Wednesday, May 3, 2017

HEADLINE: CONGRATULATIONS OR CONDOLENCES TO STARK COMMISSIONERS?



Certainly, at first blush, CONGRATULATIONS! are in order to Stark commissioners Janet Creighton, Richard Regula and Bill Smith.

What a smashing victory for the ongoing fiscal viability of Stark County finances, no!

With the 70.59% to 29.41% victory the commissioners spearheaded in convincing some 7.0% of 23,950 registered Stark County voters of Stark's 240,000, more or less, total registered voters to support a continuation of the county's 1/2 sales tax which raises in the 20s of millions of dollars annually (depending, of course, on retail sales during any given tax year).

Today there is likely to be lots of High Fives (or at least "smug satisfaction") being passed around the commissioners' suite of offices on the second floor of the Stark County Office Building located at 110 Central Plaza in downtown Canton.

And I am pleased to say I was one of those 16,907 "YES" votes.

But, on reflection, years down the road new sets of commissioners will be lamenting "the missed opportunity" for the county to have convinced yesterday's "yes" voters to go to 3/4 of a cent; maybe even 1 cent.

As counties in Ohio go, Stark is the lowest in all of Ohio in that its county add on is 1/2 cent.

Stark's 1/2 cent add-on is the same as Summit, the only other Ohio county at 1/2 cent, BUT Summit overall rate is 6.75% compared Stark's 6.50%.

There was a time (with the expiration of the 1/4 cent tax levy in the 2011/12 tax year era) that Stark was the unmatched champion of being the lowest sales tax rate in all of Ohio.

And it is admirable that Stark's commissioners work to preserve the distinction of being the lowest, but then one does not want to hear complaints/excuses about not having the financial resources that the citizens of Stark County expect of local government.


Stark County has a number of unmet needs due to financial resource limitations that if satisfied would make the county more viable in terms of being an attractive economic development site.

Using a Stark County median income figure (LINK) of $48, 819 a sales that at 6.75% would cost $122 more annually than at 6.50%.

An increase to 7.0% would cost a median level taxpayer $244.

Of course, thousands upon thousands of Stark Countians have annual income substantially less than the median.

So going forward when festering county problems (flooding ditches, opiate addictions, deteriorating streets, roads and highways, lack of economic planning and development funds and the like) reach crises points, one can bank on hearing from the-then sitting commissioners that the county lacks the financial resources to have dealt with or deal with the problem.

The prime reason that commissioners put on the continuation of the 1/2 cent sales tax early was to ensure that they could have adequate funds to finance the replacement of Stark's safety forces soon to be unserviceable radio communications system.

Had they gone in 2011 with 3/4 cent sales tax rather than a 1/2 cent increase, Stark County would already have its upgraded radio system.


And that is all well and good.

In addition to already known needs that Stark County has that will not be met with the 1/2 cent sales tax, one can easily predict without clairvoyant abilities that currently unseen needs (some critical and emergency-esque) will surface.

While High Fives may be the order of the day at the commissioners' abode today, one can easily imagine that CONDOLENCES on a missed opportunity will be in fashion once county urgencies arise and the financial shortfall sets in.

No doubt that asking for 3/4 cent or 1 cent would have made yesterday's final vote much closer than 71% to 29%.

But the out-in-the future well being of Stark County demands that our county leadership spend a measure of the political capital that has been built up since Janet Creighton and Thomas Bernabei.

Over time, if unused, the county leadership political capital will be no (excessive, in my view) more as a resource to leverage into the finances that a progressive and visionary agenda merits.

Not because our county leaders have not exercised solid, conservative  fiscal practices but because unforeseen events (perhaps, not even local but of national origin) will visit financial hard times on nation's, the state's and the county's families.

Then everyone will see the overwhelming need but voters will not be in a financial position to afford that extra $122 or $244 annually needed to give the county the resources to advance plan and implement a growth infrastructure/superstructure that could make Stark County one of the nation's best locations.

I think that Stark County commissioners Creighton, Regula and Smith are clear examples of being "penny wise, but pound foolish!"

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

A CIVIC OPPORTUNITY! VOTE. A RESPONSIBILITY OF EACH & EVERY AMERICAN

UPDATED:  05/03/2017

On $10 license plate fee rescission, 1993 Stark Commissioners Donald Watkins and Gayle Jackson voted in favor of rescission whereas Commissioner Mary Cirelli voter against rescission.

UPDATED:  2:51 PM

New material on 1992 effort to undo Stark County commissioners (Tom Rice, Patti Miller and Mary Cirelli) "imposed" sales tax of 1991.

A key player in this Stark County political drama was Plain Township's Richard J. Wingerter who is currently a member of the Stark County Educational Service Center.

Very interesting material!

UPDATED:  11:17 AM



I voted today, have you?

The only issue on my ballot was the "early" (the current levy not due to expire until April, 2020) renewal of the Stark County criminal justice sales tax issue.

With reluctance, I voted "yes."

With reluctance?

Indeed!

I was one of those who thought in November 2011 that then commissioners (Bernabei, Creighton and Ferguson) should have done a 1% sales tax rather than 0.5%.


Although I think the commissioners since 2011 have been effective in their oversight in spending taxpayer money wisely and-overall-efficiently, there are a number of projects that the county ought to be into financially which it cannot be because the 1/2 cent sales tax does not provide enough revenue.

Number one on my list is economic development promotion way beyond the monies budgeted to the Stark Development Board in the county's annual budget.

I think Stark will continue to lag behind other more revenue enhanced counties because of the self-imposed limitation on the part of the commissioners to go with a "treading water" level of revenue support.

But in their defense, there is a unique Stark County history of voters being very sparing in approving new/additional tax revenues.

Former commissioner and Democrat Todd Bosley (now a Nimishillen Township trustee, whom I deem to have been the prime promoter of "imposing" a 1/2 cent sales tax in December, 2008) and then-colleagues Tom Harmon (a Democrat) and Jane Vignos (a Republican) without a say on the part of Stark Countians at the ballot box imposed the tax.

Consequently, a "from the grassroots" band of citizens headed up by local attorney and civic activist Craig T. Conley mounted an effort on the November, 2009 ballot to undo the high-handed action by Bosley, Harmon and Vignos.

The results?


The Conley led effort should be inspiring to everyday citizens that if they will get involved they can have a huge impact on the process of and substance of government; especially a the local level.

One has to wonder whether or not the Conley group drew inspiration from another late 1980s early 1990s grassroots effort to defeat a commissioner imposed sales tax in 1991 (repealed November, 1992; see graphic below) and as a follow on forcing the commissioners to rescind a "without a vote of the people" increased $10 annual license plate fee.  As mentioned in the "updated" lead to this blog,  Plain Township resident and ardent Republican Richard J. Wingerter (a colleague of my wife's on the Stark County Educational Service Center) was a key player.  He did bow out because a run (to return later) in the Republican against one of the "imposing" commissioners and fellow Republican Tom Rice.



The drama is vividly portrayed in October 25, 1993 Akron Beacon Journal article by reporter David Knox.

Be sure to read the linked account.  You will find it to be a intriguing look into Stark County politics and the effort to tax us without citizens having a vote on the matter.

Note in the article a reference to then Stark County auditor Janet Creighton (currently a Stark County commissioner) and her part in the political goings on of 25 years ago or so.

As a sidenote, both Miller and Rice lost in November, 1992 which means that the license plate fee hike would have been by my calculations the work of the 1993 board of county commissioners consisting of the newly elected Jackson and Watkins and holdover Mary Cirelli.  Not sure if it was a unanimous vote or on the vote of two of the three members.


The Conley initiated repudiation of Bosley et al was some seven months after news broke out (April 1, 2009) that funds were missing from the Stark County treasury.  Former chief deputy treasurer Vince Frustaci was subsequently convicted of stealing of a couple million plus of Stark County taxpayer funds and was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison.

Moreover, there was a great deal of political fallout on several county officials for-in the public perception-not having structured the county fiscal facilities (i.e. to say the Stark County treasury), practices and policies to have prevented the theft of public funds.

Which is to say that elected in November, 2010 commissioners Thomas Bernabei (then a Democrat; now a political independent) and Republican Janet Creighton had a huge task before them in restoring public trust in county officialdom.

In less than a year, Bernabei and Creighton as validated by the 2011 levy results showed that they had successfully undone much of the damage done in the 2009

I think the results showed and I have made the point to Bernabei and Creighton that they could have and should have gone for at least a 3/4 cent increase if not a 1 cent increase.

Be that as it may, they understandably went conservative and consequently the commissioners (e.g. county department of governments including the Stark County Engineer's office which needs funds to keep our streets and and highways in good shape) have been hamstrung ever since.

Stark County has an able financial administrator in Chris Nichols (who doubles as a Canton Township trustee) who has implemented practices and policies to create a sustainable budget.

And, indeed, the county's budget is sustainable.

But that is all it is.

With Bernabei gone from the county by virtue of having taken on the task of bring sound fiscal practice and policy to the city of Canton (Stark's county seat) as mayor of Canton (November, 2015); the skill level and judgment of the Board of Stark County Commissioners has dropped off.

Republican commissioners Bill Smith (newly elected in November, 2016) and holdovers Creighton and Richard Regula are far to conservative to lead Stark in a responsibly progressive manner.

It is likely that today's measure will pass handily.

Both the Stark County Republican Party and the Stark County Democratic Party as well as the politically independent community need to be generating a new generation of leaders who possess a balance of being responsible and visionary as we get well into the 21st century.

What follows is a number of graphics (going back 25 years) which show the difficulty that former boards of commissioners have had in convincing the voting public that they were deserving in public confidence that, if approved, they would be effective stewards of public funds.
.
Rather than develop leadership which is trustworthy, Stark County has developed a culture of "keep them on a short leash.

And such is one approach.

In my judgment, whether one a private or public sector entrepreneur/leader, she/he has to have the resources to get the job done in way that is win/win for everybody.

In preparing this blog, I in doing my research came upon another incident in which Stark County's then-commissioners (1991), namely; Democrat Patti Miller, Republican Tom Rice and Democrat Mary Cirelli imposed

(Note:  Graphics are grounded in election data provided online by the Stark County Board of Elections.  Any highlighting and "in red" text material has been added by the SCPR).









Friday, April 28, 2017

TWO AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN AS CANTON CITY COUNCIL MEMBERS AT LARGE?

UPDATED:  04/30/2017

IF ELECTED, WILL COREY MINOR SMITH, KATHERINE BAYLOCK, PETE FERGUSON BE A PLUS?

HOW ABOUT  NICK MUSSULIN?

CIRELLI?

IDA ROSS-FREEMAN?


UPDATED:  04/29/2017

Analysis of the Quality of Canton Council Members



I can remember it like it was yesterday.

Watching the election returns in the Democratic primary of March 15, 2016.

Political novice and unknown Katherine Baylock leading former Stark County commissioner Pete Ferguson in an effort by him to reclaim a seat that he held from 2009 through 2012.

Exactly what Ferguson was when he ran against and defeated Republican political veteran John P. Hagan who had be 50th Ohio House District state representative in the eight years preceeding the 2008 county commissioner race.


But there is a major difference.

Pete Ferguson has been a Canton-based chiropractor for over 40 years.

So far as I know, Katherine Baylock does not have a similar notoriety in Canton/Stark County.

As the election returns continued to roll in on the 2016 Democratic primary for commissioner
  • (a post won by Republican and former Canton Township trustee Bill Smith in general election over Democratic nominee Stephen Slesnick [he like Hagan having served in the Ohio House for eight years prior to the commissioner race]
I fully expected, as undoubtedly did nearly every other political junkie in Stark County did, that Ferguson would pull away from Blaylock and challenge Slesnick in a nip and tuck race for the Democratic nomination.

Surprise!  Surprise!  Surprise!

Baylock came in a somewhat distant second to Slesnick.

I think that the likely winners on Tuesday will be:
  1. Bill Smuckler,  
  2. Jimmy Babcock (Ward 3)
  3. Corey Minor-Smith
But who knows this day and age.

It could be:
  1. Bill Smuckler (Ward 8)
  2. Corey Minor-Smith (Ward 4)
  3. Katherine Baylock (Ward 4)
And, it is likely that the three Democratic nominees, whomever they are, will win in November in the heavily Democratic Canton.

However, if former Councilman Richard Hart decides to run to reclaim his council-at-large seat he held (2014-2015), there might not be a Democratic sweep this fall.

No matter who wins Tuesday and no matter who wins in November, Canton City Council will not be an improved deliberative body.

Except for Edmond Mack (Ward 8) and his positive, future-thinking-perspective, council is mostly made up of plodding types at best with a few hangers-on to boot.

In my view, the "hanger-on-in-chief" is Jimmy Babcock.  Were he not the son of a former Canton mayor and long time council member, he would never have surfaced as a council member.

Other than Mack, the most capable person on council is Bill Smuckler mostly because he has been around the longest and therefore has "seen this parade before."

However, as one leading Stark County political/government figure told me off-the-record, what has Bill Smuckler really achieved for all his years in Canton government.

His ideas about government efficiencies are right on the mark, but he has been unable to translate much or any of it into policy and programs.

As I recall, former councilman Thomas West (long time Ward 2 councilperson and now a state representative replacing Stephen Slesnick) fought (along with former Ward 5 Councilman Kevin Fisher) fellow councilman Edmond Mack's effort to bring charter government to Canton.

Their basic premise of opposition seemed to me to be based on a  premise that it was highly unlikely that candidates for the charter commission from predominately Canton African-American wards and more generally from the south side of Canton could be elected in a citywide election context.

Northside political domination (i.e. principally from Wards 8 and 9) of Canton government would likely result in a commission "recommended to voters" plan which would likely diminish African-American and Canton southside influence in Canton government.

Well, Mack's charter effort failed and so the West/Fisher concerns never ripened into an actual possibility.

If Tuesday's election were to play out along  the lines of Smuckler,  Minor-Smith and Baylock becoming the Democratic nominees; wouldn't that blow a big hole in the West/Fisher position?

Speaking of Minor-Smith and Baylock, what would they bring to the table?

Minor-Smith, first.

On her Twitter page, Minor-Smith bills herself has being the candidate to "help" and "change" Canton City Council.

I doubt that she has the political/governance girth to do either.

She is not yet a year into her being elected to the Canton City Schools Board of Education (CCS, CCSBOE) and from what I have learned, she had not made a significant contribution to repairing the badly damaged CCS educational infrastructure.

Minor-Smith has run for a judgeship (against the highly regard Richard Kubilius) and the CCSBOE. Moreover, she has held a number of public appointments (see this LINK on her background)

In her personal education she has impressive credentials and in 2009 she was named to the top 20 of under age 40 Stark County.

However, as far as I am concerned she is a underachiever big time.

She does have potential to flower into a constructive and helpful public official.  But the keyword is "potential."  Minor-Smith should serve at least one full term on the CCSBOE and demonstrate that she is in realpolitik a "help" and a "change" for the better agent of the people in a highly practical and useful way.

Right now I think she will be nothing more than a wallflower and not up to being effective as a city councilperson.

Katherine Baylock.

I was absolutely stunned that she bested Pete Ferguson in the above-referenced "for the Democratic nomination" county commissioner race.

Baylock a year earlier than the commissioner race (see graphic above, November 2015 charter commission candidate results) finished with 2,397 votes whereas Ferguson garnered 3,235.

Council candidate Nick Mussulin (see below) got but 943 votes.

It will be interesting to see whether or not the charter commission vote is predictive at all on how Baylock, Ferguson and Mussulin finish in the eight person race.

Baylock, seemingly a very nice lady, but clearly not up to being an elected Canton citywide or Stark countywide elected official.

Even Pete Ferguson by virtue of his track record as an elected commissioner was more window dressing than substantive as commissioner.

I have learned that Nick Mussulin is turning some heads and some local politicos in a position to sense a winner in the making are thinking more and more that Mussulin might surface as one of the top three Democrats to face off with independent/Republican opposition in November.

Here is Mussulin on October 19, 2015 in a video appearance before the camera of The Stark County Political Report answering questions in his run for the Canton Charter Commission.



Of course, there is the shopworn Mary Cirelli.  This election should determine once and for all whether or not she is a viable city of Canton political figure.

Ida Ross-Freeman who several everybody in winning a CCSBOE race and then lost lost time out seems likely to bring up the tail end of also rans come Tuesday.

Is Canton about to experience a touch of political irony this coming Tuesday in a context in which seemingly unprepared candidates might surface as winners?

Perhaps.

Increasingly, it seems in American politics that one should expect the unexpected.

From Wikipedia.

In June 2014, in his bid for re-election, Cantor lost the Republican primary to economics professor Dave Brat in an upset that surprised political analysts. In response Cantor announced his early resignation as House Majority Leader, and several weeks later, he announced his resignation from Congress, which took effect August 18, 2014. Immediately thereafter, Cantor accepted a position as vice chairman of investment bank Moelis & Company.

Though he lost the popular vote my nearly three million votes (13 million, if one counts the votes that went to the collectivity of third party candidates), Donald J. Trump shocked most political pundits in winning a majority of the electoral college.

Could this "expect the unexpected" phenomenon be reaching all the way down to Stark County local politics?

Is Canton in for a double surprise on Tuesday?

Monday, April 24, 2017

"Sitting on an island in the Pacific" CONTEMPLATING THE FUTURE OF "THE STARK COUNTY POLITICAL REPORT."

UPDATED:  04/27/2017 at 09:14 a.m.


I have not done a blog since November 9, 2016.

The reason(s)?

I have been doing The Stark County Political Report for going on ten years (started March 2012, 2008)  and I figured that post-election was a good breaking point to step back and reassess whether or not I wanted to continue the effort and, if I do, what, if any changes, will there be to the content I focus on.

And what better place to take stock than "sitting on an island in the Pacific" as the Hawaiian Islands chain of islands was described this week by United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

The day after our arrival was December 7th and as any American student knows is the day in 1941 which Imperial Japan bombed the U.S. Fleet in harbor at Pearl Harbor.


I was privileged to witness a commemoration of that day of infamy 75 years later.  Casualties number numbered 2,335 for U.S. military forces.

Moreover, 68 civilians lost their lives.


Wish I were in Hawaii err "... an island in the Pacific" today so I could take a firsthand poll on local reaction to what at least one Hawaiian thinks of the Sessions comment as being an insult on the people  of the 50th state of the our union.

With the attack by the Japanese attack on Hawaii, the nexus of the then island nation was fixed and it was only a matter of time until Hawaii became the 50th state (August 21, 1959)

On December 6th, wife Mary and I took the long flight via Detroit and Seattle to Honolulu to visit daughter Kasi (a USAF medical doctor); her husband Will (a flight surgeon) and grandchildren Austin and Aspen.

In 1963 I had a stopover in a Hawaii on my way to South Korea for a one year stint as a member of the United States Air Force.

We were greeted at Honolulu International airport at about 5:00 p.m. on the 6th having left Akron-Canton airport on the 6th early, early, early in the morning (about 5:00 a.m.)

Festooned with leis by the grandchildren we knew instantly that we were going to thoroughly enjoy two months in the warmth experienced in "sitting in the island in the Pacific" having left behind the frigid months of northeast Ohio.

And indeed we did.

My own take away from the Sessions description of "sitting in the island of the Pacific" was a typical Trump administration slam on anybody (in this case, a Hawaii based federal judge who ruled against the administration's immigration travel executive order) only to deny that obvious insult import of the words that Sessions uttered is aptly expressed by Senator Shatz.

Sessions fits in perfectly with a boss (i.e. Trump) who tweet-slams any and everybody who differs with him.

One has to suspect that the Sessions remark was also an aside at former president Barack Obama who was according to all but the lunatic fringe of American politics was born in the "state" of Hawaii.

While President Trump has admitted (one of the few times he has owned up to being wrong about anything) he was wrong to join the "birthers" in asserting that Obama was not born in America, the Sessions' nasty suggests that the attorney general acts as a surrogate for the "Chief of Political Ugliness."

Trump has provided the climate for the likes of Sessions to pick up on insulting innuendo direct at the disagreeing.  It is obvious that Donald J. Trump will say and do whatever it takes to divert and deflect his gargantuan inadequacies.

It is apparent that he is a consummate transactionlist who has no political agenda other than what he thinks will make Donald J. Trump look good.  Among the many examples, "If [Putin] says great things about me, I'm going to say great things about him." (September 7, 2016, to NBC's Matt Lauer at a townhall meeting)

It is interesting that Hawaiians dissented from Trump's election as president by a 62% to 30% margin.


Might that have been a factor in the Sessions put down?  Just another juvenile "tit for tat?"

By and large, ugliness does not play in Hawaii.

Sessions' Alabama does have a history of political and racial nastiness.  All one has to do is to draw up our memories of "Bloody Sunday, Selma, Alabama of 1965.


Weather-wise, picturesque-wise and diversity-wise, "... the island in the Pacific" is more or less a paradise.


I had ample opportunity to mix with local while in the Aloha state.

Native Hawaiians, Japanese, Anglos, Blacks, Filipinos, Koreans and Chinese.

Take a look at his chart based on year 2015 data provided by the Kaiser Family Foundation.


Rather than casting implicated aspersions because a Hawaiian based federal judge does not see the law his way and Trump's way, Sessions, America's top lawyer charged with ensuring civil rights for all Americans, should be praising Hawaii-as a full throated state of the United States of America-and top model of how diverse populations can work together for the common good.

In the context of complementarity, the 50 states as a whole demonstrate the greatness of the American demographic landscape, in over span of more than two centuries, in melding immigrating diverse cultures into a melting pot that has proved to be a win-win for particular cultures and the grand scheme of American culture.

Many Americans are not surprised at what Trump's electoral college majority election has wrought on the nation's body politic in terms of vitriolic political discourse which largely emanates from the president, a few of his cabinet officials and quite a number of his close in political advisers (e.g. Stephen K. Bannon, Stephen Miller and the like).

But of course a majority of voting Americans did not vote for Donald J. Trump unless, of course, perhaps one buys into the Trump fabrication and fantasy of three to five million voters voting illegally.  (LINK to Charlotte Observer article)


Many of the anti-Trump voters were less than enthusiastic about Clinton.

As stale and tied to the Washington swamp as Clinton was likely to be, it was highly predictable that Trump would bring a brand of in politics and governance worse for ordinary Americans than the self-serving Clintons demonstrated in terms of moral leadership in the years they occupied the White House.

And as far as Trump dealing with the swamp is concerned, many think the swamp continues on supplemented by nepotism.

"... only 34 percent approve of his having given his daughter and son-in-law, Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner, major positions in his administration (61 percent disapprove)."  (see ABC News report citing the above)

Clinton represents the established political order and is a specific manifestation of America's political/ruling class (also includes the Bushes, Kennedys and others who trade on well known surnames) which vast numbers of us are growing tired ,of because of their self-serving, personal wealth building dominating of Democratic and Republican political party structures as vehicles to lording it over the rest of us.

Many of us yearn for a presidential election which French voters have before them on May 7th.

Two candidates unconnected to major French political parties.

Both candidates outside the established political party setup.

How refreshing, no?  And one of them is a political centrist.  Wow!

GROWING DISAFFECTION FOR DEM/GOP POLITICAL PARTIES
WITH A STARK COUNTY TIE-IN

Yesterday a ABC/Washington Post poll came out showing U.S. voter disenchantment with the Democratic and Republican political parties



With a mere 54.7% of registered voters voting in 2016, it is abundantly clear that about 45% of the national electorate do not see the importance and relevance to them in participate in a national election.

That 45% is nearly as high as Trump received (46.1%) of the national popular vote totals.

Futility in participating in elections seems to be setting in big time.

Nevertheless, Stark County's Republican and Democratic organizations go on in apparent disregard of "the out-of-touch" factor.

In 1992, 1996 and predominantly ever since, Stark County Democratic Party leaders lined up on the basis of "establishment factor" political party allegiance in support of nearly everything if not everything that the Clintons have done and stood for.

I don't recall one single Stark County Democratic Party leader come out in support of Bill Clinton's impeachment.  And no Democratic U.S. Senator voted to convict Clinton.

Though she lost to Barack Obama in the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, she was clearly the candidate of establishment Democratic leadership including local leaders.


I think that Hillary Clinton in part failed in her 2016 presidential bid because of the legacy she shared with husband Bill which, when added, to her penchant for secrecy (i.e. her maintaining a private e-mail server) and other politically arrogant stances; gave the totally unprepared in demeanor, veracity and competence Donald J. Trump the opportunity to slip through with a electoral college victory.

Just like in the Healy/Perez Canton Democratic primary mayoralty race of 2015 in which everyday Canton Democrats were underwhelmed with the qualities of the candidates.

As a corollary, many voters in November, 2016 including myself felt bereft of the opportunity to vote for a viable alternative to Clinton or Trump.

Amazing to me from a local standpoint in the 2016 presidential race was the number of candidate/elected official Stark County Republicans who openly supported and perhaps continue to support Trump's outrageousness.

In contrast to local Democratic leaders of 1998 and the Clinton/Lewinsky matter, the Stark County Republican Party organization did put out this statement:


But the "Donald Trump's behavior is indefensible" comes up a bit empty in light of the number of local Republican candidates/elected officials who showed up at his Canton rally in September, 2016.


As far as The Stark County Political Report is concerned, these folks of Stark County Republican political/governance leadership are accountable for their public support and perhaps continuing allegiance to the obviously unprepared and unfit by temperament and personal conduct Donald J. Trump who, of course, is the de facto head of the national Republican Party.

It seems pretty clear that political party loyalty is more important to our locals than the welfare of the nation.

What quality of judgment do our local Republican leaders have anyway?


It is interesting that Stark's only countywide newspaper has failed to put local Republican leaders on the spot for their having and continuing to openly support a clearly deficient person as leader of this great nation of ours.

Granted, Hillary Clinton was not a deserving alternative for them.

Independent minded and acting voters had to hold their noses in voting for Clinton.  There likely was also a number of staunch registered Democrats who had the same experience.

By boycotting the Canton sited Trump campaign event, local Republican could have in their own small way communicated to Trump that his deficiencies as a candidate were unacceptable for a leader of the free world.

One of the loudest cheerers for Donald Trump was then-Stark County Republican Party vice president Jane Timken who went on to become the Trump endorsed candidate for chairman of the Ohio Republican Party.

Shame on her!

As the nation suffers with the leadership debacle now in full swing in Washington, she is a local person who bears a special responsibility for having put the nation at risk to sustain a political/governance catastrophe.

I understand the need for political parties and some semblance of political organization loyalty, just not all consuming.  Notice I did not use the phrase "political party loyalty."

Trump has been/is so over the top that the welfare of the nation calls for Republican leaders locally and across the nation to send him a loud and clear message that they will back off and withhold support until and unless he changes his ways.

Jane Timken (and Stark County GOP chair Jeff Matthews) have proved to be highly ineffective during her time as a local Republican Party official in working to make Canton city politics and governance competitive.

So not only has she let the nation down, Jane Timken has as a Republican Party operative let Canton, Stark's county seat, down.

While necessary in some format in our democratic-republic, political party organizations as presently constituted under the banner Republican/Democrat are failing Stark Countians, Ohioans and, indeed, the entire U.S. population.

There is hope that the likes of the Tea Party (politically right) and Indivisible (politically left) will equalize as offering different outside of the political party structure contenders and going forward provide an alternative to the increasingly moribund American mainstream political party system.

To be politically healthy, there needs to be a centrist alternative not embedded in the current political party structure.

According to an article appearing in Salon yesterday, it might be that all too many American voters are so devoid of a cogent, consistent political viewpoint that they are not equipped to account for blatant ongoing rhetorical inconsistencies (i.e. flipfloping) and results (compared to campaign promises) that a analytical person might conclude that core Trump and to a lesser degree Clinton voters are stupid.

Ninety-six percent (96%) of Trump voters say (reference:  the ABC/Washington Post poll above) they would still vote for him given what we know about the reality of his governance 100 days into his administration.

Eighty-five percent (85%) say the same for Clinton.  However, in Clinton's case in that she did not become president therefore voting persistence does not have the quite the same illogicalness to it as does the 96% Trump factor.

A good part the the persisting 96% and 85% is owing the mindless political party loyalty.

A question that should have been posed to the Clinton voters is knowing what they know now (i.e. extracting defeat from the 'jaws of victory') how many would have supported Democratic nomination contender Bernie Sanders in the light of 20/20 hindsight?

Voter ignorance on the panoply of issues inherent in any political campaign at any level makes them vulnerable to demagogic, conning campaign styles worked nearly to perfection by Trump in the 2016 election.

To be sure, Clinton also played a strong hand of cards of the demagogue and political con artist with her campaign style.  Just not as well as Trump did.

Going forward, The Stark County Political Report will focus on encouraging the development of local political organizations a vehicles to make government accountable to everyday people and on an effort to goad voters into becoming responsible voters by equipping themselves to be informed voters.

Political organizations need be vehicles of informing voters; not propagandizing them.

The Stark County Political Report:  your source of equal opportunity critiques of politics and governance affecting Stark County.

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

11/08/2016 ELECTION: STARK COUNTY OFFICE ANALYSIS & ASSESSMENT



Stark County came within 552 votes (unofficial vote tally) of getting a non-political prosecutor in office yesterday.


It will be interesting to comb through precinct results and determine where Republican Jeff Jakmides of Alliance came up short.

With Stark having 288 precincts, he needed two more votes on average per precinct to come out a winner.

While Jakmides individually lost, the bigger loser was the Stark County public.

Stark County is not dealing effectively with crime as indicated on crime statistics on Canton, the Stark's county seat, to wit:


THE PROSECUTOR RACE

The Stark County Political Report believes that Prosecutor John Ferrero is more focused on the politics of retaining office than he is on effective and lasting (in the sense of being sparing on plea bargaining) prosecution of criminals "as charged" and thereby keep criminals out of our neighborhoods for longer period of time.

When you couple Ferrero and his "quick to plea bargain" approach to plea bargaining with Sheriff George T. Maier who the SCPR thinks has made his office a haven of appointees whose first duty appears to be personal political loyalty and effective law enforcement a secondary priority,  Stark Countians ought to be feeling less secure in their persons today than yesterday.

Maier too was on the ballot yesterday as an unopposed candidate.

In the 2014 elections, Stark Countians blew it in electing Maier over his Republican opponent Larry Dordea currently the police chief in Hartville and formerly the chief in Alliance.

In Alliance, Dordea is credited with having cleaned up a illegal drug problem.

And, Dordea tells the SCPR he was committed to doing the same for all of Stark County.

Maier makes a big show about cleaning up a current epidemic level heroin supply/use and overdose problem, but the problem continues to grow.

A Jakmides/Dordea law enforcement team would have made Canton and all of Stark County as much more crime free/illegal drug free community.

Elections do matter and The Report thinks that we Stark Countians are about to experience lax prosecution and law enforcement at an unprecedented level with Ferrero and Maier in place.

OTHER RACES

SMITH/SLESNICK - STARK COUNTY COMMISSIONER

Stark County did avoid another election results disaster yesterday in Canton Township trustee Bill Smith's resounding victory over Democrat Stephen Slesnick.


Slesnick, in the opinion of the SCPR, was a do-nothing state representative for eight years which likely had he been elected Stark County commissioner yesterday.

Hopefully, Canton/Stark County has seen the last of Slesnick as a candidate for elective office.

SHRIVER/GIAVASIS - CLERK OF COMMON PLEAS COURT

Plain Township's Claude Shriver in lambasting former Plain Township trustee Louis G. Giavasis (who is the brother of Stark Co. Dems chair Phil Giavasis) for political cronyism apparently was on to something that resonated with a number of Stark County voters.


Giavasis bears watching very closely in his administration of the clerk of courts office in terms of his employment practices.

ARNOLD/CAMPBELL - RECORDER

Democrat Rick Campbell is another countywide official who the SCPR thinks is way too political in how/who (i.e. the politically connected) he has hired into his office.  And besides that, there are those who think he is pretty much an absentee recorder.

Republican John Arnold (a Lake Township trustee) gave Campbell a big time "wake-up" call in yesterday's election.


Campbell could be ripe for the political plucking in the 2020 elections.

CAIN/ZUMBAR - TREASURER


Of all of yesterday's candidates, the most qualitative was Republican Stark County treasurer Alex Zumbar.

In the past, Zumbar has had some relatively close races notwithstanding the excellent job he has done in restoring public confidence in the treasurer's office post-theft-of-upwards of $3 million by former Chief Deputy Vince Frustaci (found out in April, 2009).

His 24% victory over Lake Board of Education member (former president of the state board of education under Democratic governor Ted Strickland) Debbie Cain is well deserved.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

NOVEMBER 8, 2016 - ELECTION DAY

UPDATED:  10:44 PM 

IT IS LOOKING VERY GOOD FOR JEFF JAKMIDES!  CAN HE PULL THE UPSET OFF?


Post 11:  (10:45)  88% of precincts have been reported.

Post 10:  (10:39)  Jakmides pulling even closer.  Only 649 votes behind with perhaps as many as 20,000 votes to count.  Could we be saying Prosecutor-elect Jakmides within the hour?



Post 9:  (10:25)  Jakmides pulling closer.  Less than 2,000 votes behind.  Are there enough votes out in the county for him to defeat incumbent prosecutor Ferrero?



Post 8:  (10:17)  With as many as perhaps 50,000 or more votes to count, it is looking likely that Republican Jeff Jakmides will overcome incumbent Democrat prosecutor John Ferrero and become Stark County's next prosecutor, to wit:




Post 7:  (5:40 p.m.)  From The Upshot (LINK, NYTimes) prediction of presidential winner.



Post 6:  (5:12 p.m.)  From Stark County commissioner candidate Bill Smith:

Hi Martin, voted this morning at 8 ,no line but the voting booths were all being used. Thanks to all who supported my campaign and helped in so many ways. If elected,. I will work hard to maintain their trust in me. 

Post 5:  (1:21 p.m.)  From Stark County commissioner candidate Richard Regula:


Just voted, took 5 min they said turnout has been good in Bethlehem Township.

Post 4:  (12:38 p.m.)  From Stark County commissioner candidate John Mariol:  

Hi Martin, Kallie and I both voted early so I do not have any information about the waiting time. 

Hope all is well!!

Post 3:  (12:29 p.m.) The best source for "live" coverage  (LINK) of the presidential election:




Post 2:  (12:17 p.m.)



Post 1:  (11:20 a.m.)

Wife and I showed up to Lake, Precinct 13 polling station at about 6:45 a.m.  About 12 voters ahead of us.  Line wait to complete voting about 30 minutes.  What a wonderful opportunity we in America have to participate in the selection of our leadership.

You be sure to vote today!


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Links to SCPR Recommendations  (contested races wholly within Stark County)
Sample Ballot for SCPR's Martin Olson
(Source:  Stark Co BOE)