- Esrati - https://esrati.com -

Definition of failure in Dayton on election day.

The 2005 Election split the city in two [1]

The 2005 Election split the city in two

If the map is this divided after the election tomorrow, we’ve seen no progress in Dayton.

In the Bohardt/McLin race in 2005 the city split.

Please, get out and vote- for the people you believe will make an attempt to represent the entire city- and bring us together.

It’s not a black or white thing, Democrat or Republican. It’s about vision and a plan.

Hopefully- voters will see through all the hype.

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Jameson Thompson

Esrati, so much for your integrity.  You (or your folks) went around to polling locations and kicked over Whaley and McLin signs that were in the vicinity and replaced them with your sign.  So much for openness and promoting an informed electorate.  Are these the “new ideas” that we can expect?

The most disappointing thing for me was that you put up your signs and not Gary’s.  Gary handed out your literature and helped you throughout the campaign.  So much for being a team player.  It proves that you only look after yourself. 

Wesley Wellbilly

Blah, blah, blah…That has nothing to do with writing legislation.

David Lauri

Didn’t David and Gary have different viewpoints on yard signs?  David took the view that yard signs shouldn’t be placed on public property but rather should be only on private property owned by people who wanted his yard signs.  Gary seemed to have taken the traditional view that the more signs out there, the better, including on public property.
 
Would it have been better for David to have violated the integrity you just praised and instead been a team player putting out yard signs where he’d said they shouldn’t be?
 
David did take plenty of opportunity here on this site to endorse Gary for mayor and to urge people to vote for the both of them.

Hall

Did they see you in your rappeling gear ? :-)
 
Speaking of division, Gary has a posting on his blogspot saying that the Democrats send out another postcard, but this time only to residents of the west side of town, with the “rascists” comments that they have on the no-gary website.

Jeff

David wouldn’t do that, if anything, he does have integrity.  Now, about the city being divided, I am predicting much of the same as it relates to voting habits and neighborhoods.  The west side will support McClin, Williams and Waley.  The East side will support Esrati and Gary, it is what it is, I don’t think it is a measuring stick to how far we have come in bridging the great divide.  I have however heard more west siders complaining about McClin than ever before.  The next election, McClin will lose for sure, or she won’t run again, so I guess there is always that to look forward to.

Robert Vigh

Good luck today David.

Scott

Good Luck, David!

jstults

The Democratic machine certainly tried to exploit this “cleavage” in the city, mentioned in this DDN editorial in a back-handed fasion:
http://www.daytondailynews.com/blogs/content/shared-gen/blogs/dayton/opinion/entries/2009/11/03/editorial_mclin_couldnt_beat_t.html?cxtype=fb_mlt
Not sure what exactly they are trying to say about race, Gary won because he’s white?  He won because he *didn’t* exploit race? He won because … and the DDN waves its hands about economic troubles being rough on incumbents.
We got one of those red “Gary is a racist” post-cards at our house here in Grafton Hill.  I’m glad the Dayton electorate has sent the message that these low-road smears are not effective, people are tired of being manipulated by the demagogues and power brokers.

jstults

Sorry, I looked, but junk mail has a short life-span around our house, my shredder is sprinkled with little red confetti…

Jeff

Based on the graphics the DDN has posted the map did look a lot like the Bonhart/McLin match-up in terms of what areas voted for who (though I’d like to see more detail on the majority-vote margins).
 
The big difference, as has been reported, was the turnout.  McLin was not able to turn out her base, who didn’t vote for Leitzell either, but  stayed home instead.  So not necessarily a big “yes” for Leitzell except for the usual wards and precincts that vote for white/GOP candidates (Belmont, Patterson Park, Forest Ridge, etc), but more a rejection of McLin by former McLin voters, who “went fishing”, as they say in politics.
 

Hall

Was just gonna post about the map for this year’s election… No need to now. But, look at the top picture, the one labeled “turnout”. Northeast Dayton, or Huber Heights, where many, many city employees live, had a greater than 37% turnout. Only the most southeastern part of Dayton had a similar turnout.

Jeff

The Dayton Daily News posted some neat data on the election by ward.  It seems that not only did McLin base not turn out (off 20% on average compared to the McLin/Bohardt election, up to over 30% in two wards), but of the voters who did turn out, McLins margin dropped.  The worst was Ward 13, which is the College Hill and Greenwich Village area.  McLin won by 95.5% in 2005, but got only 86.6% in 2008, a decline of 8.9% points.  This ward had McLins biggest % drop, citywide.  McLin’s margin declined by 3.85% on average in her wards.   So it wasn’t only low turnout, but also  a small shift to Leitzell, too.
 
 
Interestingly, in the “swing wards” along North Main and around downtown, McLin very slightly  improved her margin over 2005.
 
So Leitzell did make some inroads into the black vote this election, compared to Bohardt.