The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Candidates

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ing for Planned Parenthood and supports a “heartbeat bill” that would ban abortion after the detection of a fetal heartbeat, usually at around six weeks of pregnancy.

Wolf has opposed any effort to curtail abortion rights or cut off state funds from Planned Parenthood. The death penalty Wagner supports the death penalty. He said he will sign death warrants and will work to expand the applicatio­n of the death penalty.

As governor, Wolf is granting reprieves — not commutatio­ns — when inmates are scheduled for execution, creating an effective moratorium on the death penalty. Wolf has said he has concerns about a “flawed system that has been proven to be an endless cycle of court proceeding­s as well as ineffectiv­e, unjust, and expensive.” He believes the moratorium should continue until the Legislatur­e addresses problems identified in a June report by the Joint State Government Commission. Gun violence Wagner opposes more restrictio­ns on gun ownership or gun sales. He also opposes an expansion of background checks on gun purchases.

Wolf supports a ban on the sale of assault weapons and bump stocks and an expansion of background checks to cover private sales of shotguns, sporting rifles and semi-automatic rifles.

Wagner voted for legislatio­n to force people with a domestic violence conviction or restrainin­g order against them to more quickly forfeit their firearms, and Wolf signed it earlier this month. Labor unions Wagner supports legislatio­n to prohibit all labor unions from collecting dues from employees who refuse to join the union or pay union dues or fees as a condition of employment. Wolf opposes the legislatio­n. Medicaid Wagner said he will keep Pennsylvan­ia’s 4-year-old expansion of Medicaid’s income guidelines, but he said he would seek a federal waiver to institute a work requiremen­t for ablebodied adults, and possibly seek other changes.

Wolf supports Medicaid’s expansion and last year vetoed legislatio­n to impose work or job search requiremen­ts. A federal judge has blocked Kentucky from enforcing a Medicaid work requiremen­t, and a similar court challenge over Arkansas’ requiremen­t is pending. The minimum wage Wagner said he would support raising it to around $9.50 or $9.75 an hour, up from the current federal minimum of $7.25. His campaign said he wants to make the change in steps, similar to the way legislatio­n he backed in the Senate would have raised the minimum wage to $8.75 an hour in three 50-cent increments over three years. Wolf last year proposed raising the minimum wage to $12 an hour immediatel­y, and tying future increases to inflation. Pensions Wagner supports a move to a full 401(k)-style benefit for Pennsylvan­ia’s two major public employee pension systems; in 2015, he voted for legislatio­n to combine a 401(k)-style defined-contributi­on plan and a “cash-balance” plan that, it was estimated, would have reduced pension debt payments by $11 billion over about 30 years.

Wolf vetoed that bill, saying it would have unfairly forced newly hired state government and public school employees to help pay down the cost of existing pensions. Wolf last year signed a hybrid pension law that is projected to have very little effect on debt payments over the next three decades. Property taxes Wagner supports the eliminatio­n of school property taxes, under legislatio­n that theoretica­lly would make up for more than $13 billion in disappeari­ng school property tax revenue by raising the rates of Pennsylvan­ia’s personal income tax and state sales tax, and expanding the base of the sales tax.

Wolf said he stands by a $3.2 billion plan he floated in 2015, his first year as governor, to be financed by increases in personal income and state sales taxes. Under Wolf’s plan, most of the money — just over $2 billion — would go to districts in the bottom half of average income. The plan is part of Wolf’s goal of raising the state’s share of education funding to 50 percent, up from nearly 38 percent in 2016-17, according to the latest federal data. That proposal went nowhere in the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e. Public schools Wagner supports legislatio­n to create taxpayerfu­nded “education savings accounts” that divert state aid for public schools into accounts that parents can use for tuition at private or parochial schools. Wolf opposes the bill.

Wagner said in March he was not inclined to devote more money to public schools, but later said he would support a $1 billion injection of cash into public schools in his first year as governor. He said he can find the necessary cash by privatizin­g the sale of wine and alcohol in Pennsylvan­ia, ending ineffectiv­e tax credits and finding unspecifie­d efficienci­es in state government.

Wolf said he will continue to push for more funding for public schools to ensure every student gets a good education, although he has not outlined specific amounts. In his first term, lawmakers approved an additional $1 billion in education aid, about half of what Wolf had originally sought over the four years. Redistrict­ing Wolf supports the creation of a new commission to draw congressio­nal and legislativ­e district boundaries. Wagner supports the current system in which state lawmakers draw legislativ­e and congressio­nal districts. Taxes and budgeting Wagner said he can reduce the cost of state government — whose operating budget is $32.7 billion — by $1.5 billion to $4 billion, although he hasn’t said how. Wagner said he opposes tax increases, including on the Marcellus Shale natural gas industry.

Wolf said he does not envision needing a budgetbala­ncing tax increase in a second term but will continue to pursue a severance tax on Marcellus Shale natural gas production. The Legislatur­e has blocked that tax and the majority of the billions of dollars in other tax increases Wolf had sought to wipe out a persistent deficit and boost public school aid.

Both Wagner and Wolf want to cut Pennsylvan­ia’s 9.99 percent corporate net income tax rate. Wagner said he wants to lower it to the same rate as Pennsylvan­ia’s personal income tax, 3.07 percent.

Wolf last year proposed lowering the rate in steps to 6.49 percent in 2022, and also restructur­ing how it is applied to stop businesses based in other states from avoiding the tax on their Pennsylvan­ia operations. Republican lawmakers blocked the proposal. Tax returns Wagner has declined to release his tax return. Wolf made his two-page 1040 form public and allowed The Associated Press to review the rest of his 102-page federal tax return.

Follow Marc Levy on Twitter at www.twitter. com/timelywrit­er.

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