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Governor News

Is This the Beginning of the End of Pa. Public Education?

by Chris McGann on April 11, 2011 at 9:27 am

Credit AP Photo Tom Corbett 150x150 Is This the Beginning of the End of Pa. Public Education?Gov. Tom Corbett’s proposed deep cuts in state government spending have not gone over well with many citizens and organizations that depend on that spending. Probably the most controversial budget cuts are to the basic education subsidies that tend to make up about half of school district budgets.

Last year, the state had about $1 billion in federal stimulus money to help fund basic education at the state’s 500 school districts. While Corbett’s budget calls …

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  • Corbett spokesman addresses delay on Fumo non-profit

    An aide to Attorney General Tom Corbett today fired back at criticism that his boss waited too long to investigate a non-profit tied to convicted former state Senator Vince Fumo.

    Responding to an …

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    April 23, 2009 at 12:13 pm | Comments (0)

  • Despite early start, Knox has done little party outreach

    HARRISBURG—Tom Knox decided more than 6 months ago that he would run for governor. Since then, he’s been raising money, preparing policy positions and trying to gain some early traction by …

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    April 22, 2009 at 1:13 pm | Comments (1)

  • MontCo GOP feud could spill into Lt. Gov. race

    BLUE BELL—For more than a year, Montgomery County’s Republican Commissioners have been at each other’s throats politically. Commissioners Jim Matthews and Bruce Castor were elected by county voters in late 2007, promising the GOP control over county policy even as is struggled to hold onto voters. But Matthews infuriated Republicans by shunning Castor, instead forming a power-sharing agreement with Democratic Commissioner Joe Hoeffel. This has effectively locked Castor out of power, and embroiled the county GOP in bitter dispute.

    Soon, that toxic climate—and the vitriol Matthews and Castor regularly hurl at each other—could move to a statewide stage, with both Commissioners interested in the party’s nomination for Lieutenant Governor.

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    April 21, 2009 at 2:36 pm | Comments (13)

  • Cunningham looks to paint Onorato as ‘the insider candidate’

    BETHLEHEM—If you ask Democratic insiders to name the early favorite to win their party’s gubernatorial nomination, most don’t hesitate: Dan Onorato, they say. The Allegheny County Executive has held the political and media status of “front-runner” since right after Gov. Ed Rendell won a second term in 2006, with news reports repeatedly describing him as a leading candidate.

    But Lehigh County Executive Don Cunningham thinks that’s ridiculous. And in his likely campaign against Onorato, Cunningham will look to turn what has been seen as an advantage into a political liability.

    “Dan Onorato’s the insider candidate,” Cunningham told pa2010.com. “If you’re looking for the big money guy, with all the connections to the big law firms and hundred-thousand dollar donors, by all means that should be your guy. But I still have hope that politics is about all the people, something beyond who’s got the most connections to people who are writing big checks.”

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    April 20, 2009 at 3:32 pm | Comments (5)

  • Wagner leaning toward gubernatorial race

    Auditor General Jack Wagner says he’s seriously considering a run for governor, and is much more interested in that job than in running for Senate. His comments, during a recent phone interview with pa2010.com, came four months after he said he was considering both races.

    “I thought it through, and i decided the Senate race is not of interest to me,” he said, before quickly adding: “At this stage.”

    Wagner would be formidable candidate in the Democratic primary, with a long record in elected office, relatively strong statewide name recognition and solid support from military veterans (he served in the Vietnam War).

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    April 20, 2009 at 12:51 pm | Comments (0)

  • Corbett’s ‘Bonusgate’ investigation comes with political promise—and peril

    It’s the classic double-edged political sword. A tough prosecutor leads the biggest investigation of Harrisburg’s public corruption in recent memory, putting lawmakers and Capitol staffers under intense legal scrutiny and racking up indictments. He’s hailed by supporters as a man who can get public servants to actually serve the public. But lo and behold, the critics see it differently: He’s a political opportunist, they say, just setting himself up for the next election.

    This is the situation state Attorney General Tom Corbett finds himself in, as he lays the groundwork for a gubernatorial campaign while still investigating the legislators he’d have to work with if he wins. As the only Republican to win a statewide election last year, Corbett is considered by many to be the early GOP front-runner. But there’s no doubt that “Bonusgate,” his investigation into legislative employees allegedly receiving bonuses for political work, will be the defining element of his campaign, with all the good and bad that goes with it.

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    April 20, 2009 at 10:43 am | Comments (1)

  • Knox prepared to spend millions on gubernatorial bid

    PHILADELPHIA—Tom Knox spent more than $10 million from his own pocket on an unsuccessful run for mayor here in 2007. A couple years later, the wealthy Philadelphia businessman seems willing to spend a whole lot more to win the governor’s mansion.

    In a recent interview with pa2010.com, Knox, a Democrat, said a successful gubernatorial run for a candidate of his profile would cost about $30 million; $15 million each for the primary and general elections. While he has high fundraising hopes, Knox said he would spend “whatever it takes” to win.

    “I want to make sure that this time I’m a winner,” said Knox, who finished second in Philadelphia’s 2007 Democratic mayoral primary to eventual Mayor Michael Nutter.

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    April 19, 2009 at 6:19 pm | Comments (3)

  • The Wagner toss-up: Governor or Senate?

    For months, Auditor General Jack Wagner’s name has been floating around political circles as a potential Democratic candidate for governor. Only thing is, his name’s been mentioned almost as often as a possible candidate for Senate.

    So which one is it? Wagner fueled speculation in December when he told a reporter he was interested in both races. Whatever his eventual decision, it will have a profound impact on both races.

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    April 19, 2009 at 6:12 pm | Comments (0)

  • Wanted: Democrats for Lt. Gov.

    The list of Republicans mulling a run for Lieutenant Governor reads like a GOP variety show, with more than a dozen candidates of every stripe lining up to play second fiddle to their party’s gubernatorial nominee. They include party mainstays, rising stars, political unknowns and everything in between.

    But at this still-early stage, the Republicans are mostly alone in the field. Only one Democrat has said he is likely to run, and while others have been mentioned as viable, a deluge of Democratic candidates in to the race seems unlikely anytime soon.

    So why are Democrats lukewarm to the contest?

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    April 19, 2009 at 6:10 pm | Comments (1)

  • Meehan on Fumo trial: ‘I would have loved to have been there’

    PHILADELPHIA—Pat Meehan spent years trying to nail former state Senator Vince Fumo on corruption charges. But he never saw the finish line, at least not how he would have liked to.

    Fumo, the longtime powerful Philadelphia Democrat, was …

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    April 19, 2009 at 6:00 pm | Comments (0)

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