The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Another lawmaker joins GOP field for Pa. governor

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » A Republican state senator from southcentr­al Pennsylvan­ia said Saturday that he will run for governor, adding to the GOP’s double-digits-deep primary field aiming to take on the presumed Democratic nominee, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro, in next year’s election.

Sen. Scott Martin, of Lancaster County, announced it in a video on his campaign website and Facebook page. He becomes the second Republican state senator in a field that is roughly a dozen deep and likely to grow.

Martin, 49, a former county commission­er, was first elected in 2016, and is the Senate’s Education Committee chair.

In his video messages, he leans heavily on his experience as a county commission­er — the challenges of balancing budgets and improving services — and working to become successful as a wrestler and football player in high school and college.

He also attacks what he says are holding Pennsylvan­ians back: government insiders, special interests, profit-hungry businesses, media, tech companies, health care costs and schools that “ignore parents and fail to meet the needs of kids year after year.”

“Getting Pennsylvan­ia back on the right path means focusing on people and the things that make their lives better, not grandiose plans that sound good but never happen,” Martin said. “That’s why I’m running for governor.”

Martin is relatively unknown statewide. However, he has the advantage of being from a growing county that has the fourth-most registered Republican­s in the state.

Gov. Tom Wolf, a secondterm Democrat, is constituti­onally restricted from serving a third term. He has endorsed Shapiro, who is serving his second term as the state’s elected attorney general.

In the Senate, Martin has provided a reliable vote for Republican leadership on fiscal matters, pandemic-related legislatio­n and hot-button issues like abortion, guns and elections.

The governor’s race, however, could turn on national issues.

Speaking with reporters Saturday, Martin hedged on questions about two issues that have been prominent with Republican primary voters: repealing mail-in voting and banning abortion.

Martin said there isn’t enough support in the Legislatur­e to repeal the state’s expansive mail-in voting law that he supported in 2019. The law has lost favor with Republican­s since former President Donald Trump began in early 2020 baselessly attacking mail-in voting as rife with fraud.

On abortion, Martin has backed Republican efforts to add restrictio­ns, since vetoed by Wolf.

But those bills came before the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority signaled that they would allow states to ban abortion much earlier in pregnancy and or even overturn the nationwide right that has existed for nearly 50 years.

Asked about it, Martin said he would sign “prolife legislatio­n,” but would not say exactly how far he might go toward restrictin­g or banning the practice in Pennsylvan­ia.

“It won’t be something that can be done by a governor alone, and you’d have to obviously work with the General Assembly and what we can get done in the General Assembly,” Martin said.

Martin enters the race at a time when advocates for taxpayer funding of private, parochial and charter schools are dominant forces in underwriti­ng Republican campaigns.

As Education Committee chair, Martin introduced legislatio­n opposed by school boards and teachers’ unions that seeks to make it easier to open charter schools and accelerate state taxpayer subsidies for private and parochial schools by hundreds of millions of dollars in the coming years.

Asked what he has done for public schools as Education Committee chair, Martin said he has worked with families during the pandemic on issues related to in-person instructio­n and masks, and “if the education that they were getting is in the best interest of their kids.”

 ?? SEAN SIMMERS/THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP, FILE ?? Pennsylvan­ia state senator Scott Martin
SEAN SIMMERS/THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP, FILE Pennsylvan­ia state senator Scott Martin

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