American politician
Keith Faber
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![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/bb/Ohio_Senate_130th_General_Assemby_2013-2014_-_DPLA_-_4dd33bcc8c6b71853ab731d33616f568_%28page_2%29.jpg/220px-Ohio_Senate_130th_General_Assemby_2013-2014_-_DPLA_-_4dd33bcc8c6b71853ab731d33616f568_%28page_2%29.jpg) |
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Assumed office
January 12, 2019
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Governor
| Mike DeWine
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Preceded by
| Dave Yost
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In office
January 3, 2017 ? January 7, 2019
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Preceded by
| Jim Buchy
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Succeeded by
| Susan Manchester
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In office
January 3, 2001 ? January 2, 2007
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Preceded by
| Jim Buchy
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Succeeded by
| Jim Zehringer
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In office
January 7, 2013 ? December 31, 2016
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Preceded by
| Tom Niehaus
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Succeeded by
| Larry Obhof
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In office
January 2, 2007 ? December 31, 2016
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Preceded by
| Jim Jordan
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Succeeded by
| Matt Huffman
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Born
| (
1966-01-19
)
January 19, 1966
(age 58)
Troy
,
Missouri
, U.S.
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Political party
| Republican
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Spouse
| Andrea Faber
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Children
| 2
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Education
| Oakland University
(
BA
)
Ohio State University
(
JD
)
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Keith Faber
(born January 19, 1966) is an American politician from
Ohio
. A
Republican
, he has been
State Auditor of Ohio
since 2019. He was formerly a member of the
Ohio House of Representatives
(2001-2007), elected from the 84th district, and then a member of the
Ohio State Senate
(2007-2016), elected from the
12th District
. He was
president of the Ohio Senate
from 2013 to 2016.
Life and career
[
edit
]
Opening of
Congressman
Jim Jordan
's
Sidney
office in 2007. From left-to-right: John Garmhausen, State Senator Keith Faber, State Representative John Adams, Mayor Frank J. Mariano, City of Sidney, City Councilman Steve Hamby, Doug Borchers, Congressman Jim Jordan
With incumbent
Jim Buchy
unable to run for another term in the House in 2000, Faber sought to replace him. He faced a primary race with fellow Republican Terry Haworth, and won by about 1,300 votes.
[1]
He defeated Democrat Bill Sell in the general election by about 14,000 votes.
[2]
He won reelection in 2002, 2004, and 2006.
When
Jim Jordan
vacated his state Senate seat after winning a seat in Congress, Faber was one of seven who sought to replace him, along with
Derrick Seaver
,
Gene Krebs
, Robert J. Luckey III, Toni Slusser, Vincent Foulk and Kreg Allison. Faber won the support of Senate Republicans, and took the seat in the Senate in February 2007. Soon after the appointment, Senate President
Bill Harris
appointed Faber to the Senate Finance and Financial Institutions Committee.
For the
128th General Assembly
, Faber served as Senate majority floor leader, and in the
129th General Assembly
, he served as president pro tempore, the second highest post in the Senate.
[3]
As President pro tempore, Faber was also vice chairman of the Senate Rules and Reference Committee.
[4]
Faber won reelection to a second term in 2012, defeating Libertarian Paul Hinds with 79.07% of the vote.
[5]
Faber served as the
94th President of the Ohio Senate
throughout his last term in the upper chamber, before being ineligible to run again in 2016 due to term limits.
In a 2016 survey by
Columbus Monthly
of Statehouse insiders ("lawmakers, legislative aides, lobbyists, journalists and Kasich administration officials"), Faber was rated "Most Ambitious," "Most Humorless," "Least Compassionate," "Most Arrogant," and "Most Aggressive Campaign Fundraiser."
[6]
Ohio House of Representatives
[
edit
]
In 2016, state Representative
Jim Buchy
, who had returned to the House after Faber had succeeded him in 2000, again decided to retire, in what perhaps strategically opened up the seat for Faber, who himself was term-limited from his seat in the Senate, where he had served as the body's president since 2013. He easily won election, receiving over 83% of the vote against Democrat Ed Huff in the 2016 general election.
[7]
Auditor of State
[
edit
]
Faber speaking at a rally in 2018
Campaign
[
edit
]
In February 2017, Faber announced his intention to run for Ohio Auditor of State. Ohio Speaker of the House
Cliff Rosenberger
considered running for the Republican nomination for auditor,
[8]
but chose not to do so.
[9]
He ran unopposed for the Republican nomination in the May 2018 primary.
[10]
During his campaign, Faber emphasized performance audits to promote government efficiency.
[11]
Faber faced former U.S. Representative
Zack Space
, the Democratic nominee, in the 2018 campaign for state auditor.
[12]
In October 2018, the
Associated Press
published an investigation revealed that Faber and his businesses incurred penalties for tax delinquencies between 2008 and 2015 across multiple properties and years and in two counties.
[12]
Before Faber's tax payment history came to light, Faber had run digital ads attacking Space for his two tax penalties in 2005 and 2008.
[12]
Both candidates cited administrative errors as the reason for the late payments.
[12]
Space's campaign accused Faber of hypocrisy; Faber’s bookkeeper took responsibility for the delays.
On November 6, 2018, Faber was elected State Auditor.
[13]
Faber received 49.66% of the vote, defeating Space, who received 46.28%.
[10]
Tenure
[
edit
]
Faber was first inaugurated as auditor on January 12, 2019.
[14]
He was
inaugurated for a second term
on January 9, 2023, joined by his family and sworn in by newly elected chief justice of the Ohio Supreme Court Sharon Kennedy.
Electoral history
[
edit
]
Ohio Senate: Results 2008 to 2012
Year
|
SD
|
Democrat
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
|
Republican
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
|
Independent
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
|
Libertarian
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
2008
|
12
|
Thomas Matthew
|
46,273
|
28.98%
|
|
Keith Faber
|
106,637
|
66.79%
|
|
Jack Kaffenberger
|
6,750
|
4.23%
|
|
|
|
|
2012
|
12
|
None
|
|
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Keith Faber
|
111,694
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78.84%
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Paul Hinds
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29,974
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21.16%
|
Ohio House: Results 2000 to 2006
Year
|
HD
|
Democrat
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
|
Republican
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
2000
|
77
|
Bill Sell
|
18,232
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36.2%
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Keith Faber
|
32,132
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63.8%
|
2002
|
77
|
Ben Amstutz
|
9,483
|
24.16%
|
|
Keith Faber
|
28,353
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76.84%
|
2004
|
77
|
Betsy Marshall
|
17,131
|
30.2%
|
|
Keith Faber
|
39,600
|
60.8%
|
2006
|
77
|
Betsy Marshall
|
15,522
|
34.82%
|
|
Keith Faber
|
29,060
|
65.18%
|
2016
|
84
|
Ed Huff
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9,607
|
16.62%
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|
Keith Faber
|
48,191
|
83.38%
|
Auditor of State: Results 2018-2022
Year
|
Democrat
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
|
Republican
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
|
Libertarian
|
Votes
|
Pct
|
2018
|
Zack Space
|
2,006,204
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46.28%
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Keith Faber
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2,152,769
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49.66%
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Robert C. Coogan
|
175,790
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4.06%
|
2022
|
Tyler Sappington
|
1,683,216
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41.25%
|
|
Keith Faber
|
2,397,207
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58.75%
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Personal life
[
edit
]
Faber is married to Andrea Faber, and together they have two children. They reside in
Celina, Ohio
.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Blackwell, Kenneth
2000 primary election results
Archived
2011-06-27 at the
Wayback Machine
(2000-03-07)
- ^
Blackwell, Kenneth
2000 general election results
Archived
2011-06-27 at the
Wayback Machine
(2000-11-07)
- ^
"News Archives - Urbana Daily Citizen"
.
Urbana Daily Citizen
.
- ^
"Area's state lawmakers take leadership spots"
.
- ^
Husted, Jon
2012 general election results
Archived
2012-12-04 at
archive.today
(2012-11-06)
- ^
Ghose, Dave (September 23, 2016).
"Rating the Legislators"
.
- ^
"Faber passes gavel; sworn in as state rep"
. 4 January 2017
. Retrieved
2017-01-08
.
- ^
"House speaker Rosenberger ponders run for Ohio auditor"
. 24 October 2017.
- ^
Mary Kilpatrick,
House Speaker Cliff Rosenberger says he won' run for state auditor
, Cleveland.com (October 30, 2017).
- ^
a
b
2018 Official Election Results
, Ohio Secretary of State.
- ^
Roger LaPointe (September 16, 2018).
"Faber campaigns on vigilance"
.
Sentinel-Tribune
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Julie Carr Smyth (October 12, 2018).
"Tax penalty questions swirl in race for Ohio auditor"
. Associated Press.
- ^
"GOP state Rep. Keith Faber elected as Ohio auditor"
.
WTTE
. Associated Press. 6 November 2018
. Retrieved
2018-11-07
.
- ^
Friday kicks off inaugurals for new Ohio officeholders
, Associated Press (January 11, 2019).
External links
[
edit
]
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Political party affiliations
:
- ?
21
Republican
(21 states)
- ?
18
Democratic
(16 states, 1 territory, 1 district)
- ?
17 nonpartisan (13 states, 4 territories)
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