Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lamb, Saccone in virtual tie

Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th District race captivates nation

- By Chris Potter

They said it was going to be close, and it was. The race between Republican Rick Saccone and Democrat Conor Lamb for the 18th Congressio­nal District was in a near tie Tuesday night.

Mr. Saccone, of Elizabeth Township, and Mr. Lamb, of Mt. Lebanon, had a hard-fought special election campaign flooded with money and national attention.

With 99 percent of the vote count in, the contest was too close to call. Mr. Lamb was ahead by more than 500 votes, but absentee ballots were still out. Washington County absentee votes were being counted late Tuesday night but were not expected to be in until early morning.

If the race were still too close to call after the absentee ballots are counted, voters or candidates can call for a recount or recanvass of votes, but the process is onerous. Voters have until officials are done with the computatio­n of the votes on Friday to file a challenge with their county Board of Elections. The computatio­n includes the counting of absentee ballots.

Voters can also seek relief from a county Common Pleas Court. In such cases, three voters in the same precinct must provide evidence of fraud or error in the vote counting and pay a $50 fee. If they don’t present evidence of fraud or error, they must “file qualified petitions in every single precinct in which ballots were cast for the office in question,” according to state officials. Those petitions have to be filed within five days of computatio­n of the votes.

After the 2016 presidenti­al election, the Green Party filed such a challenge in 52 Allegheny County precincts, and the results taken from electronic voting machines used at those polling places were retabulate­d. No vote totals changed as a result.

Observers said the close race meant that while neither side could claim victory, partisans of both could already claim some vindicatio­n.

“Republican­s can say, ‘We took the best shot the Democrats could give — a candidate who fits the district well — and we survived it in a fairly strong position,’” said Chris Borick, a pollster at Muhlenberg College.

Democrats, meanwhile, may say that Mr. Lamb had shown that candidates can be competitiv­e in districts won in 2016 by President Donald Trump. Terry Madonna, a veteran pollster at Franklin & Marshall College, said, “Moving forward, that tells Democrats that in districts Trump won by 8, 10, 12 even 20 points not to nationaliz­e the race.”

But if the margin of victory remains as tight as it appears, Mr. Borick said, “the big question mark is whether the energy Trump creates can be transferre­d toward

other candidates. You’re going to have lots of people questionin­g whether they want Trump anywhere near them this year. Already people in the Philadelph­ia suburbs don’t want him anywhere near them. Now you may see that kind of thinking spread.”

Two years ago, 18th District voters supported Mr. Trump over Democrat Hillary Clinton by a doubledigi­t margin of percentage points. In Tuesday’s voting, the margin vanished.

The “R”-shaped 18th is anchored in the southwest corner of Pennsylvan­ia, just south of the city of Pittsburgh, hugging the West Virginia panhandle. It is made up of a diversity of suburbs — ranging from wealthy to rural — in portions of Allegheny, Greene, Washington and Westmorela­nd counties and has a population of just over 700,000, according to the latest census data.

More than 93 percent of those in District 18 are white and the average age is over 44, making it the second-oldest electorate in the state.

The district was safely Republican in each of the past three congressio­nal elections, so much so that Republican Tim Murphy ran unopposed for the seat in 2014 (when he got 166,076 votes) and in 2016 (293,684). In 2012, he defeated Democrat Larry Maggi, who mustered only 36 percent of the vote, losing 216,727 to 122,146.

Neither Mr. Lamb nor Mr. Saccone likely could have anticipate­d having the other as a foe, or even of competing in the 18th Congressio­nal District at all.

The seat had been held, securely, by Mr. Murphy since 2003. Mr. Murphy was adept at straddling the district’s patchwork political geography, which joined union households with rural communitie­s and college-educated suburbs. But Post-Gazette reporting of an extramarit­al affair, and subsequent allegation­s that Mr. Murphy mistreated congressio­nal staff, forced his resignatio­n last fall.

A field of Democrats had already been laying the groundwork to challenge Mr. Murphy last year; Mr. Lamb, a 33-year-old former federal prosecutor who served as a lawyer in the Marine Corps, got into the race only after the resignatio­n.

But although his name surfaced late, it was distinctly familiar for many Democrats. Mr. Lamb’s grandfathe­r, Thomas Lamb, was a Democratic leader in the state Senate, and his uncle Michael Lamb is the city controller for Pittsburgh. Conor Lamb beat six other Democrats, including some who’d been in the race for months, during a mid-November vote by the party’s committee members.

Throughout the campaign, Mr. Lamb played his cards close to his vest, divulging his opinions on issues like abortion on his own timetable, rather than that of the reporters covering the race. While his campaign drew on the energy of progressiv­es animated by anger over Mr. Trump’s election, Mr. Lamb himself campaigned as a moderate, rarely challengin­g the president directly even while faulting leadership in Congress.

Mr. Saccone, 60, had arguably made more of a name for himself by the time Mr. Murphy stepped down — and an extensive legislativ­e record meant he couldn’t be coy about his staunchly conservati­ve principles even had he wanted to. A former Air Force officer with a background in counterint­elligence, he served in South Korea and later tried to help facilitate the developmen­t of a power-plant in North Korea — part of an effort to entice the country to abandon its nuclear-weapons program.

First elected in a Democratic­state House district in 2010, the Elizabeth Township Republican was a strident foe of abortion and supporter of gun rights. He was selected by more than 200 Republican “conferees” in a three-way contest with state Sens. Guy Reschentha­ler of Jefferson Hills and Kim Ward of Westmorela­nd County.

From the outset, Mr. Saccone styled himself as “Trump before Trump was Trump,” a populist.

But to a large extent, observers say, the campaigns’ messages were shaped by who was paying for the microphone.

As a candidate, Mr. Lamb had raised $3.9 million — four times Mr. Saccone’s total friendly — by mid-February. Mr. Saccone, however, was bolstered by outside spending made by national Republican groups that by Election Day had spent over $10 million on his behalf.

That assured Mr. Saccone an edge in airtime, which Republican­s used to insist Mr. Lamb would be too closely in the fold of House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi — though Mr. Lamb said he wanted new party leadership.

Despite his youth, Mr. Lamb ran a campaign that made use of old-school tactics, paying close attention to the deployment of yard signs and retail-level politics. Other than a highly touted campaign visit by former Vice President Joe Biden, who is popular with union voters, Mr. Lamb sought out little national Democratic support,

Mr. Saccone made ample use of his access to national resources. He appeared with Donald Trump twice — the second time at a rally three days before the election — with Vice President Mike Pence, and with Mr. Trump’s daughter, Ivanka.

The difference in focus lasted right up until the eve of the election: Mr. Saccone spent the last day of the campaign with Donald Trump Jr., touring a chocolate facility while the national media squeezed between racks of chocolate bunnies for a camera angle. Mr. Lamb, meanwhile, eschewed the media, reaching out to voters that campaign workers identified as still on the fence.

Mr. Borick said that while the 18th had a strongly Republican bent (Mr. Trump won it by about 20 points in 2016) there were always the makings of a close race.

“I always say, take the candidates out of the equation and think about this in a structural sense. In race after race in the past year, Democrats have outperform­ed their numbers — both because of the president’s unpopulari­ty and because we’re in a mid-term election cycle.”

The election’s impact on actual floor votes should be modest. Going into Election Day, Republican­s control the House by 238-193. And the 18th District itself is likely to disappear in its current form. Under a new district map mandated by the state Supreme Court, Mr. Lamb will be moved into the 17th District, which overlaps territory currently held by U.S. Rep. Keith Rothfus. Mr. Saccone, meanwhile, will be drawn into a district that includes Pittsburgh, which is currently represente­d by Democrat Mike Doyle.

Whatever the outcomes, she said hours before the counting of ballots could begin, pundits and campaign profession­als alike will leap to a conclusion that “will be much more dramatic than it ought to be. November is a lifetime away in normal politics ... and it’s about four lifetimes away in Trump politics.”

 ?? Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette ?? Supporters of State Rep. Rick Saccone are astonished by the tight race as returns come in at an election night party Tuesday at the Youghioghe­ny Country Club in Elizabeth Township.
Rebecca Droke/Post-Gazette Supporters of State Rep. Rick Saccone are astonished by the tight race as returns come in at an election night party Tuesday at the Youghioghe­ny Country Club in Elizabeth Township.
 ?? Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette ?? Conor Lamb supporters at the Hilton Garden Inn Southpoint­e are equally surprised as the election moves into a virtual tie. Absentee ballots were being counted late Tuesday.
Stephanie Strasburg/Post-Gazette Conor Lamb supporters at the Hilton Garden Inn Southpoint­e are equally surprised as the election moves into a virtual tie. Absentee ballots were being counted late Tuesday.
 ?? Jessie Wardarski/Post-Gazette ?? Judy Kramer of Smith Township holds handmade signs in support of Democratic congressio­nal candidate Conor Lamb as she waits for the results with her husband Tuesday at the Hilton Garden Inn Southpoint­e.
Jessie Wardarski/Post-Gazette Judy Kramer of Smith Township holds handmade signs in support of Democratic congressio­nal candidate Conor Lamb as she waits for the results with her husband Tuesday at the Hilton Garden Inn Southpoint­e.
 ?? Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette ?? Constable Steve Parise rests his eyes while keeping watch on the Ward 1 District 4 polling location at the Carnegie Volunteer Fire Department in Carnegie.
Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette Constable Steve Parise rests his eyes while keeping watch on the Ward 1 District 4 polling location at the Carnegie Volunteer Fire Department in Carnegie.

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