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.
Training and Experience
I have been actively involved in local Democratic organizing for several years, serving as a precinct executive and working with groups like the Northeast Democratic Club and Democracy in Action. I currently serve as Vice President of Communications for the Northeast Democratic Club, helping improve outreach and communication. Through this work, I have spent time talking directly with voters, supporting local candidates, and strengthening grassroots engagement across the district.
Volunteer/Community Service
I have volunteered with local Democratic organizations including the Northeast Democratic Club and Democracy in Action, and have co-coached a middle school robotics team. Our children are our future!
Most people have never heard of the State Central Committee. And if I’m being honest, that’s part of the problem.
Because it actually matters.
This is where decisions get made about how the Democratic Party operates in Ohio. Who gets support. How resources are used. What gets prioritized. It’s not flashy, but it has a real impact on whether we’re building something strong or just going through the motions every election cycle.
At its best, this role connects what’s happening on the ground with what’s happening at the state level. At its worst, it turns into a small group making decisions without really hearing the people they represent.
If we want a party that grows and shows up locally, it has to be built from the ground up.
My priorities are pretty simple, and they all come back to staying connected to reality.
That means talking to voters consistently, not just during election season. Understanding what people actually care about and what’s getting missed.
It also means supporting the people doing the work locally. Volunteers, precinct leaders, first-time candidates. Those are the people who build a party, and they need support and a clear path to get involved.
I also think we can do a better job communicating. Not in a polished way, but in a way that actually makes sense. What does the party do? How do you get involved? Why should you care?
If we do those things well, everything else gets easier. When we do those well, our decisions start with the questions that matters most: "what do YOU want?"
A lot of people skip the bottom of the ballot. Not because they don’t care, but because no one ever explained what those races are or why they matter.
Ironically, those are often the ones that affect you the most.
So part of this is just making things clearer. What's this position? What does it do? Why should you vote on it? If we explain that better, more people will vote the whole ballot.
And some of it's just the basics. Reminding people when elections are, how to vote early, and simply asking them to show up. Day by day, door by door, person by person. While we do have to embrace this modern digital age, we should balance that with wisdom won through hard work and experience.
Turnout doesn’t happen by accident. It happens when someone takes the time to make it easy and worth it.
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