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Churches and religious organizations are taking different stands on Issue 1, the proposal to change the constitution to make it harder to pass future constitutional amendments.
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Ohio voters have until Sunday to vote on Issue 1, a proposal to make it harder to change the constitution, with Election Day on Aug. 8.
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Some small businesses throughout Ohio say they are opposing Issue 1 even though big lobby groups that represent them are for it.
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The Libertarian Party of Ohio has filed a complaint claiming Republican Secretary of State Frank LaRose is violating the federal law that bars state officials from using their official authority to interfere with elections.
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The dark money in the Aug. 8 special election has brought back concerns about out-of-state money in Ohio politics. Some Issue 1 critics say lawmakers should focus on campaign finance reform instead of taking power away from citizens.
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Ohio’s secretary of state called on his multi-millionaire opponents for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate to each kick in $1 million for the pro-Issue 1 campaign.
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More than $15 million has been been raised by the groups supporting and opposing Issue 1. But the money gap between the two sides is big.
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Voters deciding an August amendment that would make it harder to pass future constitutional amendments have been voting early in-person and by mail in larger numbers than many initially expected.
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Supporters of the Aug. 8 ballot issue to make it harder to amend Ohio’s constitution were handing out free root beer floats at the Delaware County early voting center, which opponents called "a double dose of desperation."
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This debate between an opponent and a backer of Issue 1 is among several being held across Ohio leading up to the Aug. 8 special election.