Traverse City Record-Eagle

Election 2008

May 19, 2008

Op-Ed: Spirited races in 2008

This year's GOP challenge of five-term Sen. Carl Levin shapes up as another Mission Improbable, but Michigan faces some of its most spirited challenges of congressional incumbents in decades.

Most of the action is downstate, including the targeting of two Republicans seen as vulnerable and two Democratic primary opponents of the mother of the beleaguered mayor of Detroit.

But Michigan GOP Chairman Saul Anuzis insists there is potential in the decidedly uphill and underfunded bid of term-limited state Rep. Tom Casperson of Escanaba, a third generation owner in a family log trucking business, against eight-term 1st District Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Menominee.

Anuzis also trumpets the challenge of Levin by term-limited state Rep. Jack Hoogendyk of Holland, who long has had one of the most conservative voting records in Lansing and last week filed 30,000 petition signatures -- double the number needed and collected from all 83 counties.

Levin, Michigan's longest-serving senator, has been holding his opponents to about 40 percent of the vote.

Stupak has done even better on occasion, getting 69 percent against Don Hooper of Iron River in 2006, and 66 percent against Hooper in 2004. Hooper seeks the nomination again this year, as does Linda Goldthorpe of McMillan.

After his filing last week, Casperson said that in his travels, "what I heard from Houghton to Houghton Lake was that the residents of the District want congressional representation that stands up for fiscal responsibility, stands against burdensome regulations, seeks common sense solutions, avoids partisan politics and refuses to 'legislate' merely through press releases and letters to the editor."

Northern Michigan's other two congressmen have solid Republican districts -- 2nd District eight-term Rep. Pete Hoekstra, R-Holland, opposed by Hope College professor Fred Johnson of Holland, and 4th District nine-term Rep. Dave Camp, R-Midland, opposed by attorney Andrew Concannon of Saginaw.

Nationally, the highest-profile Democratic targeting is of freshman Rep. Tim Walberg, R-Tipton, proclaimed by assorted independent groups to be a toss-up race -- or, as described Friday by Michigan Democratic spokeswoman Liz Kerr, a looming "rock star campaign." Challengers are state Senate Democratic Leader Mark Schauer of Battle Creek, highly successful in fundraising, and Sharon Renier of Munith, who got 46 percent of the vote against Walberg in 2006.

Also among the top 10 targets of national Dems is eight-term Rep. Joe Knollenberg, R-Bloomfield Township, opposed by ex-Sen. Gary Peters of Bloomfield Township, who came within 5,200 votes of defeating now-Attorney General Mike Cox in 2002 and then was named lottery director by Gov. Jennifer Granholm.

In Detroit, six-term Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, mother of Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, is challenged in the Democratic primary by state Sen. Martha Scott and ex-state Rep. Mary Walters, now working for Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy, who has filed perjury and other charges against the mayor stemming from his racy text messaging sex scandal with his female chief of staff.

Last week, some high drama appeared possible when the Rev. Horace Sheffield, a controversial political activist, filed in the primary against 22-term Rep. John Conyers, D-Detroit, (whose wife is on the city council and voted against removing the mayor). But, alas, Sheffield withdrew Friday.

Conyers has no GOP opponent. Not that it would matter. When he's won, it has been by about 90 percent.

Notable northern women

The Michigan Women's Hall of Fame abounds with political northerners.

In 1925, there was Cora Reynolds Anderson of L'Anse, first woman elected to the state House to what was then called the "Iron District" -- counties of Baraga, Iron, Keweenaw and Ontonagon.

In 1950, Ruth Thompson of Whitehall was the first Michigan woman elected to Congress, representing counties as far north as Benzie, Grand Traverse and Leelanau.

Among the most notable is Munising-born Connie Binsfeld of Maple City, who before her 1990 election as lieutenant governor was the only women in Michigan history to be elected to both houses of Legislature and hold major leadership positions in both.

Binsfeld was among political pioneers cited by Michigan Supreme Court Justice Betty Weaver, former chief justice and herself a hall of famer, in remarks prepared for Sunday's dedication of the Leelanau County Government Center.

In touting other Leelanau firsts, Weaver, a former probate and Michigan Court of Appeals judge, cited a woman who was born in a log cabin in the county in 1891 and was inducted into the Women's Hall of Fame in 1990: Emelia Schaub, who in 1936 was the first woman elected in Michigan as a county prosecutor, lobbied first lady Eleanor Roosevelt and others on behalf of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians long before it gained federal recognition. She also published a book at age 95.

All of that long before Wayne County just recently elected its first female prosecutor.

Notable northern books

Gov. Jennifer Granholm, following a tradition started in 1954, proclaimed Michigan Week starting May 17 "as a time to embrace, explore and celebrate everything that sets our state apart as an ideal place to live, work and raise a family."

One of the traditions is the annual selection of 20 Michigan Notable Books by a Library of Michigan committee. (Full disclosure: I am on the selection committee.)

One timely 2008 non-fiction selection is "Mackinac Bridge: A 50-year Chronicle, 1957-2007," by Mike Fornes.

Another notable of northern note is "The Sound the Stars Make Rushing Through the Sky: The Writings of Jane Johnston Schoolcraft," edited by Robert Dale Parker. Born and raised in Sault Ste. Marie by her Ojibwe mother and Irish-born father, Schoolcraft is the first known American Indian literary writer.

A list of all 2008 selections, and those of previous years, can been seen at www.michigan.gov/michiganweek, by clicking on Notable Books.

George Weeks retired in 2006 after 22 years as political columnist for The Detroit News. His weekly Michigan Politics column is syndicated by Superior Features.

Text Only
  • How Traverse City Voted

    Blue city, red county. Ballots cast in last week's general election reflected Traverse City's support of Democratic candidates and Grand Traverse County's backing of Republicans, with few exceptions.

    Continued ...
    Nov 11, 2008 9:43 am 1 Photo
  • Voters reject almost all area tax proposals

    School administrators in a few local districts soon will decide whether to put tax proposals back on the ballot after voters almost universally rejected millage requests.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 11, 2008 9:35 am
  • Engler court loses top justice

    John Engler spent 12 long, patient years as governor placing nearly 200 judges -- including three Supreme Court justices -- who supported his conservative judicial philosophy onto state courts. But a little-known Wayne County judge toppled one of those justices from his seat on Tuesday.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 9, 2008 9:46 am 2 Photos
  • Op-Ed: Granholm in the spotlight

    There, in close-up view just off the right shoulder of Barack Obama at his first press conference as president-elect in Chicago, was Gov. Jennifer Granholm, a member of his transition economic advisory board -- called an "All-Star Cast" on CNN. Obama in his opening remarks singled out Granholm, saying he was "glad to be joined" by her on a day of grappling with grim economic news of joblessness and Ford/GM loss figures.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 9, 2008 9:47 am 1 Photo
  • Advocates: Obama will be Great Lakes friend

    Barack Obama's election as president and his appointment of Rahm Emanuel as chief of staff are hopeful signs for the struggle to heal the ailing Great Lakes ecosystem, advocates said Thursday. Obama and Emanuel, both from the Lake Michigan city of Chicago, have championed initiatives in Congress to protect the lakes.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 7, 2008 9:57 am
  • Granholm to advise Obama on economy

    Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm is one of 17 people appointed to help advise President-elect Barack Obama on the economy during his transition period.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 7, 2008 9:57 am
  • Palestinian Muslim elected to State House

    Lawyer and community activist Rashida Tlaib, the daughter of Palestinian immigrants who never attended high school, becomes the first Muslim woman ever to serve in the Michigan Legislature. She said she wouldn't have run but for the repeated urging of her Jewish boss and predecessor, outgoing Democratic state Rep. Steve Tobocman.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 7, 2008 9:57 am 1 Photo
  • Local voter turnout statistics

    Voter turnout in the 5-county area.

    Continued ...
    Nov 6, 2008 11:00 am
  • Wednesday, November 5, 2008
  • Local residents react to historic election

    A late morning sun shone on this Antrim County village hours after a freshman Illinois senator became president-elect of the United States. Terry Miller talked politics with friend Wally Hibbard over coffee Wednesday at Java Jones in Elk Rapids, and called Democratic Sen. Barack Obama's solid win over rival Sen. John McCain "a breath of fresh air."

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:52 am 1 Photo
  • Environmentalists happy with court upset

    The stunning upset defeat of Republican Chief Justice Cliff Taylor ends the Michigan Supreme Court's conservative grip and opens the welcome prospect that it will overrule one of its most controversial decisions -- the 2007 gutting of the state's widely acclaimed Michigan Environmental Protection Act.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:50 am 1 Photo
  • Dems add to lead in state House

    Democrats picked up nine seats in Michigan's state House, giving them one of their biggest majorities of the past three decades.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:50 am
  • Schmidt wins 104th District House seat

    Wayne Schmidt spent part of the day reflecting on a successful state House campaign he viewed as upbeat and effective. But his defeated opponent, local attorney Roman Grucz, seethed over an at-times bruising battle for the 104th District, a territory that covers Grand Traverse and Kalkaska counties. It was a race Grucz described as "gutter politics."

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:53 am 2 Photos
  • New Michigan congressmen 'very practical'

    Democrats Mark Schauer and Gary Peters, Michigan's newest members of Congress, bring resumes of focusing on job creation and economic issues to districts flush with Republican voters.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:50 am
  • Speculation swirls around Granholm

    Gov. Jennifer Granholm can't run for president, but she could still end up in Washington next year.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:50 am 1 Photo
  • Grand Traverse County board gets a new look

    Christine Maxbauer may switch from a solo role in pushing and prodding a set-in-its-ways Grand Traverse County board to leading a newly constructed board. Maxbauer, who often found herself at odds with the board's old guard, could find some support in January from new commissioners-elect Beth Friend, Mike Stepka and Ross Richardson.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:53 am 3 Photos
  • Local shop flies American flag upside down

    Not everyone is excited about the nation's first black president. Some are downright hostile. Employees at Hampel's Key and Lockshop on Randolph Street in Traverse City flew an American flag upside down Wednesday in protest of Sen. Barack Obama's victory in the presidential election. And one employee directed a racial slur at Obama during a telephone interview with a Record-Eagle reporter.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:53 am 1 Photo
  • Nearly 5.1M cast ballots in Michigan

    The secretary of state's office says nearly 5.1 million Michigan voters took part in the 2008 election.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:50 am
  • Poll: Obama backed by prior GOP voters

    Barack Obama stitched together a winning coalition in Michigan in part by peeling away voters in groups that might have been expected to oppose him.

    Continued ...
    Updated Nov 6, 2008 9:50 am
  • 11 am: 1st Dem elected to GT board in 20 yrs

    TRAVERSE CITY — A Democrat will take a seat on the Grand Traverse County Board of Commissioners for the first time in 20 years.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 11:32 am
  • 12:39 am: Schmidt holds big lead in 104th race

    Republican Grand Traverse County Commissioner Wayne Schmidt had a big lead over Democrat Roman Grucz in the race for the 104th District of the state House of Representatives.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 7:52 am
  • 12:35 am: Heckman sheriff in Benzie, Israel in Kalkaska

    One regional sheriff’s candidate will become the top cop at his department after serving as second in command. Another fell by a wide margin to his own employee.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 7:52 am
  • 12:30 am: GT incumbents running strong

    Incumbents led in all races for the Grand Traverse County board, but large turnouts slowed ballot counts and left several county commission races unresolved.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 12:30 am
  • 12:27 am: Lile wins; heavy turnout delays other GT results

    East Bay Township Supervisor Glen Lile pulled out a win over challenger Gail Mason among the contested township races in Grand Traverse County. Other township races were still too close to call late Tuesday.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 12:27 am
  • 12:07 am: Face of Leelanau, Elmwood to change

    Change is coming to the Leelanau County and Elmwood Township boards.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 12:24 am
  • 12:11 am: Sheriff ousted in Kalkaska

    Another of the region’s incumbent sheriffs has fallen. David Israel, 60, ousted one-term incumbent Kalkaska County Sheriff William Artress by about 1,800 votes, both candidates said.

    Continued ...
    Nov 5, 2008 12:11 am