Elvira Berry Joins Race to Primary Daylin Leach

The field continues to grow. 

Elvira Berry, a small business owner and attorney, announced her intentions to seek the Democratic nomination for the state’s 17th Senate District. She becomes at least the four Democrat, joining joining activist Sara Atkins, Norristown Area School Board President Shae Ashe, and longtime labor organizer Linda Fields, to announce a primary challenge to incumbent state Sen. Daylin Leach (D-Montgomery). 

In a release about her candidacy, she said the district needs a “progressive voice we can be proud of.”

“We need a new voice in Harrisburg, a progressive voice we can be proud of – one who listens to our community.” Berry said. “As I talk to people across our community, I hear the same things: we need a Senator who understands that health care costs are out of control; that gun violence is putting our kids and families at risk; and that working families are overdue for a pay raise. I believe I AM the person to help bring this change.” 

Calls for Leach to resign have grown from the Delaware and Montgomery County Democratic committees up to Gov. Tom Wolf, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman amid sexual assault allegations, which Leach denies. According to a final report by the lawyers from the firm Eckert Seamans Cherin & Mellott LLC, Leach did not break any federal discrimination laws, although the same report concluded that Leach engaged in “workplace humor that was at times ‘unquestionsably sexual in nature.’” Following the release of that report, Wolf, Fetterman, Senate Majority Leader Jay Costa reiterated their calls for Leach to resign. Separately, Leach has apologized for incidents of inappropriate conduct with staff members. He has refused to resign. 

The release continues to detail what has led Berry to this moment. She immigrated from Nigeria as a child twenty-five years ago and is a single mother to one son. Her release adds that she worked her way through college and law school and her small business provides “100% free healthcare to her employees.”

She specifically highlights four causes for her ““Progressive Platform for Pennsylvanians.” The campaign priorities include the following: supporting students, holding drug and insurance companies accountable to reduce costs, addressing gun violence, and raising the state’s minimum wage to $15 an hour. 

“We can’t wait for change in our community – it needs to start now, for all of our families,” Berry said in the release. “The sooner we remove distractions in Harrisburg and hold our leaders accountable for delivering results, the better our community and our families will be.” 

A spokesperson for Leach’s campaign said that he is currently “focused 100% on serving the interests of the 17th Senate District constituents” and provided specific initiatives he’s currently focused on.

“His legislative efforts including working to legalize adult-use cannabis, providing protections for victims of human trafficking and preventing the irresponsible use of hydraulic fracturing on Commonwealth lands,” Leach campaign spokesperson Andrew Blum said in a statement. “In the district he is busy helping his constituents navigate government benefits, providing grant funding to local projects and attending community events to help educate citizens about important programs.”

Leach has not faced a primary challenger since being elected to the state Senate in 2009.

6 Responses

  1. The more the merrier. Split that #PayAttentionToMeToo vote, and return our liberal lion to the seat he has so well earned from his years of leading on too many left causes to count. Best luck Daylin, long my face PA state General Assembly member.

  2. I think Daylin wins that Primary whether it is one opponent or several. My guess is that Katie will make the call here as to who will be her chosen one. I would like to have the transcript of those conversations!

  3. Having more than one primary opponent guarantees Daylin winning the primary.

    Someone in leadership needs to sit down with all these primary challengers and either “lay down the law” or have them “draw straws”.. but whatever it takes so that at the end of the day there is only ONE primary opponent.

    1. David, you have to know that what you are saying is not necessarily true. If a candidate is weak, they will lose and the amount of primary challengers won’t matter but in the reverse if the candidate beats their challengers then they were strong enough to win. Your encouragement for “politics as usual” and seemingly anti good government by having “bosses” determine challengers is incorrect. Let everybody run and may the best one win is true democracy.

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  • Will tonight's U.S. Senate debate affect your decision?


    • No. I've already decided on how to cast my vote. (81%)
    • Yes. Anxious to hear from both candidates (19%)

    Total Voters: 27

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