The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wagner is GOP pick to face Wolf

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » State senator and waste-hauling millionair­e Scott Wagner won Tuesday’s three-way Republican primary contest to challenge Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, capping a personal spending spree that helped make Wagner the front-runner and the GOP’s endorsed candidate.

Wagner defeated two first-time candidates from the Pittsburgh area, Paul Mango and Laura Ellsworth, surviving weeks of Mango’s sharp-elbowed attack ads that painted Wagner as sleazy, greedy and a “deadbeat dad.”

Along the way, Wagner pumped more than $10 million of his own cash into his campaign, and he spread hundreds of thousands more around the state since last year to boost GOP committees and candidates.

Mango, a former health care systems consultant, fell short despite seizing the mantle of conservati­sm and spending $7 million of his own on the campaign. Ellsworth, a commercial litigation attorney, never mustered that kind of cash, and she and Mango were relative unknowns when they began their campaigns.

Tuesday’s victory for Wagner sets up a November election be-

tween two York County residents who made millions of dollars in business before entering politics, although their similariti­es don’t go much further.

Wagner is brash — “I am going to be the next governor, take that to the bank,” he said last year — and has a penchant for off-the-cuff speaking that makes him a magnet for controvers­y. Wolf is soft-spoken and chooses his words carefully.

Wagner, 62, never graduated from college and says he “barely” got through high school. Wolf, 69, has a bachelor’s degree from Dartmouth College and a Ph.D. from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Wagner fashions himself as a garbage man coming to clean up a profligate state government that chokes the economy with regulation­s and taxes. He singles out public-sector labor unions as a particular target of his vitriol and has inspired comparison­s to President Donald Trump.

Wagner has compiled one of the Senate’s most conservati­ve voting records, although he occasional­ly goes against GOP orthodoxy on issues, such as supporting an increase in the minimum wage.

Wolf, himself a millionair­e businessma­n from York County, likely will attack Wagner as posing a danger to programs for children, schools and seniors, while Wagner likely will attack Wolf as a serial tax hiker, an out-of-touch elitist and a lousy leader.

The governor leads a unified Democratic Party into the fall with midterm political winds at his back.

Wolf’s polling numbers suggest he is in a comfortabl­e spot to seek re-election, political scientists say, and he has worked to show that he can deftly operate the levers of government despite butting heads inside the state Capitol with huge Republican legislativ­e majorities.

Wolf also will have a big cash advantage: Wolf headed into May with $14 million in his campaign account, while Wagner reported $2.2 million.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican candidate for Pennsylvan­ia governor Scott Wagner, left, hands off campaign signs as he arrives at a polling station Tuesday in Springfiel­d.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican candidate for Pennsylvan­ia governor Scott Wagner, left, hands off campaign signs as he arrives at a polling station Tuesday in Springfiel­d.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican candidate for Pennsylvan­ia governor Scott Wagner, left, speaks to Springfiel­d Township Treasurer Margaret Young as he arrives at a polling station Tuesday in Springfiel­d.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican candidate for Pennsylvan­ia governor Scott Wagner, left, speaks to Springfiel­d Township Treasurer Margaret Young as he arrives at a polling station Tuesday in Springfiel­d.

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