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Politics of Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania has been considered a swing state throughout its entire history as it only voted for the nationwide loser on only 10 occasions (1824, 1884, 1892, 1912, 1916, 1932, 1948, 1968, 2000, and 2004). Meaning it has voted for the national winner 83% of the time, as of 2020. Although, it generally supported Republicans between the Civil War and New Deal eras, as it voted Republican in every election between 1860 and 1932, except for 1912, when the Republican vote was split. Even then, the state's strong Republican ties meant that it backed Republican-turned-Progressive Theodore Roosevelt. The state backed a Democrat in 1936 for the first time since 1856. Pennsylvania generally leaned Democratic since the 1990s, as it backed the Democratic presidential candidate in every election since 1992 except in 2016, when it was won by Republican candidate Donald Trump with a plurality.[1]

Results of the 2002 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, illustrating the conservative central "T" concept. Note that although Democratic nominee Ed Rendell won fewer counties than Republican opponent D. Michael Fisher, Rendell carried the more populous areas of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia to win the election.

In 2008, Democrat Barack Obama won the state by a margin of over 10 percent, the largest victory seen in a presidential election in Pennsylvania since Richard Nixon's victory in 1972. In 2016, Donald Trump became the first Republican presidential candidate to win Pennsylvania since George H.W. Bush in 1988, winning by a margin of 0.7 percent. In 2020, Democrat Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in the state by 1.2 percent.

Pennsylvania currently has a split government, with the governor's office being held by a Democrat Josh Shapiro and the state house being controlled by the Democratic Party and the state senate being controlled by the Republican Party. In the United States Senate, Pennsylvania is represented by Democrats Bob Casey Jr. and John Fetterman. In the United States House of Representatives, Pennsylvania is represented by nine Democrats and eight Republicans.

Pennsylvania’s former Senator, Arlen Specter, announced in April 2009 that he was switching his party affiliation from Republican to Democratic, citing the Republicans' shift to the right since he was elected in 1980, though others suspected he switched because he would face a tough Republican primary election in 2010.[2] As it turned out, he ended up losing the Democratic primary to Representative Joe Sestak. Congressman Sestak narrowly lost the general election to Pat Toomey in November 2010, returning the Senate seat to Republicans.

History edit

United States presidential election results for Pennsylvania[3]
Year Republican / Whig Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 3,377,674 48.84% 3,458,229 50.01% 79,380 1.15%
2016 2,970,742 48.17% 2,926,458 47.45% 269,738 4.37%
2012 2,680,434 46.57% 2,990,274 51.95% 84,912 1.48%
2008 2,655,885 44.15% 3,276,363 54.47% 83,228 1.38%
2004 2,793,847 48.42% 2,938,095 50.92% 37,648 0.65%
2000 2,281,127 46.43% 2,485,967 50.60% 146,025 2.97%
1996 1,801,169 39.97% 2,215,819 49.17% 489,130 10.85%
1992 1,791,841 36.13% 2,239,164 45.15% 928,805 18.73%
1988 2,300,087 50.70% 2,194,944 48.39% 41,220 0.91%
1984 2,584,323 53.34% 2,228,131 45.99% 32,449 0.67%
1980 2,261,872 49.59% 1,937,540 42.48% 362,089 7.94%
1976 2,205,604 47.73% 2,328,677 50.40% 86,506 1.87%
1972 2,714,521 59.11% 1,796,951 39.13% 80,633 1.76%
1968 2,090,017 44.02% 2,259,405 47.59% 398,506 8.39%
1964 1,673,657 34.70% 3,130,954 64.92% 18,079 0.37%
1960 2,439,956 48.74% 2,556,282 51.06% 10,303 0.21%
1956 2,585,252 56.49% 1,981,769 43.30% 9,482 0.21%
1952 2,415,789 52.74% 2,146,269 46.85% 18,911 0.41%
1948 1,902,197 50.93% 1,752,426 46.92% 80,525 2.16%
1944 1,835,054 48.36% 1,940,479 51.14% 19,260 0.51%
1940 1,889,848 46.33% 2,171,035 53.23% 17,831 0.44%
1936 1,690,200 40.84% 2,353,987 56.88% 94,239 2.28%
1932 1,453,540 50.84% 1,295,948 45.33% 109,689 3.84%
1928 2,055,382 65.24% 1,067,586 33.89% 27,642 0.88%
1924 1,401,481 65.34% 409,192 19.08% 334,177 15.58%
1920 1,218,216 65.76% 503,843 27.20% 130,557 7.05%
1916 703,823 54.25% 521,784 40.22% 71,685 5.53%
1912 273,360 22.45% 395,637 32.49% 548,739 45.06%
1908 745,779 58.84% 448,782 35.41% 72,889 5.75%
1904 840,949 68.00% 337,998 27.33% 57,791 4.67%
1900 712,665 60.74% 424,232 36.16% 36,313 3.10%
1896 728,300 60.98% 433,228 36.27% 32,827 2.75%
1892 516,011 51.45% 452,264 45.09% 34,735 3.46%
1888 526,091 52.74% 446,633 44.77% 24,844 2.49%
1884 478,804 52.97% 392,785 43.46% 32,275 3.57%
1880 444,704 50.84% 407,428 46.57% 22,651 2.59%
1876 384,184 50.62% 366,204 48.25% 8,605 1.13%
1872 349,589 62.07% 212,041 37.65% 1,632 0.29%
1868 342,280 52.20% 313,382 47.80% 0 0.00%
1864 296,391 51.75% 276,316 48.25% 0 0.00%
1860 268,030 56.26% 16,765 3.52% 191,647 40.22%
1856 147,286 32.01% 230,686 50.13% 82,189 17.86%
1852 179,104 46.18% 198,562 51.20% 10,173 2.62%
1848 185,313 50.28% 171,976 46.66% 11,263 3.06%
1844 161,125 48.59% 167,447 50.50% 3,000 0.90%
1840 144,010 50.00% 143,676 49.88% 340 0.12%
1836 87,235 48.82% 91,457 51.18% 0 0.00%

Philadelphia is the Democratic stronghold of the state, often delivering huge margins for the Democrats in statewide elections. Other urban areas, such as Pittsburgh, Erie, Harrisburg, Allentown, and Scranton lean Democratic as well. Like most states, Pennsylvania's rural areas tend to be more conservative and support Republicans. The resulting political map of Pennsylvania is therefore a red "T" in the center of the state with the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia areas a strong blue. In more recent years, the traditionally Democratic-voting areas in southwestern Pennsylvania have become much more Republican, especially after 2004, similar to other coal country areas in West Virginia and Kentucky. By 2016, counties that once voted for John Kerry in 2004 in the counties surrounding Allegheny County supported Donald Trump by more than 60%. The true swing areas of the state are the suburbs of the large cities, notably Philadelphia's collar counties and the Pittsburgh suburbs.

On the state level, Pennsylvania has been a traditionally liberal Republican state, with a dominant state Republican Party that is much more oriented towards social spending than more conservative state Republican Parties in other regions of the United States. However, the recent Democratic trend in Pennsylvania has affected state politics, and the Democrats controlled the governor's mansion for all but four years since 2003 starting with the two terms under Governor Ed Rendell. After losing the governorship for four years to Tom Corbett from 2011 to 2015, Democratic Governor Tom Wolf defeated Corbett's re-election bid in 2014. Democrat Josh Shapiro succeeded him after the 2022 election, resulting in Democrats winning the governorship three times in a row for the first time since 1844.

On January 22, 2018, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania mandated that the state's congressional map be redrawn, alleging that the current map was unconstitutionally drawn to favor Republicans and disenfranchise Democratic voters, a process known as gerrymandering. Less than one month later, a new congressional map was drawn and approved. The new map would take place in the May primaries.[4] With the new congressional map in place, Democrats had a net gain of three congressional seats, giving the Democratic Party half of Pennsylvania's congressional seats. Also in the 2018 midterm elections, Governor Tom Wolf won reelection by a margin of 17 percent, Bob Casey Jr. was reelected to a third term in the U.S. Senate, John Fetterman unseated incumbent lieutenant governor Mike Stack, and the Republican Party maintained control of the state legislature.[5][6][7]

Federal relations edit

During the Tom Ridge administration, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania maintained a permanent in-house lobbying office in Washington, D.C., to lobby the federal government of the United States.[8] During the Ed Rendell administration, the Commonwealth closed that office and entered into a $720,000 annual contract with Blank Rome to lobby the federal government.[8] The Rendell administration says that the contract with Blank Rome was $140,000 less per year than maintaining a permanent state office in Washington.[8]

Federal representation edit

Pennsylvania currently has 17 House districts In the 118th Congress, 9 are held by Democrats and 8 are held by Republicans. There are as follows:

Pennsylvania's two United States Senators are Democrats Bob Casey Jr. and John Fetterman, serving since 2007 and 2023, respectively.

Pennsylvania is part of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, and United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania in the federal judiciary. The district's cases are appealed to the Philadelphia-based United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Pennsylvania Presidential Election Voting History - 270toWin".
  2. ^ Cillizza, Chris. "The Fix - Specter To Switch Parties". Voices.washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2010-11-27.
  3. ^ "Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections - Presidential General Election Results Comparison - Pennsylvania". Uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved October 23, 2022.
  4. ^ Cohn, Nate (February 19, 2018). "The New Pennsylvania Congressional Map, District by District". The New York Times. Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  5. ^ Couloumbis, Angela (May 15, 2018). "Braddock Mayor John Fetterman wins Pa. Democratic primary for lieutenant governor". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  6. ^ Brennan, Chris (November 7, 2018). "Pa. House and Senate remain in Republican control despite Democratic gains". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  7. ^ Thompson, Charles (November 7, 2018). "Five takeaways from the 2018 mid-term elections, Pa. Legislature division". PennLive. Retrieved January 12, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c Bumsted, Brad; Mike Wereschagin (November 29, 2009). . Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Archived from the original on November 30, 2009.

3.^ "Correbett Could be the First Governor to lose Re-election in PA History" [Michael LaRosa, http://www.msnbc.com/hardball/corbett-could-be-first-governor-lose-re-el]

4.^ "Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corrbett loses Election" , Reid Wilson [1]

External links edit

  • Politics of Pennsylvania at Curlie

politics, pennsylvania, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, apr. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Politics of Pennsylvania news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Pennsylvania has been considered a swing state throughout its entire history as it only voted for the nationwide loser on only 10 occasions 1824 1884 1892 1912 1916 1932 1948 1968 2000 and 2004 Meaning it has voted for the national winner 83 of the time as of 2020 Although it generally supported Republicans between the Civil War and New Deal eras as it voted Republican in every election between 1860 and 1932 except for 1912 when the Republican vote was split Even then the state s strong Republican ties meant that it backed Republican turned Progressive Theodore Roosevelt The state backed a Democrat in 1936 for the first time since 1856 Pennsylvania generally leaned Democratic since the 1990s as it backed the Democratic presidential candidate in every election since 1992 except in 2016 when it was won by Republican candidate Donald Trump with a plurality 1 Results of the 2002 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election illustrating the conservative central T concept Note that although Democratic nominee Ed Rendell won fewer counties than Republican opponent D Michael Fisher Rendell carried the more populous areas of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia to win the election In 2008 Democrat Barack Obama won the state by a margin of over 10 percent the largest victory seen in a presidential election in Pennsylvania since Richard Nixon s victory in 1972 In 2016 Donald Trump became the first Republican presidential candidate to win Pennsylvania since George H W Bush in 1988 winning by a margin of 0 7 percent In 2020 Democrat Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump in the state by 1 2 percent Pennsylvania currently has a split government with the governor s office being held by a Democrat Josh Shapiro and the state house being controlled by the Democratic Party and the state senate being controlled by the Republican Party In the United States Senate Pennsylvania is represented by Democrats Bob Casey Jr and John Fetterman In the United States House of Representatives Pennsylvania is represented by nine Democrats and eight Republicans Pennsylvania s former Senator Arlen Specter announced in April 2009 that he was switching his party affiliation from Republican to Democratic citing the Republicans shift to the right since he was elected in 1980 though others suspected he switched because he would face a tough Republican primary election in 2010 2 As it turned out he ended up losing the Democratic primary to Representative Joe Sestak Congressman Sestak narrowly lost the general election to Pat Toomey in November 2010 returning the Senate seat to Republicans Contents 1 History 2 Federal relations 3 Federal representation 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editUnited States presidential election results for Pennsylvania 3 Year Republican Whig Democratic Third partyNo No No 2020 3 377 674 48 84 3 458 229 50 01 79 380 1 15 2016 2 970 742 48 17 2 926 458 47 45 269 738 4 37 2012 2 680 434 46 57 2 990 274 51 95 84 912 1 48 2008 2 655 885 44 15 3 276 363 54 47 83 228 1 38 2004 2 793 847 48 42 2 938 095 50 92 37 648 0 65 2000 2 281 127 46 43 2 485 967 50 60 146 025 2 97 1996 1 801 169 39 97 2 215 819 49 17 489 130 10 85 1992 1 791 841 36 13 2 239 164 45 15 928 805 18 73 1988 2 300 087 50 70 2 194 944 48 39 41 220 0 91 1984 2 584 323 53 34 2 228 131 45 99 32 449 0 67 1980 2 261 872 49 59 1 937 540 42 48 362 089 7 94 1976 2 205 604 47 73 2 328 677 50 40 86 506 1 87 1972 2 714 521 59 11 1 796 951 39 13 80 633 1 76 1968 2 090 017 44 02 2 259 405 47 59 398 506 8 39 1964 1 673 657 34 70 3 130 954 64 92 18 079 0 37 1960 2 439 956 48 74 2 556 282 51 06 10 303 0 21 1956 2 585 252 56 49 1 981 769 43 30 9 482 0 21 1952 2 415 789 52 74 2 146 269 46 85 18 911 0 41 1948 1 902 197 50 93 1 752 426 46 92 80 525 2 16 1944 1 835 054 48 36 1 940 479 51 14 19 260 0 51 1940 1 889 848 46 33 2 171 035 53 23 17 831 0 44 1936 1 690 200 40 84 2 353 987 56 88 94 239 2 28 1932 1 453 540 50 84 1 295 948 45 33 109 689 3 84 1928 2 055 382 65 24 1 067 586 33 89 27 642 0 88 1924 1 401 481 65 34 409 192 19 08 334 177 15 58 1920 1 218 216 65 76 503 843 27 20 130 557 7 05 1916 703 823 54 25 521 784 40 22 71 685 5 53 1912 273 360 22 45 395 637 32 49 548 739 45 06 1908 745 779 58 84 448 782 35 41 72 889 5 75 1904 840 949 68 00 337 998 27 33 57 791 4 67 1900 712 665 60 74 424 232 36 16 36 313 3 10 1896 728 300 60 98 433 228 36 27 32 827 2 75 1892 516 011 51 45 452 264 45 09 34 735 3 46 1888 526 091 52 74 446 633 44 77 24 844 2 49 1884 478 804 52 97 392 785 43 46 32 275 3 57 1880 444 704 50 84 407 428 46 57 22 651 2 59 1876 384 184 50 62 366 204 48 25 8 605 1 13 1872 349 589 62 07 212 041 37 65 1 632 0 29 1868 342 280 52 20 313 382 47 80 0 0 00 1864 296 391 51 75 276 316 48 25 0 0 00 1860 268 030 56 26 16 765 3 52 191 647 40 22 1856 147 286 32 01 230 686 50 13 82 189 17 86 1852 179 104 46 18 198 562 51 20 10 173 2 62 1848 185 313 50 28 171 976 46 66 11 263 3 06 1844 161 125 48 59 167 447 50 50 3 000 0 90 1840 144 010 50 00 143 676 49 88 340 0 12 1836 87 235 48 82 91 457 51 18 0 0 00 Philadelphia is the Democratic stronghold of the state often delivering huge margins for the Democrats in statewide elections Other urban areas such as Pittsburgh Erie Harrisburg Allentown and Scranton lean Democratic as well Like most states Pennsylvania s rural areas tend to be more conservative and support Republicans The resulting political map of Pennsylvania is therefore a red T in the center of the state with the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia areas a strong blue In more recent years the traditionally Democratic voting areas in southwestern Pennsylvania have become much more Republican especially after 2004 similar to other coal country areas in West Virginia and Kentucky By 2016 counties that once voted for John Kerry in 2004 in the counties surrounding Allegheny County supported Donald Trump by more than 60 The true swing areas of the state are the suburbs of the large cities notably Philadelphia s collar counties and the Pittsburgh suburbs On the state level Pennsylvania has been a traditionally liberal Republican state with a dominant state Republican Party that is much more oriented towards social spending than more conservative state Republican Parties in other regions of the United States However the recent Democratic trend in Pennsylvania has affected state politics and the Democrats controlled the governor s mansion for all but four years since 2003 starting with the two terms under Governor Ed Rendell After losing the governorship for four years to Tom Corbett from 2011 to 2015 Democratic Governor Tom Wolf defeated Corbett s re election bid in 2014 Democrat Josh Shapiro succeeded him after the 2022 election resulting in Democrats winning the governorship three times in a row for the first time since 1844 On January 22 2018 the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania mandated that the state s congressional map be redrawn alleging that the current map was unconstitutionally drawn to favor Republicans and disenfranchise Democratic voters a process known as gerrymandering Less than one month later a new congressional map was drawn and approved The new map would take place in the May primaries 4 With the new congressional map in place Democrats had a net gain of three congressional seats giving the Democratic Party half of Pennsylvania s congressional seats Also in the 2018 midterm elections Governor Tom Wolf won reelection by a margin of 17 percent Bob Casey Jr was reelected to a third term in the U S Senate John Fetterman unseated incumbent lieutenant governor Mike Stack and the Republican Party maintained control of the state legislature 5 6 7 Federal relations editDuring the Tom Ridge administration the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania maintained a permanent in house lobbying office in Washington D C to lobby the federal government of the United States 8 During the Ed Rendell administration the Commonwealth closed that office and entered into a 720 000 annual contract with Blank Rome to lobby the federal government 8 The Rendell administration says that the contract with Blank Rome was 140 000 less per year than maintaining a permanent state office in Washington 8 Federal representation editPennsylvania currently has 17 House districts In the 118th Congress 9 are held by Democrats and 8 are held by Republicans There are as follows Pennsylvania s 1st congressional district represented by Brian Fitzpatrick R Pennsylvania s 2nd congressional district represented by Brendan Boyle D Pennsylvania s 3rd congressional district represented by Dwight Evans D Pennsylvania s 4th congressional district represented by Madeleine Dean D Pennsylvania s 5th congressional district represented by Mary Gay Scanlon D Pennsylvania s 6th congressional district represented by Chrissy Houlahan D Pennsylvania s 7th congressional district represented by Susan Wild D Pennsylvania s 8th congressional district represented by Matt Cartwright D Pennsylvania s 9th congressional district represented by Dan Meuser R Pennsylvania s 10th congressional district represented by Scott Perry R Pennsylvania s 11th congressional district represented by Lloyd Smucker R Pennsylvania s 12th congressional district represented by Summer Lee D Pennsylvania s 13th congressional district represented by John Joyce R Pennsylvania s 14th congressional district represented by Guy Reschenthaler R Pennsylvania s 15th congressional district represented by Glenn Thompson R Pennsylvania s 16th congressional district represented by Mike Kelly R Pennsylvania s 17th congressional district represented by Chris Deluzio D Pennsylvania s two United States Senators are Democrats Bob Casey Jr and John Fetterman serving since 2007 and 2023 respectively Pennsylvania is part of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania and United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania in the federal judiciary The district s cases are appealed to the Philadelphia based United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit See also editGovernment of Pennsylvania Elections in Pennsylvania Political party strength in PennsylvaniaReferences edit Pennsylvania Presidential Election Voting History 270toWin Cillizza Chris The Fix Specter To Switch Parties Voices washingtonpost com Retrieved 2010 11 27 Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Presidential General Election Results Comparison Pennsylvania Uselectionatlas org Retrieved October 23 2022 Cohn Nate February 19 2018 The New Pennsylvania Congressional Map District by District The New York Times Retrieved January 12 2020 Couloumbis Angela May 15 2018 Braddock Mayor John Fetterman wins Pa Democratic primary for lieutenant governor The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved January 12 2020 Brennan Chris November 7 2018 Pa House and Senate remain in Republican control despite Democratic gains The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved January 12 2020 Thompson Charles November 7 2018 Five takeaways from the 2018 mid term elections Pa Legislature division PennLive Retrieved January 12 2020 a b c Bumsted Brad Mike Wereschagin November 29 2009 Lobbyist expenses wasteful critics say Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on November 30 2009 3 Correbett Could be the First Governor to lose Re election in PA History Michael LaRosa http www msnbc com hardball corbett could be first governor lose re el 4 Pennsylvania Governor Tom Corrbett loses Election Reid Wilson 1 External links editPolitics of Pennsylvania at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of Pennsylvania amp oldid 1173788442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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