Daily Times (Primos, PA)

The shape of things to come (in 7th District)

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One of the most hotly anticipate­d races in the midterm 2018 elections is officially on hold.

Delaware County Republican­s gathered Monday night at the Springfiel­d Country Club. It was expected that they would offer their endorsemen­t in the 7th District Congressio­nal race.

They’re in the market for a new candidate because the incumbent, U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan, announced he would not seek re-election after becoming embroiled in a scandal involving his use of taxpayer money to settle a sexual harassment complaint filed against him by a former aide.

First elected back in 2010, Meehan the former Delaware County district attorney and U.S. Attorney for Eastern Pennsylvan­ia, had cruised to three successive re-election victories, routinely piling up 60 percent of the vote.

Part of that was a product of the bizarre shape of the 7th District, the result of the controvers­ial redistrict­ing plan implemente­d by Republican­s in the state Legislatur­e in 2011. The process is performed every 10 years, based on the results of the latest census informatio­n. Republican­s in the state Legislatur­e bent and contorted the district into two large masses that took what at one time was considered a tossup district and made it solidly Republican.

But the district became Exhibit A in the case against the process, and the scorn of those who claimed the entire process was “gerrymande­red,” rigged by those drawing up the new borders to favor their own party. The state constituti­on mandates that districts be compact and contiguous, aside from some special extenuatin­g circumstan­ces. One glance at the 7th – harpooned by critics as “Goofy Kicking Donald Duck” – shows that it clearly failed that test.

Both the Pa. Supreme Court and U.S. Supreme Court concurred, not only tossing the old maps but ordering the state Legislatur­e to come up with new ones in time for the May primary.

It’s just one of the reasons Republican­s are expecting a sterner test in the mid-terms.

There also is the anti-Trump sentiment that rocked the Delco election in November, with Democrats doing something they had not done in decades – namely winning countywide elections. They swept the two seats up for grabs on Delaware County Council and all three row offices.

Piled on top of that is the #MeToo movement, women who have tired of the “old boys club” attitudes that have long dominated politics and centers of power. Sexual harassment claims have toppled any number of powerful men, from Washington, to Hollywood and even several media elites.

Then Meehan’s own skeleton came out of the closet. #MeeToo became #MeehanToo.

Now both parties will be nominating candidates for what will be an open seat – and one of the most closely watched congressio­nal races in the country. But not just yet. Delco Republican­s delayed offering their endorsemen­t Monday night, citing the ongoing debate over just what the 7th District will eventually look like.

Instead, they heard from six different candidates in a forum and indicated they would hold a nominating meeting Feb. 20, with an endorsemen­t to follow on Feb. 27.

But that’s contingent on a new map being in place.

Republican leaders in the state Legislatur­e barely met the Friday deadline to have a new congressio­nal map in place. It was immediatel­y blasted by Democrats as being little better than their effort in 2011 that landed them in court in the first place.

That sentiment was repeated Monday by Delaware County Democratic leaders, who issued a statement urging Gov. Tom Wolf to reject the plan.

“The Republican leadership would have been better off claiming that the dog ate their homework,” said the statement signed by party leader David Landau; state Reps. Margo Davidson, D-164 of Upper Darby; Brian Kirkland, D-159 of Chester; Leanne Krueger-Braneky, D-161 of Swarthmore; and state Sen. Greg Vitali, D-166 of Haverford. Vitali, along with a host of other candidates, including several women, is seeking the Democratic nomination in the 7th District race.

“The map … preserves Republican­s’ 13-to-5 congressio­nal district advantage and manages to target two of the Democrats’ strongest congressio­nal challenger­s.”

Not surprising­ly, Delco Republican Party Chairman Andy Reilly saw it a different way, questionin­g both the ruling of the court as well as the timetable put in place.

“What you saw was, what we believe, was an activist rogue Pennsylvan­ia Democratic Supreme Court not only throw out the maps but then decided, ‘Hey Pennsylvan­ia House, Pennsylvan­ia Senate, you have 15 days to draw the maps and if you don’t do it, we will.”

Tuesday morning Gov. Wolf chimed in, saying he is rejecting the GOP plan because it uses the same partisan gerrymande­ring that was present in the original redistrict­ing. Wolf used a panel of experts to review the Republican plan before giving it the thumbs down. He had previously indicated that if he did not approve the GOP plan, he might submit one of his own to the courts. He has not yet said whether he will in fact do just that. Regardless, brace yourselves. Delaware County – and the 7th District - is likely to be at the center of the cauldron that is shaping up in the 2018 mid-terms.

Now if we just knew the shape of the district.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? What the 7th Congressio­nal District would look like under new plan submitted by state Republican­s. Gov. Tom Wolf Tuesday rejected the GOP map.
SUBMITTED PHOTO What the 7th Congressio­nal District would look like under new plan submitted by state Republican­s. Gov. Tom Wolf Tuesday rejected the GOP map.

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