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2010 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania

The 2010 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania took place on November 2, 2010, during the 2010 midterm elections. Incumbent Republican-turned-Democrat U.S. Senator Arlen Specter ran for reelection to a sixth term,[1] but lost in the Democratic primary to Joe Sestak. Republican nominee Pat Toomey then won the seat.

2010 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania

← 2004 November 2, 2010 2016 →
 
Nominee Pat Toomey Joe Sestak
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 2,028,945 1,948,716
Percentage 51.01% 48.99%

Toomey:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Sestak:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%     80–90%      >90%
Tie:      50%
     No data

U.S. senator before election

Arlen Specter
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Pat Toomey
Republican

Toomey had previously run for United States Senate in 2004, challenging Specter for the Republican nomination, but was narrowly defeated in the primary.[2] Specter went on to be reelected to his fifth term, defeating the Democratic nominee, Congressman Joe Hoeffel.[3] Toomey announced on April 15, 2009, that he would again seek the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in the 2010 election.[4]

The primary season was marked by Specter's decision in early 2009 to switch from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party due to his disagreement with the increasingly conservative positions of the party, pitting him against Sestak in the Democratic primary. The contest, characterized by attacks between the two Democratic candidates, was one of the most-watched primary races of the 2010 election cycle. Sestak ultimately defeated Specter in the May 18 primary, garnering 53.9% of the vote, to Specter's 46.1%.[5] Pat Toomey easily defeated challenger Peg Luksik for the Republican nomination. Toomey received 81.5% of the vote, to Luksik's 18.5%.[6]

Toomey defeated Sestak in the general election on November 2, 2010. Toomey garnered 2,028,945 votes (51.01%) to Sestak's 1,948,716 (48.99%), a margin of 80,229 votes (2.02%).[7] The race was called by the Associated Press shortly before midnight. Not long thereafter, Sestak officially conceded the election to Toomey.[8] Toomey's winning margin made this election the third-closest race of the 2010 Senate election cycle, behind only the elections in Illinois and Colorado.[9] As of 2022, this is the last time that Lehigh County and Monroe County voted for a Republican.

Democratic primary edit

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Eliminated in primary edit

Withdrew edit

Campaign edit

 
Long-time Republican Senator Arlen Specter switched to the Democratic Party, in part because he knew he was unlikely to win the Republican primary. He ultimately lost to Joe Sestak in the Democratic primary.

The Democratic party race between Specter and Sestak was considered one of the most bitter and highly watched of all the 2010 primary elections.[11][12][13] On April 28, 2009, Specter switched to the Democratic Party after having served in the Senate as a Republican for 28 years, encouraged by Vice President Joe Biden and Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell,[14] after he had voted in favor of President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan and was faced with opposition from Pennsylvania Republicans.[15][16] Although Specter claimed he switched largely because he disagreed with the increasingly conservative direction the Republican Party was heading in, he also admitted that the switch was due to his poor chances of winning a Republican primary against Toomey due to Specter's support of the Obama stimulus package .[17][18] The Democratic establishment had till then encouraged Sestak, a former U.S. Navy admiral and the representative of Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district, to run in the Democratic primary.[19] But after Specter switched parties he was largely embraced by such major Democratic figures as Obama, Biden, Rendell and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.[17][18] The Democratic establishment now feared Sestak would harm Specter's chances in the general election and encouraged him to drop out, but Sestak refused and strongly criticized Specter's party switch as an opportunistic move aimed solely at political self-preservation.[20]

Specter led Sestak by more than 20 percentage points in polling for most of the race and, while Sestak struggled to overcome problems from his low name recognition,[21] Specter received endorsements from major Democratic figures and influential organizations like the AFL-CIO and Pennsylvania Democratic Committee.[22][23] Specter's lead narrowed significantly in the final month of the campaign, when Sestak concentrated his funds and efforts on television commercials that questioned Specter's Democratic credentials.[24] As the race progressed, Specter grew more strongly critical of Sestak, attacking his House attendance record,[25] accusing him of failing to pay his staffers' minimum wage,[26] and claiming that he was demoted in the Navy for creating a "poor command climate".[27] On May 18, Sestak ended Specter's nearly 30-year Senate career, earning 53.8 percent of the primary vote to Specter's 46.2 percent.[28] Political observers said the commercials played a major part in Sestak's victory, and that a national swing in momentum toward Republicans and against incumbents ultimately harmed Specter's chances.[29][30] During the primary campaign, it was revealed that former President Bill Clinton had offered Sestak a position in the Obama administration if he withdrew his candidacy. This drew allegations from Republicans that the administration violated federal statutes forbidding government employees from interfering with a Senate election,[31][32] but no formal investigation was opened.[32] The Democratic primary occurred on May 18, 2010. Although Specter had won the endorsement of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party, at 10:14 PM EDT that evening, the Associated Press projected the race as won by Sestak.[33]

Polling edit

Poll source Dates administered Arlen
Specter
Joe
Sestak
POS May 3, 2009 62% 24%
May 4, 2009 56% 11%
May 28, 2009 50% 21%
June 17, 2009 51% 32%
June 25, 2009 33% 13%
July 19, 2009 55% 23%
August 11, 2009 47% 34%
Research 2000 August 12, 2009 48% 33%
September 28, 2009 44% 25%
Rasmussen Reports October 13, 2009 46% 42%
Rasmussen Reports December 8, 2009 48% 35%
December 8, 2009 53% 30%
Rasmussen Reports January 18, 2010 53% 32%
Rasmussen Reports February 8, 2010 51% 36%
February 22–28, 2010 53% 29%
Research 2000 March 8–10, 2010 51% 32%
Rasmussen Reports March 15, 2010 48% 37%
March 31 – April 5, 2010 53% 32%
Rasmussen Reports April 13, 2010 44% 42%
May 2, 2010 48% 42%
April 28 – May 2, 2010 47% 39%
May 7, 2010 43% 43%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call May 8, 2010 42% 44%
May 9, 2010 42% 46%
Rasmussen Reports May 10, 2010 42% 47%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call May 10, 2010 42% 47%
May 11, 2010 43% 47%
May 12, 2010 45% 45%
May 12, 2010 44% 42%
Franklin & Marshall May 12, 2010 36% 38%
May 13, 2010 44% 44%
Suffolk 2010-05-16 at the Wayback Machine May 13, 2010 40% 49%
May 14, 2010 45% 43%
Daily Kos/Research 2000 May 14, 2010 43% 45%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call May 15, 2010 44% 43%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call May 16, 2010 44% 44%
May 16, 2010 41% 42%

Results edit

 
Results by county:
  Sestak
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Specter
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
Democratic primary results[5]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Joe Sestak 568,563 53.9%
Democratic Arlen Specter (incumbent) 487,217 46.1%
Total votes 1,055,780 100.0%

Republican primary edit

Background edit

Pat Toomey, a Republican former Congressman representing the Lehigh Valley-based 15th congressional district, had previously challenged incumbent Arlen Specter in the Republican primary of the 2004 Senate race, in which the conservative Toomey tried to portray Specter as too liberal. Although Toomey ultimately lost, he came within 17,000 votes (less than two percentage points) of beating Specter, despite the long-time Senator's strong name recognition and wide support from party leaders.[34][35] In an interview with The Hill on 1 December 2008, Toomey said he was considering a 2010 bid against Specter, whom he said was "significantly more vulnerable now than he was in 2004".[34][35] Toomey claimed that many liberal and moderate Republicans had since abandoned the party to join the Democratic Party during the 2008 presidential primaries, eliminating many of Specter's core constituents from a closed Republican primary.[34][35]

As this disastrous recession worsens, I have become increasingly concerned about the future of our state and national economy. Unfortunately, the recent extraordinary response of the federal government – more corporate bailouts, unprecedented spending and debt, higher taxes – is likely to make things worse. I think we are on a dangerously wrong path. Pennsylvanians want a US Senator focused on real and sustainable job creation that gets our economy growing again. That is why I am considering becoming a candidate for the U.S. Senate.

Pat Toomey, in a March statement[36]

The next month, however, Toomey announced he would not likely not run for Senate again and said he was instead seriously considering a possible bid for governor in 2010.[37] But after Specter voted in favor of the Barack Obama-supported stimulus proposal aimed at stopping the economic recession, Toomey began to once again contemplate running for Senate, claiming he believed the incumbent Senator was supporting federal government bailouts and spending plans that were "taking the country on a dangerously wrong path".[36][38] In discussions with potential supporters in his possible governor bid, dozens of Pennsylvanians urged Toomey to challenge Specter, who was considered particularly vulnerable because he had supported the Democrats' stimulus plan. In early March, Toomey began to privately assure supporters he would run against Specter,[39][40] and during a March 28 keynote address before the Pennsylvania Leadership Conference in Harrisburg, he announced, "It's very likely that very soon I will be a candidate for the U.S. Senate"; the 600 audience members gave him a standing ovation at the news.[39]

Peg Luksik, a conservative anti-abortion activist from Johnstown who previously lost bids for governor in 1990 and 1994, had announced her candidacy for the Republican primary in March. Although some questioned her lack of elected office experience and limited knowledge of foreign affairs, Luksik said she planned to be an advocate against big government and excessive spending. During a conversation in February 2009, Toomey had assured her he did not plan to run for Senate again.[41] She was present the next month at the Pennsylvania Leadership Conference when Toomey announced his plans to run, but Luksik said she nevertheless planned to stay in the race.[39][42] She said she did not feel betrayed by Toomey's surprise announcement, adding, "I understand these two men have a long, personal and rather vindictive history and there's a real desire for the two of them to go and hit each other with sticks. I get that. I have five sons."[42] Her candidacy led to speculation that Luksik and Toomey could split the conservative vote, which could help Specter secure a victory in the primary from moderate voters,[43] but Luksik said she would resist any efforts by conservative Republicans to pressure her into withdrawing.[39]

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

  • Pat Toomey, former U.S. Representative and candidate for the United States Senate in 2004.

Eliminated in the primary edit

  • Peg Luksik, conservative activist

Campaign edit

Specter's party switch edit

 
Pat Toomey speaking at a rally in April 2009, the same month he formally announced his candidacy for Senate.

Pat Toomey formally announced his candidacy on April 15, 2009, Tax Day, via a video on his website,[4] and stepped down as head of the anti-tax political organization Club for Growth to concentrate on his campaign.[44] A Quinnipiac University Polling Institute poll released the previous month had indicated Toomey would defeat Specter by 14 percentage points in a two-man race if the primary were held that day. That same poll, however, found three out of four Republicans didn't yet know enough about Toomey to form an opinion about him.[45] Some Republicans expressed concerns that if Toomey defeated Specter in the closed Republican primary, he would be a weaker candidate in the general election and the party could risk losing the Senate seat to the Democrats. Toomey rejected such concerns, pointed to his two successful reelections in the Democratic-leaning Lehigh Valley congressional district as proof he could win votes from the opposing party.[4] Rumors began to circulate that Senator John Cornyn, chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee and a Specter supporter, had asked Toomey to drop his candidacy, but Toomey denied those claims.[4][46] Nevertheless, Toomey received some early support from conservatives like Jim DeMint, the senator from South Carolina who endorsed Toomey and donated thousands of dollars to his campaign.[47][48]

Starting in April, Specter made the rare move of starting to run television advertisements more than a year before the primary election, linking Toomey's background as a Wall Street banker and support of credit default swaps to the economic crisis.[35][49] While Toomey criticized Specter as a liberal who consistently sided with the Democratic majority,[35][46] Specter stressed that if Toomey won the primary, he would lose the general election and give Democrats a 60th seat in the Senate, which would allow them to suppress Republican filibusters. In an interview on Morning Joe, Specter said, "If Mr. Toomey is the nominee, you can be sure he'll lose. He's to the right of Rick Santorum. Santorum lost by 18 points, spent $31 million and was a two-term incumbent."[50] Stuart Rothenberg, editor of the Rothenberg Political Report, said of the expected primary match-up, "Republicans will have to decide whether they want to hold the seat or make a statement about issues and ideology."[46]

On April 28, 2009, however, Specter announced he was leaving the Republican Party and becoming a Democrat, claiming he disagreed with the increasingly conservative direction the party was heading in and found his personal philosophy was now better aligned with the Democratic Party. Although Specter said his decision was made primarily based on principle, he admitted it was also partially due to his poor chances of beating Toomey in the Republican primary: "I have traveled the state and surveyed the sentiments of the Republican Party in Pennsylvania and public opinion polls, observed other public opinion polls and have found that the prospects for winning a Republican primary are bleak."[17][18] Toomey became widely considered the favorite to win the Republican primary as a result of Specter's defection.[51][52] Peg Luksik said of Specter's switch, "It is clear that Arlen Specter stands with President Obama on a host of issues and with this decision, has gone home to the Democratic Party."[53]

Republican primary edit

 
Some Republicans encouraged former Governor Tom Ridge to enter the race, fearing Pat Toomey was too conservative to win the general election.

With Specter's departure from the primary, some speculated that a less conservative candidate than Toomey was needed to defeat Specter in the general election, since the state had previously supported Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election.[54][55][56] John Cornyn declined to immediately endorse Toomey and Senator Orrin Hatch, vice chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said of him, "I don't think there is anybody in the world who believes he can get elected senator there."[57] Names of other potential Republican candidates began to be floated, like Congressman Jim Gerlach, Lieutenant Governor Joseph B. Scarnati, and State Senate Majority Leader Dominic F. Pileggi, none of whom ruled out running. Some, like Senator Lindsey Graham and Republican State Committee Chairman Robert Gleason, suggested former governor Tom Ridge might be a suitable candidate.[54] Ridge began to seriously contemplate a run, and Quinnipiac University polls indicated Specter held a projected lead over Ridge of only three percentage points, compared to 20 points over Toomey.[58][59]

Even before Ridge made a final decision, however, conservative bloggers began criticizing Ridge's moderate positions and support for abortion rights.[60] Political opponents also circulated e-mail messages questioning Ridge's residency eligibility because, although he still voted in Pennsylvania, he lived in Chevy Chase, Maryland. On May 7, Ridge announced he would not run in the primary,[60][61] claiming he preferred to continue supporting the Republican Party by promoting causes as a private citizen.[61] Some felt Ridge's decision not to run ended the Republican Party's best chance to win the seat from Specter.[62] But Toomey expressed confidence he could beat the incumbent senator, claiming Democrats would find him difficult to trust after seeing the way he abandoned the Republicans.[51][52] Toomey said he "expected to beat Arlen Specter soundly in the Republican primary, but I had no idea I would drive him clear out of the party."[52] A Quinnipiac University poll released on May 28 projected Toomey now trailed Specter by nine percentage points, a smaller gap than Specter's 20-point lead from a May 4 survey.[63]

Although Toomey anticipated that other candidates would enter the race,[64] the Republican primary remained a two-way race between him and Luksik.[65][66] State Senator Jane Orie, from the North Hills area of Pennsylvania, briefly considered entering the race but announced on July 13 that she would not run because she wanted to concentrate on the state budget.[65] The National Republican Senatorial Committee announced on July 14 that it was endorsing Toomey,[56] even though the group previously helped Specter defeat Toomey in 2004.[67] It was considered a key endorsement expected to help improve fund-raising efforts for Toomey, who had already raised $1.6 million in the previous three-month quarter.[68] By July 22, polls indicated that Specter's projected lead over Toomey had nearly disappeared, as the Senator now led him only 45-44 percent.[66] That same poll showed Toomey led Luksik by 47 percent to 6 percent, a margin so large that media outlets predicted Luksik stood little chance of overcoming him;[66][69] the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said Luksik was "not considered to be a stiff challenge".[70] By August, Toomey had an even greater advantage in the polls, 12 points, over Specter.[71]

Following an e-mail exchange with the Democratic challenger Joe Sestak about health care, Toomey agreed to an unorthodox proposal by Sestak to hold a joint town hall about the issue, which was held September 2 at Muhlenberg College in Allentown. Specter was not invited to participate, and political pollster G. Terry Madonna described it as an "informal pact" between Sestak and Toomey to weaken their joint rival, something the two men denied.[72][73] Commentators suggested Toomey was willing to help Sestak at this stage of the race because he preferred Sestak as a general election opponent rather than Specter, who could possibly steal Republican and Independent voters from Toomey.[74][75] By October, Toomey had raised a total of $3.1 million for the race, but spent $861,000 in the past three-month quarter as he traveled across the state for his campaign.[75] In contrast, Luksik raised less than $100,000 from June to October.[76] Also in October, Toomey was endorsed by former Massachusetts Governor and presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who called Toomey the "man for the job" and pledged to help him raise funds.[77]

Late campaign edit

We're going to win this election because when you give people a choice between prosperity and stagnation, they'll choose prosperity. We're on the side of the people who pay all the bills. I believe they will choose to return to the principles of this great party.

Pat Toomey in February 2010[48]

Toomey continued to hold projected leads against his Democratic opponents as the primary campaign entered 2010, with January polls indicating he held a 14-point lead over Specter and a 17-point lead over Sestak.[78][79] Some political scientists, like G. Terry Madonna and Jeff Brauer, attributed Toomey's gains to voter dissatisfaction with the health-care plan before Congress and a poor national political climate for Democrats and incumbents. Toomey's campaign continued to portray him as a political outsider and small-government advocate while condemning Specter and Sestak as "a rubber stamp for the Reid-Pelosi big government agenda".[80] In February, it was announced Toomey raised more money than Specter in the final three months of 2009, earning $1.67 million compared to Specter's $1.15 million, although Specter's total war chest of $8.66 million was still significantly larger than Toomey's $2.8 million.[81] In that same quarter, Peg Luksik raised $163,000 and had $66,000 on hand.[82] On February 13, the Republican State Committee of Pennsylvania endorsed Toomey over Peg Luskik in the Senate race.[48] Toomey told the committee he would work to restore fiscally conservative principals to Washington and fight to eliminate street money, or state grants offered in exchange for support on key issues.[83] When asked whether Luksik would continue to run, she replied, "Absolutely. Are you kidding? I always run un-endorsed."[48]

With news outlets like the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Fox News predicting Toomey would have little difficult defeating Luksik in the primary,[84][85] Toomey again became involved with the Democratic primary by accepting an invitation to a second debate with Sestak, who had been trying unsuccessfully to engage Arlen Specter in more than one primary debate. In accepting the April 11 debate, Toomey said, "Like many politicians who have spent decades in Washington, Sen. Specter maintains a sense of entitlement to his office and he is unwilling to put his record and ideas to the test of open and honest debate."[86][87] In response to the scheduled debate, Luksik spokesman Steve Clark said Toomey had to remember he was running against Luksik in the primary, not Sestak or Specter.[88] By March, Specter appeared to be gaining momentum in the Democratic primary, with polls indicating he not only led Sestak by 24 percentage points, but had recaptured a projected lead against Toomey in the general election by a margin of 49 percent to 42 percent.[21][89] Pollsters indicated Specter was benefiting greatly from the large amount of media attention the Democratic primary had received,[89] as well as the Senator's strong name recognition, whereas Sestak and Toomey remained relatively unknown.[21]

When the Senate candidates publicly released their quarterly campaign finance reports on April 15, it was revealed that Pat Toomey once again raised more in the first three months of 2010 than either Democratic candidate, increasing his funds by $2.3 million to a total of a $4.1 million war chest compared to Specter raising $1.1 million to a total of $9.1 million and Sestak raising $0.4 million to a total of $5.3 million.[90][91] The funds raised that quarter made Toomey the best-funded Senate challenger in the country to that point.[92] Political analysts attributed Toomey's success to the national swing in momentum toward Republicans, and said it could indicate the Republicans would be victorious in many Senate races, including in Pennsylvania.[90][92] Meanwhile, Luksik continued to campaign in low-attendance appearances on conservative anti-abortion, anti-tax and anti-spending principles, while portraying herself as a down-to-earth housewife and common-sense candidate.[93] In the days leading up to the primary election, Toomey received endorsements by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.[94][95] On May 10, he ran his first television advertisement, which called for more jobs and less government and included a narrator saying, "Trillion dollar bailouts and deficits, government-run health care, record unemployment. Had enough?"[96] John Baer of the Philadelphia Daily News said Toomey was so widely expected to defeat Luksik that he said of the Republican primary, "The race is a balloon with no air. It sits flat while the Democratic fight between Arlen Specter and Joe Sestak sucks up all the oxygen."[97]

Pat Toomey won the May 18 primary with 81.5 percent of the vote, or 668,409 of the votes cast, compared to 18.5 percent and 151,802 votes for Peg Luksik.[6] The Associated Press wrote that Luksik could not overcome Toomey's financial advantages, particularly when the Republican primary was so overshadowed by the Democratic race.[98] The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that Toomey's run against Luksik in the primary "will help him maintain his competitive condition" against Sestak, who defeated Specter in the Democratic primary.[99]

Polling edit

Poll source Dates administered Arlen
Specter*
Pat
Toomey
Tom
Ridge*
Peg
Luksik
December 8, 2008 43% 28% –– ––
March 17, 2009 33% 18% –– 2%
March 19, 2009 27% 41% –– ––
April 21, 2009 30% 51% –– ––
POS May 3, 2009 –– 22% 62% 2%
Public Opinion May 5, 2009 –– 23% 60% ––
Research 2000 May 7, 2009 –– 41% 33% ––
May 28, 2009 –– 38% –– 3%
July 19, 2009 –– 47% –– 6%
May 12, 2010 –– 60% –– 9%
Suffolk 2010-05-16 at the Wayback Machine May 13, 2010 –– 60% –– 9%

* Declined to run for Republican nomination

Results edit

Republican primary results[6]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pat Toomey 668,409 81.5%
Republican Peg Luksik 151,802 18.5%
Total votes 820,211 100.0%

General election edit

Candidates edit

Campaign edit

Early weeks edit

I passionately disagree with his ideas, and you're going to see us talking about that, but there will never be anything of a personal nature. At the end of the game, let's have had a great debate and then go out and have a beer. That's how they did it in the old days.

Joe Sestak on his mutual agreement with Toomey for a "clean" campaign[100]

Shortly after Joe Sestak's primary victory, Arlen Specter called him to offer congratulations and vowed to support his candidacy, saying that "I think it's vital to keep this seat in the Democratic Party."[101] Both Sestak and Pat Toomey began campaigning for the general election the day after the May 18 primary. Before reporting to Capitol Hill for House matters, Sestak appeared in interviews on several national media outlets including CNN, MSNBC, NPR and CBS News.[102] Both Toomey and Sestak said they considered each other friends and vowed to engage in a "clean" campaign focusing on policy rather than personal attacks. The two quickly began challenging each other's records, however, with Sestak citing Toomey's past Wall Street career and claiming he would rather aid rich bankers than the working class, and Toomey portraying Sestak as a liberal aligned with Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi.[100][103] The day after the primary, Sestak claimed that Toomey wanted to continue "to back failed policies of George W. Bush" and "to let Wall Street do whatever it wants".[104] At a rally at the Allegheny County Airport, Toomey said Sestak's politics were more liberal than most mainstream Democrats and described him as a proponent of "even-larger government".[105]

Within minutes of Sestak's victory, National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John Cornyn issued a statement describing Sestak as too liberal for Pennsylvania, claiming that he consistently voted with Washington Democratic leaders and supported energy policies that would reduce jobs.[104] President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell, all of whom vocally supported Specter in the primary, each called Sestak after his primary victory and pledged to support him in the general election.[105][106] Congressman Darrell Issa, the ranking Republican on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said it would "be incredibly disingenuous and reek of political payback" for Sestak to accept any such support from the Obama administration after Sestak had accused the White House of offering him a job in exchange for dropping out of the Democratic primary. Nevertheless, while Sestak said he would not become "part of the establishment", he welcomed the Obama administration's support and said, "I plan on being the president's best ally."[106][107]

On May 20, Toomey released the first statewide advertisement of the campaign, a television commercial with a narrator describing both candidates as "Two good men with very different ideas." The ad contrasted the positions between the two candidates on the Wall Street bailout, national health-care debate and terrorist trials.[100][108] Meanwhile, Sestak said Toomey needed to be held accountable for his support of bank deregulation and former President George W. Bush's financial policies which helped lead to the economic recession.[108][109] The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said Toomey was "conveniently failing to mention his decades of service to Wall Street" in his advertisements. When asked about the promise between Sestak and Toomey to maintain a clean and friendly campaign, Pennsylvania Democratic Party Chairman T.J. Rooney said, "Guess what? That all changed at 10:30 p.m. (Tuesday). I hope the congressman adheres to his word, but I have no consuming expectation that he will. It's going to get hard in a moment. This race is going to take a turn."[100]

Early polls showed varied results over who was leading, although some indicated Sestak had an advantage due to the positive press he received for defeating Arlen Specter.[110][111] Despite Specter's stated support for Sestak, the Senator's former chief of staff David Urban, now a lobbyist, offered his support to Toomey after the Democratic primary ended. Urban sought to connect moderate Republicans, conservative Democrats and the current and former chiefs of staff of Republicans and encourage them to help Toomey get elected.[112][113] Both candidates sought to use online media avenues to reach out to prospective voters, which was still considered a relatively new field for politicians. The two started accounts on Twitter, with the ToomeyForSenate account amassing 4,907 followers and the Sestak2010 account 3,796 followers as of June 4. Both also had accounts on Facebook, where Toomey had 10,361 friends and Sestak had 3,146.[114]

Both candidates have decided to go negative and go negative early because both are trying to win by making the other candidate unacceptable and therefore, not the choice of the voters.

Lara Brown, Villanova University professor[115]

Sestak and Toomey had wildly different views on almost every issue, including abortion, health care, energy, social security and the recent stimulus bill and financial bailouts.[116] Sestak favored the bailouts of the United States financial system, automobile industry and mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, claiming they saved many jobs and homes. Toomey condemned them as a waste of taxpayer money that rewarded irresponsible behavior.[117] Sestak praised the financial regulatory reform bill before Congress as "a victory for the American people over Wall Street" that would protect the economy from shadow banking and toxic assets. Toomey said it did nothing to prevent taxpayer bailouts of failing corporations.[118] Toomey also argued against a proposed cap and trade bill, which he said would encourage firms to move manufacturing jobs overseas and force Pennsylvania businesses to close. Sestak claimed the bill would help businesses by lowering energy costs in the long-run, claiming, "Pat Toomey is in the pocket of big oil, and big oil doesn't want alternative energy."[119]

Following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, Sestak criticized Toomey for his support of offshore drilling in Lake Erie, claiming the proposal risked placing 90 percent of the country's surface water in danger. Toomey said that he supported allowing states to retain the right to make decisions about drilling, and claimed Sestak was too willing to cede control to the federal government.[120] Both Sestak and Toomey sought to portray themselves as the ideal candidates for small-business issues. Toomey campaigned on lower taxes and less regulation, and released a 30-second television advertisement emphasizing his experience as owner of a small chain of bars and restaurants in the 1990s. Sestak countered that image, however, citing past court depositions that indicated Toomey was not very involved in the businesses and delegated most responsibilities to his brother Steven. Sestak said he would help small businesses through tax cuts and federal loan guarantees.[121]

Heading into July, polls still indicated that the two candidates were roughly even. Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, said this was better news for Toomey than Sestak because it meant Toomey had "limited the damage" from the national positive publicity Sestak received after defeating Arlen Specter.[122] From April 1 to June 30, Toomey raised $3.1 million compared to Sestak's $1.95 million. This left Toomey with $4.56 million in total funds, more than twice Sestak's total amount of about $2 million. Toomey was considered to have a financial advantage in part because he did not have as challenging a primary as Sestak, and thus was able to save most of his money. Additionally, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spent $1.4 million of the allotted sum in support of Specter during the primary, which left them with only $200,000 for the general election race.[123][124]

In July, Toomey began airing five new television commercials, focusing on how he would oppose the Democratic establishment if elected, and four focusing on different votes Sestak had cast in the House: the stimulus plan, health-care reform, cap and trade, and tax increases. The ads characterized Sestak's positions as extreme, and each ended with a narrator saying, "That's liberal. That's Joe Sestak."[115][123] Although they directly attacked Sestak, Toomey claimed that they did not break the candidates' pledge for a clean campaign because they focused on his policies, not his character. By running the commercials four months before the general election campaign, Toomey hoped to gain an advantage in name recognition.[123] Also in July, the United States Chamber of Commerce began running television advertisements criticizing Sestak's support of "a government takeover of health care" and "billions in job-killing energy taxes", claiming he voted with Nancy Pelosi "100 percent of the time".[125][126] Sestak called the ads inaccurate, citing specific instances when he voted against Pelosi;[125] Two Pennsylvania television stations removed the ads, but Toomey defended them, claiming they were not misleading and accusing Sestak of being "hyper-sensitive".[126]

Final campaign edit

Starting in July, both Sestak and Toomey blamed each other for the federal budget deficits that had become a national spotlight amid the troubled economy. Toomey portrayed Sestak as lacking "fiscal discipline" and supporting budget earmarks for pet projects, while Sestak said Toomey supported President George W. Bush's deficit spending and damaged the economy by helping deregulate Wall Street.[127] On July 15, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Sestak received at least $119,650 in campaign contributions from employees of companies that received federal earmarks he had steered to the state since 2008. Although a common practice among political candidates, Sestak had advocated banning earmarks in favor of a competitive grant program, and vowed on his website to return any contributions from organizations or individuals who "has made a request for an appropriations project".[128] In response to the story, Toomey called on Sestak to return those contributions, which he did not respond to. However, Sestak said he routinely returned money from employees of such companies, but sometimes had difficulty tracking donations from low-level employees.[127][129] Toomey vowed never to seek earmarks if elected,[128] while Sestak said although he favors ending the practice, he would continue advocating for them as long as earmarks continued to exist.[129]

While Sestak presented economists who agreed with his positions, the conservative non-profit Citizens Against Government Waste gave him a zero rating on spending issues based on a review of 120 of his votes in Congress.[127] Toomey challenged Sestak to sign a "No Pork" pledge offered by the organization. In turn, Sestak criticized Toomey for accepting campaign contributions from Club for Growth, a group that Toomey used to spearhead and which received criticism from such prominent Republicans as Senator Orrin Hatch, Senator John McCain and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee.[130]

On August 2, moderate Republican Senator Susan Collins, who was once condemned by Toomey's Club for Growth for her support of the stimulus package, headlined a $1,000-a-plate luncheon for Toomey's campaign at Philadelphia's Union League. The Philadelphia Inquirer said Collins' support indicated Toomey was finding success in seeking moderate support for his candidacy. The newspaper noted other apparent efforts to draw in centrists, including Toomey's support for Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who many conservatives opposed, and the fact that throughout the campaign Toomey had rarely brought up social issues like gay rights and abortion, for which he held conservative views. Sestak's campaign claimed those gestures only sought to conceal an extremely conservative voting record.[113]

The first debate was held on October 20 at WPVI-TV studios in Philadelphia[131] and the second held on October 22 at WPXI studios in Pittsburgh.[132][133] Both candidates criticized the each other's ideology and referred to the other as extreme. Toomey heavily criticized Sestak for his support of Obama's stimulus, cap and trade, and healthcare reform.[134] Sestak not only supported these measures but said they did not go far enough,[135] referred to Toomey as "Pennsylvania's most right-wing congressman",[136] and criticized him for working at Wall Street and supporting the elimination of corporate taxes.[137]

Toomey was endorsed by former longtime Democratic Mayor of Harrisburg Stephen Reed,[138] former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani, United States Chamber of Commerce, NRA Political Victory Fund, U.S. Senator Scott Brown and former governor Sarah Palin. Newspaper endorsements include the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review,[139] The Intelligencer,[140] The Tribune-Democrat[141] and the Bucks County Courier Times.[142]

Sestak was endorsed by independent NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg and former Republican U.S. Senator Chuck Hagel.[143] Sestak received newspaper endorsements from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,[144] The Philadelphia Inquirer,[145] the Erie Times-News,[146] The Citizens' Voice,[147] The Patriot-News,[148] the Observer-Reporter,[149] and The Huffington Post.[150]

Toomey defeated Sestak on election day by a margin of 80,229 votes, and 2.1 percentage points.[7] The Associated Press called the race for Toomey shortly after midnight. The Washington Post credited his victory to voter discontent with the Obama administration and unemployment rates. Sestak conceded defeat addressing a crowd at a suburban Philadelphia hotel in his congressional district, stating "it is now Alex time" referring to his 9-year-old daughter.[8] Toomey gave his victory speech at a get together in Allentown, stating that the election was a "simple, clear message to the establishment" with some conciliatory notes that he would cooperate with the White House and fellow Pennsylvania Senator, Bob Casey Jr, a Democrat.[151][152] It was third-closest race of the 2010 Senate elections, behind only Illinois and Colorado.[9]

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
RealClearPolitics[153] Tossup October 20, 2010
Rothenberg[154] Tilt R (flip) October 28, 2010
Sabato's Crystal Ball[155] Lean R (flip) October 28, 2010
Rasmussen Reports[156] Tossup October 30, 2010
CQ Politics[157] Tossup October 31, 2010
Cook Political Report[158] Tossup October 31, 2010

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Joe
Sestak (D)
Pat
Toomey (R)
Other Undecided
Research 2000 (report) May 7, 2009 600 ± 4.0% 37% 32% –– ––
Quinnipiac University () May 20, 2009 1,191 ± 2.8% 37% 35% 1% 23%
Rasmussen Reports (report) June 16, 2009 800 ± 4.5% 41% 35% 7% 18%
Quinnipiac University () July 19, 2009 1,173 ± 2.9% 35% 39% 1% 23%
Rasmussen Reports (report) August 11, 2009 1,000 ± 3.0% 35% 43% 5% 18%
Research 2000 (report) August 12, 2009 600 ± 5.0% 42% 41% –– 17%
Quinnipiac University () September 28, 2009 1,100 ± 3.0% 35% 38% 1% 25%
Rasmussen Reports (report) October 13, 2009 1,000 ± 3.0% 38% 37% 6% 19%
Rasmussen Reports (report) December 8, 2009 1,200 ± 3.0% 38% 44% 6% 13%
Quinnipiac University () December 8, 2009 1,381 ± 2.6% 35% 40% 1% 22%
Rasmussen Reports (report) January 18, 2010 1,000 ± 3.0% 35% 43% 6% 16%
Rasmussen Reports (report) February 8, 2010 1,000 ± 3.0% 35% 43% 7% 15%
Franklin & Marshall () February 15–21, 2010 954 ± 2.9% 20% 38% 3% 39%
Quinnipiac University () February 22–28, 2010 1,452 ± 2.6% 36% 39% 1% 24%
Research 2000 (report) March 8–10, 2010 600 ± 4.0% 39% 42% –– 19%
Rasmussen Reports (report) March 15, 2010 1,000 ± 3.0% 37% 42% 7% 15%
Franklin & Marshall () March 15–21, 2010 1,119 ± 2.9% 19% 27% 5% 49%
Public Policy Polling (report) March 29 – April 1, 2010 934 ± 3.2% 36% 42% –– 22%
Quinnipiac University () March 30 – April 5, 2010 1,412 ± 2.6% 34% 42% 1% 22%
Rasmussen Reports (report) April 14, 2010 1,000 ± 3.0% 36% 47% 5% 12%
Rasmussen Reports (report) May 6, 2010 1,000 ± 3.0% 40% 42% 10% 9%
Research 2000 (report) May 14, 2010 600 ± 4.0% 40% 45% –– 15%
Rasmussen Reports (report)[permanent dead link] May 19, 2010 500 ± 4.5% 46% 42% 3% 9%
Research 2000 (report) May 24–26, 2010 600 ± 4.0% 43% 40% –– ––
Rasmussen Reports (report) June 2, 2010 500 ± 4.5% 38% 45% 5% 12%
Public Policy Polling (report) June 19–21, 2010 609 ± 4.0% 41% 41% –– 18%
Rasmussen Reports (report) June 29, 2010 500 ± 4.5% 39% 45% 6% 11%
Quinnipiac University () July 6–11, 2010 1,367 ± 2.7% 43% 43% 1% 12%
Rasmussen Reports (report) July 14, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 38% 45% 6% 12%
Rasmussen Reports (report) July 28, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 39% 45% 6% 10%
Public Policy Polling (report) August 14–16, 2010 585 ± 4.1% 36% 45% –– 20%
Rasmussen Reports (report) August 16, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 37% 46% 5% 12%
Rasmussen Reports (report) August 30, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 39% 45% 5% 11%
Ipsos/Reuters () August 31, 2010 407 ± 4.0% 37% 47% 2% 15%
Rasmussen Reports (report) September 13, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 41% 49% 2% 8%
Pulse Opinion Research (report) September 18, 2010 1,000 ± 3.0% 40% 48% 4% 8%
Quinnipiac University () September 15–19, 2010 684 ± 3.8% 43% 50% –– 7%
CNN/Time Opinion Research (report) September 17–21, 2010 741 ± 3.5% 44% 49% 4% 3%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report[permanent dead link]) September 18–23, 2010 445 ± 5.0% 39% 46% –– 14%
Suffolk University (report 2010-10-08 at the Wayback Machine) September 24–27, 2010 500 ± 4.4% 40% 45% –– 13%
Rasmussen Reports (report) September 29, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 40% 49% 4% 7%
Rasmussen Reports (report) October 12, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 39% 49% 2% 10%
Quinnipiac University () October 13–17, 2010 1,046 ± 3.0% 46% 48% –– 5%
Public Policy Polling (report) October 17–18, 2010 718 ± 3.7% 46% 45% –– 9%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call () October 16–19, 2010 403 ± 5.0% 44% 41% 5% 10%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report[permanent dead link]) October 17–20, 2010 420 ± 5.0% 43% 43% 4% 10%
Rasmussen Reports (report) October 21, 2010 750 ± 5.0% 44% 48% 1% 7%
Franklin & Marshall University () October 18–24, 2010 720 ± 5.0% 36% 43% 2% 19%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 21–24, 2010 437 ± 5.0% 42% 47% 2% 9%
Ipsos/Reuters () October 22–24, 2010 400 ± 4.9% 46% 46% 2% 6%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 22–25, 2010 448 ± 5.0% 40% 48% 3% 9%
CNN/Time/Opinion Research (report) October 20–26, 2010 1,517 ± 2.5% 45% 49% 3% ––
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 23–26, 2010 457 ± 5.0% 41% 46% 3% 9%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 24–27, 2010 460 ± 5.0% 40% 48% 2% 10%
Susquehanna Polling & Research () October 24–27, 2010 800 ± 3.46% 44% 46% –– 9%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 25–28, 2010 470 ± 4.5% 42% 47% 3% 9%
Rasmussen Reports (report) October 28, 2010 750 ± 4.0% 46% 50% 1% 3%
Marist College (report) October 26–28, 2010 806 ± 3.5% 45% 52% 1% 2%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 26–29, 2010 480 ± 4.5% 43% 45% 2% 10%
Quinnipiac University () October 25–30, 2010 1,244 ± 2.8% 45% 50% –– 5%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 27–30, 2010 484 ± 4.5% 43% 45% 2% 9%
Muhlenberg/Morning Call (report) October 28–31, 2010 474 ± 4.5% 44% 48% –– ––
Public Policy Polling (report) October 30–31, 2010 772 ± 3.5% 46% 51% –– 4%

Fundraising edit

Candidate (party) Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand Debt
Pat Toomey (R) $14,818,231 $12,743,824 $2,074,406 $53,000
Joe Sestak (D) $11,842,844 $10,185,073 $1,657,769 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[159]

Results edit

General election results[7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Pat Toomey 2,028,945 51.01% -1.61%
Democratic Joe Sestak 1,948,716 48.99% +7.00%
Total votes 3,977,661 100.00% N/A
Republican gain from Democratic

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit

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External links edit

  • Pennsylvania Department of State
    • Official election results
  • – Look up which district you live in, and who is running for US Representative there, using your address or zip code.
  • U.S. Congress candidates for Pennsylvania at Project Vote Smart
  • Pennsylvania U.S. Senate 2010 from OurCampaigns.com
  • Campaign contributions from Open Secrets
  • 2010 Pennsylvania Senate General Election: All Head-to-Head Matchups graph of multiple polls from Pollster.com
  • Election 2010: Pennsylvania Senate from Rasmussen Reports
  • 2010 Pennsylvania Senate Race from Real Clear Politics
  • from CQ Politics
  • Race profile from The New York Times
Debates
  • Pennsylvania Senate Debate, C-SPAN, May 1, 2010
Official campaign sites
  • (archived from October 28, 2010)
  • Pat Toomey for U.S Senate

2010, united, states, senate, election, pennsylvania, related, races, 2010, united, states, senate, elections, took, place, november, 2010, during, 2010, midterm, elections, incumbent, republican, turned, democrat, senator, arlen, specter, reelection, sixth, t. For related races see 2010 United States Senate elections The 2010 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania took place on November 2 2010 during the 2010 midterm elections Incumbent Republican turned Democrat U S Senator Arlen Specter ran for reelection to a sixth term 1 but lost in the Democratic primary to Joe Sestak Republican nominee Pat Toomey then won the seat 2010 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania 2004 November 2 2010 2016 Nominee Pat Toomey Joe SestakParty Republican DemocraticPopular vote 2 028 945 1 948 716Percentage 51 01 48 99 County resultsPrecinct resultsToomey 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Sestak 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Tie 50 No dataU S senator before electionArlen SpecterDemocratic Elected U S Senator Pat ToomeyRepublicanToomey had previously run for United States Senate in 2004 challenging Specter for the Republican nomination but was narrowly defeated in the primary 2 Specter went on to be reelected to his fifth term defeating the Democratic nominee Congressman Joe Hoeffel 3 Toomey announced on April 15 2009 that he would again seek the Republican nomination for U S Senate in the 2010 election 4 The primary season was marked by Specter s decision in early 2009 to switch from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party due to his disagreement with the increasingly conservative positions of the party pitting him against Sestak in the Democratic primary The contest characterized by attacks between the two Democratic candidates was one of the most watched primary races of the 2010 election cycle Sestak ultimately defeated Specter in the May 18 primary garnering 53 9 of the vote to Specter s 46 1 5 Pat Toomey easily defeated challenger Peg Luksik for the Republican nomination Toomey received 81 5 of the vote to Luksik s 18 5 6 Toomey defeated Sestak in the general election on November 2 2010 Toomey garnered 2 028 945 votes 51 01 to Sestak s 1 948 716 48 99 a margin of 80 229 votes 2 02 7 The race was called by the Associated Press shortly before midnight Not long thereafter Sestak officially conceded the election to Toomey 8 Toomey s winning margin made this election the third closest race of the 2010 Senate election cycle behind only the elections in Illinois and Colorado 9 As of 2022 this is the last time that Lehigh County and Monroe County voted for a Republican Contents 1 Democratic primary 1 1 Candidates 1 1 1 Nominee 1 1 2 Eliminated in primary 1 1 3 Withdrew 1 2 Campaign 1 3 Polling 1 4 Results 2 Republican primary 2 1 Background 2 2 Candidates 2 2 1 Nominee 2 2 2 Eliminated in the primary 2 3 Campaign 2 3 1 Specter s party switch 2 3 2 Republican primary 2 3 3 Late campaign 2 4 Polling 2 5 Results 3 General election 3 1 Candidates 3 2 Campaign 3 2 1 Early weeks 3 2 2 Final campaign 3 3 Predictions 3 4 Polling 3 5 Fundraising 3 6 Results 3 6 1 Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican 3 6 2 Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic 4 References 5 External linksDemocratic primary editMain article 2010 United States Senate Democratic primary election in Pennsylvania Candidates edit Nominee edit Joe Sestak U S representative for Pennsylvania s 7th congressional districtEliminated in primary edit Arlen Specter incumbent U S Senator 1 Withdrew edit William C Kortz member of Pennsylvania House of Representatives 10 Campaign edit nbsp Long time Republican Senator Arlen Specter switched to the Democratic Party in part because he knew he was unlikely to win the Republican primary He ultimately lost to Joe Sestak in the Democratic primary The Democratic party race between Specter and Sestak was considered one of the most bitter and highly watched of all the 2010 primary elections 11 12 13 On April 28 2009 Specter switched to the Democratic Party after having served in the Senate as a Republican for 28 years encouraged by Vice President Joe Biden and Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell 14 after he had voted in favor of President Barack Obama s economic stimulus plan and was faced with opposition from Pennsylvania Republicans 15 16 Although Specter claimed he switched largely because he disagreed with the increasingly conservative direction the Republican Party was heading in he also admitted that the switch was due to his poor chances of winning a Republican primary against Toomey due to Specter s support of the Obama stimulus package 17 18 The Democratic establishment had till then encouraged Sestak a former U S Navy admiral and the representative of Pennsylvania s 7th congressional district to run in the Democratic primary 19 But after Specter switched parties he was largely embraced by such major Democratic figures as Obama Biden Rendell and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid 17 18 The Democratic establishment now feared Sestak would harm Specter s chances in the general election and encouraged him to drop out but Sestak refused and strongly criticized Specter s party switch as an opportunistic move aimed solely at political self preservation 20 Specter led Sestak by more than 20 percentage points in polling for most of the race and while Sestak struggled to overcome problems from his low name recognition 21 Specter received endorsements from major Democratic figures and influential organizations like the AFL CIO and Pennsylvania Democratic Committee 22 23 Specter s lead narrowed significantly in the final month of the campaign when Sestak concentrated his funds and efforts on television commercials that questioned Specter s Democratic credentials 24 As the race progressed Specter grew more strongly critical of Sestak attacking his House attendance record 25 accusing him of failing to pay his staffers minimum wage 26 and claiming that he was demoted in the Navy for creating a poor command climate 27 On May 18 Sestak ended Specter s nearly 30 year Senate career earning 53 8 percent of the primary vote to Specter s 46 2 percent 28 Political observers said the commercials played a major part in Sestak s victory and that a national swing in momentum toward Republicans and against incumbents ultimately harmed Specter s chances 29 30 During the primary campaign it was revealed that former President Bill Clinton had offered Sestak a position in the Obama administration if he withdrew his candidacy This drew allegations from Republicans that the administration violated federal statutes forbidding government employees from interfering with a Senate election 31 32 but no formal investigation was opened 32 The Democratic primary occurred on May 18 2010 Although Specter had won the endorsement of the Pennsylvania Democratic Party at 10 14 PM EDT that evening the Associated Press projected the race as won by Sestak 33 Polling edit Poll source Dates administered ArlenSpecter JoeSestakPOS May 3 2009 62 24 Research 2000 May 4 2009 56 11 Quinnipiac May 28 2009 50 21 Rasmussen Reports June 17 2009 51 32 Franklin Marshall June 25 2009 33 13 Quinnipiac July 19 2009 55 23 Rasmussen Reports August 11 2009 47 34 Research 2000 August 12 2009 48 33 Quinnipiac September 28 2009 44 25 Rasmussen Reports October 13 2009 46 42 Rasmussen Reports December 8 2009 48 35 Quinnipiac U December 8 2009 53 30 Rasmussen Reports January 18 2010 53 32 Rasmussen Reports February 8 2010 51 36 Quinnipiac February 22 28 2010 53 29 Research 2000 March 8 10 2010 51 32 Rasmussen Reports March 15 2010 48 37 Quinnipiac March 31 April 5 2010 53 32 Rasmussen Reports April 13 2010 44 42 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 2 2010 48 42 Quinnipiac April 28 May 2 2010 47 39 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 7 2010 43 43 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 8 2010 42 44 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 9 2010 42 46 Rasmussen Reports May 10 2010 42 47 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 10 2010 42 47 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 11 2010 43 47 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 12 2010 45 45 Quinnipiac May 12 2010 44 42 Franklin amp Marshall May 12 2010 36 38 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 13 2010 44 44 Suffolk Archived 2010 05 16 at the Wayback Machine May 13 2010 40 49 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 14 2010 45 43 Daily Kos Research 2000 May 14 2010 43 45 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 15 2010 44 43 Muhlenberg Morning Call May 16 2010 44 44 Quinnipiac May 16 2010 41 42 Results edit nbsp Results by county Sestak 50 60 60 70 Specter 50 60 60 70 Democratic primary results 5 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Joe Sestak 568 563 53 9 Democratic Arlen Specter incumbent 487 217 46 1 Total votes 1 055 780 100 0 Republican primary editBackground edit Pat Toomey a Republican former Congressman representing the Lehigh Valley based 15th congressional district had previously challenged incumbent Arlen Specter in the Republican primary of the 2004 Senate race in which the conservative Toomey tried to portray Specter as too liberal Although Toomey ultimately lost he came within 17 000 votes less than two percentage points of beating Specter despite the long time Senator s strong name recognition and wide support from party leaders 34 35 In an interview with The Hill on 1 December 2008 Toomey said he was considering a 2010 bid against Specter whom he said was significantly more vulnerable now than he was in 2004 34 35 Toomey claimed that many liberal and moderate Republicans had since abandoned the party to join the Democratic Party during the 2008 presidential primaries eliminating many of Specter s core constituents from a closed Republican primary 34 35 As this disastrous recession worsens I have become increasingly concerned about the future of our state and national economy Unfortunately the recent extraordinary response of the federal government more corporate bailouts unprecedented spending and debt higher taxes is likely to make things worse I think we are on a dangerously wrong path Pennsylvanians want a US Senator focused on real and sustainable job creation that gets our economy growing again That is why I am considering becoming a candidate for the U S Senate Pat Toomey in a March statement 36 The next month however Toomey announced he would not likely not run for Senate again and said he was instead seriously considering a possible bid for governor in 2010 37 But after Specter voted in favor of the Barack Obama supported stimulus proposal aimed at stopping the economic recession Toomey began to once again contemplate running for Senate claiming he believed the incumbent Senator was supporting federal government bailouts and spending plans that were taking the country on a dangerously wrong path 36 38 In discussions with potential supporters in his possible governor bid dozens of Pennsylvanians urged Toomey to challenge Specter who was considered particularly vulnerable because he had supported the Democrats stimulus plan In early March Toomey began to privately assure supporters he would run against Specter 39 40 and during a March 28 keynote address before the Pennsylvania Leadership Conference in Harrisburg he announced It s very likely that very soon I will be a candidate for the U S Senate the 600 audience members gave him a standing ovation at the news 39 Peg Luksik a conservative anti abortion activist from Johnstown who previously lost bids for governor in 1990 and 1994 had announced her candidacy for the Republican primary in March Although some questioned her lack of elected office experience and limited knowledge of foreign affairs Luksik said she planned to be an advocate against big government and excessive spending During a conversation in February 2009 Toomey had assured her he did not plan to run for Senate again 41 She was present the next month at the Pennsylvania Leadership Conference when Toomey announced his plans to run but Luksik said she nevertheless planned to stay in the race 39 42 She said she did not feel betrayed by Toomey s surprise announcement adding I understand these two men have a long personal and rather vindictive history and there s a real desire for the two of them to go and hit each other with sticks I get that I have five sons 42 Her candidacy led to speculation that Luksik and Toomey could split the conservative vote which could help Specter secure a victory in the primary from moderate voters 43 but Luksik said she would resist any efforts by conservative Republicans to pressure her into withdrawing 39 Candidates edit Nominee edit Pat Toomey former U S Representative and candidate for the United States Senate in 2004 Eliminated in the primary edit Peg Luksik conservative activistCampaign edit Specter s party switch edit nbsp Pat Toomey speaking at a rally in April 2009 the same month he formally announced his candidacy for Senate Pat Toomey formally announced his candidacy on April 15 2009 Tax Day via a video on his website 4 and stepped down as head of the anti tax political organization Club for Growth to concentrate on his campaign 44 A Quinnipiac University Polling Institute poll released the previous month had indicated Toomey would defeat Specter by 14 percentage points in a two man race if the primary were held that day That same poll however found three out of four Republicans didn t yet know enough about Toomey to form an opinion about him 45 Some Republicans expressed concerns that if Toomey defeated Specter in the closed Republican primary he would be a weaker candidate in the general election and the party could risk losing the Senate seat to the Democrats Toomey rejected such concerns pointed to his two successful reelections in the Democratic leaning Lehigh Valley congressional district as proof he could win votes from the opposing party 4 Rumors began to circulate that Senator John Cornyn chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee and a Specter supporter had asked Toomey to drop his candidacy but Toomey denied those claims 4 46 Nevertheless Toomey received some early support from conservatives like Jim DeMint the senator from South Carolina who endorsed Toomey and donated thousands of dollars to his campaign 47 48 Starting in April Specter made the rare move of starting to run television advertisements more than a year before the primary election linking Toomey s background as a Wall Street banker and support of credit default swaps to the economic crisis 35 49 While Toomey criticized Specter as a liberal who consistently sided with the Democratic majority 35 46 Specter stressed that if Toomey won the primary he would lose the general election and give Democrats a 60th seat in the Senate which would allow them to suppress Republican filibusters In an interview on Morning Joe Specter said If Mr Toomey is the nominee you can be sure he ll lose He s to the right of Rick Santorum Santorum lost by 18 points spent 31 million and was a two term incumbent 50 Stuart Rothenberg editor of the Rothenberg Political Report said of the expected primary match up Republicans will have to decide whether they want to hold the seat or make a statement about issues and ideology 46 On April 28 2009 however Specter announced he was leaving the Republican Party and becoming a Democrat claiming he disagreed with the increasingly conservative direction the party was heading in and found his personal philosophy was now better aligned with the Democratic Party Although Specter said his decision was made primarily based on principle he admitted it was also partially due to his poor chances of beating Toomey in the Republican primary I have traveled the state and surveyed the sentiments of the Republican Party in Pennsylvania and public opinion polls observed other public opinion polls and have found that the prospects for winning a Republican primary are bleak 17 18 Toomey became widely considered the favorite to win the Republican primary as a result of Specter s defection 51 52 Peg Luksik said of Specter s switch It is clear that Arlen Specter stands with President Obama on a host of issues and with this decision has gone home to the Democratic Party 53 Republican primary edit nbsp Some Republicans encouraged former Governor Tom Ridge to enter the race fearing Pat Toomey was too conservative to win the general election With Specter s departure from the primary some speculated that a less conservative candidate than Toomey was needed to defeat Specter in the general election since the state had previously supported Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election 54 55 56 John Cornyn declined to immediately endorse Toomey and Senator Orrin Hatch vice chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee said of him I don t think there is anybody in the world who believes he can get elected senator there 57 Names of other potential Republican candidates began to be floated like Congressman Jim Gerlach Lieutenant Governor Joseph B Scarnati and State Senate Majority Leader Dominic F Pileggi none of whom ruled out running Some like Senator Lindsey Graham and Republican State Committee Chairman Robert Gleason suggested former governor Tom Ridge might be a suitable candidate 54 Ridge began to seriously contemplate a run and Quinnipiac University polls indicated Specter held a projected lead over Ridge of only three percentage points compared to 20 points over Toomey 58 59 Even before Ridge made a final decision however conservative bloggers began criticizing Ridge s moderate positions and support for abortion rights 60 Political opponents also circulated e mail messages questioning Ridge s residency eligibility because although he still voted in Pennsylvania he lived in Chevy Chase Maryland On May 7 Ridge announced he would not run in the primary 60 61 claiming he preferred to continue supporting the Republican Party by promoting causes as a private citizen 61 Some felt Ridge s decision not to run ended the Republican Party s best chance to win the seat from Specter 62 But Toomey expressed confidence he could beat the incumbent senator claiming Democrats would find him difficult to trust after seeing the way he abandoned the Republicans 51 52 Toomey said he expected to beat Arlen Specter soundly in the Republican primary but I had no idea I would drive him clear out of the party 52 A Quinnipiac University poll released on May 28 projected Toomey now trailed Specter by nine percentage points a smaller gap than Specter s 20 point lead from a May 4 survey 63 Although Toomey anticipated that other candidates would enter the race 64 the Republican primary remained a two way race between him and Luksik 65 66 State Senator Jane Orie from the North Hills area of Pennsylvania briefly considered entering the race but announced on July 13 that she would not run because she wanted to concentrate on the state budget 65 The National Republican Senatorial Committee announced on July 14 that it was endorsing Toomey 56 even though the group previously helped Specter defeat Toomey in 2004 67 It was considered a key endorsement expected to help improve fund raising efforts for Toomey who had already raised 1 6 million in the previous three month quarter 68 By July 22 polls indicated that Specter s projected lead over Toomey had nearly disappeared as the Senator now led him only 45 44 percent 66 That same poll showed Toomey led Luksik by 47 percent to 6 percent a margin so large that media outlets predicted Luksik stood little chance of overcoming him 66 69 the Pittsburgh Post Gazette said Luksik was not considered to be a stiff challenge 70 By August Toomey had an even greater advantage in the polls 12 points over Specter 71 Following an e mail exchange with the Democratic challenger Joe Sestak about health care Toomey agreed to an unorthodox proposal by Sestak to hold a joint town hall about the issue which was held September 2 at Muhlenberg College in Allentown Specter was not invited to participate and political pollster G Terry Madonna described it as an informal pact between Sestak and Toomey to weaken their joint rival something the two men denied 72 73 Commentators suggested Toomey was willing to help Sestak at this stage of the race because he preferred Sestak as a general election opponent rather than Specter who could possibly steal Republican and Independent voters from Toomey 74 75 By October Toomey had raised a total of 3 1 million for the race but spent 861 000 in the past three month quarter as he traveled across the state for his campaign 75 In contrast Luksik raised less than 100 000 from June to October 76 Also in October Toomey was endorsed by former Massachusetts Governor and presidential candidate Mitt Romney who called Toomey the man for the job and pledged to help him raise funds 77 Late campaign edit We re going to win this election because when you give people a choice between prosperity and stagnation they ll choose prosperity We re on the side of the people who pay all the bills I believe they will choose to return to the principles of this great party Pat Toomey in February 2010 48 Toomey continued to hold projected leads against his Democratic opponents as the primary campaign entered 2010 with January polls indicating he held a 14 point lead over Specter and a 17 point lead over Sestak 78 79 Some political scientists like G Terry Madonna and Jeff Brauer attributed Toomey s gains to voter dissatisfaction with the health care plan before Congress and a poor national political climate for Democrats and incumbents Toomey s campaign continued to portray him as a political outsider and small government advocate while condemning Specter and Sestak as a rubber stamp for the Reid Pelosi big government agenda 80 In February it was announced Toomey raised more money than Specter in the final three months of 2009 earning 1 67 million compared to Specter s 1 15 million although Specter s total war chest of 8 66 million was still significantly larger than Toomey s 2 8 million 81 In that same quarter Peg Luksik raised 163 000 and had 66 000 on hand 82 On February 13 the Republican State Committee of Pennsylvania endorsed Toomey over Peg Luskik in the Senate race 48 Toomey told the committee he would work to restore fiscally conservative principals to Washington and fight to eliminate street money or state grants offered in exchange for support on key issues 83 When asked whether Luksik would continue to run she replied Absolutely Are you kidding I always run un endorsed 48 With news outlets like the Pittsburgh Post Gazette and Fox News predicting Toomey would have little difficult defeating Luksik in the primary 84 85 Toomey again became involved with the Democratic primary by accepting an invitation to a second debate with Sestak who had been trying unsuccessfully to engage Arlen Specter in more than one primary debate In accepting the April 11 debate Toomey said Like many politicians who have spent decades in Washington Sen Specter maintains a sense of entitlement to his office and he is unwilling to put his record and ideas to the test of open and honest debate 86 87 In response to the scheduled debate Luksik spokesman Steve Clark said Toomey had to remember he was running against Luksik in the primary not Sestak or Specter 88 By March Specter appeared to be gaining momentum in the Democratic primary with polls indicating he not only led Sestak by 24 percentage points but had recaptured a projected lead against Toomey in the general election by a margin of 49 percent to 42 percent 21 89 Pollsters indicated Specter was benefiting greatly from the large amount of media attention the Democratic primary had received 89 as well as the Senator s strong name recognition whereas Sestak and Toomey remained relatively unknown 21 When the Senate candidates publicly released their quarterly campaign finance reports on April 15 it was revealed that Pat Toomey once again raised more in the first three months of 2010 than either Democratic candidate increasing his funds by 2 3 million to a total of a 4 1 million war chest compared to Specter raising 1 1 million to a total of 9 1 million and Sestak raising 0 4 million to a total of 5 3 million 90 91 The funds raised that quarter made Toomey the best funded Senate challenger in the country to that point 92 Political analysts attributed Toomey s success to the national swing in momentum toward Republicans and said it could indicate the Republicans would be victorious in many Senate races including in Pennsylvania 90 92 Meanwhile Luksik continued to campaign in low attendance appearances on conservative anti abortion anti tax and anti spending principles while portraying herself as a down to earth housewife and common sense candidate 93 In the days leading up to the primary election Toomey received endorsements by the Pittsburgh Post Gazette and the Pittsburgh Tribune Review 94 95 On May 10 he ran his first television advertisement which called for more jobs and less government and included a narrator saying Trillion dollar bailouts and deficits government run health care record unemployment Had enough 96 John Baer of the Philadelphia Daily News said Toomey was so widely expected to defeat Luksik that he said of the Republican primary The race is a balloon with no air It sits flat while the Democratic fight between Arlen Specter and Joe Sestak sucks up all the oxygen 97 Pat Toomey won the May 18 primary with 81 5 percent of the vote or 668 409 of the votes cast compared to 18 5 percent and 151 802 votes for Peg Luksik 6 The Associated Press wrote that Luksik could not overcome Toomey s financial advantages particularly when the Republican primary was so overshadowed by the Democratic race 98 The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that Toomey s run against Luksik in the primary will help him maintain his competitive condition against Sestak who defeated Specter in the Democratic primary 99 Polling edit Poll source Dates administered ArlenSpecter PatToomey TomRidge PegLuksikResearch 2000 December 8 2008 43 28 Franklin Marshall March 17 2009 33 18 2 Qunnipiac March 19 2009 27 41 Rasmussen April 21 2009 30 51 POS May 3 2009 22 62 2 Public Opinion May 5 2009 23 60 Research 2000 May 7 2009 41 33 Quinnipiac May 28 2009 38 3 Quinnipiac July 19 2009 47 6 Quinnipiac May 12 2010 60 9 Suffolk Archived 2010 05 16 at the Wayback Machine May 13 2010 60 9 Declined to run for Republican nomination Results edit Republican primary results 6 Party Candidate Votes Republican Pat Toomey 668 409 81 5 Republican Peg Luksik 151 802 18 5 Total votes 820 211 100 0 General election editCandidates edit Pat Toomey R former U S Congressman Joe Sestak D U S CongressmanCampaign edit Early weeks edit I passionately disagree with his ideas and you re going to see us talking about that but there will never be anything of a personal nature At the end of the game let s have had a great debate and then go out and have a beer That s how they did it in the old days Joe Sestak on his mutual agreement with Toomey for a clean campaign 100 Shortly after Joe Sestak s primary victory Arlen Specter called him to offer congratulations and vowed to support his candidacy saying that I think it s vital to keep this seat in the Democratic Party 101 Both Sestak and Pat Toomey began campaigning for the general election the day after the May 18 primary Before reporting to Capitol Hill for House matters Sestak appeared in interviews on several national media outlets including CNN MSNBC NPR and CBS News 102 Both Toomey and Sestak said they considered each other friends and vowed to engage in a clean campaign focusing on policy rather than personal attacks The two quickly began challenging each other s records however with Sestak citing Toomey s past Wall Street career and claiming he would rather aid rich bankers than the working class and Toomey portraying Sestak as a liberal aligned with Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi 100 103 The day after the primary Sestak claimed that Toomey wanted to continue to back failed policies of George W Bush and to let Wall Street do whatever it wants 104 At a rally at the Allegheny County Airport Toomey said Sestak s politics were more liberal than most mainstream Democrats and described him as a proponent of even larger government 105 Within minutes of Sestak s victory National Republican Senatorial Committee Chairman John Cornyn issued a statement describing Sestak as too liberal for Pennsylvania claiming that he consistently voted with Washington Democratic leaders and supported energy policies that would reduce jobs 104 President Barack Obama Vice President Joe Biden and Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell all of whom vocally supported Specter in the primary each called Sestak after his primary victory and pledged to support him in the general election 105 106 Congressman Darrell Issa the ranking Republican on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform said it would be incredibly disingenuous and reek of political payback for Sestak to accept any such support from the Obama administration after Sestak had accused the White House of offering him a job in exchange for dropping out of the Democratic primary Nevertheless while Sestak said he would not become part of the establishment he welcomed the Obama administration s support and said I plan on being the president s best ally 106 107 On May 20 Toomey released the first statewide advertisement of the campaign a television commercial with a narrator describing both candidates as Two good men with very different ideas The ad contrasted the positions between the two candidates on the Wall Street bailout national health care debate and terrorist trials 100 108 Meanwhile Sestak said Toomey needed to be held accountable for his support of bank deregulation and former President George W Bush s financial policies which helped lead to the economic recession 108 109 The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said Toomey was conveniently failing to mention his decades of service to Wall Street in his advertisements When asked about the promise between Sestak and Toomey to maintain a clean and friendly campaign Pennsylvania Democratic Party Chairman T J Rooney said Guess what That all changed at 10 30 p m Tuesday I hope the congressman adheres to his word but I have no consuming expectation that he will It s going to get hard in a moment This race is going to take a turn 100 Early polls showed varied results over who was leading although some indicated Sestak had an advantage due to the positive press he received for defeating Arlen Specter 110 111 Despite Specter s stated support for Sestak the Senator s former chief of staff David Urban now a lobbyist offered his support to Toomey after the Democratic primary ended Urban sought to connect moderate Republicans conservative Democrats and the current and former chiefs of staff of Republicans and encourage them to help Toomey get elected 112 113 Both candidates sought to use online media avenues to reach out to prospective voters which was still considered a relatively new field for politicians The two started accounts on Twitter with the ToomeyForSenate account amassing 4 907 followers and the Sestak2010 account 3 796 followers as of June 4 Both also had accounts on Facebook where Toomey had 10 361 friends and Sestak had 3 146 114 Both candidates have decided to go negative and go negative early because both are trying to win by making the other candidate unacceptable and therefore not the choice of the voters Lara Brown Villanova University professor 115 Sestak and Toomey had wildly different views on almost every issue including abortion health care energy social security and the recent stimulus bill and financial bailouts 116 Sestak favored the bailouts of the United States financial system automobile industry and mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac claiming they saved many jobs and homes Toomey condemned them as a waste of taxpayer money that rewarded irresponsible behavior 117 Sestak praised the financial regulatory reform bill before Congress as a victory for the American people over Wall Street that would protect the economy from shadow banking and toxic assets Toomey said it did nothing to prevent taxpayer bailouts of failing corporations 118 Toomey also argued against a proposed cap and trade bill which he said would encourage firms to move manufacturing jobs overseas and force Pennsylvania businesses to close Sestak claimed the bill would help businesses by lowering energy costs in the long run claiming Pat Toomey is in the pocket of big oil and big oil doesn t want alternative energy 119 Following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico Sestak criticized Toomey for his support of offshore drilling in Lake Erie claiming the proposal risked placing 90 percent of the country s surface water in danger Toomey said that he supported allowing states to retain the right to make decisions about drilling and claimed Sestak was too willing to cede control to the federal government 120 Both Sestak and Toomey sought to portray themselves as the ideal candidates for small business issues Toomey campaigned on lower taxes and less regulation and released a 30 second television advertisement emphasizing his experience as owner of a small chain of bars and restaurants in the 1990s Sestak countered that image however citing past court depositions that indicated Toomey was not very involved in the businesses and delegated most responsibilities to his brother Steven Sestak said he would help small businesses through tax cuts and federal loan guarantees 121 Heading into July polls still indicated that the two candidates were roughly even Peter Brown assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute said this was better news for Toomey than Sestak because it meant Toomey had limited the damage from the national positive publicity Sestak received after defeating Arlen Specter 122 From April 1 to June 30 Toomey raised 3 1 million compared to Sestak s 1 95 million This left Toomey with 4 56 million in total funds more than twice Sestak s total amount of about 2 million Toomey was considered to have a financial advantage in part because he did not have as challenging a primary as Sestak and thus was able to save most of his money Additionally the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spent 1 4 million of the allotted sum in support of Specter during the primary which left them with only 200 000 for the general election race 123 124 In July Toomey began airing five new television commercials focusing on how he would oppose the Democratic establishment if elected and four focusing on different votes Sestak had cast in the House the stimulus plan health care reform cap and trade and tax increases The ads characterized Sestak s positions as extreme and each ended with a narrator saying That s liberal That s Joe Sestak 115 123 Although they directly attacked Sestak Toomey claimed that they did not break the candidates pledge for a clean campaign because they focused on his policies not his character By running the commercials four months before the general election campaign Toomey hoped to gain an advantage in name recognition 123 Also in July the United States Chamber of Commerce began running television advertisements criticizing Sestak s support of a government takeover of health care and billions in job killing energy taxes claiming he voted with Nancy Pelosi 100 percent of the time 125 126 Sestak called the ads inaccurate citing specific instances when he voted against Pelosi 125 Two Pennsylvania television stations removed the ads but Toomey defended them claiming they were not misleading and accusing Sestak of being hyper sensitive 126 Final campaign edit Starting in July both Sestak and Toomey blamed each other for the federal budget deficits that had become a national spotlight amid the troubled economy Toomey portrayed Sestak as lacking fiscal discipline and supporting budget earmarks for pet projects while Sestak said Toomey supported President George W Bush s deficit spending and damaged the economy by helping deregulate Wall Street 127 On July 15 The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Sestak received at least 119 650 in campaign contributions from employees of companies that received federal earmarks he had steered to the state since 2008 Although a common practice among political candidates Sestak had advocated banning earmarks in favor of a competitive grant program and vowed on his website to return any contributions from organizations or individuals who has made a request for an appropriations project 128 In response to the story Toomey called on Sestak to return those contributions which he did not respond to However Sestak said he routinely returned money from employees of such companies but sometimes had difficulty tracking donations from low level employees 127 129 Toomey vowed never to seek earmarks if elected 128 while Sestak said although he favors ending the practice he would continue advocating for them as long as earmarks continued to exist 129 While Sestak presented economists who agreed with his positions the conservative non profit Citizens Against Government Waste gave him a zero rating on spending issues based on a review of 120 of his votes in Congress 127 Toomey challenged Sestak to sign a No Pork pledge offered by the organization In turn Sestak criticized Toomey for accepting campaign contributions from Club for Growth a group that Toomey used to spearhead and which received criticism from such prominent Republicans as Senator Orrin Hatch Senator John McCain and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee 130 On August 2 moderate Republican Senator Susan Collins who was once condemned by Toomey s Club for Growth for her support of the stimulus package headlined a 1 000 a plate luncheon for Toomey s campaign at Philadelphia s Union League The Philadelphia Inquirer said Collins support indicated Toomey was finding success in seeking moderate support for his candidacy The newspaper noted other apparent efforts to draw in centrists including Toomey s support for Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor who many conservatives opposed and the fact that throughout the campaign Toomey had rarely brought up social issues like gay rights and abortion for which he held conservative views Sestak s campaign claimed those gestures only sought to conceal an extremely conservative voting record 113 The first debate was held on October 20 at WPVI TV studios in Philadelphia 131 and the second held on October 22 at WPXI studios in Pittsburgh 132 133 Both candidates criticized the each other s ideology and referred to the other as extreme Toomey heavily criticized Sestak for his support of Obama s stimulus cap and trade and healthcare reform 134 Sestak not only supported these measures but said they did not go far enough 135 referred to Toomey as Pennsylvania s most right wing congressman 136 and criticized him for working at Wall Street and supporting the elimination of corporate taxes 137 Toomey was endorsed by former longtime Democratic Mayor of Harrisburg Stephen Reed 138 former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani United States Chamber of Commerce NRA Political Victory Fund U S Senator Scott Brown and former governor Sarah Palin Newspaper endorsements include the Pittsburgh Tribune Review 139 The Intelligencer 140 The Tribune Democrat 141 and the Bucks County Courier Times 142 Sestak was endorsed by independent NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg and former Republican U S Senator Chuck Hagel 143 Sestak received newspaper endorsements from the Pittsburgh Post Gazette 144 The Philadelphia Inquirer 145 the Erie Times News 146 The Citizens Voice 147 The Patriot News 148 the Observer Reporter 149 and The Huffington Post 150 Toomey defeated Sestak on election day by a margin of 80 229 votes and 2 1 percentage points 7 The Associated Press called the race for Toomey shortly after midnight The Washington Post credited his victory to voter discontent with the Obama administration and unemployment rates Sestak conceded defeat addressing a crowd at a suburban Philadelphia hotel in his congressional district stating it is now Alex time referring to his 9 year old daughter 8 Toomey gave his victory speech at a get together in Allentown stating that the election was a simple clear message to the establishment with some conciliatory notes that he would cooperate with the White House and fellow Pennsylvania Senator Bob Casey Jr a Democrat 151 152 It was third closest race of the 2010 Senate elections behind only Illinois and Colorado 9 Predictions edit Source Ranking As ofRealClearPolitics 153 Tossup October 20 2010Rothenberg 154 Tilt R flip October 28 2010Sabato s Crystal Ball 155 Lean R flip October 28 2010Rasmussen Reports 156 Tossup October 30 2010CQ Politics 157 Tossup October 31 2010Cook Political Report 158 Tossup October 31 2010Polling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Marginof error JoeSestak D PatToomey R Other UndecidedResearch 2000 report May 7 2009 600 4 0 37 32 Quinnipiac University report May 20 2009 1 191 2 8 37 35 1 23 Rasmussen Reports report June 16 2009 800 4 5 41 35 7 18 Quinnipiac University report July 19 2009 1 173 2 9 35 39 1 23 Rasmussen Reports report August 11 2009 1 000 3 0 35 43 5 18 Research 2000 report August 12 2009 600 5 0 42 41 17 Quinnipiac University report September 28 2009 1 100 3 0 35 38 1 25 Rasmussen Reports report October 13 2009 1 000 3 0 38 37 6 19 Rasmussen Reports report December 8 2009 1 200 3 0 38 44 6 13 Quinnipiac University report December 8 2009 1 381 2 6 35 40 1 22 Rasmussen Reports report January 18 2010 1 000 3 0 35 43 6 16 Rasmussen Reports report February 8 2010 1 000 3 0 35 43 7 15 Franklin amp Marshall Report February 15 21 2010 954 2 9 20 38 3 39 Quinnipiac University report February 22 28 2010 1 452 2 6 36 39 1 24 Research 2000 report March 8 10 2010 600 4 0 39 42 19 Rasmussen Reports report March 15 2010 1 000 3 0 37 42 7 15 Franklin amp Marshall report March 15 21 2010 1 119 2 9 19 27 5 49 Public Policy Polling report March 29 April 1 2010 934 3 2 36 42 22 Quinnipiac University report March 30 April 5 2010 1 412 2 6 34 42 1 22 Rasmussen Reports report April 14 2010 1 000 3 0 36 47 5 12 Rasmussen Reports report May 6 2010 1 000 3 0 40 42 10 9 Research 2000 report May 14 2010 600 4 0 40 45 15 Rasmussen Reports report permanent dead link May 19 2010 500 4 5 46 42 3 9 Research 2000 report May 24 26 2010 600 4 0 43 40 Rasmussen Reports report June 2 2010 500 4 5 38 45 5 12 Public Policy Polling report June 19 21 2010 609 4 0 41 41 18 Rasmussen Reports report June 29 2010 500 4 5 39 45 6 11 Quinnipiac University report July 6 11 2010 1 367 2 7 43 43 1 12 Rasmussen Reports report July 14 2010 750 4 0 38 45 6 12 Rasmussen Reports report July 28 2010 750 4 0 39 45 6 10 Public Policy Polling report August 14 16 2010 585 4 1 36 45 20 Rasmussen Reports report August 16 2010 750 4 0 37 46 5 12 Rasmussen Reports report August 30 2010 750 4 0 39 45 5 11 Ipsos Reuters report August 31 2010 407 4 0 37 47 2 15 Rasmussen Reports report September 13 2010 750 4 0 41 49 2 8 Pulse Opinion Research report September 18 2010 1 000 3 0 40 48 4 8 Quinnipiac University report September 15 19 2010 684 3 8 43 50 7 CNN Time Opinion Research report September 17 21 2010 741 3 5 44 49 4 3 Muhlenberg Morning Call report permanent dead link September 18 23 2010 445 5 0 39 46 14 Suffolk University report Archived 2010 10 08 at the Wayback Machine September 24 27 2010 500 4 4 40 45 13 Rasmussen Reports report September 29 2010 750 4 0 40 49 4 7 Rasmussen Reports report October 12 2010 750 4 0 39 49 2 10 Quinnipiac University report October 13 17 2010 1 046 3 0 46 48 5 Public Policy Polling report October 17 18 2010 718 3 7 46 45 9 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 16 19 2010 403 5 0 44 41 5 10 Muhlenberg Morning Call report permanent dead link October 17 20 2010 420 5 0 43 43 4 10 Rasmussen Reports report October 21 2010 750 5 0 44 48 1 7 Franklin amp Marshall University report October 18 24 2010 720 5 0 36 43 2 19 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 21 24 2010 437 5 0 42 47 2 9 Ipsos Reuters report October 22 24 2010 400 4 9 46 46 2 6 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 22 25 2010 448 5 0 40 48 3 9 CNN Time Opinion Research report October 20 26 2010 1 517 2 5 45 49 3 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 23 26 2010 457 5 0 41 46 3 9 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 24 27 2010 460 5 0 40 48 2 10 Susquehanna Polling amp Research report October 24 27 2010 800 3 46 44 46 9 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 25 28 2010 470 4 5 42 47 3 9 Rasmussen Reports report October 28 2010 750 4 0 46 50 1 3 Marist College report October 26 28 2010 806 3 5 45 52 1 2 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 26 29 2010 480 4 5 43 45 2 10 Quinnipiac University report October 25 30 2010 1 244 2 8 45 50 5 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 27 30 2010 484 4 5 43 45 2 9 Muhlenberg Morning Call report October 28 31 2010 474 4 5 44 48 Public Policy Polling report October 30 31 2010 772 3 5 46 51 4 Fundraising edit Candidate party Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand DebtPat Toomey R 14 818 231 12 743 824 2 074 406 53 000Joe Sestak D 11 842 844 10 185 073 1 657 769 0Source Federal Election Commission 159 Results edit General election results 7 Party Candidate Votes Republican Pat Toomey 2 028 945 51 01 1 61 Democratic Joe Sestak 1 948 716 48 99 7 00 Total votes 3 977 661 100 00 N ARepublican gain from DemocraticCounties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit Beaver largest city Beaver Fayette largest borough Uniontown Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit Delaware largest city Upper Darby Erie largest city Erie Lackawanna largest city Scranton Luzerne largest city Wilkes Barre Montgomery largest city Lower Merion References edit a b Longtime GOP Sen Arlen Specter becomes Democrat CNN com April 28 2009 Retrieved May 19 2010 PA US Senate R Primary Our Campaigns Retrieved April 28 2012 The Green Papers Pennsylvania 2004 General Election The Green Papers Retrieved April 28 2012 a b c d McCormack John April 15 2009 An Interview with Pat Toomey The Weekly Standard Retrieved November 16 2010 a b Commonwealth of PA Elections Information Electionreturns state pa us May 18 2010 Retrieved June 14 2010 a b c 2010 General Primary Pennsylvania Department of State November 16 2010 Archived from the original on November 16 2012 Retrieved November 20 2010 a b c 2010 General Election Elections Information Pennsylvania Department of State November 2 2010 Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved November 18 2010 a b Levy Marc November 3 2010 Pa Dem concedes to GOP s Toomey in Senate race The Washington Post a b Election Results 2010 Senate Races What to Watch Hour by Hour The New York Times Archived from the original on October 28 2018 Malloy Daniel January 15 2010 State Rep Kortz drops out of U S Senate race Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 15 2010 Fitzgerald Thomas May 2 2010 Specter Sestak focus on honor The Philadelphia Inquirer Lorber Janie July 13 2009 For Pa Senate Seat Words Fly Between Specter and Sestak The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2010 Balz Dan Cillizza Chris May 19 2010 Sen Arlen Specter loses Pennsylvania primary Rand Paul wins in Kentucky The Washington Post Retrieved November 15 2010 Connolly Katie April 9 2009 Specter Will Not Run as an Independent Newsweek Archived from the original on October 27 2010 Retrieved November 3 2010 Arlen Specter trailing in new Quinnipiac poll Pittsburgh Business Times March 25 2009 Archived from the original on April 23 2014 Retrieved November 4 2010 Montopoli Brian March 25 2009 Specter In Trouble In Pennsylvania CBS News Archived from the original on January 28 2011 Retrieved November 4 2010 a b c Hornick Ed Walsh Deirdre April 28 2009 Longtime GOP Sen Arlen Specter becomes Democrat CNN Retrieved November 4 2010 a b c Montopoli Brian April 28 2009 Sen Arlen Specter To Become A Democrat CBS News Retrieved November 4 2010 Sestak s Senate candidacy is not official yet The Philadelphia Inquirer July 23 2009 p B02 Rotenberg Carl January 24 2010 Trying to make Pa all it should be The Times Herald Archived from the original on March 5 2012 Retrieved November 8 2010 a b c Vecsey Laura March 3 2010 Specter leads in poll The Patriot News Archived from the original on January 31 2013 Retrieved November 11 2010 Fitzgerald Thomas March 31 2010 Specter wins state AFL CIO backing Jackson Peter February 6 2010 Pa Dems endorse Specter for sixth term Associated Press Retrieved November 11 2010 permanent dead link Schultheis Emily May 12 2010 Poll Specter Sestak race becomes a nail biter Philadelphia Daily News McNulty Timothy October 1 2009 Specter Sestak should resign from the House Pittsburgh Post Gazette Kraushaar Josh February 26 2010 Arlen Specter to Joe Sestak Show your staff the money Politico Retrieved November 11 2010 O Toole James April 21 2010 Specter Sestak debut dueling TV ads in Senate race Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 13 2010 2010 General Primary Pennsylvania Department of State November 16 2010 Archived from the original on November 16 2012 Retrieved November 16 2010 The crushing of Arlen Specter The Economist May 20 2010 Retrieved November 15 2010 Cillizza Chris May 19 2010 The Fix How and why Arlen Specter lost The Washington Post Retrieved November 15 2010 Elliott Philip May 29 2010 WH had Clinton try to ease Sestak out of PA race USA Today Retrieved November 10 2010 a b Bendery Jennifer November 8 2010 Issa Has No Plans To Investigate Sestak Job Offer Roll Call Retrieved November 11 2010 Reported by Fox News at 10 14 PM EDT a b c Swanson Ian December 1 2008 Toomey Specter faces tougher road in 2010 The Hill Retrieved November 16 2010 a b c d e Bacon Perry Jr April 14 2009 Specter s Stimulus Vote Looms Large in Race The Washington Post Retrieved November 16 2010 a b A Specter Toomey rematch MSNBC March 2 2009 Archived from the original on August 12 2011 Retrieved November 16 2010 Micek John L January 25 2009 Toomey In For Governor The Morning Call Retrieved November 16 2010 Seelye Katharine Q April 15 2009 Challenger to Specter From Right of His Party The New York Times Retrieved November 16 2010 a b c d Barnes Tom March 28 2009 Toomey sort of announces U S Senate candidacy Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 16 2010 Drobnyk Josh March 5 2009 Toomey tells friends Senate run is on The Morning Call Retrieved November 16 2010 Vecsey Laura March 13 2009 Luksik prepares to do battle for Specter s seat The Patriot News Retrieved November 16 2010 permanent dead link a b Jackson Peter March 28 2009 Pat Toomey very likely to launch Senate bid Delaware County Daily Times Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved November 16 2010 Luksik seeks Specter s seat Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 11 2009 Retrieved November 16 2010 Toomey quits job to face Specter Times Leader April 14 2009 Archived from the original on February 4 2013 Retrieved November 16 2010 Quinnipiac poll shows Specter trailing Toomey Pittsburgh Tribune Review March 25 2009 Archived from the original on September 6 2012 Retrieved November 16 2010 a b c Schouten Fredreka April 15 2009 Congressional rematch in Pa no GOP party USA Today Retrieved November 16 2010 Rosen James December 10 2009 South Carolina s DeMint wades into Texas Senate race The Miami Herald Retrieved November 20 2010 a b c d Micek John L Itkowitz Colby February 14 2010 State GOP endorses Corbett Toomey The Morning Call Archived from the original on March 22 2012 Retrieved November 20 2010 Trygstad Kyle April 2 2009 PA Sen Specter Up With First Ad RealClearPolitics Archived from the original on April 4 2009 Retrieved November 16 2010 Trygstad Kyle April 7 2009 Specter Running On Electability RealClearPolitics Archived from the original on April 8 2009 Retrieved November 16 2010 a b Toomey Despite Party Shift Specter May Not Be Democratic Nominee Fox News April 29 2009 Retrieved November 16 2010 a b c Barnes Tom May 18 2009 Toomey likes his chances for Senate Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 17 2010 Luksik Arlen has gone home to Dems Delaware County Daily Times April 28 2009 Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved November 16 2010 a b Vecsey Laura April 29 2009 Toomey not top pick for GOP ticket The Patriot News Retrieved November 16 2010 Gilgoff Dan April 28 2009 Christian Conservatives Will Cheer Specter Defection but Toomey Is a Long Shot U S News amp World Report Retrieved November 16 2010 a b Hulse Carl July 14 2009 N R S C Endorses Toomey for Pa Senate Seat The New York Times Retrieved November 17 2010 Raju Manu April 29 2010 Hatch Toomey has no shot in Pa Politico Retrieved November 16 2010 Cillizza Chris May 5 2009 Ridge May Run for Specter s Senate Seat The Washington Post Retrieved November 17 2010 Jackson Peter May 5 2009 Cornyn Ridge weighs bid for Sen Specter s seat The Guardian London Retrieved November 17 2010 a b Wereschagin Mike May 8 2009 Tom Ridge says he won t run for U S Senate in 2010 Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on January 31 2013 Retrieved November 17 2010 a b Matthews Chris May 7 2009 Ridge on decision not to run for Senate Hardball with Chris Matthews New York City NBC News nbcnews com id 30629335 Orr Jimmy May 7 2009 Ridge says no Specter could retain powerless Senate seat The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved November 17 2010 Vecsey Laura May 28 2009 Poll shows Toomey closing gap on Specter The Patriot News Retrieved November 17 2010 Vecsey Laura May 18 2009 Toomey I will be GOP candidate for Senate The Patriot News Retrieved November 17 2010 a b Vecsey Laura July 13 2009 Jane Orie I will not be a candidate in 2010 U S Senate race The Patriot News Retrieved November 17 2010 a b c O Toole James July 23 2009 Specter Toomey matchup is close poll says Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 17 2010 Brennan Chris January 4 2010 Think nationally vote locally Hot button U S issues to shape race in Harrisburg Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved November 19 2010 Vecsey Laura July 14 2009 Pat Toomey gains key endorsement from National Republican Senatorial Committee The Patriot News Retrieved November 17 2010 Alingod Kris July 22 2009 Specter Virtually Tied With Conservative Rival In Latest Poll All Headline News Retrieved November 17 2010 permanent dead link Malloy Daniel October 15 2009 Fundraising shows GOP energized in taking seat away from Specter Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 18 2010 Heyl Eric August 14 2009 Republican Pat Toomey leads Specter by 12 percentage points Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on September 6 2012 Retrieved November 18 2010 Seelye Katharine Q September 3 2009 A Civil Health Care Debate by Senate Candidates Who Deeply Disagree The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2010 Jackson Peter August 31 2009 2 Specter foes team up for meeting on health care Associated Press Zito Salena September 6 2010 Senate 10 It s complicated Pittsburgh Tribune Review Retrieved November 7 2010 permanent dead link a b Vecsey Laura October 16 2009 U S Senate race in Pennsylvania costing Toomey Specter and Sestak tons of cash The Patriot News Retrieved November 7 2010 Toomey raises over 3 million for Senate bid Pocono Record October 7 2009 Retrieved November 18 2010 Romney Endorses Toomey in Pennsylvania Senate Race Fox News October 13 2009 Retrieved November 18 2010 Gibson Jake January 27 2010 Toomey Surges Over Specter in Poll as Fundraising Shows Strong Fourth Quarter Draw Fox News Retrieved November 19 2010 Brennan Chris January 27 2010 Poll Toomey Over Specter by 14 Points Philadelphia Daily News Zito Salena January 22 2010 Toomey doubles size of lead over Specter Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on January 25 2010 Retrieved November 18 2010 Kleefield Eric February 1 2010 Toomey Out Raises Specter In Fourth Quarter Talking Points Memo Retrieved November 18 2010 Itkowitz Colby February 2 2010 Democratic Senate hopefuls soon to start paying for ads The Morning Call Archived from the original on March 22 2012 Retrieved November 20 2010 Micek John L Itkowitz Colby February 13 2010 We ll return to our roots vow GOP candidates The Morning Call Archived from the original on March 22 2012 Retrieved November 20 2010 O Toole James February 1 2010 Specter picks up union endorsements Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 20 2010 Gibson Jake January 14 2010 Specter Sestak Schedule Pennsylvania Democratic Primary Debate Fox News Retrieved November 20 2010 Vecsey Laura February 22 2010 Pat Toomey agrees to another debate with U S Rep Joe Sestak The Patriot News Retrieved November 20 2010 Itkowitz Colby April 12 2010 Sestak goes on offensive in debate The Morning Call Retrieved November 14 2010 Sestak Toomey to debate Delaware County Daily Times February 23 2010 Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved November 20 2010 a b Levy Marc March 2 2010 Poll Specter Leads Toomey in Potential Showdown ABC News Retrieved November 20 2010 a b Giroux Greg April 17 2010 GOP Senate Candidates Fatten Bank Accounts Roll Call Itkowitz Colby April 16 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22 2010 Retrieved November 20 2010 Plaudits for the primaries The Philadelphia Inquirer May 17 2010 a b c d Itkowitz Colby May 23 2010 Sestak Toomey begin face off The Morning Call Archived from the original on May 26 2010 Retrieved November 20 2010 Bumsted Brad Zito Salena Sestak dethrones five term incumbent Specter Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on May 22 2010 Retrieved November 20 2010 Nunnally Derrick May 20 2010 Sestak back in the grind and the coffee flows The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved November 20 2010 permanent dead link Halloran Liz May 20 2010 Filling In The Blanks On Senate Hopefuls Paul Sestak NPR Retrieved November 20 2010 a b Mauriello Tracie May 19 2010 Sestak bucks the odds party regulars in U S Senate primary win Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 20 2010 a b Levy Marc May 19 2010 Sestak Toomey now running for November Associated Press Archived from the original on October 24 2010 Retrieved November 20 2010 a b Clark Stephen May 19 2010 Sestak Opens Arms to White House After Job Offer Allegation Fox News Retrieved November 20 2010 Zito Salena May 23 2010 Nonstop Joe Sestak refuses to join the establishment Pittsburgh Tribune Review Retrieved November 20 2010 permanent dead link a b Toomey airs statewide ad on 3 issues The Morning Call May 21 2010 Archived from the original on October 26 2010 Retrieved November 20 2010 Sargent Greg May 21 2010 Sestak vows aggressive campaign on accountability The Washington Post Retrieved November 20 2010 Cillizza Chris June 2 2010 Alabama voters shake up status quo again The Washington Post Retrieved November 22 2010 O Toole James June 23 2010 Senate race too close to call poll says Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 22 2010 Malloy Daniel June 8 2010 Some Specter loyalists line up to support Toomey Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved November 22 2010 a b Fitzgerald Thomas July 18 2010 Conservative Pat Toomey woos moderates in Senate campaign The Philadelphia Inquirer 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Campaign Trail The Wayne Independent Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved November 22 2010 Fitzgerald Thomas July 9 2010 Toomey Sestak stake out small business mantle The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved November 22 2010 Poll Toomey Sestak races for Pa Senate seat wide open Pittsburgh Business Times July 14 2010 Retrieved November 22 2010 a b c Itkowitz Colby July 8 2010 Toomey ads take early aim against Sestak The Morning Call Archived from the original on November 19 2010 Retrieved November 22 2010 Fitzgerald Thomas July 14 2010 Toomey s war chest more than twice Sestak s The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved November 22 2010 a b Levy Marc July 15 2010 2 Pa TV stations pulling anti Sestak Senate ad The Boston Globe Retrieved November 22 2010 a b Roarty Alex July 15 2010 PoliticsPA Toomey calls Sestak hyper sensitive over ad complaint The Washington Post Retrieved November 22 2010 a b c Brennan Chris July 20 2010 Sestak Toomey play blame game on federal deficits Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved November 30 2010 a b Fitzgerald Thomas July 15 2010 Sestak steers earmarks but also decries system The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved November 30 2010 a b Toomey Sestak spar on earmarks jobless benefits in Pennsylvania s Senate race Intelligencer Journal July 19 2010 Archived from the original on March 13 2012 Retrieved November 30 2010 Waring Tom July 21 2010 Sestak vs Toomey The battle rages on The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved December 4 2010 Sestak Toomey hold 1st debate Sestak surges to lead in new poll delcotimes com Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Retrieved October 22 2010 Sestak Toomey debate in tight Senate race in Pa The Washington Post Archived from the original on October 23 2010 Sestak Toomey meet for last time Morning Call Toomey ad attacks Sestak Archived from the original on October 5 2010 Retrieved October 22 2010 NRSC NRSC Launches New Ad in Pennsylvania Highlighting Sestak s Far Left Position on the Issues Archived November 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine Pa Senate candidates trade extreme charges WHYY News and Information WHYY Archived from the original on November 9 2010 Retrieved October 29 2010 PolitiFact Joe Sestak hits Pat Toomey for supporting zero corporate taxes Ex Harrisburg Mayor Stephen R Reed endorses Republican Pat Toomey PennLive com For U S Senate Elect Pat Toomey Pittsburgh Tribune Review The Official Campaign Website for Pat Toomey for U S Senate Archived October 23 2010 at the Wayback Machine For the U S Senate Pat Toomey The Official Campaign Website for Pat Toomey for U S Senate Archived November 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine Toomey gets our nod over Sestak The Official Campaign Website for Pat Toomey for U S Senate Archived November 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine Endorsement 2010 Toomey for Senate The Official Campaign Website for Pat Toomey for U S Senate Archived November 4 2010 at the Wayback Machine Carlson Margaret October 20 2010 Derivative Trader s Tea Party Gets a Crasher Margaret Carlson Bloomberg story headline Associated Press The Times Leader Wilkes Barre amp Scranton PA Archived March 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Inquirer Editorial Sestak puts good ideas first Philly com GoErie com Editorial Erie Times News endorses Joe Sestak for U S Senate Endorsement Joe Sestak Election Citizens Voice Sestak for Senate He has courage needed for independence PennLive com Sestak our choice for U S Senate Washington Greene PA Editorial Opinion www observer reporter com Archived from the original on November 6 2010 Retrieved October 29 2010 Davis Lanny May 13 2010 Sestak for Senate The Huffington Post Becker Bernie November 3 2010 Toomey at Helm of a Republican Wave in Pennsylvania The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Toomey s Victory Speech POLITICO October 3 2011 Archived from the original on November 8 2010 Battle for the Senate RealClearPolitics Retrieved October 31 2010 Senate Ratings Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved October 31 2010 2010 Senate Ratings Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved October 31 2010 Election 2010 Senate Balance Of Power Rasmussen Reports Retrieved October 31 2010 Race Ratings Chart Senate CQ Politics Archived from the original on October 28 2010 Retrieved October 31 2010 Senate Cook Political Report Retrieved October 31 2010 2010 House and Senate Campaign Finance for Pennsylvania fec gov Retrieved July 25 2010 permanent dead link External links editPennsylvania Department of State Official election results Official general information for voting no candidate lists Imagine Election Look up which district you live in and who is running for US Representative there using your address or zip code U S Congress candidates for Pennsylvania at Project Vote Smart Pennsylvania U S Senate 2010 from OurCampaigns com Campaign contributions from Open Secrets 2010 Pennsylvania Senate General Election All Head to Head Matchups graph of multiple polls from Pollster com Election 2010 Pennsylvania Senate from Rasmussen Reports 2010 Pennsylvania Senate Race from Real Clear Politics 2010 Pennsylvania Senate Race from CQ Politics Race profile from The New York TimesDebatesPennsylvania Senate Debate C SPAN May 1 2010Official campaign sitesJoe Sestak for U S Senate archived from October 28 2010 Pat Toomey for U S Senate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2010 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania amp oldid 1208301730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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