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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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The state’s Senate hopefuls vary widely on the issues of voting rights and democracy.
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On the Republican side, voters are more unified on a host of issues, except who they plan to vote for next month. Even Donald Trump’s endorsement of doctor and television celebrity Mehmet Oz appears to have done little to clarify the picture.
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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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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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Bartos touts his business experience, derides other candidates for weak ties to PA at tele town hallBefore he officially entered the race, Bartos said he signed a pledge that, if elected, he would only serve two terms.
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The title of “Pennsylvanian” may not carry quite the cachet of declarations of fighting socialists or getting tough on China, but it’s increasingly the go-to weapon for Republican primary candidates in one of the nation’s premier U.S. Senate contests. A wide-open race for the swing-state seat has attracted wealthy and well-connected transplants, and homers Jeff Bartos and George Bochetto are seizing on it.
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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.