Republican concedes to Democrat in close
U.S. House race in Pennsylvania
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[March 22, 2018]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
Republican candidate in a close U.S. House of Representatives special
election on March 13 in Pennsylvania conceded to his Democratic opponent
on Wednesday, cementing a Democratic upset in a long-time Republican
area that President Donald Trump handily won in 2016.
In an ominous sign for Trump's Republicans eight months before national
midterm elections, moderate Democrat Conor Lamb led conservative Rick
Saccone by a fraction of a percentage point in the race for the
southwestern Pennsylvania seat.
Trump won the district by almost 20 points in the presidential election.
He campaigned for Saccone, who started the race well ahead of Lamb.
"Just got off the phone with my opponent, @RickSaccone4PA, who
congratulated me & graciously conceded last Tuesday's election," Lamb
said on Twitter.
An official at Saccone's campaign confirmed the candidate had conceded.
The earliest the final election result could be certified is March 26,
but the final tally could be unknown for weeks.
Lamb led Saccone by 627 votes unofficially, state returns showed last
week; Lamb had 49.8 percent of the vote and Saccone 49.6 percent.
House Republicans had called the race unique, noting that Lamb, 33, a
Marine Corps veteran, had distanced himself from his party's leaders and
staked out positions to the right of many Democrats.
The patchwork of small towns, farms and Pittsburgh suburbs that make up
Pennsylvania's 18th congressional district has been so staunchly
Republican that Democrats did not field candidates in the previous two
House elections.
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U.S. Democratic congressional candidate Conor Lamb is greeted by
supporters during his election night rally in Pennsylvania's 18th
U.S. Congressional district special election against Republican
candidate and State Rep. Rick Saccone, in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania,
March 13, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Come November, the district will cease to exist because boundaries
have been redrawn. Both Lamb and Saccone are expected to run again,
though in different districts.
The election, held to replace a Republican who resigned amid a
scandal last year, was the latest forceful electoral showing for
Democrats, who also won a governor's race in Virginia and scored a
U.S. Senate upset in conservative Alabama.
Lamb's strong showing could buoy Democrats nationally as they seek
to win control of the House from Republicans in the November
elections. Democrats see 118 Republican-held districts in play. If
they flip 24 seats, they could reclaim a House majority.
The Lamb win vindicates a strategy Democrats are using in some races
to enlist candidates whose positions and ideologies are well suited
to the district even while conflicting in significant ways with the
positions of the Democratic leadership in Washington.
(Reporting by Eric Walsh; additional reporting by David Morgan;
editing by Toni Reinhold and Grant McCool)
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