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District Name Life dates Party Candidate Served 1st District: Charles R. Blasdel: 1971–Present: Republican: 2000 2002 2004: 2001–Present 2nd District: Jon M. Peterson Republican ?-Present 3rd District: Jim Carmichael Republican ?-Present 4th District: John R. Willamowski: 1960–Present: Republican: 1998 2000 2002 2004: 1997–2006 5th ...
1st district: Greg Landsman (D) 2nd district: Brad Wenstrup (R) 3rd district: Joyce Beatty (D) 4th district: Jim Jordan (R) 5th district: Bob Latta (R) 6th district: Bill Johnson (R) 7th district: Max Miller (R) 8th district: Warren Davidson (R) 9th district: Marcy Kaptur (D) 10th district: Mike Turner (R) 11th district: Shontel Brown (D)
Robert Cole Sprague (born April 18, 1973) is an American politician serving as the 49th and current Ohio Treasurer of State.Prior to his election as treasurer, he represented the 83rd district in the Ohio House of Representatives, and served as city auditor and treasurer in his hometown of Findlay.
Bill Albright, Meredith Craig, Dennis Finley, Frank Grande and Josh Hlavaty are the Republicans and Mark D. Gooch is the Democrat seeking the seat in the Ohio Senate, which serves a two-year term ...
The Ohio District Courts of Appeals consists of 69 judges in 12 districts. Judges serve a 6-year term. Approximately 1/3 of these positions were up for election in 2024.
The proposed amendment would set up a 15-member commission, appointed by retired judges, to draw the district maps for Ohio statehouse and U.S. Congressional elections. [4] The proponents say that the new law would end gerrymandering and "ban current or former politicians, political party officials and lobbyists from sitting on the Commission."
Incumbent Republican state treasurer Robert Sprague ran for re-election to a second term in office and was challenged by Democrat Scott Schertzer. [7] Sprague easily won the general election. Despite a victory margin of 17.1%, Sprague’s victory was the closest victory of any statewide election of the cycle.
The current salary for the full-time job of first selectman is a modest $43,901, with an additional travel stipend. She also receives a state pension of $54,174 for her years of service as a Connecticut corrections officer and $28,000, plus expenses, for her part-time job as state senator. [23]