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Ohio House District 43

No. to be elected: 99 | Salary: $68,674 | Term: 2 yearsResponsibilities: To represent the people of the district and the State of Ohio in dealing with matters not allocated to the federal government.

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    Zach Hall
    (Lib)

Biographical Information

What changes would you make, if any, to voting and elections policy?

What type of tax reform, if any, would best serve Ohio?

How would you address concerns about the rising cost of living?

What are your priorities for K-12 and higher education?

How would you reduce hyperpartisanship and promote civility?

I believe Ohio’s election system should be focused on one thing: maximizing voter choice while maintaining transparency and trust in the process. That means making it easier for people to vote, easier for candidates to get on the ballot, and harder for government or parties to limit competition.

Right now, too many rules protect the two-party system instead of the voters. I would work to remove unnecessary barriers so every Ohioan has real choices at the ballot box.
Ohio’s tax system should be simpler, fairer, and less burdensome especially for working families and small businesses. Right now, we rely too heavily on property taxes and a patchwork of taxes that are complicated, non-transparent, and often regressive.

The best reform is to shift toward a simpler, consumption-based system while reducing or eliminating taxes that punish productivity like property and income taxes.
The rising cost of living isn’t happening by accident it’s the result of bad policy. In Ohio, we’re making it more expensive to live, work, and build because of taxes, regulations, and artificial limits on supply.

My approach is straightforward: lower the cost drivers, increase supply, and stop government policies that make everyday life more expensive.
My priority is simple: education should serve student not systems, not bureaucracies, and not political agendas. That means empowering parents, focusing on outcomes, and making both K–12 and higher education more accountable, flexible, and affordable.
You don’t reduce hyperpartisanship by asking people to “be nicer” you reduce it by changing the incentives in the system. Right now, our political structure rewards division, punishes independence, and protects two-party control.

If we want more civility, we need more competition, more voter choice, and less structural polarization.