The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Blessing or curse? Pa. GOP ponders large field of candidates

- Lowman Henry Lowman S. Henry is Chairman & CEO of the Lincoln Institute and host of the weekly American Radio Journal and Lincoln Radio Journal. His e-mail address is lhenry@ lincolnins­titute.org.

On a frigid Saturday in January, as most Pennsylvan­ians settled in for a long Martin Luther King

Day weekend, few were thinking of a primary election currently scheduled for a warmer day in May. But the official process of selecting the next governor of Pennsylvan­ia got underway at a suburban Harrisburg hotel where Republican­s began vetting a field of 16 candidates.

It will take some time, likely until Primary Election Day, for the historical­ly large GOP field to be narrowed to just one nominee. Meanwhile, state Democrats have one lone contender, current Attorney General Josh Shapiro, who will advance to the General Election barring a political developmen­t of epic proportion­s.

The large and highly accomplish­ed Republican field is reflective of deep optimism in GOP ranks that 2022 is going to be a “wave” election year. In political terms “wave” means a national tide that sweeps one party or the other into offices at all levels.

Here in Pennsylvan­ia, incumbent Gov. Tom Wolf is unpopular. Wolf suffered a historic rebuke last May as voters took the extraordin­ary step of amending the state constituti­on to bring an end to his emergency powers which most had come to view as harmful and draconian.

With those millstones around his neck, Shapiro will need the perceived advantage of an unconteste­d primary just to remain competitiv­e. The big question is: will the GOP be disadvanta­ged by taking until the primary for the large field of Republican candidates to narrow to one nominee?

Much of course depends on how the candidates conduct themselves. To date, they have trained their fire on the Wolf/Shapiro administra­tion. The lack of a front-runner leaves Shapiro with no target to attack. But, if the GOP primary turns fractious, that advantage will be neutralize­d. Let’s turn to history as a guide. In the modern political era, which would be since the adoption of the current state constituti­on in 1968, there have been two gubernator­ial elections in which Republican­s were faced with a large field of candidates — although as noted not as large as this year.

In 1978, the first two-term governor, Milton Shapp, was leaving office after having run an administra­tion noted mostly for corruption. This had given rise to Republican hopes and seven candidates appeared on the primary ballot.

The field was largely distinguis­hed and included Arlen Specter who would go on to become a long-serving U.S. Senator, the state Senate Minority Leader Henry Hagar, Robert Butera the Republican leader in the state House, former U.S. Attorney for the Southeaste­rn District of Pennsylvan­ia David Marston.

And Alvin Joseph Jacobson, a former psychiatri­c patient who campaigned on having been medically diagnosed as sane.

The primary was won by Richard Thornburgh, the former U.S. Attorney for Western Pennsylvan­ia who then triumphed over Pittsburgh Mayor Peter Flaherty by campaignin­g to clean up the corruption that had festered under Shapp. He then proceeded to do just that.

In 1994 Republican­s again had a large field of candidates from which to select. And again, the field was distinguis­hed. It included Mike Fisher who had previously been nominated for Lt. Governor and who years later would become the GOP gubernator­ial nominee; Attorney General Ernie Preate, former Philadelph­ia mayoral nominee Sam Katz, State Senator and former state GOP party Chairman Earl Baker, and others. Congressma­n Tom Ridge from Erie prevailed in the primary contest and went on to defeat Lt. Governor Mark Singel in the General Election.

It is true in each of those years Democrats had their own primary battles. But the end result was the primary contest built the ultimate GOP nominee into being a contender. The current crop of Republican gubernator­ial candidates lacks statewide name ID, but Tom Ridge began the 1994 campaign self-described as the “man nobody knew from a city nobody has been to.” By November everybody knew who Tom Ridge was, the next governor of Pennsylvan­ia.

It is a long way to May, and even longer to November. As history has shown, competitiv­e primaries may or may not be a pathway to victory, but neither are they a roadblock.

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