The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pennsylvan­ia Libertaria­ns file for governor, Senate ballots

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » The Libertaria­n Party of Pennsylvan­ia’s nominees for U.S. Senate and governor filed voter signatures Friday to get on November’s election ballot, helped by a federal court order in 2016 that substantia­lly lowered signature requiremen­ts for minor-party candidates.

The party’s U.S. Senate nominee Dale Kerns and gubernator­ial nominee Ken Krawchuk each said their campaigns filed more than twice the legal threshold of 5,000 signatures. Pennsylvan­ia’s Department of State, which oversees elections in the state, confirmed the filings ahead of the deadline next Wednesday.

Kerns would join twoterm Democratic Sen. Bob Casey and Republican challenger Lou Barletta on the Nov. 6 ballot, while Krawchuk would join Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and Republican challenger Scott Wagner.

Kerns, 34, is an electrical constructi­on project manager from Delaware County making his first bid for statewide office. Krawchuk, 65, is a computer architectu­re consultant from Montgomery County and longtime Libertaria­n Party standard-bearer making his third bid for governor.

The highest third-party vote-getter in Pennsylvan­ia’s U.S. Senate or gubernator­ial races the last two decades was Constituti­onal Party candidate Peg Luksik in 1998 with 10 percent.

No other candidate has broken 4 percent, and Krawchuk in 2002 was the last minor party candidate to appear on a gubernator­ial ballot. He also ran in 1998.

Before the 2016 federal court decision, ballot-access advocates regarded Pennsylvan­ia as having the nation’s toughest barriers to third-party candidates. In 2014, Pennsylvan­ia law had set the minor-party signature requiremen­t at 21,774 before U.S. District Judge Lawrence Stengel ordered it lowered to 5,000 in 2016.

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