The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Winning a ‘row office’ is a chance for GOP to pressure Wolf

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » Gov. Tom Wolf is raising money to help fellow Democrats in their quest to retake Pennsylvan­ia’s state House or Senate majorities, but there are other races that may have a bigger impact on his fortunes in his last two years in office.

The three statewide contests for attorney general, auditor general and treasurer elect people to fouryear terms who can change how a governor manages the state’s finances, pursues agendas outside of the Legislatur­e and claims the mantle of a capable operator of government.

“They can have an influence,” former Gov. Tom Corbett said in an interview.

A political spokespers­on for Wolf said the Democrat gave $10,000 in campaign donations to each of his fellow Democrats running for a so-called row office this year, a tiny sum compared with his giving to Democrats seeking seats in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

A Democratic takeover of even one chamber of the Legislatur­e is a long-shot. Republican­s, rather, may have a better shot at picking off a row office.

For Republican­s, it’s an avenue they haven’t had in a long time. The last time Pennsylvan­ia elected a Republican as attorney general, it was 2008; as treasurer, 2000; and as auditor general, 1992.

The row officers have built-in watchdog duties that can gum up a governor’s agenda.

For instance, a treasurer or auditor general must approve a general obligation bond issue, while both must approve a tax-anticipati­on note. Treasurers can block payments they see as illegal. Attorneys general must ensure all executive branch contracts are legal and can carry a governor’s policy agenda in the courts in clashes with lawmakers or the White House.

They also can use their statewide platform to amplify an opposition message.

“You will have a bully pulpit on certain issues that may not fall within the purview of your job descriptio­n,” said Rob Gleason, the former chairman of the state Republican Party.

In the view of Republican­s, Wolf has benefitted from having Democrats in all three jobs since he took office in 2015, helping his agenda in budget battles or policy battles during the coronaviru­s with lawmakers. Wolf’s relationsh­ips with the row officers have

been smooth sailing compared with his conflicts with the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

“It would be nice to have someone who’s going to be a watchdog, and those three positions put themselves out as watchdogs,” said state Rep. Greg Rothman, R-Cumberland.

Of course, row officers don’t have to be of the opposite party to get under a governor’s skin, especially when they want to run for higher office.

Former Gov. Ed Rendell, a Democrat, recalled feeling burned by how some audits were rolled out by then-Auditor General Jack Wagner, a Democrat who went on to run for governor in 2010, before losing in a crowded primary. But he got along

with Corbett, the Republican state attorney general who succeeded Rendell as governor.

As governor, Corbett had high-profile scrapes with then-Attorney General KathleenKa­ne, aDemocrat who in 2013 rejected one of Corbett’s ballyhooed efforts at privatizat­ion, a contract to hire the operator of British national lottery tomanage the Pennsylvan­ia Lottery.

Meanwhile, Auditor General Eugene DePasquale promised an audit of the contract terms, and thenTreasu­rer Rob McCord warned that he might not pay the operator unless he was satisfied that the company’s plans to expand the scope of lottery gambling were allowed by law.

Later that year, Kane refused to defend Pennsylvan­ia’s

1996 law banning same-sex marriage against a newly filed federal lawsuit, saying the lawwas unconstitu­tional. That forced Corbett’s office to mount a defense of a law that was losing political and legal favor just as he was gearing up to run for reelection.

Then, amid Corbett’s reelection run, DePasquale andMcCord issued a warning about the state’s deteriorat­ing finances, drawing accusation­s from Republican­s that they were engaged in political theater.

Corbett sees Kane’s treatment of him as the hallmarks of someone aiming for higher office — “She was looking for a future,” he said — but recalls no hard feelings toward DePasquale and McCord.

DePasquale is the only currently serving row officer who dealt with both Corbett and Wolf as governors, and insists he treated both men the same, regardless of party. He never, he said, blunted an audit to benefit Wolf.

“I take enormous pride in being hard on both Tom

Corbett and Tom Wolf,” said DePasquale, who is now running for Congress against four-term U.S. Rep. Scott Perry in the Harrisburg-area 10th District.

If DePasquale never got under Corbett’s skin, then he definitely got under the skin ofWolf administra­tion officials, perhaps most recently when, in December, Wolf’s secretary of state, Kathy Boockvar, accused him of issuing a misleading estimate of possibly inaccurate voter records.

That didn’t stop Wolf from holding a fundraiser for DePasquale’s congressio­nal run, drawing complaints from Republican­s.

Of course, the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e had pushed through a 9% cut in DePasquale’s official budget last year — after they knew he would challenge Perry.

“The thing I find fascinatin­g about the criticism,” DePasquale said, “is a lot of people who are criticizin­g me now were extolling my virtues before I ran for Congress.”

 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE AP ?? In this file photo from Jan. 31, 2018, Nina Ahmad, a former Philadelph­ia city official, speaks with members of the media in Philadelph­ia. Democrat Ahmad is running against Republican Tim DeFoor for the open auditor general’s seat.
MATT ROURKE - THE AP In this file photo from Jan. 31, 2018, Nina Ahmad, a former Philadelph­ia city official, speaks with members of the media in Philadelph­ia. Democrat Ahmad is running against Republican Tim DeFoor for the open auditor general’s seat.
 ?? JOE HERMITT/HARRISBURG PATRIOTNEW­S VIA AP ?? In this photo from May of 2018, Timothy DeFoor, Dauphin County Controller, poses for a portrait in a studio in Harrisburg, Pa. Republican DeFoor is running against Democrat Nina Ahmad for the open auditor general’s seat.
JOE HERMITT/HARRISBURG PATRIOTNEW­S VIA AP In this photo from May of 2018, Timothy DeFoor, Dauphin County Controller, poses for a portrait in a studio in Harrisburg, Pa. Republican DeFoor is running against Democrat Nina Ahmad for the open auditor general’s seat.
 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE AP ?? In this Nov. 26, 2019, file photo, Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro speaks at Muhlenberg High School in Reading, Pa. Democrat Shapiro is being challenged by Republican Heather Heidelbaug­h for the office.
MATT ROURKE - THE AP In this Nov. 26, 2019, file photo, Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro speaks at Muhlenberg High School in Reading, Pa. Democrat Shapiro is being challenged by Republican Heather Heidelbaug­h for the office.
 ?? MATT ROURKE - THE AP ?? In this Jan. 15, 2019 file photo, treasurer of Pennsylvan­ia Joe Torsella is shown at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. Torsella is facing Republican Stacy Garrity in the Nov. third election.
MATT ROURKE - THE AP In this Jan. 15, 2019 file photo, treasurer of Pennsylvan­ia Joe Torsella is shown at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa. Torsella is facing Republican Stacy Garrity in the Nov. third election.

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