Karen Kasler
Contact Karen at 614/578-6375 or at kkasler@statehousenews.org.
Karen Kasler is a lifelong Ohioan. She grew up in Lancaster, attended Otterbein College in Westerville, and found her first professional break at WCBE-FM, Columbus. Karen was selected as a Fellow in the Kiplinger Program for Mid-Career Journalists at The Ohio State University in 1994. After earning her Master's Degree in that program, she worked at WBNS-TV in Columbus and then moved north to become the afternoon drive anchor/assignment editor for WTAM-AM, Cleveland. Karen followed the demolition and rebuilding of Cleveland Browns Stadium, produced award-winning series on identity theft and the Y2K panic, covered the Republican National Convention in 2000 and the blackout of 2003, and reported annually from the Cleveland National Air Show each year, often going upside down in an aerobatic plane to do it. In 1999, she was a media witness to the execution of Wilford Berry, at the time the first man put to death since Ohio re-instated capital punishment. Karen frequently reported for ABC Radio News, and also co-produced an award-winning nationally-distributed documentary on the one-year anniversary of September 11, 2001, which featured her interview with Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge from the West Wing of the White House.
Since returning to Columbus, she's covered major elections and the controversies surrounding them. Each year she anchors the Bureau's live coverage of the governor's State of the State. She was a moderator for US Senate debates in 2012 and 2010, participated in several debates in 2010, and has led debates over statewide issues. She's produced features for NPR and "Marketplace", and has been interviewed by NPR, the BBC, NBC and several local and regional stations around the country. She's a regular panelist on WCPN/ideastream's "The Sound of Ideas", a frequent guest on WOSU-TV’s “Columbus on the Record” and has appeared on WBNS-TV's "Face the State".
She's been honored by the Association of Capitol Editors and Reporters, the Cleveland Press Club/Society of Professional Journalists, the Ohio Educational Telecommunications Commission, and holds a National Headliner Award. She's won several awards from the Ohio AP, and is a four-time winner of the AP's Best Broadcast Writing award. She's a three-time Emmy nominee for "The State of Ohio". She's a past president of the Ohio Associated Press, and currently on the Board of Directors for the Central Ohio Society of Professional Journalists. Karen is also a former adjunct professor at Capital University in Columbus.
Karen, her husband and their son Jack live on Columbus' northeast side.
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The recent arrest of a former Portage County court mediator might not have happened without the help of the man best known as the voice calling the Ohio Supreme Court into session.
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This Tuesday, the primary for just Ohio House and Senate districts and state party central committee offices will be unprecedented and mostly unnoticed.
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The Republican governor, who signed the six-week ban on abortion now in effect, said lawmakers need to clarify state laws surrounding abortion.
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Mike Gonidakis, Ohio Right to Life president, also played a leading role in the redistricting case in federal court that led to the primary for state lawmakers coming up August 2.
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The split among the justices was as it's been throughout the redistricting saga. The decision said the map "creates just three seats with Democratic vote shares over 52% (and one of those is at 52.15%). By contrast, all the Republican-leaning seats comfortably favor Republican candidates."
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Terpsehore “Tore” Maras, a pro-Trump podcaster, has promoted the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. An affidavit that Maras wrote was included in a 2020 case filed by Trump lawyer Sidney Powell that claimed Dominion Voting machines shifted votes to President Joe Biden.
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It's the first fair the public can attend since 2019, and the new state law on permitless conceal carry has changed some security rules.
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The June report from Ohio's Office of Budget and Management shows the state’s total revenues for the fiscal year were up 12% over estimates, or $4.3 billion. But more than half of the extra money in the state’s coffers is already spoken for.
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Kellie Copeland, Pro-Choice Ohio's executive director, said abortion rights advocates are now working to let people know of the services that still exist. That includes traveling to Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia or Illinois, depending on where the person seeking an abortion lives.
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Gov. Mike DeWine didn't mention further abortion restrictions but talked about assistance for women and children in a speech of just under six minutes, which his Democratic opponent blasted as anti-choice.