Gov. Mike Dewine signed House Bill 37 into law, also known as Liv’s Law. This law will create harsher penalties for repeat ...
Ohio lawmakers plan to introduce a bill that would end the death penalty and prohibit state funding for abortions and ...
Sextortion schemes that often target minors and caused the death of a suburban Columbus high school student are now illegal in Ohio. Gov. Mike DeWine signed legislation Wednesday named for ...
What happens to JD Vance's senate seat? Ohio Gov. DeWine names replacement With Vance having officially resigned as U.S. Senator on Jan. 10, the task of filling his vacant seat fell to Ohio Gov. Mike ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine is getting closer to making another major appointment. After he named Jon Husted as Ohio’s newest U.S. senator, filling the vacancy left by now-Vice ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Gov. Mike DeWine signed more than two dozen bills into law on Wednesday. In total, DeWine signed 29 bills into law. Two of those were Braden's Law, which makes sextortion a ...
DeWine and state lawmakers funded the phasing-in for the first four years of the bipartisan plan, which school districts say is necessary because Ohio’s education system is over reliant on ...
Ohio's Lt. Gov. Jon Husted will be the state's next U.S. Senator. Gov. Mike DeWine announced his pick to replace Vice-President elect JD Vance in the Senate on Friday. Vance resigned from the chamber ...
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has signed a bill into law that will require school districts to create a mandatory religious instruction release time policy and require educators to out a students ...
An incoming Ohio law will create harsher penalties for drunk driving and allow law enforcement to use a new method when ...
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine announced a new group Monday that is meant to focus on missing persons investigations in the state.The Missing Persons Working Group will review and study Ohio’s resources ...
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed into law several education changes that will require schools to let students leave for off-site religious classes and that opponents worry will out LGBTQ students.