Butts served in the 23rd District from 1975 until 1990. Butts originally defeated Republican Senator Anthony F. Novak in 1974 to take a seat in the Senate, which represented the near westside of Cleveland at the time, including parts of the
Detroit-Shoreway and
Ohio City neighborhoods. He was reelected in 1978, 1982, and 1986. After the 1980 elections, Butts was elected as minority whip, and was elected as assistant president pro-tempore in 1982. Butts served on the Ways and Means Committee, Energy and Public Utilities, and the Rules Committees. He was appointed Chairman of the Elections, Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee, as well as chairman of the Public Improvements Inspection Committee. Butts was generally known as a hard working legislator, but he also could antagonize opponents, once considered of the "worst" legislators by
Cincinnati magazine. The 23rd Senate District would later be
gerrymandered, expanding westward to include the eastern portions of
Lakewood. In 1990, Butts was defeated for reelection by former Lakewood mayor
Anthony Sinagra.
1979 mayoral campaign In April 1979, Butts announced that he would enter the
1979 Cleveland mayoral election, challenging fellow Democrat, the beleaguered incumbent
Dennis Kucinich. Kuicinich was considered vulnerable, having narrowly survived a
recall election the year before by just over 200 votes out of more than 120,000 votes. The field quickly grew in July with additions of
city council majority leader
Basil Russo and Republican
George Voinovich, who was
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio. Also, Thabo L. Ntweng of the socialist worker's party would also join the race. One of Butts' top senate aides, A. Lamont Eanes, helped run the 1979 mayoral campaign. Eanes would eventually be nominated by President
Barack Obama as deputy Social Security administrator in 2014 Butts would finish fourth in the nonpartisan primary in the crowded field, garnering a respectable 19,431 votes, or 15.28%, behind eventual winner Voinovich, Kuicinich, and Russo. ==After politics==