Daily Times (Primos, PA)

U.S. House races loom largest in Pa. campaign sprint

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Ron DiNicola, the Democrat running in northweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia’s 16th Congressio­nal District, isn’t trying to rewrite the message of President Donald Trump’s 2016 victory. Instead, he’s trying to harness it in his uphill battle to unseat four-term Republican Rep. Mike Kelly.

Voters in the longtime Democratic bastion of Erie County, DiNicola’s home, backed a Republican presidenti­al candidate there for the first time in 32 years, and DiNicola sees why.

“I probably was a bit surprised at the time,” DiNicola said, “but as you reflect on it, you realize that people are really frustrated with a government that doesn’t work.”

Now, the fights for U.S. House seats being waged by DiNicola and his fellow Democrats are shaping up as the most closely watched contests in Pennsylvan­ia, as the state’s races for governor and U.S. Senate are relegated to relative backburner status.

Campaigns are ramping up on Labor Day, when labor-endorsed candidates like DiNicola march in union-organized parades in cities across Pennsylvan­ia. It’s also viewed by campaign strategist­s as a fulcrum of sorts, when persuadabl­e voters return from summer vacations, and start paying attention and making up their minds over a nine-week sprint to the Nov. 6 election.

There is no sign that super PACs will flush millions of dollars into Pennsylvan­ia to try to unseat Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, and no independen­t poll shows their Republican challenger­s within striking distance.

But with Democrats aiming to recapture the U.S. House, Pennsylvan­ia could be a springboar­d to wipe out the GOP’s 23-seat majority.

A pickup of seats by Democrats would be unsurprisi­ng since the party of the president historical­ly does poorly in midterm elections. But Democrats in Pennsylvan­ia have extra reasons giving them hope of flipping as many as six seats.

Pollsters have repeatedly found that registered Democrats in Pennsylvan­ia are more enthusiast­ic than Republican­s about voting in November. The latest poll to find that was issued Thursday by Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster.

Also propelling Democrats is a state Supreme Court decision in January to throw out seven-yearold congressio­nal district boundaries as unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red to elect Republican­s. Under that map, Republican­s won 13 of Pennsylvan­ia’s 18 U.S. House seats in three straight elections, even as Democrats dominated statewide elections during that period.

The replacemen­t districts approved by the court’s Democratic majority are fueling more competitiv­e contests around the state.

Freshman Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k is defending his suburban Philadelph­ia seat in a perpetual swing district against a challenge from first-time candidate Scott Wallace. Democrats are expected to capture two other suburban Philadelph­ia seats being left vacant by Republican­s. Just to the north, an Allentowna­rea seat is viewed as a tossup after seven-term Republican Rep. Charlie Dent resigned in May.

Elsewhere, three Republican incumbents — Kelly and three-term Reps. Scott Perry and Keith Rothfus — are facing what GOP strategist­s view as the most difficult re-election campaigns of their careers.

All three were handed more difficult district boundaries in the redrawn map.

In the heat of August, Kelly aired a TV ad designed to cement his standing with seniors.

“It was promised to you that when you were done working, you’d be taken care of, that’s why I fought to protect and preserve Medicare and Social Security,” Kelly tells a roomful of retirement-age listeners.

DiNicola called that “trying to rewrite history.” Kelly, a strong Trump supporter, also has touted Trump’s tax-cutting law as an economic good, while DiNicola criticizes it as primarily benefiting the wealthy.

Unseating Kelly won’t be easy: Had the district existed in 2016, Trump would have won it by 20 percentage points.

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