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Keystone
State Education Coalition
Here’s an updated look at who in the Pennsylvania State Legislature is
departing and who’s seeking another office.
All 203 state House seats and half the state Senate (25 seats – even
numbered districts) are on the ballot this year. Republicans currently hold
sizeable majorities in both chambers; 34-16 in the state Senate and 120-81 with
2 vacant seats in the state House.
This site shows all candidates running for listed elected offices in
Pennsylvania. It reports that State
Representative Greg Vitali (D-Delaware County) has filed FEC paperwork to run
for Pat Meehan’s 7th Congressional District seat
Who’s Running? US Elections ~ Pennsylvania
US Elections Website
Directory of Pennsylvania elections. Pennsylvania candidates for
Governor, state reps and Congress (Senators / House of Representatives). PA
primary and election races. Voting info. Political parties. State election
office.
Not running for reelection in 2018:
Rep. Ron Marsico (R-Dauphin)
– Elected to House in 1988, Majority Chair of the House Judiciary Committee
Rep. Bob Godshall (R-Montgomery)
– Elected to House in 1982, Majority Chair of the House Consumer Affairs
Committee
Rep. Will Tallman (R-Adams) –
Elected to House in 2008
Rep. John Taylor (R-Philadelphia)
– Elected to House in 1985, Majority Chair of the House Transportation
Committee
Rep. Eli
Evankovich (R-Westmoreland) – Elected to House in 2010
Rep. Harry Lewis (R-Chester)
– Elected to House in 2014
Rep. Katharine
Watson (R-Bucks) – Elected to House in 2000, Majority Chair of the House
Children and Youth Committee
Sen. Chuck
McIlhinney (R-Bucks) – Elected to Senate in 2006 (served 1998-06 in House), Senate
Republican Caucus Administrator, Majority Chair of the Senate Law and Justice
Committee, Majority Vice-Chair of the Senate Game and Fisheries Committee
Rep. Kevin
Haggerty (D-Lackawanna) – Elected to House in 2016 (served
2012-14 in House)
Rep. Adam Harris (R-Juniata)
– Elected to House in 2002, Majority Chair of the House Liquor Control
Committee
Sen. Stewart
Greenleaf (R-Montgomery) – Elected to Senate in 1978 (served 1977- 78 in House),
Majority Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee
Running for a different seat in 2018 and not running
for reelection:
Sen. Scott Wagner (R-York) –
Elected to Senate in 2014, Majority Chair of the Senate Local Government
Committee, Running for Governor
Rep. Kristin
Phillips-Hill (R-York) - Elected to House in 2014, Running for State Senate Seat
held by Sen. Scott Wagner
Rep. Ryan
Mackenzie (R-Lehigh) – Elected to House in 2012, Running for US House seat
held by Charlie Dent who is retiring
Rep. Stephen Bloom (R-Cumberland)
– Elected to House in 2010, Running for US House seat held by Lou
Barletta who is seeking to unseat US Sen. Bob Casey
Sen. John
Eichelberger (R-Blair) – Elected to Senate in 2006, Majority Chair of the
Senate Education Committee, Vice-Chair of the Senate Banking and Insurance
Committee, Running
for US House seat
held by Bud Shuster who is retiring
Rep. Judith Ward (R-Blair) –
Elected to House in 2014, Running for State Senate seat held by Sen. John
Eichelberger
Rep. Dave
Reed (R-Indiana) – Elected to House in 2002, House Republican Floor Leader,
Running for US House seat held by Bud Shuster who is retiring
Running for reelection and a different seat in 2018:
Rep. Rick Saccone (R-Allegheny)
– Elected to House in 2010, Running for US House seat held by Tim Murphy who
resigned amid scandal
Rep. Tina Davis (D-Bucks) –
Elected to House in 2010, House Democratic Policy Committee Vice-Chair, Running
for State Senate Seat held by Republican Tommy Tomlinson
Rep. Madeleine
Dean (D-Montgomery) – Elected to House in 2012, Minority Vice-Chair of
the House Finance Committee, Running for Lt. Governor
Rep. Jim Christiana (R-Beaver) –
Elected to House in 2008, Running for US Senate seat held by Bob Casey
Rep. Mike Turzai (R-Allegheny)
– Elected to House in 2001, Speaker of the House, Running for Governor (If he
wins the Republican primary for governor, Turzai promises to step out of the
House race).
More than
a dozen PA Republicans not seeking re-election
Morning Call by Mark Scolforo Of The Associated
Press January 27, 2018
Retirements and other departures are poised to hit
Republicans in the Pennsylvania Legislature particularly hard this year, as
most of those who have already announced they are leaving belong to the GOP. The
party that has wielded broad power in the General Assembly in recent years,
thanks to strong majorities in both chambers, looks to also have far more open
seats to defend in 2018. At least eight state House Republicans are running for
Congress or state Senate, and the party is also losing several veteran
committee chairs to retirement. In all, 15 of the 16 representatives who have
said for certain they are not seeking re-election this year are Republicans. In
the state Senate, all four who are definitely leaving are Republicans.
Some may return to the House or Senate if they lose
or drop out of races for other elective positions. But it’s entirely possible
that more than 30 newcomers will take legislative seats early next year. Republicans
currently control the Senate 34-16, and the House 120-81 with two vacancies,
one from each party.
PoliticsPA Written by Paul Engelkemier, Managing Editor January 26, 2018
Retiring state Rep. John Taylor and HRCC Chair Mark Mustio are worried about the consequences of the state Republican Party endorsing Congressman Lou Barletta’s Senate campaign could have on down ticket races. The House Republican Campaign Committee is tasked with electing – and re-electing – GOP candidates to the state House. “Mark, I wanted to express my concern about the potentially negative effects of the top of our ticket to our House colleagues in 2018,” Taylor wrote in an email obtained by PoliticsPA. Taylor’s concerns stem Barletta’s emphasis on immigration and his close ties to President Trump. Taylor believes that the election could become a referendum on Trump, hurting southeast Republicans.
Spending
millions on early TV ads, Republican rivals follow Gov. Tom Wolf's lead
Inquirer by Andrew Seidman, Staff
Writer @AndrewSeidman | ASeidman@phillynews.com Updated: JANUARY
26, 2018 — 12:29 PM EST
One ad shows Paul Mango, a Republican
candidate for governor, accepting his diploma from President Ronald Reagan at
West Point and later jumping out of an airplane as a paratrooper in the Army. Another
ad, called “Tough,” shows
Republican State Sen. Scott
Wagner standing in front of a garbage facility he
owns as he pledges to “put big government in the Dumpster.”
Either explicitly or implicitly, the ads, which have
aired in Philadelphia and markets statewide, portray Gov. Wolf as a weak
liberal who needs to let a real leader take charge in Harrisburg. But if the
candidates are critical of Wolf’s politics, they owe a debt of gratitude to his
campaign playbook: Advertise on TV early in the campaign. Wagner, owner of a
waste-hauling company in York County, and Mango, a retired Pittsburgh-area
health-care consultant, have already spent nearly $2 million on television ads
ahead of the May 15 GOP gubernatorial primary, according to data provided to
the Inquirer and Daily News by a media buyer. In a crowded four-candidate
primary that also includes the speaker of the state House, Wagner and Mango are
trying to replicate Wolf’s successful strategy in the 2014 Democratic primary.
Meehan
must go now, not 11 months from now | Editorial
by The Inquirer Editorial Board
Updated: JANUARY 26, 2018 — 4:21 PM EST
Pat Meehan must go. The Delaware County
Republican exposed for using taxpayer dollars to secretly settle a sexual
harassment claim made by a former staffer should resign from the U.S. House. Meehan
must go now, not 11 months and five days from now, at the end of the 115th
Congress. Now. Meehan, a former U.S.
attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, should still possess a
prosecutor’s sense of how evidence establishes guilt. Meehan was seeking a
fifth term when the New York Times broke an explosive
storyon Jan. 20 about the settlement. He dropped that
reelection bid Thursday after a calamitous attempt at crisis
communications exponentially compounded his predicament. If Meehan’s betrayal
of the trust of the public and his constituents are bad enough to end his
congressional career, why should we wait until next January to be rid of him?
Members of the House are paid $174,000 per year. That means we’ll pay Meehan
$161,605 before he departs public office. But it’s not just about the money.
Consider the defense he offered last week.
http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/editorials/pat-meehan-resign-pennsylvania-senator-20180126.html
Work
begins on new congressional maps as Pa. Supreme Court appoints adviser
THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE JAN 26, 2018 5:53
PM
HARRISBURG — The state Supreme Court appointed an
adviser Friday to help it select a new congressional map if legislators and the
governor miss their deadline for reconfiguring districts, even as legislators
quietly began working on just that. The court appointed Stanford University law
professor Nathaniel Persily as an adviser “to assist the Court in
adopting, if necessary, a remedial congressional redistricting plan,” according
to its order. Mr. Persily is a well-known expert who last year was appointed by
a federal court to serve as a special master in redrawing state legislative
maps in North Carolina. He has also worked on cases in New York, Connecticut,
Georgia and Maryland. He was a senior research director for former President
Barack Obama’s Presidential Commission on Election Administration from June
2013 to January 2014. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court earlier this week declared
the state’s congressional maps unconstitutional and gave the
Republican-controlled legislature until Feb. 9 to pass a map, which Democratic
Gov. Tom Wolf must approve by Feb. 15. If they miss those deadlines, the state
Supreme Court intends to intervene to select a new map on its own.
Governor
Wolf to Enlist Non-Partisan Mathematician to Evaluate Fairness of Redistricting
Maps
Governor Wolf’s
Website January 26, 2018
Harrisburg, PA – Governor Wolf today announced
he will enlist a non-partisan mathematician, Moon Duchin, Ph.D. an Associate
Professor of Mathematics from Tufts University, to provide him guidance on
evaluating redistricting maps for fairness. Governor Wolf has made clear since
the Supreme Court ruled the map unconstitutional that he saw this as an
opportunity to eliminate partisan gerrymandering and deliver the people of
Pennsylvania a fair Congressional map. “Moon Duchin has been a leader in applying
mathematics, geometry, and analytics to evaluate redistricted maps and work to
eliminate extreme partisan gerrymandering,” Governor Wolf said. “The people of
Pennsylvania are tired of partisan games and gridlock – made worse by
gerrymandering – and it is my mission to reverse the black-eye of having some
of the worst gerrymandering in the country. I am open and willing to work with
the General Assembly but I will not accept an unfair map and enlisting a
non-partisan expert is essential to ensure that is possible.”
How the dominoes may fall as Pennsylvania
congressional districts are shifted into a new map
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court decided the
state's congressional map illegally favors Republicans and must be redrawn.
Here's the background on the case.
Morning Call by Laura Olson Contact Reporter Call Washington
Bureau January 26, 2018
Pennsylvania’s congressional candidates find
themselves amid dominoes after Monday’s state Supreme Court order tossing the
current congressional district maps and ordering new ones. Those dominoes will start tipping this way or that
as a new map takes shape, shifting the political makeup of each region —
perhaps even putting a candidate outside a new boundary line. So far, the state Supreme Court, which ruled the
current maps unfairly favor one party, has offered minimal directions on how to
make more equitable districts. Should the mapmakers design politically
competitive districts? Geographically compact ones? Some combination, or other
criteria altogether? One thing is clear: Each tweak to a district has broad
ramifications not only on the political leanings of that seat, but of the
districts around it — and on the odds of national Democrats salivating to
regain control of the U.S. House.
Advertising in schools?
A number of school districts
across the country have turned to advertising as a way to fill budget gaps.
Some districts have offered corporate naming rights to buildings and others
have allowed ads on buses and lockers. A reporter for the Harrisburg
Patriot-News is investigating the prevalence of ads in Pa. schools and needs
your help. Please contact him if you’re aware of any of the following in your
area:
· Ads placed on sports uniforms, school buses, lockers, or other areas of
school grounds.
· Corporate sponsorship of sports fields, buildings, parking lots, or
other school property.
· Ads on school websites or newsletters.
· Any other examples of advertising or sponsorship in the school
environment or curriculum.
You can reach reporter Daniel Simmons-Ritchie at simmons-ritchie@pennlive.com or
on 717-255-8162
Register now for PSBA Board Presidents Panel
PSBA Website January 2018
School board leaders, this one's for you! Join your colleagues at an evening of networking and learning in 10 convenient locations around the state at the end of January. Share your experience and leadership through a panel discussion moderated by PSBA Member Services team. Participate in roundtable conversations focused on the most pressing challenges and current issues affecting PA school districts. Bring your specific challenges and scenarios for small group discussion. Register online.
NSBA 2018
Advocacy Institute February 4 - 6, 2018 Marriott Marquis, Washington D.C.
Register Now
Come a day early and attend the Equity
Symposium!
Join hundreds of public education advocates
on Capitol Hill and help shape the decisions made in Washington D.C. that
directly impact our students. At the 2018 Advocacy Institute, you’ll gain
insight into the most critical issues affecting public education, sharpen your
advocacy skills, and prepare for effective meetings with your representatives. Whether
you are an expert advocator or a novice, attend and experience inspirational
keynote speakers and education sessions featuring policymakers, legal experts
and policy influencers. All designed to help you advocate for your students and
communities.
Local School Board Members to Advocate on Capitol Hill in 2018
NSBA's Advocacy Institute 2018 entitled, "Elected. Engaged. Empowered: Representing the Voice in Public Education," will be held on February 4-6, 2018 at the Marriott Marquis in Washington, D.C. This conference will convene Members of Congress, national thought-leaders, state association executives and well-known political pundits to provide local school board members with an update on key policy and legal issues impacting public education, and tactics and strategies to enhance their ability to influence the policy-making process and national education debate during their year-round advocacy efforts.
WHAT'S NEW - ADVOCACY INSTITUTE '18?
·
Confirmed
National Speaker: Cokie Roberts, Political Commentator for NPR and ABC News
·
NSBA
will convene first ever National School Board Town Hall on School Choice
·
Includes
General Sessions featuring national policy experts, Members of Congress,
"DC Insiders" and local school board members
·
Offers
conference attendees "Beginner" and "Advanced" Advocacy
breakout sessions
·
NSBA
will host a Hill Day Wrap-Up Reception
Click here to register for the Advocacy
Institute. The hotel block will close on Monday, January 15PSBA Closer Look Series Public Briefings
The Closer Look Series Public Briefings will take a deeper dive into concepts contained in the proposed Pennsylvania State Budget and the State of Education Report. Sessions will harness the expertise of local business leaders, education advocates, government and local school leaders from across the state. Learn more about the fiscal health of schools, how workforce development and early education can be improved and what local schools are doing to improve the State of Education in Pennsylvania. All sessions are free and open to the public.
Connecting Student Success to Employment
Doubletree by Hilton Hotel – Pittsburgh Green Tree Feb. 27, 2018, 7-8:45 a.m.
More than eight out of 10 students taking one or more industry-specific assessments are achieving either at the competent or advanced level. How do we connect student success to jobs in the community? What does the connection between schools and the business community look like and how can it be improved? How do we increase public awareness of the growing demand for workers in the skilled trades and other employment trends in the commonwealth? Hear John Callahan, PSBA assistant executive director, and Matt Smith, president of the Greater Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce, give a free, public presentation on these topics followed by a Q&A period.
A Deeper Dive into the State of Education
Crowne Plaza Philadelphia – King of Prussia March 6, 2018, 7-8:45 a.m.
In the State of Education Report, 40% of schools stated that 16% to 30% of students joining schools at kindergarten or first grade are below the expected level of school readiness. Learn more about the impact of early education and what local schools are doing to improve the State of Education in Pennsylvania. A free, public presentation by local and legislative experts will be followed by a Q&A period.
Public Education Under Extreme Pressure
Hilton Harrisburg March 12, 2018, 7-8:45 a.m.
According to the State of Education Report, 84% of all school districts viewed budget pressures as the most difficult area to manage over the past year. With so many choices and pressures, school districts must make decisions to invest in priorities while managing their locally diverse budgets. How does the state budget impact these decisions? What investments does the business community need for the future growth of the economy and how do we improve the health, education and well-being of students who attend public schools in the commonwealth in this extreme environment? Hear local and legislative leaders in a free, public presentation on these topics followed by a Q&A period.
Registration for these public briefings: https://www.psba.org/2018/01/closer-look-series-public-briefings/
Registration is now open for the 2018 PASA Education Congress! State College, PA, March 19-20, 2018
Don't miss this marquee event for Pennsylvania school leaders at the Nittany Lion Inn, State College, PA, March 19-20, 2018.
Learn more by visiting http://www.pasa-net.org/2018edcongress
SAVE THE DATE for the 2018
PA Educational Leadership Summit - July 29-31 - State College, PA sponsored by
the PA Principals Association, PASA, PAMLE and PASCD.
This year's Summit will be held from July 29-31, 2018 at the Penn Stater
Conference Center Hotel, State College, PA.
Any comments contained herein are my comments, alone, and
do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any other person or organization
that I may be affiliated with.
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