Ups and Downs – April 29
The year is now one-third complete. We are three weeks away from one of the most highly-anticipated primaries in Commonwealth history and the fun is just beginning.
The year is now one-third complete. We are three weeks away from one of the most highly-anticipated primaries in Commonwealth history and the fun is just beginning.
It’s the holiday weekend edition of Ups and Downs. It’s about endorsements, polls, mail-in ballots, drop boxes, forums and yes, peeps.
It might be our favorite weekend of 2022 so far. A tradition unlike any other is taking place in Augusta, Ga., while baseball is back. Wishing the Phillies and the Pirates the best of luck this season! Here are our Ups and Downs for Opening Weekend.
No April Fool’s Day jokes here. Now that March is in the rearview mirror, we offer our salute to the final week of the third month of the year.
Congressman Conor Lamb won the PoliticsPA readers poll for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate.
A busy news week for us here at PoliticsPA. And a week of celebrations – National Cheesesteak Day, for instance. We’re a little partial to Tony Luke’s, but that’s just us. Would that get an Up or a Down from you? Here’s what we think for the week that was March 21-25.
What a week. It began with a press availability in Harrisburg and ended with a statement to renounce Turkish citizenship if elected to the U.S. Senate. It saw 91 candidates make official their intention to run for senator, governor, lieutenant governor or congress. It saw endorsements flying left and right. It saw the PA Supreme Court uphold the constitutionality of the LRC maps and set in motion the election calendar for potential state legislative nominees. And we lost an hour to Daylight Saving Time. Here are the ups and downs for March 18.
Given the commotion surrounding the campaigns of Dave White, Jake Corman, Bill McSwain and Doug Mastriano to name a few, one name has been particularly inconspicuous – Jason Richey.
Over the last two election cycles, Pennsylvanians in rural sections of the commonwealth have become even friendlier toward Republican candidates. That fact has not been lost in Democratic circles.
In the long history of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the hallways of Harrisburg have been dotted with elected statewide officials who are primarily white and male. Can that change in 2022?
Do you agree that ByteDance should be forced to divest TikTok?
Total Voters: 30