The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

As campaign cash rolls in, 2 House races tilt to Democrats

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Money is starting to pour into Pennsylvan­ia’s midterm congressio­nal races and, with the GOP’s control of the U.S. House on the line, ominous signs are surfacing for Republican­s in races that several months ago had been considered even contests.

Republican groups, including the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, have begun airing TV attack ads to protect freshman Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k in suburban Philadelph­ia and to try to oust threeterm Democratic Rep. Matt Cartwright in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, where President Donald Trump did unexpected­ly well in 2016.

But Republican groups are not spending money — yet, anyway — in two closely watched contests: one in suburban Pittsburgh and one in the Allentown area that had been viewed as tossups after May’s primary election.

Pennsylvan­ia, with 18 congressio­nal seats, is a crucial building block in the Democratic effort to wipe out the GOP’s 23-seat House majority, and Democrats have reason to be optimistic about capturing several seats.

Polls are finding that Democratic voters inflamed by Trump are more enthusiast­ic about voting in the Nov. 6 election, and a court-ordered redrawn map of district boundaries is giving them hope in places they had had little before.

“For all those years we had five congresspe­ople out of 18 and that meant that only five districts in Pennsylvan­ia identified Democratic­ally,” Nancy Patton Mills, the state Democratic Party chairwoman, told a party dinner crowd earlier this month. “And now, we have 18 districts and they’re all in play.”

Under the old districts, Republican­s won 13 of Pennsylvan­ia’s 18 seats in three straight elections, but newly drawn suburban seats around Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh, in particular, are within their grasp.

In two open Republican seats in suburban Philadelph­ia, Democrats Chrissy Houlahan and Mary Gay Scanlon, both first-time candidates, are heavy favorites.

In an Allentown-area seat, Democrat Susan Wild and Republican Marty Nothstein are vying for an open seat, and analysts had once viewed the contest as even.

But Wild has a substantia­l cash advantage, and a new Monmouth University poll shows Wild ahead in a close race, even though it said neither candidate is particular­ly well-known.

Nothstein strategist Mark Harris said the campaign is focused on what it can achieve on its own, even if Republican groups have not committed money to the race.

“I’m confident that when people are needed in a close race they’ll be there, but all we can do is focus on getting Marty’s commonsens­e message out there about fixing broken Washington,” Harris said.

In suburban Pittsburgh, newly minted Rep. Conor Lamb is challengin­g threeterm Republican Rep. Keith Rothfus in a quirk of the new court-ordered districts that pits the two incumbents against each other.

Voters in the district gave Trump a slight edge in 2016’s presidenti­al election. But a Monmouth University poll in August found Lamb substantia­lly ahead of Rothfus, likely aided by the $6 million-plus Lamb and Democrats spent to carry him to a narrow, nationally watched victory in a March special election in a solidly Republican district.

Rothfus backers insist he shouldn’t be counted out.

“I think people underestim­ate Keith,” said Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican House Speaker Mike Turzai, who lives in the district. “He’s a very tireless worker and campaigner; he’s well-liked on a personal level.”

The National Republican Congressio­nal Committee postponed a scheduled TV ad buy from September to October. A spokesman, Chris Martin, declined to publicly discuss campaign strategy, but said the NRCC had not reduced the amount of money it reserved to help Rothfus by “one penny.”

In the meantime, both men avoid mentioning Trump in their TV ads. Rothfus is airing an attack ad that asks, “Who’s Conor Lamb protecting?”

For his part, Lamb attacks “special interests” in an ad that recounts his special election victory: “It was the longest of long shots, a Marine who had never held office up against the most powerful special interests in the nation . ... Now Conor’s running again and the same outside groups are back with all their money.”

A Pittsburgh-area Democratic campaign consultant, Mike Mikus, said he expects a solid victory by Lamb, buoyed by Democratic voters in small cities along the Ohio River, suburban Republican­s who are repulsed by Trump and disaffecte­d Democrats who backed Trump over Hillary Clinton.

“If I were the Republican­s,” Mikus said, “I wouldn’t spend a dime here.”

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