Wednesday,
November 07, 2001
Issue 6 loses
by 23 votes
Recount
expected in campaign finance
decision
By
Tim Bonfield
The Cincinnati Enquirer
A proposal to
change how Cincinnati City Council candidates finance their
campaigns failed by a razor-thin margin and is likely headed
for an automatic recount.
Issue 6, a measure that would
use public funds to subsidize City Council and mayoral
campaigns, lost 50.01 percent to 49.99 percent. The gap was 23
votes, 40,884 to 40,861.
To curb spending on city races,
Issue 6 proposed rewarding candidates who voluntarily limit
their campaign contributions. Candidates who agree to limit
campaign spending to three times their elected salary would
get $2 in public funds for every $1 they raise from
individuals.
We've got to figure out a way
to reduce the influence of big money in campaigns, said Pete
Strauss, a former six-term council member who supported Issue
6. We fought a long time for increased disclosure (of
campaign donations) and more timely disclosure. (If
Issue
6 fails), the end result is that the same old spending rules
will apply.
If the measure passes, City
Council candidates, who would get paid $55,701 if elected,
could receive up to $111,402 out of the city's general fund. A
mayoral candidate, who would be paid $59,201 if elected, could
receive up to $118,402.
Council candidates who
participate would agree to spend no more than $167,103 on
their campaigns. This year's top spender Councilman Pat
DeWine raised more than $309,500.
Contributions from political
action committees or political parties would not be matched.
Issue 6 also would require
candidates to file more contribution disclosures, limit the
amount of donations they can receive, penalize those who go
over the limit, and create an oversight board.
Before the election, Chris
Finney, a lawyer and a mem ber of the Issue 6 opposition
group, No Taxes for City Council Campaigns Committee, called
the proposal goofy.
He said Issue 6 would punish
people for getting involved in the election process.
Cincinnati City Council passed
a similar measure in 1997, but rescinded it a year later.
City
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Luken
could be longest running mayor
Luken's
top priority: Boosting city's economy
The
'strong mayor' plan
Voters
pick for and against in mayor's race
West
Siders showed up in force for Luken
Newcomer
Pepper wins council race
Issue
5 victory changes hiring of chiefs
Issue 6
loses by 23 votes
Bates,
3 incumbents win school board
Fire,
police big winners
GOP
sweeps Hamilton County municipal court
Hamilton
County levies pass
Hamilton
County township races
Democrats
take over Norwood
Finneytown
approves school levy
Butler
County defeats sales tax
Butler
County school board races
Ryan
elected Hamilton mayor
Lebanon,
Mason elect newcomers
Newcomer
elected in Warren township
Warren
County approves mental health levy
Warren
County school boards
Waynesville
re-elects mayor
Clermont
defeats mental retardation levy
Clermont
schools count victories
Most
Clermont incumbents re-elected
Upsets
on Clermont school boards
Vote
more valued after Sept. 11
Cleveland,
Toledo mayors set firsts
Dayton
elects first female mayor
Giuliani's
candidate wins NY
mayor