Election Summary Report EMS Monroe County, Indiana 2008 GENERAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Election Date: 11/4/2008

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Election Summary Report EMS Monroe County, Indiana 2008 GENERAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Election Date: 11/4/2008 11/17/200 12:20:15 Election Summary Report EMS Monroe County, Indiana 2008 GENERAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Election Date: 11/4/2008 M- # OF Machine Ballots 34845 NUMBER OF PRECINCTS: 67 A- # OF Absentee Ballots 28929 # OF PRECINCTS REPORTED: 67 P- # OF Provisional Ballots 166 # OF PRECINCTS NOT REPORTED: 0 PUBLIC COUNT: 63940 # OF PRECINCTS INCOMPLETE: 0 REGISTERED VOTERS: 91532 69.86% - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VOTES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M A P TOTAL % VOTES= 63,387 President And VP Of The US VOTE FOR 1 19882 21446 122 41450 65.39% BARACK OBAMA (D) 14028 7051 39 21118 33.32% JOHN MCCAIN (R) 387 152 2 541 0.85% BOB BARR (L) 187 89 2 278 0.44% WRITE IN VOTES= 60,294 Governor And Lt Governor VOTE FOR 1 13696 16289 41 30026 49.80% JILL LONG THOMPSON (D) 18020 10415 47 28482 47.24% MITCH DANIELS (R) 1157 604 3 1764 2.93% ANDY HORNING (L) 16 6 0 22 0.04% WRITE IN VOTES= 55,908 Attorney General VOTE FOR 1 15785 17954 47 33786 60.43% LINDA PENCE (D) 14467 7618 37 22122 39.57% GREG ZOELLER (R) VOTES= 54,008 Superintendent Of Public Inst VOTE FOR 1 15195 17545 42 32782 60.70% RICHARD D. WOOD (D) 13793 7360 36 21189 39.23% TONY BENNETT (R) 15 22 0 37 0.07% WRITE IN VOTES= 12,082 United States Rep Dist 4 VOTE FOR 1 2965 2428 8 5401 44.70% NELS ACKERSON (D) 4463 2205 7 6675 55.25% STEVE BUYER (R) 2 4 0 6 0.05% WRITE IN VOTES= 47,023 United States Rep Dist 9 VOTE FOR 1 14637 17200 69 31906 67.85% BARON P. HILL (D) 8540 4626 23 13189 28.05% MIKE SODREL (R) 1264 646 4 1914 4.07% D. ERIC SCHANSBERG (L) 7 6 1 14 0.03% WRITE IN VOTES= 2,167 State Senator District 37 VOTE FOR 1 581 429 1 1011 46.65% JOSEPH F. OSBORN (D) 816 337 3 1156 53.35% RICHARD D. BRAY (R) VOTES= 50,868 State Senator District 40 VOTE FOR 1 17539 18871 47 36457 71.67% VI SIMPSON (D) 9360 5029 22 14411 28.33% LESLIE O. COMPTON (R) VOTES= 3,703 State Senator District 44 VOTE FOR 1 986 750 3 1739 46.96% MATTHEW S. COLGLAZIER (D) 1419 543 2 1964 53.04% BRENT STEELE (R) INMONG08 Page 1 of 4 11/17/200 12:20:15 Election Summary Report EMS Monroe County, Indiana 2008 GENERAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Election Date: 11/4/2008 M- # OF Machine Ballots 34845 NUMBER OF PRECINCTS: 67 A- # OF Absentee Ballots 28929 # OF PRECINCTS REPORTED: 67 P- # OF Provisional Ballots 166 # OF PRECINCTS NOT REPORTED: 0 PUBLIC COUNT: 63940 # OF PRECINCTS INCOMPLETE: 0 REGISTERED VOTERS: 91532 69.86% - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VOTES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M A P TOTAL % VOTES= 1,226 State Representative District 46 VOTE FOR 1 445 245 1 691 56.36% VERN TINCHER (D) 396 138 1 535 43.64% BOB HEATON (R) VOTES= 21,871 State Representative District 60 VOTE FOR 1 11839 10004 28 21871 100.00% PEGGY WELCH (D) 0 0 0 0 0.00% NO CANDIDATE (R) VOTES= 21,778 State Representative District 61 VOTE FOR 1 10527 11219 32 21778 100.00% MATT PIERCE (D) 0 0 0 0 0.00% NO CANDIDATE (R) VOTES= 34,115 Judge Of The 10th JCC Seat 5 VOTE FOR 1 0 0 0 0 0.00% NO CANDIDATE (D) 20707 13364 44 34115 100.00% KENNETH G. TODD (R) VOTES= 54,454 Judge Of The 10th JCC Seat 6 VOTE FOR 1 15831 17737 45 33613 61.73% VALERI HAUGHTON (D) 13482 7329 30 20841 38.27% JOBY D. JERRELLS (R) VOTES= 54,905 Judge Of The 10th JCC Seat 9 VOTE FOR 1 13083 15518 36 28637 52.16% ELIZABETH ANN CURE (D) 16461 9767 40 26268 47.84% CHRISTINE TALLEY HASEMAN (R) VOTES= 54,177 County Auditor VOTE FOR 1 13130 15215 35 28380 52.38% AMY GERSTMAN (D) 16105 9654 38 25797 47.62% VIVIEN M. BRIDGES (R) VOTES= 54,713 County Treasurer VOTE FOR 1 13749 16123 37 29909 54.67% CATHY SMITH (D) 15546 9222 36 24804 45.33% BARBARA M. CLARK (R) VOTES= 53,778 County Coroner VOTE FOR 1 15007 16949 42 31998 59.50% JERRY REED (D) 14043 7704 33 21780 40.50% JEFF ELLINGTON (R) VOTES= 52,973 County Surveyor VOTE FOR 1 15589 17111 39 32739 61.80% KEVIN ENRIGHT (D) 12982 7221 31 20234 38.20% STEVEN "VIC" FARKAS (R) INMONG08 Page 2 of 4 11/17/200 12:20:15 Election Summary Report EMS Monroe County, Indiana 2008 GENERAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Election Date: 11/4/2008 M- # OF Machine Ballots 34845 NUMBER OF PRECINCTS: 67 A- # OF Absentee Ballots 28929 # OF PRECINCTS REPORTED: 67 P- # OF Provisional Ballots 166 # OF PRECINCTS NOT REPORTED: 0 PUBLIC COUNT: 63940 # OF PRECINCTS INCOMPLETE: 0 REGISTERED VOTERS: 91532 69.86% - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VOTES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M A P TOTAL % VOTES= 53,358 County Commissioner District 2 VOTE FOR 1 15602 17439 41 33082 62.00% MARK STOOPS (D) 13093 7153 30 20276 38.00% JEFF SCHEMMER (R) VOTES= 54,721 County Commissioner District 3 VOTE FOR 1 15748 17797 38 33583 61.37% IRIS KIESLING (D) 13704 7403 31 21138 38.63% PAT JEFFRIES (R) VOTES= 151,872 County Council At-Large VOTE FOR 3 13661 16089 33 29783 19.61% WARREN HENEGAR (D) 12888 15787 32 28707 18.90% GEOFF MCKIM (D) 14288 16597 33 30918 20.36% JULIE THOMAS (D) 12353 6712 32 19097 12.57% DON FRANCIS (R) 12308 6870 35 19213 12.65% JEFF HUSTON (R) 14923 9197 34 24154 15.90% JOYCE POLING (R) VOTES= 24,485 MCCSC SB District 2 VOTE FOR 1 13340 11120 25 24485 100.00% SUE WANZER VOTES= 30,000 MCCSC SB District 4 VOTE FOR 1 6602 7444 16 14062 46.87% PENNY BUFFIE GITHENS 9244 6682 12 15938 53.13% JIM MUEHLING VOTES= 24,055 MCCSC SB District 5 VOTE FOR 1 12975 11052 28 24055 100.00% JOHN HAMILTON VOTES= 23,559 MCCSC SB District 6 VOTE FOR 1 12518 11014 27 23559 100.00% LOIS SABO-SKELTON VOTES= 5,812 RBB SB Richland District VOTE FOR 1 1779 870 5 2654 45.66% BRAD GOOLDY 2020 1137 1 3158 54.34% DEBRA (DEBBIE) WALCOTT VOTES= 5,824 RBB SB Bean Blossom Dist VOTE FOR 1 1840 1003 5 2848 48.90% TIM ADAMS 1968 1006 2 2976 51.10% JIMMIE DALE DURNIL VOTES= 6,024 RBB School Board At-Large VOTE FOR 1 137 109 2 248 4.12% JAMES BEIMA 1723 843 3 2569 42.65% CHRISTOPHER GOSS 214 123 1 338 5.61% BENTON M. STIDD 1857 1012 0 2869 47.63% LARRY THRASHER INMONG08 Page 3 of 4 11/17/200 12:20:15 Election Summary Report EMS Monroe County, Indiana 2008 GENERAL PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Election Date: 11/4/2008 M- # OF Machine Ballots 34845 NUMBER OF PRECINCTS: 67 A- # OF Absentee Ballots 28929 # OF PRECINCTS REPORTED: 67 P- # OF Provisional Ballots 166 # OF PRECINCTS NOT REPORTED: 0 PUBLIC COUNT: 63940 # OF PRECINCTS INCOMPLETE: 0 REGISTERED VOTERS: 91532 69.86% - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - VOTES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - M A P TOTAL % VOTES= 33,873 IN Sup Court - Shepard VOTE FOR 1 13749 11157 28 24934 73.61% Yes 5200 3727 12 8939 26.39% No VOTES= 32,774 IN Sup Court - Boehm VOTE FOR 1 13320 10561 26 23907 72.95% Yes 5159 3694 14 8867 27.05% No VOTES= 32,450 IN Sup Court - Dickson VOTE FOR 1 13388 10477 26 23891 73.62% Yes 4952 3595 12 8559 26.38% No VOTES= 32,520 IN Court Of App 4th- Darden VOTE FOR 1 13274 10504 26 23804 73.20% Yes 5092 3610 14 8716 26.80% No VOTES= 34,202 IN Tax Court Judge - Fisher VOTE FOR 1 14680 10456 28 25164 73.57% Yes 5405 3621 12 9038 26.43% No VOTES= 15,978 Public Question - Assessor VOTE FOR 1 4995 4969 8 9972 62.41% Yes 3186 2813 7 6006 37.59% No VOTES= 7,110 Public Question - Rbbcsc VOTE FOR 1 1730 957 2 2689 37.82% Yes 2854 1562 5 4421 62.18% No Straight Party Summary Information Democratic Party 7967 Libertarian Party 34 Republican Party 3745 INMONG08 Page 4 of 4.
Recommended publications
  • Interview with Jill Long Thompson, Ph.D
    The Journal of Values-Based Leadership Volume 13 Issue 2 Summer/Fall 2020 Article 22 July 2020 Interview with Jill Long Thompson, Ph.D. Elizabeth Gingerich [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/jvbl Part of the Business Commons Recommended Citation Gingerich, Elizabeth (2020) "Interview with Jill Long Thompson, Ph.D.," The Journal of Values-Based Leadership: Vol. 13 : Iss. 2 , Article 22. Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.22543/0733.132.1338 Available at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/jvbl/vol13/iss2/22 This Interview is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Business at ValpoScholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Journal of Values-Based Leadership by an authorized administrator of ValpoScholar. For more information, please contact a ValpoScholar staff member at [email protected]. Interview and Discussion JILL LONG THOMPSON June 9, 2020 Argos, Indiana, USA ― by Elizabeth F. R. Gingerich Q: Firstly, congratulations on your new book, The Character of American Democracy. Is this your first? This is my first book. I have done quite a bit of writing in my work in academia and public service, but this is my first and I think my last book. Q: Why your last? 1 It’s tiring. Q: When did you begin writing? As I recall, I started this in 2017 and I think I finished it in the late fall of 2018. Q: Actually, that didn’t take long! It seemed like it! Q: What was the precipitating factor that motivated you to write this book? Well, I have always felt that professional ethics are integrally tied to democracy and I also believe to a strong capitalist economy.
    [Show full text]
  • How Bosma Created His Power Base in His Farewell, He Urged Colleagues to Think a Decade in Advance, Which Is What He Did in 2010 by BRIAN A
    V25, N25 Thursday, March 12, 2020 How Bosma created his power base In his farewell, he urged colleagues to think a decade in advance, which is what he did in 2010 By BRIAN A. HOWEY INDIANAPOLIS – Speaking in the well of the Indiana House just after he had passed the gavel to Speaker Todd Huston, Brian Bosma reflected on one of the key elements of his record tenure. “We have to have a long-term vision here,” Bosma said at the end of a historic 12 years as speaker, including the last 10. “We each need to think a decade away.” He was speaking from experi- ence. While Republicans have held the Indiana Senate for all but two years House Minority Leader Brian Bosma on Election Night 2010, when the GOP recaptured (1974-76) in the past half century, the the Indiana House, igniting the reforms of Gov. Mitch Daniels. Indiana House had swung back and forth speaker for an unprecedented decade. between Republicans and Democrats regularly (along with His first stint as speaker lasted a mere two years, two 50/50 splits), until 2010. Bosma was instrumental in Continued on page 3 the creation of the super majority House, and he held it as Trumpian whiplash By BRIAN A. HOWEY INDIANAPOLIS — This has become the whiplash era of American politics. The punditry class was chastened in 2016. Howey Politics Indiana put out a “blue tsunami warning” that “I think there’s a good chance June, only to see it swing wildly the other way resulting in Donald Trump’s stunning upset of Hillary Clinton.
    [Show full text]
  • A Debate About Bush's War and the 2006 Impact
    V 12, No 14 Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2005 A debate about Bush’s war and the 2006 impact ‘It will end in a way and at an hour of our choosing’ “This session will be so By BRIAN A. HOWEY in Indianapolis political. A real tax Last week, the National Capital Memorial Advisory Commission announced it had chosen a prominent National Mall site for the memorial to President Dwight D. package won’t make it Eisenhower, which was a bit of obscure news given the swirl of controversy over the until next year.” War in Iraq. Eisenhower is poised to join on the mall a pantheon of great American –– State Sen. Allen presidents: Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and FDR. President Eisenhower resisted plunging the United States into war. He had Paul, to the Muncie Star Press opportunities at the Suez Canal, Hungary and Vietnam. He knew war, having served in the Army infantry and, in 1918 during World War I, engaged in battle in the tank corps. As supreme Allied commander in 1944, he was responsible for sending 47 divisions, 6,900 ships and more than a million men into battle, supplying them with 9,000 tons of supplies every day. As Wikipedia notes, “The Normandy invasion succeeded in its objective by sheer force The Howey Political Report is published of numbers.” by NewsLink Inc. It was founded in 1994. On Sept. 14, 2001, it appeared Brian A. Howey, Publisher that President George W. Bush had a shot Mark Schoeff Jr., Washington Writer at becoming a great American president. Jack E.
    [Show full text]
  • To Download This Handout As an Adobe Acrobat
    AEI Election Watch 2006 October 11, 2006 Bush’s Ratings Congress’s Ratings Approve Disapprove Approve Disapprove CNN/ORC Oct. 6-8 39 56 CNN/ORC Oct. 6-8 28 63 Gallup/USAT Oct. 6-8 37 59 Gallup/USAT Oct. 6-8 24 68 ABC/WP Oct. 5-8 39 60 ABC/WP Oct. 5-8 32 66 CBS/NYT Oct. 5-8 34 60 CBS/NYT Oct. 5-8 27 64 Newsweek Oct. 5-6 33 59 Time/SRBI Oct. 3-4 31 57 Time/SRBI Oct. 3-4 36 57 AP/Ipsos Oct. 2-4 27 69 AP/Ipsos Oct. 2-4 38 59 Diag.-Hotline Sep. 24-26 28 65 PSRA/Pew Sep. 21-Oct. 4 37 53 LAT/Bloom Sep. 16-19 30 57 NBC/WSJ Sep. 30-Oct. 2 39 56 Fox/OD Sep. 12-13 29 53 Fox/OD Sep. 26-27 42 54 NBC/WSJ (RV) Sep. 8-11 20 65 Diag-Hotline Sep. 24-26 42 56 LAT/Bloom Sep. 16-19 45 52 Final October approval rating for the president and Final October approval rating for Congress and number of House seats won/lost by the president’s number of House seats won/lost by the president’s party party Gallup/CNN/USA Today Gallup/CNN/USA Today Number Number Approve of seats Approve of seats Oct. 2002 67 +8 Oct. 2002 50 +8 Oct. 1998 65 +5 Oct. 1998 44 +5 Oct. 1994 48 -52 Oct. 1994 23 -52 Oct. 1990 48 -9 Oct. 1990 24 -9 Oct. 1986 62 -5 Apr.
    [Show full text]
  • Summer/Fall 2020 Article 1
    The Journal of Values-Based Leadership Volume 13 Issue 2 Summer/Fall 2020 Article 1 July 2020 Summer/Fall 2020 Follow this and additional works at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/jvbl Part of the Business Commons Recommended Citation (2020) "Summer/Fall 2020," The Journal of Values-Based Leadership: Vol. 13 : Iss. 2 , Article 1. Available at: https://scholar.valpo.edu/jvbl/vol13/iss2/1 This Full Issue is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Business at ValpoScholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Journal of Values-Based Leadership by an authorized administrator of ValpoScholar. For more information, please contact a ValpoScholar staff member at [email protected]. Volume XIII | Issue II | Summer/Fall 2020 • Special Feature Leadership in the Time of COVID-19: Reflections from around the World • Rome, Italy The Coronavirus: A Personal View from the Eternal City Emilio Iodice — Rome, Italy • New York City Welcome to New York City, COVID-19 Capital of the World Linda Weiser & Hershey H. Friedman — Brooklyn, New York, USA • Norway Leadership in times of crisis: Who is working on a dream? Tom Karp — Oslo, Norway • Australia The Coronavirus Pandemic Supports the Case for Benevolent Authoritarian Leadership Mark Manolopoulos — Melbourne, Australia • Mexico Water in the Time of Coronavirus Dylan Terrell — San Miguel de Allende, Mexico • Los Angeles The City of Angels/COVID California’s Center-Stage County Olivia N.R. Leyva — Pasadena, California, USA • India A State of Responsiveness Amid Crisis – Learnings from India Vijaya Sunder M — Hyderabad, India ALSO IN THIS ISSUE: Editorial Comments Case Studies • An Explication of Our Collective Moral Consciousness • A Leadership Test Like Few Others Joseph Hester — Claremont, North Carolina, USA Ritch K.
    [Show full text]
  • Cnnctn 070102 for PDF.Indd
    envisioning dear members Comments on this issue? Ideas for future issues of Connection? Let us hear from you! [email protected] ��������� In the breathless excitement ���������������������������������������� of post-election possibilities, NETWORK—a Catholic leader we are gearing up for the in the global movement 110th Congress. We are NOTE TO ALL MEMBERS: for justice and peace— holding out hope that it will, educates, organizes and in deed and not just word, Be sure to vote for two new members lobbies for economic and social transformation. be a bipartisan effort to solve for NETWORK’s Board of Directors. the problems of economic NETWORK Board of Directors Elizabeth Avalos, BVM Barbara Lange injustice in our federal Ballots can be found on the back page and Marie Clarke Brill Marie Lucey, OSF policies. Simone Campbell, SSS Lourdes Mendoza must be postmarked by March 15. Joan Carey, SSJ Kateri Mitchell, SSA We are also working to Cathleen Crayton Suzanne Sassus, CSJ Patricia Crowley, OSB Aisha Smith Taylor bolster our hope with more Jackie Griffith, SSJ Sandra Thibodeux, MMB determined and effective Linda Howell-Perrin, LSW Mary T. Yelenick action. More than ever, your Barbara Jennings, CSJ advocacy will be important NETWORK Education Program Board of Directors to ensure that the change Kit Hinga, SSJ called for by voters comes Contents Dorothy Jackson, SCN to pass. Therefore, you will Kathleen Phelan, OP Margaret Phipps notice a new look to our envisioning Mary Ann Smith, MM Web site. We are always Redirection NETWORK Staff working to make it more 3 Communications Coordinator/Editor— Simone Campbell, SSS, explores the electorate’s user-friendly and informa- hunger for change—and NETWORK’s response.
    [Show full text]
  • Chamber Goes to Washington
    Chamber Goes to Washington By Rebecca Patrick ore than 75 of the state’s business leaders converged on the nation’s capital to talk federal policy with their congressional representatives at the Indiana Chamber’s annual D.C. Fly-in. At a time when Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, Supreme Court nominations and appropriations bills were capturing the bulk of Congress’ attention, the Chamber’s contingent emphasized the business concerns that can’t afford to Mget lost in the shuffle. Topping that list are asbestos litigation reform, permanent repeal of the estate tax and Social Security/pension reform. The featured segment of the two-day event was the roundtable discussion moderated by Gerry Dick of Inside INdiana Business. Six House members (Pete Visclosky, Chris Chocola, Mark Souder, Mike Pence, Julia Carson and Mike Sodrel) and Sen. Richard Lugar participated. Following several floor votes, representatives Steve Buyer and Dan Burton joined the group at dinner. Day two kicked off with briefings by Al Hubbard, assistant to the president for economic policy and director of the National Economic Council, and Dan Coats, former U.S. senator from Indiana who later served as U.S. ambassador to Germany. Capping the proceedings were visits to the congressional offices – highlighted by a discussion with Sen. Evan Bayh and his policy staff. Rolls-Royce North America was the event’s dinner sponsor, with additional sponsorship from the Build Indiana Council, Clarian Health Partners, Inc., Dow AgroSciences, Indiana Statewide Assn./REMC, Indianapolis Power & Light Company and Ogletree Deakins. Below are highlights from the roundtable discussion: The Chamber takes Indiana business leaders to Washington each September to discuss key Prospects of asbestos litigation reform this year federal issues.
    [Show full text]
  • Politics Indiana
    Politics Indiana V14 N44 Tuesday, June 24, 2008 JLT labors under the unity facade UAW, Schellinger don’t join Jill’s Convention confab By RYAN NEES INDIANAPOLIS - Jill Long Thompson has work still to do with the party faithful, who at the state convention Saturday appeared more swept by the candidacy of Barack Obama and even the muted appearances by the Hoosier Congressional delegation than of Indiana’s first female gubernato- rial nominee. And behind the scenes, the machinery of the Democratic establishment still appears to be exacting upon her nothing short of malicious ven- geance. The candidate was met with polite ap- plause as she toured district and interest group caucus meetings, but skepticism persisted especially amongst the roughly half of the party that supported her opponent in Indiana’s May primary. That unease was punctuated dramatically by the UAW’s refusal to endorse her candidacy the morning of the conven- tion, a move that appeared designed to rain on the nominee’s parade. Jill Long Thompson listens to her brother talk about her life and candidacy The UAW’s support provided vital to archi- just prior to taking the stage Saturday at the Indiana Democratic Conven- tect Jim Schellinger’s primary tion. (HPI Photo by Brian A. Howey) campaign, which received See Page 4 Back home again with Jill By BRIAN A. HOWEY NASHVILLE, Ind. - In the Hoosier brand of guber- natorial politics, home is where the heart is. We remember Frank O’Bannon talking about his “wired” barn down near Corydon. In January 2005, Mitch Daniels talked about an “These days many politicians Amish-style barn raising.
    [Show full text]
  • 435 HOUSE RACES 2006 Pres ’04 House ’04 DISTRICT DEMOCRAT REPUBLICAN STATUS K B D R
    435 HOUSE RACES 2006 Pres ’04 House ’04 DISTRICT DEMOCRAT REPUBLICAN STATUS K B D R THE HOUSE BREAKDOWN: 435 Districts: 202 Democratic, 232 Republican, 1 Independent, 2 vacancies: NJ-13 (D), TX-22 (R) ALABAMA THE BREAKDOWN: 7 Districts. Current lineup: 2 Democratic, 5 Republican CD-1 Southeastern Corner: Vivian Sheffield Beckerle JO BONNER 35% 64% 37% 63% SAFE REPUBLICAN Mobile Attorney Elected in 2002 CD-2 Southeastern: Part of Chuck James TERRY EVERETT 33% 67% 28% 71% SAFE REPUBLICAN Montgomery Professor Elected in 1992 CD-3 Eastern: Anniston, Greg Pierce MIKE ROGERS 41% 58% 39% 61% SAFE REPUBLICAN Auburn Fmr Army Sgt Elected in 2004 CD-4 North Central: Gadsden, Barbara Bobo ROBERT ADERHOLT 28% 71% 75% 25% SAFE REPUBLICAN Jasper Newspaper Publisher Elected in 1996 CD-5 Northern border: Huntsville BUD CRAMER No Republican Candidate 39% 60% 25% 73% SAFE DEMOCRAT Elected in 1990 CD-6 Central: Part of Birmingham No Democratic Candidate SPENCER BACHUS 22% 78% 1% 99% SAFE REPUBLICAN Elected in 1992 CD-7 Western: Parts of Birmingh. & ARTUR DAVIS No Republican Candidate 64% 35% 75% 25% SAFE DEMOCRAT Montgomery Elected in 2002 ALASKA THE BREAKDOWN: 1 District. Current lineup: 0 Democratic, 1 Republican CD-1 Entire State Diane Benson DON YOUNG (R) 36% 61% 22% 71% SAFE REPUBLICAN Author Elected in 1973 . 1 435 HOUSE RACES 2006 Pres ’04 House ’04 DISTRICT DEMOCRAT REPUBLICAN STATUS K B D R ARIZONA THE BREAKDOWN: 8 Districts. Current lineup: 2 Democratic, 6 Republican (1 Open seat: Republican) CD-1 Northern & Eastern borders: Ellen Simon RICK RENZI 46% 54% 36% 59% COMPETITIVE Flagstaff Attorney Elected in 2002 CD-2 Western border, Phoenix John Thrasher TRENT FRANKS 38% 61% 39% 59% SAFE REPUBLICAN suburbs: Lake Havasu Retired Teacher Elected in 2002 CD-3 Central, Phoenix suburbs: TBD (race too close to call) JOHN SHADEGG 41% 58% 20% 80% SAFE REPUBLICAN Paradise Valley Primary 9/12 Elected in 1994 CD-4 Central: Phoenix ED PASTOR Don Karg 62% 38% 70% 26% SAFE DEMOCRAT Elected in 1994 Management in Aerospace CD-5 Central: Tempe, Scottsdale Harry Mitchell J.D.
    [Show full text]
  • Aa006392.Pdf (11.83Mb)
    Inside: Message from the National Commander page 2 “MAKE FLAB PROTECTION AN ISSUE" National Adjutant’s column pages “A MEMORIAL FOR EVERYONE” Where candidates stand on flag protection page a Dateline: Capitol Hill page 7 “BUDGET PROCESS BADL Y LAGGING; VA APPROPRIA TIONS WILL SUFFER” A National Headquarters Publication Legion, VSOs support mandatory VA funding pages October 11,2002 Vol. 12, No. 4 Up & Coming: OCTOBER National Disability/Employment Awareness Month A matter of life or death 16 - Notification of Child Welfare Foundation Grant Commander outlines The American Legion's vision for VA. recipients for 2003 25-27 - National Americanism Conference in Indianapolis By James V. Carroll Contributing Editor 25-27 - Auxiliary Department Chaplains and Girls State Directors Conference in Indianapolis Thousands of veterans may die waiting for VA NOVEMBER health care if new and innovative sources of income 3-8 - Legion College in Indianapolis are not found, American Legion National 5 - Election Day Commander Ronald F. Conley told a joint session of House and Senate Veterans' Affairs committees on 11 - Veterans Day Capitol Hill in September. 6-9 - Auxiliary Presidents and Secretaries Conference in "There are 7 million veterans either enrolled or Indianapolis waiting to enroll to make VA their primary health¬ 17-23 - American Education Week care provider," Conley said. "But in order for the 24-30- National Family Week growing number of veterans to access VA health 28 - Holiday Donor Blood Drive begins care, additional revenue streams must be generated 28 - Thanksgiving to supplement - not offset - annual discretionary DECEMBER appropriations." To provide every veteran his or her promised 1-31 - Holiday Donor Blood Drive care, VA must become a needs-driven health-care 7 - Pearl Harbor Day operation and abandon its current budget-driven 15-Bill of Rights Day system, Conley said.
    [Show full text]
  • The Marriage Debate Heads for GOP Platform Fight, Treasurers Race to Headline Convention by BRIAN A
    V19, N36 Tuesday, June 3, 2014 The marriage debate heads for GOP Platform fight, treasurers race to headline convention By BRIAN A. HOWEY NASHVILLE, Ind. – Sometime be- tween 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. this Saturday in Fort Wayne, the Indiana Republicans will chart a course that could impact their position as Indi- ana’s super majority party. The supposed 1,775 delegates (not all will show up) will make a determination on whether the party’s 2014 platform addresses the constitutional marriage amendment, and it will choose a state treasurer nominee who could expose the various fissures – Tea Party, establishment, money wings – of the party. Terre Haute attorney Jim Bopp Jr., who lost his Republican National Committee seat While the treasurer floor fight among in 2012 after proposing a party litmus test, is pushing the marriage platform plank. Marion Mayor Wayne Seybold, Don Bates Jr., and Kelly Mitchell has been the long-anticipated nor Democrats took a platform stance on the marriage is- event for the Indiana Republican Convention, it is the plat- sue. form, normally an obscure, rote exercise that rarely influ- The Republican platform committee did not take ences voters, that could define Hoosier Republicans for the next several years. In 2012, neither Indiana Republicans Continued on page 3 A doozy of a convention By CRAIG DUNN KOKOMO – The Indiana Republican State Conven- tion, June 6-7 in Fort Wayne, is shaping up to be quite an event, promising to change this sleepy little election year into a good old-fashioned Hoosier barnburner. In a phenomenon that “It seems the governor has been happens every 12 years, the election ticket will be headed by everywhere of late but Indiana.” the secretary of state race this - John Gregg, speaking year.
    [Show full text]
  • The Howey Political Report Is Published by Newslink Tive Congressional Races on Our Landscape: 2Nd CD Between Inc
    Monday, July 1, 2002 ! Volume 8, Number 39 Page 1 of 8 Setting the stage for The Indiana’s CD races Howey !"##$%&'()&*(+,%&'-./,&%0-1%.#%)&2%)%& By BRIAN A. HOWEY in Indianapolis Tax restructuring and deficit reduction and cigarettes and dockside and the old Dog Doctor and Speaker Bauer and Political blah, blah, blah, and ... ... now for something completely different. Like that other huge Hoosier political story of 2002: Report Our role as epicenter for control of the U.S. House of Representatives. HPR sees three, and possibly four, competi- The Howey Political Report is published by NewsLink tive Congressional races on our landscape: 2nd CD between Inc. Founded in 1994, The Howey Political Report is Democrat Jill Long Thompson and Republican Chris an independent, non-partisan newsletter analyzing the Chocola; 6th CD between U.S. Rep. Mike Pence and political process in Indiana. Democrat Melina Ann Fox; 7th CD where Republican Brose Brian A. Howey, publisher McVey is showing a tenacious streak against U.S. Rep. Julia Mark Schoeff Jr., Washington writer Carson; and the 9th CD where Republican Mike Sodrel is Jack E. Howey, editor expected to press U.S. Rep. Baron Hill. HPR views the Thompson-Chocola race as a pure The Howey Political Report Office: 317-968-0486 tossup. Currently, Reps. Hill and Carson are in the “Leans PO Box 40265 Fax: 317-968-0487 Indianapolis, IN 46240-0265 Mobile: 317-506-0883 D” range and Pence is in a “Leans R” status and of the lot, Pence may be in the best position of incumbents ... for now.
    [Show full text]