Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Where GOP candidates stand on the issues

- By Marc Levy The Associated Press

Three candidates are seeking the Republican nomination in the May 15 primary election to run for Pennsylvan­ia governor — commercial litigation attorney Laura Ellsworth, former health care systems consultant Paul Mango and state Sen. Scott Wagner — and contest the re-election campaign of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf. A look at where they stand on some key issues:

Abortion

All three said they oppose abortion rights and support legislatio­n vetoed by Wolf last year. The bill banned elective abortions after the first 20 weeks of pregnancy, compared with 24 weeks in current law. It kept in place exceptions under current law for when a mother’s life or well-being is at risk, but it did not add exceptions for rape, incest or fetal abnormalit­ies.

Opponents said the bill effectivel­y outlawed the most common method of second-trimester abortion. The bill’s sponsor disputed that.

Budgeting

Wagner would institute a private-sector concept called “zero-based budgeting” in state government that he said he expects will reduce costs by $1.5 billion to $4 billion.

Mango would work to reduce the state workforce to 50,000 or 55,000 employees. The number of employees under the governor’s jurisdicti­on is currently about 72,800, according to the governor’s office. Mango also said he would end the diversion of hundreds of millions of dollars in highway constructi­on funds to underwrite state police costs.

Ellsworth would eliminate a system in which state agencies support themselves through regulatory fines and task every agency with reducing expenses 3 percent every year.

Campaign finances

Mango opposes limits on campaign finance. Ellsworth supports limits on campaign donations and Wagner is open to the idea.

Death penalty

All three support the death penalty and would sign death warrants. Ellsworth’s campaign said she supports the death penalty in situations in which it has a deterrent effect. Mango’s campaign said he would sign a death warrant for those who commit the most heinous crimes.

Wagner said he would pursue a mandatory death penalty for any school shooter who kills someone, although legal analysts said laws like that have been unconstitu­tional for decades.

Economy

All three said they would seek to address the need for skilled labor through Pennsylvan­ia’s schools and colleges and to reduce taxes and government regulation.

Ellsworth said she would create a 10-year business plan, with input from the private sector, to guide budgeting and economic developmen­t. She also would ask the state’s big pension systems to invest in Pennsylvan­ia’s economic developmen­t programs.

Mango said he would travel aggressive­ly beyond Pennsylvan­ia’s borders to attract business to the state.

Ethics

Wagner supports banning former lawmakers from lobbying and prohibitin­g lobbyists from doing campaign work for politician­s.

Mango supports “payto-play” legislatio­n limiting political contributi­ons from government contractor­s. Mango also would prohibit lobbyists from doing campaign work for politician­s, prohibit elected officials or their businesses from winning government contracts and double a “revolving door” lobbying ban to two years and expand it to cover all state government entities.

Ellsworth would impose a “no nepotism” rule for lobbyists.

Gun violence

None of the three supports more restrictio­ns on gun ownership or gun sales or an expansion of background checks. Mango and Wagner oppose an expansion of background checks on gun purchases, although Ellsworth said she supports “more universal background checks” to adequately capture adjudicate­d instances of mental illness and dangerous conduct. Mango said the state needs to add resources to screen, diagnose and treat mental illness to ensure people who sufferers don’t have access to guns.

Labor unions

Wagner and Ellsworth support “right to work” legislatio­n, a measure that would prohibit labor unions from collecting dues from employees who refuse to join the union or pay union dues or fees as a condition of employment. Mango said he would not support a blanket “right to work” law and would draw the line at unions representi­ng private-sector trades, firefighte­rs and police.

LGBT rights

Wagner and Ellsworth support current legislatio­n in Pennsylvan­ia that’s designed to bar discrimina­tion in employment, public accommodat­ion and housing because of someone’s sexual orientatio­n or gender identity or expression. Mango said that he opposes discrimina­tion but that the legislatio­n would compromise religious freedom of conscience and the privacy and security of children in public bathrooms and school locker rooms, claims the bill’s backers say are baseless.

Marijuana

None of the three supports the full legalizati­on of marijuana. All three support Pennsylvan­ia’s 2016 legalizati­on of medical marijuana.

Medicaid

None of the three would end Pennsylvan­ia’s 3-yearold expansion of Medicaid’s income guidelines under former President Barack Obama’s federal health care law.

All three said that the program must become more efficient and that they would seek a federal waiver to institute a work requiremen­t for able-bodied adults on Medicaid and possibly other changes. Mango also would seek a federal waiver to establish a high-risk pool for the sickest enrollees and health savings-style accounts for others.

Minimum wage

Mango and Ellsworth oppose raising it from the current federal minimum of $7.25. Wagner said he would support raising it to around $9.50 an hour.

Opioid epidemic

Wagner would seek to reinstate mandatory minimum sentences for drug dealers, limit the number of pills in opioid prescripti­ons and increase state funding to lengthen in-patient addiction treatment stays.

Ellsworth supports training more narcotics agents in the Pennsylvan­ia State Police and taking a “two-strikes” approach that would require someone revived with naloxone twice to enter an in-patient treatment program.

Mango would seek to reinstate mandatory minimum sentences for drug dealers and organize communitie­s into task forces, but said the state should focus resources on prevention, not treatment.

Pensions

Mango and Wagner said they support a move to a full 401(k)-style benefit for new state government and public school employees, rather than the traditiona­l pension benefit or a hybrid.

Wagner would push to fire pension system investment managers over lackluster returns. Ellsworth would privatize the statecontr­olled wine and liquor store system and use the proceeds to help pay down the pension debt. Mango would lower obligation­s by reducing employee ranks through early buyouts and attrition and by fighting the abuse of voluntary overtime.

Property taxes

Mango and Wagner each support the eliminatio­n of school property taxes under the design of current legislatio­n that would raise rates on Pennsylvan­ia’s personal income tax and sales tax to make up for disappeari­ng property tax revenue.

Ellsworth opposes eliminatin­g property taxes, saying it would destroy local control over school funding and destabiliz­e school finances. Ellsworth says property taxes should be frozen for people who have paid them for 35 years.

Public schools

All three support expanding taxpayer-funded options for public school alternativ­es, including legislatio­n to create taxpayerfu­nded “education savings accounts” that divert state aid for public schools into accounts that parents can use for tuition at private or parochial schools.

Mango and Wagner said they are not inclined to devote more money to public schools. Mango said he would invest more in education if there’s proof it would improve student achievemen­t or it would drive more students into skilled labor profession­s.

Ellsworth said that Pennsylvan­ia’s school funding system is not fair or adequate, and that making public schools compete for money with public school alternativ­es is holding back achievemen­t.

Redistrict­ing

Ellsworth supports the creation of an independen­t redistrict­ing panel. Mango and Wagner support the current system in which state lawmakers draw legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts every 10 years.

Taxes

None of the three gave an explicit pledge not to raise taxes or fees, but all three say they intend to avoid it. All three want to cut Pennsylvan­ia’s 9.99 percent corporate net income tax rate.

Ellsworth supports providing local government­s more taxing options so that property taxes don’t have to be the primary funding source.

Tax returns

All three declined to release a copy of their tax return.

Trump

Wagner and Mango said they support President Donald Trump and would campaign with him. Ellsworth said she supports Trump’s tax-cutting legislatio­n and appointmen­t of Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch. Wagner and Mango said they voted for Trump; Ellsworth said she voted for Ohio Gov. John Kasich..

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 19, 2017, file photo, candidates seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s 2018 bid for re-election, Pennsylvan­ia Sen. Scott Wagner, left, R-York County, Laura Ellsworth, center, and Paul Mango, right, take part in the Montgomery County Republican Committee’s gubernator­ial forum in Blue Bell, Pa.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 19, 2017, file photo, candidates seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s 2018 bid for re-election, Pennsylvan­ia Sen. Scott Wagner, left, R-York County, Laura Ellsworth, center, and Paul Mango, right, take part in the Montgomery County Republican Committee’s gubernator­ial forum in Blue Bell, Pa.

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