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Democrats Sponsor Resolution To Urge Candidates To Debate

The lack of debates in this election season has sparked an idea with two state lawmakers. 

Ohio Public Radio's Karen Kasler reports.

For the first time since 1978, there will be no debates in the governor’s race, after talks between incumbent John Kasich and challenger Ed FitzGerald broke down. And Attorney General Mike DeWine, Secretary of State Jon Husted and Treasurer Josh Mandel – all Republican incumbents – have refused to debate their Democratic challengers. Freshman Democratic Rep. Mike Curtin of Columbus is a former reporter and the author of an almanac on Ohio politics. He says this is “a slap in the face to voters.” 

“I’m surprised and disturbed. I did not think I would live to see the day when essentially you have unanimous opinion of the officeholders of the party of power refusing to stand up and debate.”

Curtin and longtime Rep. Vernon Sykes of Akron have co-sponsored a resolution that would urge statewide candidates to debate, though there’s no way to require that in law. And Curtin dismisses the suggestion that debates are outdated, unproductive and largely ignored by most voters. 

“The moral obligation to debate isn’t driven by Nielsen ratings. It’s driven by a respect for the public, a respect for ‘we the people’. Those are the people who own these offices. Many of them, a significant percentage of those people, look forward to debates, consider those debates to be, quite frankly, the high point of campaigns.”

But Curtin notes the resolution most likely won’t be voted on in the Republican dominated House before the election, if at all.

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