Sen. David Goodman Says Hi
One of the most interesting aspects of keeping this blog is that,
despite the almost unimaginable wealth of information now available on
the web, it's actually not that easy to find basic political
information about one's own district and elected officials.
By basic political information I mean such things as an accurate map
of the Ohio 21st's boundaries. I found one by happenstance, but have
since discovered that they're not that easy to come by. And even with
that map, I discovered, it is not so easy to be sure, at the
boundaries, which streets lie within the district and which are just
outside. It seems a small matter, but it makes a difference if you're
canvassing a neighborhood.
Like most things in life, this isn't an accident. It's not a
conspiracy, either. Or if it is a conspiracy, it's a conspiracy
between, on the one hand, politicians, activists, and lobbyists, who
like to keep easy access to this information to people like them; and
on the other hand, average citizens like myself, who for the most part
could not possibly care less about the identity, much less the
actions, of the public officials who supposedly represent us (and, I
insist on believing, often actually try their best to do so).
It's a conspiracy, in short, of citizens who don't much act like
citizens and politicians who have come to accept the ignorance and
passivity of most of their constiuents as a fact of life.
Which is why, in low-profile races, so many campaign ads simply a)
repeat the candidates' last names as many times as possible, in order
to achieve name recognition; b) emphasize the fact that they are good
family people who like children and pets, so you'll feel comfortable
about them; and c) show their opponents in unflattering, shadowed
black and white photos, preferably with ominous background music, so
you'll feel uneasy about them.
It's not that our state legislators and local officials can do no
better. It's that this is the best our limited attention spans permit
them to do.
Still, sometimes that assumption of constituent passivity can get a
little overdone. I will give you an example.
My state senator is David Goodman, a youthful-looking Republican. His
3rd Senate district includes most if not all of the Ohio 21st--it's
hard to be certain, because I've not yet found a detailed map of his
district--and then extends to incorporate the entire eastern third of
Franklin County. From my sharply limited knowledge he seems pretty
energetic and bright. He was a city councilman in Bexley, a small but
affluent suburban community, from 1995 to 1998; then representative of
the Ohio 25th district from 1998 until 2001. Since then he has been a
state senator, though in November 2004 he ran unsuccessfully to unseat
Mary Jo Kilroy as one of three Franklin County commissioners. (The
normally pro-Republican Columbus Dispatch endorsed Kilroy over
Goodman, praising her "steady and pragmatic voice" and noting that
Goodman "failed to make a case for replacing her.")
A couple of weeks ago I emailed Sen. Goodman about good ole SB 24,
Sen. Larry Mumper's bill to tame irresponsible tenured radicals like
myself. Sen. Goodman must be deluged with mail on all sorts of
subjects, but in due time he replied. I found his letter awaiting me
last evening when I got home:
Dear Mr. Grimsley,
Thank you for contacting my office regarding your opposition to
Senate Bill 24. I also agree that hearing different viewpoints is
an important part of the higher education experience. Students at
our state colleges and university should be free to hear different
viewpoints and form their own beliefs.
It's wonderful that Sen. Goodman feels that way. So do I. So does Sen.
Mumper. The question is whether we need a state law to enforce this
happy state of affairs, and on that point Sen. Goodman is silent.
Gee, what a shock. This is a form letter--a form letter written so
that it would placate proponents and opponents of the bill alike.
The form letter I don't mind. That's understandable. But am I alone in
thinking that even a form letter should provide some inkling of the
legislator's own opinion of the bill, whether it's "I'm for it," "I'm
against it," or "I'm thinking it over"?
But of course, why should Sen. Goodman stick his neck out, even a
little, for the likes of me? I've risked only the time it takes to
compose an email. He risks an erosion of political capital and
popularity that could, in time, mean the loss of his office. I have
tenure. He doesn't.
No, there's absolutely no reason for Sen. Goodman to stick his neck
out.
Unless citizens like me oblige him to stick his neck out.
Which is why I am now on record as saying that I will contribute $100
to Sen. Goodman's opponent next year (in any race for which he's a
candidate: due to term limits, he cannot run for a third term as state
senator). It's not that I dislike Sen. Goodman. But I dislike the
system that we have all conspired to create. And the first step toward
changing it is to change my own behavior.
But to be fair, Senator: I'll make you a deal. If you or your staff
happen to stumble across this post, and you favor me with an honest
statement of where you stand on SB 24 and why you stand there, the
hundred bucks is yours.
This isn't about politics. It's about creating a better environment in
which politics can operate. The pols, the lobbyists, the activists
quite obviously won't create a better environment. They are used to
this one. They understand it. It works for them.
No, it's up to ordinary people like me. We will never change our
2 comments:
Next year is now... or at least it starts on March 5. Mr. Goodman is running to be a judge for the Franklin County Court of Appeals. He's unopposed in the Republican Primary, his Democratic opponent for the general will be decided in next weeks Dem primary.
p.s. Cleveland State hosts detailed maps. The 21st is here:
http://nodis.csuohio.edu/nodis/2000reports/maps/oh_houNsen1105/house21.pdf
Post a Comment