Wednesday, January 30, 2013

January30


Secretary of State Jon Husted and other Republicans say Electoral College changes not in store for Ohio

By Henry J. Gomez, Plain Dealer Politics Writer The Plain Dealer
on January 29, 2013 at 1:53 PM, updated January 29, 2013 at 5:46 PM

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Count Ohio's Republican leaders out of a GOP-backed effort to end the Electoral College's winner-take-all format in the Buckeye State and other presidential battlegrounds.

Spokesmen for Gov. John Kasich, State Senate President Keith Faber and House Speaker William G. Batchelder told The Plain Dealer this week that they are not pursuing plans to award electoral votes proportionally by congressional district.

Batchelder went a step further, saying through his communications director that he "is not supportive of such a move." And Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted, the state's chief elections administrator, emphasized that he does not favor the plan either, despite Democratic suspicions based on reported comments that he said were taken out of context.


 

 

ENQUIRER EXCLUSIVE: Kasich says two-year budget has $1B surplus

Expect fight on whether to spend or save doubled 'rainy day fund'

Jan 29, 2013 |

 

Written by

Paul E. Kostyu

COLUMBUS — When the governor publicly releases his proposed two-year operating budget on Monday, it will show a $1 billion surplus, he says.

But until then, no one will know just how Gov. John R. Kasich and his staff arrived at that figure. That’s because they’re not telling anyone about the two-year budget proposal – including legislators and their leaders in either party.

It means the surplus – called the rainy day fund – will double from its current $500 million. When he took office two years ago, the surplus was 89 cents, he said.

House Speaker William G. Batchelder, R-Medina, suggested future local government funding could be tied to performance measures, although Kasich said he was not proposing that.


 

 

House Insurance Chair Sees Some Work Continuing From Last Session; Blair Targets Government Efficiencies

Gongwer 1/29/13

House Insurance Committee Chairman Rep. Bob Hackett (R-London) said a priority bill for his committee will be a bipartisan captive insurance measure he began working on last session with Rep. John Carney (D-Columbus).

"A lot of states allow it and we don't," he said after the panel's organizational meeting on Tuesday. "It's almost like setting up a special subsidiary that operates on a little different rules, and what happens is the major corporations and insurance companies want it. For example, Kentucky has one domiciled insurance company of 100 captives already set up in the state...and so that's business that Ohio loses.

"But we want to set it up that we don't want to compete strongly...against our existing insurance industry. We just want to bring the alternative for people to set up captives. They're going to do it anyway and not really be in the regular marketplace."

Mr. Hackett said he and Rep. Carney held interested party meetings last session. Department of Insurance Director and Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor is behind the bill, and the industry is "about 95% on board."

Rep. Hackett said he is going to discuss with Speaker Bill Batchelder (R-Medina) legislation to overhaul the state workers' compensation system. Bills (HB516, HB517, HB518, 129th General Assembly) on the matter were dropped last year when labor unions and Democrats criticized the proposal as an "attack" on the middle class.

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