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David Pepper is an American politician of the Democratic party. Formerly a councilman for the city of Cincinnati, he is currently a commissioner for the Hamilton County, Ohio Board of Commissioners. Portune addresses a crowd at a Turnaround Ohio rally in Cincinnati Todd Portune is a American politician of the Democratic Party, who currently serves as a commissioner for Hamilton County. ...
Cincinnati, Ohio viewed from the SW, across the Ohio River from Kentucky. ...
Cincinnati, Ohio viewed from the SW, across the Ohio River from Kentucky. ...
Hamilton County is a county in the located in the southwest corner of the state of Ohio, United States. ...
Biography Born in the Cincinnati area, he is the son of former Procter & Gamble CEO, John Pepper. A graduate of Cincinnati Country Day, an elite private high school in nearby Indian Hill, Ohio, he later attended Yale University, receiving a B.A. in 1993 and a J.D. in 1999. Thereafter, he clerked for Judge Nathaniel Jones on the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. He now lives in Mt. Adams, a neighborhood in Cincinnati just east of downtown, and is an occasional local political candidate. Procter & Gamble Co. ...
Cincinnati Country Day School (abbreviated CCDS) is a non-parochial, private school located in Indian Hill, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati, Ohio. ...
The Village of Indian Hill is a city located in Hamilton County, Ohio, and is the affluent suburb of the Greater Cincinnati area. ...
âYaleâ redirects here. ...
Cincinnati City Councilman In 2001, Pepper sought a seat on Cincinnati's city council and collected the most votes of all candidates in the race. [1] Nine council members are elected every two years at large. Though he is a Democrat, the office is nonpartisan. In 2003, he ran for re-election and again collected the most votes of all candidates. While on council, he served on the Law and Public Safety, Rules, and Neighborhoods committees.
Mayoral Run Following the announcement that Charlie Luken, the incumbent Democratic mayor of Cincinnati, would not seek a second term, Pepper announced he would vie for the office. Several local politicians were involved in a large nonpartisan primary. The top two votegetters - Pepper and Ohio State Sen. Mark Mallory, also a Democrat - then faced each other in a runoff. On election day, Mallory narrowly won the election when he collected 51.8% of the total vote - to Pepper's 48.2%. [2] Charles J. Luken (born July 18, 1951, in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American politician of the Democratic party who was mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio. ...
Mark L. Mallory of Cincinnati, Ohio, is an American politician of the Democratic party, who as of January 2005 (126th Ohio General Assembly) is the assistant minority leader in the Ohio Senate. ...
2006 County Run Pepper sought, and won election to Hamilton County's Board of Commissioners. He defeated incumbent Republican Phil Heimlich by collecting 55% of the vote. [3] Pepper serves on the three-person board with Democrat Todd Portune and Republican Pat DeWine. Portune addresses a crowd at a Turnaround Ohio rally in Cincinnati Todd Portune is a American politician of the Democratic Party, who currently serves as a commissioner for Hamilton County. ...
Richard Patrick Pat DeWine is a lawyer and politician of the Republican party who serves as a member of the Hamilton County Commission. ...
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