Chattanooga Times Free Press

WOMEN WIN; MEN TAKE A POWDER

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As a public service, today we are going to discuss the latest primary elections. And I promise there will be some sex scandals.

But first — wow, women are on the move. The big election story on Tuesday was in Pennsylvan­ia, whose 18- member delegation to the U. S. House of Representa­tives is currently composed of 18 men. (Well, OK, 16 men and two vacancies due to men who abruptly left town. As we will see, Pennsylvan­ia is having some trouble hanging on to its representa­tives.)

Next year there could conceivabl­y be seven women.

Whatever happens, the state is guaranteed to get at least one congresswo­man — there’s a Philadelph­ia area district with female nominees on both sides.

Meanwhile, incumbent Republican­s are falling like flies. Rep. Patrick Meehan resigned recently after he used taxpayer money to pay off a former aide who accused him of sexual harassment. He claimed he was a faithful husband who simply regarded the staffer as a “soul mate.” Pick your response: A) Interestin­g job title. B) First rule of the #MeToo movement is that bosses do not get to be soul mates with their underlings. C) Hahahahaha­ha Meehan was the second Pennsylvan­ia Republican House member to fall to the forces of testostero­ne recently. You may remember that Tim Murphy, an avid anti-abortion crusader, had to resign from his seat after word got out that he’d urged his former mistress to consider terminatin­g a possible pregnancy. When the ex-lover complained about his lack of consistenc­y, she got a text from Murphy’s cellphone saying: “I get what you say about my March for Life messages. I’ve never written them. Staff does them.”

Murphy’s seat then went to Democrat Conor Lamb in a super-dramatic special election. Lamb is still in office.

He’s running this fall in a new district drawn by court order. The redistrict­ing story is super-important, but we’re going to skip the details — you already have enough on your mind about Pennsylvan­ia today. Suffice it to say that the combinatio­n of those new districts and Donald Trump has sent still more House Republican­s slinking off in despair.

“Whether it’s Stormy Daniels, or passing an omnibus spending bill that the president threatens to veto after promising to sign, it’s very difficult to move forward in a constructi­ve way today,” Republican Ryan Costello told a local newspaper, signaling his departure.

Charlie Dent, a moderate Republican, had already been planning to retire at the end of the year. But suddenly, he was leaving right away. And off he went.

Dent didn’t really offer an explanatio­n. But use your imaginatio­n. Do you think he’d have said it was because:

A) “Pennsylvan­ians have started to treat Republican­s like bark beetles.”

B) “New district bad.” C) “Just tired. So very, very tired.”

My guess is C. If you’re a person like Dent, who brags about giving “voice to the sensible center,” it’s easy to understand feeling that this might not really be your moment.

Anyhow, Dent’s gone and Democrats have great hopes that his successor will be Susan Wild, an attorney. And that Costello’s district will be taken by Chrissy Houlahan, a businesswo­man and former Air Force engineer.

Houlahan, who has no political background, was one of the thousands of women who responded to Donald Trump’s victory by desperatel­y seeking a way to get involved.

Pennsylvan­ia wasn’t the only state nominating congressio­nal candidates this week. The Democratic establishm­ent was disappoint­ed when primary voters in Nebraska picked Kara Eastman, a nonprofit executive, over former Rep. Brad Ashford, who was regarded as more salable even though he seems to have switched parties as often as he changed socks. I can see where you’d like voters to think strategica­lly, but gee.

Over in Idaho, Paulette Jordan won the Democratic nomination for governor to replace the departing Butch Otter. If she wins — and no Democrat has done that since the year “Driving Miss Daisy” won the Best Picture award — she’d become the first Native American governor.

On the other side, Rep. Raúl Labrador lost the race for the Republican governor’s nomination. This is not going to make any impact on your life, but I just wanted to point out, sadly, that we will probably never again have a chance to use “Raúl Labrador” and “Butch Otter” in the same sentence.

The New York Times

 ??  ?? Gail Collins
Gail Collins

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