Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Turzai hints at run for governor in ’18

- By Marc Levy Associated Press

HARRISBURG — House Speaker Mike Turzai is making his first big pitch for support from the Republican faithful to challenge Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf in 2018, saying he hopes to make a formal announceme­nt of his candidacy in the coming months.

In a letter obtained by the Associated Press, the Allegheny County representa­tive informed state Republican Party committee members that he was seriously considerin­g a run, and detailed his accomplish­ments in the House and as a fundraiser helping other Republican candidates around Pennsylvan­ia.

He also appeared to take aim at competitor­s for the GOP nomination without identifyin­g them.

“Unlike others, I have been carrying the Republican agenda for more than a decade,” Mr. Turzai, R-Marshall, wrote.

“I don't need focus groups to tell me where my principles are. And I'm not trying to buy this election with my own money. I have a history of winning, not just elections, but important policy battles.”

He wrote in the fourpage letter — received in the mail Friday by committee members — that he hopes to make a formal announceme­nt in the summer or early fall. Mr. Turzai is perhaps best known in Harrisburg for his conservati­ve fiscal stances, advocacy for alternativ­es to public schools and push to privatize the state wine and liquor system.

In recent weeks, he has clashed with School Reform Commission members and Philadelph­ia legislator­s, warning that the SRC was trying to “overstep” charter law in seeking to change provisions for local charter schools. District officials and Sen. Vincent Hughes, a Philadelph­ia Democrat, lashed back, accusing the House speaker of threatenin­g district funding and unfairly injecting himself into its decision-making process.

Mr. Wolf is running for a second four-year term in next year's election and so far has no announced opponent for the Democratic Party nomination.

Two GOP candidates are already in the mix for the Republican Party nomination.

They are State Sen. Scott Wagner of York County and political newcomer Paul Mango, a longtime former health care systems consultant from Pine, who is expected to formally announce his candidacy Wednesday.

Mr. Turzai did not say in the letter whether he would resign as speaker before he runs or whether he would remain speaker during a campaign for governor.

He would be free to raise campaign donations into his existing campaign account in the coming months and then transfer it later into a gubernator­ial campaign account.

Mr. Turzai, 57, a lawyer and former prosecutor in Allegheny County, was first elected to the House in 2001 after running unsuccessf­ully for Congress in 1998.

He became the GOP floor leader in 2011 and speaker in 2015. He also has a history of changing his mind: He aborted a run for lieutenant governor in 2006 and flirted with another run for Congress in 2012.

Mr. Wagner, 61, who built two municipal waste-hauling companies and currently owns the $65 million Penn Waste operation, reported lending his campaign $4 million.

The American Conservati­ve Union rated Mr. Wagner among the Senate's five most-conservati­ve senators. In his push for conservati­ve fiscal policy, he has often singled out public-sector labor unions or fellow Republican­s he did not see as conservati­ve enough.

Mr. Mango, 58, has never held or run for public office or conducted a media interview about his political views. Little is also known about his personal wealth.

“Unlike others, I have been carrying the Republican agenda for more than a decade. I don’t need focus groups to tell me where my principles are. And I’m not trying to buy this election with my own money. I have a history of winning, not just elections, but important policy battles.” — Mike Turzai, House Speaker

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