On One Ohio Street, Voters Weary of Election Promises for The Wall Street Journal
At the end of a mansion lined street outside of Cincinnati, Ohio sits a parking lot surrounded by a strip mall with a Subway and a laundromat in a space previously occupied by a Camaro plant. It's a microcosm of what was once the American dream. Massive century homes and General Motors co-existing on the same block.
Four families on the block, now struggling with the upkeep of their property and livelihoods, have all flip-flopped from party line, lifetime Republicans to Democrats and vice-versa.
At the end of a mansion lined street outside of Cincinnati, Ohio sits a parking lot surrounded by a strip mall with a Subway and a laundromat in a space previously occupied by a Camaro plant. It's a microcosm of what was once the American dream. Massive century homes and General Motors co-existing on the same block.
Four families on the block, now struggling with the upkeep of their property and livelihoods, have all flip-flopped from party line, lifetime Republicans to Democrats and vice-versa.