Ohio Surprise

Todd Wiener gave history a nudge.

Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Tax Cuts

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Barack Obama promises tax cuts for 98% of small businesses and 99.9% of plumbers.

Written by Todd Wiener

November 3, 2008 at 3:08 am

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Ted Strickland

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Ohio governor Ted Strickland declares his state “Obama country.”

Written by Todd Wiener

November 3, 2008 at 1:48 am

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One Third

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We are one third filled. The crowd is starting to do the wave. The mayor of Cincinnati and governor of Ohio have arrived.

Maureen Tracey-Mooney, the Cincinnati regional field director fires up the crowd.

Written by Todd Wiener

November 3, 2008 at 12:52 am

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Frampton Comes Alive!

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Barack Obama has a campaign that is running smoothly at every level, from the perfect pitch of yesterday’s campaign infomercial to the urgent calm here at street level in the Cincinnati office. It sure does help to be winning.

Outside the Obama office, previously a storefront pharmacy, were several large boxes surrounded by teams of volunteers working at curbside. Inside those boxes were 30,000 thin metal bars, the skeletons of lawn signs soon to be born.

I donned some protective gloves and got to work bundling the bars in manageable packages of ten and twenty apiece, perfecting a method of accurately estimating the count and then evening out the bundle using the bended ends as guides. I then asked a volunteer to do nothing but tape the bundles as quickly as I could produce them. (Thank you Henry Ford!)

My bundle taper was a local man in his fifties who came out to the very first Obama organizing meeting in Cincinnati. This was back in the middle of 2007, well before things started heating up. He had been involved in ballot initiatives and electoral politics for years, and was expecting a few dozen diehards to show up. The crowd swelled to about 600.

After we finished, I headed inside as phone bankers making another round of ballot-chase calls. I was handed a culled list of about 30 voters who had not received their ballots, or who had not ordered them. I called through the list and made appointments with four ladies, all in their eighties, who really needed to get those ballots because they were unable to get themselves to their polling place.

But another lady was too sick to leave the house, and hadn’t yet applied for a ballot, and time is running out. By law, all absentee ballots are mailed to the address on file and must be returned postmarked by election day.

So I called the Board of Elections and got some surprising results. First, my call was answered right away. Second, the woman I spoke to told me to leave a message for Patricia, who was in charge of elderly and nursing home voters. Third, Patricia called me back within the hour and arranged to have a duly authorized poll worker drive out the voter’s home the following day to allow her to vote early.

Patricia called me back later to confirm everything was all arranged, and we chatted about the importance of giving sick and elderly voters extra help to vote. I told her I would serve as the point person for any elderly Hamilton county person who needed a ride. The Obama campaign has a statewide hotline for voters who need rides on election day, but I figured it would be good for the board of elections to have a local point person.

In a time where election officials are routinely attacked (sometimes deservedly) for their handling of an election, I have nothing but praise so far for the Hamilton Board of Elections.

As I left the campaign office for the evening, it was reported to me that earlier in the afternoon we had a visit from Cincinnati transplant Peter Frampton, who was coming by to pick up a few of the recently-assembled yard signs.

Written by Todd Wiener

October 30, 2008 at 2:59 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Good Pie

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After a full day canvassing Brown county, my New York crew and I settled in for a meal at the fireside restaurant in Georgetown. This restaurant was made famous when Barack Obama stopped by during his recent Ohio bus tour. He liked the pie.

We knocked 97 doors and spoke to 58 people. Obama led McCain 3 to 2 in those who declared their preference. This is not a random sample but it’s nevertheless pretty encouraging.

This area is very rural and the folks here are suffering from the hard economic times. Most of the supporters we talked to were lifelong republicans who were voting Obama for the first time.

Charles a 73-year-old diehard Democrat told us he couldn’t vote because he wasn’t sure he would be able to get to the polls. He told us he was diagnosed with colon cancer and was given five months to live. But he was glad to have visitors and we talked politics for awhile while CNN blared on the TV. By the time we left Charles had arranged a ride to vote early at the county seat.

Written by Todd Wiener

October 26, 2008 at 11:23 pm

Posted in Uncategorized