Who Is Running for House of Representatives in Ohio
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On March 10, 2021, Marcia Fudge resigned her seat in the U.s.a. House of Representatives after being confirmed past the United States Senate to serve as the Secretary of Housing and Urban Evolution in the Biden administration. Governor Mike DeWine set the primary date for August iii, concurrent with the special election in Ohio's 15th congressional commune.[1] [2] The general election was on November 2.
Democratic primary [edit]
By early Jan 2021, former state senator Nina Turner, Cuyahoga County Council member Shontel Brown, and former Cleveland City Quango fellow member Jeff Johnson had all announced their candidacies. Turner has been perceived every bit the progressive candidate in the race, while Brown is considered a moderate.[3] Johnson portrays himself as ideologically between the other two.[3]
By mid-Feb 2021, former country senator Shirley Smith and former state representative John E. Barnes Jr. had entered the primary. Turner and Brown were considered the front-runners at this point, with Turner having raised $650,000 to Brown'due south $forty,000.[4] Upon entering the race, Smith attacked Turner for her ties to left-wing activist groups and Brownish for her ties to the Cuyahoga Canton "motorcar", while Barnes touted his legislative experience.[5] On February 19, The Plain Dealer and Cleveland.com Editorial Team called on Dark-brown to resign as Cuyahoga County Democratic Party chair in order to avoid conflicts of interest, and to "restart the procedure of amassing local endorsements from scratch" as a candidate and not a "powerful local chair."[6]
By the time the U.s.a. Senate confirmed Fudge as HUD secretary, two more candidates had entered the race: Bryan Flannery, a old state representative, and Tariq Shabazz, who ran in the Autonomous primary for OH-11 in 2020.[7] The candidates in the Autonomous chief have a noted geographical separate. The 11th district, which is heavily gerrymandered, is dissever roughly evenly between Cuyahoga and Pinnacle Counties. Nonetheless, 6 of the seven major candidates were from Cuyahoga County, Flannery existence the only exception.[vii] Flannery withdrew from the race in early May, citing family unit bug.[viii]
By mid-June, Seth Richardson of The Patently Dealer considered Turner the sole front-runner, every bit expected support for Brown's entrada had not materialized.[ix] Turner has often been called the "frontrunner" in local and national media.[10] In late June, several senior and more than moderate Democrats publicly announced their back up for Chocolate-brown; these endorsements were noted as resulting in large fundraising hauls for Turner,[xi] but they acquired Dark-brown to rising substantially in the polls, though her fundraising totals remained behind Turner's.[12] In July, Brown was referred to the Ohio Ethics Commission over allegations made in an article in The Intercept that she had used her influence to award government contracts to entrada donors.[thirteen] It has been revealed that Brown faked the endorsement of Garfield Heights Councilman Michael Dudley, who actually endorsed Turner.[14]
In the days leading up to the special election, many national figures came to last-infinitesimal campaign events. Figures such as House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn campaigned for Brown, while figures such as Senator Bernie Sanders, a 2022 and 2022 contender for the Democratic nomination for president of the Us, campaigned for Turner.[fifteen]
David Weigel of The Washington Postal service said Brown's campaign was trying to make the special election "a referendum on supporting the Biden administration" but that Brown's lack of substance on what she would do in Congress "has become a sticking point in the primary".[16] Due to the fragmented nature of the field, it was considered unlikely that whatever candidate would get 50% of the vote, which resulted in heavy campaigning in Summit County, habitation to Akron, as the traditionally overlooked pool of voters there were considered a potential swing gene.[17]
Brown won the primary on August 3 with 50% of the vote to Turner's 45%. In her concession spoken communication, Turner attributed her loss to "evil coin", referencing Super PAC spending.[18]
Leave polls showed that Brown won some of the areas with a college proportion of Black and Jewish voters while Turner won some with more white voters, a minority in the district. In general, Brown fared improve in wealthier areas, while Turner won more with below-average incomes. Brown won more areas in the suburbs, while Turner won more in the city of Cleveland. A printing release from the Brown campaign says that their internal polling also showed that Turner'due south loss could be attributed in part to her comparing of voting for and then-candidate Joe Biden to "eating half a bowl of shit".[19]
Campaign financing [edit]
Past mid-February 2021, Turner had raised $650,000 to Dark-brown'due south $40,000.[4] Final direct entrada donations in August totaled $ii.1 million for Brown and $4.5 million for Turner, co-ordinate to FEC filings. No other candidate raised more $60,000.[20]
By July, the Democratic Bulk for Israel PAC had contributed over $660,000 in advertising attacking Turner and supporting Brown,[21] a figure that rose to over $2 million past the end of the primary,[22] $1 million of which was for television advertisements.[23] The Jewish Democratic Council of America spent five figures targeting Jewish voters in back up of Brown.[24] Equally of late July, the Working Families Party pledged to spend at to the lowest degree $150,000 for Turner via its Super PAC.[25] By the terminate of the campaign, outside advertizement spending supporting Turner or opposing Brown totaled $900,000 and outside ad spending supporting Brown or opposing Turner totaled $2.9 million.[26]
Candidates [edit]
Nominee [edit]
- Shontel Chocolate-brown, Cuyahoga Canton Council member (2015–present), Chair of the Cuyahoga County Autonomous Party[27]
Eliminated in primary [edit]
- John E. Barnes Jr., former country representative for the 12th district (1999–2002, 2011–2018)[28]
- Jeff Johnson, former state senator for the 10th commune (1990–1998), quondam Cleveland City Council member (1984–1990, 2014–2018), candidate for Mayor of Cleveland in 2017[27]
- Tariq Shabazz, U.S. Navy veteran, candidate for OH-eleven in 2020[ix] [29]
- Shirley Smith, former state senator for the 21st district (2007–2014), former Assistant Minority Leader of the Ohio Senate (2008–2014), old state representative for the eighth district (1999–2003) and the tenth district (2003–2006)[27]
- Nina Turner, president of Our Revolution (2017–nowadays), sometime state senator for the 25th district (2008–2014), sometime Minority Whip of the Ohio Senate (2013–2015), old Cleveland Metropolis Councillor (2006–2008), national co-chair of the 2022 and 2022 Bernie Sanders presidential campaigns, nominee for Ohio Secretary of State in 2014[thirty]
Other alleged candidates [edit]
- Martin Alexander, lawyer[31] [32]
- James Jerome Bong, writer and perennial candidate[viii]
- Seth J. Corey, oncologist[33]
- Will Knight, businessman[8]
- Pamela Pinkney, preacher[8]
- Isaac Powell, former city council candidate[eight]
- Lateek Shabazz, businessman and instructor[34] [31]
- Reece Wright-McDonald, Reform Party candidate[8]
Withdrawn [edit]
- Bryan Flannery, erstwhile state representative for the 17th district (1999–2002) and candidate for governor of Ohio in 2006[35]
Declined [edit]
- Blaine Griffin, Cleveland Urban center Quango member for Ward 6[27] (endorsed Turner)[36]
- Stephanie Howse, state representative[37] (endorsed Turner)[38]
- Sandra Williams, state senator[27] (endorsed Turner)[39]
Debates [edit]
| 2021 Ohio'southward 11th congressional district autonomous primary debates | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Date & Fourth dimension | Host | Moderator | Link | Participants | ||||||||||
| Key: P Participant A Absent-minded Northward Not-invitee W Withdrawn | |||||||||||||||
| John E. Barnes Jr. | Shontel Brown | Jeff Johnson | Tariq Shabazz | Shirley Smith | Nina Turner | Others | |||||||||
| 1[40] | May 23, 2021 | East Cleveland Public Library | Wayne Dawson Brandon Male monarch Korean Stevenson | Video | P | A [a] | P | P | P | A | Bell Pinkney | ||||
| 2[41] | June 22, 2021 | City Social club of Cleveland | M.L. Schultze | Video | P | P | P | P | P | P | Corey Knight | ||||
Endorsements [edit]
Shontel Dark-brown
- Executive officials
- Hillary Clinton, 67th United states of america Secretary of State (2009–2013), U.S. Senator from New York (2001–2009), Commencement Lady of the United States (1993–2001), 2022 Democratic nominee for president of the The states[42]
- U.Due south. Representatives
- Pete Aguilar, U.S. Representative from CA-31 (2015–nowadays), Vice Chair of the Firm Democratic Caucus (2021–present)[43]
- Joyce Beatty, U.S. Representative from OH-03 (2013–present), Chair of the Congressional Black Conclave (2021–present)[44]
- Troy Carter, U.S. Representative from LA-02 (2021–present)[45]
- Jim Clyburn, U.S. Representative from SC-06 (1993–nowadays), Firm Bulk Whip (2019–present)[46]
- Ted Deutch, U.S. Representative from FL-22 (2011–present)[47]
- Josh Gottheimer, U.S. Representative from NJ-05 (2017–nowadays)[46]
- Ron Klein, former U.S. Representative from FL-22 (2007–2011)[48]
- Gregory Meeks, U.Due south. Representative from NY-05 (2013–present)[49]
- Stacey Plaskett, Delegate to the The states Business firm of Representatives from the U.S. Virgin Islands (2015–present)[50]
- Brad Schneider, U.Due south. Representative from IL-10 (2017–present)[47]
- Bennie Thompson, U.S. Representative from MS-02 (1993–present)[51]
- David Trone, U.S. Representative from MD-06 (2019–nowadays)[46]
- Marc Veasey, U.South. Representative from TX-33[45]
- Statewide officials
- Richard Cordray, director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (2012–2017); Ohio Attorney General (2009–2011); Ohio Land Treasurer (2007–2009)[44]
- Ted Strickland, one-time Governor of Ohio (2007–2011)[52]
- Country legislators
- Kent Smith, Ohio State Representative from District eight (2015–present)[53]
- Terrence Upchurch, Ohio State Representative from District 10 (2019–present)[53]
- Casey Weinstein, Ohio Land Representative from District 37 (2019–present)[54]
- Local officials
- Armond Budish, Cuyahoga County Executive (2015–nowadays)[44]
- Dan Horrigan, mayor of Akron, Ohio (2016–present)[44]
- Don Plusquellic, former mayor of Akron, Ohio (1987–2015)[43]
- Bill Stonemason, former Cuyahoga County Prosecutor[55]
- Brad Sellers, mayor of Warrensville Heights, Ohio[56]
- Labor unions
- American Federation of Teachers / Ohio Federation of Teachers[57]
- Boilermakers Local 744[43]
- International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 38[43]
- International Association of Sheet Metallic, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers[53]
- Bricklayers Local 5[56]
- International Wedlock of Painters and Allied Trades[53]
- National Clan of Alphabetic character Carriers Ohio Land Chapter[58]
- Laborers Local 130[43]
- Pipe Fitters Local xx[43]
- Teamsters Local 436[59]
- UAW Regional 2B[sixty]
- Organizations
- Congressional Blackness Caucus PAC[61]
- Democratic Bulk for State of israel[62]
- Jewish Democratic Council of America[63]
- New Democrat Coalition Activity Fund[64]
- Pro-Israel America[4]
- Notable individuals
- Yvette Nicole Brownish, extra[54]
Bryan Flannery (withdrawn)
Nina Turner
- Executive officials
- Robert Reich, United States Secretary of Labor (1993–1997)[66]
- U.Due south. Senators
- Ed Markey, U.S. Senator from Massachusetts (2013–present)[67]
- Bernie Sanders, U.S. Senator from Vermont (2007–present) and candidate for president in 2022 and 2020[68]
- U.S. Representatives
- Jamaal Bowman, U.S. Representative from NY-xvi (2021–present)[66]
- Cori Bush, U.S. Representative from MO-01 (2021–present)[69]
- Pramila Jayapal, U.S. Representative from WA-07 (2017–present), Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (2019–present)[lxx]
- Mondaire Jones, U.S. Representative from NY-17 (2021–nowadays)[71]
- Ro Khanna, U.S. Representative from CA-17 (2017–nowadays)[69]
- Andy Levin, U.S. Representative from MI-09 (2019–nowadays)[44]
- Ted Lieu, U.South. Representative from CA-33 (2015–nowadays)[72]
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, U.S. Representative from NY-14 (2019–nowadays)[73]
- Ilhan Omar, U.Southward. Representative from MN-05 (2019–nowadays)[74]
- Mark Pocan, U.Due south. Representative from WI-02 (2013–present)[75]
- Katie Porter, U.Due south. Representative from CA-45 (2019–present)[76]
- Ayanna Pressley, U.S. Representative from MA-07 (2019–nowadays)[77]
- Jamie Raskin, U.S. Representative from MD-08 (2017–nowadays)[78]
- Rashida Tlaib, U.S. Representative from MI-13 (2019–present)[74]
- Statewide officials
- Keith Ellison, Attorney General of Minnesota (2019–present); U.S. Representative from MN-05 (2007–2019)[69]
- Land legislators
- Nickie Antonio, Ohio State Senator from Commune 23 (2019–nowadays)[79]
- Charles Booker, Kentucky State Representative (2019–2021) and candidate for U.S. Senate in 2022 and 2022[66]
- Janine Boyd, Ohio State Representative from District ix (2015–present)[eighty]
- Juanita Brent, Ohio State Representative from District 12 (2019–present)[eighty]
- Nick Celebrezze, Ohio State Representative from District xv (2012–2019)[81]
- Tavia Galonski, Ohio State Representative from District 35 (2017–present)[43]
- Stephanie Howse, Ohio State Representative from District 11 (2015–present)[80]
- Eric Kearney, Ohio State Senator from District 9 (2005–2014)[82]
- C.J. Prentiss, Ohio State Senator from Commune eight (1999–2007); Minority Leader of the Ohio Senate (2005–2006)[81]
- Phil Robinson, Ohio State Representative from Commune 6 (2019–nowadays)[83]
- Bakari Sellers, South Carolina State Representative (2006–2014)[84]
- Mike Skindell, Ohio State Representative from District 13 (2019–present; 2003–2010); Ohio State Senator from District 23 (2011–2018)[85]
- Sandra Williams, Ohio State Senator from District 21 (2015–present)[82]
- Kenny Yuko, Ohio State Senator from District 25 (2015–present); Minority Leader of the Ohio Senate (2017–present)[82]
- Municipal officials
- Carmen YulÃn Cruz, Mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico (2013–2020)[86]
- Frank Jackson, Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio (2006–present)[85]
- Ben Jealous, president and CEO of the NAACP (2008–2013) and 2022 nominee for Governor of Maryland[87]
- Melissa Mark-Viverito, Speaker of the New York Metropolis Quango (2014–2017) and Councilwoman from District viii (2006–2017)[88]
- Rhine McLin, Mayor of Dayton, Ohio (2002–2010)[81]
- David Pepper, Chair of the Ohio Autonomous Party (2015–2020); one-time Cincinnati city councilor[89]
- Yvette Simpson, city council member of Cincinnati (2011–2018) and CEO of Commonwealth for America (2019–present)[90]
- Randall Woodfin, Mayor of Birmingham, Alabama (2017–present)[68]
- Labor unions
- Amalgamated Transit Spousal relationship[91]
- Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers' International Union Local xix[92]
- Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Wedlock[93]
- SEIU Local one[94]
- SEIU Local 1199[95]
- National Nurses United[96]
- Newspapers and publications
- Blavity News [97]
- The Plain Dealer (Democratic main only) [32] [98]
- Organizations
- Akron Democratic Socialists of America[99]
- Brand New Congress[100]
- Cuyahoga Canton Progressive Caucus[101]
- Middle for Biological Diversity Action Fund[102]
- Climate Hawks Vote[103]
- Cleveland Stonewall Democrats[104]
- Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC[53]
- Republic for America[105]
- Friends of the Earth Action[102]
- International Clan of Blackness Professional Firefighters[53]
- Justice Democrats[106]
- MoveOn[107]
- Our Revolution[69]
- Peace Activity[108]
- Progressive Democrats of America[109]
- Sierra Social club[110]
- Sunrise Movement[66]
- The Gravel Establish[111]
- The People for Bernie Sanders[112]
- Women's March[113]
- Working Families Party[114]
- YDSA at IUSB[115]
- Notable individuals
- Krystal Ball, journalist and political pundit; onetime host of Ascent on The Hill [116]
- Charlamagne tha God, radio presenter, television personality, and author[69]
- Ben Cohen, businessman, activist, and philanthropist[117]
- Sean Combs, rapper, record producer, record executive, and entrepreneur[118]
- Danny Glover, actor, film director, and political activist[69]
- John Iadarola, talk prove host, YouTube personality, and political pundit[117]
- Ana Kasparian, political commentator and announcer[119]
- Killer Mike, rapper, songwriter, role player, and activist[69]
- Shaun King, writer, ceremonious rights activist, and co-founder of Real Justice PAC[68]
- Kyle Kulinski, political commentator, YouTuber, co-founder of Justice Democrats and Secular Talk host[120]
- Chuck Rocha, political consultant, Autonomous Political party strategist, former union organizer, and president of Solidarity Strategies[121]
- Aida Rodriguez, comedian[119]
- Marking Ruffalo, thespian and producer[68]
- Susan Sarandon, actress and activist[68]
- Sam Seder, actor, political commentator, and host of The Majority Report with Sam Seder[122]
- Norman Solomon, activist and founder of RootsAction.org[123]
- Paula Jean Swearengin, environmental activist; candidate for U.S. Senate from W Virginia in 2022 and Democratic nominee in 2020[68]
- Cenk Uygur, one-time candidate for California'southward 2022 25th congressional commune special election, journalist, creator of The Young Turks, and co-founder of Justice Democrats[124]
- Jeffrey P. Weaver, political strategist[125]
- Cornel West, philosopher, social critic and activist[126]
- Marianne Williamson, spiritual leader, author, and political activist; candidate for president in 2020[127]
- Andrew Yang, entrepreneur and philanthropist; candidate for president in 2020; candidate for Mayor of New York Metropolis in 2021[68]
Polling [edit]
- Graphical summary
| Poll source | Date(due south) administered | Sample size[b] | Margin of error | John E. Barnes Jr. | Shontel Dark-brown | Jeff Johnson | Tariq Shabazz | Shirley Smith | Nina Turner | Other | Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Data for Progress (D)[A] | July xxx – August 1, 2021 | 341 (LV) | ± 5.iii% | – | 46% | 2% | – | – | 43% | iii% | 7% |
| The Mellman Group (D)[B] | July 13–17, 2021 | 400 (LV) | ± 4.9% | – | 36% | – | – | – | 41% | v% | 18% |
| Data for Progress (D)[A] | July 13–14, 2021 | 318 (LV) | ± 5.5% | – | 46% | – | – | – | 45% | 9% | – |
| TargetPoint (R) | July viii–10, 2021 | 300 (LV) | ± v.vii% | 1% | 33% | 3% | ane% | – | 33% | 4%[c] | 25% |
| Normington Petts (D)[C] | July 6–eight, 2021 | 400 (LV) | ± 4.ix% | – | 36% | – | – | – | 43% | 7% | xiv% |
| The Mellman Group (D)[B] | June 2021 | 400 (LV) | ± 4.9% | – | 26% | – | – | – | 50% | 6% | xviii% |
| Tulchin Inquiry (D)[D] | May xx–26, 2021 | 600 (LV) | ± 4.0% | two% | fifteen% | 4% | 2% | 3% | l% | v%[d] | 21% |
| The Mellman Group (D)[B] | April 2021 | 400 (LV) | ± iv.nine% | – | 19% | – | – | – | 42% | 11% | 29% |
| Normington Petts (D)[C] | April 2021 | 400 (LV) | ± iv.9% | – | 10% | – | – | – | 42% | xix% | 29% |
Results [edit]
Results by county
-
Brown—50–60%
-
Turner—xl–50%
Republican primary [edit]
Candidates [edit]
Nominee [edit]
- Laverne Gore, businesswoman, nominee for OH-11 in 2020[7]
Eliminated in primary [edit]
- Felicia Washington Ross, Democratic candidate for Ohio's 12th state house district in 2020[8]
Endorsements [edit]
Results [edit]
Results by canton
-
Gore—70–80%
General ballot [edit]
Predictions [edit]
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| The Melt Political Written report[130] | Solid D | August 4, 2021 |
| Inside Elections[131] | Solid D | October 27, 2021 |
| Sabato'south Crystal Brawl[132] | Rubber D | August 4, 2021 |
Endorsements [edit]
Shontel Brown (D)
- Executive officials
- Joe Biden, President of the United States (2021–present), Vice President of the United states (2009–2017) and U.S. Senator from Delaware (1973–2009)[133]
- Hillary Clinton, 67th United States Secretary of State (2009–2013), U.S. Senator from New York (2001–2009), Outset Lady of the U.s. (1993–2001), 2022 Democratic nominee for president of the Us[42]
- Pecker Kristol, Master of Staff to the Vice President (1989–1993)[134]
- U.S. Representatives
- Pete Aguilar, U.Southward. Representative from CA-31 (2015–nowadays), Vice Chair of the House Democratic Conclave (2021–present)[43]
- Joyce Beatty, U.S. Representative from OH-03 (2013–present), Chair of the Congressional Black Caucus (2021–present)[44]
- Troy Carter, U.Due south. Representative from LA-02 (2021–nowadays)[45]
- Jim Clyburn, U.South. Representative from SC-06 (1993–nowadays), House Majority Whip (2019–present)[46]
- Ted Deutch, U.South. Representative from FL-22 (2011–present)[47]
- Josh Gottheimer, U.S. Representative from NJ-05 (2017–present)[46]
- Hakeem Jeffries, U.Due south. Representative from NY-8 (2013–present)[135]
- Ron Klein, former U.S. Representative from FL-22 (2007–2011)[48]
- Gregory Meeks, U.S. Representative from NY-05 (2013–present)[49]
- Stacey Plaskett, Delegate to the United states of america House of Representatives from the U.S. Virgin Islands (2015–present)[50]
- Brad Schneider, U.S. Representative from IL-ten (2017–present)[47]
- Bennie Thompson, U.S. Representative from MS-02 (1993–present)[136]
- David Trone, U.Due south. Representative from Physician-06 (2019–nowadays)[46]
- Marc Veasey, U.S. Representative from TX-33 (2013–nowadays)[45]
- Debbie Wasserman Schultz, U.South. Representative from FL-23 (2013–nowadays), FL-20 (2005–2013) and Chair of the Democratic National Committee (2011–2016)[137]
- Statewide officials
- Richard Cordray, managing director of the Consumer Fiscal Protection Bureau (2012–2017); Ohio Attorney General (2009–2011); Ohio Land Treasurer (2007–2009)[44]
- Ted Strickland, former Governor of Ohio (2007–2011)[138]
- State legislators
- Kent Smith, Ohio Country Representative from District 8 (2015–nowadays)[53]
- Terrence Upchurch, Ohio State Representative from District ten (2019–present)[53]
- Casey Weinstein, Ohio State Representative from Commune 37 (2019–present)[54]
- Local officials
- Armond Budish, Cuyahoga County Executive (2015–present)[44]
- Dan Horrigan, mayor of Akron, Ohio (2016–present)[44]
- Don Plusquellic, old mayor of Akron, Ohio (1987–2015)[43]
- Bill Mason, former Cuyahoga County Prosecutor[55]
- Brad Sellers, mayor of Warrensville Heights, Ohio[56]
- Labor unions
- American Federation of Teachers / Ohio Federation of Teachers[57]
- Boilermakers Local 744[43]
- International Brotherhood of Electric Workers Local 38[43]
- International Association of Canvas Metallic, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers[53]
- Bricklayers Local 5[56]
- International Wedlock of Painters and Centrolineal Trades[53]
- National Association of Letter Carriers Ohio State Chapter[58]
- Laborers Local 130[43]
- Piping Fitters Local xx[43]
- Teamsters Local 436[59]
- UAW Regional 2B[60]
- Organizations
- Congressional Black Caucus PAC[61]
- Democratic Majority for Israel[62]
- Giffords[139]
- Homo Rights Campaign[140]
- Jewish Democratic Council of America[63]
- Mom'southward Demand Activeness[141]
- New Democrat Coalition Activity Fund[64]
- Pro-Israel America[4]
- Notable individuals
- Yvette Nicole Brown, actress[54]
Results [edit]
By County [edit]
| County | Shontel Brown Democratic | Laverne Gore Republican | Margin | Full votes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
| Cuyahoga | 76,386 | fourscore.iii | 18,774 | xix.seven | 57,612 | lx.six | 95,160 |
| Elevation | 5,250 | 62.6 | iii,155 | 37.four | 2,095 | 25.2 | 8,405 |
| Total | 81,636 | 78.8 | 21,929 | 21.2 | 59,707 | 35.iv | 103,565 |
Notes [edit]
- ^ Brown sent a surrogate, Jasmine Lattery, to debate in her place.[40]
- ^ Key:
A – all adults
RV – registered voters
LV – likely voters
V – unclear - ^ "Ane of the other candidates" with 3%, Will Knight with 1%
- ^ "Other" with 3%, Seth Corey and Pamela Pinkney with 1%, Isaac Powell with 0%
- Partisan clients
- ^ a b This poll was conducted for an IE and released later the master
- ^ a b c This poll was sponsored by DMFI PAC, which had previously endorsed Brown
- ^ a b This poll was sponsored by Brown'due south campaign
- ^ This poll was sponsored by Turner'southward entrada
References [edit]
- ^ Richardson, Seth (March xviii, 2021). "Gov. Mike DeWine sets Aug. three primary appointment for special election to succeed Marcia Fudge". The Plainly-Dealer . Retrieved March xviii, 2021.
- ^ DeNatale, Dave (March 18, 2021). "Election for Ohio's 11th Congressional District will exist held on November 2, 2021". WKYC . Retrieved March 18, 2021.
- ^ a b Hannan, Sheehan (February iii, 2021). "The Race To Replace Rep. Marcia Fudge In Congress Continues". Cleveland Magazine . Retrieved February 5, 2021.
- ^ a b c d Kassel, Matthew (February 11, 2021). "An Ohio special election highlights the Democratic divide". Jewish Insider. Archived from the original on Feb xi, 2021. Retrieved Feb 15, 2021.
- ^ Marans, Daniel (February 17, 2021). "Ohio Ballot Tests The Left's Strength In Institution Stronghold". HuffPost . Retrieved February 17, 2021.
- ^ The Plain Dealer Editorial Team (February 19, 2021). "Shontel Chocolate-brown must resign as Cuyahoga County Democratic Political party chair". The Plain Dealer.
- ^ a b c McDonnell, Sean (March 12, 2021). "Simply one Summit Canton candidate competing for Fudge'southward seat". Akron Beacon Journal . Retrieved March 12, 2021.
- ^ a b c d eastward f chiliad Livingston, Dave (May 6, 2021). "No Summit Canton resident seeks 11th Congressional District seat afterward former state rep from Bath bows out". Akron Beacon Journal . Retrieved May 7, 2021.
- ^ a b Richardson, Seth A. (June 17, 2021). "With most all the 11th Congressional District candidates in one room Wednesday, Nina Turner showed why she's the front-runner: analysis". The Manifestly Dealer . Retrieved June 17, 2021.
- ^
- Johnson, Jake (June xvi, 2021). "Nina Turner Kicks Off '$27 Dollar Donation Challenge' After Hillary Clinton Endorses Establishment Candidate in Ohio". Common Dreams.
According to recent polling data and fundraising figures, Turner is the clear frontrunner to win the seat left open past President Joe Biden'south selection of former Ohio Rep. Marcia Fudge to lead the Department of Housing and Urban Evolution.
- Sam, Allard (June 1, 2021). "Poll Shows Nina Turner with Commanding Lead in OH-11 Congressional Race". Cleveland Scene.
The poll clarifies Turner'southward frontrunner status 2 months before the Aug. iii special election for the seat formerly occupied by Marcia Fudge.
- Richardson, Seth (June ane, 2021). "Nina Turner Q & A: where the major 11th Congressional Commune candidates stand". The Plain Dealer.
With a heavy fundraising reward and a slate of both national and local endorsements, many political observers consider Turner the front end-runner in the race.
- Darcy, Jeff (May 28, 2021). "Biden in Cle, Nina Turner race SmackDown: Darcy cartoons". The Plain Dealer.
The fact that Brown's first and, then far, only Idiot box spot is an attack on Turner, is an immediate concession that Turner is the frontrunner to trounce.
- Larkin, Brent (May 9, 2021). "Turning Nina Turner'due south own words against her is just a tactic, merely one she needs to address". The Patently Dealer.
Turner is the unquestioned front-runner in the entrada for Fudge'south seat. Merely she'southward no certain thing.
- Johnson, Jake (June xvi, 2021). "Nina Turner Kicks Off '$27 Dollar Donation Challenge' After Hillary Clinton Endorses Establishment Candidate in Ohio". Common Dreams.
- ^ Gray, Briahna Joy; Grim, Ryan (July 1, 2021). "Briahna Joy Gray responds to Clyburn'due south endorsement of Nina Turner rival". The Loma . Retrieved July 1, 2021.
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Turner was endorsed by Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York and the Congressional Progressive Conclave, including Jamie Raskin of Maryland.
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- ^ "In upset, pro-State of israel backed candidate wins key Cleveland area Democratic primary". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. August iii, 2021. Retrieved August 4, 2021.
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- ^ "Giffords Endorses Shontel Chocolate-brown for the US Business firm of Representatives". Giffords. Oct 21, 2021. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
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- ^ @ShontelMBrown (August 2, 2021). "Honored to be selected as a 2022 Moms Demand Activeness Gun Sense Candidate of Distinction. My plan to combat gun viole…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
External links [edit]
Media related to Ohio's 11th congressional district special election, 2022 at Wikimedia Commons
- Official campaign websites
- Shontel Brown (D) for Congress
- Laverne Gore (R) for Congress
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Ohio%27s_11th_congressional_district_special_election
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