Pennsylvania's high-profile attorney general enters 2022 governor race
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[October 14, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania's
Democratic attorney general and a high-profile critic of former
President Donald Trump, on Wednesday entered the 2022 race for governor,
vowing to use veto power as a check on any efforts by Republicans to
curtail abortion or voting rights in the battleground state.
Shapiro, seen as a rising star in the Democratic Party, delivered a
speech with both moderate and progressive messages. He promised to
reduce taxes to entice business investment while also boosting wages,
expanding broadband internet access and lowering the cost of healthcare.
"I think we all know that Pennsylvanians need a governor who will take
on the powerful and be on their side," Shapiro told supporters in
Pittsburgh at an event launching his campaign.
The announcement makes Shapiro, 48, the early front-runner to become the
Democratic Party nominee. No other Democrat has launched a campaign to
succeed Democratic Governor Tom Wolf, who is constitutionally barred
from running for a third four-year term.
The Republican field for the 2022 race currently numbers a half-dozen
and is expected to grow, with most candidates jostling to secure an
endorsement from Trump, the Republican Party's de facto leader. Lou
Barletta, 65, a former U.S. congressman, and former U.S. Attorney Bill
McSwain, 52, are among those who have already announced campaigns.
Pennsylvania is a battleground state, where presidential elections can
go either way, and commands a large number of the electoral votes needed
to win the White House. President Joe Biden, a Democrat, won the state
by more than 80,000 ballots.
Shapiro, a former state representative and commissioner in Montgomery
County just outside Philadelphia, has in recent months built up his
national profile through frequent appearances on cable TV shows to
criticize Trump's baseless claims of widespread fraud in the 2020
presidential election.
Last month, Shapiro filed a lawsuit in state court against Republican
state lawmakers in a bid to stop their effort to subpoena detailed
personal information on voters, including partial Social Security
numbers, as part of their partisan review of the 2020 election. That
legal dispute is continuing.
Without naming them, Shapiro said his Republican challengers were more
focused on promoting lies about the 2020 election than in solving
everyday problems. He noted that the ongoing election review was being
funded by taxpayers.
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Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro speaks at the opening
ceremony at Girard College for the Greater Philadelphia King Day of
Service before a free drive-through coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
testing event targeting underserved communities on Martin Luther
King day in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., January 18, 2021.
REUTERS/Hannah Beier
"There's a cost to their lies. Not only are they
doing real damage to our democracy, but they are holding us back
from meeting this moment," Shapiro said, adding that, if elected, he
would veto any law that infringed on voting or abortion rights.
"I won't hesitate to use that veto pen to protect you."
In an earlier online video announcing his candidacy, Shapiro also
highlighted his work overseeing a grand jury investigation that in
2018 led to sexual abuse allegations against 300 Roman Catholic
priests in six Pennsylvania dioceses.
Barletta sought to tie Shapiro to the far left of the Democratic
Party and the policies of Wolf, who has come under Republican fire
for business restrictions aimed at curbing COVID-19's spread.
"His policies are dictated to him by leftist activists," Barletta
said in a statement.
Terry Madonna, a Pennsylvania political analyst, said he expected
progressives, who have been at odds with Shapiro over instances when
he supported police and for his relatively tough-on-crime stance, to
eventually come around to back him.
Madonna said Shapiro had perhaps the highest profile of any attorney
general in modern Pennsylvania history. He said that should help
Shapiro as he took on the Republican nominee.
"I don't know anyone who has been more out and about," Madonna said.
"He's all over the state."
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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