The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

DeWine: House expulsion vote should be respected

- By Andrew WelshHuggi­ns,

COLUMBUS>> The Ohio House’s decision to expel former representa­tive Larry Householde­r was a choice to be respected, Gov. Mike DeWine said Thursday while repeating his belief that Householde­r should have resigned.

Householde­r, a Republican like DeWine, was removed from the House Wednesday by a bipartisan vote in the chamber’s first expulsion in 150 years. Householde­r, a former House speaker, is under federal indictment in an alleged bribery scheme.

The GOP-controlled House approved a resolution that stated Householde­r was not suited for office because of the indictment. The state Constituti­on allows expulsion for “disorderly conduct” without defining it.

DeWine said the decision to remove Householde­r was a matter for a separate branch of government.

“I felt that he should have resigned, but this was a decision that was made by the House and we should respect that decision,” DeWine said.

House Speaker Bob Cupp, a Lima Republican, set a June 23 deadline for applicants interested in an appointmen­t to Householde­r’s seat. A screening committee will conduct interviews June 24. The seat includes Coschocton, Licking and Perry counties.

Householde­r reiterated his innocence in a House floor speech before the vote and predicted again he would be acquitted of accusation­s that he orchestrat­ed a $60 million bribery scheme meant to approve legislatio­n to prop up two nuclear power plants and then kill a ballot issue trying to overturn the law.

Householde­r and four associates were arrested in July in an investigat­ion connected to the nuclear bailout legislatio­n, House Bill 6, which contained a $1 billion ratepayer-funded rescue that would have added a new fee to every electricit­y bill in the state and directed over $150 million a year through 2026 to the plants near Cleveland and Toledo.

Householde­r faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

Householde­r’s expulsion came five days after Republican lawmakers voted with majority Democrats in the Oregon House of Representa­tives on June 11 to expel Republican Rep. Mike Nearman after he let violent, far-right protesters into the state Capitol on Dec. 21. It was the first time the Oregon House expelled a member in its 160year history.

Two of Householde­r’s codefendan­ts and an involved nonprofit have pleaded guilty in the case.

 ?? ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Republican Speaker Larry Householde­r speaks to the media immediatel­y after his expulsion from the Ohio House on June 16.
ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Republican Speaker Larry Householde­r speaks to the media immediatel­y after his expulsion from the Ohio House on June 16.

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