Jim Renacci tried to avoid paying taxes on nearly $14 million that he made.
The congressional contest between Democratic Rep. Betty Sutton and Republican Rep. Jim Renacci is among the nation's most costly and hard-fought races, and has also devolved into one of the nastiest.
After Renacci placed ads accusing Sutton of "voting to raise taxes on just about everyone," Sutton fired back with an ad that claims Renacci supports tax breaks for millionaires like himself and "tried to avoid paying taxes on nearly $14 million that he made."
"We play by the rules but Renacci thinks he's above them," says a male blue collar worker shown in Sutton's ad.
Watch It:
Reams of legal documents show that Renacci battled with the state over trust income from an S corporation, trying to avoid paying taxes on the $13.7 million at issue in the case.
On the Truth-O-Meter, Sutton's claim rates True.
Bending over backwards to attack President Obama, Ohio Senator Rob Portman attacked the White House over Ohio job numbers.


COLUMBUS, OHIO - Facing a slew of bad polls and even worse headlines, Josh Mandel has lost his cool on a member of the Ohio media for the third time in two weeks. 
Republican opponents of Issue 2, the proposed redistricting reform plan, have started to question the rules that would govern the new citizens committee that would handle redistricting should voters approve the measure on Nov. 6.
"It would not be necessary for federal courts to intervene in our state's elections were it not for Republican leaders' continued attempts to restrict the opportunities that Ohioans have to cast a ballot. If the secretary is truly concerned about setting statewide voting hours, nothing in the Sixth Circuit's ruling prohibits him from doing so during the three days before the election.
"It is now clear that Secretary of State Jon Husted will stop at nothing to deny Ohioans full and equal access to the polls. 

COLUMBUS - In a stunning affirmation by opponents of State Issue 2, The Ohio Republican Party and Protect Your Vote Ohio agreed to stop using two statements Voters First has said are false. Facing disciplinary action by the Ohio Elections Commission, the Ohio Republican Party and Protect Your Vote Ohio agreed to a settlement whereby they agreed to stop using two statements.
<



COLUMBUS - Citing the need to have the cloud of constitutionality decided, ProgressOhio, State Rep. Dennis Murray (D-Sandusky) and State Senator Michael Skindell appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court over JobsOhio.
The Republican nominee in Ohio's Senate race stands to reap a significant financial windfall if the government defaults by not raising the debt ceiling, a move he opposed last year and has indicated he would vote against if elected to the Senate.
PARMA HEIGHTS, OH - After weeks of pressure from Betty Sutton has finally forced Congressman Jim Renacci to return over $100,000 in campaign contributions under FBI investigation from Suarez Corporation employees, questions remain about what Renacci knew about the questionable contributions and why he decided to wait over two months since Sutton first called on him to return the potentially illegal funds.

"Gov. Kasich's proposal to modestly increase the severance tax on oil and gas companies is a step in the right direction. But we should be protecting local property taxpayers and prioritizing our communities, not passing more tax cuts that disproportionately benefit wealthy Ohioans. 
COLUMBUS--State Rep. Tracy Maxwell Heard (D-Columbus) sent a letter to Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections Director Gary Mohr today questioning the abrupt removal of Cathy Collins-Taylor and Jose Torres from the Parole Board last week.
Columbus: Innovation Ohio, a progressive think tank headquartered in Columbus, released a "white paper" today asserting that at least 12,500 Ohio jobs were created by President Obama's auto rescue plan and that hundreds more now seem likely.
A proposed new tax on Ohio's banks would provide millions of dollars in tax cuts to mortgage lenders, securities brokers, payday lenders, finance companies, and other so-called "dealers in intangibles." It also would create a new way for insurance-company affiliates to cut taxes between now and 2014 by restructuring operations, and add other new exemptions. 


COLUMBUS - ProgressOhio today called on the Ohio General Assembly to halt an earmark tucked away in HB 487, the Mid-Biennium Review (MBR). The earmark shifts redistricting tax funds away from public oversight while covering redistricting costs for majority party legislators and shutting out minority legislators.

Assistant Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-IL), Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Human Rights, chaired a field hearing today examining the impact of Ohio's new voting law, HB 194, which restricts early voting, eliminates the requirement that poll workers direct voters to the proper precinct, and makes it harder to vote absentee. Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown joined Durbin at the hearing.
COLUMBUS - Peppered throughout his
PARMA HEIGHTS, OH - This week, Tax Evader Millionaire Jim Renacci was rewarded for his loyalty to big corporations and billionaires by receiving an endorsement and a $5,000 donation by the Citizens United Political Victory Fund, a donation that Betty Sutton has called on him to return.

Last night Senator Rob Portman voted against allowing a vote on the Buffett Rule, which would ensure that millionaires and billionaires pay their fair share in taxes like the rest of middle-class families across the country:
With Congress out for its Easter-Passover break, U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown started making the rounds with constituent and factory visits in early April. One of those stops was at the Nucor steel plant in Marion, where the Democratic freshman discussed what he calls the unfair trade practices of China.
WASHINGTON--As the deadline approaches for Americans to file their taxes, a significant portion of profitable corporations may not pay a dime. The reason? Corporate tax loopholes.

The shooting of 



The use of combined heat and power technologies in Ohio could save billions of dollars currently lost in the state's inefficient electric system, according to 
(Columbus) -State Senator Nina Turner (D-Cleveland) announced legislation today that would protect men in Ohio from the risks of PDE-5 inhibitors, drugs commonly used to treat symptoms of impotence. Turner's legislation would include provisions to document that the symptoms are not psychological in nature, and would guide men to make the right decision for their bodies. Physicians would be required to obtain a second opinion from a psychological professional to verify that a patient has a true medical malady before the medication could be prescribed.
COLUMBUS -Today, State Rep. Vernon Sykes (D- Akron) called for Ohio House Speaker Bill Batchelder to apologize for comments he made suggesting that President Obama should be sent to jail.
After a little over a year on the job, 
COLUMBUS, OH - A new report released today by People For the American Way Foundation, Common Cause, the Center for Media and Democracy and ProgressOhio reveals the deep ties between the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and Ohio's legislature.



COLUMBUS- State Rep. Matt Lundy (D- Elyria) sent a letter to Auditor Dave Yost today asking for an audit to be done on the Ohio Department of Transportation in regards to the use of the state plane. He also asked for answers to questions that have recently been raised about the frequent use of the state plane. Recently, the public has been made aware of Lt. Gov. Taylor being picked-up and dropped-off at Akron-Canton airport, which is only six miles from her home.
A
COLUMBUS - Today, Representative John Patrick Carney (D- Columbus) moved to subpoena Lt. Governor Mary Taylor to testify before the House Health and Aging committee. Rep. Carney has been trying for nearly a month to have the Lt. Governor, who also serves as Director of the Department of Insurance, appear before the committee to discuss the Department's efforts in setting up an Ohio specific Health Benefits Exchange.
"The revelations confirm my worst suspicions about the redistricting process. It is now apparent that public hearings in which I participated across the state were nothing more than a charade. Ohioans were promised a fair and open process for drawing new Congressional districts. Instead, they got a map put together behind a veil of secrecy in a Columbus hotel room. 



COLUMBUS- State Rep. Mike Foley (D-Cleveland) criticized a report today that Governor Kasich and his administration are offering up to $400 million to bring ailing retail giant Sears Holding Company to Ohio from its Illinois home. Sears Holding Company lost more than $400 million in the most recent financial quarter.
COLUMBUS - Democratic members of the Ohio House Health and Aging committee want Lt. Governor Mary Taylor to provide an update on Ohio's progress in setting up a Health Insurance Exchange in compliance with the Affordable Care Act. Lt. Gov. Taylor is Director of the Ohio Department of Insurance, and Democrats on the committee have sent a memo to Chairman Lynn Wachtmann (R-Napoleon) requesting that she testify at an upcoming meeting of the committee.
Despite
COLUMBUS - Today, Republicans rejected a compromise proposal for new congressional districts that would end a redistricting standoff and give voters the ultimate say in the makeup of Ohio's congressional delegation. The proposal was submitted in an effort to reach an acceptable agreement that would make 6 of the current districts more competitive for voters. A comparison of the Democratic Partisan Index of the original map, HB 319, the GOP proposed map and the Democratic counter offer
COLUMBUS- State Reps. Kathleen Clyde (D- Kent) and Ronald V. Gerberry (D- Austintown), Ranking Member on the State Government and Elections committee, held a press conference today amid the ongoing confusion surrounding the implementation of military voting bill, HB 224. Over the last month Democratic lawmakers have repeatedly contacted Secretary Husted informing him of their concerns, and asking him not to thwart the HB 194 referendum and to allow in-person early voting at county Boards of Elections through Monday, Nov. 7. Secretary Husted has refused these requests and ignored the concerns.

"There has been no agreement between members of the Ohio Legislative Black Caucus and anyone on the Republican side on new congressional district lines," said Rep. Williams. 
COLUMBUS - ProgressOhio called on Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel, a potential U.S. Senate candidate, to donate a $1,000 contribution he accepted from a controversial Nazi re-enactor who previously ran for Congress.
You know it and I know it. SB5/Issue 2 is an attack on the middle class and bad for Ohio. 
"It is the height of hypocrisy for Republicans, who claim to be fiscal conservatives, to pass a bill that needlessly spends $15 million of taxpayers' money. Substitute House Bill 318 is fiscally irresponsible and will only add cost and confusion to our elections. Furthermore, the rationale behind the legislation simply defies logic 
(Oct. 19, 2011) -- As local authorities respond to the escape or release of dozens of lions, bears, and wolves from a private menagerie in Muskingum County, The Humane Society of the United States is calling on Gov. John Kasich and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to immediately issue emergency regulations restricting the sale and possession of dangerous wild animals. The Kasich Administration allowed emergency rules put in place by former Gov. Ted Strickland to expire in April. The Ohio Department of Natural Resources has convened a working group to develop standards, which it will apparently recommend to the Legislature for action, at some undetermined time frame.
T
The union movement as a whole has helped ensure that workers throughout the economy - not just those in unions - share in economic growth, have decent wages and benefits, have good training, and are protected by health and safety regulations. But do public sector unions also bargain for provisions that more directly benefit the community?
Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur this morning welcomed the announcement by the U.S. Department of Transportation that the Ohio Department of Transportation may not use federal funding to further a scheme to privatize the Ohio Turnpike.


The USPS carries an extraordinary financial burden that no other government agency or company bears.
"There are serious questions whether the new legislative map violates the state constitution and the Voting Rights Act. Specifically, the number of majority-minority Senate districts has dropped from two to just one. And the number of times counties and cities have been split across the state appears to exceed constitutional limits.


"As supporters of Issue 2 continue attacking worker rights with two politicians in television ads, We Are Ohio remains focused on what this bill will really do, hurt middle class families and put the safety of Ohio communities at risk," said Melissa Fazekas, spokeswoman for We Are Ohio. "The politicians behind Issue 2 want us to do what they say, not what they do. They blame firefighters, nurses and teachers for the budget problems they created by giving hundreds of thousands of dollars in tax breaks to their corporate campaign contributors, while at the same time cutting funding to local communities for safety services. At the same time politicians also left a gaping loophole which exempts them from Senate Bill 5. While claiming we all need to share in the sacrifices, politicians gave their staff members and upper management big pay increases and bonuses. Their actions continue to show who is important to them, their special interest friends who spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to help get them elected, not the hardworking Ohioans who serve and protect our families and communities. The hypocrisy never seems to end with these guys. Today Ohioans are left with one simple question, who do you trust more, hypocritical politicians who support this unsafe and unfair law or firefighters who risk their lives to serve and protect us?"

COLUMBUS - Ohio House Democratic Leader Armond Budish (D- Beachwood) and Ohio Senate Democratic Leader Carpi Cafaro (D-Hubbard) announced today that they will be introducing companion legislation that would require the Apportionment Board to make new state legislative district maps available for public and board input in advance of the required approval deadline.

"Today Governor Kasich and Republican leaders said it would be reasonable to sit down at the table and talk about a compromise on Senate Bill 5. Since the bill's introduction, the actions of the Governor and the majority have been everything but reasonable. Was it reasonable for the Governor to say he was going to 'break the backs of organized labor in schools' or 'that he would only work with unions that make things'? So now they want to meet with the same people that they refused to have discussions with before it was introduced.
Columbus - State Senator Charleta B. Tavares (D-Columbus) today blasted the Kasich administration and the Ohio Lottery Commission for revising Video Lottery Terminal (VLT) rules which would eliminate requirements for Ohio Racetracks to contract with Ohio-based and minority businesses, hire local Ohio residents and protect young people.
COLUMBUS- Sate Reps. Matt Lundy (D- Elyria) and W. Carlton Weddington (D- Columbus) again raised concerns and questions over the privatization of five state prisons. Today they sent a public records request to the Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections and the Governor's office asking that the bids to privatize five Ohio prisons be made public. This comes amid continued public safety concerns and questions surrounding Gov. Kasich's ties to lobbyist at interested firms.






COLUMBUS - State Rep. Nickie J. Antonio (D-Lakewood) today released the following statement in response to Gov. Kasich's signing of HB 78, which would ban abortions after 20 weeks. Rep. Antonio's statement is below:
COLUMBUS - Today, Ohio Democratic Party Chairman Chris Redfern sent a letter to Governor John Kasich asking him to contribute to charity the contributions and earnings he received from News Corporation. A News Corporation publication reportedly hacked into the phone records of families of September 11 victims and paid law enforcement for information, among other egregious actions.



"I want to be perfectly clear, when I began working with the General Assembly to improve Ohio's elections system it was never my intent to reject valid votes. I would rather have no bill than one with a rigid photo identification provision that does little to protect against fraud and excludes legally registered voters' ballots from counting.
Columbus, OH - Ohio Governor Ted Strickland today announced agreements to create Turning Point Solar, a 49.9 MW solar array to be built on strip-mined land adjacent to The Wilds nature conservancy. At signing ceremonies in the governor's cabinet room, American Electric Power (AEP) CEO Michael G. Morris signed a memorandum of understanding with project developers New Harvest Ventures and Agile Energy to enter into a 20-year purchase agreement for the facility's power.

Defending HB 159, which requires a state issued photo ID to vote, sponsor 

Yesterday, the Ohio House approved three anti-abortion efforts, including the nation's 






COLUMBUS - State Rep. Sandra Williams (D-Cleveland) today expressed her concern about the refusal of the Chair of the House Economic and Small Business Development Committee to allow state agency directors to testify. Rep. Williams is Ranking Member of that committee.
COLUMBUS - State Rep. Vernon Sykes (D-Akron) requested today an analysis of a new proposal by Ohio Gov. John Kasich to give tax breaks to financial investors. The proposal was reportedly provided to some members of the Ohio House and Senate Conference Committee to be included in the state budget at the request of Gov. Kasich. 





Innovation Ohio, a progressive think tank headquartered in Columbus, released an 

COLUMBUS - Two Ohio House members today objected to the partisan way a pair of elections bills are being handled in the legislature, including a statement from the House Speaker that Democrats would be intentionally shut out of the process. The Representatives both serve on the State Government and Elections committee.
Columbus - Senator Michael J. Skindell (D-Lakewood) today called for removing a provision from the state budget that would privatize the Ohio Lottery by June 1, 2012. Senator Skindell will submit an amendment this week to strip the Lottery privatization proposal from the Senate's version of the budget.
COLUMBUS - An amendment to the Senate's version of the budget bill released yesterday would take millions from a fund that provides housing for poor, elderly and disabled Ohioans, and funnel it to county recorders offices for "general purposes."





COLUMBUS - House Republicans pulled a rare parliamentarian maneuver today to abruptly end the floor debate on legislation that significantly limits voting opportunities for Ohioans. The move came on the heels of a contentious floor debate on House Bill 194, which restricts voting opportunities, limits voting rights and disqualifies votes that would count under today's laws. 
Prevailing wage has been part of Ohio law for 77 years. This law has helped to protect communities and workers from unscrupulous practices such as contractors low balling bids on construction projects that are funded by taxpayers and it sets wage standards for workers.


The leader of Ohio's Poverty Fighting Network today urged Ohio lawmakers to enact policies that will allow more Ohioans to be self-sufficient.
COLUMBUS - The Ohio House Democratic Women's Caucus today raised serious concerns with the state budget passed by the House. The caucus points to a series of provisions that slash funding for programs and services for women and children despite a state spending increase of $5 billion. The budget passed by a vote of 59-40.