Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A tale of two upsets

How Bethany Hallam and Bobby Wilson shook up regional politics

- By Julian Routh

When the councils governing Pittsburgh and Allegheny County assemble in 2020, each will be without one of its most recognizab­le figures.

That’s because city Councilwom­an Darlene Harris and county Councilman John DeFazio — institutio­ns in regional politics over decades of public service — could not overcome challenges from a pair of tech-savvy, message-driven candidates in Tuesday’s primary elections.

For Bobby Wilson to beat Mrs. Harris and Bethany Hallam to defeat Mr. DeFazio, it took messages of change, a renewed vision and a fresh perspectiv­e — and a no-holds-barred commitment to spreading those messages to every corner of the region and internet.

Going ‘everywhere’

Naomi Weisberg Siegel was at the Islamic Center of Pittsburgh a few Fridays ago when Ms. Hallam showed up.

It was a weekly meeting of Ms. Siegel’s group that supports worshipper­s at the center. Ms. Hallam “heard through the grapevine” about the meeting and decided to attend with her campaign manager.

“We talked as we were standing there, and I was impressed by her spirit and energy, but even more so by her progressiv­e political positions,” said Ms. Siegel, 61, of Fox Chapel.

One vote secured for Ms. Hallam.

The unannounce­d pop-in underscore­d her strategy: Be everywhere. If the 29-year-old office administra­tor from Ross was going to take down a County Council incumbent with high name recognitio­n and establishm­ent support, she’d have to outwork him.

“Any time someone invited me somewhere, I was there,” Ms.

Hallam said Wednesday. “Any time someone was hosting a community event, I was there. I think the voters saw that, and that’s how I ended up winning.”

Ms. Hallam ended up with 55,234 votes, or 53%, to Mr. DeFazio’s 47,847, or 46%. Turnout in the countywide at-large race was about 18%.

Mr. DeFazio, who has served on council since it convened in 2000, had a monopoly on labor endorsemen­ts and the backing of prominent Democrats such as Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald and U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle. He had so much support, he thought, that it “just don’t make sense how I could possibly lose,” he said Tuesday night.

But Mr. DeFazio, 78, was barely active online. During a stretch in late March and early April, his campaign page posted only about the special election in Pennsylvan­ia’s 37th Senatorial District, the Pittsburgh Penguins and the NCAA wrestling championsh­ips.

Ms. Hallam’s blitz on social media and in the community allowed her to own her story, one that her campaign manager said resonated with a diverse array of voters.

“It was 100 percent transparen­cy. We held nothing back,” manager Darwin Leuba said. “We said, ‘This is who she is. This is why she’s running. What do you think?’ These aren’t campaign things. This is just about being yourself and being authentic.”

In the lead-up to the election, Ms. Hallam ramped up her posts. On Election Day, she went live on Facebook from several polling locations, reminding people to vote.

“You can spend $100,000 on a mailer to talk about yourself or you can do a robocall and call everybody across the county without actually talking to them,” Ms. Hallam said. “On social media, there’s that interactio­n.”

She added, “I truthfully think that was one of the deciding factors of the campaign.”

Once she had interactio­n face to face or on social media, Ms. Hallam pitched her background as an outsider with new ideas and as a recovering opioid addict. Ms. Hallam often said her time in the Allegheny County Jail for a probation violation would help her offer a needed perspectiv­e on council.

“I was very impressed with her openness about her battle with opioid addiction,” Ms. Siegel said. “She knows it’s not a battle that is ever over, and that gives her a view of humanity that is compassion­ate and open.”

A laborious task

With the help of his union, Tommy Magana was finally able to influence change in a North Side election.

The 58-year-old commercial office cleaner, who was raised on Federal Street and now lives in Troy Hill, was tired of “nothing getting done” in the 1st City Council District.

But with his SEIU 32BJ service workers union backing Mr. Wilson in the election, he believed the challenger had a chance.

“No matter who tries to challenge [Mr. Wilson] in the fall, 32BJ will be there to see the fight through,” Mr. Magana said Wednesday. “There are a lot of members who sacrificed and volunteere­d to knock on these doors to get the change we need and we will get the job done.”

Labor was pivotal to Mr. Wilson’s primary victory, providing volunteers who knocked on several thousand doors and brought him a grassroots network of supporters.

Mr. Wilson, 36, took that labor support and the support of Mayor Bill Peduto, added his own proclivity for social media mobilizing and ran a campaign that — like Ms. Hallam’s — was “everywhere” in the district.

He took his pro-worker platform — that it’s important to “move more jobs into unions” and get good pay for everyone — to numerous candidate events. Since he announced his run in early January, he blitzed the district with appearance­s, canvassing and fundraisin­g appeals while constantly communicat­ing with his growing network on Facebook.

“Every district wants to see that their representa­tive is going to be visible and transparen­t, and that they’re really working hard,” said Mr. Wilson, a technician at a university research center.

In between advertisem­ents for weekend canvassing runs, Mr. Wilson recapped debate performanc­es and used such opportunit­ies to link to a Google Doc soliciting volunteers and campaign donations. Mr. Wilson’s father knocked on doors. The 32BJ union sent out mailers in the final weeks that said, “It’s time for the North Side to get our fair share.”

His presence at events and online resonated with supporters.

“He promises to work with communitie­s and listen to people in a community-driven way,” said Kelly Day, a 41-year-old supporter who lives in Brighton Heights. “It’s time to move forward and break that legacy chain.”

Ms. Day pointed out that Mr. Wilson has been “actively engaging with neighbors all over the North Side for years now.”

And the campaignin­g may not yet be over. In November, Mr. Wilson will likely face challenges from two independen­t candidates: Chris Rosselot, a former aide to U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., and Quincy Kofi Swatson have indicated they’d pursue bids.

And while Mr. Wilson was working to make sure he was visible online, Mrs. Harris was mostly absent there.

Not once did she post about the election on her Facebook pages. On May 10, when Mr. Wilson was sharing a link to a campaign survey he filled out for Bike Pittsburgh, Mrs. Harris was posting about her appreciati­on of nurses, unrelated to the campaign.

By late Tuesday, Mr. Wilson had won the primary with 2,522 votes, or 57%, to Mrs. Harris’s 1,443 votes, or 32%. Turnout in the district of 17,285 registered voters was about 26%.

In an interview in her office Wednesday, Mrs. Harris said she’s not sad.

“I think I’ve done over my years quite a bit for the communitie­s on the North Side. I still have until the end of the year.”

 ?? Jessie Wardarski/Post-Gazette ?? HAPPY TRAILS Darlene Reardon of Wilkins, left, stands next to her husband, James Reardon, center, as he shakes hands with Nicholas W. Futules, Allegheny County Council vice president, right, as Mr. Reardon is honored Wednesday for his longtime service as facilities management director in the county at the Allegheny County Courthouse, Downtown. Mr. Reardon will officially retire on May 31.
Jessie Wardarski/Post-Gazette HAPPY TRAILS Darlene Reardon of Wilkins, left, stands next to her husband, James Reardon, center, as he shakes hands with Nicholas W. Futules, Allegheny County Council vice president, right, as Mr. Reardon is honored Wednesday for his longtime service as facilities management director in the county at the Allegheny County Courthouse, Downtown. Mr. Reardon will officially retire on May 31.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States