CINCINNATI (TDB) -- Christian Citizen calls the March 4 primary "a critical time for conservatives and the Value Voters," and has picked State Rep. Tom Brinkman in the OH-o2 contest against U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt. The newspaper -- which appears irregularly and is distributed through evangelical churches in SW and southern Ohio -- quietly put out the word for Brinkman last week. It describes the suburban Cincinnati lawmaker as a "conservative's conservative" and seems to say that Schmidt is not a really a Republican.
The endorsement may gain the term-limited Brinkman some attention -- he is a serious underdog, seriously underfunded and widely considered headed for defeat barring a political comeback of epic proportions. Here's what the Christian publication said:
"The 2nd Congressional District race is another hotly contested race where Republicans are trying to take that district from incumbent Jean Schmitt (sic). . . However, our pick for that race is Tom Brinkman. Also a former Ohio State Representative, Brinkman stands for lower taxes and no abortions. He has taken a pledge to 'oppose any and all efforts to increase marginal tax rates for individuals and/or businesses and oppose any net reduction or elimination of deductions and credits unless matched dollar for dollar by further reducing tax rates." Brinkman is known as a conservative's conservative and he wants to win the primary in the 2nd Congressional District becauses he fears that district could be lost to the Democrats due to a weak showing of Congresswoman Schmidt."
It is not elegant prose. And there is an error -- Brinkman is not a former rep.
Showing posts with label Christian Newspaper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Newspaper. Show all posts
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Ohio's Online Christian Right Newspaper: Hibernating, Dead Or Needs A Miracle?
DAYTON (TDB) -- Citizen USA online hasn't published a fresh news story for more than a month. The conservative Christian right newspaper has traditionally been a foe of Democrats on its editorial pages, opposes abortion and gay rights, and has been critical of the mainstream media. Last fall, it endorsed Republican Ken Blackwell for governor, and Blackwell appears on the online site in what amounts to a plug that praises Citizen USA.
So far, there is nothing available that explains the lack of fresh news and commentary. It could be a slow perior, or neglect. But some are wondering if the Christian right publication has folded -- perhaps succumbing to the pressures and shifts in readership that are shrinking and damaging the bottom lines of general interest newspapers. Citizen USA online grew out of the print version of Christian Citizen, a newspaper that had its first press run in 1984. In the 1990s, it was aligned with Mike Turner, then Dayton's Republican mayor, now a conservative Ohio congressman.
The publishers are Pendra Lee and Rick Snyder, who say in a note describing their paper's history that they wanted to reach a broader audience. That meant a name change from Christian Citizen to Citizen USA. They intended to fashion a general interest publication with Christian roots. Does the lack of copy indicate their plan flopped, or has flagged? They wrote:
"As the Citizen USA expands into the culture and works to continually improve the coverage of news and information from a traditional values point of view, we pray that we won't have to wear our Jesus on our mast head. We pray that people who might otherwise stay away might will pick up Citizen USA and join us in the movement to return to traditional values in our nation."
So far, there is nothing available that explains the lack of fresh news and commentary. It could be a slow perior, or neglect. But some are wondering if the Christian right publication has folded -- perhaps succumbing to the pressures and shifts in readership that are shrinking and damaging the bottom lines of general interest newspapers. Citizen USA online grew out of the print version of Christian Citizen, a newspaper that had its first press run in 1984. In the 1990s, it was aligned with Mike Turner, then Dayton's Republican mayor, now a conservative Ohio congressman.
The publishers are Pendra Lee and Rick Snyder, who say in a note describing their paper's history that they wanted to reach a broader audience. That meant a name change from Christian Citizen to Citizen USA. They intended to fashion a general interest publication with Christian roots. Does the lack of copy indicate their plan flopped, or has flagged? They wrote:
"As the Citizen USA expands into the culture and works to continually improve the coverage of news and information from a traditional values point of view, we pray that we won't have to wear our Jesus on our mast head. We pray that people who might otherwise stay away might will pick up Citizen USA and join us in the movement to return to traditional values in our nation."
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