WHAT SHOULD I BE DOING INSTEAD OF THIS?
 
 

A Year for the Ages

Obama’s presidential election, with historic help from Hamilton County, led local news in 2008

0 Comments · Tuesday, December 30, 2008
1776, 1865, 1945, 1968 and now 2008. There are some years that stick out in American history as significant turning points, with events occurring that are so momentous even those living through them know they’re witnessing history.   

Yes, We Did

Obama’s landslide victory even includes Hamilton County

5 Comments · Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Change is in the air across the United States, but some things remain constant: for example, the slow pace of tabulating ballots in Hamilton County. But given the dramatic finish to the nearly two-year-long race for the White House, the local problems were just an annoying delay.  

Mixed Messages on the Issues

Voters are heard on city and state ballot issues

0 Comments · Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Cincinnati voters sent a mixed message on the two ballot issues before them, both placed on the ballot by a group of local activists and political organizations. Issue 8 failed, meaning City Council won't be elected via proportional representation, with Issue 7 passed, prohibiting the use of "red light" cameras.  

‘One People’

President-elect Barack Obama chooses unity over division

0 Comments · Wednesday, November 5, 2008
By 11 p.m. on Election Day, about 25 people were at Integrity Hall in Bond Hill talking or dancing to the music of a DJ. Just 25 people in a room with that DJ, a TV and a snack table with corn chips and sheet cake with red, white and blue frosting, watching in amazement as the first biracial person was elected president of the United States. "His life is the perfect example of inclusion," said Ken Ghee, a psychology professor at the University of Cincinnati. "His color is a merging of Caucasian, African, Hawaiian."  

Split Decision in Congressional Races

Driehaus unseats Chabot, Schmidt hangs on

0 Comments · Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Ohio might have turned Democratic blue Tuesday night, but Hamilton County and the southwestern part of the state sent mixed signals about whether it embraced the tides of change. State Rep. Steve Driehaus unseated seven-term U.S. Rep. Steve Chabot in the 1st District, while U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt (R-Miami Township) claimed victory in the 2nd Congressional District.  

Underdogs Get Some Respect

But incumbents keep their Hamilton County Commission seats

0 Comments · Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Democratic incumbent Todd Portune and Republican Greg Hartmann, endorsed candidates who received money and volunteer help from their respective parties, easily won in their separate Hamilton County Commission races. Still, Ed Rothenberg, an unendorsed Republican who challenged Portune, and Chris Dole, an unendorsed Democrat who vied against Hartmann, each nabbed more than one-third of the votes cast in the races.  

VOTE Today!!!

Tuesday Nov. 4 is Election Day

0 Comments · Tuesday, November 4, 2008
It has been said that the 2008 Presidential Election is the most important election in a generation. Be sure that you're a part of it, and help your family, friends and neighbors share in this historic event. Find your polling place and voter registration information by entering your informaton at this address...  

2008 Presidential Race

Results, analysis and background from the Ohio primary through to the November general election

0 Comments · Friday, October 31, 2008
Read up on CityBeat's coverage of the presidential campaigns from throughout 2008, starting before the Ohio primary up through this week's election endorsements. Plus coverage from other alt weekly papers on the Democratic and Republican conventions.  

What's Best for the City

Debating the cost and benefits of proposed PR election system

2 Comments · Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Cincinnati currently elects its city council members in an at-large, winner-take-all field race known as "9X." Voters are allowed to select up to nine people from a field of candidates that usually includes about 20 to 25 people. The top nine finishers are elected. Some community groups, however, say the current system distorts the will of voters and shuts out fresh voices that don’t have high name recognition, big campaign money or party connections. As a result, the groups are pushing to revive proportional representation (PR), an electoral system used by Cincinnati from 1925 to 1957.   

Endorsements: Crossing Over to a New Day

1 Comment · Wednesday, October 29, 2008
At CityBeat, we’re fired up and ready to go. We’ve worked for months to explain the candidates and issues on Tuesday’s ballot, and this is our third (and final) week of endorsements. Are you ready? Let's go!  

0|7
 
Close
Close
Close