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2018 was a big election year in Ohio. Republicans held onto all five statewide executive offices including governor and super majorities in both the Ohio House and Senate. But there were a few bright spots for Democrats, among them the reelection of U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown and the election of two Democrats to the Ohio Supreme Court.With election 2018 over, the focus now shifts to governing. Stay connected with the latest on politics, policies and people making the decisions at all levels affecting your lives.

Early Ohio Voters Are Drawn -- and Torn -- by Gubernatorial Races

electronic voting machine
M.L. SCHULTZE
/
WKSU
Election Day is Tuesday; early voting finishes at 2 this afternoon.

Early voting wraps up this afternoon at 2 (Monday) at boards of elections throughout the state. According to the Ohio Secretary of State’s office, the number of early ballots requested and cast is surging over 2014’s primary. Here's more from some of those early voters.

Hotly contested gubernatorial primaries among both Republicans and Democrats were the top draw for many early voters. But according to a Baldwin Wallace University poll released last week, a large segment of voters were having trouble making up their minds.

Dale Sklar is a Stark County Democrat. She says attack ads swayed her vote for Richard Cordray for governor.

“I saw an ad that was an ad against him, and everything they said that they thought was rotten against him was things that I believe in. And I thought, ‘Good enough.’”

But she acknowledged she was having a tough time making up her mind between Cordray and former congressman Dennis Kucinich.

Courtney Johnson-Benson settled on Kucinich. That's in part because, as an Akron native, she's followed his running mate, Akron Councilwoman Tara Mosley Samples.

But she's as interested in the one statewide issue on the ballot: The Ohio constitutional amendment to change the way congressional districts are drawn.

courtney_johnson_benson_voice_heard.mp3
Johnson-Benson on redistricting hopes

“I am big fan of bipartisanship, and I think it’s only fair that I am voting for someone who represents my interests and that I have a fair chance of having my voice heard.”

Seth Stephens of Stark County is a conservative Republican voter. His vote went to Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, who has portrayed herself as the candidate the establishment doesn’t want. He says he likes outsiders, and thinks Taylor’s gender is a plus.

“Not to be sexist but sometimes a little more, maybe female diversity in politics isn’t such a bad thing.”

Taylor is running against Attorney General Mike DeWine. The latest Baldwin Wallace poll shows 40 percent of Democratic voters and 25 percent of Republicans had not made up their minds in the gubernatorial races -- with less than a week to go before the election.  

M.L. Schultze is a freelance journalist. She spent 25 years at The Repository in Canton where she was managing editor for nearly a decade, then served as WKSU's news director and digital editor until her retirement.