The
Ohio gubernatorial election of 2006 was held
on November 7, 2006, and was a race for the
Governor and
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio.
Incumbent Governor
Bob Taft could not run
for re-election, as Ohio governors are
limited to two consecutive terms in office.
The general election for governor pitted
Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell, the Republican nominee, against
U.S.
Representative
Ted Strickland of Ohio's 6th congressional
district (representing Steubenville
, Marietta
and Portsmouth
), the Democratic nominee.
Their
running mates for lieutenant
governor was former
Ohio Attorney
General Lee Fisher for Strickland and
state Representative
Tom Raga for Blackwell. (Candidates for
governor and lieutenant governor in Ohio run on a
single ballot line).
Strickland captured about 60 percent of the vote; Blackwell
conceded to Strickland at about 8:45 p.m.
EST on November 7, 2006.
Strickland will serve from 2007 to 2011.
Historical background
National attention
As the election approached, there was increasing national attention
on the Ohio gubernatorial election, focused largely on the ability
of the Republican party to maintain control in Ohio. Results in
Ohio in 2006 were regarded as a possible
bellwether for the
2008 presidential
election; Ohio was considered a crucial
swing state, with 20
electoral votes. Since the
Republican
Party's inception in 1854, no Republican presidential candidate
has ever been elected to office without the electoral votes of
Ohio. In contrast, a Democratic candidate has won the national
election without the support of Ohio seven times (1836, 1844, 1856,
1884, 1892, 1944, 1960). Overall, Ohio's electoral votes have gone
to the winner of the election 78% of the time.
Comedian
and talk-show host Jon Stewart taped
The Daily Show from October
30 to November 2, 2006, at the Roy Bowen Theater on the campus of
Ohio State
University
. The series of episodes was entitled
"Battlefield Ohio: The Daily Show’s Midwest Midterm Midtacular" and
was intended to bring further national attention to the election in
Ohio.
This
was only the second time that the show had been filmed in a
location other than New York
City
.
Ohio, Blackwell, and the 2004 election
Ohio played a decisive role in the
2004 presidential
election, as Ohio's electoral votes would have been sufficient
to swing the election from
George W.
Bush to
John
Kerry had Kerry won in Ohio. Given the importance of the state,
Blackwell's role in the conduct of the election was closely
scrutinized. As Ohio Secretary of State, Blackwell was the state's
chief elections officer. He was also an honorary co-chair for the
Bush
re-election campaign in Ohio and the most prominent backer of a
ballot measure to ban
same-sex marriage on
the same ballot.
Leading up to the election Blackwell made a number of decisions
about the election process, most of which placed additional
restrictions on voting. Opponents argued that Blackwell's decisions
would have the effect of suppressing turnout among vulnerable
populations, most of whom would be expected to vote for Kerry in
the presidential contest—and that Blackwell had a conflict of
interest as a co-chair of Bush's re-election campaign. Supporters
argued that the Secretary of State had always been a partisan
political office and that there was nothing wrong with Blackwell
having a preference in the presidential elections; they denied that
Blackwell's decisions were designed to benefit Bush.
Reaction to Blackwell's conduct was so strong that a coalition of
left-leaning organizations attempted to amend the
Ohio Constitution to abolish the Secretary
of State's oversight of elections, as part of a package of election
reforms. The proposal was rejected by voters in November 2005.
Dissatisfaction with Blackwell's involvement in the 2004 election
apparently hurt him with Ohio's African-American community;
according to exit polls, Blackwell received only 20% of the vote in
2006, compared to much higher showings in his previous races. Exit
polls showed that confidence in the election process among Ohio
voters was even lower than voters in Florida, the state which
produced an unprecedented five-week post-election fight in 2000.
But among voters "very confident" that votes would be counted
accurately, Blackwell actually
led Strickland.
Republican control
Entering the 2006 campaign, Ohio had been dominated for a decade by
Republicans.
Republicans had held the governorship for sixteen years, occupied
all statewide constitutional offices, and controlled both houses of
the
state legislature.
Important scandals
Bob Taft
At a low point in his popularity in November 2005, Taft garnered
only a 6.5% approval rating. According to polling organization
Survey USA, this was a lower proportion than any governor in the
United States. A poll taken in May 2006 indicated that only 2% of
Ohio residents "strongly approved" of Taft's performance. The low
approval ratings led pollster
John Zogby
to comment, "I'm not aware of anyone who's ever sunk lower."
Taft's low approval ratings follow several years of scandals. In
2005, Taft pled no contest to four ethics violations involving
illegal gifts totaling $5,800. He was convicted of four
misdemeanors and was ordered to pay a $4,000 fine and apologize to
the people of Ohio. Taft is the only Ohio governor to be convicted
of a crime while in office.
Thomas Noe and Coingate
In 1996 the Republican controlled
Ohio General Assembly removed a
restriction requiring that state investments only be in safer,
though lower-yielding,
bonds. After
the restriction was eliminated, hundreds of millions of dollars in
state funds were invested by a number of investment firms with
close ties to the Republican party. Among those investments was $50
million of the Ohio Bureau of Worker's Compensation fund which was
given to
Thomas Noe, an investor in rare
and unusual coins and major donor to the Republican Party including
then-governor Bob Taft.
In 2005 it was revealed that Noe could only account for $13 million
of the original investment. Among the missing funds were two coins
worth over $300,000 alone. Throughout 2005, there was a protracted
legal battle over the release of records which Noe claimed were
privileged and prosecutors claimed were in the public domain.
The
Ohio Supreme
Court
ruled 5-2 in favor of the prosecutors. On
February 13, 2006, Noe was indicted on 53 counts, including:
engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity (which carries a
mandatory 10 year sentence), 11 counts of theft, 11 counts of money
laundering, 8 counts of tampering with records, and 22 counts of
forgery. The charges also accuse Noe of personally stealing $2
million. On November 20, 2006, Noe was found guilty of theft, money
laundering, forgery and corrupt activity, and was sentenced to
serve 18 years in prison, fined $213,000, ordered to pay the $2
million dollar cost of his prosecution and make restitution to the
Ohio Bureau of Worker's Compensation.
Also in 2006, Noe pled guilty to three charges of using over a
dozen people in 2004 as illegal "conduits" to make donations to
George W. Bush's re-election campaign of over $45,000
in order to skirt laws limiting donations in federal campaigns to
$2,000. Noe was convicted and sentenced to 27 months in federal
prison and ordered to pay a $136,000 fine.
Primaries
Republican
On May 2, 2006, Blackwell won the Republican nomination with 56% of
the vote, defeating Attorney General
Jim
Petro. State auditor
Betty
Montgomery had also been a candidate, but withdrew from the
contest and instead ran for state attorney general, an office she
lost to Democrat
Marc Dann. Despite
commercials preaching his conservative values, Petro was never able
to shake his previous pro-choice stance. As the election
approached, the barbs grew worse between Petro and Blackwell, only
serving to bring more negative attention to the Ohio GOP.
Democratic
Strickland won the Democratic nomination with 79% of the vote
against state representative
Bryan
Flannery. Strickland was originally also in a tough fight for
the nomination, as Columbus Mayor
Michael Coleman was also campaigning and
raising money. Before attacks were traded between the nominees,
Coleman bowed out, citing a need to spend more time with his
family.
General election
Campaign finance

Ted Strickland campaigning before the
election
The race for the 2006 election was, in 2006, the most expensive in
Ohio's history. Reflective of both the national significance of the
race, as well as the powerful fund-raising capabilities of both
parties, Blackwell and Strickland passed the previous fund raising
record set in 1998. That record, set when current Governor Bob Taft
was running against Lee Fisher (Strickland's running mate), totaled
a combined $18 million by the end of the election. As of September
9, 2006, Blackwell and Strickland had already raised a combined
$21.2 million dollars. Strickland led Blackwell, $11.2 million to
$10 million. Most of the money raised in Ohio by both major party
candidates came from a single zip code in downtown Columbus, which
is home to their respective parties, labor and political groups,
lobbyists and lawyers.
A significant amount of money was spent by private groups on behalf
of the candidates as well, the estimated combined total at the time
of the May 2 primary was $50 million.
Polling

300 px
Since the first polls on the general election matchup were taken in
November 2005, Strickland led Blackwell, though the margin
substantially increased in March 2006.
The greatest margin recorded in an individual poll was found in the
October 26, 2006, SurveyUSA poll which showed Strickland leading by
30 points. The smallest recorded margin was the February 6, 2006,
Zogby poll showing Strickland leading by a mere 3 points. When the
results are averaged across the different polls, the greatest
margin was in October 2006 with a difference of 22.6 points in
favor of Strickland. The smallest average margin was during January
2006 with Strickland leading Blackwell by 4 points.
| Source |
Date |
Strickland (D) |
Blackwell (R) |
Peirce (L) |
Fitrakis (G) |
| Survey USA |
November 6, 2006 |
55% |
38% |
2% |
1% |
| University of Cincinnati |
November 6, 2006 |
59% |
37% |
4% (Independents combined) |
| CNN |
October 31, 2006 |
59% |
36% |
|
|
| Survey USA |
October 26, 2006 |
62% |
32% |
1% |
1% |
| Quinnipiac |
October 18, 2006 |
59% |
32% |
|
|
| NY Times/CBS News |
October 18, 2006 |
53% |
29% |
2% (Independents combined) |
| University of Cincinnati |
October 14, 2006 |
52% |
38% |
3% |
1% |
| Survey USA |
October 12, 2006 |
60% |
32% |
2% |
1% |
| Rasmussen |
October 6, 2006 |
52% |
40% |
|
|
| Zogby |
September 28, 2006 |
48.3% |
39.7% |
|
|
| Survey USA |
September 28, 2006 |
56% |
35% |
2% |
2% |
| Rasmussen |
September 20, 2006 |
54% |
35% |
|
|
| Quinnipiac |
September 19, 2006 |
56% |
34% |
|
|
| University of Cincinnati |
September 17, 2006 |
50% |
38% |
3% |
2% |
| Zogby |
September 11, 2006 |
47.5% |
41.8% |
|
|
| Zogby |
August 28, 2006 |
49.7% |
41.4% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
August 27, 2006 |
57% |
32% |
|
|
| Survey USA |
August 7, 2006 |
57% |
35% |
2% |
1% |
| Rasmussen |
August 1, 2006 |
50% |
39% |
|
|
| Zogby |
July 24, 2006 |
48.4% |
43.8% |
|
|
| Columbus Dispatch |
July 23, 2006 |
47% |
27% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
June 27, 2006 |
50% |
37% |
|
|
| Zogby |
June 21, 2006 |
49.1% |
44.3% |
|
|
| Survey USA |
June 13, 2006 |
53% |
37% |
2% |
1% |
| University of Cincinnati |
May 25, 2006 |
50% |
44% |
2% (Independents combined) |
| Rasmussen |
May 18, 2006 |
52% |
36% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
April 25, 2006 |
52% |
35% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
March 31, 2006 |
50% |
40% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
February 19, 2006 |
47% |
35% |
|
|
| Zogby |
February 6, 2006 |
38% |
35% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
January 7, 2006 |
44% |
40% |
|
|
| Rasmussen |
November 15, 2005 |
42% |
36% |
|
|
|
Results
Strickland won the overwhelming majority of Ohio's counties,
although Blackwell did respectably in some traditionally Republican
areas, mostly in western Ohio.
Note that while Bill Pierce and Bob Fitrakis were endorsed by the
Libertarian and Green parties, respectively, they appeared as
independents on the ballot.
References
See also