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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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."
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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.
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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.
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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:
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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.
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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."
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Neil Clark, a FirstEnergy lobbyist and co-defendant with former House Speaker Larry Householder, referred to Husted as FirstEnergy's "golden boy."
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Text messages between Husted and FirstEnergy Executives reveal that the trio were in constant communication "before, during and after his campaign."
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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.
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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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