Wednesday, October 15, 2008

The Boston Globe Calls Ohio for McCain

Even as they "enthusiastically" endorse him -- and rip their Repuglican champion.

"Anxiety shadows even economic 'oasis'; GM still buoys Lordstown, but horizon unclear" by Scott Helman, Globe Staff | October 14, 2008

First in a series on how voters in key Ohio communities see the 2008 race.

LORDSTOWN, Ohio - Here, where nearly 5,000 workers produce truckload after truckload of Chevrolet Cobalts and Pontiac G5s, the work keeps growing, and with it hope that US automakers can compete in a radically reshaped global economy. GM, betting on a long-term appetite for fuel efficiency, is preparing its Lordstown plant for the 2010 rollout of the Chevy Cruze, a sleek compact designed to get more than 40 miles per gallon.

"It feels like we're an oasis in the desert," Dave Green, president of a United Auto Workers chapter representing workers at the facility, told us outside the local union hall.

In this environment, the stakes in the presidential election feel somewhat different than they do elsewhere across the industrial Midwest, where voters are seeing their factories close, health insurance evaporate, and livelihoods threatened. That is not to say that there is widespread contentment in Lordstown, because there's not. But interviews with voters suggest less of an urgency about picking a candidate based solely on his ability to solve the country's economic woes.

But the Globe goes to the ONE PLACE where the sentiment is the OPPOSITE! Pfft.

In the first stop of a weeklong trip through our native Ohio to hear from voters, Globe photographer Dina Rudick and I sat down to lunch at A.J.'s Country Cafe and talked with Jason Lehman, a 29-year-old who works for a staffing company that contracts with General Motors. He said he was drawn to Republican John McCain.

At another table, Shirley Albanese, who works for a steel company, told us that she voted for President Bush twice, but that she's with Obama.

Shawn Ellwood, a music deejay from Niles, Ohio, was buying a Weedwacker at Sears with his son. He said Obama's promise of change drew him in - on the economy, yes, but largely on the Iraq war. "I don't believe we should have even been in Iraq," he said.

But Kerry Roberts, a 57-year-old from Leavittsburg, Ohio, ruled Obama out when she learned about his two-decade-long membership in the Chicago church of the Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr. She's solidly behind McCain.

"Everything's going to the . . . " said Sandra Stargell, a 61-year-old from Warren, Ohio, who works for General Electric, her voice trailing off as I told her we couldn't print obscenities in the newspaper. But is Obama the one who can fix it? "I know McCain's not," she said. "He thinks the same way Bush does."

Even in Lordstown, the past several weeks of economic turmoil have stirred anxieties: rumors of layoffs, fears of a sudden change in course by GM, worries that the credit crunch - which has restricted consumers' ability to get car loans - will severely depress new car sales.

"Just in the last three weeks, you hear concern out in the parking lot, in the plant," said Rich Austin, a 66-year-old from Cortland, Ohio, who works for the GM staffing contractor. "A lot of that uncertainty has come back."

Surrounding Trumbull County voted Democratic in the past two presidential elections, but it is clear many voters here would have preferred Hillary Clinton, who crushed Obama in the primary in the county. Green, who is organizing on Obama's behalf, has heard a litany of personal objections to Obama - "I just don't like him" and "I just don't trust him" and "there's just something about him I don't like" - owing to Obama's foreign-sounding name, his race, and his young age. --more--"

Adjust your map accordingly, readers.

Also see: Rapid growth of exurbs alters the equation