Current:Home > StocksPennsylvania House back to a 101-101 partisan divide with the resignation of a Democratic lawmaker -Aspire Financial Strategies
Pennsylvania House back to a 101-101 partisan divide with the resignation of a Democratic lawmaker
View
Date:2025-04-15 05:15:49
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The Pennsylvania House of Representatives is back to a 101-101 partisan split with the resignation of a Democratic lawmaker Thursday, teeing up another special election to determine the chamber’s majority early next year.
The resignation of Rep. John Galloway, of Bucks County, had been expected for months after his election as a magisterial district judge in November. But it was made official after the chamber concluded its final business of the year late Wednesday, wrapping up a monthslong budget feud.
A special election will be held Feb. 13. In the interim, Democrats who control chamber has scheduled no voting days for January and February while it is slated to be deadlocked.
If Republicans win the special election, it would grease the skids for GOP priorities to make it to Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro’s desk, or go out to the voters through constitutional amendments.
But Democrats have sought to defend their razor-thin majority since last year’s election, when they flipped enough seats to take the speaker’s rostrum for the first time in more than a decade. In the period of about a year, voters have cast ballots in threespecialelections determining party control.
In those elections, Republican efforts to clinch seats in Democratic strongholds fell short.
Republicans had long controlled Bucks County, a heavily populated county just north of Philadelphia. But the county has shifted left in recent years, helping Democrats win control of the county and many of its legislative seats.
Galloway ran unopposed in 2022. He was reelected in 2020 with 60% of the vote in a district that leans Democratic.
With the slim margin, Democrats have advanced a number of the party’s priorities — more funding for public education, broadened LGBTQ+ rights and stricter gun laws — but still have had to contend with the GOP-controlled Senate.
Tensions between the chambers had embroiled the Legislature in a five-month stalemate over the budget, after negotiations soured between the Senate and Shapiro, who could not get the House to pass a school voucher program, a priority for GOP lawmakers. For months, funding for a number of programs was locked in the Legislature.
Meanwhile, Rep. Joe Kerwin, a Republican from Dauphin County, will be on extended leave while he is deployed to East Africa in the Army National Guard. It will leave the Republican Party at 101 lawmakers, but he will not cast votes while deployed.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Mobile Homes, the Last Affordable Housing Option for Many California Residents, Are Going Up in Smoke
- This Program is Blazing a Trail for Women in Wildland Firefighting
- America is going through an oil boom — and this time it's different
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Dominic Fike and Hunter Schafer Break Up
- Just Two Development Companies Drive One of California’s Most Controversial Climate Programs: Manure Digesters
- CEO Chris Licht ousted at CNN after a year of crisis
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Amazingly, the U.S. job market continues to roar. Here are the 5 things to know
Ranking
- Bodycam footage shows high
- A Houston Firm Says It’s Opening a Billion-Dollar Chemical Recycling Plant in a Small Pennsylvania Town. How Does It Work?
- This airline is weighing passengers before they board international flights
- Text scams, crypto crackdown, and an economist to remember
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- New Documents Unveiled in Congressional Hearings Show Oil Companies Are Slow-Rolling and Overselling Climate Initiatives, Democrats Say
- Inside Clean Energy: The Idea of Energy Efficiency Needs to Be Reinvented
- Tupperware once changed women's lives. Now it struggles to survive
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Project Runway All Stars' Johnathan Kayne Knows That Hard Work Pays Off
Warming Trends: A Comedy With Solar Themes, a Greener Cryptocurrency and the Underestimated Climate Supermajority
These Secrets About Grease Are the Ones That You Want
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Dive Into These Photos From Jon Hamm’s Honeymoon With Wife Anna Osceola
Dominic Fike and Hunter Schafer Break Up
Receding rivers, party poopers, and debt ceiling watchers