Posts Tagged ‘Ted Strickland’

Remember November! (feat. our very own Sam Bain!)

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

The Republican Governors Association is back up with another video promoting their Remember November efforts, and it is a great one. If a great video weren’t enough reason to hit the “Play” button, you can also check out our very own Sam Bain, OCRF Field Director, making a cameo at the :15 to :18 mark of the video. Take a peek at the video and make sure to pass it along via Facebook and Twitter!

13 Weeks from Republican Governors Association on Vimeo.

November is right around the corner, and Election Day is just 91 days away–make sure you sign up to make a difference today at www.OhioGOP.org/call and if you’re already signed up, find a friend to join you!

Ted Strickland should be worried!

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

The Republican Governors Association is up on the air in Ohio with a retort to Ted Strickland’s lame copy & paste of the 2008 SEIU ad attacking John McCain, calling the Governor out on his attempt to change the subject. As all of our mothers used to say, if you don’t have anything good to say, you probably shouldn’t say anything at all, which is clearly the advice Ted is taking when it comes to his record. All of the attack ads in the world won’t change that 427,000 Ohioans are out of work since Ted Strickland took office, we are facing an $8 billion budget hole in 2011, and the Governor simply does not appear to take any of the challenges facing Ohio seriously.

Check out the video that is up on the air in Ohio:

As the Kasich/Taylor for Ohio team gets ready to roll again, a look at the first trip to all 88 counties

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

This video is now about ten days old, but it is great nonetheless. John Kasich and Mary Taylor recently completed their tour of the entire state–all 88 counties at least once–on April 28, and this short piece shows a few highlights of the past 11 months on the campaign trail as John and Mary fight to bring a new way and a new day to the great state of Ohio. Tomorrow morning will bring the first statewide bus tour for the Kasich/Taylor team as John and Mary make stops in Delaware, Marion, Findlay, and do a live webcast from the Western Ohio Reagan Dinner in the evening. Here is the 88 Counties video for your viewing pleasure:

We’ll be hitting the road to a few of the stops tomorrow, and hopefully with capture some great video to bring back later this week. If you want to find out more info about the bus tour and how close it will be to your neck of the woods, check out http://blog.kasichforohio.com/ or email events@kasichforohio.com for the details.

Press Release: Kasich LG running-mate Taylor to bring experience, record to ticket

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

January 20, 2010

Contact: Christopher Wimsatt

cwimsatt@ohiocollegegop.org

740.707.1838

(COLUMBUS, OH) In a Twitter message to supporters on Thursday, candidate for Ohio Governor John Kasich formally tapped State Auditor Mary Taylor as his running mate. “This represents a significant flexing of political muscle on the part of the Kasich campaign” said Christopher Wimsatt, Communications Director of the Ohio College Republican Federation (OCRF). “The statewide races in Ohio are clearly heating up, and adding someone with the experience and record of Mary Taylor shows that our ticket will be one to reckon with.”

Kasich, a former Congressman from Ohio’s 12th District has campaigned on a platform of fiscal responsibility and job creation, a contrast from the irresponsible spending and doubling of unemployment under the Strickland administration. Mary Taylor, a CPA and current Auditor has long been critical of the Governor’s inability to fill the gaping budget hole, including his farfetched efforts involving slot machine gambling and income tax hikes. Auditor Taylor has also led groundbreaking audits of government agencies that are helping to cut down on wasteful spending and corruption in Ohio.

“The addition of Taylor to the already surging Kasich ticket gives Ohio voters a ticket to economic salvation. Citizens of our hard-hit state can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel, and the train to jobs and prosperity conducted by John Kasich and Mary Taylor will be a huge boost to conservative candidates across the state in this election year.” Wimsatt continued, saying that, “Ohio’s College Republicans will be able to promote a ticket on college campuses that can deliver college students the jobs they need upon graduating—and the type of state they will want to stay in to raise a family, which is a clear contrast to the deficit of opportunity we face under Governor Ted Strickland’s failed Turnaround Ohio plan.”

The Ohio College Republican Federation (OCRF) is the statewide body of all College Republican chapters across Ohio. Currently giving support and aid to over 45 chapters, the OCRF brings together nearly 10,000 members throughout Ohio. The OCRF provides crucial grassroots support to Republican campaigns and organizations, serving as the preeminent Republican youth organization in the state.

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What I would have said…

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Last night, you probably tuned in to see the State of the Union.  Last night, you probably didn’t watch the coverage bookending the speech, and maybe you didn’t even catch Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell’s response (which was incredibly impressive–and why he will be a player on the national stage in the coming years).  However, for those who missed it, there was a focus group of Central Ohioans held at The Ohio State University by CNN and conducted by a team from Southern Methodist University.  The focus group was carefully selected, with an even demographic split of age groups, racial backgrounds, and political affiliations.  I had the privilege of participating, as did recently elected Ohio State College Republicans Chairman Meagan Cyrus, who will lead the group in the coming year.  A couple of law school Republicans from Ohio State were there as well, and if you did happen to catch any of the coverage, you would have seen Stephen White interviewed by CNN’s correspondent, Jessica Yellin, following the speeches.  While neither of the CRs present got to face the music on CNN last night, there was certainly a lot on my mind after watching the two speeches.  Here is what I would have said, given the chance:

-Democrats have only themselves to blame for a lack of bipartisanship.  The rhetoric and dishonesty coming from the President’s party in the past 13 months has been nothing short of disgraceful.  And when President Obama called for alternative solutions on healthcare, it was overly apparent that our President is content to placate Republicans without actually including their ideas–the GOP has had an alternative, viewable online (unlike Democrat legislation) at http://www.gop.gov/solutions for months.  Then the President talks about bipartisanship, and Nancy Pelosi decides this would be a perfect time to roll her eyes.  Of course the President then makes an additional comment directed at Republicans about simply saying no to his agenda–which is certainly not the case.  At every turn, Republicans have offered solutions, and they have fallen on our President’s deaf “Bipartisan in name only” ears again.  The whiny comment about holding up business in the Senate for want to 60 votes is both forgetful of Democrat’s repeated stalling of GOP nominees from 2001-2009, and ignorant of the fact that Democrats enjoyed a supermajority of 60 votes for all of last year, not needing any GOP support if their own house were in order.

-I’m all for tackling the big challenges of our day, but we fundamentally disagree with the President on the order of these priorities.  America needs jobs, and nowhere is that more apparent than in Ohio.  Our own Governor, Ted Strickland, in his final State of the State speech this past Tuesday, proposed a few band-aid fixes, recycled some Republican ideas, and mostly punted on the truly tough issues.  We deserved better from Strickland, and we definitely deserve better from the President.  We cannot have a leader publicly calling for a “Jobs” bill that masquerades as a job-creating bill while simply spending money on pet project after pet project.  Spending our way out of recession is simply not the right move, and leading Americans into believing that the first stimulus bill did anything other than put up a lot of fancy signs along our highways is just not true.  The bill was sold as a job creator, and we lost over 3 million jobs in the nation last year.  The math does not add up, Mr. President.

-Young voters are starting to get the picture and are waking up from a massive hangover.  We’ve seen vast gains for the GOP in the youth vote in recent VA, NJ, and MA elections, all wins for the Republicans.  And while the specifics of student loan reform are another post for another day, two things are extremely obvious.  First, forgiving student loan debts will do little to reduce the actual cost of attendance, and it does nothing to create jobs for graduating students.  Youth unemployment is drastically higher than the general population, and this is a problem that needs addressed.  Secondly, nationalizing the student loan industry to cut out competition in the marketplace that helps create lower interest rates and more loan availability is a dangerous move.  If you can show me a nationalized industry that works better under fed control than it did or does under private control, I’m all ears.  And didn’t President Obama just get done talking about cutting government?

AG Cordray wants Ohioans to pay for Ben Nelson’s bribe, otherwise known as Nebraskan healthcare

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

You would think that in a state rife with unemployment, facing a looming budget crisis (not the ‘09 version, the ‘11 edition that promises to be even uglier), and a mass exodus of its residents to greener pastures (anywhere with a tax climate better than Ohio’s, also known as no less than 45 other states), “fiscally conservative” Democrat Aspiring Governor Attorney General Rich Cordray would rush to condemn the bribery of our fine Senators in D.C., like the $100 million given to Louisiana Democrat Mary Landrieu, or the free ride on his state’s healthcare given to Nebraska Democrat Ben Nelson.  He wouldn’t even be the first prominent Ohio Democrat to do so–both freshman Senator Sherrod Brown and future one-term Governor Ted Strickland have already gone on record saying these vote-buying efforts, formerly known as bribes outside the Beltway, should not be in the final bill and are wrong.

Cordray is as silent on this matter as Strickland and Brown have been on widespread Democrat corruption in Cuyahoga, Athens, and now Crawford County, where Bucyrus Mayor Dan Ross allegedly no longer lives in the city he presides over.  It isn’t even like over a dozen of his colleagues across the nation haven’t already spoken up–Attorneys General in Pennsylvania, Michigan, South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Colorado, Idaho, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Washington are on record questioning the constitutionality of such measures.  Maybe Cordray sides with House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-SC), who called it a political ploy.  I’m sure that our Founding Fathers would say the same thing–checking to make sure something fits within Congress’ powers in the Constitution is clearly just a political ploy and has absolutely nothing to do with doing what is right (and legal, of course).

This is a red meat issue, especially for cash-strapped Ohioans.  Yet Cordray is once again playing partisan politics and hoping no one notices.  Unfortunately for the former Jeopardy champion, a man who wants his job, former US Senator Mike DeWine (R-Cedarville), did take notice.  In a note posted yesterday on his Facebook page, DeWine blasted Cordray for his inaction:

“Richard Cordray needs to join 13 other state attorneys general in calling for the removal of a provision in the national health care bill that exempts the state of Nebraska from having to pay for any newly eligible Medicaid recipients.

Ohio is bleeding jobs and facing a $6 billion budget deficit next year. The last thing Ohio taxpayers can afford is to foot the bill for Medicaid recipients in Nebraska!

Richard Cordray needs to stand up to fellow Democrats Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi, and President Obama before Ohioans are forced to pay millions in increased Medicaid spending for services we’ll never receive. I urge him to speak out and join his fellow attorneys general who have already asked Congress to remove the “Cornhusker Kickback” from the health care bill.

This provision is beyond outrageous. It amounts to a $100 million payoff to one senator for his support of the health care bill. Richard Cordray’s job is to protect Ohio. He needs to do the right thing and immediately ask for the repeal of this provision.”

For more coverage on this debacle, check out a couple of our favorite Ohio political blogs, who had more on this yesterday (along with an excerpt from each post):

Third Base Politics:  Cordray feels the heat

“13 AGs get it. Sherrod Brown gets it. Hell, even Strickland gets it…..sorta.

But Cordray? Not so much.

DeWine is doing the right thing by placing the focus solely on Cordray. From a state perspective, a lawsuit over something as unfair and quite likely unconstitutional as the Nelson bribe is something that must be made a priority.

Ohio is in too much trouble itself to prop up a few Cornhuskers.”

Athens Runaway: Dick Cordray Speaks Out on Obamacare’s Constitutionality

“I e-mailed Dick Cordray’s office to see where he stood on the constitutionality of ObamaCare, and to see if he planned to fight for Ohioans, as well as Americans in general.  The answer: probably not.

Cordray’s Deputy Director of Media Relations, Ted Hart, responded to my e-mail, saying:

“As Ohio’s chief law officer, the Attorney General focuses on issues involving state law and proposed state legislation here in Ohio.

However, he also stays in close touch with his fellow state attorneys general through the national association, NAAG, and will be considering together with them all issues that may arise from new federal legislation in this and any other area.”


How… disappointing. Cordray’s blind party loyalty outweighs his political opportunism and willingness to take a leading role in the protection of Ohio’s consumers.”