Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Refusal to debate?


Plunderbund has news on the Kasich refusal to debate Ed Fitzgerald:

News broke this morning that the campaign team for Kasich, comfortably ahead in the polls, can’t agree on whether to tempt fate by putting their candidate on stage next to his opponent for a debate, risking a verbal encounter that could help FitzGerald and hurt Kasich.  The failure to reach an internal consensus in camp Kasich to even be seen on stage with Ed FitzGerald, Kasich’s Democratic challenger whose name he has yet to actually say in public, tells voters all they need to know about the Wizard of Westerville’s supersized ego and arrogance....


...John Kasich is the consummate performance politician. He really doesn’t like the press—because some of us can ask questions that make his head explode—and if he actually spoke truthfully, he doesn’t like the legislature either, because it’s just a big group of people who can say no to him, and if there’s one thing Mr. Kasich dislikes above all else, it’s not being able to act like a CEO of a private corporation who can do what he wants, when he wants. One can only wonder if he has a picture of Vladimir Putin on a wall somewhere.

Kasich needs to win by a large margin to get the mandate he so desperately needs to flesh out the false narrative that he’s a comeback governor.  But FitzGerald, an attorney, could skewer Kasich big time in a live matchup. From history we know that John Kasich is extremely prone to political foot-in-mouth disease. Even the Cleveland Plain Dealer, which is certain to endorse him again this year, said in their 2010 editorial endorsement of him, that he could “talk himself off a cliff.” The PD and other newspapers, especially the Columbus Dispatch, were for him in 2010 because they swallowed his talk of razzle dazzle in government hook, line and sinker. They slow but steady recovery under Strickland, following a tidal wave of job losses brought on by the Great Recession, not Strickland policies as Kasich would have you believe, was too boring for newspaper editorial boards who became mesmerized by the fast but erratic rabbit over the steady plodding tortoise....


Those of us that are familiar with John Kasich, Governor of Ohio, know that he is a pompous, self-centered person. Now that he has refused to debate Democratic candidate, Ed Fitzgerald, more people might realize it. After the Kasich campaign announced that they would not participate in any debates, the Fitzgerald campaign released some info.

MSNBC:

...On Tuesday,  Kasich’s campaign announced it was walking away from debate negotiations with Democratic challenger Ed FitzGerald....
  
“He’s not accepting the challenge because his handlers know that when the Governor is forced to speak on his feet he reveals his disdain for working Ohioans and he is unable to defend his record of helping his wealthy friends at the expense of Ohio’s middle class,” says Laura Hitt, FitzGerald’s campaign spokesperson.  

But Kasich isn’t the only Ohio Republican ditching debates this year.  Attorney General Mike DeWine, Secretary of State Jon Husted, and State Treasurer Josh Mandel have all declined to participate in the City Club of Cleveland’s debate series....


This should make every voter in Ohio very suspicious of what the Republican Party has in their plans that they are unwilling to share with the people. Are the Republicans are so certain of their re-elections that they are afraid to be exposed to questions submitted by the press and the people?


Vote against the hubris of the Republicans. Vote for Democrats.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Ohio

What numbers are being used to Ohio Gov. John Kasich on job growth in the state? Here is something that will knock your socks off immediately!

Scroll down to see where Ohio ranks in job growth.

WPCarey:


Total Nonfarm 1 month change: July 2014 over June 2014


StateRank% ChangeJob Growth# of Jobs
Alabama
39.0013.001,919.80
Alaska
49.0044.00333.00
Arizona
12.003.002,572.50
Arkansas
30.0022.001,188.90
California
9.0023.0015,492.50
Colorado
6.0021.002,452.20
Connecticut
45.0028.001,670.30
Delaware
8.0016.00439.50
Florida
4.0041.007,795.90
Georgia
14.0020.004,108.40
Hawaii
31.0029.00623.90
Idaho
38.0011.00647.70
Illinois
46.0024.005,824.50
Indiana
16.0040.002,991.30
Iowa
23.0037.001,550.20
Kansas
28.0026.001,387.10
Kentucky
44.004.001,863.70
Louisiana
36.0010.001,981.30
Maine
27.0045.00610.10
Maryland
42.0049.002,610.20
Massachusetts
21.008.003,422.10
Michigan
40.007.004,161.50
Minnesota
18.0046.002,814.60
Mississippi
35.0031.001,121.30
Missouri
20.005.002,781.60
Montana
24.001.00457.90
Nebraska
33.0042.00981.90
Nevada
2.0039.001,217.40
New Hampshire
26.0033.00646.90
New Jersey
47.0027.003,950.60
New Mexico
50.002.00812.00
New York
25.0025.009,042.20
North Carolina
15.0012.004,139.80
North Dakota
1.0035.00465.30
• Ohio
34.0047.005,288.90
Oklahoma
17.0043.001,663.70
Oregon
7.0036.001,717.60
Pennsylvania
41.0038.005,793.00
Rhode Island
22.0018.00477.80
South Carolina
11.0048.001,928.40
South Dakota
37.0017.00421.60
Tennessee
13.0030.002,800.70
Texas
3.009.0011,607.80
United States
0.15209.00139,004.00
Utah
5.006.001,338.30
Vermont
43.0014.00307.60
Virginia
48.0015.003,788.20
Washington
10.0019.003,062.10
West Virginia
32.0050.00771.70
Wisconsin
19.0032.002,859.90
Wyoming
29.0034.00292.90