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What could be the final primary debate between Republicans running for Pennsylvania’s open U.S. Senate seat devolved into a string of attacks.
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With two weeks until Pennsylvania’s primary election, Republican candidates running for U.S. Senate and governor continue to sow doubts about the legitimacy of 2020′s presidential election.
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Pennsylvania candidates for the governor and U.S. Senate seats quickly weighed in on the potential overturning of Roe.
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Millionaire candidates and billionaire investors are harnessing their considerable personal wealth to try to win competitive Republican primaries for open U.S. Senate seats in Pennsylvania and Ohio. In Pennsylvania, three multimillionaire candidates, including former hedge fund CEO Dave McCormick and TV's Dr. Mehmet Oz, report lending their campaigns over $20 million combined.
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The state’s Senate hopefuls vary widely on the issues of voting rights and democracy.
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For the first time Monday night, all the major candidates in Pennsylvania’s Republican U.S. Senate primary met for a debate.
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Dave McCormick earned more than $22 million last year as CEO of the world’s largest hedge fund — the job he quit to run for U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania. McCormick filed a financial disclosure form that offered the public its first detailed look at his finances.
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An overview of what's at stake in the 2022 race to represent Pennsylvania in the U.S. Senate, as well as candidate profiles on Democrats John Fetterman, Alex Khalil, Conor Lamb, and Malcolm Kenyatta; and Republicans Kathy Barnette, Jeff Bartos, George Bochetto, Sean Gale, David McCormick, Mehmet Oz, and Carla Sands.
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Every election cycle, candidates for the U.S. Senate and House have to file detailed, public reports on their personal finances.
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Although the 2022 election is more than a year away and the financial and political fields could change significantly, the major candidates have already filed several rounds of campaign finance reports, and clear differences in their fundraising powers have emerged. On the heels of their latest filing, for the third quarter of 2021, here’s where they stand.