The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Real estate investor enters Pa.’s U.S. Senate race

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » A new face has joined the crowd vying to challenge Democratic U.S. Sen. Bob Casey in 2018.

Real estate investor Jeffrey Bartos announced Monday that he will seek the Republican Party nomination to challenge Casey, although Bartos like every other announced challenger to Casey thus far is a political unknown.

Casey, the 56-year-old son of a late former governor, is one of Pennsylvan­ia’s best-known politician­s and has emerged as a fierce critic of President Donald Trump. He plans to seek a third six-year term in next year’s election in a state where Democrats maintain a 4-3 ratio registrati­on edge over Republican­s.

One advantage Bartos has over the rest of the existing GOP field is the ability to make a substantia­l campaign donation to himself. He also has connection­s to southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia’s business community, influentia­l GOP campaign donors and political elite, having served on the board of a political action committee chaired by Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican national committeem­an, Bob Asher.

In a brief interview Monday, Bartos characteri­zed Casey as being out of touch with average Pennsylvan­ians after 10 years in the Senate.

“Bob Casey’s left Pennsylvan­ia behind,” Bartos said. “He’s become Washington.”

The Democratic Party released a statement calling Bartos the candidate of the “party of Trump” and suggesting that Bartos has failed at both politics and real estate.

Bartos, 44, of Montgomery County, has never run for office, although he flirted with a run for U.S. House in last year’s election. He made the formal announceme­nt of his candidacy by releasing a 90-second video that starts with showing himself driving around Reading and blaming its urban decay on Casey while Washington, D.C., booms. The video appears to use a stock image from China to depict a constructi­on crane in Washington.

Those already announcing their candidacy or filing paperwork with the Federal Election Commission include Republican state Reps. Rick Saccone and Jim Christiana, Republican Berwick borough councilman Andrew Shecktor and Libertaria­n Dale Kerns of suburban Philadelph­ia.

Meanwhile, members of Congress and top state lawmakers have quietly gauged their chances against Casey in private talks with fundraiser­s and party leaders.

Bartos is pitching himself as a conservati­ve and an outsider. He is opposed to abortion rights and would oppose efforts to broaden background checks on firearms, such as legislatio­n backed by Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican U.S. Pat Toomey.

He is also allying himself with Trump, saying the new Republican president has gotten off to an “outstandin­g start” on the economy, energy policy and dealings in the Middle East and with foreign powers.

Bartos supports the constructi­on of a U.S.-Mexico border wall proposed by Trump and, like Toomey, would take a harder line on immigratio­n, rejecting the bipartisan compromise that passed the Senate in 2013.

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