The Hill: Rep. Steve Chabot gets serious challenger?
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  The Hill: Rep. Steve Chabot gets serious challenger?
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Author Topic: The Hill: Rep. Steve Chabot gets serious challenger?  (Read 1261 times)
Adlai Stevenson
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« on: May 18, 2007, 03:40:27 AM »

By Aaron Blake
May 18, 2007

Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) was starting to appear increasingly comfortable in his seat in 2004, when he completed his second straight reelection bid with more than 60 percent of the vote.

Then came 2006, and now comes state Rep. Steve Driehaus.

National Democrats are selling Driehaus as the answer to their long quest to knock out Chabot and make a dent in a state on which they placed heavy emphasis in 2006.

When all was said and done, despite taking 30 House seats nationwide from Republicans, Democrats had taken over just one House district out of about four serious takeover tries in the state.

The Chabot seat is at the top of their list of near-misses, and Democrats are extremely high on Driehaus as a Democrat whom they say can appeal to the western portion of the district, which is more Republican and has thus been Chabot’s base of support.

Driehaus was contacted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) last cycle but turned down a bid. He is now term-limited in the state House and hoping to finish what 2006 Democratic nominee John Cranley started in a suburban district that Democrats say is swinging their way because of urban sprawl.

“This district is becoming less safe for the incumbent every year,” Driehaus said. “It’s just a matter of time, and I think that time is shortly approaching.”

Cranley and Chabot were neck-and-neck throughout the closing months of the campaign, but Chabot held on for a 52-48 win.

Much like Rep. Heather Wilson (R-N.M.), Chabot has demonstrated an ability to survive close elections. First elected in 1994 with 56 percent of the vote, he has since won reelection with less than 55 percent of the vote four times.

“I’ve won 10 elections in a row in the last 20 years or so, and I’ve been targeted by virtually all of these left-wing groups for years now,” Chabot said. “I think the people in my district are smart enough to judge people based on merit and their records.”

In fact, Democrats largely abandoned the district in the 2002 and 2004 races, when Democrat Greg Harris ran a pair of under-funded campaigns and lost by 30 and 20 points, respectively.

But Democrats reemphasized the seat in 2006 and invested heavily in Cranley.

Now they make the case that the district continues to shift in their favor and will make things even harder for Chabot in 2008.

Chabot’s district is a classic example of a suburban district shifting in the Democrats’ favor, according to Robert Lang, director of the Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech University.

In a recent report, Hamilton County, Ohio, is classified by Lang and his team as an “inner suburb” county, a type that is growing Democratic the fastest of any other part of the country’s metropolitan areas.

“The 1st district contains a lot of the maturing suburbs west of Cincinnati,” Lang said. “The process is, as you build these places denser and they get more city-like, they vote more like cities.”

Democrats and Driehaus also say he appeals to those suburbs because he’s represented them, though the majority of his district lies inside the Cincinnati city limits.

The DCCC notes that Driehaus has won convincingly in what it considers a Republican state House district — a classification it justifies by pointing out that Republicans have won most of the major races in the district in recent years.

Republicans dispute that picture of Driehaus’s district.

They point out that, according to Hamilton County, which contains the entire state House district, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) beat President Bush there by about 10 points in 2004. The district often has mirrored the rest of the state and the congressional district — which are both considered swing — in other elections.

Driehaus has won the district overwhelmingly in recent years, most recently by almost 40 points.

“If the DCCC is going to recruit a candidate you would think they would take the time to know the district,” Chabot Chief of Staff Gary Lindgren said. “On the other hand, they’ve consistently misread the district and targeted Congressman Chabot without success.”

DCCC spokesman Ryan Rudominer said: “Obviously, Chabot is losing sleep over Steve Driehaus’s candidacy, and he has reason to.”

Republicans downplay Driehaus’s crossover appeal and note that Chabot won in a district that was more Democratic in the late 1990s. In 2004, after redistricting, Bush won the district by two points.

Chabot told the Cleveland Plain Dealer before last year’s election that the district gradually changes after redistricting until it “is almost unwinnable by the 10th year.”

Coming up on the eighth year of this decade, he told The Hill last week that while “it changes slightly” over time, his comment about the district was referring mostly to last decade.

Driehaus also provides something different as a state legislator. The seat has for decades been held by former members of the Cincinnati City Council — several of whom were also mayors.

Driehaus said serving on the city council can be a mixed bag, because it can provide higher name recognition but might be ill-perceived in the suburbs.

Chabot detailed the long history of council members-turned-Congress members and said any idea that that’s changed is bogus.

“In my mind, it’s just not accurate at all, if one even takes a cursory look at the history of the district,” Chabot said.

National Republican Congressional Committee spokeswoman Julie Shutley said Chabot has proven a strong candidate who delivers for his district.

“Chabot won in what was ground zero for the worst election cycle for Republicans in decades,” Shutley said. “We have every confidence he will be successful in 2008.

http://thehill.com/campaign-2008/democrats-call-driehaus-the-answer-to-dry-spell-against-rep.-steve-chabot-2007-05-17.html
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Padfoot
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« Reply #1 on: May 18, 2007, 04:40:25 AM »

As I think has been pointed out before on this forum, Ohio is very well gerrymandered in favor of the Republicans which is why they only lost one seat last cycle and still had a 11-7 majority in Ohio's House delegation despite losing the statewide congressional vote by 6 points.  As the article points out, Chabot's district has likely been slowly shifting left since it was drawn but I'm still not convinced he will be defeated.  Most of Southwest Ohio is heavily Republican outside of Cincy proper.  Republicans effectively neutralized the Democrats in Cincy by splitting the city between OH-1 and OH-2.
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Mr.Phips
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« Reply #2 on: May 18, 2007, 08:02:59 AM »

I think that 2008 will be the year that Chabot is finally defeated.  The reason is the district is trending more Democratic.  John Kerry came within a couple thousand votes of winning the district while losing the state and if a Democrat carries the state they will almost certainly carry the district.  The other reason is that the district as a 30% and growing black population and they will likely turn out at a higher rate ina Presidential year.
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MarkWarner08
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« Reply #3 on: May 18, 2007, 03:43:36 PM »
« Edited: May 18, 2007, 03:48:23 PM by MarkWarner08 »

I think that 2008 will be the year that Chabot is finally defeated.  The reason is the district is trending more Democratic.  John Kerry came within a couple thousand votes of winning the district while losing the state and if a Democrat carries the state they will almost certainly carry the district.  The other reason is that the district as a 30% and growing black population and they will likely turn out at a higher rate ina Presidential year.

What makes you think this new candidate can do better than John Cranley who ran on a ticket headed by Ted Strickland and Sherrod Brown in a state that hated Bush and the state GOP. This all occured in a year like 2006, in which the DCCC was on the attack and the war in Iraq, Mark Foley, Katrina, corruption and more were dragging down Republican congressmen from Arizona to New Hampshire. Yet, Steve Chabot won by a bigger margin than Pryce and Schmidt combined!
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Padfoot
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« Reply #4 on: May 18, 2007, 10:31:29 PM »

IMO if Chabot is going to go down before the next round of redistricting it will be in 2010 not 2008.  Republicans really did a fantastic job of protecting their own asses and undermining voters in Ohio when they drew up the congressional districts for this decade.

One thing we can hopefully look forward to is more balanced control over the redistricting process.  If Gov. Strickland is re-elected in 2010 Ohio's delegation should be closer to 50-50 in 2012.
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Mr.Phips
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« Reply #5 on: May 18, 2007, 11:14:07 PM »

I think that 2008 will be the year that Chabot is finally defeated.  The reason is the district is trending more Democratic.  John Kerry came within a couple thousand votes of winning the district while losing the state and if a Democrat carries the state they will almost certainly carry the district.  The other reason is that the district as a 30% and growing black population and they will likely turn out at a higher rate ina Presidential year.


What makes you think this new candidate can do better than John Cranley who ran on a ticket headed by Ted Strickland and Sherrod Brown in a state that hated Bush and the state GOP. This all occured in a year like 2006, in which the DCCC was on the attack and the war in Iraq, Mark Foley, Katrina, corruption and more were dragging down Republican congressmen from Arizona to New Hampshire. Yet, Steve Chabot won by a bigger margin than Pryce and Schmidt combined!

John Cranley got a late start and was not looked at by the Democrats as a serious challenger until about September 2006.  With a more serious candidate and an early start, Democrats have a better chance in 2008.
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