|
|
| Also listed in: Ohio 15th Congressional District | Upper Arlington Progressive Action |
*Cross-posted to UA Progressive Action *
There has been a great deal of discussion recently about who may run against Deb Pryce in 2008. Paula Brooks recently formed a 527 which may be a stepping-off point for running in the 15th. There has also been some buzz (and some assumptions) that Mary Jo would run against Pryce in a rematch in 2008.
Here are some numbers for Arlington:
2006 Kilory
+/- win/loss: -2,704 votes
UA precincts won: 1
Average precinct performance: -80 votes
2004 Kilroy
+/- win/loss: -2,456 votes
UA precincts won: 3
Average precinct performance: -72 votes
2004 Brooks
+/- win/loss: +511 votes
UA precincts won: 21
Average precinct performance: +15 votes
2006 Celeste
+/- win/loss: -1,051 votes
UA precincts won: 10
Average precinct performance: -31 votes
Obviously performance in UA should not be a single factor for determining a candidate's strength, but it is hard to argue against UA's strategic importance if you're running in 15.
The numbers above are stark, especially considering that Kilroy lost by 1,062 votes. The key for Democratic candidates running in House 15 (or anywhere else that covers Arlington for that matter) is to "stem-the-bleeding" in UA and do pretty strongly in the other less-Republican areas. Ted Celeste did this effectively when he won his Ohio House 24 seat this past November - though he won just 10 UA precincts, his average loss in UA per precinct was just 31 votes. By keeping it competitive, UA didn't kill him elsewhere.
So what do YOU think? Should it be the Kilroy rematch or Brooks that takes on Pryce?



















However, I think the numbers that you present regarding Ms. Brooks and Upper Arlington are misleading without stating the fact that Upper Arlington is Paula Brooks hometown and she served on the city council there for years.
The potential positive outlook for Brooks you allude to from the numbers you provide will be significantly lessened in a race against Pryce because Upper Arlington is her hometown too.
The primary reason Mary Jo Kilroy lost (if a primary reason can adequately be identified) is the gerrymandering of the 15th district to include Union and Madison Counties.
Whomever, the candidate from Ohio's 15th District is will have to overcome these same obstacles.
Remember Pryce won these two counties by a margin far greater than the difference in total votes between Kilroy and "hometown favorite" Brooks in Upper Arlington in the County Commissioner race in 2004.
Also, the hair stands up on the back of my neck whenever I hear someone say their candidate lost because of gerrymandering or the layout of the district.
Lastly, you totally lost me on the last sentence of your post - can you show me what you meant with some numbers?
Sorry Paula.