2014 Ohio gubernatorial election

His decision to accept the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's expansion of Medicaid, his increased spending, taxation of fracking on Ohio farmland and perceived failure to go far enough on charter schools and school vouchers caused Tea Party groups to refuse to support his campaign.

[2] Tea Party groups announced they would support a primary challenger, or, if none emerged, the Libertarian nominee.

[25] FitzGerald released a plan for state-funded universal preschool in addition to announcing his support for gay marriage.

[29] FitzGerald also chided Kasich for a lack of transparency at JobsOhio, the privatized economic development agency that Kasich formed,[30][31][32] and for signing into law bills that cut early voting days and limit the distribution of absentee ballot applications.

[33][34] FitzGerald faced several scandals that damaged his candidacy, most notably the revelations that he had driven for several years without a valid driver's license, him being found in a car late at night with a woman who was not his wife, and that his initial running mate, State Sen. Eric Kearney, owed over $1 million in unpaid taxes.

Results by county:
FitzGerald
  • 60–70%
  • 70–80%
  • 80–90%
State Senate District results