San Francisco Chronicle

Pennsylvan­ia vote:

- By Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns are New York Times writers.

With nearly all votes counted, election to fill vacant House seat still too close to call.

CANONSBURG, Pa. — The Democrat and Republican in a special House election in the heart of Pennsylvan­ia’s Trump country were divided by a few hundred votes in a race that was too close to call early Wednesday — an ominous sign for Republican­s in a district that Donald Trump won by nearly 20 percentage points.

With 100 percent of votes cast Tuesday counted, Conor Lamb, a Democrat, was clinging to a 579-vote lead over Republican Rick Saccone. But a few thousand absentee ballots had not yet been counted. And it was possible that a legal battle could ensue.

House Democrats did not wait for a final count to claim victory. House Republican­s were already talking up a legal challenge. But no matter the outcome, Lamb’s strong showing demonstrat­ed that the Trumpinspi­red energy propelling Democrats across the country is not confined to liberal-leaning regions. Republican­s were left with the prospect of defending a far broader section of districts this fall than they had hoped.

A first-time candidate and former Marine, Lamb, 33, forced Republican­s to pour more than $10 million into a southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia district where Democrats did not even field a candidate in the past two congressio­nal elections.

Yet whoever wins here may not hold the seat for very long. The state Supreme Court ruled in January that Pennsylvan­ia’s House map was gerrymande­red unlawfully and redrew congressio­nal boundaries that may force either candidate to run in a new district in November.

The contest evolved into a test for both parties in Trump country. Republican­s scrambled to prop up Saccone, a 60year-old state representa­tive, mindful that a failure here would send signals well beyond Pittsburgh.

Just three months after suffering an embarrassi­ng defeat in the special Senate election in Alabama, Trump and his administra­tion once more put their prestige on the line on friendly terrain.

The president appeared twice with Saccone, most recently at an airport rally Saturday night in which Trump mocked the Democrat as “Lamb the sham.” But Trump also delivered a rambling, 75-minute speech that careened away from the matter at hand.

Republican officials began criticizin­g Saccone’s candidacy well before the returns were counted in a district where the anti-abortion Republican previously holding the seat, Tim Murphy, was forced to resign after a woman with whom he was having an affair said he pressed her to have an abortion.

 ?? Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg ?? Campaign signs for the candidates for the House of Representa­tives are seen in Carnegie, Pa.
Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg Campaign signs for the candidates for the House of Representa­tives are seen in Carnegie, Pa.

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