Ohio Democratic Party

02/27/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 02/27/2026 12:50

WHAT OHIOANS ARE READING: ‘Husted backed the corrupt HB 6 bailout. Ohio households now pay $663 more a year.’

WHAT OHIOANS ARE READING: 'Husted backed the corrupt HB 6 bailout. Ohio households now pay $663 more a year.'

February 27, 2026

Husted at center of ongoing FirstEnergy corruption trial, mentioned more than 100 times

Columbus, Ohio - New reporting reveals that Senator Jon Husted "led the charge" to pass HB 6, the scandal-ridden bribery legislation that has contributed to Ohioans' electric bills, rising by an average of more than $660 since the bailout passed in 2019.

As the FirstEnergy criminal corruption trial continues, Husted's ties to the largest corruption scandal in Ohio history continue to deepen - with new phone calls, text messages, and previously unreported secret meetings placing him at the center of the scheme that delivered a billion dollar bailout to utilities while sticking Ohio families with higher energy bills.

Read more about the latest revelation on Husted's role in the center of Ohio's largest corruption scandal:

TiffinOhio.net: Husted backed the corrupt HB 6 bailout. Ohio households now pay $663 more a year.

  • U.S. Sen. Jon Husted, who is running to keep his Senate seat in Ohio's 2026 special election, allegedly played a central role in passing a utility bailout law that sits at the heart of the state's largest-ever corruption scandal - and that has contributed to Ohio households paying $663 more per year for electricity in the years since.
  • The financial toll is direct and documented. When House Bill 6 took effect in October 2019, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio recorded the average monthly residential electric bill at $89.19 - $1,070.28 annually. By January 2026, that figure had climbed to $144.47 per month, or $1,733.64 per year. The difference: $55.28 per month, $663.36 per year.
  • Text messages and internal emails released in 2024 show that Husted allegedly led the charge with now-indicted FirstEnergy executives to pass the bill, according to the Ohio Capital Journal.
  • A FirstEnergy email stated that Gov. Mike DeWine "left the details of H.B. 6 to others - John [sic] Husted and Danny," referring to Husted and Dan McCarthy, DeWine's legislative director and a former FirstEnergy lobbyist.
  • House Bill 6 passed in 2019 and authorized a $1 billion ratepayer-funded bailout of the state's nuclear power industry, with monthly surcharges paid by every Ohio residential electricity customer.
  • Federal authorities later revealed it was secured through a nearly $61 million bribery scheme - described by U.S. Attorney David DeVillers as "the largest bribery money laundering scheme ever perpetrated against the people of the state of Ohio."
  • HB 6 required Ohio residential utility customers to pay a monthly surcharge of between $1.30 and $1.50 […]. From 2020 through August 14, 2025, Ohioans paid $527,808,043 in OVEC subsidies specifically under HB 6's Legacy Generation Rider.
  • According to PUCO's January 2026 Unit Costs data, the average Ohio household now pays $144.47 per month for electricity - $1,733.64 annually, based on the commission's standard estimate of 750 kilowatt hours of monthly residential usage.
  • When HB 6 took effect in October 2019, that same household paid $89.19 per month, or $1,070.28 per year.

Read more about Jon Husted's role in Ohio's largest corruption scandal:

  • New evidence at trial revealed nine calls between Jon Husted and Mike Dowling in the months preceding a $4.3 million bribe to former Utilities Commission Chair Sam Randazzo.
  • New reporting reveals Jon Husted held secret meetings with indicted FirstEnergy executives, including with the "mastermind of Ohio's largest public corruption scheme two days before scandal-ridden bribery legislation was introduced."
  • Neil Clark, a FirstEnergy lobbyist and co-defendant with former House Speaker Larry Householder, referred to Husted as FirstEnergy's "golden boy."
  • Text messages between Husted and FirstEnergy Executives reveal that the trio were in constant communication "before, during and after his campaign."
  • Just weeks after Husted and DeWine were elected in 2018, they had a dinner with FirstEnergy executives Jones and Dowling at the Athletic Club of Columbus that has become a focal point of the current criminal trial.
  • Public records show that FirstEnergy funneled $1 million in dark money to a nonprofit backing Husted in 2017 - part of the same corrupt scheme that led to federal indictments.

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Ohio Democratic Party published this content on February 27, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on February 27, 2026 at 18:51 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]