CBS/AP/ November 9, 2011, 7:42 AM

Voters across nation stick largely by incumbents

From left, Stephen Harris and Kristin Sutton cheer during a rally to repeal Senate Bill 5, Nov. 8, 2011, in Columbus, Ohio.

From left, Stephen Harris and Kristin Sutton cheer during a rally to repeal Senate Bill 5, Nov. 8, 2011, in Columbus, Ohio. / AP

For all the frustration surrounding the economy, voters refused to throw incumbent parties out of governors' and most big-city mayors' offices, and they turned back an Ohio law that aimed to ease grinding budget problems by restricting the union rights of public employees.

In the heart of the Bible Belt, a Mississippi initiative that would have defined life as beginning at fertilization also went down to defeat, ending a plan to use it to challenge Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that established the right to abortion.

Across the nation, voters' last major judgments of 2011 were sure to be closely analyzed for any clues about the public's political mood just two months ahead of the first presidential primary and nearly four years into the worst economic slowdown since the Depression.

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Kentucky's Democratic governor easily won another term, and Mississippi voters kept their governor's office in GOP hands — decisions that suggested many Americans were not ready to abandon the parties in power.

In Ohio, a hotly debated new law that severely limited the bargaining rights of more than 350,000 teachers, firefighters, police officers and other public employees was repealed with more than 60 percent of the vote. The defeat was a stinging blow to Gov. John Kasich and cast doubt on other Republican governors who have sought union-limiting measures as a means to curb spending.

"Ohio sent a message to every politician out there: Go in and make war on your employees rather than make jobs with your employees, and you do so at your own peril," AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said.

Kasich congratulated his opponents and pledged to consider his next steps carefully.

"I've heard their voices. I understand their decision, and frankly, I respect what people have to say in an effort like this," he said, adding that the vote requires him "to take a deep breath" and "spend some time reflecting on what happened here."

The disputed law permitted workers to negotiate wages but not pensions or health care benefits, and it banned public-worker strikes, scrapped binding arbitration and eliminated annual raises for teachers.

The outcome will no doubt be studied by presidential candidates as a gauge of the Ohio electorate, which is seen as a bellwether. No Republican has won the White House without Ohio, and only two Democrats have done so in more than a century.

Elsewhere on the ballot, Ohio voters approved a proposal to prohibit people from being required to buy health insurance as part of the national health care overhaul. The vote was mostly symbolic, but Republicans hoped to use it in a legal challenge.

The governors' races were of keen interest to both parties. Ten states will elect governors next year, and governors can marshal get-out-the-vote efforts crucial to any White House candidate. The first presidential primary is Jan. 10 in New Hampshire.

In Kentucky, Gov. Steve Beshear was easily re-elected despite high unemployment, budget shortfalls and an onslaught of third-party attack ads. He became the second Democrat to win a governor's race this year, after West Virginia's Earl Ray Tomblin.

In Mississippi, voters picked Republican Lt. Gov. Phil Bryant to succeed Haley Barbour, who could not run again because of term limits. Bryant beat Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny Dupree, the first black major-party nominee for governor in Mississippi.

The Mississippi measure to define life as beginning at fertilization would have been the first victory in the country for the so-called personhood movement, which aims to make abortion all but illegal. Similar attempts have failed in Colorado and are under way elsewhere.

The proposal divided the medical and religious communities and caused some of the most ardent abortion opponents, including Barbour, to waver in their support.

Opponents said the measure would have made some forms of birth control, such as the morning-after pill or the intrauterine device, illegal. And they worried that it could have deterred physicians from performing in vitro fertilization for fear of criminal charges if an embryo did not survive.

In Arizona, state Sen. Russell Pearce, architect of the tough immigration law that put the state at the forefront of the national debate, was ousted after a recall attempt led by a fellow Republican.

Other votes of note:

— Hundreds of cities held mayoral races, including some of the nation's largest. In San Francisco, interim Mayor Ed Lee had a strong lead in early returns and would become the city's first elected Asian-American mayor if he wins. But it could be days before final results are known because of a complicated system in which voters rank their top three candidates.

In Philadelphia, Democratic Mayor Michael Nutter trounced a little-known Republican challenger.

Phoenix elected Democrat Greg Stanton, a former city council member, as its new mayor after a campaign focused on pulling the nation's sixth-largest city out its economic and foreclosure slump.

Incumbent mayors also prevailed in Baltimore and Indianapolis.

— Comic-turned-politician Robert Farmer lost his bid to become Kentucky's agriculture commissioner. Farmer told hillbilly jokes that upset some people, and he had no farming experience. In Ohio, another comedian, Drew Hastings, a fixture on "Comedy Central," became mayor of tiny Hillsboro.

— In Maine, voters repealed a new state law that required voters to register at least two days before an election. The decision restored Election Day voter registration, which had been available for nearly four decades. A proposal to allow casinos in certain communities was rejected.

— Washington state voters approved a plan to end the state-run liquor system and allow large stores to sell alcohol. The proposal was bankrolled by giant retailer Costco, which spent more than $22 million, making it the costliest initiative in Washington history.

— Atlanta overwhelmingly approved Sunday alcohol sales, clearing the way for shoppers to buy liquor in stores as soon as New Year's Day.

— Oregon held a special primary to replace Democratic Rep. David Wu, who resigned in August after being accused of an unwanted sexual encounter with an 18-year-old woman. Wu was the fourth member of Congress to quit this year in a sex scandal.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
34 Comments Add a Comment
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noloyalisti says:
I think this was a HUGE day for progressives. They got rid of the Ohio law written by for and of the Top 1%. Of course the article did not state the obvious, that the budget problems in Ohio (as well as across the country) are a result of tax welfare to the Top 1% and the depression caused by Wall Street and the Big Bankster Houses.

They threw out the racist AZ guy, and MS decided to continue to abort and avoid more inbreds.
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signseeker1717 replies:
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Perhaps more to the point, MS voters rejected "Personhood" so that certain types of birth control (the pill and IUD) would not become illegal, thus limiting the number of conceptions, and reducing the NEED for abortions.
bigsk8fan replies:
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well said noloyal! i am tired of billionaire welfare and i vote!
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OrangPuteh says:
Voters stick by incumbents.

THERE'S THE PROBLEM!
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NunyaBidness1950 says:
Congrats, Ohio voters! You just voted for a one way street to financial ruin. How can you still be confused about public sector unions? Good luck! (Love the picture of twiddle dumb and twiddle dumber - with a combined reasoning skill set of a puppy.)
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GoUnion86 replies:
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Sour grapes.
twiddle_dumb replies:
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Go **** yourself!
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hanpenjer says:
PEOPLE - WAKE UP!!!!! DON'T YOU SEE WHAT THESE PEOPLE ARE DOING TO US???? GET THEM OUT OF OFFICE - NOW! VOTE SOMEONE NEW IN, AND IF THEY DON'T DO THE JOB... VOTE THEM OUT.. KEEP DOING IT UNTIL WE GET PEOPLE IN THERE THAT CARE ABOUT US AS A COUNTRY, NOT THEMSELVES AND THEIR AGENDA'S!!! WE ARE A BUNCH OF IDIOTS IN THIS COUNTRY.. LET'S USE THE FREEDOMS THAT WE HAVE, VOTE, VOTE, VOTE!!!!!
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twodm replies:
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Yes you know how to YELL... I can hear you... I just don't believe you.
hanpenjer replies:
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Yes I do know how to yell twodm... and I am furious... furious that the American people are not waking up to these guys. or.. they just don't care anymore and what a pathetic cop out. That's because half the country lives off the government and doesn't pay taxes. I get so tired of supporting them. ugh!
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Shibbol says:
While CBS headline writers slept, a quiet revolution took place in Ohio, Maine, and Mississippi yesterday.
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1two3four5 says:
I am no leader but I do have a suggestion. From reading these comments I understand basically we all think incumbents should be ousted. As it stands this is not possible because we ( you and I ) are too busy commenting here. I consider myself to be one of the poor, I have no idea about you and your status economically. My point finally is this: someone is voting all the same thugs into office time after time. It is not me, is it you? I read that the amount of actual voters are so small as to be negligible if we all voted. Lets all vote, I mean miss work, miss chow whatever it takes, get off your duff grab a friend and vote. If the candidate has ever held public office he is out.
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tsigili says:
That simply demonstrates people have to idea, of what they are DOING!
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Anotheryahoo replies:
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I agree,the incumbents have triple the $$$ so they can brainwash people through the corporate owned media. WE deserve this mess we are in if we keep electing the idiots who made it.
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BILLYSNAP says:
Doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
Fools.
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hanpenjer replies:
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Agree a 100%!!! When will they wake up? When it's too late?
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obetwo says:
The Ohioans' are especially stupid.

The public unions won the battle but the state will lose the war now and head into further decline and bankruptcy.
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Shibbol says:
Dear CBS headline writers: Maybe you didn't wake up yet on Wednesday morning. SB5 got destroyed. Maine decided for voting rights. Even old conservative Mississippi decided the far right was truly crazed. And FYI how many federal officials (formally to blame for the impasse in Congress) were on the ballot yesterday? That's right. Zero. Last night was a significant straw in the wind that middle class voters are going in a very healthy direction and getting ready to stomp on politicians that try to destroy collective bargaining, restrict their rights to vote, and tell them when life begins. Guess who supports those latter positions.
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