logo
Team: Acton setting gubernatorial fundraising records

Team: Acton setting gubernatorial fundraising records

Yahoo27-03-2025
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Ohio's next gubernatorial election is 21 months away but the candidates are already reaching out to voters.
Republican frontrunner Vivek Ramaswamy, who is endorsed by President Donald Trump, has already begun airing advertising.
The lone Democrat in the race so far, former Ohio Health Department Director Dr. Amy Acton, is shattering the first quarter fundraising record for Democrats.
Her team said that by the time the first quarter ends next Monday, she will have $600,000 in her campaign coffers, beating the previous record for a Democrat: former Gov. Ted Strickland raised $472,000 in 2009.
Acton's team said it is a grassroots effort with more than 10,000 donors from all 88 of Ohio's counties.
The figures raised by the three Republicans in the race – Ramaswamy, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, and Morgan County's Heather Hill – have not yet been released. Campaign finance reports are due to the state by Monday; the state is expected to release them later in April.
Acton, a first-time candidate, served as health director under Gov. Mike DeWine during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In a statement, Acton said, 'I'm incredibly grateful to so many in Ohio who are embracing our movement and hungry for change.'
Ramaswamy, also promising change, hasn't released his financial information for the governor's race, but during his short 2024 presidential campaign, he raised more than $66 million.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Warren County Republicans vie for Ohio Senate seat
Warren County Republicans vie for Ohio Senate seat

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Warren County Republicans vie for Ohio Senate seat

The race to represent a Warren County seat in the Ohio Senate is heating up, as two Republican candidates have already announced their campaigns for a May 2026 primary. Sen. Steve Wilson currently represents District 7 but term limits prevent him from running again. The district includes Warren County and northern parts of Hamilton County. It has a 60% Republican lean and a population of about 366,000, according to analysis by Dave's Redistricting, which uses recent election results data to predict partisan split of electoral districts. It's not clear who else, Republican or Democrat, may run for the seat as it's too early to see who has pulled petitions for 2026 local elections. Who is Zac Haines? Symmes Township resident Zac Haines has announced his campaign to represent the 7th District. Haines is a Miami University trustee and CEO of DPA Buying Group, a marketing agency in Blue Ash. He was nominated by President Trump to be a trustee for the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. He's been endorsed for the seat by U.S. Rep. Warren Davidson, a Republican from Troy, along with Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague, according a campaign news release. 'My goal is to make Ohio the best and most competitive state in the country,' Haines said in the release. Who is Scott Lipps? Scott Lipps, who previously represented Warren County in the Ohio House, has also pulled petitions to run for the Senate seat. Lipps last won reelection for the eastern Warren County House seat in 2022 with 75% of the vote. Term limits prevented him from running for the Ohio House again. Lipps has also served as Franklin mayor and city council member. He owns Sleep Tite Mattress Factory and Showroom in Franklin. Lipps said in a news release that he spent his time at the statehouse advocating for Second Amendment rights and for the rights of the elderly and those with disabilities. "It was an honor to represent Warren County and southwestern Ohio at the Statehouse. I am proud of my conservative record," Lipps said in the release. Regional politics reporter Erin Glynn can be reached at eglynn@ @ee_glynn on X or @eringlynn on Bluesky. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Warren County primary: meet the Republican candidates Solve the daily Crossword

9/11 victims' fund architect slams changes to New Hampshire abuse settlement program
9/11 victims' fund architect slams changes to New Hampshire abuse settlement program

San Francisco Chronicle​

time12 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

9/11 victims' fund architect slams changes to New Hampshire abuse settlement program

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — An attorney who helped design and implement the 9/11 victims' compensation fund says New Hampshire lawmakers have eroded the fairness of a settlement program for those who were abused at the state's youth detention center. Deborah Greenspan, who served as deputy special master of the fund created after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, recently submitted an affidavit in a class-action lawsuit seeking to block changes to New Hampshire's out-of-court settlement fund for abuse victims. She's among those expected to testify Wednesday at a hearing on the state's request to dismiss the case and other matters. More than 1,300 people have sued the state since 2020 alleging that they were physically or sexually abused as children while in state custody, mostly at the Sununu Youth Services Center in Manchester. Most of them put their lawsuits on hold after lawmakers created a settlement fund in 2022 that was pitched as a 'victim-centered' and 'trauma-informed' alternative to litigation run by a neutral administrator appointed by the state Supreme Court. But the Republican-led Legislature changed that process through last-minute additions to the state budget Gov. Kelly Ayotte signed in June. The amended law gives the governor authority to hire and fire the fund's administrator and gives the attorney general — also a political appointee — veto power over settlement awards. That stands in stark contrast to other victim compensation funds, said Greenspan, who currently serves as a court-appointed special master for lawsuits related to lead-tainted water in Flint, Michigan. She said it 'strains credulity' to believe that anyone would file a claim knowing that 'the persons ultimately deciding the claim were those responsible for the claimant's injuries.' 'Such a construct would go beyond the appearance of impropriety and create a clear conflict of interest, undermining the fairness and legitimacy of the settlement process," she wrote. Ayotte and Attorney General John Formella responded by asking a judge to bar Greenspan's testimony, saying she offered 'policy preferences masquerading as expert opinions' without explaining the principles beyond her conclusions. 'Her affidavit is instead a series of non sequiturs that move from her experience to her conclusions without any of the necessary connective tissue,' they wrote. The defendants argue that the law still requires the administrator to be 'an independent, neutral attorney' and point out that the same appointment process is used for the state's judges. They said giving the attorney general the authority to accept or reject settlements is necessary to give the public a voice and ensure that the responsibility for spending millions of dollars in public funds rests with the executive branch. As of June 30, nearly 2,000 people had filed claims with the settlement fund, which caps payouts at $2.5 million. A total of 386 had been settled, with an average award of $545,000. One of the claimants says he was awarded $1.5 million award in late July, but the state hasn't finalized it yet, leaving him worried that Formella will veto it. 'I feel like the state has tricked us,' he said in an interview this week. 'We've had the rug pulled right out from underneath us.' The Associated Press does not name those who say they were sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly. The claimant, now 39, said the two years he spent at the facility as a teenager were the hardest times of his life. 'I lost my childhood. I lost things that I can't get back,' he said. 'I was broken.' Though the settlement process was overwhelming and scary at times, the assistant administrator who heard his case was kind and understanding, he said. That meeting alone was enough to lift a huge burden, he said. 'I was treated with a lot of love,' he said. 'I felt really appreciated as a victim and like I was speaking to somebody who would listen and believe my story.' Separate from the fund, the state has settled two lawsuits by agreeing to pay victims $10 million and $4.5 million. Only one lawsuit has gone to trial, resulting in a $38 million verdict, though the state is trying to slash it to $475,000. The state has also brought criminal charges against former workers, with two convictions and two mistrials so far. The 39-year-old claimant who fears his award offer will be retracted said he doesn't know if he could face testifying at a public trial. 'It's basically allowing the same people who hurt us to hurt us all over again,' he said.

Dollar grinds higher with Fed in focus in run-up to Jackson Hole
Dollar grinds higher with Fed in focus in run-up to Jackson Hole

CNBC

time13 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Dollar grinds higher with Fed in focus in run-up to Jackson Hole

The dollar got off on the front foot on Wednesday following two days of gains as traders awaited the Federal Reserve's Jackson Hole annual symposium later this week for clues on the path for monetary policy. A speech on Friday by Fed Chair Jerome Powell is the main focus, with the market watching for any push back against market pricing of a rate reduction next month. Traders currently place 84% odds on a cut next month, and expect around 54 basis points of reductions by year-end. The dollar index, which measures the currency against six major counterparts, edged up to 98.393 early on Wednesday, the highest since August 12. It had gained about 0.4% in the first two days of this week. "Given the relatively high bar for Powell to meet, there's a bit of risk being baked into the markets that he leans to the hawkish side and the proverbial rug gets pulled from beneath investors," said Kyle Rodda, an analyst at In Asian hours, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand sets policy later in the day, with a large majority of economists predicting a quarter-point cut to the cash rate. The New Zealand dollar drooped close to Tuesday's nearly two-week low, last changing hands at $0.5895. "There's little reason for RBNZ to keep rates on hold," said Rodda. "Inflation is within its target band, and although it is no longer mandated to target the labor market, the unemployment rate is at a post-Covid high." For the Fed, traders ramped up bets for a cut on September 17 after a surprisingly weak payrolls report at the start of this month, and were further encouraged after consumer price data showed limited upward pressure from tariffs. However, a hotter-than-expected producer price reading last week complicated the policy picture. Powell has said he is reluctant to cut rates due to expected tariff-driven price pressures this summer. The Fed will release minutes from its July 29-30 meeting later on Wednesday, when the central bank held rates steady, although they may offer limited insight as the meeting came before the weak jobs numbers. The dollar advanced 0.1% to 147.78 yen. The euro eased 0.1% to $1.1633, the weakest since August 14. Sterling slipped 0.1% to $1.3476, the lowest since August 12. Australia's dollar edged down to $0.64485, a level last seen on August 1.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store