Latest news with #OhioFairnessAct
Yahoo
24-06-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Report: Ohio has 45 out LGBTQ people in elected offices but none at the top levels
Across Ohio, just 45 people who are out and identify as LGBTQ hold elected government positions but none of them are in statewide or congressional posts, according to a new national report. LGBTQ+ Victory Institute reported that 1,333 officeholders across the country identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer. That's an increase of 200% over the eight years that the institute has been collecting data. But it is a small slice of the 520,000 elected offices across the country. To reach parity, another 47,000 LGBTQ people would need to be elected, the institute estimates. The LGBTQ+ Victory Institute, founded in 1991, endorses and supports candidates for elected offices. 'This year's Out for America report shows the resilience of our LGBTQ+ elected leaders. Despite hateful rhetoric plaguing the 2024 election cycle, LGBTQ+ elected officials won at the ballot box and made history,' said LGBTQ+ Victory Institute President & CEO Evan Low in a written statement. Ohio's neighbors Michigan and Pennsylvania have 62 and 66 LGBTQ officeholders, respectively. Kentucky has 13, West Virginia six and Indiana one. Most of Ohio's 45 out elected officeholders are serving in local government positions, such as school boards and city councils. Nationally, the number of LGBTQ+ state legislators has grown by 123% from 109 to 243. But the Ohio Legislature hasn't seen any increase. Senate Minority Leader Nickie Antonio, D-Lakewood, was the first out LGBTQ person elected to the Ohio General Assembly in 2010. She is the only out person among the 132 state lawmakers. Antonio has introduced the Ohio Fairness Act in every legislative session since 2011. It would prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in housing, employment and public spaces. It has yet to be adopted. The Victory Institute reported that Ohio has four out LGBTQ judges among more than 700 judgeships. The four include: Shawn Dingus of the 10th District Court of Appeals, Bill Hedrick of Franklin County Municipal Court, Jeff Mackey of Franklin County Common Pleas Court and Mary Wiseman of Montgomery County Common Pleas Court. Wiseman was elected to the bench in 2007 and previously served on the Dayton City Commission from 1998 to 2002. State government reporter Laura Bischoff can be reached at lbischoff@ and @lbischoff on X. This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: How many LGBTQ people hold elected offices in Ohio?
Yahoo
24-02-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Ohio Statehouse bill to ban LGBTQ+ discrimination loses Republican support
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Previously bipartisan legislation to ban discrimination against the LGBTQ+ community is again being proposed at the Ohio Statehouse, but without Republican support. Named the 'Ohio Fairness Act,' the legislation has been reintroduced for the 12th time and would prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity or expression, without creating new protected classes or infringing on religious liberty. Sen. Nickie Antonio (D-Lakewood), Ohio's first openly gay Statehouse lawmaker, has proposed the bill in every General Assembly since she was elected in 2010. Watch a previous NBC4 report on the Fairness Act in the video player above. Watch: Dave Yost on his 2026 run for Ohio governor While the act has never passed the Statehouse to be signed into law, the proposal has traditionally received bipartisan support. Every member of the Senate Democratic Caucus and two Republican senators co-sponsored the bill when it was reintroduced for the 11th time during the summer of 2023. The time before that, the act was sponsored by former Sen. Michael Rulli, who now holds a seat in the U.S. Congress, and was co-sponsored by Sen. Matt Dolan (R-Chagrin Falls). Now, the Fairness Act is only co-sponsored by the Ohio Senate's eight other Democrats. Although Antonio hasn't spoken to her Republican colleagues on why they aren't supporting the bill this General Assembly, she said she's disappointed and hopes some join the proposal's co-sponsorship list later on. 'I would guess that every single member of the General Assembly knows someone, either a friend or a coworker, a family member, a neighbor, from the LGBT community,' Antonio said. 'I want to ask them, how do you face those people and not support them having equal rights? Because that's really what support for this bill means and if you're not supporting the bill, it means that you're not willing to take a stand for folks.' Ohio lawmakers want to allow parents to claim 'conceived children' on income taxes The legislator has long argued the act is needed given Ohio is one of more than two dozen states without nondiscrimination protections for members of the LGBTQ+ community. Last year, Out Leadership's state climate index labeled Ohio as under 'notable risk' for LGBTQ+ discrimination given an individual can be fired from their workplace, denied services and rejected or removed from housing based on their sexual orientation or gender identity. Ohio Business Competes, a nonpartisan coalition of businesses, echoes Antonio and has advocated for nondiscrimination policies to attract the best talent. The coalition, which once was a group of more than 1,350 businesses but has since shrunk to about 90, includes Abbott Nutrition, American Electric Power and the American Heart Association. Those businesses that have supported the bill over the years, including the Ohio Chamber of Commerce and the Ohio Manufacturing Association, see this as an economic issue. To draw in the best and brightest workers to Ohio, the state needs to reassure prospective residents that they're welcome here no matter their family makeup, Antonio argued. The lawmaker said she is especially concerned those employee recruitment efforts are hindered following last year's approval of several Statehouse bills that opponents deem 'anti-LGBTQ+,' and given the Trump Administration's executive orders encouraging private companies to roll back diversity, equity and inclusion programming. Student-led TEDx event invites New Albany to learn from speakers 'I've had the occasion, in the past couple of weeks, having a conversation with a staffer who is looking for a state to go to rather continue to work in the state of Ohio; a very talented person who doesn't feel that the state is open and welcoming,' Antonio said. 'I also just participated in a goodbye dinner for a previous staffer who is going to Colorado because one of the things she knows about Colorado is she is much more welcome there than she is in the state of Ohio.' Lawmakers have failed to repeal Ohio's dormant same-sex marriage ban, ban anti-LGBTQ+ techniques known as 'conversion therapy' and remove antiquated HIV criminalization laws passed in the 1980s. Instead, the Statehouse has passed a bill to ban certain healthcare for transgender youth and education legislation that opponents say will result in the 'outing' of students, which caused an increased number of LGBTQ+ youth to call a crisis hotline. The Fairness Act has again been assigned to the Senate Government Oversight Committee, where it received just one hearing last General Assembly. Although the bill lacks Republican support, Antonio is hopeful that her proposal will at least get one hearing where she will get to testify before her colleagues. 'There's no closet big enough to put all the LGBTQ+ people back in, we're not going,' Antonio said. 'It's important to talk about the fact that this is the right thing to do. This is the pragmatic, business-friendly, economically advancement thing to do in this state.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.