Why Obama’s losing Ohio Democrats
By Salena Zito
Published: Saturday, October 20, 2012, 8:58 p.m.
Updated: Tuesday, February 19, 2013
MINGO JUNCTION, Ohio — As Sophia Schoolcraft explained, this Ohio River town once was a vibrant place, home to a powerful Wheeling-Pitt steel plant that helped support a Main Street bustling with small businesses.
“The community prospered, the local government did too, as well as the schools and churches,” Schoolcraft said, “but as steel declined and finally collapsed, so did the rest of the town.”
Today, the village treasurer said, the village council plans to turn off streetlights to save money.
Remarkably, she remains hopeful. “I can't give up on my hometown,” she said, her voice cracking with emotion, although she is “very sad.”
“There were so many things thrown at towns like ours, like stimulus dollars and bailouts, but the problem is deeper. No one running the town over the years ever prepared for what might happen if the steel or coal industries left,” she said. “Too much dependency, not enough independent thought.”
Steel provided 75 percent of the tax base to keep services humming. In July, bankrupt RG Steel, the plant's then-owner, was bought by Frontier, which sold off the once formidable empire, piecemeal. Schoolcraft said, “We are trying to save a furnace in it that is basically new.”
She said village workers have been laid off “and more layoffs are coming.”
Schoolcraft is an elected Democrat, as are the village council members. “And by registration, so is almost all of the town,” she said.
Yet, in this Democrat stronghold of 3,000 in the shadow of a huge steel plant along the Ohio River, hundreds of “Romney for President” signs clutter yards, the few remaining small businesses and vacant brownfields.
At age 82, Schoolcraft not only is village treasurer but volunteers with the village social-services program, feeding those who fall on hard times. “I have coal miners here who haven't worked in a very long time,” she said.
This is a very real world, untethered from a sheltered political class and pundits who deliver all-knowing understanding of hardships from which they are detached. Washington felt no recession, no shuttered businesses, no laid-off government employees — at least not to the magnitude of towns like this across America.
Throughout this Jefferson County region, interviews reveal an electorate incredibly dissatisfied with Barack Obama's administration, confused by his gimmicky jabbing at Republican Mitt Romney while offering no presidential vision for another four years.
“I believe in my heart that Americans are better than this, that we can get through just about anything,” said Schoolcraft of her community's downfall.
Yet, as Americans consider who is better to lead the country and towns such as Mingo Junction back to prosperity, the Obama campaign has chosen to persuade Ohio voters with a story that is nothing short of what Vice President Joe Biden might call “a bunch of malarkey”:
Seventy-three miles upriver at a Youngstown soup kitchen, Brian Antal, a local St. Vincent De Paul Society chairman, made national news when he claimed that Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan lied about washing dirty dishes when he visited the facility.
Antal also claimed to be an “independent voter” who was there during the alleged event.
One day later, he admitted that Ryan did in fact wash dishes and that he, himself, was not at the facility when Ryan visited. Oh, and the record shows that Antal has voted as a Democrat for the past 17 years.
Yet Antal's discredited tale is what the media focused on. This was the story that splashed across national news and penetrated into the culture — not the reality that, since 2009, a nearby steel mill that traces its origins to Andrew Carnegie has been shuttered and its 600 to 800 steelworkers will never work there again.
This is why Ohio and many of its lifelong Democrats have moved away in polls from Obama and toward Romney, who comes to the state and talks about “American exceptionalism” and energy jobs while the president jokes about binders full of women and Big Bird.
As Schoolcraft explained, “We don't want a handout. We need a plan and a vision to build a better future, to function within our means and keep our community going.”
Salena Zito covers politics for Trib Total Media. (412-320-7879 or szito@tribweb.com)
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Salena excellent story thank you for bringing it to light .I think part of the problem is that the people in this town are registered as democrats and the party takes them for granted the same as they do to the minoritys who against thier best interest continue to vote democrats.the answer to this problem is when you go to vote change your party affiliation to Independent and then educate yourself to where the candidates really stand don't take thier word for it investigate.once they realize you are not going to blindly vote for them they will start to pay attention to you.Growing up my father, god rest his soul, stressed to me that the democrats were for the working people,that might have been true many years ago but as I have discovered, that is the furthest thing from the truth .Todays democratic party is dominated by socialists, ultra rich movie stars,greedy public employee unions,Ill informed people and deadbeats who do not want to work and will lay around all day and suck on the publics teat It is time that the hard working patriotic Americans take our country back, and we can do that by showing up at the polls tomorrow with all our familys and freinds and vote accordingly.






