The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Entering new troubling era in Pa. politics

- — Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/ The Associated Press — Scranton Times-Tribune/ The Associated Press

In the candidates who will represent their parties in November, and in those who came close, we can see a new political culture taking root in the commonweal­th — a nationaliz­ed one that’s replacing Pennsylvan­ia’s distinctiv­e one.

For a state of its size, the fifth-biggest by population, the Keystone State’s political culture has remained remarkably parochial. The state’s voters tend to elevate homegrown candidates based on hometown concerns, through the typical political channels. State representa­tives become state senators; district attorneys become attorneys general; congressme­n become senators.

That helps explain Pennsylvan­ia’s habit of producing relatively moderate, or at least hard to pigeonhole, politician­s. Bob Casey, Sr., was a pro-life Democrat. Tom Ridge was a pro-choice Republican. Arlen Specter was both.

In nominating state Sen. Doug Mastriano, R-Franklin, for governor, Republican voters haven’t only reached to their far right flank; they’ve elevated a freshman state legislator based almost entirely on ideologica­l purity and loyalty to Mr. Trump. The race had little or nothing to do with the actual work of governing the state. That’s the nationaliz­ation of issues.

Meanwhile, none of the three front-runners for the GOP nomination for Senate had roots in state politics. None went through the usual channels to prominence. Mehmet Oz ran on his TV popularity. Dave McCormick, like Mr. Oz with shallow-at-best roots in the state, ran on his ads. And Kathy Barnette run as a bold tell-it-all pundit. That’s the nationaliz­ation of celebrity.

And like the race for governor, this wasn’t a race about Pennsylvan­ia; it was a national race about national concerns that Pennsylvan­ia only happened to host. The three could have run in Illinois or Arizona with minimal changes to the ads.

John Fetterman’s surge to the Democratic Senate bid also fits this pattern, if a little less clearly. He did none of the things candidates are supposed to do in order to curry favor with party leadership, cultivated a certain celebrity status with his wardrobe choices, and positioned himself unambiguou­sly within a national progressiv­e movement, headlined by Sen. Bernie Sanders. And in so doing, he has earned a mandate to be a leader of Pennsylvan­ia Democrats for the foreseeabl­e future.

Josh Shapiro is the only statewide candidate who did everything the Pennsylvan­ia way. He rose through the ranks and cleared the field like a combine harvester, and now has positioned himself as the experience­d, competent, moderately left-wing, safe choice for governor.

In short, Mr. Shapiro excepted, Pennsylvan­ia politics is converging with national politics. And that loss of distinctiv­eness may come with a loss of agency, as the state is buffeted increasing­ly by national political power, rather than wielding its own.

‘Emergencie­s’ often aren’t

Those numbered balls that you see bouncing around in televised Pennsylvan­ia lottery drawings aren’t just painted ping-pong balls.

As revealed by PennLive, each foam ball is designed and painted to be identifiab­le from any angle, and each contains a microchip to preclude tampering and ensure security and each drawing’s integrity.

The state Lottery Commission recently purchased 30 sets of the custom-manufactur­ed balls for $41,280 — $80 for each ball.

Remarkably, the commission purchased the balls through the state government’s emergency procuremen­t process, even though replacing the balls is a matter of routine.

Apparently, the state is beset by a wide array of emergencie­s. According to PennLive, agencies had used the emergency process 98 times this year as of Wednesday, about five times a week.

Republican state Rep. Jason Ortitay of Allegheny County has introduced a bill to better define emergencie­s for procuremen­t purposes.

They would include threats to safety, health and welfare, or when unforeseen circumstan­ces relative to contracts hinders an agency’s ability to operate.

Routine lack of government transparen­cy is an emergency of its own that lawmakers can help to resolve by passing Ortitay’s bill.

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