The Columbus Dispatch

‘You’re either this or that’ In Ohio, a rural/urban divide is stark and growing

- Céilí Doyle and Jackie Borchardt Columbus Dispatch | USA TODAY NETWORK

WOODSFIELD – If you draw a line across Ohio, starting at Youngstown, west to Canton and southwest through Columbus and Cincinnati, you’ll roughly split the state in half.

The southeaste­rn half has just one Democrat at the Ohio Statehouse. A decade ago, there were 10.

That Democrat, Rep. Jack Cera, is term-limited this year. He isn’t sure Democrats will hold on to the seat that snakes along the Ohio River on the state’s eastern-most edge.

Roughly 100 miles away, Republican­s in Franklin County worry they’ll lose a few more Statehouse seats in the state’s most populated county.

Party politics have changed in Ohio and across the country, as have demographi­cs. The result: Democrats have lost ground in rural areas and Republican­s have a hard time winning in urban areas.

The best predictor of whether a state will vote red or blue is whether more people live in urban areas vs. rural places, said Will Wilkinson, vice president for research at the Niskanen Center, a moderate D.C. think tank.

Ahead of the election, USA Today Ohio Network reporters and photograph­ers visited four counties across the state to talk with people about this divide – what has caused it and what might heal it.

Most people spoke of national politics that don’t reflect the cities and small towns they live and work in, as well as frustratio­ns about the way in which their communitie­s are represente­d.

Reliably blue, now red

Dick Yoss has three signs in front of his downtown Woodsfield law office, which faces Monroe County’s elections office and sits kitty-corner from the county’s historic courthouse.

Make America SANE AGAIN... BidenHarri­s... RESTORE SANITY and DECENCY – VOTE FOR JOE!

Yoss, a former county prosecutor, made the first sign himself. He gave nearly 100 away. They dot lawns along the main road in Woodsfield, as well as homes further out in the rolling hills of this Ohio River county. The sanity signs outnumber the actual Biden signs here.

Monroe County voted for a Democrat for president in every election from 1976 to 2008. Republican Mitt Romney broke the streak in 2012, with 52% of the vote. Four years later, Trump won big with 72% of the vote.

Democrats in the county aren’t ready to give it up. They point to Trump as the disruptor more than a swing toward the Republican Party.

There used to be coal jobs here, glass factory jobs, steel jobs, union jobs. Used to. Trump tapped into that feeling of being forgotten. Yoss believes Trump’s celebrity appeals to Monroe County voters.

“People often just want a change,” Yoss said.

But it’s hard to ignore the effect of national party politics.

“The problem you’re up against is they watch the news, they hear the national Democrats’ message and it’s not their issues,” Cera said.

For example, gun control doesn’t play well in his district. Cera has sided with Republican­s on gun bills. But he frequently agrees with Black lawmakers from cities on issues of poverty and job creation.

He sees some hope in U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown’s ability to win statewide and, until 2018, in counties like his on a jobs message.

In Brown’s first Senate race in 2006, the Democrat won 13 of the 14 counties in Ohio’s Southeast region against incumbent Republican Mike Dewine.

In 2018, he won just one county – Athens County, home to Ohio University.

Shaun Burnett, 56, grew up in Woodsfield. When he turned 18, he registered as a Democrat – an implicit requiremen­t to work in county government. After a short stint in politics in Washington, D.C., Burnett returned home as a Republican.

After President Obama was elected, he got involved in tea party events. Four years ago, he jumped aboard the Trump train and made one out of plywood to display in his front yard. This year, the train is back. Taking Hillary Clinton’s place locked up in front is Biden “in his basement bunker.”

Burnett said Democrats lost the incentive to win votes in places like Monroe County. They’ve built up voting blocs in large cities – there’s no chance they would let that go.

“Democrats used to be your rural party, your farmers,” Burnett said, adding the party went too far left.

Emily Lallathin also left Woodsfield and came back. But she points to her experience­s away at college as the difference between her and her classmates who stayed and have moved to the right.

Lallathin, 33, went to school just an hour away at Muskingum University. But the population was more diverse than Woodsfield. She actually met other students from the Middle East, a group typically only mentioned in the village Facebook group in negative posts.

The Facebook group has become especially toxic with the coronaviru­s pandemic and election.

“There’s no gray area – you’re either this or that,” Lallathin said.

Wilkinson calls it “the diploma divide.”

“College increases your openness to experience,” he said. “You meet the Muslim kid in your class. You meet African-americans you never would have run into in your hometown. Lots of things that make you feel exotic and strange become comfortabl­e.”

And as many good-paying jobs have left rural areas, they’ve consolidat­ed in cities and suburbs, drawing the college educated away.

“In order to make the most of your college degree, you have to move to a major labor market and that’s all consolidat­ing,” Wilkinson said.

Trump won the non-college educated vote in 2016. And in Ohio, that group

of voters favored Republican Gov. Mike Dewine, too.

Trump accelerate­s the divide in urban counties

The house has Biden banners hanging from its front porch and a Black Lives Matter sign in the front yard.

“This will be a good one,” Republican statehouse candidate Mehek Cooke says, campaign literature in hand. She presses the doorbell, steps several feet back from the door and waits.

No one’s home.

Cooke leaves a glossy card on the doormat. She checks the canvassing app on her phone for the next house on her list in this big-tree neighborho­od located in the farthest northwest corner of Columbus.

Cooke works from a list of independen­t and Democratic voters – she has to.

The district was represente­d by a Republican since it was based in Franklin County in 1992. But in 2018, the seat flipped blue.

Democrats picked up seven Statehouse seats that year, including three state representa­tives and one state senator representi­ng parts of Franklin County. The other seats were similarly located in more suburban areas outside Cleveland, Cincinnati and Akron.

Cooke introduces herself as someone born in India and raised in Ohio, as a candidate who wants to build unity. Then she says she’s a Republican: “I don’t want to be judged by what’s happening nationally.”

That admission gets her an “oh, no” from independen­t voter Jim Herron, 79. Later he says he doesn’t trust politician­s, period, and votes for the candidate who is the lesser of two evils rather than along party lines. And he doesn’t like Donald Trump.

Herron said he stays out of politics, but the growing divide between the parties – that if you’re a Republican you have to do one thing and if you’re a Democrat you have to do another – concerns him.

“There’s a lot of problems that could be solved if you could give and take a bit,” Herron said.

County-wide, Republican­s used to dominate in local and Statehouse races and won Columbus mayoral races. The 2018 suburban blue wave caught one of those officials, auditor Clarence Mingo, who had previously won two elections. Now there are just two county elected Republican­s, the engineer and prosecutor.

Mingo, who is Black, had been a rising star in the party and briefly ran for state treasurer. He said Republican­s have become more tribal, as have Democrats. Politician­s are unwilling to buck the party line and voters don’t consider splitting their tickets.

“The consequenc­e is you can almost look at a zip code and determine whether or not a person in that zip code is a Republican or a Democrat,” Mingo said.

Mingo said that past the Trump era, whenever that is, Republican­s need to show voters they are committed to issues that aren’t solidly in the conservati­ve box, such as race relations and poverty.

“The consequenc­e of the last four years is there are a lot of Republican­s in local races who are not tribal and who are considerat­e of other political views and perspectiv­es alternativ­e to conservati­ve thought and are losing their careers or influence,” Mingo said.

Hamilton County, home to Cincinnati, has seen a similar shift.

In 1992, just eight of 51 subdivisio­ns in Hamilton County were won by Democrat Bill Clinton. In 2016, all but 12 voted for Hillary Clinton, according to county election data .

Five have made that flip in the past three presidenti­al elections: Mt. Healthy, North College Hill City, Springdale, Springfield Township and Wyoming.

Mary Pouncy, 48, decorated the windows on her home near Cincinnati’s Over-the-rhine neighborho­od with Biden/harris 2020 painted in pink and purple pastels. She said she gravitates toward Democratic candidates based on her financial circumstan­ces: “Because I’m poor.”

“I hope Biden wins,” she said. “Trump is not for the poor. He’s only for the rich.”

David Lewis, 56, was surprised to hear parts of the county, including his suburban city of Wyoming, were getting bluer. Lewis said political parties are just interested in raising money by saying things that fire up their constituen­cies, like about guns or abortion.

“They’re both interested in saying ‘The other side is extreme. Send me

Pocket of progressiv­ism

The neon glare from the Dari Creme sign casts a glow through the parking lot in Portsmouth, an Ohio River city 92 miles south of Columbus and 104 miles southeast of Cincinnati, in early October. A breeze ushers in a gust of latesummer air and the opening notes of “Taps” in the distance.

Around the block, Kenneth Dunn, 66, plays tribute to the military anthem with his trumpet, as the sun sets over Alexandria Point Park.

A couple hours earlier a group of Scioto County residents gathered in the park, overlookin­g the Ohio River and Kentucky border, to discuss the upcoming election.

Frustrated by Appalachia­n stereotype­s that paint rural Ohio as one large swath of Trump country, Ryan Ottney is running as a Democrat for Ohio State Senate’s 14th District.

“I think that perception of our area, of being conservati­ve ... I think that reinforces the conservati­ve population here to empower them to feel like that’s what controls this area,” he said. “I honestly don’t believe it does.”

Ottney, 42, won’t speak to the ignorant and rather offensive stereotype­s, he said, that outsiders cast. But he has seen community members slowly become more comfortabl­e voicing their liberal leanings.

“I think conservati­ves are much louder sometimes,” he added, “Which gives the impression of being more.”

Local historian Drew Feight said Portsmouth’s progressiv­e concentrat­ion gets written off by those same Appalachia­n stereotype­s.

But the 2016 presidenti­al election results are telling.

Four years ago Trump won Scioto County by nearly 37%, but within the city of Portsmouth Democrat Hillary Clinton won by almost 34%.

“The urban-rural divide, I would say that exists within Appalachia,” Feight said. In Portsmouth there is a Democratic majority, he said, but that doesn’t get into the national media coverage.

“People show up with their stereotype­s,” Feight said. “Editors have their stereotype­s and they go looking for it, and they find it, and then they miss us.”

Gary Harriston, a Portsmouth native, recognizes that another popular stereotype about the region assumes Black people like him don’t really live in Appalachia, or cities like Portsmouth aren’t actively fighting to be anti-racist.

“The African Americans living in Portsmouth today, the largest percentage of them live in the area that’s known as the North End,” the 67-year-old said. “And you could take a drive through the North End and you will not find a Trump sign anywhere.”

And while the Black population has shrunk, along with the total number of residents living in Portsmouth — the city recorded 20,226 people in the 2010 U.S. Census, but Harriston said they were nearly 40,000 strong while he was growing up — the appreciati­on for African-american culture and its rich history in Portsmouth is strong.

In September, during the Portsmouth

Unity Art Project’s launch, the city installed historical­ly themed unity banners and art murals honoring local abolitioni­sts, suffragettes, Civil Rights-era activists.

The project helped restore faith in the community, Harriston said.

But celebratio­n of Portsmouth unity can’t deny the lack of economic opportunit­y.

The area remains a Democratic and labor union stronghold despite shrinking industry, Joe Dillow said.

“But bad policies and Reagonomic­s have turned jobs elsewhere,” Dillow, the president of the local chapter of the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Electrical Workers said. “Since industry left folks are starting to feel underappre­ciated.”

Just down the street from the park, Justin Everman lives in Portsmouth with his grandmothe­r and uncle. He’s frustrated by so few job opportunit­ies in the region and Trump’s apathetic atti

tude about COVID-19 terrifies him.

The pandemic feels like a war, Everman said.

“Usually I want a Republican during a wartime, but Trump’s not that guy,” he said.

Still, hope persists. Adjunct English professor at Shawnee State University, Kasie Mccreary, is buoyed by her students.

“Watching, especially a younger generation, who’s seeing an Appalachia­n identity as a positive thing they can define and redefine is uplifting,” she said.

If elected, Ryan Ottney would be the first Democrat to serve in the Ohio 14th District’s senatorial history. Ottney wants to serve what he sees as a rapidly diversifyi­ng community.

“We can either embrace that community and what will be their world,” he said, “or we can fight against it.”

Enquirer reporter Rachel Smith contribute­d reporting.

“Watching, especially a younger generation, who’s seeing an Appalachia­n identity as a positive thing they can define and redefine is uplifting.”

Kasie Mccreary, adjunct English professor at Shawnee State University

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY KAYLA GOLLIHER/ USA TODAY NETWORK ??
PHOTOS BY JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY KAYLA GOLLIHER/ USA TODAY NETWORK
 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Attorney Dick Yoss poses at his office in Monroe County. Yoss voted for President Barack Obama in 2008, but broke heavily for President Donald Trump in 2016. He has a “VOTE FOR JOE” sign now.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Attorney Dick Yoss poses at his office in Monroe County. Yoss voted for President Barack Obama in 2008, but broke heavily for President Donald Trump in 2016. He has a “VOTE FOR JOE” sign now.
 ?? JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Shaun Burnett stands outside his home with is homemade “Trump Train” display on Oct. 9 in Woodsfield.
JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Shaun Burnett stands outside his home with is homemade “Trump Train” display on Oct. 9 in Woodsfield.
 ?? HANNAH RUHOFF/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? “Vote” and “Black Lives Matter” signs hang in the window of a boutique in the Over the Rhine neighborho­od of Cincinnati on Oct. 25.
HANNAH RUHOFF/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER “Vote” and “Black Lives Matter” signs hang in the window of a boutique in the Over the Rhine neighborho­od of Cincinnati on Oct. 25.
 ??  ?? David Lewis, 56, of Wyomingsay­s he’s still undecided about who to vote for president this year.
David Lewis, 56, of Wyomingsay­s he’s still undecided about who to vote for president this year.
 ?? PHOTOS BY HANNAH RUHOFF/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER ?? Mary Pouncy 48, has her Biden/harris decoration­s at home.
PHOTOS BY HANNAH RUHOFF/CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Mary Pouncy 48, has her Biden/harris decoration­s at home.
 ?? PHOTOS BY JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Kenneth Dunn of Portsmouth plays his trumpet as the sun sets on Oct. 7 in Portsmouth.
PHOTOS BY JOSHUA A. BICKEL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Kenneth Dunn of Portsmouth plays his trumpet as the sun sets on Oct. 7 in Portsmouth.
 ??  ?? Kasie Mccreary
Kasie Mccreary
 ??  ?? Justin Everman
Justin Everman
 ??  ?? Gary Hairston
Gary Hairston
 ??  ?? Ryan Ottney
Ryan Ottney
 ??  ?? Drew Feight
Drew Feight
 ??  ?? Joe Dillow
Joe Dillow

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