In 2019, Edwards voted in favor of
House Bill 6 in the Ohio House; the bill passed 51–38 in what federal prosecutors later alleged was a $60 million
racketeering scheme involving then-Speaker
Larry Householder and his allies to secure its approval and provide a coal and nuclear bailout worth more than $1 billion. Federal prosecutors later stated that approximately $60 million was directed through a nonprofit entity linked to Householder to support political activities, including efforts to elect candidates aligned with his leadership. After the scandal became public, Edwards supported a partial rollback through House Bill 128 in 2021, which revised electric utility service law, repealed the nuclear bailout and related “decoupling” provisions of HB 6, and ordered refunds to customers, while leaving other subsidy provisions in place. Subsequent repeal proposals, including House Bill 351 and Senate Bill 117 in the 134th General Assembly, were referred to committee but never received floor votes. Reporting related to the House Bill 6 investigation examined communications involving Edwards. In 2022, the Ohio House declined to release text messages between Edwards and then-Speaker Larry Householder, citing exemptions under public records law during the ongoing criminal case. Edwards stated that he regularly communicated with Householder by text message and phone and that he deletes text messages that are not useful. News outlets also reported that Householder continued contacting lawmakers, including Edwards, after being charged. Court filings related to the HB6 case also identified Edwards as “Representative 8” in an affidavit from an indicted lobbyist, according to local reporting. Edwards did not publicly comment on those claims at the time. Subsequent reporting on the broader HB6 investigation detailed the scope of recorded conversations and evidence gathered by federal investigators, though no criminal charges were filed against Edwards. Additional reporting has also referenced Edwards in connection with broader public discussion of the House Bill 6 scandal. A documentary titled
Ohio Confidential, part of the Max series
Dark Money Game, examining the HB6 bribery case, included Edwards among current and former Ohio political figures appearing in the film.
Vote on the Expulsion of Larry Householder During the 134th Ohio General Assembly, Jay Edwards voted against the expulsion of former House Speaker Larry Householder, who had been federally indicted and later convicted in connection with the
Ohio nuclear bribery scandal tied to House Bill 6. The Ohio House voted 75–21 to expel Householder, with Jay Edwards among the 21 Republican members who opposed the resolution. According to local reporting, Edwards did not publicly explain his votes at the time, declining interview requests and not issuing a public statement addressing his position on Householder’s continued membership in the House while facing federal charges. ==Campaign contributions==