The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

FOUR MORE YEARS

Wolf sworn in to second term as governor of commonweal­th

- By Mark Scolforo and Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> Gov. Tom Wolf kicked off his second term Tuesday with a call for Pennsylvan­ians to work together to build a stronger, fairer and more prosperous future, and said progress in his first term is proof the state can overcome its challenges.

Wolf, 70, returns for a second term battle-tested and perhaps more pragmatic than the politician who waged protracted budget fights before regaining voters’ confidence and sweeping to an easy re-election win in November.

To a great degree, Wolf pronounced his first term a success after delivering an inaugural address four years ago in which he called Pennsylvan­ia a state at a “crossroads” with rickety finances, stagnant wages and a shrinking middle class where voters were cynical about government.

“My fellow Pennsylvan­ians, we’ve gone from a commonweal­th at a crossroads to a commonweal­th on a comeback,” Wolf said Tuesday in his 16-minute inaugural address to a crowd of hundreds in near-freezing temperatur­es outside the Capitol’s East Wing.

The Democrat, no longer the outsider who spent $10 million of his own money in winning his first run for the governor’s office, still faces substantia­l Republican majorities in the Legis-

lature that have proven hostile to large elements of his agenda.

But the theme of a divided government played neatly into Wolf’s remarks as he contended that working across the aisle shows the state is meeting challenges he cited four years ago.

On Tuesday, Wolf contended that divided government is working — pre-kindergart­en enrollment, high school graduation and employment are up, while the prison population, crime and the uninsured rate are down — and he urged Pennsylvan­ians to help renew faith in the state’s future.

“I ask you to choose hope over hopelessne­ss, empathy over apathy,” Wolf said in his inaugural address. “I ask you to choose action over passivity. I ask you to take the future of our commonweal­th into your own hands and help lead us forward.”

Still, the election left him with more Democratic allies in the Legislatur­e than before, and he seems happy with his new lieutenant governor, John Fetterman, after a first term spent barely speaking with outgoing Lt. Gov. Mike Stack.

Fetterman, 49, was sworn in about two hours before Wolf, in the Senate chambers. A somber Fetterman wore a black suit and tie, a contrast to the sleeveless work shirts, cargo shorts and boots the 6-foot-8, bald and goateed Fetterman was accustomed to wearing as mayor of the down-on-its-luck steel town of Braddock, near Pittsburgh.

Chief Justice Thomas Saylor of the state Supreme Court administer­ed Wolf’s oath of office, using a 19th century Bible from Wolf’s family.

During his remarks, Wolf said his toughest day in office during his first term was Oct. 27, when a gunman killed 11 people at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh.

A survivor of that attack, Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, delivered an invocation before Wolf’s swearing-in.

Myers, who said he has stopped using the word “hate” in the wake of the attack, asked that God grant Wolf “the recognitio­n that the vast majority of people are good people, and that their goodness will always overcome others who use the h-word in speech and deed.”

Wolf on Tuesday gave no insight into his second-term initiative­s, although he previously has said he plans to push for policies to fight climate change, improve public education, fix inequities in Pennsylvan­ia’s criminal justice system and make voting easier and more secure.

From all appearance­s, Wolf has emerged from his first term with a more realistic outlook about what is politicall­y possible. In his first year, he fought — and lost — a record nine-month budget stalemate over his proposal for a multibilli­ondollar tax increase.

But Wolf has since emphasized the benefits of fiscal austerity, restoring trust in government, and achieving bipartisan agreement.

Since that first budget fight, Wolf indeed changed, said Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, RJefferson.

“I have found him to certainly always reach over, always have a conversati­on, always listen and have an understand­ing,” Scarnati said in an interview Tuesday.

Marcus Williams, a retired boilermake­r, made the two-hour drive from Philadelph­ia with his exwife to sit on the cold, metal stands to support Wolf, who he called a “level-headed” man who can broker compromise­s to satisfy a politicall­y moderate American majority.

The mild-mannered Wolf spent most of his adulthood running a family building supply company in York County and was prominent in civic affairs in York. He was a longtime donor to Democratic political causes and served as then-Gov. Ed Rendell’s revenue secretary during 2007-08.

Wolf attended Dartmouth College before earning a doctorate in political science from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology.

Fetterman, 49, made his name as Braddock’s mayor and became a minor media darling for his efforts to help revive it. Fetterman beat Stack in the Democratic primary last year and was elected with Wolf in November.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf, accompanie­d by his wife Frances, takes the Oath of Office as he is sworn in for his second term Tuesday at the state Capitol in Harrisburg.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf, accompanie­d by his wife Frances, takes the Oath of Office as he is sworn in for his second term Tuesday at the state Capitol in Harrisburg.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? John Fetterman is sworn in as Pennsylvan­ia’s lieutenant governor by Superior Court Judge Judge Deborah Kunselman on Tuesday at the state Capitol in Harrisburg.
ASSOCIATED PRESS John Fetterman is sworn in as Pennsylvan­ia’s lieutenant governor by Superior Court Judge Judge Deborah Kunselman on Tuesday at the state Capitol in Harrisburg.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf speaks after he was sworn in for his second term Tuesday at the state Capitol in Harrisburg.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf speaks after he was sworn in for his second term Tuesday at the state Capitol in Harrisburg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States