Ohio Election Results
Voters in Ohio weren’t just picking candidates yesterday; they were helping shape decisions that affect the entire country.
The Big Story
Voters across Ohio voted Tuesday in primary elections for governor, Congress, and the U.S. Senate.
This election decides which Republican and Democratic candidates move on to November, where voters choose who will represent Ohio in Washington and who will lead the state for the next several years.
The Two Spins
From the Left
Focused on Ohio elections because they influence abortion access, healthcare programs, and public-school funding nationally.
Views Ohio as an important test of how competitive statewide races remain after Republicans performed strongly there in recent elections.
From the Right
Focused on Ohio elections because they influence immigration enforcement, energy production, taxes, and control of Congress.
Views Ohio as important because the state shapes which party holds influence in Congress next year.
What This Means for Us
These elections affect more than just Ohio.
Governors decide how states handle things like new factories, power plants, data centers, schools, business incentives, voting laws, and abortion rules. There is a pattern that when large states move in one direction, others often follow or respond to those policies too.
How They Make Money
Meta Platforms
Owns Facebook and Instagram, where political campaigns spend heavily on ads because the platforms can target voters by age, location, interests, and online behavior in real time.
Meta made more than $160 billion in advertising revenue in 2025, and election years often bring even more spending from campaigns, PACs, and political groups trying to reach voters online.
Takeaway
Elections now compete for attention the same way brands do through algorithms, targeted ads, and the apps we use every day.
The Number That Stuck With Me
15
Ohio has 15 seats in the U.S. House and one Senate seat on the ballot this cycle, helping shape control of Congress.


