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Tuesday's election gives Democrats control of Ohio's major cities

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

Associated Press

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Following last week's elections, the two parties agreed on only one thing: Democratic mayors now control all major cities in Ohio.

Democrats say it's a huge positive, further solidifying their base as the 2008 presidential election approaches.

Extras

Republicans see a benefit too, targeting their opponents for all the problems in those cities, from poverty to crime to struggling schools.

GOP Chairman Bob Bennett provided a taste of the campaign to come the day after the election.

"Republicans continue to run strong in suburban, exurban and rural areas where our voters have moved out of the inner cities to avoid the festering school and safety problems being largely ignored by Democratic mayors," he said.

That's a message that could resonate with a large chunk of Ohio voters. According to exit polls, suburban residents accounted for about six in 10 votes cast in the 2006 Ohio election.

Republicans would love to hear Democratic mayors talking about what their cities need, said political analyst Tom Sutton.

"The suburbs will hear that and say, 'Yeah, and that's why we don't live there anymore,'" said Sutton, a professor at Baldwin-Wallace College.

That cities are largely Democratic strongholds is no secret, and the shift of Republican votes to the suburbs and beyond isn't news either.

Yet it wasn't that long ago in Ohio that either party could take political control of the large urban areas for granted.

In Columbus, Mayor Michael Coleman handily defeated his Republican opponent last week to begin his third term. Yet eight years ago, Coleman was the first Democrat to reach city hall in decades.

Cleveland and Cuyahoga County are considered overwhelmingly Democratic areas, yet Republican George Voinovich was mayor through the 1980s.

Dayton has had a Democratic mayor since 2002, when Rhine McLin took office. Republican Mike Turner was mayor from 1994-2002. Before Turner, Dayton's last Republican mayor was Dave Hall who left office in 1970.

In Canton, Republican Janet Weir Creighton had been mayor since 2003, when the GOP took the seat with a massive get-out-the-vote effort.

That was the last major Ohio city without a Democrat in charge, a claim to fame state lawmaker William Healy ended Tuesday with a 53 percent to 47 percent victory.

Democrats also put a mayor in Lorain on Tuesday and held on to mayors' offices in Columbus, Chillicothe and Mansfield. But they lost a long Democratic seat to the GOP in Newark in Republican-leaning Licking County.

Democrats were quick to focus on the wins in Canton and Lorain and the implication for next year.

"Democratic mayors now lead the ten largest cities in Ohio," said Chris Redfern, chairman of the state Democratic party. "The results show that the Ohio Democratic Party has the momentum going into 2008."

On paper, the election showed continued Democratic success after two successive presidential elections in which Ohio voted for George W. Bush.

Last year, fatigue with Republican leadership nationally and a government corruption scandal at home helped Ohio Democrats win a U.S. Senate seat, four of five statewide offices and close the gap in the Ohio House.

Based on those results, Democrats are making too much of their success in cities, says Jim Trakas, a former state lawmaker from suburban Cleveland.

The 2006 victory of Gov. Ted Strickland, the first Democrat elected governor in 20 years, is much more significant because of his ability to raise money statewide from a variety of sources, said Trakas, an Independence Republican who left office because of term limits.

Like Bennett, Trakas believes Democrats will be vulnerable because of the problems in the cities they control.

Democratic strategist Dale Butland disagrees, saying each city's political machine can add up to big results across Ohio. Butland also says Republicans should be careful who they blame for problems in the state, since they held all elected offices for more than a decade.

"We certainly can't do any worse than what they've done," Butland said.

Mayors of Ohio's largest cities

Columbus

Population: 711,470

Mayor: Michael Coleman

In office: 2000-present

Party: Democrat

Cleveland

Population: 478,403

Mayor: Frank G. Jackson

In office: 2006-present

Party: Democrat

Cincinnati

Population: 331,285

Mayor: Mark Mallory

In office: 2005-present

Party: Democrat

Toledo

Population: 313,619

Mayor: Carleton S. Finkbeiner

In office: 2006-present; 1994-2002

Party: Democrat

Akron

Population: 217,074

Mayor: Donald L. Plusquellic

In office: 1987-present

Party: Democrat

Dayton

Population: 166,179

Mayor: Rhine McLin

In office: 2002-present

Party: Democrat

Youngstown

Population: 82,026

Mayor: Jay Williams

In office: 2006-present

Party: Ran as independent, registered Democrat

Parma

Population: 85,655

Mayor: Dean DePiero

In office: 2004-present

Party: Democrat

Canton

Population: 80,806

Mayor: William Healy

In office: Starts in Jan. 2008; is Canton's first Democratic mayor in 16 years.

Party: Democrat

Lorain

Population: 68,652

Mayor: Tony Krasienko

In office: Starts in Jan. 2008.

Party: Democrat

Note: Population figures from 2000 census

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