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2025 Ohio Issue 2

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2025 referendum
2025 Ohio Issue 2

May 6, 2025
Local Public Infrastructure Bond Amendment[1]
Results
Choice
Votes%
Yes588,25167.76%
No279,87332.24%
Valid votes868,124100.00%
Invalid or blank votes00.00%
Total votes868,124100.00%

Yes:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%
No:     50–60%
Elections in Ohio
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Ohio Issue 2 was alegislatively referredconstitutional amendment that appeared on the ballot in theU.S. State ofOhio on May 6, 2025.[2]

Background

[edit]

Funding for the State Capital Improvement Program has been approved by voters three times, first in 1987.[3] The amendment was passed as abipartisan effort by theOhio General Assembly.[4]

Impact

[edit]

The 2025 measure would approve $250 million per year for ten years for the program.[5] The money would go to projects relating to infrastructure, such as bridges, road, sewers, and water lines.[6]

Endorsements

[edit]
Yes
State legislators
Organizations
Political parties
Labor unions
Newspapers
No
State Representatives
  • Ron Ferguson, state representative from the 96th district (2021–present) (Republican)[14]

Results by county

[edit]
Breakdown of voting by county[1]
CountyYes, %Yes, votesNo, %No, votes
Adams64.7%54735.3%299
Allen67.2%5,32332.8%2,599
Ashland61.7%3,03538.3%1,885
Ashtabula65.0%5,40235.0%2,908
Athens71.6%2,68428.4%1,066
Auglaize65.8%2,24434.2%1,165
Belmont67.8%2,09232.2%992
Brown59.0%91941.0%638
Butler64.9%12,04435.1%6,512
Carroll60.9%96039.1%617
Champaign59.6%3,31840.4%2,248
Clark59.9%7,82640.1%5,251
Clermont46.8%9,04353.2%10,264
Clinton62.4%2,00737.6%1,208
Columbiana57.6%6,27542.4%4,615
Coshocton49.7%1,85050.3%1,874
Crawford60.8%2,22639.2%1,435
Cuyahoga77.8%74,32322.2%21,253
Darke63.2%1,74336.8%1,014
Defiance73.1%1,16526.9%428
Delaware71.0%15,56929.0%6,361
Erie66.4%3,08833.6%1,563
Fairfield62.1%6,36437.9%3,878
Fayette61.3%72738.7%459
Franklin77.2%57,64122.8%16,996
Fulton64.2%1,40535.8%783
Gallia51.7%40348.3%377
Geauga57.7%4,46642.3%3,275
Greene59.1%11,38940.9%7,874
Guernsey57.8%83442.2%610
Hamilton75.0%40,44825.0%13,495
Hancock71.6%6,79428.4%2,697
Hardin61.1%1,27638.9%811
Harrison72.8%51427.2%192
Henry73.4%99426.6%361
Highland54.8%1,22745.2%1,013
Hocking58.7%91141.3%642
Holmes58.4%65441.6%466
Huron59.7%2,39040.3%1,611
Jackson63.5%83836.5%482
Jefferson74.4%3,23725.6%1,117
Knox59.4%2,50140.6%1,711
Lake71.1%11,51928.9%4,686
Lawrence56.5%89643.5%690
Licking57.7%9,76642.3%7,159
Logan63.0%1,98637.0%1,167
Lorain65.3%21,19234.7%11,262
Lucas64.2%17,52535.8%9,776
Madison57.4%2,14642.6%1,596
Mahoning66.1%9,99033.9%5,121
Marion64.6%1,87935.4%1,031
Medina63.2%11,44536.8%6,671
Meigs56.0%73644.0%579
Mercer66.0%2,25234.0%1,160
Miami65.1%6,67334.9%3,581
Monroe53.7%43846.3%378
Montgomery70.1%26,08229.9%11,104
Morgan64.9%59635.1%323
Morrow53.8%1,35046.2%1,161
Muskingum60.3%2,31339.7%1,522
Noble65.1%50134.9%269
Ottawa65.5%3,00934.5%1,586
Paulding68.8%58631.2%266
Perry56.1%93643.9%732
Pickaway50.0%3,67350.0%3,677
Pike66.5%46633.5%235
Portage69.3%9,93630.7%4,393
Preble56.9%1,40843.1%1,065
Putnam72.8%1,44727.2%540
Richland64.0%4,47236.0%2,521
Ross66.0%1,94534.0%1,004
Sandusky63.4%2,56336.6%1,477
Scioto69.1%1,80930.9%809
Seneca67.2%2,04332.8%999
Shelby58.4%2,00941.6%1,429
Stark64.0%18,89436.0%10,614
Summit72.1%37,94127.9%14,710
Trumbull70.5%10,65529.5%4,462
Tuscarawas60.0%4,58240.0%3,060
Union65.9%8,06034.1%4,174
Van Wert66.6%1,01733.4%510
Vinton58.0%33342.0%241
Warren60.8%8,38439.2%5,401
Washington62.0%4,17438.0%2,558
Wayne62.4%5,51737.6%3,324
Williams57.9%1,35342.1%983
Wood74.0%11,93826.0%4,187
Wyandot63.8%1,12036.2%635

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Ohio Issue 2 - Local Public Infrastructure Bond Amendment".270toWin. RetrievedMay 10, 2025.
  2. ^"Issue 2 on May 2025 ballot: Ohio to vote on $2.5B bond initiative for public infrastructure projects".Dayton Daily News. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
  3. ^"What is Ohio Issue 2 on the May ballot? Voters could extend $2.5B public works program".Cincinnati.com The Enquirer. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
  4. ^"Ohio primary election 2025 voter guide: Here's what's on the ballot, how you can vote".10 WBNS. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
  5. ^Dennis, Justin."What is Issue 2 on Ohio's May 6 ballot?".FOX 8 News. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
  6. ^"Explaining Ohio Issue 2, a $2.5B infrastructure program".Axios. RetrievedApril 25, 2025.
  7. ^"VOTE YES ON ISSUE 2 ON MAY 6, 2025".The Ohio Senate. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
  8. ^"CHAVEZ BACKS STATE ISSUE 2 AS IMPERATIVE TO STATE INFRASTRUCTURE".The Ohio Senate. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
  9. ^"2025 Endorsements".theoecactionfund.org. RetrievedMay 7, 2025.
  10. ^"Important Information on May 2025 Special Election".Butler County Democrats. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.ODP's Executive Committee unanimously endorsed a yes vote on state issue two
  11. ^"Ohio AFL-CIO Endorses State Issue 2".Ohio AFL-CIO. RetrievedMay 7, 2025.
  12. ^"Editorial: Yes on 2".The Blade. RetrievedMay 7, 2025.
  13. ^Editorial Board, cleveland com and The Plain Dealer (April 4, 2025)."Yes on State Issue 2, supporting local improvements without a tax hike: endorsement editorial".cleveland. RetrievedMay 7, 2025.
  14. ^Fahmy, Natalie (April 10, 2025)."Only issue on May ballot would boost infrastructure spending".nbc4i. RetrievedMay 7, 2025.
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