Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Wolf starting to look like ‘2-term Tom’ as 2018 nears

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HARRISBURG » He’s starting to look like two-term Tom.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf likely has wrapped up his biggest first-term fights with the Legislatur­e’s huge Republican majorities and his record is largely set a year before voters decide whether to give him a second term. He now heads into the 2018 election year with political winds at his back.

Wolf’s polls currently resemble those of former Gov. Ed Rendell’s, the Democrat who won a second term in 2006, rather than former Gov. Tom Corbett’s, the Republican who Wolf beat in 2014 to make the first Pennsylvan­ia governor to lose reelection and the original “one-term Tom.”

“That is a decent spot to be in for an incumbent governor who’s been through lots of fiscal battles the last three years,” said Christophe­r Borick, a pollster and political science professor at Muhlenberg College in Allentown. “All in all, you probably take that if you’re Tom Wolf.”

In recent days, eyes increasing­ly have turned to next year’s election.

The budget battle of 2017 ended, if four months late, and the four-candidate Republican primary field appears set with the entry of House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny.

Wolf’s potential adversarie­s attack him in relatively boilerplat­e terms: he’s a serial tax hiker, an outof-touch elitist and a lousy leader. The state Republican Party calls him “America’s most liberal governor.”

To be sure, Republican­s have blocked the vast majority of Wolf’s proposed tax increases, billions of dollars primarily to fix yawning budget deficits and funding disparitie­s in public schools.

Wolf, 69, was virtually a political novice when he took office in 2015, and his strategy in the Capitol has evolved.

In this year’s budget stalemate, Wolf allied with Senate Republican­s against House Republican­s. He also agreed to versions of legislatio­n long-sought by Republican­s — and long opposed by public-sector labor unions — such as breaking the state’s monopoly on wine and liquor sales.

Those concession­s and the drumbeat for a tax increase make Wolf’s record a “mixed bag,” said Gene Barr, president and CEO of the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry, which backed Corbett in the 2014 campaign.

Wolf signed robust medical marijuana legislatio­n — something Corbett opposed — and a package of measures designed to fight Pennsylvan­ia’s opioid-addiction crisis. Meanwhile, his administra­tion has been relatively scandal-free, Pennsylvan­ia’s uninsured rate has fallen to the lowest on record, unemployme­nt is at a post-recession low and hiring has picked up.

As of September, Pennsylvan­ia had the nation’s 29th fastest 12-month jobgrowth rate — better than the bottom-10 ranking it racked up over the past three decades.

Wolf faces no Democratic Party challenger in the May 15 primary election, despite complaints from the left’s coalition of labor unions and environmen­tal advocacy organizati­ons about the deals Wolf cut with Republican­s.

To some extent, he is forgiven for having little choice with historical­ly large Republican legislativ­e majorities — the biggest since the 1950s — and some in the coalition see 2018 as an existentia­l election if a Republican governor joins those majorities in power.

“It appears highly likely that the choice will be between Gov. Wolf and someone who is highly anti-environmen­tal,” said David Masur, executive director of Philadelph­ia-based Penn Environmen­t.

Wolf has not really achieved his major firstterm aims to fix Pennsylvan­ia’s long-term finances, raise the minimum wage or overhaul the state’s tax structure and system of public-school funding.

Allies blame Republican lawmakers, and Wolf has signaled that he will, too.

“Governor Wolf has been fighting to change Harrisburg and move Pennsylvan­ia away from the days of Harrisburg insiders balancing budgets on the backs of children, our schools and seniors,” his campaign said.

That said, Wolf has gotten almost halfway to his goal of $2 billion education funding increase, as well as Senate passage of a tax on Marcellus Shale natural gas production.

Next year’s election provides a built-in advantage for Wolf: mid-term elections tend to go poorly for the party of the president, currently Republican Donald Trump.

This month’s sweeping election victories for Democrats across Philadelph­ia’s heavily populated suburbs is another good sign for Wolf. No prospectiv­e opponent of Wolf’s has a household name and Wolf can convenient­ly campaign against an unpopular Trump and GOP-controlled Congress.

Historical­ly speaking, incumbents in statewide office in Pennsylvan­ia only go down in defeat when swing voters are motivated against them, such as Corbett.

Analysts say they see no similar pattern for Wolf.

“And when you combine that with a potential wind of positive Democratic fortunes in 2018,” Borick said, “you certainly could be optimistic if you’re in his camp.”

 ??  ?? Gov. Tom Wolf
Gov. Tom Wolf

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