of these long-range frolics -- held by Democrats and Republicans alike -- will be from that legislator's hometown. But woe to the lobbyist who doesn't at least send a check.

Democrats' dicey prospects up the tempo -- and the ante. Democrats run the House 53-46; Republicans could win it back. And Democrats run the Apportionment Board 3-2.

The Apportionment Board will redraw General Assembly districts in 2011 to suit the party that runs the board. For Democrats to keep running the board, at least two of these three Democrats -- Gov. Ted Strickland, state auditor candidate David Pepper, secretary of state candidate Maryellen O'Shaughnessy -- must win this fall.

Polls show Strickland's GOP challenger, former U.S. Rep. John R. Kasich, in the lead. And pending a Republican primary, the GOP's likely auditor candidate (Delaware County Prosecuting Attorney David Yost) and secretary of state candidate (Dayton-area state Sen. Jon Husted) are formidable.

That's why Ohio Republicans are pawing at the starting gate -- and both Ohio Republicans and Ohio Democrats are foraging for donations like hogs rooting for truffles.
Link


-Lurid Crime Tales-
Man convicted of 1992 Christmas killing spree in Dayton to be executed today
2009-07-21
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- With no legal challenges expected, Ohio prepared today to execute a man who took part in a 1992 Christmas holiday killing spree that left six people dead and two wounded. Attorneys for Marvallous Keene, 36, said they planned no late appeals for a series of slayings that included an 18-year-old mother gunned down at a pay phone. Keene regrets the crimes and doesn't want to die but opted not to fight the death sentence, public defender Rachel Troutman said.

Keene, who was convicted in five of the murders, was scheduled to die by lethal injection at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville one week after Ohio's most recent execution. It would be the fastest turnaround since the state executed two inmates in six days in 2004.

Gov. Ted Strickland denied clemency last week for Keene, who didn't request it. At a June 17 clemency hearing, Keene directed his attorneys not to present evidence on his behalf, saying he didn't want to cause additional pain to his family or to the victims' families.

Keene and three accomplices went on a three-day murder and robbery rampage in Dayton that began on Christmas Eve 1992.

Other victims included Sarah Abraham, 38, a convenience store clerk shot in the head after handing over $30 from a cash register, and Marvin Washington and Wendy Cottrill, two teenage acquaintances who Keene feared would tell police about his crimes.

His three accomplices are serving life sentences.

Keene was examined Monday by the prison's medical staff for suitable injection sites. No problems with his veins were reported, prison spokeswoman Julie Walburn said.

He also ordered a special meal for dinner that included a porterhouse steak, jumbo deep-fried shrimp and German chocolate cake. Keene was calm and quiet and spent the day watching television and writing a letter, Walburn said.

Seven members of the victims' families were expected to witness today's execution. Keene's two defense attorneys were to be his only witnesses.

Defense attorneys said Keene, who was 19 at the time of the slayings, was despondent over the death of his brother, who was shot and killed a year earlier. At his trial, Keene also told a three-judge panel that a falling-out with his father contributed to his troubled emotional state.

Prosecutors described Keene as the ringleader of a group that called itself the Downtown Posse. The killings began with 34-year-old Joseph Wilkerson. Keene and his accomplices arrived at Wilkerson's home under the pretext of wanting to participate in an orgy, prosecutors said. They tied Wilkerson to his bed and ransacked the house, and when Keene found a .32-caliber handgun in the garage, he returned to the bedroom and shot Wilkerson twice.

Later Christmas Eve, Keene and accomplice DeMarcus Smith approached 18-year-old Danita Gullette at a pay phone, took her jacket and shoes and fatally shot the woman, prosecutors said. Gullette was the mother of a 2-year-old girl.

Washington, 18, and Cottrill, 16, were acquaintances who sometimes stayed at Keene's apartment and observed Keene returning with stolen items, prosecutors aid. They were shot and killed behind a gravel pit.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Ohio official in 'Joe the Plumber' flap "resigns"
2008-12-18
CINCINNATI -- An Ohio agency director resigned Wednesday in the wake of a finding that she improperly used state computers to access personal information on the man who became known as "Joe the Plumber" during the presidential campaign. Two other officials who were suspended from their positions for their role in the computer search will not be returning to their jobs, an agency spokeswoman said.

Department of Job and Family Services Director Helen Jones-Kelley said in a statement accompanying her resignation that she won't allow her reputation to be disparaged and that she is concerned for her family's safety.
And the newspapers allow her to say that without challenge. What tools. Her reputation is in tatters precisely because of what she did and no one has threatened her family.
"This decision comes after a time of pause, in which I realize that I continue to be used as a political postscript, providing a distraction from urgent state priorities," she said in her statement.
Just shut up and get under the bus.
Gov. Ted Strickland suspended Jones-Kelley for a month without pay after the Ohio Inspector General's office found in November that she improperly used state computers to find personal information on Samuel Wurzelbacher. The investigation also found that she conducted improper political fundraising activity for now President-elect Barack Obama. Investigators could not confirm that Jones-Kelley accessed the records of Wurzelbacher with political gain in mind. His report did indicate that she had used her personal Blackberry to send the Obama fundraising requests -- though it was synched up to state equipment.
Nope, no clue at all as to why she accessed those records ...
Two top-level members of Jones-Kelley's staff also will be leaving the department, said agency spokeswoman Scarlett Bouder. Fred Williams, the department's assistant director, will resign effective Jan. 31 and the agency is revoking Doug Thompson's position as deputy director of child support effective Dec. 22, she said. Both had been suspended from their positions after being implicated in the computer records search.
Good riddance. I'm sure Move.on or Think Progress will have jobs for you ...
Link


Home Front: Politix
4 more punished over 'Joe the Plumber' searches
2008-11-23
Two more senior managers at the Ohio agency where computers were used to dig up information about "Joe the Plumber" have been suspended without pay for their roles in the searches, an official at the agency said Friday.
Let's consider this: suppose someone had confronted John McCain during a tour of a swing state, one that's controlled by Republicans. How about Indiana. Now suppose that officials in Indiana abused their positions to toss the files of said individual. And now suppose the Republican governor had passed out 2 and 4 week suspensions for the guilty officials.

Now ask: how do you think the MSM would have handled it?
Fred Williams, the Department of Job and Family Services' assistant director, will be placed on two weeks unpaid suspension beginning Monday, spokeswoman Scarlett Bouder said in a statement. Doug Thompson, the department's deputy director of child support, is facing a four-week unpaid suspension, also starting on Monday. Two other agency employees are facing disciplinary action based on conclusions reached Thursday by Ohio's government watchdog, she said.

The department's director, Helen Jones-Kelley, improperly ordered staff to look up records on Samuel J. Wurzelbacher, the Toledo-area man who became a household name in the final weeks of the presidential campaign, Ohio Inspector General Thomas Charles said in a report. Gov. Ted Strickland immediately ordered Jones-Kelley be placed on a one-month unpaid suspension after reviewing the report's findings.

Charles' report also outlines roles played by Williams and Thompson in the searches, as well as Paul Fraunholtz, the deputy director of family stability, and Judi Cicatiello, the deputy director of unemployment compensation.

Fraunholtz and Cicatiello will receive written reprimands, and all four employees must undergo ethics training on handling confidential data, Bouder said.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Ohio agency head probed over alleged info hunt on 'Joe the Plumber'
2008-11-08
The head of the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services has been placed on paid leave for allegedly approving a computer search for personal information about "Joe the Plumber."

Helen Jones-Kelley, a Democrat, is being investigated over whether a state computer or state e-mail account was used to assist in political fundraising, Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland said in a statement. Strickland, also a Democrat, did not specifically mention Samuel Joe Wurzelbacher of Toledo, a.k.a. Joe the Plumber.

Wurzelbacher told NewsMax he was "angered" by the background checks state officials ran after John McCain invoked his name in a presidential debate. "I'm just a private citizen ... That scares me just for the simple fact that other people might hesitate on questioning our elected officials and that worries me greatly for America," he said. "I'm not real happy about that at all."

As for the election results, he said, "I'm disappointed, but the American people have spoken. They've gotten what they wanted. Now it's time to make sure that he goes to work for us. He's got a lot of work to do."

Meanwhile, Wurzelbacher has paid his delinquent $1,200 tax bill and had the lien on his house lifted, the Associated Press reports.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Who Will Be Held Accountable For Snooping in Joe the Plumber's Records?
2008-10-29
Jim Geraghty, National Review

Glad to see somebody's being held accountable for snooping in Joe the Plumber's records -- Toledo Police Department clerk Julie McConnell faces charges of "gross misconduct" at a disciplinary hearing next week.

I'd urge voters in Ohio to remember this statement from their governor, Ted Strickland:

Democrat Gov. Ted Strickland is satisfied that there are no political overtures to the check on Wurzelbacher, a spokesman said.  "Based on what we know to this point, we don't have any reason to believe the information was improperly accessed or disclosed by a state employee," said Keith Dailey, Strickland's press secretary.

Come on, Governor. You were a die-hard Hillary backer. You were the first Democrat to say you wouldn't be Obama's running mate. Don't pretend to be stupid, or bet your political future on the premise that the voters are stupid. They know abuse of power when they see it.
Link


Home Front: Politix
Strickland crossed off Obama's "VP prospects" list
2008-06-11
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland (D) was Shermanesque on Tuesday in saying that he would "absolutely not" be Sen. Barack Obama's, D-Ill., running mate even if asked to join the Democratic ticket.

Asked on NPR's "All Things Considered" if he is auditioning to be Obama's running mate, Strickland said, "Absolutely not. If drafted I will not run, nominated I will not accept and if elected I will not serve. So, I don’t know how more crystal clear I can be."

Strickland was seen by some political handicappers as an attractive vice presidential pick for Obama because he is a popular chief executive and former House member who hails from Ohio, the state which decided the 2004 election.
He won in a landslide and has got good approval ratings, but after Bob Taft's screwups, a duckbilled platypus could've gotten elected on the Dem ticket, so I wouldn't attribute his electoral performance to his charm, good looks, and sparkling personality. He's pretty much a standard Mk.1 Mod.0 knee-jerk liberal Democrat, a bit gaffe-prone, and tends to back down when pressed hard (as he did on his crusade to eliminate vouchers and charter schools).
It would also bring back unpleasant memories of the Ohio AG who had to resign in disgrace.
Strickland was also a high-profile backer of Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., which would have allowed Obama to present his selection as a play towards party unity.
One suspects it was scored as a point against him.
It does make you wonder if Strickland has thoughts about 2012 ...
Link



Warning: Undefined property: stdClass::$T in /data/rantburg.com/www/pgrecentorg.php on line 132
-12 More