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see also our other report:

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EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY
Download
a complete copy of the report
Large campaign contributions
allow wealthy donors to unduly influence who can run for office
and who wins elections in Ohio. This analysis examines the role
of campaign contributions in influencing the outcome of Ohio elections.
The candidate who raised
the most money won 95% of the time.
n Big money won 18 of 18 congressional
races, 16 of 16 state senate races, and 92 of 99 state house races.
Winning candidates significantly outraised their opponents.
n In congressional races, winners
raised five times as much as their opponents and had a total cash
advantage of $15 million.
n In state senate races, winners raised
twelve times as much as their opponents and had total a cash advantage
of $9.7 million.
n In state house races, winners raised
four times as much as their opponents and had a total cash advantage
of $11 million.
Slanted districts are even worse.
Fundraising discrepancies are even larger in districts that are
slanted heavily toward one party as a result of gerrymandering in
the redistricting process. Excluding uncontested races:
n In safe congressional seats, winners
raised 11 times as much as their opponents. In less safe seats,
winners raised 2.4 times as much.
n In safe state senate seats, winners
raised 37 times as much as their opponents. In less safe senate
seats, winners raised seven times as much as their opponents.
n In safe house seats, winners raised
five times as much as their opponents. In less safe seats, winners
raised 2.6 times as much as their opponents.
Dual disadvantages.
Campaign fundraising and gerrymandering both tilt the playing field
in favor of some candidates and against others. Our final analysis
looked out how these forces work in tandem.
n For 14 congressional and 13 state
senate races, the dual advantages predicted 100% of the results
for non-competitive districts.
n In the 84 non-competitive state
house districts, only seven candidates overcame the district advantage.
Five of those seven did so by dramatically outspending their opponents.
n In only 2 of 111 non-competitive
districts did a candidate beat the odds by winning in a district
where the partisan makeup disadvantaged them while also facing an
opponent who raised more money.
n In 98% of these non-competitive
districts, one or more of the dual advantages of campaign financing
or district gerrymandering prevailed.

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