By KIMBERLY HEFLING
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
March 10, 2008 11:15 am
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Pennsylvania’s most competitive U.S. House race primary — or, at least the one with the most competitors — has been playing out in north-central Pennsylvania, where 12 candidates are running for the state’s only open congressional seat.
But there are also other congressional races to watch leading up to the state’s April 22 primary.
In northeast Pennsylvania, Republican businessmen Chris Hackett and Dan Meuser have already run TV ads against each other. They are vying for the opportunity to unseat Rep. Chris Carney, a freshman Democrat in a heavily Republican district.
In western Pennsylvania, Republican Reps. Phil English and Tim Murphy each have four Democrats competing for the chance to unseat them. They could be taking a cue from Rep. Jason Altmire, a freshman Democrat also from western Pennsylvania who seemed to come from nowhere in 2006 to beat then-Rep. Melissa Hart, a three-term Republican.
Altmire was one of four House freshmen Democrats to unseat a Republican in the 2006 election. The wins tipped membership of Pennsylvania’s 19-member House delegation in the Democrats’ favor for the first time since 1998.
Nine Republicans and three Democrats are competing for the seat held by Rep. John Peterson, a Republican retiring at the end of his term. The district, which includes a wide swath of central and northern Pennsylvania, includes the college town of State College, but is predominantly rural. Peterson has not endorsed a candidate, and there is no clear front-runner. But the winner of the Republican primary would likely have an advantage in November in the heavily Republican district.
The GOP candidates include: Elk County Coroner Lou Radkowski; Jeffrey J. Stroehmann, a business owner who is the great-grandson of the founder of Stroehmann Bakery; Derek Walker, owner of a financial planning business; Chris Exarchos, a former Centre County commissioner; Matt Shaner, a hotel developer; Glenn Thompson, the Centre County GOP chairman; Keith Richardson, an attorney and pastor; Clarion Mayor John Rea Stroup; and John Krupa, an insurance agent.
The Democratic candidates are Bill Cahir, a journalist who fought in the Iraq war with the Marines; Clearfield County Commissioner Mark McCracken; and Lock Haven Mayor Richard Vilello.
The four candidates competing in the Democratic primary to challenge Murphy are Wayne Dudding, a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves and an Iraq war veteran; Steve O’Donnell, a businessman; Beth Hafer, the daughter of former state treasurer Barbara Hafer and an executive in her mother’s consulting firm; and Brien Wall, a life insurance company employee.
Those vying in the Democratic primary to challenge English are Tom Myers, a lawyer; Kathy Dahlkemper, the director of the Lake Erie Arboretum; Kyle Foust, an administrator at Mercyhurst College and member of the Erie County Council; and Mike Waltner, a program coordinator at the Episcopal Cathedral of St. Paul in Erie.
The primary is just a precursor to what will likely be an even more competitive election cycle in November. Among the competitive races without contested primaries:
—A rematch between Altmire and Hart.
—In northeast Pennsylvania, a contest between Democratic Rep. Paul Kanjorski, a 12-term incumbent, and Hazleton mayor Lou Barletta, a Republican who gained national attention for his efforts to crack down on illegal immigration.
—In the Philadelphia region, a matchup between Rep. Patrick Murphy, a freshman Democrat and Iraq war veteran, and Republican Tom Manion, a retired Marine Reserves colonel and pharmaceutical executive whose son died last year in Iraq.
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On the Net:
Pennsylvania Republican Party: http://www.pagop.org/
Pennsylvania Democratic Party: http://www.padems.com/
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