Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

RACE FOR GOVERNOR

Where Shapiro, Mastriano stand on the issues

- By Karen Shuey kshuey@readingeag­le.com

Who will lead Pennsylvan­ia for the next four years is up for grabs this November.

When voters cast their ballots in the general election, they will be selecting a new governor. The race features two candidates at the top of the field with very different plans for the state — Democratic candidate Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro and Republican candidate state Sen. Doug Mastriano.

With that in mind, and in an attempt to ensure local voters are well informed, MediaNews Group compiled informatio­n on where Shapiro and Mastriano stand on a series of important issues.

The informatio­n has been gleaned from the candidates’ official websites and from public statements each has made. The amount Shapiro and Mastriano have discussed each issue varies, as does the level of detail each has provided about their plans of action if elected.

On the economy

Mastriano focuses on two areas when discussing his plan to revive Pennsylvan­ia’s economy: promoting the fossil fuel industry and slashing regulation­s on businesses.

If elected, he would immediatel­y withdraw from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a consortium of 11 states that aims to cap and reduce CO2 emissions from the power sector.

Mastriano says his administra­tion would encourage investment in the coal and natural gas industry. He wants to expand natural gas extraction efforts in the Marcellus shale region, including by exploring new technologi­es.

Regulation, taxes and fees that impact drilling and mining for fossil fuels would be lifted under Mastriano’s administra­tion. And so would other rules impacting other sectors.

Mastriano said he wants to slash the bureaucrac­y and reduce burdensome regulation­s that he believes are hurting the state’s economy. That includes creation of a regulation strike force.

Shapiro says economic growth will be a top priority.

He says his administra­tion would focus on spurring innovation by creating hubs that connect businesses, universiti­es and research institutio­ns as a way to create jobs.

Shapiro would bolster modern manufactur­ing by expanding the state’s Manufactur­ing PA Initiative, which connects companies with higher learning institutio­ns to identify and train a skilled workforce by embedding students with local manufactur­ers and provides technical support to Pennsylvan­ia manufactur­ers.

He says he would slash the corporate tax rate to 4% by 2025 to make it clear that Pennsylvan­ia is open for business, and he would eliminate unnecessar­y regulation­s.

On his campaign website, Shapiro says he would also aggressive­ly push to make Pennsylvan­ia the home of a new regional hydrogen hub and grow the commonweal­th’s carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage industry — creating thousands of jobs.

On education

Shapiro says on his campaign website

THIRD PARTY CANDIDATES

In addition to major party candidates Josh Shapiro and Doug Mastriano, there will be three other candidates running to be the next governor of Pennsylvan­ia on the Nov. 8 ballot.

• Christina DiGiulio, a former analytical chemist for the U.S. Department of Defense, is representi­ng the Green Party. For more informatio­n on this candidate, visit facebook.com/PKforPA.

• Joe Soloski, a public accountant from Centre County, is representi­ng the Keystone Party. For more informatio­n on this candidate, visit joesoloski.com.

• Matt Hackenburg, a computer engineer from Northampto­n County, is representi­ng the Libertaria­n Party. For more informatio­n on this candidate, visit matthacken­burg. com. that he would ensure every student has access to the thorough and efficient education Pennsylvan­ia’s constituti­on promises. He says he would fully fund schools — invest in attracting and retaining quality teachers, repair old and dangerousl­y unhealthy buildings and keep pace with changing technology so students are prepared for the future.

He promises to make mental health a priority and ensure that every school building has at least one mental health counselor, and limit reliance on standardiz­ed testing so schools can create more time for kids to learn and more flexibilit­y for teachers to teach.

Shapiro says he would empower students with the skills necessary to succeed in whatever path they choose, ensuring every high school student has access to vocational, technical and computer training.

He said he believes parents deserve to be empowered to ensure their kids receive a quality education and have choices available to put their children in the best position to succeed. That requires boosting funding for education, adding opportunit­ies and innovating to ensure children in the state’s most challenged schools receive the education and care they deserve.

And, he says, he would ensure parents have a seat at the table when decisions about education are made by appointing at least two parents to the state Board of Education.

Mastriano has unveiled a plan for public education in the Keystone State that would drasticall­y change the way the system is funded by completely eliminatin­g iproperty taxes.

On his campaign website, Mastriano promises to create a property tax eliminatio­n task force, and he does not suggest replacing that lost revenue with any other source. He has argued that the lost revenue can be paid for by redirectin­g state funds to follow students instead of systems through essentiall­y establishi­ng a voucher program.

In a March interview, Mastriano said Pennsylvan­ia spends about $19,000 on each student. He suggested cutting that to $10,000. However, Mastriano has since revised that figure.

In an August campaign video he now says the vouchers would be an average of $15,000 to be spent on home school or at public schools, private schools or religious schools.

Mastriano also calls for an immediate ban on teaching critical race theory in public schools.

On taxes

Mastriano says on his website that, in addition to eliminatin­g property taxes for all homeowners, he would establish working groups to slash the gas tax and reduce the corporate net income tax rate.

He said he would create strike force teams at each state agency with the goal of cutting statewide regulation­s by 55,000 in the first year.

He said he would work with the General Assembly to introduce and pass legislatio­n that would automatica­lly review all regulation­s with a cost of more than $1 million, eliminate two regulation­s for any new regulation created, increase transparen­cy for the permit process and expedite reviews.

Shapiro said on his campaign website that he would issue gas tax refunds of $250 for every personal passenger vehicle registered in the commonweal­th — up to four per household.

He says he would also eliminate the state cellphone tax — specifical­ly, the gross receipt and sales tax on cellphone service. By eliminatin­g this 11% state tax, he says he can reduce Pennsylvan­ians’ tax burden by $317 million and save folks money on their monthly cellphone bill.

Lastly, Shapiro says he would lower household costs by expanding the property tax and rent rebate program, increasing the maximum rebate to $1,000 and making the program available to over 275,000 more eligible people.

On abortion

Shapiro has vowed to be the last line of defense against legislatio­n banning abortion.

On his campaign website, he said he would veto any bill that would restrict abortion rights, and he would expand access to reproducti­ve care.

As attorney general, Shapiro repeatedly has come down firmly in support of protecting or expanding abortion rights. He challenged abortion bans in other states in court and argued against the Trump administra­tion’s gag rule that barred funding for clinics that made referrals to or informed patients about abortion providers.

Mastriano said during a gubernator­ial primary debate in April that a full ban on abortion should be instituted without exceptions for rape, incest or instances where the mother’s life is jeopardize­d by the pregnancy.

He said he would sign a “heartbeat bill” that would effectivel­y ban abortion at about six weeks, end any state funding to Planned Parenthood and support funding for counseling and for adoption services.

As a state lawmaker, Mastriano has introduced his own “heartbeat bill.”

On crime

Mastriano has leveled harsh criticism at his Democratic opponent on the campaign trail over the crime rate in Pennsylvan­ia.

But he has not proposed a plan for how to lower crime should he be elected. There is no mention of the issue on his campaign website, and he has offered few insights into what his administra­tion would do to handle the problem.

Mastriano has said he would impose a minimum sentence of 25 years in prison for fentanyl dealers whose sales lead to overdose deaths and protect police from “social justice warriors” so law enforcemen­t personnel won’t be prosecuted for a “split-second decision.”

He has proposed sending the state police to round up undocument­ed immigrants and take them to President Joe Biden’s Delaware home.

Shapiro details on his campaign website how he plans to make communitie­s safer while advocating for criminal justice reforms.

He said that he would stop costly imprisonme­nt for technical rule violations. Rather than spending taxpayer money on incarcerat­ion, he said he would reinvest that money into initiative­s and programs that directly target getting violent criminals off the streets.

Shapiro promised to fund legal representa­tion for indigent Pennsylvan­ians in his first budget. Currently, Pennsylvan­ia is the only state in the country that allocates zero dollars to public defender’s offices.

He said he would continue to oppose mandatory minimum sentences, sign legislatio­n to ensure those convicted of second-degree felony murder are not given a mandatory life sentence, support bills that create opportunit­ies for elderly prisoners who are no longer deemed a threat, and advocate for the abolition of the death penalty and work to legalize recreation­al marijuana.

As he makes those changes to the criminal justice system, Shaprio says he would ensure that local police department­s have the resources necessary to protect and serve their communitie­s and will demand the Legislatur­e fund police appropriat­ely.

On election integrity

Shapiro says he would defend democracy by ensuring access to the ballot box and keeping elections secure.

On his campaign website, he says he would veto any efforts to restrict mail voting, expand early voting and set up automatic voter registrati­on — making it easier than ever for legal voters to participat­e in democracy.

He says he would make state funds available so every county can conduct a postelecti­on analysis through a risk-limiting audit, appoint a secretary of state to run elections that will uphold democracy and allow counties to precanvass mail ballots before election day to reduce delays in reporting election results.

Mastriano has a number of proposals that he says will help restore confidence in elections.

On his campaign website, he says he would immediatel­y end all contracts with compromise­d voting machine companies, appoint a secretary of state with experience in securing elections from fraud and ban the use of private funds to influence elections.

He has also proposed making millions of registered voters register again.

Mastriano says he would also work with the General Assembly to eliminate no-excuse mail voting and ballot drop boxes, enact universal voter ID for those who go to the polls and increase the number of poll watchers.

 ?? READING EAGLE AND ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ?? Pennsylvan­ia candidates for governor are Attorney General Josh Shapiro, left, and state Sen. Doug Mastriano.
READING EAGLE AND ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS Pennsylvan­ia candidates for governor are Attorney General Josh Shapiro, left, and state Sen. Doug Mastriano.

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