Change Address

VOTE411 Voter Guide

Indiana State House District 24

Qualifications: To be eligible to run for state representative, a person must:Be registered to vote in the election district the person seeks to representBe a United States citizen at the time of electionHave resided in the state for at least two years and in the house district for at least one yearBe at least 21 years old upon taking officeTerm Limits: Two-year term. No term limits.Duties: Legislative authority and responsibilities of the Indiana House of Representatives include:Passing bills on public policy mattersSetting levels for state spendingRaising and lowering taxesVoting to uphold or override gubernatorial vetoesCurrent State Representative Salary: $77,691.28

Click a candidate icon to find more information about the candidate. To compare two candidates, click the "compare" button. To start over, click a candidate icon.

  • Candidate picture

    Bill Gutrich
    (Rep)

  • Candidate picture

    Josh Lowry
    (Dem)

  • Candidate picture

    Hunter Smith
    (Rep)

Biographical Information

What are the most important challenges facing our state, and how do you propose to address them?

Are you in favor of term limits? Why or why not?

What policies will you pursue to promote social and racial justice in our state?

Climate change is having a negative impact in Indiana. Using a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being strongly agree and 1 strongly disagree, how would you rate this statement? Please explain your answer.

What will you do to support a vibrant economy in our state?

The state government has a responsibility to ensure healthcare for all residents. Using a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being strongly agree and 1 strongly disagree, how would you rate this statement? Please explain your answer.

What is your stance on access to abortion and contraception?

The state government has a responsibility to provide an equitable, quality public education for all children pre-K through grade 12. Using a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being strongly agree and 1 strongly disagree, how would you rate this statement? Please explain your answer.

What measures do you support to improve and secure elections and voting access in our state?

Do you see fatal gun violence due to homicide, suicide, and accidental shootings an issue that the Indiana legislature should address? If so, how?

My campaign is focused on 4 pillars to improve District 24 and the state of Indiana: Fiscal Responsibility & Lower Taxes; Educational Excellence & Parent Empowerment; Smart Development; and Public Safety.
Yes, I am in favor of term limits, and I have signed the U.S. Term Limits Pledge.
We are all Americans and should be focused on our commonalities over our differences. Any time you add a hyphen before American when describing a person, you are adding a division amongst alike citizens. I believe in mutual respect and civility toward all.
Conservation is always a good pursuit: we should be aiming towards doing more with less and having less of an impact on the environment. I support ideas looking at these issues, but, too often, environmental legislation contains too many proposals that overrule all other priorities.
I will work to attract investment and development opportunities to the district by highlighting our strengths, such as our skilled workforce, strategic location, and quality of life amenities. This may include marketing campaigns, business incentives, and targeted outreach to industries that align with our regional strengths and priorities. I will also prioritize infrastructure investments that support economic growth and connectivity, such as transportation improvements, broadband expansion, and utility upgrades. By investing in the infrastructure backbone of our district, we can enhance our competitiveness and attract new businesses and industries.
(1) The state of Indiana has the responsibility to ensure public safety; healthcare is not a right. However, healthcare is not exempt from free market economics. I will support initiatives to reduce prescription drug costs and increase transparency in healthcare pricing, empowering consumers to make informed decisions about their healthcare options based on where they believe their money is best spent.
I am 100% pro-life and strongly believe in the sanctity of human life from conception until natural death. The law in Indiana is in a better place than where it used to be, including key exceptions to protect the life and health of a mother. Regardless of my personal views, the availability of contraception options is an important compromise that allows Hoosiers an option to avoid unplanned pregnancies.
I believe educating children is in society’s best interest, as it is an investment in our future. The best form of government is the government closest to the people, able to adjust to the ebbs and flows of local issues. I think most education decisions are best made locally by the school boards and the parents of schoolchildren. Parents should have the freedom to choose the form of schooling they believe best suits their child’s needs, whether it be public or not.
I am a firm believer in Voter ID laws and am proud Indiana has implemented these to ensure secure elections. I think early voting is a good thing, as it necessitates identification verification; however, I think mail-in ballots are potentially susceptible to voter fraud.
Gun violence due to homicide, suicide, and accidental shootings is the result of bad actors, not the guns themselves. I am a firm believer of our Second Amendment rights, which have been affirmed time and time again by the Supreme Court through Heller v. DC, McDonald v. Chicago, and Bruen v. NYSRPA.
Candidate Statement I’m a foster parent, an attorney and a lifelong Hoosier who can’t sit back and watch as our state legislators put personal beliefs ahead of the will of the people. I am a pro-choice candidate. I’m pro women having the choice to get the healthcare that is right for them. I’m pro people loving who they want to love. And, I’m pro people choosing to use marijuana responsibly. The data speaks for itself: these issues are important to our community and these are the issues I will advocate for as your representative.
Education Indiana University (bachelors, masters, law school)
Occupational background Trial attorney
Campaign Website http://lowryforindiana.com
Campaign email (public) lowry4indiana@gmail.com
The cost of living is growing faster than wages and salaries. This impacts people at every income level and stage of life. As your representative, I’ll invest in working and middle-class Hoosiers because they are the engine of our local economy.

We need to put the buying power back in the hands of Hoosiers, and here’s how. We’ll invest in pre-K programs to give parents the choice to re-enter the workforce if they choose. We’ll prepare young Hoosiers to be economic contributors by investing in high school trade pathways. And we’ll continue to invest in high-skilled jobs that attract homegrown talent so Hoosiers can grow, learn, and work right here at home.
It will be my honor to serve Hoosiers for as long as they elect me.
Racial and social justice starts with empowering and amplifying all voices. That is why I want to protect and expand voting rights. We must move to an independent redistricting commission to help reverse decades of race-based gerrymandering that limits the voting power of Hoosiers. We must expand education and access to early voting opportunities while having population-based polling locations to ensure equitable access to the ballot box.

Indiana must create a ballot initiative process that empowers Hoosiers. Polling shows that the majority of Hoosiers are in favor of abortion and modern marijuana legislation, so putting these issues on the ballot will allow Hoosiers to truly let their voices be heard.
5 The Republican supermajority has relaxed standards for businesses so much that we have the worst air and water in the country, and that’s before we discuss the dangerous impacts of climate change. The Hoosier state is experiencing increasing temperatures, increasing precipitation, and decreasing water quality.

We can’t halt or reverse these effects, but we can slow them down by investing in renewable energy, increasing wetlands protections, and holding large corporations to strict emissions and pollution standards. As your representative, I will fight for the programs and initiatives that offset carbon emissions, invest in energy efficiency, and more. I’ll also help amplify the voices of those who care about our environment and our futur
In addition to Indiana’s strong agbioscience and manufacturing roots, we are one of the country’s tech hubs and a destination for innovation. We can continue to recruit innovative companies that attract top talent.

We need to invest in Hoosier businesses and create an economic environment that keeps their needs at its core. Small and medium-sized businesses have their fingers on the pulse of the community and truly know how to serve their needs.
4 Access to quality healthcare outcomes should be a right and not a privilege. Whether that right is afforded by the state or the federal government, every citizen deserves to be healthy.

Indiana ranked 16th in the nation for access to healthcare, but we ranked 10th WORST for healthcare outcomes, 12th WORST in quality of care, 47th in maternal mortality, and have the 12th HIGHEST cost of care. Let’s remove profit from the medical decision-making process and allow our high quality providers to give high quality care.
Access to abortion, contraception and other reproductive care need to be available for those who choose it.
5 Every child deserves access to a great education, and Central Indiana is home to some of the best public school systems in the country. However, this Republican supermajority is trying to defund our public schools by using the voucher system to allow taxpayer dollars to fund the private school tuition of wealthy families. Private schools are private institutions and should not take public funding from the more than 90% of Hoosier students who attend our great public schools.
Our most recent elections have been the most secure elections in our nation’s history, but the fallacy of election integrity is used to suppress turnout. Indiana’s voter turnout rate is second to last in the country, allowing the Republican supermajority to make the rules and draw unfair district boundaries. We need to increase access to the ballot box by allowing same-day registration, increasing early voting hours, putting more polling locations in densely populated areas, getting rid of assigned polling places, and increasing education around the fact that Indiana is one of 16 states where felons have their voting rights automatically restored when released.
If legislators can save a single life by mandating better accountability of guns, then they have the obligation to do so. Mandating gun owners to carry permits will ensure proper accountability for all law-abiding gun owners. We can also institute red flag laws, increase holds on gun purchases, and pass legislation closing the gun show loophole like the one State Senator Andrea Hunley tried to pass.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.
Candidate has not yet responded.