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District 10 State Central Committeewoman

Republican State Central Committee Member, ManNo. to be elected: 33 statewide—1 per State Senate district | Salary: none | Term: 2 yearsResponsibilities: With other Committee members, represents the state-level decision-making body for the Republican party. Each Ohio Senate district is represented by one man and one woman.Republican State Central Committee Member, WomanNo. to be elected: 33 statewide—1 per State Senate district | Salary: none | Term: 2 yearsResponsibilities: With other Committee members, represents the state-level decision-making body for the Republican party. Each Ohio Senate district is represented by one man and one woman.Democratic State Central Committee Member, ManNo. to be elected: 33 statewide—1 per State Senate district | Salary: none | Term: 4 yearsResponsibilities: With other Committee members, represents the state-level decision-making body for the Democratic party. Each Ohio Senate district is represented by one man and one woman.Democratic State Central Committee Member, WomanNo. to be elected: 33 statewide—1 per State Senate district | Salary: none | Term: 4 yearsResponsibilities: With other Committee members, represents the state-level decision-making body for the Democratic party. Each Ohio Senate district is represented by one man and one woman.

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    Noelle Marie Diller
    (Rep)

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    Setys Kelly
    (Rep)

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    Amana J. Koeller
    (Dem)

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    Sharen Swartz Neuhardt
    (Dem)

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    Laura Rosenberger
    (Rep)

Biographical Information

What are the most important functions of the State Central Committee, and why?

What are your top priorities, if elected?

What will you do to promote voter participation?

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Twitter/X @rosenberger4OH
Training and Experience Clark County Executive Committee 2018 to present, Executive Chairman 2022 to present; State of Ohio Elections Official-Clark County Board of Elections board member, appointed and certified by the Ohio Secretary of State 2-terms, 2022-present; Institute on the Constitution, teaching certificate US Constitutional studies; VIRTUS, National Catholic Risk Retention Group, certification in child protection through the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, OH
Volunteer/Community Service • Contributes to: Dayton Right to Life, Catholics United for Life, Elizabeth New Life Center (Dayton Pro-Life), Ohio Gun Owners Association, Buckeye Firearms, Institute on the Constitution/the American View, Homeschool Legal Defense Association, Dayt
The three basic functions of a political party committee member at either the state or county level are also the most important and that is why they are mandated by the Ohio Revised Code: 1) appoint an executive committee to oversee the campaign fundraising and business of the committee; 2) support and endorse candidates; and 3) fill vacancies of either elected officials or other committee persons who have vacated their position.
My top priority has always been to protect Ohio voters' primary election vote. I have and will continue to stand firm against primary endorsements of candidates in contested races. I believe Ohioans need to choose their nominees who go on to November and not the "big-wigs" in smoke-filled back-room deals. I believe in a bottom-up, grass roots approach and not a top-down approach. My other top priority is to continue to work on closing Ohio's primaries. Right now, open primaries mean that Democrats can easily vote in Republican primaries and visa-versa. This waters down the conservative vote and results in weak Republican winners who behave like Democrats. We need to prohibit cross-over primary voting to curb this practice. It is done in other states where the result is a stronger party.
I have been promoting voter participation for almost two decades by going door to door, registering new voters, providing absentee mail-in ballot request forms, working at fair booths for voter outreach, tracking voters through database work, recruiting poll workers and watchers. I have done all of this and more and will continue to do so until I can no longer serve.