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Ohio gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial election, 2014

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Ohio Gubernatorial Election

Primary Date:
May 6, 2014

General Election Date:
November 4, 2014

November 4 Election Winners:
John KasichRepublican Party
Mary TaylorRepublican Party
Incumbents prior to election:
John KasichRepublican Party
Mary TaylorRepublican Party
John R Kasich.jpg

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TheOhio gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial election took place onNovember 4, 2014. IncumbentsJohn Kasich (R) andMary Taylor first won election in 2010 and ran for re-election successfully in 2014.[1] Kasich and TaylordefeatedDemocratic candidatesEd FitzGerald andSharen Neuhardt as well asGreen Party candidatesAnita Rios andBob Fitrakis to new four-year terms.[2][3]

Aprimary election is an election in which registered voters select a candidate that they believe should be a political party's candidate for elected office to run in the general election. They are also used to choose convention delegates and party leaders. Primaries are state-level and local-level elections that take place prior to a general election. Ohio law provides forclosed primaries, meaning a voter must be affiliated with a party to vote in that party's primary. However, a voter of any affiliation can choose the ballot they would like to vote on the day of the primary, and their choice may be regarded as registration with that party.[4][5]

For information about which offices are nominated via primary election, seethis article.

Candidates

General election

Republican PartyJohn Kasich/Mary TaylorGreen check mark transparent.png -Incumbents[6]
Democratic PartyEd FitzGerald/Sharen Neuhardt[7][8]
Green PartyAnita Rios/Bob Fitrakis[9][10]

Lost in primary

Democratic PartyLarry Ealy/Ken Gray[11]

Disqualified

Green PartyDennis S. Spisak/Suzanne Patzer[12]
Libertarian PartyCharlie Earl/Sherry Clark[13][14]

Declined to run or withdrew

Democratic PartyTim Ryan -U.S. House Rep.Ohio's 13th Congressional District[15][16]
Democratic PartyBetty Sutton - Former 13th District House Rep.[15][17]
Democratic PartyRichard Cordray - Director of the United States Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and formerattorney general,state treasurer[15]
Democratic PartyTodd Portune - Hamilton County Commissioner[18][19]

Results

General election

Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, 2014
PartyCandidateVote %Votes
    RepublicanGreen check mark transparent.pngJohn Kasich/Mary TaylorIncumbent63.6%1,944,848
    DemocraticEd FitzGerald/Sharen Neuhardt33%1,009,359
    GreenAnita Rios/Bob Fitrakis3.3%101,706
Total Votes3,055,913
Election results viaOhio Secretary of State

Primary election

Democratic primary

Governor/Lt. Governor of Ohio - Democratic Primary, 2014
CandidateVote %Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngEd FitzGerald/Sharen Neuhardt83.1%366,056
Larry Ealy/Ken Gray16.9%74,197
Total Votes440,253
Election results viaOhio Secretary of State.


Republican primary

  • Uncontested

Race background

IncumbentRepublicanJohn Kasich was initially seen as potentially vulnerable in late 2013, as there was speculation he might face a primary challenge from the right, along with a competitive general election featuring a full slate ofOhio Libertarian Party candidates. These potential challenges diminished by early 2014: Kasich did not face any primary opponents, and the Libertarian gubernatorial candidate was disqualified from the ballot. In the general election, Kasich facedDemocratic Cuyahoga County ExecutiveEd FitzGerald andGreen Party candidateAnita Rios. By May 2014, polling indicated an improvement in Kasich’s approval ratings and an expanding lead.[20]

In August 2014,The Washington Post reported on several challenges facing FitzGerald’s campaign, including limited fundraising, a delay in renewing his driver’s license, a meeting with a foreign trade representative that drew attention, and significant staff turnover.[21] Following these developments, a poll conducted by theColumbus Dispatch in September showed Kasich increasing his lead over FitzGerald to 30 percentage points.[22]

Tea Party primary challenge

Ted Stevenot, an Ohio Tea Party leader, had planned to announce a primary challenge to incumbentGovernor Kasich.[23] In early January 2014, however, Stevenot and his running mate,Brenda Mack, decided not to challenge Kasich.[24] In his prepared statement, Stevenot said that his running mate's financial history, which had been the subject of recent news coverage, was not part of his consideration to withdraw.[25]

Ballot disqualifications
Libertarian Party

TheLibertarian Party of Ohio had intended to file a full slate of candidates to contest each election. However, due to the number of signatures rejected on their ballot access petitions, no candidate ended up qualifying.[26]

On March 7, 2014, the Libertarian gubernatorial ticket was stricken from the ballot, having initially received thesecretary of state's approval following a legal challenge from a self-identified Libertarian voter.[27] The challenge alleged that Charlie Earl's signature-gathering effort had been led by Democrats; however, this allegation was not the basis ofSecretary of StateHusted's decision. Husted found that some of the signature gatherers had failed to properly identify their employer on the correct form and therefore rejected the signatures they had gathered.[28]Ballot Access News reported that the decision could impact future elections: "With no gubernatorial candidate on the November ballot, the party will lose its status as a qualified party."[29] The Libertarian Party of Ohio failed to win an injunction against this disqualification twice at thedistrict court level and, after a similarly unsuccessful appeal to theSixth Circuit Court of Appeals, petitioned theU.S. Supreme Court for emergency relief that would have allowedCharlie Earl to appear on the May 6 primary ballot. The Supreme Court declined to hear the case.[30] On May 2, the Supreme Court rejected the petition.[31] On June 4, a petition for re-hearing before the fullSixth Circuit was rejected, leaving an appeal to the district court as the only possible source of redress.[32][33]

Green Party

Both of theGreen Party's candidates were also disqualified for signature-related issues. Two alternative candidates filed to run as write-ins on the Green Party line:Anita Rios andBob Fitrakis for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively. To get on the November ballot, Rios and Fitrakis needed to receive 500 write-in votes in the primary on May 6. They succeeded and participated in the general election.[34]

Polls

Ohio Governor's Race 2014 - Kasich vs. Fitzgerald
PollJohn KasichEd FitzgeraldOtherMargin of errorSample size
The Columbus Dispatch
October 22-31, 2014
62%34%4%+/-3.31,009
New York Times/CBS News/YouGov
October 16-23, 2014
54%35%11%+/-32,728
Columbus Dispatch
September 3-12, 2014
59%29%10%+/-2.71,185
Rasmussen Reports
September 8-9, 2014
50%30%20%+/-4.0780
YouGov
August 18, September 2, 2014
50%37%13%+/-3.02,978
Qunnipiac
July 24-28, 2014
48%36%16%+/-2.71,366
YouGov
July 7-24, 2014
49%43%8%+/-03,624
Quinnipiac
May 7-12, 2014
50%35%14%+/-2.91,174
Rasmussen Reports
May 7-8, 2014
45%38%17%+/-4.0750
SurveyUSA
April 24-28, 2014
46%36%18%+/-4618
Magellan Strategies for the Liberty Foundation of America
April 14-15, 2014
47%41%12%+/-3.35857
Quinnipiac University Poll
February 12-17, 2014
43%38%19%+/-2.71,370
AVERAGES 50.25% 36% 13.5% +/-2.97 1,536.58
Note: The polls above may not reflect all polls that have been conducted in this race. Those displayed are a random sampling chosen by Ballotpedia staff. If you would like to nominate another poll for inclusion in the table, send an email toeditor@ballotpedia.org.
Ohio Governor's Race 2014
PollJohn KasichEd FitzgeraldCharlie EarlNot sureMargin of errorSample size
Public Policy Polling
(December 6-8, 2013)
40%38%6%16%+/-3.11,011
Public Policy Polling
(November 5-6, 2013)
41%41%6%13%+/-4.0595
AVERAGES 40.5% 39.5% 6% 14.5% +/-3.55 803
Note: The polls above may not reflect all polls that have been conducted in this race. Those displayed are a random sampling chosen by Ballotpedia staff. If you would like to nominate another poll for inclusion in the table, send an email toeditor@ballotpedia.org.


Potential match-ups

Ohio Governor's Race 2014 - Kasich vs. Fitzgerald
PollJohn KasichEd FitzgeraldOtherMargin of errorSample size
Quinnipiac University Poll
(November 19-24, 2013)
44%37%19%+/-2.71,361
Public Policy Polling
(August 16-19, 2013)
35%38%27%+/-4.2551
Quinnipiac University Poll
(June 18-23, 2013)
47%33%20%+/-3.2941
AVERAGES 42% 36% 22% +/-3.37 951
Note: The polls above may not reflect all polls that have been conducted in this race. Those displayed are a random sampling chosen by Ballotpedia staff. If you would like to nominate another poll for inclusion in the table, send an email toeditor@ballotpedia.org.
Ohio Governor's Race 2014 - Kasich vs. Cordray
PollJohn KasichRichard CordrayOtherMargin of errorSample size
Quinnipiac University Poll
(June 18-23, 2013)
47%36%18%+/-3.2941
Note: The polls above may not reflect all polls that have been conducted in this race. Those displayed are a random sampling chosen by Ballotpedia staff. If you would like to nominate another poll for inclusion in the table, send an email toeditor@ballotpedia.org.

Money in the race

Mid-year campaign financial reports detailing the first six months of the year were due on July 31, 2013. IncumbentKasich reported about $4.4 million on hand at the end of June, raising nearly $2.6 million in the first half of the year. ChallengerEd FitzGerald raised over $600,000, leaving him with $544,000 on hand.[35]

Campaign media

Ed FitzGerald

Ed FitzGerald ad: Working

John Kasich

John Kasich ad: Purpose

Past elections

2010

Governor/Lt. Governor of Ohio, 2010
PartyCandidateVote %Votes
    RepublicanGreen check mark transparent.pngJohn Kasich/Mary Taylor49%1,889,186
    DemocraticTed Strickland/Yvette McGee BrownIncumbent47%1,812,059
    LibertarianKen Matesz/Margaret Ann Leech2.4%92,116
    GreenDennis Spisak/Anita Rios1.5%58,475
    Write-In David Sargent0%633
Total Votes3,852,469
Election results viaOhio Secretary of State

2006

Governor of Ohio, 2006
PartyCandidateVote %Votes
    DemocraticGreen check mark transparent.pngTed Strickland60.5%2,435,505
    Republican J. Kenneth Blackwell36.6%1,474,331
    Non-Partisan William S. Peirce1.8%71,437
    Non-Partisan Robert Fitrakis1%40,967
    Write-In James Lundeen0%579
    Write-In Larry Bays0%73
Total Votes4,022,892
Election results viaOhio Secretary of State

Voter turnout

Political scientist Michael McDonald's United States Elections Project studied voter turnout in the 2014 election by looking at the percentage of eligible voters who headed to the polls. McDonald used voting-eligible population (VEP), or the number of eligible voters independent of their current registration status, to calculate turnout rates in each state on November 4. He also incorporated ballots cast for the highest office in each state into his calculation. He estimated that 81,687,059 ballots were cast in the 50 states plus theDistrict of Columbia, representing 35.9 percent of the VEP.[36] By comparison, 61.6 percent of VEP voted in the 2008 presidential election and 58.2 percent of VEP voted in the 2012 presidential election.[37]

Quick facts

  • According toPBS Newshour, voter turnout in the 2014 midterms was the lowest since the 1942 midterms, which took place during the nation's involvement in World War II.[38]
  • Forty-three states and the District of Columbia did not surpass 50 percent turnout in McDonald's analysis.
  • The three states with the lowest turnout according to McDonald's analysis wereTexas (28.3 percent),Tennessee (28.6 percent), andIndiana (28.8 percent).
  • Maine (58.5 percent),Wisconsin (56.5 percent), andColorado (54.5 percent) were the three states with the highest turnout.
  • Twelve states increased voter turnout in 2014 compared to the 2010 midterm elections.[39]
Voter turnout rates, 2014
StateTotal votes counted% voter eligible populationTop statewide office up for electionSize of lead (Raw votes)Size of lead (%)
Alabama1,191,27433.2Governor320,31927.2
Alaska285,43154.4Governor4,0041.6
Arizona1,537,67134.1Governor143,95112.5
Arkansas852,64240.1Governor118,66414.0
California7,513,97230.8Governor1,065,74817.8
Colorado2,080,07154.5Governor50,3952.4
Connecticut1,096,50942.5Governor26,6032.5
Delaware234,03834.4Attorney General31,15513.6
District of Columbia177,17635.8Mayor27,93419.0
Florida6,026,80243.3Governor66,1271.1
Georgia2,596,94738.5Governor202,6858.0
Hawaii369,55436.5Governor45,32312.4
Idaho445,30739.6Governor65,85214.9
Illinois3,680,41740.9Governor171,9004.9
Indiana1,387,62228.8Secretary of State234,97817.8
Iowa1,142,28450.2Governor245,54821.8
Kansas887,02343.4Governor33,0523.9
Kentucky1,435,86844.0U.S. Senate222,09615.5
Louisiana1,472,03943.8U.S. Senate16,4011.1
Maine616,99658.5Governor29,8204.9
Maryland1,733,17741.5Governor88,6486.1
Massachusetts2,186,78944.6Governor40,3611.9
Michigan3,188,95643.2Governor129,5474.3
Minnesota1,992,61350.5Governor109,7765.6
Mississippi631,85828.9U.S. Senate141,23433.0
Missouri1,426,30331.8Auditor684,07453.6
Montana373,83147.3U.S. Senate65,26217.9
Nebraska552,11541.5Governor97,67818.7
Nevada547,34929.0Governor255,79346.7
New Hampshire495,56548.4Governor24,9245.2
New Jersey1,955,04232.5N/AN/AN/A
New Mexico512,80535.7Governor73,86814.6
New York3,930,31029.0Governor476,25213.4
North Carolina2,939,76741.2U.S. Senate48,5111.7
North Dakota255,12845.0U.S. House At-large seat42,21417.1
Ohio3,149,87636.2Governor933,23530.9
Oklahoma824,83129.8Governor122,06014.7
Oregon1,541,78253.5Governor59,0294.5
Pennsylvania3,495,86636.0Governor339,2619.8
Rhode Island329,21242.2Governor14,3464.5
South Carolina1,261,61135.2Governor179,08914.6
South Dakota282,29144.9Governor124,86545.1
Tennessee1,374,06528.6Governor642,21447.5
Texas4,727,20828.3Governor957,97320.4
Utah577,97330.2Attorney General173,81935.2
Vermont193,08738.8Governor2,0951.1
Virginia2,194,34636.6U.S. Senate16,7270.8
Washington2,123,90143.1N/AN/AN/A
West Virginia451,49831.2U.S. Senate124,66727.6
Wisconsin2,410,31456.5Governor137,6075.7
Wyoming168,39039.3Governor52,70333.6

Note: Information from the United States Elections Project was last updated on December 16, 2014.

Campaign finance

Comprehensive donor information for this election has been collected by Follow the Money. Based on available campaign finance records, the candidates raised a total of$26,020,774 during the election. This information was last updated on April 3, 2015.[40]

Campaign Contribution Totals
CandidateOfficeResultContributions
John KasichRepublican Party
Mary Taylor
Ohio GovernorWon$21,414,148
Ed FitzgeraldDemocratic Party
Sharen Neuhardt
Ohio GovernorDefeated$4,602,489
Anita RiosGreen Party
Bob Fitrakis
Ohio GovernorDefeated$4,137
Larry EalyDemocratic Party
Ken Gray
Ohio GovernorDefeated$0
Grand Total Raised$26,020,774

Key deadlines

DeadlineEvent
February 5, 2014Filing deadline
May 6, 2014Primary election
November 4, 2014General election
November 25, 2014Completion of state canvass of vote results
January 12, 2015Inauguration of all state-wide executive officeholders

Recent news

This section links to a Google news search for the term "Ohio + Governor + elections"

See also

External links


Footnotes

  1. Columbus Dispatch, "Kasich focused on his own re-election bid," November 8, 2012
  2. Cincinnati.com, "Election 2014," accessed November 4, 2014
  3. NBC News, "Decision 2014 – Ohio Governor," accessed November 4, 2014
  4. Ohio Laws and Administrative Codes, "Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 3513.19," accessed December 19, 2025
  5. Ohio Laws and Administrative Codes, "Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 3513.05," accessed December 19, 2025
  6. Columbus Dispatch, "Kasich focused on his own re-election bid," November 8, 2012
  7. The Plain Dealer, "Cuyahoga County Executive Ed FitzGerald files paperwork needed to intensify gubernatorial run (video)," March 11, 2013
  8. The Columbus Dispatch, "Ed FitzGerald names Sharen Neuhardt as running mate," February 6, 2014
  9. The Plain Dealer, "Libertarian, Green parties post write-in candidates for primary in hopes of reaching November ballot," February 26, 2014
  10. Ohio Secretary of State, "Results," accessed May 9, 2014
  11. Ohio Secretary of State, "SECRETARY OF STATE JON HUSTED RECEIVES STATEWIDE CANDIDATE PETITIONS FOR MAY PRIMARY," February 6, 2014
  12. Cleveland.com, "Green Party candidate Dennis Spisak plans second bid for governor," November 25, 2013
  13. Facebook, "Earl and Clark for Ohio," accessed August 29, 2013
  14. Ballot Access News, "Ohio Secretary of State Removes Libertarian Party Statewide Candidates from the Libertarian Primary Ballot," March 10, 2014
  15. 15.015.115.2Plain Dealer, "Former Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland to pass on rematch with John Kasich," January 8, 2013
  16. VIndy.com, "Ryan decides not to run for governor," March 16, 2013
  17. The Plain Dealer, "Former Rep. Betty Sutton will not run for governor," March 22, 2013
  18. WCPO Cincinnati, "Hamilton County Commissioner Todd Portune announces bid for Ohio governor mansion," December 31, 2013
  19. The Plain Dealer, "Todd Portune ends exploration of governor's race," February 4, 2014
  20. Quinnipiac, "Ohio Gov Roars Past Little Known Challenger, Quinnipiac University Poll Finds; Support For Life Options Outweighs Death Penalty," May 14, 2014
  21. The Washington Post, "The remarkable implosion of Ed FitzGerald," August 26, 2014
  22. Columbus Dispatch, "Ohio governor: Kasich ahead by 30 points in new poll," September 14, 2014
  23. Cleveland Plain Dealer, "Tea party leader takes first step toward challenging John Kasich in GOP primary," January 6, 2014
  24. Cleveland Plain Dealer, "Tea Party primary challenge to Kasich fizzles," January 6, 2014
  25. Ohio Liberty Coalition, "Stevenot Decides Not to Run for Governor," January 6, 2014
  26. The Plain Dealer, "Ed FitzGerald faces only primary among statewide candidates; Libertarians fail to field full slate," March 10, 2014
  27. Akron Beacon Journal Online, "Libertarian governor candidate challenged in Ohio," March 10, 2014
  28. The Republic, "Ohio elections chief disqualifies 2 Libertarian candidates from May primary after protests," March 10, 2014
  29. Ballot Access News, "Ohio Secretary of State Removes Libertarian Party Statewide Candidates from the Libertarian Primary Ballot," March 10, 2014
  30. Libertarian Party of Ohio v. Jon Husted, "Application for stay and emergency injunction addressed to Justice Kagan," accessed May 2, 2014
  31. The Republic, "Ohio Libertarians' ballot plea denied at US Supreme Court, re-filed with 2nd justice," May 2, 2014
  32. The Alliance Review, "Court denies request in Ohio Libertarians’ case," May 5, 2014
  33. The Blade, "Legal options trimmed for Libertarian Ohio governor candidate; federal court won't rehear case," June 4, 2014
  34. Ballot Access News, "Ohio Green Party Still Has Chance to Qualify its Gubernatorial Candidate for the November Ballot," March 24, 2014
  35. The Bellingham Herald, "Ohio gov holds $4.4M in campaign cash for 2014 bid," July 31, 2013
  36. United States Elections Project, "2014 November General Election Turnout Rates," November 7, 2014
  37. TIME, "Voter Turnout in Midterm Elections Hits 72-Year Low," November 10, 2014
  38. PBS, "2014 midterm election turnout lowest in 70 years," November 10, 2014
  39. U.S. News & World Report, "Midterm Turnout Down in 2014," November 5, 2014
  40. Follow the Money, "Overview of Ohio 2014 elections," accessed April 7, 2015
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