Batchelder served in the
Ohio House of Representatives for more than 30 years, serving as chairman of the Joint Committee on Ethics and Vice-Chairman of the Criminal Justice Committee, as well as
ranking member at various times on the House Judiciary Committee and House Financial Institutions Committee. From 1995 to 1998, Batchelder served as
Speaker Pro Tempore of the House and Vice-Chairman of the Reference and Rules Committee. During the
Savings and Loan Crisis in the 1980s, Batchelder worked with
Democratic Governor Dick Celeste to draft legislation to save depositors' savings at stricken
Savings and loan associations, causing Celeste to thank Batchelder during his
State of the State speech. During the pay-to-play scandal of the mid 1990s, as chair of the Joint Committee on Ethics, Batchelder referred both the Republican President of the
Ohio Senate and the Democratic Ohio Speaker of the House to a prosecutor; both were
convicted. He is the only ethics committee chair ever to have referred the heads of both legislative chambers to a prosecutor. After leaving the bench in 2005, Batchelder again was elected to the state House of Representatives in 2006, defeating Jack Schira. He would be reelected in 2008. By 2009, Batchelder was serving as Minority Leader, and when Republicans retook the Ohio House in 2010, he was elected as the
101st Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives. He would remain as Speaker for the 130th Ohio General Assembly, and was term-limited in 2014. ==Personal life and death==