The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Boundary confusion abounds

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » The first day for congressio­nal candidates in Pennsylvan­ia to circulate petitions will arrive amid legal challenges to week-old court-ordered boundaries of the state’s 18 U.S. House districts.

The map of districts continued Monday to spur more wouldbe candidates to reconsider whether — and where — to run, as Republican challenges to new U.S. House district boundaries awaited action in federal courts.

Perhaps the most prominent name, Pennsylvan­ia’s auditor

general, Democrat Eugene DePasquale, said he would not run for Congress, after spending several days considerin­g a shot at a more competitiv­e district in south-central Pennsylvan­ia.

Tuesday is the first day under a delayed schedule to gather signatures to qualify for May 15 primary election ballots. The deadline to submit them is March 20.

More than 70 people had been considerin­g running for Congress in Pennsylvan­ia before a gerrymande­ring

lawsuit prompted the state Supreme Court to redraw the congressio­nal district boundaries last week.

Meanwhile, five incumbent members of Congress from Pennsylvan­ia are not seeking another term this year and a sixth resigned last year, creating the state’s largest number of open seats in four decades and fueling interest in running.

DePasquale now lives in a more competitiv­e district around his York County home that the court-ordered boundaries had created by adding heavily Democratic areas surroundin­g the city of Harrisburg.

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