The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Democrats bore Lamb’s centrism, unified on other core issues

- By MARC LEVY Associated Press

JEFFERSON HILLS, Pa. (AP) — To help explain Tuesday’s stunning special U.S. House election in southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, look to Ed Karloski’s political preference­s for how Democrat Conor Lamb seized the lead for a seat in a Republican stronghold.

Karloski, a steelworke­r and registered Democrat, voted for Republican Donald Trump as someone who appealed to his middle-class sensibilit­ies, although he had no real love for a presidenti­al candidate he saw as the “lesser of two evils.”

Karloski is in the middle on debates over abortion rights and gun rights. He looks for new and different people to change the tone in Washington. As a steelworke­r, Trump’s steel tariffs are important to him and, as a union member, union rights are important.

Lamb checked every box. Republican Rick Saccone checked almost none.

“It’s time to get a younger person in there, somebody who will work with both sides of the aisle and not just be a backstop for Trump,” Karloski, 53, said after voting in this Pittsburgh suburb.

Karloski’s vote showed how Democrats tolerated Lamb’s centrist stances on certain hot-button issues, as well as his move to downplay Trump’s role in the race, while liberals and labor unions rallied around Lamb’s embrace of core party positions on issues such as Social Security and health care.

Lamb, a 33-year-old former federal prosecutor and first-time candidate, held a roughly 600-vote lead out of more than 228,000 cast in a nationally watched election over Saccone, 60, a fourterm state lawmaker who ran as Trump’s “wingman” after compiling one of the most conservati­ve voting records in Pennsylvan­ia’s Legislatur­e.

The Associated Press has not called the race. Lamb has declared victory while Saccone’s campaign has said he has no plans to concede before the counting of a few hundred remaining ballots wraps up Tuesday.

Several months ago, few thought it possible that a Democrat could win this district. Trump thrashed Democrat Hillary Clinton there by nearly 20 percentage points in 2016’s presidenti­al election. Former Rep. Tim Murphy, a pro-union Republican who resigned in a scandal in October, had been re-elected there seven times, always easily, in a district Republican­s drew for him.

On paper, the district might appear Democratic: it has more registered Democrats than Republican­s. That’s a relic of union families tied to the district’s long history of coal mining and steel-making. But southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia began sending Republican­s to the state Capitol and Washington in the past decade or so as bluecollar whites fled the Democratic Party.

In Tuesday’s election, it seemed more like a Democratic district again.

Democratic energy was high: Lamb won 47 of the 50 precincts with the highest percentage turnout in Allegheny, the district’s mostpopulo­us county, according to an Associated Press analysis of the results. In 2016, Trump won 30 of the 50 highest-turnout precincts.

First-time activists fueled by an anti-Trump fervor worked on Lamb’s campaign, knocked on doors for volunteer groups or started a local Democratic Party committee in their neighborho­od.

Democrats seemed unbothered by Lamb’s drift from liberal orthodoxy on the hot-button issue of guns, such as his opposition to an assault weapons ban.

Republican­s even tried to peel away liberal voters on that issue, with a super PAC allied with Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan — the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund — sending mailers to registered Democrats highlighti­ng Lamb’s opposition to more sweeping forms of gun control.

For Carol Marraccini, a retired commercial real estate broker and registered Democrat, gun control is her top issue. She is frightened by gun violence in schools and still voted for Lamb, hoping he will advance a gun-control agenda in Congress.

“I hope that his position will change,” Marraccini said.

It was clear that Democrats nominated a strong candidate: voters liked Lamb’s youth and looks, often calling him “freshfaced” or “refreshing.” Even Republican­s admitted that Lamb’s youth was an asset. Brian Konick, a registered Democrat who voted for Trump in 2016, voted for Lamb on Tuesday, liking his “newer thought, newer blood.”

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