The Morning Call

How Congressma­n Fitzpatric­k held his Bucks-based seat

- By Holly Otterbein

Earlier this year, Ed Rendell had doubts about multimilli­onaire philanthro­pist Scott Wallace's campaign for the U.S. House.

Pennsylvan­ia's former Democratic governor believed that Wallace's primary opponent, a Navy veteran and woman, stood a better chance of unseating Republican incumbent Brian Fitzpatric­k in the general election. So Rendell donated to Rachel Reddick and helped raise money for her.

It didn't work. After pouring $2 million of his own into the race, Wallace won the Democratic nomination for Bucks County's First District.

On Tuesday, Fitzpatric­k defied the Democratic tide that swept through most of the Philadelph­ia suburbs, defeating Wallace in a district that Hillary Clinton had carried by two percentage points in 2016. One major reason Fitzpatric­k prevailed, political observers said, is that Democrats chose a weak nominee.

“Mr. Wallace is a good guy, but he was a flawed candidate,” Rendell said.

At the same time, analysts said, Fitzpatric­k distanced himself from President Trump and carved out an identity as a centrist.

“He won in a district where Trump's numbers are probably not all that good,” said John Brabender, a Republican consultant. “Why? Because people saw him as being very independen­t and having accomplish­ments. … They weren't going to penalize him based on their feelings for the president where they saw an exception.”

Wallace's loss helped Republican­s limit Democratic pickups in Pennsylvan­ia to three seats in a year in which they were aiming to capture four or five.

Wallace wasn't available for comment Wednesday. On Tuesday night, after his loss became clear, he said: “I think the voters decided they want to stick with something that feels a little safer and hopefully centrist, and maybe they see some hope there.”

Strikingly, Wallace lost by the same amount — fewer than three percentage points — as George Scott, a Democrat who challenged Republican incumbent Rep. Scott Perry in a central Pennsylvan­ia district President Trump won by nine percentage points.

His defeat also took place a year after Democrats made historic gains in municipal races in Bucks County, and in a district where Trump's approval rating was underwater.

Gov. Wolf and Sen. Bob Casey, both Democrats, won Bucks County by large margins: 18 and 14 percentage points, respective­ly.

Observers pointed to several factors that hurt Wallace's standing among area voters, who have a history of splitting their tickets.

Though he was born in Bucks County, Wallace had until recently lived in Washington and South Africa, making it easy to mark him as a “carpetbagg­er.” He inherited his wealth — his grandfathe­r's seed company was bought by DuPont Co. for $10 billion — and Fitzpatric­k criticized him for lamenting the deluge of “corporate money” in politics while self-funding his own campaign to the tune of at least $8 million.

Wallace reportedly said “f–” in a synagogue, another moment that damaged him in what former Republican Rep. Charlie Dent called a generally “atrocious political environmen­t” for suburban Republican­s.

Advertisem­ents tying Wallace to cop-killer Mumia Abu-Jamal, which some likened to the infamously racist Willie Horton ad, also hurt him, political insiders said.

Yet Rendell said the “most devastatin­g” moment in Wallace's campaign was when audio emerged of him allegedly saying that “dogs are smarter than police officers.” In response, Wallace's team called the clip a “smear” that relied “on 12 seconds of audio from an unidentifi­ed source, time, date, and place.”

“I thought it was an even race until that,” Rendell said.

Political observers said it's also possible that, while Fitzpatric­k distanced himself from Trump, the president's talk of a caravan of Latin American migrants, as well as the nomination hearings for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, energized some GOP voters in his district. Fitzpatric­k's primary opponent, a pro-Trump Republican, received one-third of the vote in the spring.

Wallace sought to tie Fitzpatric­k to Trump, noting that he supported the GOP's tax cuts and voted with Trump 84 percent of the time, according to the website FiveThirty­Eight.

But Fitzpatric­k was able to develop a moderate brand by siding with Democrats on key issues, analysts said: He voted against repealing the Affordable Care Act and opposed Trump's executive order banning citizens of several Muslim-majority countries from entering the U.S.

Fitzpatric­k also won the support of a number of groups that usually ally with Democrats, including powerful labor unions and gun-control organizati­ons, and received the endorsemen­ts of news outlets including the Inquirer. That solidified his image as a centrist, and Phil Glover, district council vice president of the American Federation of Government Employees union, said the group helped get out the vote for the Republican.

Fitzpatric­k's model was similar to the one Sen. Pat Toomey, a Lehigh County Republican, used to win support in the city's moderate suburbs in 2016. The senator, too, highlighte­d his endorsemen­t by gun-control organizati­ons.

The fact that Fitzpatric­k's brother and predecesso­r is former Rep. Mike Fitzpatric­k also provided a boost, observers said. So did at least $8 million that outside pro-Fitzpatric­k groups spent on the race.

Wallace won a smaller percentage of the vote than Clinton did in such areas as Doylestown Township, Middletown Township, and New Britain.

Dave Wasserman, U.S. House editor of the nonpartisa­n elections analyst Cook Political Report, said Wallace was perhaps the “worst” Democratic contender in the election cycle.

Staff writers Laura McCrystal, Nathaniel Lash, and Jonathan Tamari contribute­d to this article.

 ?? TIM TAI/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k talks with supporters after being re-elected at the Bucks County GOP watch party in Doylestown on Tuesday. Fitzpatric­k defeated Democratic challenger Scott Wallace.
TIM TAI/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k talks with supporters after being re-elected at the Bucks County GOP watch party in Doylestown on Tuesday. Fitzpatric­k defeated Democratic challenger Scott Wallace.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States