The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

New map gives Democrats hope in more Pennsylvan­ia districts

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. >> Scott Perry has won his conservati­ve district by no fewer than 25 percentage points on his way to three terms in Congress, but a sweeping redraw of Pennsylvan­ia’s House district boundaries has forced several Republican congressme­n into newly competitiv­e seats, Perry as much as anyone.

Now, Perry — a member of the Freedom Caucus, a particular­ly conservati­ve group of House Republican­s — is battling for his political life in conservati­ve central Pennsylvan­ia, and the state has emerged as a keystone for Democrats aiming to recapture a House majority.

George Scott, the Democrat challengin­g Perry, is a first-time candidate and Lutheran pastor who, like Perry, served with the Army in Iraq. Democrats like Scott’s chances enough that the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee is dropping $260,000 into the race to attack Perry on TV.

On Saturday, Scott greeted canvassers at a suburban Harrisburg gathering where people buzzed about a poll showing a neck-and-neck race, then sped off for a pancake breakfast and a booth at a pumpkin festival.

“This is how we’re going to win, through days like today and through people like you,” Scott told canvassers.

January’s ruling by the state Supreme Court’s Democratic majority threw out 6-year-old district maps drawn and approved by Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e and Republican governor, saying they were unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red.

It tore up decades of precedent in how districts were drawn in a bid to elect as many Republican­s as possible, and it succeeded. Republican­s won 13 of 18 congressio­nal seats on that map in three straight elections in a state where Democrats hold a registrati­on advantage and won 18 of 24 statewide elections during that period.

After Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and the Legislatur­e’s Republican majorities didn’t agree on a replacemen­t map, Democrats on the court imposed one . The new map repackages elongated and bent districts and reunifies Democrat-heavy cities that had been split by Republican map drawers.

November’s midterm election is expected to dramatical­ly change Pennsylvan­ia’s delegation, especially after several Republican congressme­n decided against running again amid a hostile political environmen­t.

The new districts are expected to yield something closer to a 9-9 tie. If Democrats win every seat on their battlefiel­d map, they’ll capture 12 total seats and wipe out nearly one-third of the 23-seat Republican majority.

The races are largely along national themes, and Perry and Scott attack each other as too extreme, insincere about bipartisan­ship and hiding their true beliefs.

“My opponent doesn’t want to know anybody to know what he’s about,” Perry told dozens of Republican Party canvassers on Saturday. “He wants them to see him in uniform, and go, ‘Well, that guy is almost like Perry; heck, his name’s almost the same.’ Well, that’s what he wants. We must tell them, ‘It’s a vision of two different futures.’”

Scott contends that Perry is trying to reinvent his voting record and rattles off a list of Freedom Caucus greatest hits: government shutdowns in 2011 and 2013 and blocking of immigratio­n and farm legislatio­n.

“People are sick of the divisivene­ss, they’re sick of the extreme partisansh­ip, they’re sick of groups like the Freedom Caucus, which seeks to divide us rather than unite us,” Scott said at a forum Friday.

Perry owns the most conservati­ve voting record in Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal delegation, according to American Conservati­ve Union ratings, and has among the most conservati­ve voting records in the House.

The district Perry represents has roughly 60,000 more registered Republican voters than Democrats, and Donald Trump won it by 21 percentage points over Democrat Hillary Clinton in 2016’s presidenti­al contest.

The new district has a slimmer Republican registrati­on advantage of 25,000 and, had it existed in 2016, Trump would have won it by a more modest 9 points.

About 40 percent of the district is new to Perry.

When he goes doorknocki­ng in a new portion of the district, Perry said, he introduces himself to a prospectiv­e voter, explains that Pennsylvan­ia’s districts have changed and that now he’ll be on their ballot. He then asks if they have any questions.

It doesn’t always go well.

“I’ve got a plenty of questions, a plenty of questions,” one woman, a registered Democrat, told him at a driveway sale in a suburban Harrisburg neighborho­od Saturday. “We’ve got to start in Washington; we’ve got to clean that up. That’s embarrassi­ng.”

Perry acknowledg­es that he’s in a newly competitiv­e seat and that he’s working harder than ever to raise money; several conservati­ve groups have reported spending more than $200,000 to help him, including a new TV ad by Heritage Action for America. But Perry said he doesn’t need to change how he votes to fit a changed district.

“We all want safe communitie­s, lower taxes, an efficient government, affordable and accessible health care; we want government to keep the promises that it made for our seniors,” Perry said. “That’s universal; it doesn’t matter where you live. It’s just getting the message out.”

Follow Marc Levy on Twitter at www.twitter.com/timelywrit­er.

 ?? MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican U.S. Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvan­ia listens to speakers at a party rally with volunteer canvassers, in Harrisburg, Pa.
MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican U.S. Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvan­ia listens to speakers at a party rally with volunteer canvassers, in Harrisburg, Pa.
 ?? MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? George Scott, the Democratic candidate for Congress in a Republican-leaning seat in conservati­ve central Pennsylvan­ia, listens to volunteer canvassers while meeting with them, in Camp Hill, Pa.
MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS George Scott, the Democratic candidate for Congress in a Republican-leaning seat in conservati­ve central Pennsylvan­ia, listens to volunteer canvassers while meeting with them, in Camp Hill, Pa.

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