Ohio, DeWine and Ramaswamy
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Ramaswamy has secured trade union endorsements including the Ohio Teamsters Union and the Central Regional Council of Carpenters. President Donald Trump and the Center for Christian Virtue’s president have also endorsed Ramaswamy, who ran for president in 2024.
Ramaswamy has secured trade union endorsements including the Ohio Teamsters Union and the Central Regional Council of Carpenters. President Donald Trump and the Center for Christian Virtue’s president have also endorsed Ramaswamy, who ran for president in 2024.
The Nov. 3, 2026 election will be the first major referendum on President Donald Trump's second term. At the state level, Ohioans will see a shakeup in leadership with the departure of Gov. Mike DeWine as other term-limited officials pursue new jobs.
Next year’s political news, in Ohio and across the country, is likely to revolve around the 2026 Midterm Elections. State leaders have made some big changes to how Ohioans will vote in the Midterms and how elections are run and secured.
Is everything amazing in Ohio? Is that your experience? Do Ohio politicians have an outstanding record of winning big for Ohio residents? Do you feel like they are looking out for you? Have they turned Ohio into a destination among our 50 states?
17hon MSNOpinion
From trying to overturn democracy to top DOJ position: How an Ohio election denier is failing upward
The rise of T. Elliot Geyser, who helped Trump's efforts to block election certification and now holds one of the most powerful legal positions in the U.S. government.
WJW-TV Cleveland on MSN
How new absentee ballot rules will impact Northeast Ohio voters
The Cuyahoga County Board of Elections is working to inform voters of an important change ahead of the May primary election.
Historians point to 1864 as the year America began absentee voting on a large scale. President Abraham Lincoln wanted the votes of soldiers fighting in the Civil War, so they mailed ballots from the battlefield,
COLUMBUS — A new group is taking over the investigation of campaign finance violations in Ohio, and it begins work on Jan. 1. It’s called the Ohio Election Integrity Commission, and lawmakers created it in the state budget to replace the longtime Ohio Elections Commission.