Space formally announced his campaign for
Ohio Auditor of State in August 2017 with stops in
Martins Ferry,
Zanesville, Columbus, and
Lima. Space focused his campaign around using the auditor's office to restore confidence in Ohio's democratic process. He pledged to expose pay-to-play in Ohio's state government and mitigate against the influence of money in politics. In addition, Space campaigned for an end to partisan
gerrymandering. Space also embarked on an "Ohio River Tour to Restore" in November 2017, holding 11 campaign events over three days in
Scioto,
Lawrence,
Gallia,
Meigs,
Athens,
Monroe,
Belmont, and
Jefferson counties along the
Ohio River. In February 2018, Space's race for state auditor was named a National Priority Target by the
National Democratic Redistricting Committee, an anti-gerrymandering organization. In January 2018, as a campaign point Space called on politicians who took campaign contributions from the founders of the
Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow (ECOT) to donate those monies back to local public schools. In May, Space's Republican opponent,
Keith Faber, returned over $36,000 in ECOT campaign contributions, also claiming he "helped shut ECOT down".
Politifact Ohio rated this "Mostly False". In June 2018, Space announced a plan to form a unit in the Auditor's office to investigate the full extent of the for-profit charter school scam in Ohio. Space's proposal was criticized by Faber, who argued that the auditor was already responsible for auditing all charter schools in Ohio. In August 2018, Space announced a plan to investigate the effects of
NAFTA-era free trade policies on Ohio communities and workers. The plan, called Working Families First, was announced at
United Steelworkers halls in
Youngstown and
Martins Ferry. In September 2018, The
Columbus Dispatch criticized a website launched by Faber, which included false claims made against Space and an image of Space's father which had been doctored to look like Space shaking hands with
Nancy Pelosi. Space also criticized the doctored photograph as a campaign point. In October, three weeks before the election, the
Associated Press reported that Faber had incurred penalties for failing to pay nearly $5,500 in taxes on time on multiple properties over multiple years. Space argued these failures would make Faber a hypocritical state auditor. After Space in September 2018 was endorsed by the
Columbus Dispatch and
Akron Beacon Journal, the
Cleveland Plain Dealer endorsed Space in mid-October, citing Faber's reputation for partisanship. Space was defeated in the November election by less than 3.5%. Space led the Democratic ticket, running ahead of the four other statewide Democratic ticket, and ran between 5-10% ahead of the Democratic ticket across Appalachian Ohio. ==Personal life==