Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor: A guide to the 2022 primary and candidates

What’s at stake : The lieutenant governor’s office doesn’t have a long list of official responsibilities, but the role’s gravity transcends its historically low profile (scandal and star power notwithstanding). In addition to refereeing the state Senate, the LG chairs the Board of Pardons and the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency. The job also requires keeping tabs on local government agencies across the diverse, massive Keystone State. All those tasks have amassed more import in recent years since the role’s relevance was questioned. And the position’s significance seems poised to grow on the heels of the pandemic and a chaotic 2020 election (and startlingly unaffected redistricting process) — not to mention the Board of Pardons’ significance in desperately needed criminal justice reforms. And, maybe, this year's winner will someday be needed to cast the Senate's tie-breaking vote.

Note: Campaign finance fundraising totals include contributions raised in 2021 and 2022. Data updated 5/12/22.


Democrats

Austin Davis

Davis’s war chest dwarfs that of the Republican field, at least as of the last campaign finance report filing deadline on April 5. Paired with Attorney General and Democratic gubernatorial nominee Josh Shapiro, Davis, 32, hails from McKeesport and has spent much of his life in politics and the Pittsburgh area. Davis was the first Black state representative elected from his district in 2018, and he would be the state’s first Black lieutenant governor if he wins this race.

Austin Davis
Courtesy of Friends of Austin Davis
/
Courtesy of Friends of Austin Davis
Austin Davis

Party: Democrat
Experience:
Pennsylvania House of Representatives – 35th District (2018 – present);
Previous aide to Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald
Education: University of Pittsburgh (B.S.)
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: Allegheny County Democratic Committee; 14th Ward Independent Democratic Club; gubernatorial candidate Josh Shapiro; Pennsylvania AFL-CIO
Fundraising total: $1.6 million
Worth reading: "Austin Davis announces bid for lieutenant governor, backed by Josh Shapiro" (Chris Potter, WESA)


Brian Sims

Matt Rourke
/
AP
Brian Sims

Sims made history as Pennsylvania’s first openly gay state legislator when he was elected more than a decade ago to represent Center City Philadelphia in the state House — and if elected lieutenant governor, would make history as Pennsylvania's first openly gay elected official to hold state office. He’s spent his legislative years in the House of Representatives, not the Senate — where he would run voting sessions as lieutenant governor. Opponents say Sims’s quick temper makes him ill-suited for that part of the job, but supporters defend his record. Sims settled in Philly after law school in Michigan and a peripatetic upbringing by two parents who are Army officers.

Party: Democrat
Experience: Pennsylvania House of Representatives – 182nd District (2012 – present)
Education: Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania (B.S.); Michigan State University (J.D.)
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: LGBTQ Victory Fund; Philly Neighborhood Networks; Philadelphia state Reps. Angel Cruz and Chris Rabb
Fundraising total: $819,582
Worth reading: "Philly Democrat Brian Sims sparks firestorm after posting videos of him scolding Planned Parenthood protesters" (Andrew Seidman, Philadelphia Inquirer)


Ray Sosa

Ray Sosa
Courtesy the Sosa campaign
Ray Sosa

 Sosa has run for lieutenant governor before, and is adamant about the importance of the office. Sosa has criticized current Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, a fellow Democrat now running for Senate, for his handling of the pandemic as head of PEMA. More broadly, Sosa critiques the practice of using the position as a launching pad to higher office through the years. Sosa, who’d be the first Latino lieutenant governor in Pennsylvania if elected, is a finance and insurance consultant and has lived in suburban Philadelphia for more than a decade.

Party: Democrat
Education: Interamerican University of Puerto Rico (B.B.A.)
Links: Website | Facebook
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: None currently available
Fundraising total: $4,507


Republicans

John Brown 

John Brown
Courtesy the Brown campaign
John Brown

Brown’s tenure in local government started in 2009 when he ran for mayor of Bangor, Northampton County, after a career in banking and pharmaceuticals. He says his years in the borough’s highest office, as Northampton County Executive, and his time on Northampton County Council have prepared him well for keeping the peace during state Senate debates. As Board of Pardons chair, he would similarly lean on his experiencesoverseeing the implementation of Northampton’s re-entry program and enhanced law enforcement training protocols.

Party: Republican 
Experience: Northampton County Council member (2022 – present)
SEDA – COG Executive Director (2020)
Northampton County Executive (2014 – 2017)
Mayor of Bangor (2010 – 2014)
Education: Notre Dame University (B.S.)
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: None currently available
Fundraising total: $395.55


Jeff Coleman

Jeff Coleman
Courtesy the Coleman campaign
Jeff Coleman

Coleman previously served nearly two terms as a state rep out of Western Pennsylvania, after ousting a 12-year incumbent to win office at age 25 in 2000 and then leaving office early to host a political radio show. The political consultant says he’s running to help restorecivility and substantive (vs. performative) debate on the Senate floor. Of the Republican candidates, he’s reported the most campaign cash on hand as of this writing.

Party: Republican 
Experience: Pennsylvania House of Representatives – 60th District (2001 – 2004)
Education: Liberty University (B.S.)
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: Former Board of Pardons Secretary and former opponent/candidate Brandon Flood
Fundraising total: $156,048


Teddy Daniels

Teddy Daniels, a Republican candidate for Pennsylvania lieutenant governor, enters the Wayne County Courthouse in Honesdale, Pa., on Friday, May 6, 2022, for a hearing on a protection from abuse order.
Michael Rubinkam
/
AP
Teddy Daniels, a Republican candidate for Pennsylvania lieutenant governor, enters the Wayne County Courthouse in Honesdale, Pa., on Friday, May 6, 2022, for a hearing on a protection from abuse order.

Daniels cut his political teeth supporting former President Donald Trump, including organizing during Trump’s re-election campaign and the insurrection on Jan. 6. Daniels, who recently filed an unsuccessfulredistricting lawsuit, hasn’t submitted campaign finance disclosures for this race yet. But he’draised more than half a million dollars for his Congressional run in 2020 and another he’d started beforedeciding to seek state office instead. The 47-year-old U.S. Army veteran had a controversial law enforcement career and more recentlystarted his own security consultancy targeting the cannabis industry. Daniels, who played football at West Virginia University, isfrom Montgomery County and lives in Wayne County.

Party: Republican 
Education: Valley Forge Military Academy
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Gab
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: State Sen. Doug Mastriano
Fundraising total: $157,846
Worth reading: "Domestic-abuse allegation haunts law-and-order MAGA candidate" (Hunter Walker, Rolling Stone)
"Pennsylvania GOP lieutenant governor candidate calls out opponent over Facebook post" (Mark Scolforo, AP)
"GOP lieutenant governor primary candidate Teddy Daniels hit with protective order" (Michael Rubinkam/Mark Scolforo, AP)


Carrie Lewis DelRosso

Carrie DelRosso
Courtesy the DelRosso campaign
Carrie DelRosso

DelRosso is still in her first term in Harrisburg representing Pittsburgh’s northeast suburbs after defeating longtime incumbent House Minority Leader Frank Dermody. (DelRosso, a Republican, was drawn out of that district by a new map of House political boundaries.) She was likewise in her first term on Oakmont Borough Council when she launched her statehouse bid. The 46-year-old Scranton native previously ran her own public relations firm, counting Pittsburgh-area school districts, local governments, nonprofit organizations, and small businesses among her clients. DelRosso, who has two children, has said motherhood has prepared her for keeping the peace during state Senate sessions.

Party: Republican 
Experience: 
Pennsylvania House of Representatives – 33rd District (2021 – present)
Education: University of Pittsburgh
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: Commonwealth Partners Chamber of Entrepreneurs; full list here.
Fundraising total: $1.7 million
Worth reading: "First-term state Rep. Delrosso jumps into GOP race for Pa. lieutenant governor" (Julian Routh, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)


Russ Diamond

Russ Diamond
Courtesy the Diamond campaign
Russ Diamond

Diamond’s political career went mainstream in 2014, when he weathered domestic violence accusations and the local GOP’s demand to quit to win a statehouse seat on the Republican ticket after losing as a Libertarian for nearly a decade. Spurred by the state’s midnight pay-raise scandal of 2005, Diamond got into politics after years of running his Raintree Multimedia in Annville, Lebanon County. In recent years, Diamond staunchly opposed mask mandates during the pandemic, and professed ignorance about the insurrection when questioned days later regarding election disinformation he and other Pennsylvania Republicans had amplified.

Party: Republican
Experience: Pennsylvania House of Representatives (2015 – present)
Education: Northern Lebanon High School; Lebanon County VoTech
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: None currently available
Fundraising total: $33,910
Worth reading: "COVID-19 vaccine mandates give rise to call for protecting medical freedom in Pa. constitution" (Jan Murphy, PennLive)
"Pennsylvania GOP lieutenant governor candidate calls out opponent over Facebook post" (Mark Scolforo, AP)


Chris Frye

Chris Frye
Courtesy the Frye campaign
Chris Frye

Frye is the first Black mayor of New Castle, Lawrence County (pop. 22,000). Before winning election in 2020, the career social worker was overseeing multiple grants and collaborations for the county’s Community Action Partnership. Frye also did a post-grad school stint with U.S. Pretrial and Probation Services as a workforce development specialist, which he’s said suits him particularly well to lead the Board of Pardons. The lifelong Republican, 33, also pointed to his experience in local government as a strong qualification. If elected, Frye would be the state's first Black lieutenant governor.

Party: Republican 
Experience: Mayor of New Castle (2020 – present)
Education: Gannon University (B.A.), University of Pittsburgh (MSW)
Links: Website | Facebook | Instagram
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: Butler County Republican Committee, Frederick Douglass Foundation
Fundraising total: $34,212


James Jones 

James Jones
Courtesy the James campaign
James Jones

Jones has run twice for Congress — in2010 and2016 — in Pennsylvania, where he’s lived for more than two decades. His oil and petroleum products trading business,Silverback Commodities, is headquartered in Philadelphia; Jones lives in Montgomery County. He grew up in Arkansas, joined the U.S. Navy and served for nearly 20 years. Like Democrat Austin Davis and fellow Republican Chris Frye, Jones would be the state's first Black lieutenant governor if elected.

Party: Republican 
Experience: CEO, Silverback Commodities (2003 – present)
Education: Southern Illinois University (B.S.)
Links: Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: BlakPAC, Calvary Chapel of Philadelphia
Fundraising total: Not yet announced


Rick Saccone

Keith Srakocic
/
AP
Rick Saccone

Following careers in broadcasting and the military as an officer and civilian/consultant, Saccone represented southwestern Pennsylvania for eight years in the state House of Representatives. Saccone lost two bids for Congress in 2018, an opportunity created by a lawsuit-prompted, off-schedule redistricting in Pennsylvania. He re-emerged in the public square on Jan. 6, 2021, when he posted Facebook videos of himself at the insurrection. While it was determined he hadn’t actually entered the U.S. Capitol building, Saccone resigned his professorship at Saint Vincent College after the school opened an investigation into the incident.

Party: Republican
Experience: Pennsylvania House of Representatives – 39th district (2011 – 2018)
Education: Weber State College (B.S.); University of Oklahoma (M.P.A.); Naval Postgraduate School (M.A.); University of Pittsburgh (Ph.D.)
Links: Website | Facebook
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: Gun Owners of America Pennsylvania
Fundraising total: $40,440
Worth reading: "Former Pittsburgh-area lawmaker to run for Lieutenant Governor" (Marc Levy, Associated Press)


Clarice Schillinger

Clarice Schillinger
Courtesy the Schillinger campaign
Clarice Schillinger

Schillinger left her job as a state legislative aide in August 2020 to enter the political fray in her own right, advocating for reopening schools during the COVID-19 pandemic through fundraising, litigation, and supporting school board candidates. Backed by venture capital and buoyed by national media coverage, most of those candidates won their races. Education remains a priority for Schillinger, along with the economy — both of which are tangential to the lieutenant governor’s official role. But based on her statements so far, voters should expect her to be a tough sell on approving applications considered by the state Board of Pardons.

Party: Republican
Experience: Founder, Keeping Kids in School Political Action Committee/Executive Director, Back to School PA (2020 – 2021)
Executive Assistant to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (2017 – 2020)
Education: Penn State University (B.A.)
Links: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube
Candidate surveys: League of Women Voters
Major endorsements: Pennsylvania Leadership Conference
Fundraising Total: $493,606
Worth reading: "How political organizers are channeling parents’ education frustrations" (Gabe Cohen, CNN)

A primer on voting information and who is running in the 2024 election for offices in the Pittsburgh metro area and Pennsylvania.

Emily Previti is a podcast producer and data journalist, and executive editor and co-creator of Obscured from Kouvenda Media.