Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Candidates of color in Pa. lack money, party support

- By Kate Huangpu

HARRISBURG — Neither Omy Maldonado nor Yamelisa Taveras had run for office before May of this year.

Mr. Maldonado is a Marine veteran and Republican who works for a finance and technology management consulting firm. Ms. Taveras, a Democrat, works in social services, counseling people with substance use issues.

Compelled by different priorities, the Lehigh Valley residents decided to launch bids to represent a brand new state Senate district highlighte­d during the monumental redistrict­ing process as an opportunit­y to increase Hispanic representa­tion in the General Assembly.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Latino population grew 43% between 2010 and 2020, and the five-member panel charged with drawing new legislativ­e lines sought to reflect that increase by creating opportunit­y districts — areas with minority population­s large enough to sway an election.

“Our new Senate District 14 already represents opportunit­ies for influence,” Mark Nordenberg, chancellor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh and chair of the Legislativ­e Reapportio­nment Commission, said earlier this year.

Nearly 40% of the voting-age population in state Senate District 14 is nonwhite. But regardless of whether a Democrat or Republican wins in November, its next state senator will be a white person who previously held elected office. Mr. Maldonado and Ms. Taveras both lost in their respective primaries.

“I am happy with the fact that we gave it all and with very few dollars and very few people, very little support, we were able to accomplish all of this,” said Ms. Taveras, whose two opponents raised tens of thousands more dollars than she did. “I was the only Latina that took the risk and ran.”

Following the May 2022 primary — the first election cycle under the new legislativ­e maps — Spotlight PA analyzed races in five opportunit­y districts to examine the initial effect of such seats on the representa­tion of marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

At least one candidate of color ran in either the Democratic or Republican primary in each district. Two of the six candidates won their primary, one of whom ran unopposed.

The candidates told Spotlight PA that the demographi­c compositio­n of the district generally did not overcome a more deep-rooted disadvanta­ge: running for office without resources or party support.

“It’s a much smoother path for candidates that don’t have those barriers in the way and those barriers are placed there too often to prevent BIPOC [Black, Indigenous and people of color] individual­s to get into office,” Ms. Taveras said. “When we go into different races, we are going with passion and purpose — not with money and resources.”

An uphill battle

Five of the candidates ran in an opportunit­y district that lacked an incumbent and told Spotlight PA that an open field — rather than a large minority population — motivated their campaigns.

In Harrisburg, Democrats Eric Epstein and Justin Fleming ran against each other in state House District 105, which has a voter

makeup that is 37.8% minorities, most of them Black.

Mr. Fleming, who is Black, has spent his career in and around public affairs. He is currently a Susquehann­a Township commission­er and has worked in the press offices of several state department­s.

He won his primary election with over 60% of the vote.

Mr. Fleming said the district’s lack of an incumbent, rather than its demographi­cs, encouraged his run.

“I was unfamiliar with the term [opportunit­y district]. It was a district that just made a lot of sense to me, having grown up in this community,” said Mr. Fleming. “Truthfully, it’s impossible to say.

Had the existing district and the incumbent chosen to run again, would I be running? Probably not.”

Mr. Maldonado in the Lehigh Valley didn’t know his district was an opportunit­y district when he launched his campaign, only learning the term a few weeks into his candidacy.

The fact that state Senate District 14 was an open seat “heavily played into my decision in deciding to run,” Mr. Maldonado said.

Although he didn’t face an incumbent, Mr. Maldonado still felt disadvanta­ged by his lack of name recognitio­n.

One of three Republican candidates, Mr. Maldonado won 20% of the vote. His opponents, Dean Browning, who won the nomination, and Cindy Miller, both held elected positions in Lehigh County.

“When you start to go and actually knock on doors, you start to actually tell people [about yourself], it’s very expensive to educate,” said Mr. Maldonado.

Many of the candidates who spoke with Spotlight PA described an uphill battle, as they had few resources and a lack of “traditiona­l” political experience, making it difficult to navigate the party system and accrue endorsemen­ts or donations. Nonwhite candidates often face questions of “viability” that their white counterpar­ts do not.

Born in the Dominican Republic, Ms. Taveras began to volunteer for political campaigns two years ago, helping organize for various Latina candidates.

She described “layers” of qualificat­ions to be seen as a viable candidate — prerequisi­tes such as interning for lawmakers or studying political science — that can be less accessible for immigrants or nonwhite and low-income people.

Ms. Taveras emphasized that first-time candidates are not

necessaril­y inexperien­ced. Rather, their experience­s differ from those of“traditiona­l” politician­s. Still, that lack of traditiona­l experience makes potential endorsemen­ts and donations harder to come by.

Yesenia Rodriguez is the only Democrat who ran in state House District 116′s primary. The district was drawn with no incumbent and includes the majorityLa­tino city of Hazleton.

Ms. Rodriguez immigrated to the U.S. at 14 from the Dominican Republic and owns a bakery in Hazleton, Luzerne County, where she’s lived since 2004. She became involved in local politics when she learned the Hazleton Area School District, where her children were enrolled, had a dearth of bilingual counselors. The issue prompted her unsuccessf­ul run for a position on the school board in 2019.

“I think there’s always a challenge there when you are from the Latinx community,” Ms. Rodriguez said. “[Voters] see it as ‘this candidate is only going to represent the Latino community.’ ”

During her campaign, Ms. Rodriguez did not receive direct financial support from the Luzerne Democratic Party, but she said the party did provide volunteers to help make phone calls.

“You have to do your job, knocking on everybody’s door, making your phone calls, and doing your job as a candidate … but you also need money. You do need funding, so you can do your [TV] advertisem­ent, radio advertisem­ent, the newspaper,” said Ms. Rodriguez. “Funding is always an issue, and usually those that get the funding from the big companies, they’re able to be more successful.

“But it’s not everything. I plan on going during the summer and — if I have to — knocking on each and every door for my district.”

Need for cash, connection­s

Running for statewide office often costs millions of dollars. Legislativ­e elections cover smaller areas, but campaigns still spend tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars to buy advertisem­ents, pay staff and fight lawsuits.

Only two of the six candidates Spotlight PA spoke with raised more than $10,000 between the beginning of 2021 and early May 2022, according to campaign finance reports.

Norberto Dominguez was one of three Democrats to declare his candidacy in state House District 22 and the only Latino. The district includes Allentown, Lehigh County, has no incumbent, and has a voter makeup that’s 53% Hispanic and 67% minority.

Legislativ­e candidates had less than two weeks to circulate nominating petitions and collect signatures because of redistrict­ing-related lawsuits, and Mr. Dominguez rushed to local grocery stores and barbershop­s so he could get on the ballot.

On the morning the petitions were due, he drove to Harrisburg feeling nervous, having collected just over the minimum 300 signatures required. He later withdrew his candidacy, explaining that he was unsure that the filing petition would hold up if challenged. He did not have the funds to counter a challenge in court.

“There’s a part of me that feels like if had I had the funds to pay for a good attorney that deals specifical­ly with elections, that we may have gotten out of it with maybe just a few over 300,” said Mr. Dominguez.

Before his withdrawal, Mr. Dominguez’s campaign

raised just over $1,000. The candidate who won the Democratic primary — Josh Siegel, an Allentown City Council member who is also chief of staff in the office of the Lehigh County controller — has raised over $42,000.

Similarly, Ms. Taveras’ campaign reported raising just over $2,500, most of which was accrued through a single donor. Both of her opponents raised more than 20 times that amount, according to their campaign finance reports.

One opponent, Allentown school board member Nick Miller, who led the race by about 40 votes, loaned $20,000 to his campaign and received contributi­ons from local politician­s, unions and PACs. Another candidate, Northampto­n County Commission­er Tara Zrinski, received $20,000 from a PAC that supports women candidates, amongother large donations.

In Harrisburg, Mr. Fleming raised over $106,000 according to his campaign finance

reports, a total he attributed in part to his existing political connection­s.

He received money from the PACs of George Scott, a former candidate for state Senate, and House Minority Leader Joanna McClinton, D-Philadelph­ia. Mr. Fleming also received a $10,000 inkind contributi­on from the Pennsylvan­ia House Democratic Campaign Committee, the “political arm” of the House Democratic caucus, for “staff costs.”

Mr. Fleming was the only candidate Spotlight PA spoke to who received financial support from his party’s official campaign body.

“Those were like connection­s and folks I’ve worked with in the commonweal­th, the people I worked with in various government affairs capacities,” said Mr. Fleming. “That was pretty unique — for me to have that base or perceived base of support from which to draw as a firsttime candidate at this level.”

While opportunit­y districts

provide good starts, Mr. Dominguez believes that not enough is being done to guide candidates of color through the process, and that establishe­d political organizati­ons and party establishm­ents do not provide enough support to nonwhite candidates.

“People of color do not have access to that machine,” he said.

A matter of fairness?

Mr. Maldonado in the Lehigh Valley said that he doesn’t think the party establishm­ent should back candidates of color even in districts with large minority population­s, as they might unfairly tip the scale in an election.

“Party establishm­ent down in Harrisburg, whether you’re Democrat or Republican, wants to also be neutral, especially in the contested primaries,” he said. “They don’t want to go all-in on one candidate.”

Enid Santiago twice opposed Democratic state Rep. Peter Schweyer, of Lehigh County, coming within 50 votes of defeating him during the 2020 primary. This year, she ran again against him in new House District 134, which has a 39% Hispanic voting-age population.

In both her campaigns, Ms. Santiago said she was unsupporte­d by the Democratic establishm­ent. She described being approached by a high-ranking member of the local party who tried to persuade her to run for a school board or city council seat rather than a state House position, in 2020 — an incident confirmed by another source.

“It’s one thing when you don’t endorse a candidate and you don’t financiall­y support them, and you don’t provide them resources,” she said. “It’s another thing when you are working with that candidate to make sure that there is no equity and that is what I dealt with.”

Ms. Santiago said she also did not have access to the Voter Activation Network, an insider tool Democratic candidates use to easily contact voters and mobilize volunteers.

The Pennsylvan­ia House Democratic Campaign Committee determines who can use the database. Executive Director Trevor Southerlan­d said the committee denies access to candidates running in a contested primary because itsupports its members.

“It’s literally the good old boys club,” said Ms. Santiago. “Let’s keep the players where they’re at and make sure that we do not allow any outsiders to come inside the circle.”

 ?? Matt Smith/For Spotlight PA ?? “It’s a much smoother path for candidates that don’t have those barriers in the way and those barriers are placed there too often to prevent BIPOC individual­s to get into office,” said Yamelisa Taveras, a recent candidate for the Pennsylvan­ia State Senate, seen at her office in Allentown, Lehigh County.
Matt Smith/For Spotlight PA “It’s a much smoother path for candidates that don’t have those barriers in the way and those barriers are placed there too often to prevent BIPOC individual­s to get into office,” said Yamelisa Taveras, a recent candidate for the Pennsylvan­ia State Senate, seen at her office in Allentown, Lehigh County.
 ?? ??
 ?? Matt Smith/For Spotlight PA ?? Omy Maldonado — seen here in Bethlehem — didn’t know his state Senate district was an opportunit­y district when he launched his campaign, only learning the term a few weeks into his candidacy.
Matt Smith/For Spotlight PA Omy Maldonado — seen here in Bethlehem — didn’t know his state Senate district was an opportunit­y district when he launched his campaign, only learning the term a few weeks into his candidacy.

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