The Morning Call

Barletta camp upset with Trump’s snub

But ex-president claims candidate ‘ran a bad race’ for Senate in 2018

- By Michael P. Buffer

WILKES-BARRE TOWNSHIP — Republican candidate for governor Lou Barletta and his supporters are a little ticked off that former President Donald Trump endorsed Doug Mastriano on Saturday in the Republican race.

That was clear at Barletta’s campaign rally Monday night at the Wilkes-Barre Township firehall. Voters go to the polls Tuesday.

“There is no denying there was a big endorsemen­t by President Trump, and I’m going to say this loud and clear,” Barletta said to a crowd of more than 200. “President Trump, you are dead wrong, and I’m going to prove it on Tuesday.”

But on Tuesday, Trump said he passed over Barletta because he “ran a very bad race” for the U.S. Senate in 2018.

Trump, calling in to conservati­ve talk show host Chris Stigall’s program on AM-990 The Answer, said he likes Barletta but endorsed Mastriano because he has been “very loyal to election integrity.” Trump, in the interview, repeated his lies about the 2020 presidenti­al election being “stolen” in Pennsylvan­ia, which Mastriano has

pushed as well.

Trump backed Barletta in the 2018 race that he lost by 13 points to U.S. Sen. Bob Casey.

“He was a little missing in action,” Trump said. “He did not run a good race. And he got beaten pretty badly.”

Thomas Marino, a former congressma­n from Lycoming County, spoke at the Barletta rally Monday.

“I’m incredibly disappoint­ed and disgusted with Trump, and

actually hurt,” former U.S. Rep. Tom Marino said. “He didn’t even have the decency to call Lou and tell him he was endorsing someone else . ... Fate is a funny thing, and we have a big surprise for him.”

Barletta, a Hazleton resident and the city’s former mayor, embraced Marino after he spoke. Trump referred to Barletta and Marino as “Thunder and Lightning” for their loyal support when they served in Congress and during Trump’s 2016 campaign for president.

“Where in the hell is the loyalty?” Marino asked Saturday at a Barletta event in Williamspo­rt, referring to Trump endorsing Mastriano, a state senator from Franklin County.

Before Monday’s rally, Barletta talked to reporters.

“I think the president is wrong,” Barletta said. “Everyone knows, you know, I was one of the first to endorse him, along with Tom. Co-chaired his campaign. Was on his transition team. Gave up a safe congressio­nal seat because the president asked. I think the president was wrong on this, and I’m going to prove it to him on Tuesday.”

Barletta lost his congressio­nal seat because he ran for U.S. Senate in 2018 and lost to U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, a Democrat from Scranton.

State Sen. Lisa Baker spoke at Monday’s rally and referenced a Barletta story about his inability to hit a curveball as a baseball player.

“Lou Barletta got thrown the Trump curveball,” she said. “But what did he do? He’s still in the batter’s box. It’s the bottom of the ninth. We can bring this home. He can round the bases and drive it over the fence with your help.”

Nine Republican­s are on the primary ballot in the governor’s race. Two of them — Melissa Hart, a former congresswo­man from Allegheny County, and state Sen. Jake Corman of Centre County — ended their campaigns last week to back Barletta, and both spoke at

Monday’s rally.

Lynette Villano, a longtime Republican committeew­oman from West Pittston, was there to support Barletta. She supported Trump during the 2016 primary campaign and was elected as a Trump delegate.

“Well I wasn’t happy about it of course. Yeah, none of us were,” she said, referring to the Mastriano endorsemen­t. “I’ve been getting phone calls ever since. But Trump is Trump. He’s going to do what he’s going to do, and nobody’s going to talk him into doing anything different. But [Tuesday] night, he’s going to be there saying ‘I’m so happy Lou Barletta won.’ ”

Mastriano campaigned in Wilkes-Barre on Friday at Kirby Park. While Mastriano has been surging in campaign polls in recent weeks, Barletta has been promoting dozens of endorsemen­ts from state politician­s.

“I think it’s an effort by the swamp to strike back,” Mastriano said Friday of Barletta’s endorsemen­ts. “Sadly, there’s a propensity for politics in Pennsylvan­ia where there is an elite ruling class of, I don’t know, folks that do this for living, that have been in politics for most of their adult life, that they want to pick a candidate that’s maybe predictabl­e, reliable, malleable.”

 ?? TOM GRALISH/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Lou Barletta was one of Donald Trump’s earliest supporters, but the former president endorsed Doug Mastriano on Saturday in the Republican race for governor.
TOM GRALISH/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Lou Barletta was one of Donald Trump’s earliest supporters, but the former president endorsed Doug Mastriano on Saturday in the Republican race for governor.

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