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Sep 30 2023

Ohio Democratic Party Statement on J.R. Majewski Entering GOP Primary for OH-9

Columbus, OH – Today, the Ohio Democratic Party released the following statement in response to J.R. Majewski announcing he’s running again in the GOP primary for Ohio’s 9th Congressional District. 

“With J.R. officially in the race, the GOP primary in OH-09 will be messy, mean and expensive. When this nasty primary race is over, the nominee who limps across the finish line will be badly bruised and out-of-touch with voters in OH-09,” said Matt Keyes, spokesperson for the Ohio Democratic Party.   

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Written by Matthew Keyes · Categorized: Uncategorized

Sep 29 2023

#OHSEN Slugfest Shutdown Edition: LaRose and Moreno Fight Over Who Cares About Ohioans The Least… Just Another Day in The Senate Slugfest

Columbus, OH – With a government shutdown looming, the infighting is only escalating with Frank LaRose and Bernie Moreno clashing over shutting down the federal government and competing for the title of who cares about Ohioans the least.  

Here’s what you missed this week in what has already been called one of the “messiest, “most expensive” and “bruising” primary battles in the country. 

LESS THAN 48 HOURS UNTIL A SHUTDOWN: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW 

Ohio’s Senate Slugfest is already “the messiest Senate primary” in the country with three candidates duking it out while neglecting the issues most important to Ohioans’ daily lives — and their livelihoods.

Bernie Moreno is leading the charge and was first to call for a government shutdown. It’s no surprise that mega-millionaire Moreno doesn’t understand the real impact a shutdown will have on Ohioans. 
Moreno supports a government shutdown – and he went so far as to  launch an ad cheering it on:

Frank LaRose was asked if he would support a CR if he were in the Senate today… and said no. Parroting Moreno’s talking points, LaRose reinforced that he does not care about Ohioans and will put his finger in the wind to support his own political ambitions.

Matt Dolan has continued to dodge questions about the government shutdown. He owes Ohioans answers: Does he support a government shutdown? 

GASOLINE ON THE INFIGHTING FIRE

And now, Moreno and LaRose are throwing punches over who cares about Ohioans the least. After Moreno launched his ad, he slammed LaRose for being weak and “caving to the left.” 

From Cleveland.com:

“In a statement to cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer, Moreno took an indirect swipe at LaRose’s comments on Bannon’s show. His campaign also released a web ad Thursday highlighting his stance.

“Now is not the time for Republicans to cave to the left with a clean CR or more funding for Ukraine…”

Did someone say cat fight!?

WHILE MORENO AND LAROSE DUKE IT OUT, OHIOANS’ LIVELIHOODS ARE ON THE LINE 

A government shutdown would be devastating to Ohioans:

Over 2.4 million Ohioans receiving Social Security and Medicare will be at risk for disruptions. 

Over 52,000 federal civilian workers in Ohio will either be furloughed or forced to work without pay. In addition, an estimated 6,800 active duty service members in Ohio will not receive pay.

Many Ohio families, including more than 93,000 Ohio children, will lose their access to affordable food. 

Civilian employees at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, the largest single-site employer in Ohio with an economic impact of $4.2 billion a year, will be furloughed unless deemed mission critical.

Thirteen Disaster Recovery Fund long-term projects would be delayed in Ohio.

WHAT OHIOANS ARE HEARING ABOUT THE #OHSEN SLUGFEST AND THE IMPENDING SHUTDOWN

Cleveland.com: How would Ohio’s U.S. Senate candidates handle a potential government shutdown if they make it to Washington, D.C.?

WATCH HERE: BERNIE MORENO AND FRANK LAROSE SUPPORT A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN

SLUGFEST COUNTDOWN

172 days left until this Slugfest comes to a head and the infighting just keeps getting worse. 

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

Colleen Marshall, WCMH: “Republicans vying to unseat Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown are insisting they would not support a short term funding bill to keep the government open…”

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Written by Reeves Oyster · Categorized: Uncategorized

Sep 29 2023

Frank LaRose Continues Dodging Questions From Ohioans, Media, and Lawmakers on Latest Scandal

Why won’t LaRose give Ohioans the answers they deserve after costing them $600,000? 

Columbus, OH – Frank LaRose is still facing serious questions for his decision to put his political ambitions ahead of Ohioans by moving the Ohio Secretary of State office to the same building as his current campaign HQ. After a series of expensive missteps during the August special election, LaRose’s latest scandal is now costing taxpayers a steep $600,000 that will take Ohioans over 50 years to recoup.

The list of people waiting for answers on LaRose’s decision keeps growing. Thirteen state lawmakers have joined Ohioans and media outlets calling on LaRose to provide answers on his latest scandal.

Ohio Lawmakers: “Out of concern for our constituents, we are requesting additional information about the process you followed to identify a new location for the Secretary of State’s office. As elected officials, we owe Ohioans complete transparency into how their tax dollars are spent, especially when related to political campaigns.”

“Frank LaRose’s latest scandal is growing and Ohio taxpayers are paying the bill for his scheme to move the Secretary of State office to the same building as his campaign,” said ODP Spokesperson Reeves Oyster. “Ohioans aren’t buying LaRose’s excuses or his phony math as it becomes clearer every day that LaRose will do whatever it takes to advance his political career, regardless of how much it hurts – or costs – Ohioans.”

Read / watch more: 

Ohio Capital Journal: Democrats ask LaRose to provide more information about moving his office to campaign headquarters

Megan Henry

September 28, 2023

  • Thirteen Ohio Democratic lawmakers are asking Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose to provide more information about moving his office to the same location as his U.S. Senate campaign headquarters.
  • Earlier this month, it was reported that LaRose is looking to move the secretary of state’s office from a building at 180 E. Broad Street, where it had been located for nearly 20 years, to a building at 200 Civic Center Drive — the same address he listed as his campaign address when he filed his candidacy for Senate with the Federal Election Commission.
  • “Out of concern for our constituents, we are requesting additional information about the process you followed to identify a new location for the Secretary of State’s office,” the lawmakers wrote in their Wednesday letter to LaRose. “Despite your claims that your decision to move your official office to the same location as your Senate campaign is “completely incidental,” several key questions remain unanswered.”
  • Will you provide the full details for the process for deciding to move the office, including how many properties – including their respective costs per square foot compared to the office space located at 200 Civic Center Drive – were considered?
  • When did you make the decision to move your official office to 200 Civic Center Drive in relation to when you began thinking about running for Senate?
  • Will you release all documentation from your office pertaining to your request to bypass the standard process to move the Secretary of State’s office to the same building as your Senate campaign?
  • “As elected officials, we owe Ohioans complete transparency into how their tax dollars are spent, especially when related to political campaigns,” the letter said.

WSYX: LaRose asked to justify spending $600,000 on relocating his office

Darrel Rowland

September 28, 2023

  • The latest political controversy in Columbus revolves around office space.
  • Secretary of State Frank LaRose wants to move his office from North Fourth Street to 200 Civic Center Drive a few blocks away. Democrats point out that that space houses the attorneys for his U.S. senate campaign.
  • Ohio Sen. Bill DeMora, D-Columbus, is pounding on LaRose for changing the location of the secretary of state’s leased office for the first time in decades. DeMora led 13 Democrats who sent a letter to LaRose this week, seeking justification for the move, which will cost $600,000. While the office gets a slight decrease in the lease rate, that initial outlay won’t be recovered until 2077, DeMora said.
  • “We want some answers,” DeMora said. “I mean this is state money he’s spending to move. It’s a purview of Democratic legislators to ask him why you’re spending this money.”
  • DeMora, a top operative of the Ohio Democratic party for years before taking office last year, said he thinks it’s hardly a coincidence that LaRose picked the building that houses his senate campaign’s legal adviser, Baker-Hostetler.
  • “It doesn’t pass the smell test for any rational person,” DeMora said. “The secretary of state’s office, through Democrat and Republican secretary of states, has been in the same building for 20 years. And now all of a sudden Secretary LaRose decides, well, it has to be moved.”
  • Neither LaRose nor anyone from his campaign would go on camera to respond to the Democrats’ concerns.

WCMH: Ohio Democrats question Secretary of State office move

Natalie Fahmy

September 26, 2023

  • Democratic state lawmakers are questioning Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose’s decision to move his state office to the same building that his U.S. Senate campaign is filed under.
  • Thirteen House and Senate Democrats have asked LaRose to disclose the timeline of deciding the move and the full details that led to the building being chosen.
  • NBC4 was first to report on the move earlier this month, which will cost more than half a million dollars… LaRose previously said that the building is where his campaign lawyers are based and that it is purely “incidental” that his state office will be there now as well.

Toledo Blade: Ohio Secretary of State’s offenses pile up

Eric Haidet, Sylvania Township

September 28, 2023

  • I feel like I can’t read the news anymore without seeing another new Secretary of State Frank LaRose scandal. How many times are we going to let this elected official manipulate us for his own personal gain?
  • First, he made multiple mistakes in the August election, then he rewrote the ballot language for the November abortion amendment to be misleading and inaccurate, and now Mr. LaRose is moving his Secretary of State office to the same building as his campaign headquarters.
  • I cannot understand how this is allowed. Isn’t this a conflict of interest?
  • So we are essentially paying for Mr. LaRose to not serve us in the way he was elected to.
  • I am disappointed in Mr. LaRose’s blatant disregard for Ohio voters. We need to hold him accountable.

Ironton Tribune: LaRose’s unethical move

Thomas Yeager

September 25, 2023

  • I should have known better when LaRose, whose salary WE pay, announced his run for higher office this summer. And since launching his Senate campaign, LaRose has made a number of political moves that should cause concern for Ohioans.
  • His latest unethical move is a bit more literal.
  • It was reported that LaRose is moving the official Secretary of State office for the first time in nearly 20 years. Where, you might ask? The same building as LaRose’s Senate campaign headquarters. And the move isn’t cheap, LaRose’s decision to be closer to his political lackeys will cost taxpayers over half a million dollars.
  • It’s long been clear that LaRose is more focused on advancing his political career than doing his job. But LaRose’s latest scandal shows there is no line he won’t cross if it helps him climb the political ladder.
  • As Secretary of State, LaRose owes Ohioans some answers.
  • Between moving office buildings, making himself the face of the August election, and now trying to mislead Ohioans by rewriting the November amendment ballot language, LaRose is not hiding his willingness to disrespect Ohioans in pursuit of advancing his own political ambitions.
  • He is once again proving he does not care about us. He will violate our trust to benefit himself. He will cost us hundreds of thousands of dollars to get a political promotion. He will try to trick us to push his own agenda. He will silence our voices.
  • I was held to the highest ethical standards as a senior noncommissioned officer in the USAF. We should receive no less from our elected officials. LaRose needs to be held accountable for this string of unethical moves.

WATCH MORE FROM WCMH HERE

WATCH MORE FROM WSYX HERE

READ THE FULL LETTER FROM STATE LAWMAKERS HERE.

See also: Ohio Lawmakers Call On Frank LaRose To Answer for Latest Scandal Costing Ohioans; Frank LaRose’s “Latest Unethical Move Is a Bit More Literal”; ICYMI: “Ethics Red Flags” Go Up as Frank LaRose’s “Ability to Do that Job Impartially Has Been Called into Question” [Ohio Capital Journal]; LaRose’s Math Not Adding Up as Taxpayers Cover Steep Cost to Move Secretary of State Office to His Campaign HQ; As Scandal Grows, LaRose’s “Answers” Just Raise More Questions About Steep Cost to Move Secretary of State Office to His Campaign HQ; Frank LaRose Still Owes Ohioans Answers After Latest Scandal Surfaces;  A New Scandal For Frank LaRose: Taxpayers Foot Steep Bill to Move Secretary of State Office to Campaign HQ

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Written by Reeves Oyster · Categorized: Uncategorized

Sep 28 2023

Republican Politicians are Rooting for a Government Shutdown, and It’s Going to Harm Ohio

Columbus, OH – As Republican politicians in Washington hurtle us toward a government shutdown this weekend, it’s Ohio servicemembers, families and workers who will pay the price. While Ohio Democrats are doing their part to find solutions, Washington Republicans and politicians here in Ohio, like Bernie Moreno and Frank LaRose, seem dead set on shutting down the government. 

“Republican politicians in Washington and here at home are rooting for a government shutdown that would have devastating effects on working Ohioans, families and servicemembers. Our message to these politicians is clear: stop playing political games with the lives and well-being of Ohioans and do your damn jobs,” said Ohio Democratic Party Chair Elizabeth Walters. 

Here’s a sampling of the ways Ohioans will be hurt by a government shutdown:

  • Put critical nutrition assistance at risk for 179,262 Ohioans, including 42,341 women, 93,119 children and 43,802 infants
  • Put 6,800 active-duty servicemembers in Ohio at risk of not getting paid. 
  • Delay 13 natural disaster relief projects in Ohio.
  • The Small Business Administration would not review or approve any new business loans. 
  • The Food and Drug Administration could be forced to pause food inspections on a wide variety of products. 
  • The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) would be forced to delay inspections that keep workers safe on the job. 

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Written by Matthew Keyes · Categorized: Uncategorized

Sep 28 2023

Chair Walters Lays Out the Stakes of November Election: Stopping Ohio’s Extreme Abortion Ban & Keeping Politicians Out of Our Healthcare Decisions

Columbus, OH – This week, Ohio Democratic Party Chair Elizabeth Walters conducted a number of interviews to lay out the stakes of the November election and urge Ohioans to vote YES on Issue 1. Voting YES on Issue 1 will prevent Ohio’s extreme abortion ban – with no exceptions for rape or incest – from taking effect and keep private medical decisions between a woman and her doctor, without interference from politicians. 

“We are working to prevent a total abortion ban from taking effect and protect Ohio women’s freedom to make healthcare decisions for ourselves, our families without any interference from politicians,” Chair Walters told WKEF-TV in Dayton.  

See what Ohioans are watching and reading about Issue 1 below: 

Columbus Dispatch
Chair Elizabeth Walters, Op-Ed
September 26, 2023

  • The only thing stopping a total abortion ban from taking effect in Ohio is your yes vote on Issue 1 on November 7. 
  • Now, the only way we can stop this draconian abortion ban from taking effect and stop politicians from inserting themselves into our private, personal medical decisions is to vote Yes on Issue 1 by November 7. 
  • Here’s the simple truth: passing Issue 1 would protect our right to reproductive care in the Ohio Constitution so that our freedoms will not be up to the whims of whatever politicians are in power at the moment.
  • Full stop.
  • It will keep these private healthcare decisions where they belong: with women and their families. 
  • Any other talking points from the other side are just scare tactics meant to distract you from their anti-abortion agenda and their extreme total abortion ban.

WDTN-TV Dayton
Riley Phillips
September 26, 2023

  • Issue One is about reproductive rights. The amendment would give every Ohioan the right to make their own decisions about things like abortion and contraception. It would also provide legal protections for those who do get an abortion.
  • Ohio Democratic Party Chair, Liz Walters, said the party is staying focused on outreach.
  • “This summer has been really, I think, inspiring for us. We’ve engaged hundreds and thousands of volunteers who are talking to their friends, family, and neighbors about why voting yes on Issue One this November is the right thing to do for Ohio, women and girls,” Walters explained.
  • “We know that when our activists and volunteers or members of their community take the time to talk to friends and neighbors about voting, people show up more. They feel better informed about casting their vote in November,” Walters said.

WFMJ-TV Youngstown
Corey Vallas
September 26, 2023

  • We spoke with Ohio’s Democratic Chair on 21 News at Five about why she feels this ballot measure is so important.
  • “We know that Ohio voters overwhelmingly support women’s healthcare freedom and that no one wants politicians inserting themselves into their doctor’s office to make those choices,” Ohio Democratic Chair Liz Walters told 21 News.
  • Walters said the proposed measure will give access to abortion protections for women in cases of rape or incest.
  • It would also expand healthcare access to birth control and IVF treatments.

Cleveland Scene
Mark Oprea
September 27, 2023

  • Walters said her office made one million calls and knocked on 243,000 doors in their battle to knock down the legislature-proposed constitutional amendment change.  As work continues in advance of November, Walters talked with Scene about the stakes for Ohio, the stakes for the nation, and voter outreach.
  • We’re very aware that the entire fight for abortion rights in this country, Ohio is now the center of the universe for that. And so we take that very [seriously]. At the end of the day, this campaign is about Ohioans, about Ohio women. And it’s being led for and by voters.
  • I think, though, philosophically, and I say this to someone like, listen, I was raised Catholic. I went to Catholic school. And here’s the thing about a yes vote on Issue 1. If you don’t like abortion, you can still not be for abortion with a yes vote on Issue 1. Right? This is about democracy, freedom and choices.
  • This is not us trying to force a pro-abortion view on others. It is about trying to enshrine the right for Ohio women and their families to make deeply personal health care decisions in privacy with their doctors, rather than with politicians guiding what those decisions should be.
  • And so whether you are an undecided voter, whether you don’t like abortion, a yes vote still empowers you to have those viewpoints, right? But if this issue fails, it will force extreme out-of-touch views from the Ohio legislature on all Ohio women—full stop.

WOSU News Columbus
Debbie Holmes
September 27, 2023

  • The campaigns for the November election are gearing up as early voting in Ohio is scheduled to begin in two weeks. 
  • “We are proud to be part of a big, diverse coalition who are supporting the yes on Issue 1 campaign for the November election,” says Ohio Democratic Party Chair Liz Walters. “We are working in this space, because we think the stakes couldn’t be higher.” 
  • Walters says the party will be getting their message out in many ways. 
  • “If you haven’t seen a TV ad yet or radio ad, I’m sure you will soon, and you’ll definitely be getting, you know, volunteers, maybe knocking on your door or making a phone call to you to talk about the importance of voting yes this fall,” says Walters.
  • Walters says she expects voter turnout will surpass that of an off-year, non-presidential election.
  • “I think with an issue as important as women’s health care, freedom on the ballot this November and so many folks who are going to want to come out and vote yes on Issue 1 to enshrine health care freedom for Ohio women. I think turnout will be higher than the normal odd year, November turnout,” says Walters.
  • Walters adds the August special election in Ohio showed that Issue 1 attracted a wide variety of voters, not just progressive ones. She expects the same turnout on Nov. 7.
  • “I think these are issues that are not necessarily about party,” says Walters. “They’re about people, you know, individual people. These are bigger than a partisanship. These are about folks making choices for themselves without the interference of politicians. And a whole bunch of folks, I think, are going to show up to vote this November to express their desires on these issues.”

WKEF-TV Dayton
September 26, 2023

  • “We are working to prevent a total abortion ban from taking effect and protect Ohio women’s freedom to make healthcare decisions for ourselves, our families without any interference from politicians.” 

The Ohio University Post 
Paige Fisher
September 27, 2023

  • The Post sat down with Liz Walters, chair of the Ohio Democratic Party, to talk about the November election and what issues will be on the ballot.
  • We are supporting a “yes” vote on state Issue 1; this enshrines women’s health care freedom in the Ohio Constitution. 
  • A “yes” vote ensures that the extreme abortion bans that have already been passed in Ohio don’t take effect and that moving forward, Ohio women can make their own health care decisions in consultation with their families and their doctors without the interference of politicians.
  • We have thousands of volunteers across the state who are working hard to talk to voters in their communities—where they live—knocking doors and making phone calls. 
  • Also, where (voters) consume information, we have folks doing a lot of social media sharing (and) we have a texting program; some people are writing postcards. There’s all kinds of activism happening, particularly around Issue 1.

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Written by Matthew Keyes · Categorized: Uncategorized

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