Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

2018 midterm election sees record voter turnout in Montgomery County.

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt @21st-centurymed­ia.com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

Media opinion about Nov. 6’s midterm elections is pretty universal — that it was in many ways a referendum on the first two years of Donald Trump’s presidency, one with mixed results.

But the similariti­es don’t end there, given that voter turnout in Berks, Chester and Montgomery counties nearly reached the heights driven by the 2016 presi- dential election.

At polling place after polling place, election in- spectors, judges and volun- teers echoed the same refrain — “it’s just like 2016.” Not quite, but close. Before noon Nov. 6, Jackie Gleason, majority inspector for the Douglass District 4 polling place at the Gilbertsvi­lle firehouse, said, “We’ve already passed our total for the primary.”

Dave LaMonaco didn’t mind waiting in the line though.

“I’ve already told people if you lopped off my leg with an ax, I would still be here to vote,” he said with a laugh.

Elsewhere in Montgomery County, the story was the same.

Grabbing a quick slice of pizza, Debbie Whalen, majority inspector at Pottsgrove Middle School, said Upper Pottsgrove voting was so busy she had to choose between lunch and a bathroom break.

“We ran out of ‘I voted’ stickers before noon,” she said.

Whalen said she was seeing a lot of new voters from new developmen­ts, as well as a lot of young voters.

“We had a girl who was voting for the first time, so she needed to show ID but she didn’t have it. She went home and came back to vote,” said Whalen. “I think that’s wonderful. They’re interested in making a difference.”

Voters in Montgomery County certainly did make a difference, with a 65 percent voting rate; under the record 78 percent turn-out for 2016, but towering over the 32 percent turn-out in 2017 and the 48 percent turnout in the last midterm election in 2014.

Montgomery County delivered a 135,000-vote majority for Gov. Tom Wolf and his lieutenant governor running mate, John Fetterman, according to numbers released Nov. 7 by the Montgomery County Democratic Committee.

The county’s 255,000 votes in total for the WolfFetter­man ticket constitute­d the third largest trove of Democratic votes in the state, after only Philadelph­ia and Allegheny County (home to Pittsburgh). The county also produced a majority of more than 120,000 votes for Sen. Bob Casey, helping him to win a third term U.S. Senate term, according to Democratic Chairman Joseph Foster.

“Over the years, we have turned this county from red to blue, and now we are consolidat­ing our strength across the board,” he said in the statement.

A look at the Montgomery County elections map shows a sea of blue townships and boroughs, with red indicating Republican majorities only in the northwest corner, from the Pottsgrove­s north.

One place that strength showed was in the 146th state House legislativ­e race in which Democratic challenger Joe Ciresi beat incumbent Republican Rep. Tom Quigley by about 2,800 votes out of 41,000 cast.

Two years ago, Ciresi lost to Quigley by just 600 votes out of roughly 30,000 cast.

And even though Democrat Linda Fields of Pottstown lost her bid to unseat Republican state Sen. Bob Mensch in the 24th District, she earned 585 more votes than Mensch in the Montgomery County portion of the district.

That advantage was erased six times over by the more than 3,000 vote lead Mensch took over Fields in the Berks County portion of the district.

Incumbent Republican state Sen. John Rafferty Jr. had no such safe haven in the 44th Senate District, split between Montgomery and Chester counties with a portion of Berks. His opponent, political novice Katie Muth, won in both Chester and Montgomery counties.

In fact, she beat Rafferty by nearly 6,000 votes out of 112,713 cast — a 2.7 percent margin of victory.

 ?? EVAN BRANDT — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Upper Pottsgrove voters line up at the registrati­on table at Pottsgrove Middle School.
EVAN BRANDT — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Upper Pottsgrove voters line up at the registrati­on table at Pottsgrove Middle School.
 ?? EVAN BRANDT — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Daniel Murphy, was voter number 700 at the Grace Lutheran Church polling place in Pottstown. To his right is Amy Gazillo, voter 699. During the primary election in May only 259 votes were cast there all day.
EVAN BRANDT — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Daniel Murphy, was voter number 700 at the Grace Lutheran Church polling place in Pottstown. To his right is Amy Gazillo, voter 699. During the primary election in May only 259 votes were cast there all day.
 ?? EVAN BRANDT — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Voters who cast their ballots at the Norco Firehouse in North Coventry were offered an “I Voted” sticker.
EVAN BRANDT — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Voters who cast their ballots at the Norco Firehouse in North Coventry were offered an “I Voted” sticker.

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