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Despite millions of dollars in super PAC money sloshing around and lots of big, politically-connected donors picking their favorite candidates, the GOP gubernatorial hopeful who is leading in recent polls has raised relatively little money.
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The two are uniting in a last-ditch attempt to winnow support for state Sen. Doug Mastriano, who leads the race so far.
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With six days until Pennsylvania’s primary, Republicans are openly worrying that a leading candidate in the crowded GOP field running for governor is unelectable in the fall general election.
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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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Pennsylvania’s GOP gubernatorial frontrunners want no abortion, no mail voting, and lots of frackingNo matter who wins Pennsylvania’s Republican gubernatorial primary, the candidate will probably be someone who supports essentially outlawing abortion, getting rid of mail voting, dramatically expanding fracking, and slashing regulations on drillers and other industries.
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To date, White has dumped $4 million of his own money into his campaign — more self-funding than any other candidate in the race.
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An overview of what's at stake in the 2022 race for Pennsylvania governor, as well as candidate profiles on Democrat Josh Shapiro and Republicans Lou Barletta, Joe Gale, Charlie Gerow, Doug Mastriano, Bill McSwain, Dave White, and Nche Zama.
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The nine candidates vying for the Republican nomination in Pennsylvania’s 2022 primary governor election have collectively raised more than $13 million over the past 15 months.
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Republican candidates for Pennsylvania governor are pledging to open up natural gas production, but there are constraints to what a governor can do. While governors can influence state agencies and lawmaking, they have limited ability to make the major moves the industry really wants, such as building interstate pipelines and big processing facilities, because other states and federal policy are involved.