Ted Strickland
Ted Strickland (born August 4 1941) is an American politician of the Democratic Party, and the current Governor of the state of Ohio. Before his election in 2006, he served six terms as a member of the United States House of Representatives from Ohio’s 6th district.
[edit] Early career and election to Congress
Born in Lucasville, Ohio, Strickland was one of nine children; his father was a steelworker. A 1959 graduate of Northwest High School (McDermott, Ohio), Strickland went on to be the first of his family to attend college. [4] Strickland was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree from Asbury College (Wilmore, Kentucky) in 1963. In 1966, he received a Master of Arts degree from the University of Kentucky (Lexington, Kentucky). He received another master's degree in 1967 from Asbury Theological Seminary (Wilmore, Kentucky). He received a doctorate in psychology from the University of Kentucky in 1980. He is married to Frances Strickland, an educational psychologist and author of a widely used screening test for kindergarten-age children.
Strickland worked as a counseling psychologist at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville, Ohio; was an administrator at a Methodist children's home; and was a professor of psychology at Shawnee State University (Portsmouth, Ohio). His only known pastoral position within a church was a very brief associate pastoral position at Wesley United Methodist Church located at the corner of Offnere and Gallia Streets, Portsmouth, Ohio (now Cornerstone United Methodist Church).
Strickland ran for U.S. Representative for Ohio's 6th congressional district in 1976, 1978, and 1980, losing twice to long-time incumbent William H. Harsha, and later to Harsha's successor and campaign manager, Bob McEwen.
Strickland ran again for the 6th District seat in 1992, once again facing Bob McEwen, who had suffered some political damage by being associated with the House banking scandal. The 6th District had been combined with the old 10th District when Ohio lost two seats in Congress following the 1990 census, and now covered a huge area stretching from Lebanon in Warren County to Marietta in Washington County on the opposite side of the state. The district proved a difficult place to campaign, representing half a dozen different media markets and home to no large cities and few unifying influences.
Patrick J. Buchanan, Dan Quayle and Oliver North came to Ohio to campaign for McEwen, but Strickland narrowly won in the general election on November 3, 1992. Strickland received 122,720 votes to McEwen's 119,252, a plurality of only 3,468. Strickland said "I ran against Pat Robertson, Pat Buchanan, the National Rifle Association and Right-to-Life. They threw everything at me. I'm just so happy I beat back those guys. I think they're so divisive." Strickland began serving in 1993 (103rd Congress).
[edit] Congressional career
Strickland was first elected to Congress in 1992. In 1994, the Republican wave swamped Strickland, who narrowly lost his seat to Republican Frank Cremeans. However, in 1996, Strickland won his seat back, again narrowly, taking office in 1997 (the 105th Congress). He was reelected four more times without serious opposition, and even ran unopposed in 2004. Strickland served on the Energy and Commerce Committee and the Veterans' Affairs Committee.
[edit] 2006 Ohio gubernatorial campaign
-
Strickland successfully ran for Governor of Ohio in 2006, when the then-governor, Robert A. Taft II, was term-limited and could not run for re-election. Strickland selected former Ohio Attorney General and 1998 Democratic nominee for governor Lee Fisher as his running mate. He was sworn in as governor on January 8, 2007.[1]
Strickland addresses a crowd at a Turnaround Ohio rally in Cincinnati.
[edit] Opposition
Strickland easily won the Democratic primary on May 2, 2006, winning 80 percent of the vote.[2] He was challenged by Republican Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, Libertarian economist Bill Peirce and Green Bob Fitrakis in the November general election, but won handily on November 7, 2006, capturing 60% of the vote. Blackwell finished in a distant second with 37% of the vote.[3]
[edit] Major endorsements (general election)
A full listing of endorsements can be found on Strickland's campaign website.[6]
[edit] Media strategy
Strickland began his media campaign for the general election in July by purchasing significant airtime on Christian radio stations throughout the state. The ad cites a verse from the Book of Micah calling one "to do justice, to love kindness and to walk humbly with our God," principles Strickland says he has held throughout his life. His televised ads began airing in late September and are available for viewing on his website.[7]
[edit] Republican support
Strickland's candidacy received some support from Republicans, indicated by many of the pollsters covering the race.[8] Additionally, a number of high profile Republicans publicly announced their support for Strickland at a press conference on September 12,[9] and Strickland's website has launched "Republicans For Strickland,"[10] which lists over 340 registered Republican endorsers.
[edit] Gubernatorial career
After drawing criticism for running a "close to the vest" campaign with few specific details about how he would change Ohio as governor, Strickland became more outspoken upon taking office. He has made education a centerpiece of his goals as governor, hoping to come up with ways to get more Ohioans to afford state-controlled college, graduate from in-state public universities, and thus stay in-state for quality jobs. Although his Congressional record gave reason for many critics to claim during the campaign he is unfriendly to taxpayers and will carry this trend to the gubernatorial office[11], he has made some efforts to investigate state government spending and have minimal tax increases in his "State of the State" address in March 2007.[12] he emphasized a goal to over-ride the free market and freeze or minimally increase tuition in the next few years, and have minimal tax increases across the board. He appointed Eric Fingerhut as a state chancellor of higher education. He also wants to shift funding away from Ohio's private universities towards public universities.[13] While the Republican-led legislature, led by State House Speaker Jon Husted, agreed with the need to emphasize education, they disagreed on how to keep costs down without raising taxes.[14] Nevertheless, Strickland overcame nearly all of these disagreements with the legislature to pass a unanimous budget of $52 billion over the two fiscal years beginning July 2007 with line-item vetoes; this unanimous approval of the budget was the state's first in 84 years.[15] On the pre-collegiate level of education, Strickland has pushed to cut funding of school vouchers, which critics claim will reduce education choice available to the public. He opposes federally subsidized abstinence-only sex education programs.[16]
[17]
In addition to shoring up the state's education bureaucracy, one of Strickland's primary economic plans has been working to help bring jobs in the coal and energy industries to Ohio by emphasizing ethanol production and other non-petroleum based energy sources.[18]
Strickland has also emphasized health care. In addition, on the issue of capital punishment, Strickland has thus far delayed three executions until further review.[19] Strickland refused to block three additional executions, including two that eventually occurred.[20] The March 20, 2007 execution of Kenneth Biros, which Strickland refused to stop, was later stayed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Cincinnati.[21]
Strickland voted against partial-birth abortion while in the U.S. House, but has said he would veto a near-total abortion ban proposed by Ohio State House member Tom Brinkman (R-Cincinnati) that does not include rape, incest or health exceptions.[22]
Arguably the biggest setback to occur during his short career as Governor was the loss of a computer backup tape that contained the names and Social Security numbers of 64,000 state employees and their families, and 225,000 other state taxpayers. Especially troubling was that a 22-year-old intern was entrusted to this tape and it was stolen out of his unlocked car; however, the administration has insisted that because of the technical nature of the coding it has not been accessed.[23]
In spite of such setbacks, his success with bringing the legislature together with his budget and the state's overall desire for change after the Taft years have resulted in some of the highest approval and lowest disapproval ratings in Ohio gubernatorial history: 61% approval, 15% disapproval, including 54%/19% splits from Republicans (July 2007).[24]
Strickland's approval ratings have dropped due to the state's economy and from Obama supporters[citation needed] (likely due to his support of Hillary Clinton.) Young voters, black voters and independents--considered to be overwhelming supporters of Obama--gave him neutral-to-negative ratings in April 2008, not long after the March primaries. However, he still enjoyed an overall approval rating of 54% and a disapproval of 39%. (April 2008).[25] Additionally, in spite of the state's economic woes, the state unemployment rate has actually increased less than the national average--as of February 2008, the state unemployment was 5.3% compared to a national 4.8%, and in March, the numbers were 5.7% and 5.1%, compared to gaps of over 1% early in Strickland's administration and during much of Taft's administration. [26]
[edit] Marc Dann scandal
In 2006 Strickland ran on a Democratic ticket which included Marc Dann as the candidate for Attorney General. The ticket promised to clean up corruption in state government attributed to Republican Governor Bob Taft. Once elected Attorney General, Dann became emmeshed in a sexual harassment scandal which implicated many top aides who were forced to resign or were fired, and which led the married father Dann in May 2008 to admit he had a sexual relationship with a subordinate in his office. In response to this admission, Strickland and other leading Democrats demanded Dann's resignation. Dann resigned his position May 14, 2008, while facing possible impeachment.
[edit] Vice Presidential speculation
Due to his more conservative politics (he was voted an 'A' by the NRA[27]) and popularity in what is presumed to be a key swing state, Strickland has been mentioned as a possible Democratic Vice Presidential nominee in the 2008 election[28]
. Ted Strickland would be the fourth vice president from Ohio if elected. [29] Interestingly, Obama and Strickland share a birthday, the former being exactly 2 decades younger than the latter, both born on August 4th.
[edit] Electoral history
Ohio's 6th congressional district: Results 1976–1980, 1992–2004[30]
| Year
|
| Democrat
| Votes
| Pct
|
| Republican
| Votes
| Pct
|
| 3rd Party
| Party
| Votes
| Pct
|
|
| 1976
|
| Ted Strickland
| 67,067
| 39%
|
| William H. Harsha
| 107,064
| 61%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1978
|
| Ted Strickland
| 46,313
| 35%
|
| William H. Harsha
| 85,592
| 65%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1980
|
| Ted Strickland
| 84,235
| 45%
|
| Robert D. McEwen
| 101,288
| 55%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1992
|
| Ted Strickland
| 122,720
| 51%
|
| Robert D. McEwen
| 119,252
| 49%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1994
|
| Ted Strickland
| 87,861
| 49%
|
| Frank A. Cremeans
| 91,263
| 51%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1996
|
| Ted Strickland
| 118,003
| 51%
|
| Frank A. Cremeans
| 111,907
| 49%
| *
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1998
|
| Ted Strickland
| 102,852
| 57%
|
| Nancy P. Hollister
| 77,711
| 43%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 2000
|
| Ted Strickland
| 138,849
| 58%
|
| Mike Azinger
| 96,966
| 40%
|
| Kenneth R. MacCutcheon
| Libertarian
| 4,759
| 2%
|
|
| 2002
|
| Ted Strickland
| 113,972
| 59%
|
| Mike Halleck
| 77,643
| 41%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 2004
|
| Ted Strickland
| 223,842
| 100%
|
| (no candidate)
|
|
| *
|
|
|
|
|
|
*Write-in and minor candidate notes: In 1996, write-ins received 16 votes. In 2004, John Stephen Luchansky received 145 votes.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Julie Carr Smyth, "New governor starts new era", Associated Press (The Cincinnati Post), January 8, 2007.
- ^ 2006 Democratic primary election results. Ohio Secretary of State (2006-05-02). Retrieved on 2008-01-12.
- ^ 2006 general election results. Ohio Secretary of State (2006-11-07). Retrieved on 2008-01-12.
- ^ Vindy.com - GOP gets nods from FOP but not for governorship
- ^ Ohio Federation of Teachers, AFT, AFL-CIO - OFT Expands List of Endorsed Candidates
- ^ http://strickland.3cdn.net/c874e30e818198d204_idm6i6sb6.pdf
- ^ Untitled Document
- ^ The Columbus Dispatch - Local/State
- ^ Smyth, Julie Carr. "GOP loyalists back Democrat in governor race", Associated Press, Canton Repository, 2006-09-13. Retrieved on 2008-01-13.
- ^ Untitled Document
- ^ Matthew Naugle, [1], Tell the Truth Ted (non-neutral POV), April 8, 2007
- ^ http://www.cleveland.com/plaindealer/stories/index.ssf?/base/news/1175848366321660.xml&coll=2
- ^ Provance, Jim; and Feehan, Jennifer. "Students face possible loss of state funds", Toledo Blade, 2007-03-25. Retrieved on 2008-01-12.
- ^ "Text of Governor Strickland's State of the State Address", WTOL.com, 2007-04-25. Retrieved on 2008-01-12.
- ^ www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/news/17424050.htm
- ^ The Enquirer - This article is no longer available
- ^ http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/living/education/16915796.htm
- ^ http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/6420AP_OH_Test_Well.html
- ^ Times Recorder - www.zanesvilletimesrecorder.com - Zanesville, Ohio
- ^ Executions in the United States in 2007
- ^ Jobs Strikeforce > Admin > Vendors
- ^ Ohio Bill to Ban Abortion Gets Mixed Support from Pro-Life Groups
- ^ WBNS-10TV, Central Ohio's News Leader - Strickland : Stolen Device Contains Taxpayer Info
- ^ Quinnipiac University (2007-07-11). "Economy Could Force Loved Ones To Leave Ohio, Voters Tell Quinnipiac University Poll; Government, Global Economy Get Most Blame". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Survey USA
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ The Line on Running Mates - The Fix
- ^ http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0194032.html
- ^ Election Statistics. Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives. Retrieved on 2008-01-10.
[edit] External links
U.S. Representative (1993–1995, 1997–2007)
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