One-hundred-year-old debt or 50-year-old debt is one thing, but 10 years is a pretty short window. Somebody with deep pockets can hire lawyers and play some legal games.
If that is the kind of exploitation we can expect a heartbeat away from the governor's office, the people of Ohio should be wary.
He was a very strong, formidable candidate and there are options that would make him a strong candidate even if he doesn't succeed legally. This is not the last chapter of this story.
We're working very aggressively on a year-round basis.
County parties tend to do better when a governor's in power. There's more of a fundraising base, having established relationships on an ongoing basis.
Term limits did have an effect. There was one less chair for them.
They do get messages out, but they do get mixed results.
There's a better nature to Bryan Flannery. But he hasn't been showing it throughout the primary, and it's unfortunate.
If he can't manage to know what's in his checkbook, why would the people of Ohio want to trust this man with the state's checkbook?
The law is pretty clear. It really is an issue that the secretary of state needs to investigate. Ken Blackwell can decide to be partisan or enforce the law.