The Morning Call (Sunday)

Shapiro’s win holds lessons

Governor-elect trounced GOP’s Mastriano, received most votes in any gubernator­ial race in Pa. history

- By Katie Meyer and Stephen Caruso

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HARRISBURG — In his successful bid for Pennsylvan­ia governor, Josh Shapiro received more votes than any other gubernator­ial candidate in commonweal­th history.

And he didn’t just get a lot of votes. The attorney general also won by a margin not often seen in an open race — trouncing GOP candidate Doug Mastriano by nearly 15 points, according to unofficial results, and driving down margins in counties some state and national Democrats have written off in recent years.

Now the political world is figuring out what lessons to take from that victory.

Analysts, activists, campaign operatives, supporters and detractors all tend to agree that a few key things sealed the deal for Shapiro: a politicall­y extreme, cash-poor opponent in Mastriano; strong outreach to rural areas Democrats sometimes neglect; and a pragmatic — and at times, flexible — policy message that appealed to voters in populous urban and suburban areas, as well as those in rural communitie­s.

But some observers are also focusing on areas where Shapiro’s results were weaker.

Turnout — which is important for Democrats in vote-rich stronghold­s like big cities — was low in Philadelph­ia relative to other parts of the commonweal­th.

This was especially the case in poorer, heavily Black and Hispanic precincts. And outside Philly, turnout was also relatively weak in smaller cities where lots of Black and Latino people live, such as Allentown, Hazleton and Reading.

The Doug effect

It’s impossible to talk about Shapiro’s victory without talking about his opponent, far-right state Sen. Doug Mastriano of Franklin County.

Mastriano had quickly moved from the fringe of his party to its center before the election, propelled by his commitment to conspiracy theories about widespread 2020 election fraud. By the time he emerged from a bruising primary with little support from mainstream Republican­s, Shapiro had spent his unconteste­d primary raising tens of millions of dollars and building campaign infrastruc­ture across the state.

Mastriano never amassed much of a campaign chest or mainstream following, and it showed in both his limited fundraisin­g and his insular events. Meanwhile, Shapiro broke spending records. This allowed his campaign to run ad after TV ad across the state portraying Mastriano as a dangerous radical and Shapiro as a reasonable consensus-builder.

Mastriano remained totally off the air for most of the race.

In their election post-mortems, Republican­s’ complaints go beyond Mastriano’s campaign decisions. They blame lack of a clear message and little institutio­nal guidance from the state Republican Party for their generally disastrous results, which include losing the state House for the first time since 2010.

While Shapiro was out creating a unifying platform that all Democrats could run under, Mastriano’s refusal to talk to the mainstream press and lack of advertisin­g allowed his opponents to define his campaign to swing voters, said Jeff Coleman, a former state legislator for Armstrong County and current GOP campaign strategist.

Mastriano and his backers argued that grassroots enthusiasm in redder, rural areas would overcome the deficits in more moderate suburbs. But Dean Browning, an unsuccessf­ul GOP candidate for state Senate in the Lehigh Valley, did not see any carryover.

Mastriano “did nothing to counter any of the charges against him,” Browning told Spotlight PA. “I did not see anything in the way of mail. He purported to have a huge grassroots because he got 30,000 signatures to get on the ballot, but I didn’t see them on the ground.”

Meanwhile, Browning and other Republican legislativ­e candidates were hit with “cookie-cutter ads,” he said, connecting the individual candidates to Mastriano’s support for criminaliz­ing abortion, overturnin­g the 2020 election and cutting public education spending.

Those advantages gave Democrats a powerful cudgel against the GOP up and down the ticket. Beyond winning open races, the party also knocked off four GOP incumbents in suburban Philadelph­ia to win a one-vote state House majority — putting Republican­s in the minority for the first time in 12 years.

The loss has led to widespread discontent among legislativ­e Republican­s, all of whom agree that the party needs a legible policy platform and clearer messaging.

“We just assumed ‘Biden’s unpopular, gas prices are high,’ ” said state Rep. Jesse Topper, R-Bedford. “But where was Newt Gingrich’s Contract With America? Where was that with the American people or the commonweal­th of Pennsylvan­ia?”

Topper did not specify what policies he hoped to pursue.

Become a Luzerne County resident (almost)

University of Pittsburgh political analyst Lara Putnam, who already has been combing over available 2022 election data, pointed out a few areas of the state where Shapiro’s results were especially notable.

“Basically Shapiro hung on to all the Biden voters and had unusually large numbers of them actually voting in the midterm elections … and then additional­ly he persuaded some Trump voters,” she said. “So he benefited from both swinging the votes of some number of independen­ts, and he benefited from maintainin­g strong turnout among sometimes-voters, most strongly in upscale suburbs and exurbs.”

Shapiro’s campaign staff, and the local leaders who supported him, attributed some of this success to Mastriano’s unpopulari­ty but argued the campaign’s commitment to travel also played a role. That strategy emerged from failure, they noted.

Among people who work on and with Democratic campaigns, Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, with its firm focus on Pennsylvan­ia’s cities and big suburbs, has become a model of how not to run a race in the state.

Kathy Bozinski, who chairs the Democratic committee in Luzerne County, where Clinton notoriousl­y lost six years ago, said that “to this day … people will shake their heads and say, ‘Hillary Clinton never came here. She didn’t care about us.’ ”

In the opposite corner of the state Democratic state Rep. Pam Snyder of Greene County said of Clinton, “I don’t think she paid enough attention to rural America.”

“The candidates, I think, have woken up to the fact that they can’t hang their hat on Philly and Pittsburgh anymore,” said Jeff Eggleston, a Democratic county commission­er in Warren County, in the northern tier. “There have been too many losses, too many narrow wins.”

Biden increased in-person stops during his 2020 bid for the presidency. And Shapiro’s campaign, organizers said, really took the every-county approach to heart.

“I joked to him, ‘I think you just need to, like, buy a house here already. You’re here once a month,’ “Bozinski said of Shapiro’s visits to Luzerne. “I think it paid off for him.”

Some of Shapiro’s ventures into lessfriend­ly territorie­s were fraught.

Patrick Joyal, who was Shapiro’s deputy political director, spent the early months of Shapiro’s unconteste­d primary talking to people he calls “community validators” — county commission­ers, township supervisor­s, sheriffs and other elected officials. Many were Democrats; some were Republican­s.

In December 2021 the Shapiro campaign tapped some of these allies, such as Butler County Commission­er Kevin Boozel, to ask around and find voters who were open to a conversati­on with Shapiro.

Not all were on board with his candidacy, but 10 people assembled in a hunting club in Butler County in December 2021, Joyal said.

“It was a very frank and honest conversati­on, and there were certain moments where there was outright disagreeme­nt,” Joyal said.

At one point, Shapiro and Boozel tangled with a business owner who opposed COVID19-induced shutdowns. They also clashed with a young mother who did not want to vaccinate her kids.

But Joyal said the conversati­ons were worthwhile.

“I really believe that a bunch of those folks, even if they didn’t vote for the governor-elect, felt respected, felt heard,” he said.

Ditches ‘one-size-fits-all’ in statewide messaging

Among the Shapiro campaign’s many ads were spots calibrated to very specific audiences — like a TV ad run mostly in the Pittsburgh, State College/Johnstown and Scranton media markets highlighti­ng Shapiro’s suit against a contractor for prevailing wage theft, and another, run in similar markets, that focused on Shapiro’s opposition to a proposed change to tipping law the Trump administra­tion pitched.

This approach made sense to county Democratic operatives like Bozinski.

“The Democratic Party is such a big-tent party,” she said. “It’s definitely not a one-size-fits-all message.

“I’ve looked at Luzerne County as an illustrati­on of that. We’ve got some very conservati­ve Democrats [and] some very progressiv­e Democrats here.”

Snyder, who will retire from the state House at the end of this year’s legislativ­e session, has for nearly a decade represente­d a seat in the far southweste­rn corner of Pennsylvan­ia. Her district, like much of that region, has gotten increasing­ly Republican during her tenure — a process she says accelerate­d rapidly with Donald Trump’s 2016 election.

She said Shapiro’s rhetoric mattered as much as his presence. In Snyder’s estimation, the main thing that has turned people in her district off from Democrats is what she sees as a misunderst­anding of the party platform on issues such as energy.

Her district has two coal mines and a good number of natural gas jobs, and Snyder supports their continued operation. But she thinks there’s a broad perception that Democrats want to stop the use of fossil fuels.

On the campaign trail Shapiro talked about transition­ing to renewable energy sources, but he also stressed that he thinks fossil fuels are currently indispensa­ble. He avoided taking a firm position on the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a pledge in which states commit to reducing emissions by requiring fossil fuel power plants to purchase allowances to emit carbon dioxide.

RGGI is one of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s signature energy policies. At a recent news conference on the gubernator­ial transition, Shapiro told reporters he’ll assemble a working group to assess it.

“One of the reasons why

I was so involved in his campaign is because I see [Shapiro] as a Democrat like me: pragmatic,” Snyder said. “You want to come to the center and find solutions. You want to do your job without the obstructio­nists getting in the way.”

One of the campaign’s bigger events in Greene County was hosted in a barn on Snyder’s family farm. People there, she said, seemed “starved” for elected officials to take a personal interest in their problems.

“We packed the place,” she said. “I was so happy because Greene County has become a county where, you know, if you’re able to put 20 Democrats in a room for an event, you’re lucky.”

Snyder’s collaborat­ions with Shapiro aren’t ending with the campaign.

This week, she was named — along with a who’s who of other politician­s and powerful people — to the leadership board of Shapiro’s gubernator­ial transition team.

City problems

Putnam noted the only areas where Shapiro consistent­ly did not see extremely impressive turnout numbers relative to previous elections were “the most economical­ly marginal, heavily minority” neighborho­ods in Pittsburgh and Philadelph­ia, as well as in some smaller cities.

This election was not a presidenti­al one, she noted, so some turnout decline is expected.

“But that decline was much sharper in urban core areas, including in urban core areas where 2018 had seen strong turnout,” Putnam said.

This does not mean cities had terrible turnout.

In Philadelph­ia, for instance, overall 2022 turnout was lower than in 2018 but higher than any other midterm in recent history. But turnout in these areas dropped more from 2020 than in other parts of the commonweal­th, i.e. it was lower relative to most of the state — an issue, Putnam said, that seems to be larger than any one campaign.

“The same pattern basically appeared nationwide this year in disadvanta­ged urban core areas and heavily African American areas,” she said.

It’s always difficult to take specific lessons from broad turnout trends, but Putnam pointed out one more data point she thinks sheds light on Shapiro’s relatively weak showing in poor urban areas: comparison with Lt. Gov. John Fetterman’s successful campaign for U.S. Senate.

Shapiro achieved better margins than Fetterman across most of the state — which Putnam mostly attributes to the fact that Fetterman had a relatively more formidable opponent in Dr. Mehmet Oz. But repeatedly in poor, heavily Black and Latino urban neighborho­ods, Fetterman’s results were much closer to Shapiro’s — i.e., he did comparativ­ely better in those areas.

Putnam did not have a firm answer as to why, but she said the reason could indicate what messaging works in these areas.

“Maybe people should start thinking, for instance, that being associated with criminal justice reform, legalizati­on of marijuana, clemency, critique of the carceral system — maybe that’s a good thing for Democrats in places where folks haven’t been turning out to vote recently,” she said.

On the ground, canvassers said they repeatedly encountere­d this kind of attitude in relatively poor, urban neighborho­ods.

The union Unite Here, which primarily represents hotel, food service and airport workers, knocked on over 980,000 doors in Pennsylvan­ia this year for Fetterman and Shapiro, which made it the biggest door-todoor effort on their behalf in the commonweal­th.

They worked primarily in Philadelph­ia and its immediate suburbs but also in Reading, and focused on precisely the kinds of voters Shapiro struggled to attract: people who were poorer, and less likely to vote. Their strategy included offering job training and connection­s at the door, noted Rosslyn Wuchinich, who is a president of Unite Here Local 274 and served as campaign director for the effort.

Tim Freeman, a Philadelph­ia-based hotel worker who serves as a steward and worked as a 2022 organizer, said people he spoke to at the door often didn’t know it was an election year, or didn’t realize Fetterman and Shapiro were both Democrats. And a good number, he said, were burned out on voting entirely.

“A lot of people were saying that they really didn’t care for voting because they didn’t see things change,” Freeman said.

But there were a couple strategies he found effective. People really responded to a reminder that abortion could be restricted and that Mastriano supported those restrictio­ns. Freeman talked frequently about Shapiro’s pledges to fund public education.

But one of the main strategies he used didn’t have much to do with the candidates at all — it had to do with him, the messenger.

Freeman was shot in the leg in 2019 — a case of “wrong place at the wrong time,” he said. That’s a fear and reality that people respond to and it gave him credibilit­y, he said.

“By using them things and letting them know what’s at stake, like with the gun control laws … people open up and really understand the importance of getting out there,” he said, adding that in-person pitches always beat TV ads.

“Because we share our stories. We want to hear their stories as well.”

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 ?? HEATHER KHALIFA/ PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Gov.-elect Josh Shapiro got a record-setting number of votes.
HEATHER KHALIFA/ PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Gov.-elect Josh Shapiro got a record-setting number of votes.
 ?? ??
 ?? AMANDA BERG/FOR SPOTLIGHT PA ?? Far-right state Sen. Doug Mastriano of Franklin County never amassed much of a campaign chest or mainstream following in the general election for governor against Josh Shapiro.
AMANDA BERG/FOR SPOTLIGHT PA Far-right state Sen. Doug Mastriano of Franklin County never amassed much of a campaign chest or mainstream following in the general election for governor against Josh Shapiro.
 ?? MATT SMITH/FOR SPOTLIGHT PA ?? Voters are seen at Lackawanna Community College in Hazleton, Luzerne County on Election Day.
MATT SMITH/FOR SPOTLIGHT PA Voters are seen at Lackawanna Community College in Hazleton, Luzerne County on Election Day.

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