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Pennsylvania Republican Party

Pennsylvania affiliate of the Republican Party

Pennsylvania Republican Party

Summary

Pennsylvania affiliate of the Republican Party

FieldValue
namePennsylvania Republican Party
logoPennsylvania Republican Party logo.png
logo_size200px
colorcode
chairmanGreg Rothman
leader1_titleSenate President pro tempore
leader1_nameKim Ward
leader2_titleHouse Leader
leader2_nameJesse Topper
founderDavid Wilmot
foundation
Towanda, Pennsylvania
headquarters112 State Street Harrisburg, PA 17101
membership3,623,613
membership_year2025
ideologyConservatism
nationalRepublican Party
colorsRed
seats1_titleSeats in the U.S. Senate
seats1
seats2_titleSeats in the U.S. House
seats2
seats3_titleStatewide Executive Offices
seats3
seats4_titleSeats in the State Senate
seats4
seats5_titleSeats in the State House
seats5
seats6_titleSeats on the State Supreme Court
seats6
symbol[[File:Republican Party Disc (alternate).svg100px]]
website
statePennsylvania

Towanda, Pennsylvania The Pennsylvania Republican Party (PAGOP) is the affiliate of the Republican Party in the state of Pennsylvania, headquartered in Harrisburg. Its chairman is state senator Greg Rothman.

Along with the Pennsylvania Democratic Party, it is one of the two major political parties in the state. It currently controls one of Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate seats, 10 of the state's 17 U.S. House seats, three of the five statewide offices, and holds a majority in the State Senate.

History

Founding

The party was founded on November 27, 1854, in Towanda, Pennsylvania, by former Congressman David Wilmot. Wilmot invited political leaders and a small group of friends to the organization's first meeting, which took place in his home. Notable attendees included U.S. Senator Simon Cameron, Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, Colonel Alexander McClure, and future governor Andrew Curtin. Wilmot convinced the group to form local Republican clubs in their home counties. On September 5, 1855, at the inaugural state convention held in Pittsburgh, Wilmot became the first party chairman.

Following the 1856 election, Pennsylvania Republicans reorganized as the People's Party. The change in name helped to welcome former Know Nothings who had supported Millard Fillmore over the Republican presidential candidate, John C. Frémont. The People's Party sent delegates to the 1860 Republican National Convention, where they voted for Simon Cameron on the first ballot. During the Civil War, leaders in the People's Party joined War Democrats to organize the Union Party. After 1868, the party was known as the National Union Republican, or simply Republican.

In 1959, chairman George I. Bloom made the Republican Party a statewide organization. He had the headquarters located in Harrisburg, where it remains to this day.

Overview

Pennsylvania was politically dominated by the Democratic Party until around 1856. This is at least partially attributed to the desire of many in the state to promote its growing industries by raising taxes. From the period immediately preceding the Civil War until the mid-1930s, political dominance in the state largely rested with the Republican Party. The party was led by a series of bosses, including Simon Cameron, J. Donald Cameron, Matthew Quay, and Boies Penrose. Quay in particular was one of the dominant political figures of his era, as he served as chairman of the Republican National Committee and helped place Theodore Roosevelt on the 1900 Republican ticket. Republican dominance was ended by the growing influence of labor and urbanization, and the implementation of the New Deal. However, even after the New Deal, Republicans remained competitive in the state.

Governorship

During the period from the Civil War until the start of the Great Depression, Republican gubernatorial administrations outnumbered Democratic administrations by a margin of sixteen to two. The first Republican governor was elected in 1860, and there was a Republican governor until 1882. The governorship alternated between Republican and Democratic every term until 1894. From 1894 until 1934, Republicans held an unbroken grip on the governor's office. Democrat George Howard Earle III held the governorship for one term, from 1935 to 1939, after which Republicans held the governorship until the 1954 election of state senator George M. Leader. Democrats continued to hold the governorship into 1963, following the 1958 election of Pittsburgh mayor David L. Lawrence, who succeeded Leader. Republicans Bill Scranton and Ray Shafer followed Lawrence. In 1968, state law was changed to allow governors to run for a second consecutive four-year term. However, in the 1970 election, Democrat Milton Shapp defeated Shafer's lieutenant governor, Ray Broderick. Shapp was reelected over Republican nominee Drew Lewis in 1974.

Recent election history

Presidential

After Democratic president Jimmy Carter's victory in 1976, Pennsylvania was won by the Republican nominee in three consecutive elections: Ronald Reagan in 1980 and 1984, and George H. W. Bush in 1988.

From 1992 to 2012, the Democratic nominee carried Pennsylvania in every presidential election. In 2016, however, Republican Donald Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton, becoming the first Republican to win the state in nearly three decades. In 2020, Democratic nominee Joe Biden defeated Trump in his reelection bid.

Congressional and state

Republicans held both of Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate seats from 1968 to 1991. In 1991, after the death of senator John Heinz, a special election was held. In the election, former Kennedy administration official and Democrat Harris Wofford defeated former Republican governor Dick Thornburgh, who resigned as U.S. attorney general to run in the election. The Republican defeat was considered to be a major upset. Wofford went on to be defeated in his bid for a full six-year term in 1994 by Republican Congressman Rick Santorum. Republicans would hold both of Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate seats until Santorum was defeated in his bid for a third term in 2006.

Following the 1994 federal and state elections, Republicans flipped the governorship with the election of Congressman Tom Ridge, retook the majorities in both houses of the General Assembly, and gained a majority of the state's congressional seats. Ridge won reelection to a second term in 1998, defeating his Democratic opponent by 26 percentage points. In 2001, Ridge resigned as governor to take the role of homeland security advisor to president George W. Bush. He was succeeded by lieutenant governor Mark Schweiker, who decided not to run for reelection. In 2002, Republicans lost the governorship to Democrat Ed Rendell.

Two statewide elections took place in 2006. In the U.S. Senate race, Democratic state treasurer Bob Casey Jr. won, defeating incumbent Republican Rick Santorum. Santorum's margin of defeat was 18 percentage points—the largest for an incumbent Republican senator in state history. In the gubernatorial election, incumbent Democratic governor Ed Rendell won a comfortable reelection over Republican challenger Lynn Swann. Democrats also retook the majority in the State House this year, though the balance of power in the State Senate remained the same.

In 2010, Republican nominee Pat Toomey defeated Democrat Joe Sestak in the U.S. Senate election. Sestak had defeated incumbent senator Arlen Specter in the Democratic primary after Specter, who had been a Republican since his election to the Senate in 1980, switched his party affiliation to Democratic in 2009. Specter's partisan defection had briefly given Democrats control over both of Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate seats for the first time since before the Civil War. In the gubernatorial election, Republican state attorney general Tom Corbett defeated Democrat Dan Onorato. Republicans also retook the majority in the State House, which was captured by Democrats in 2006. Corbett ran for reelection to a second term in 2014, but was defeated by Democrat Tom Wolf. This marked the first time an incumbent Republican governor running for reelection in Pennsylvania lost. Corbett is the last Republican to hold the office of governor.

In 2016, incumbent Republican senator Pat Toomey won reelection to a second term, defeating Democratic challenger Katie McGinty. After Toomey announced in 2020 that he would retire and not seek a third term, Republicans lost the seat to Democrat John Fetterman, who defeated Republican nominee Mehmet Oz in the 2022 general election. Also in 2022, Democrats flipped the State House, while Republicans maintained the majority in the State Senate, which the party has held since 1994.

Current elected officials

The Pennsylvania Republican Party controls three of the five statewide offices and holds a majority in the Pennsylvania Senate. Republicans hold one of the state's U.S. Senate seats, 10 of the state's 17 U.S. House seats, and a minority in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.

Members of Congress

U.S. Senate

File:McCormick Portrait (HR).jpg|Junior U.S. Senator

U.S. House of Representatives

DistrictMemberPhoto
1st[[File:Brian Fitzpatrick official congressional photo (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
7th[[File:Rep. Ryan Mackenzie official photo, 119th Congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
8th[[File:Rep. Rob Bresnahan official photo, 119th Congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
9th[[File:Rep. Dan Meuser official photo, 116th congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
10th[[File:Scott Perry, official portrait, 116th congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
11th[[File:Lloyd Smucker Official Congressional Photo (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
13th[[File:John Joyce, official portrait, 116th Congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
14th[[File:Guy Reschenthaler 116th Congress.jpgcenterframeless130px]]
15th[[File:Glennthompson (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]
16th[[File:Mike Kelly, Official Portrait, 112th Congress (cropped).jpgcenterframeless130px]]

Statewide offices

  • Attorney General: Dave Sunday
  • Auditor General: Timothy DeFoor
  • State Treasurer: Stacy Garrity

Legislative leadership

Pennsylvania Senate

  • President pro tempore of the Senate: Kim Ward
  • Senate Majority Leader: Joe Pittman

Pennsylvania House of Representatives

  • House Minority Leader: Jesse Topper

Leadership

  • Chairman: Greg Rothman
  • Vice Chair: Bernie Comfort
  • Deputy Chair: Abby Kail
  • Executive Director: Eric Anderson
  • Secretary: Ann Coleman
  • Treasurer: Sam DeMarco
  • National Committeeman: Andy Reilly
  • National Committeewoman: Lori Hardiman

Former chairmen

David Wilmot, party founder and first chairman
NameTerm
David Wilmot1855
Alexander McClure1860–1863
Wayne MacVeagh1863–1864
Simon Cameron1864–1865
John Cessna1865–1866
Francis Jordan1866–1868
Galusha A. Grow1868–1869
John Covode1869–1871
Russell Errett1871–1875
Henry M. Hoyt1875–1876
J. Donald Cameron1876–1877
W. P. Wilson1877–1878
Matthew Quay1878–1879
Francis C. Hooton1879–1880
John Cessna1880–1881
Thomas Valentine Cooper1881–1888
William Henry Andrews1888–1891
Louis Arthur Watres1891–1892
Frank Reeder1892–1893
B. F. Gilkeson1893–1895
Matthew Quay1895–1896
John P. Elkin1896–1899
Frank Reeder1899–1902
Matthew Quay1902–1903
Boies Penrose1903–1905
Wesley R. Andrews1905–1910
Henry F. Walton1910–1912
Henry G. Wasson1912–1913
William E. Crow1913–1922
W. Harry Baker1922–1926
William Larimer Mellon Sr.1926–1928
Edward Martin1928–1934
M. Harvey Taylor1934–1937
G. Edward Green1937–1938
James F. Torrance1938–1942
M. Harvey Taylor1942–1954
Miles Horst1954–1956
George I. Bloom1956–1963
Craig Truax1963–1967
John C. Jordan1967–1970
Clifford L. Jones1970–1974
Richard Frame1974–1977
Richard Filling1977–1978
Bud Haabestad1978–1980
Martha Bell Schoeninger1980–1983
Bob Asher1983–1986
Earl Baker1986–1990
Anne Anstine1990–1996
Alan Novak1996–2004
Eileen Melvin2004–2006
Rob Gleason2006–2017
Val DiGiorgio2017–2019
Lawrence Tabas2019–2025

Electoral history

Presidential

ElectionPresidential ticketVotesVote %Electoral votesResult
1856John C. Frémont/William L. Dayton147,28632.01%
1860Abraham Lincoln/Hannibal Hamlin268,03056.26%
1864Abraham Lincoln/Andrew Johnson296,39151.75%
1868Ulysses S. Grant/Schuyler Colfax342,28052.20%
1872Ulysses S. Grant/Henry Wilson349,58962.07%
1876Rutherford B. Hayes/William A. Wheeler384,18450.62%
1880James A. Garfield/Chester A. Arthur444,70450.84%
1884James G. Blaine/John A. Logan478,80452.97%
1888Benjamin Harrison/Levi P. Morton526,09152.74%
1892Benjamin Harrison/Whitelaw Reid516,01151.45%
1896William McKinley/Garret Hobart728,30060.98%
1900William McKinley/Theodore Roosevelt712,66560.74%
1904Theodore Roosevelt/Charles W. Fairbanks840,94968.00%
1908William Howard Taft/James S. Sherman745,77958.84%
1912William Howard Taft/Nicholas Murray Butler273,36022.45%
1916Charles Evans Hughes/Charles W. Fairbanks703,82354.26%
1920Warren G. Harding/Calvin Coolidge1,218,21665.76%
1924Calvin Coolidge/Charles G. Dawes1,401,48165.34%
1928Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis2,055,38265.24%
1932Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis1,453,54050.84%
1936Alf Landon/Frank Knox1,690,20040.84%
1940Wendell Willkie/Charles L. McNary1,889,84846.33%
1944Thomas E. Dewey/John W. Bricker1,835,05448.36%
1948Thomas E. Dewey/Earl Warren1,902,19750.93%
1952Dwight D. Eisenhower/Richard Nixon2,415,78952.74%
1956Dwight D. Eisenhower/Richard Nixon2,585,25256.49%
1960Richard Nixon/Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.2,439,95648.74%
1964Barry Goldwater/William E. Miller1,673,65734.70%
1968Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew2,090,01744.02%
1972Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew2,714,52159.11%
1976Gerald Ford/Bob Dole2,205,60447.73%
1980Ronald Reagan/George H. W. Bush2,261,87249.59%
1984Ronald Reagan/George H. W. Bush2,584,32353.34%
1988George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle2,300,08750.70%
1992George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle1,791,84136.12%
1996Bob Dole/Jack Kemp1,801,16939.97%
2000George W. Bush/Dick Cheney2,281,12746.43%
2004George W. Bush/Dick Cheney2,793,84748.42%
2008John McCain/Sarah Palin2,655,88544.15%
2012Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan2,680,43446.59%
2016Donald Trump/Mike Pence2,970,73348.18%
2020Donald Trump/Mike Pence3,377,67448.84%
2024Donald Trump/JD Vance3,543,30850.37%

Gubernatorial

ElectionGubernatorial candidate/ticketVotesVote %Result
1857David Wilmot146,13940.24%Lost
1860Andrew Curtin262,34653.26%Won
1863Andrew Curtin269,50651.46%Won
1866John W. Geary307,27451.44%Won
1869John W. Geary290,55250.40%Won
1872John F. Hartranft353,28752.55%Won
1875John F. Hartranft304,17549.90%Won
1878Henry M. Hoyt319,56745.52%Won
1882James A. Beaver315,58942.43%Lost
1886James A. Beaver412,28550.33%Won
1890George W. Delamater447,65548.23%Lost
1894Daniel H. Hastings574,80160.31%Won
1898William A. Stone476,20649.01%Won
1902Samuel W. Pennypacker593,32854.20%Won
1906Edwin Sydney Stuart506,41850.31%Won
1910John K. Tener412,65841.33%Won
1914Martin Brumbaugh588,70552.98%Won
1918William Sproul552,53761.05%Won
1922Gifford Pinchot831,69656.79%Won
1926John Stuchell Fisher1,102,82373.35%Won
1930Gifford Pinchot1,068,87450.77%Won
1934William A. Schnader1,410,13847.80%Lost
1938Arthur James2,035,34053.39%Won
1942Edward Martin1,367,53153.67%Won
1946James Duff/Dan Strickler1,828,46258.52%Won
1950John Fine/Lloyd Wood1,796,11950.74%Won
1954Lloyd Wood/Frank Truscott1,717,07046.15%Lost
1958Art McGonigle/John Walker1,948,76948.93%Lost
1962Bill Scranton/Ray Shafer2,424,91855.39%Won
1966Ray Shafer/Ray Broderick2,110,34952.10%Won
1970Ray Broderick/Ralph Scalera1,542,85441.76%Lost
1974Drew Lewis/Ken Lee1,578,91745.11%Lost
1978Dick Thornburgh/Bill Scranton III1,996,04252.54%Won
1982Dick Thornburgh/Bill Scranton III1,872,78450.84%Won
1986Bill Scranton III/Mike Fisher1,638,26848.35%Lost
1990Barbara Hafer/Harold Mowery987,51632.34%Lost
1994Tom Ridge/Mark Schweiker1,627,97645.40%Won
1998Tom Ridge/Mark Schweiker1,736,84457.42%Won
2002Mike Fisher/Jane Earll1,589,40844.40%Lost
2006Lynn Swann/Jim Matthews1,622,13539.61%Lost
2010Tom Corbett/Jim Cawley2,172,76354.49%Won
2014Tom Corbett/Jim Cawley1,575,51145.07%Lost
2018Scott Wagner/Jeff Bartos2,039,89940.70%Lost
2022Doug Mastriano/Carrie DelRosso2,238,47741.71%Lost

Notes

References

References

  1. "Current Voter Registration Statistics". Pennsylvania Department of State.
  2. "Our History".
  3. (1964). "The Triumph of Militant Republicanism: A Study of Pennsylvania and Presidential Politics, 1860–1872". University of Pennsylvania Press.
  4. (April 1978). "The Significance of "Pennsylvania s 1938 Gubernatorial Election".
  5. (2000). "The Life of the Parties". Rowman & Littlefield.
  6. "Pennsylvania History." The Pennsylvania General Assembly. Web. 07 Sept. 2011. [https://web.archive.org/web/20000115173813/http://www.legis.state.pa.us/WU01/VC/visitor_info/pa_history/pa_history.htm].
  7. Lamis, Renée M. The Realignment of Pennsylvania Politics Since 1960: Two-Party Competition in a Battleground State. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State UP, 2009. Print.
  8. "Commonwealth of PA - Elections Information".
  9. (November 4, 2014). "NBC News Projects: PA's Corbett Ousted by Democrat Tom Wolf". NBC News.
  10. (January 27, 1894). "A Congressional Veteran: Galusha A. Grow's Nomination Revives Wartime Memories". Madison County Monitor.
  11. (May 29, 1925). "Pennsylvanians: Past and Present - M. S. Quay, Political and United States Senator from Pennsylvania, Died May 28, 1904". Reading Eagle.
  12. (February 5, 1910). "Death Takes Well-Known Keystone State Leader". The Pittsburgh Press.
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