The Morning Call (Sunday)

Mastriano posed in Confederat­e uniform for faculty photo

- By Chris Brennan

State Sen. Doug Mastriano, the Republican nominee for governor in Pennsylvan­ia, appeared during his time on the faculty of the Army War College in an official photograph while wearing a Civil War Confederat­e Army uniform.

That photograph, first reported Friday night by Reuters, was recently removed from the college’s campus in Carlisle after the news service asked about it.

Mastriano’s campaign did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. He rarely engages with reporters covering his campaign.

Jenna Ellis, a senior legal adviser to Mastriano’s campaigned, mocked the brewing controvers­y on Twitter. Mastriano retweeted her comment.

“Media MELT DOWN that Mastriano apparently once posed as a civil war historical figure for a photo. And? He has a Ph.D in HISTORY. The left wants to erase history. Doug Mastriano wants us to learn from it,” Ellis tweeted.

Mastriano, who won a nine-candidate bruising primary in May, has attempted to moderate his firebrand conservati­ve tone for November’s general election. But he has a long digital and paper trail of making controvers­ial statements that come back to haunt his campaign.

State Attorney General Josh Shapiro, the Democratic nominee for governor, quickly circulated the Reuters story, noting it came “after Mastriano has spent weeks refusing to condemn the same antisemite­s and white nationalis­ts he paid thousands of dollar to recruit on Gab — just the latest example of his campaign’s close associatio­n with violent extremists.”

Mastriano paid the controvers­ial social media site Gab $5,000 for consulting in April and praised the site’s founder, Andrew Torba, for his efforts. Mastriano later deleted his profile from the site and said Torba, a Christian Nationalis­t known for antisemiti­c remarks, did not speak for his campaign.

Mastriano served for three decades in the U.S. Army, retiring in 2017 as a colonel after serving in Europe, Iraq, and Afghanista­n.

Reuters reported that Army War College faculty from the Department of Military Strategy, Plans, and Operations were given the option to wear historical military garb in the 20132014 faculty portrait.

Most of the 19 men and two women in the photograph wore contempora­ry military uniforms or civilian clothes. Mastriano wore the distinctiv­e gray uniform of the Confederat­e Army, with a pouch for ammunition, while holding what appears to be a rifled musket.

The Army War College told Reuters a team in 2020 reviewed all of the art, photograph­s, and other images on campus but did not notice that Mastriano was wearing Confederat­e garb and left the portrait in place with other faculty photos until this week.

“This faculty photo did not get the team’s attention; the photo has since been removed because it does not meet AWC values,” the college said in a statement.

Mastriano represents a central Pennsylvan­ia Senate district that includes Gettysburg, the location of the Civil War’s bloodiest battle, a decisive Union Army win over the Confederat­e Army in 1863. Pennsylvan­ia was in the Union during the war.

Mastriano introduced legislatio­n in 2020 that would have required the state Attorney General’s Office to prioritize the prosecutio­n of vandalism of historical monuments, at a time when statues and monuments celebratin­g the Confederac­y across the country were being removed from public spaces and vandalized.

That bill, which did not advance out of committee, would have withheld state funding from cities that did not protect monuments from vandalism and stiffened penalties for vandals in such cases.

 ?? NEWS SERVICE TRIBUNE ?? Doug Mastriano celebrates his victory in the Republican primary for governor in Chambersbu­rg.
NEWS SERVICE TRIBUNE Doug Mastriano celebrates his victory in the Republican primary for governor in Chambersbu­rg.

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