I think those other states you mention are all sorta the opposite. Isn't much of the "rust belt" hollowing out? Populations stagnant to declining? Potentially de-urbanizing as people in cities are leaving for better economic opportunities in the South / West, while the rural population, especially farming, remains right where they are?
When I think of Ohio, I think of a state where everyone who lives there loves it because there's no such thing as a "big city". There are a lot of medium-sized cities, all large enough to give people a wide range of experiences but none so large that they're anything like an NYC or LA or Chicago or Atlanta. You get all the advantages of cities without their worst excesses. But even then it's discussed upthread that Cinci and Cleveland are sort of hurting, while someplace with a major university / knowledge hub like Columbus is the one growing.
I get a similar sense with Wisconsin, where it's a more heavily rural state with Milwaukee which is a minor city. Detroit used to be a major city, but it's dead. Pittsburgh seems to be declining, but I'm sure Philly is still more healthy being close to the power centers of the East. I can't really tell re: MSP, it seems like a city that punches above its weight class but I'm not sure how much it dominates the state overall like Chicago or Atlanta or Phoenix or Denver does.
I dunno... You guys are the ones that live there. If you can offer more color, let me know.
Vis-a-vis Ohio:
If you remember back to the 2000 Election, most of the attention was on Florida but Ohio was almost as close. Recall that Bush ended up winning the EC 271-266. Ohio had 21 EV's then and went for Bush so flipping it would EASILY have flipped the election:
- 2,351,209 Bush 49.97%
- 2,186,190 Gore 46.46%
- 165,019 difference 0.51%
This was typical for Ohio for Generations. If you've never heard of it, a group called Cook does a "Cook Political Value Index" that rates states, Congressional Districts, and other geographic areas by their partisan lean relative to the Country as a whole. Ie, if your district matches the country as a whole you get a PVI of 0. If you are 4% more Republican than the Country as a whole, you get a PVI of R+4. If you are 6% more Democratic than the Country as a whole, you get a PVI of D+6. One advantage of this is that it accounts for landslides and really good or really bad candidates because we aren't just looking at how a district voted but how they voted relative to the Nation as a whole.
For literally generations Ohio's PVI using this method would have been +/-2%. Ohio was ALWAYS right on the line. Examples:
- 2000 Gore beat Bush by 0.5% nationally, Bush beat Gore by 0.5% in Ohio indicating a PVI of R+1
- 2004 Bush beat Kerry by 2.4% nationally and by 2.1% in Ohio indicating a PVI of 0
- 2008 Obama beat McCain by 7.2% nationally and by 4.6% in Ohio indicating a PVI of R+2.6
- 2012 Obama beat Romney by 4% nationally and by 3% in Ohio indicating a PVI of R+1
- 2016 Clinton beat Trump by 2% nationally, Trump beat Clinton by 8% in Ohio indicating a PVI of R+10
- 2020 Biden beat Trump by 4.5% nationally, Trump beat Biden by 8% in Ohio indicating a PVI of R+12.5
A mere 20 years ago, in 2004 Ohio voted slightly more Democratic than the nation as a whole. Today that would be unthinkable.
I remember, in 2004, that my dad, brother, and I drove to Chicago for an Ohio State game against Northwestern on October 2. One thing I remember from the trip was how active the Presidential campaigns were in Ohio and how dead silent they were in Indiana and Illinois. That makes sense. Ohio was a fiercely competitive state so during the Ohio portion of our trip we heard nearly ceaseless radio ads for Bush and Kerry. We actually saw both of their busses on the Ohio Turnpike (one on the way, the other on the way back). Then we got to Indiana and . . . NOTHING. Same in Illinois. The campaigns spent NOTHING in Indiana because both sides knew that Bush would win there and they spent NOTHING in Illinois because both sides knew that Kerry would win there. They spent lavishly in Ohio because it was up for grabs.
On Ohio generally:
One thing I learned from a Marketing professor in College was that a lot of Marketing studies were conducted in Ohio because it made a pretty good proxy for the country as a whole. The State had manufacturing, agriculture, shipping (both great lakes and Ohio River), a lot of medical. Basically Ohio had most everything you would find in the Country and it tended to have it in roughly the same allocation as the country as a whole so if people in Ohio liked your widgets, they'd probably sell nationwide.
Your summation of Ohio's cities is an interesting outsider take to me. One funny side note is that there is some dispute as to Ohio's most populous City. There are actually arguments for all three:
- Columbus has BY FAR the largest population IN the City.
- Cleveland has the biggest media market.
- Cincinnati has the most populous MSA (Metropolitan Statistical Area) but this includes a bunch of people who live in Kentucky and Indiana so if you are asking for "population in Ohio" they don't count.
Ohio has more large cities than almost any other state (depending on how you define large). My point is, Ohio's most populous Cities are:
- 906k Columbus
- 373k Cleveland
- 309k Cincy
- 271k Toledo
- 190k Akron
- 138k Dayton
- 81k Parma (Cleveland suburb)
- 71k Canton
- 65k Lorain
- 62k Hamilton
A few comparisons:
- Illinois: Chicago is #1 and MUCH larger than anything in Ohio but their #2 is a Chicago suburb that would be #6 in Ohio.
- Michigan: Detroit is #1 at 639k and their second most populous city would be #5 in Ohio.