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Ohioans Vote Red on National Races

Political science professor sees results as indicative of a state becoming more conservative

Ohio voters were seeing red at the ballot box on Tuesday in choosing Republican candidates for both major national races. 

For the third time, voters supported Republican Donald Trump for president while also sending newcomer Republican Bernie Moreno to the U.S. Senate.

黑料网 political science expert Mark Cassell said that supporting one party in both national races was not a complete surprise.

鈥淲e're still digesting what it means,鈥 said Cassell, professor of political science. 鈥淥hio voted much like the rest of the country. Trump and Republicans down the ballot outperformed 2016 and 2020 across the country, including Ohio. Following Florida鈥檚 lead, Ohio has clearly shifted from purple to red. The failure of Issue 1 and the races all show that like much the country, Ohio as a state has become more conservative.  

鈥淲hat is also interesting, however, is that the election showed that conservatism has changed, that a partisan realignment is occurring.鈥

Kent State students voting

Issue 1 Overwhelmingly Rejected

Ohio voters rejected Issue 1, which would have shifted the responsibility of redrawing congressional and legislative district boundaries from politicians to citizens.

Had it passed, a 15-member citizens redistricting commission would have been created to redraw the maps for Ohio Statehouse seats and U.S. Congressional districts beginning with the 2026 election. That commission would have been comprised of five Republicans, five Democrats and five independents.

Instead, the state鈥檚 current districts, which were drawn by a group of five Republicans and two Democrats, will stay in place.

Emilia Sykes

Sykes Returns to the US House

, who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in psychology from Kent State, was reelected Nov. 5 to the U.S. House of Representatives for Ohio鈥檚 13th Congressional District, which includes the university's Kent and Trumbull campuses and the Twinsburg Academic Center. Sykes, a longtime Akron Democrat, defeated Kevin Coughlin, a Republican who had previously served in the Ohio House of Representatives and the Ohio Senate.

Born and raised in Akron, Sykes was elected to the Ohio House of Representatives to represent her hometown in November 2014. Sykes served in Democratic leadership for four years, holding the positions of assistant whip, minority whip and minority leader. She was then elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2022.

POSTED: Tuesday, November 5, 2024 01:53 PM
Updated: Thursday, November 7, 2024 11:28 AM

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