Frank LaRose


Frank LaRose is an American politician. He currently serves as Ohio's Secretary of State after serving two terms as a Republican member of the Ohio State Senate from Ohio's 27th Senate district which includes Wayne County as well as portions of Stark and Summit Counties.

Early life and military career

LaRose was born at Akron City Hospital and grew up in Copley Township in Summit County, Ohio. His father was the co-owner of a beverage distributor. He has four siblings.
According to his official biography, he is an Eagle Scout. He graduated from Copley High School and enlisted in the United States Army, serving in the 101st Airborne Division and later the U.S. Special Forces. He received the Bronze Star for his service as a warrior in Iraq with the U.S. Special Forces.
After returning from Iraq, LaRose married Lauren Kappa and graduated from Ohio State University with a Bachelor of Science in Consumer Affairs and a minor in Business Administration.

Ohio Senate career

Ohio Senate election (2010)

LaRose ran for Ohio Senate in 2010 and defeated the Democratic nominee, Summit County Councilman Frank Comunale, in the 27th District, a Democratic-leaning district. LaRose edged out Comunale 56.5% to 43.5%.

Ohio Senate (2011-2013)

LaRose was sworn into the Ohio Senate in 2011. Governing magazine named him one of "12 State Legislators to Watch in 2014."
LaRose was chair of the Ohio Senate Transportation, Commerce and Workforce Committee, and previously was chair of the State and Local Government Committee and Public Safety, Local Government and Veterans Affairs Committee. He previously was chair of the Joint Committee on Agency Rule Review.
LaRose voted for Senate Bill 5 which reduced collective bargaining rights for public workers. LaRose added that he agonized over the decision. After the bill, which passed by a narrow margin, was repealed by a public referendum, LaRose said, "The voters have made it clear that this was not the course they wished to take." In 2018, LaRose said, "As I look back on am I confident I did the right thing? Not necessarily."
LaRose voted for the Congressional Redistricting plan. that is now under legal challenge for gerrymandering.

Ohio Senate (2014-2018)

LaRose won re-election for his seat in 2014.
LaRose sponsored a bill to eliminate six days of early voting, and prohibit county Board of Elections from sending out unsolicited absentee voting applications. In 2016, he voted for SB 296, introduced by Rep. Bill Seitz which would require a monetary payment in order to extend voting hours at any vote center for any reason.
During his Senate tenure, LaRose supported every abortion restriction proposed. In a now deleted page on his website but still indexed on Google, LeRose heralds his "100% pro-life voting record".

His 2016, his legislative aide, Jessica Koehler, joined Ohio's Right to Life as the Director of Legislative Affairs.
LaRose voted for SB 72 in 2011, a "late-term abortion" ban, which only affects 1% of abortions, and provided no exception for the mother's health. This was reintroduced as HB 78, which lowered the ban from 24 to 20 weeks, but allowed for an exemption for the woman's health. In 2015, he voted for SB 127, a 20-week abortion ban, and cosponsored HB 294, which prohibited public funds for abortion services.
In 2016, he supported HB 493, a heartbeat bill, even though similar bills have been unanimously blocked by the judiciary in several states. In 2017, he voted for SB 28, which would require the burial or cremation of fetal remains, identical to a similar bill which has been blocked in Texas.
In 2017, he sponsored legislation to prevent women from having abortions after a fetal diagnosis of Down syndrome. He also voted for SB 145, which bans certain abortion procedures.
The American Conservative Union gave him a 100% evaluation for 2017.

Ohio Secretary of State

Candidacy for state secretary (2018)

On May 17, 2017, LaRose announced that he would run for Ohio Secretary of State in the 2018 election. LaRose defeated Democratic State Rep. Kathleen Clyde in the general election 50.9% to 46.7%.
Early during the campaign, LaRose indicated that he would continue a policy of purging voters from voter rolls if those voters had not voted for six consecutive years. Later during the campaign, LaRose said that he did not support the policy. In 2016, LaRose opposed automatic voter registration, but said during the campaign that he supported automatic voter registration. While in Ohio Senate, LaRose sponsored legislation to eliminate Ohio's "Golden Week" ; during the 2018 campaign, LaRose said he favored a different same-day registration system.
During the campaign, Clyde supported a shift to a uniform paper ballot system in Ohio; LaRose said he favored the current system where there is a requirement for a paper trail for ballots but all counties are allowed to use their own machines. Clyde called for the adoption of postal voting to replace early in-person voting; LaRose supported the existing system which is a combination of early in-person voting and postal voting.

Ohio's Secretary of State (2019-present)

On January 12, 2019, LaRose was sworn in to serve as Ohio's 51st Secretary of State, a four-year term. He was the "first Summit County resident elected Ohio secretary of state in about 166 years."
In April 2019, he observed the Ukrainian presidential election. He was promoting simplifying the voter roll purging process in May 2019. He was also seeking automated voter registration, stating he was crafting an election reform bill on the issue. In June 2019, he ordered county boards of elections to undergo security upgrades for the 2020 election.
As the top election official in Ohio, in September 2019, LaRose had spent "months working on a project to purge Ohio’s inactive voters while also trying to address long-standing criticisms of the controversial process." He was urged to halt a purge of inactive voters by Democrats over errors, but he defended the purge. In September 2019, his office was reviewing Ohio voter registrations that might have been incorrectly deleted in vendor errors, with Democrats suing.
In September 2019, he was released from a February 2019 lawsuit filed by members of environmental activist groups, who "accused elections officials of using unconstitutional tactics that kept certain initiatives from going before voters." That month, he also claimed that Ohio had the most secure elections in the United States.On September 19, 2019, he said he was in the process of distributing $12.8 million EAC funds.
On October 9, 2019, the Ohio Senate unanimously approved Senate Bill 52, which among other reasons, made LaRose a member of Ohio’s Homeland Security Advisory Council.

Personal life

According to his official biography, LaRose lives in Hudson, Ohio with his wife, Lauren and their three daughters.
According to his official biography, LaRose is a board member of the Ohio Historical Society; Junior Vice Commander of the Fairlawn Veterans of Foreign Wars; and a member of the executive board for the Great Trail Council, Boy Scouts of America.