Tuesday, November 6, 2012
The Keystone State helped Barack Obama win re-election in what was a good night for Democrats across Pennsylvania
- ELECTIONS
-
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Pennsylvania helped President Barack Obama win re-election as U.S. Sen. Bob Casey fended off a feisty challenge from Republican coal magnate Tom Smith in what turned out to be a big night for Democrats in the Keystone State. Democrats held the lead in three state row office races as of 2:30 a.m. Wednesday with close to 98 percent of the vote in, according to unofficial results. Kathleen Kane, a former assistant district attorney from Lackawanna County, made history by becoming the first Democrat and first woman to be elected as the state's attorney general. The Republican candidate, David Freed, is a two-term district attorney in Cumberland County. Democrat Eugene DePasquale of York leads Republican John Maher of Allegheny in the auditor …
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Gov. Mitt Romney is making a last-minute play to win Pennsylvania with TV ads focusing on the coal industry
- ELECTIONS
-
Thursday, November 1, 2012
TV viewers in Pennsylvania will soon start seeing a commercial from Gov. Mitt Romney's campaign targeting President Obama's stand on coal, according to a PoliticsPa report. Recent weeks have brought speculation as to whether Romney would make a last-minute push in Pennsylvania after Obama's poll numbers dipped in the wake of the first presidential debate. Obama held a strong lead in the Keystone State prior to the first debate and neither candidate has been spending money on the airwaves here.
Thursday, October 25, 2012
U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, left, may have helped Republican Tom Smith gain needed name recognition, resulting in a more competitive race
- ELECTIONS
-
Thursday, October 25, 2012
By Eric Boehm | PA Independent HARRISBURG — U.S. Sen. Bob Casey suddenly has a real race on his hands — and his own ads might be partially to blame. Until the past few weeks, the race between Casey, a first-term Democratic senator, and Republican challenger Tom Smith was considered a non-event. Casey was coasting toward re-election, and Smith, who won a five-way primary among a group of unknowns in April, was hardly considered a top-tier candidate for the Republicans. A farmer and coal executive from Armstrong County, Smith had plenty of money to make the race competitive, but as a political novice, he was miles behind Casey when it comes to name recognition. Then, he got a gift from Casey that may have contributed to Smith’s climb in the …
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Polls show the race between U.S. Sen. Bob Casey and challenger Tom Smith has tightened
- ELECTIONS
-
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
By Melissa Daniels/Pa. Independent HARRISBURG — Polls show the U.S. Senate race in Pennsylvania has tightened considerably, and finance reports released Monday from the two campaigns show Republican challenger Tom Smith might be in position for a final advertising push. Incumbent Democrat U.S. Sen. Bob Casey once held a commanding lead in polls, but that has narrowed considerably as Smith, a former coal executive from Armstrong County, is making gains. A poll from Muhlenberg College and The Morning Call released Monday shows Casey leading with 41 percent, and Smith close behind with 39 percent. The poll was conducted via telephone with 438 likely voters, with a margin of error of 5 percent. The poll shows Smith’s favorability rating has …
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Democratic incumbent Bob Casey Jr. faces a challenge from coal executive and Tea Party founder Tom Smith for the U.S. Senate seat.
Incumbent Democrat Bob Casey Jr. of Scranton, Lackawanna County, faces a well-funded challenge from Republican Tom Smith of Shelocta, Armstrong County, in the race for one of Pennsylvania's two U.S. Senate seats. After a relatively slow start, the race gained momentum, with competing television ads from the candidates. Smith also made news in an appearance before the Pennsylvania Press Club with remarks about abortion in which he likened a pregnancy resulting from rape to that of a pregnancy in which a child is born out of wedlock. Casey, one of eight children of the late Gov. Robert Casey, is a former teacher and attorney. He won the seat in 2006 after defeating former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum, a conservative Republican. Prior to …
A profile of Tom Smith, a candidate for the U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania.
General Information Name: Tom Smith Place of residence: Shelocta, PA Education: Elderton High School Employment History: Private Coal mine owner/operator. Party affiliation: Republican Running for a: Federal office Running for position: United States Senator Chamber/district: Pennsylvania Incumbent/Seat last held by: Plumcreek Township Board of Supervisors in Armstrong County. URLs Website : http://tomsmithforsenate.com Twitter : https://twitter.com/TomSmithforPA Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TomSmithForSenate
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Republican Tom Smith is challenging U.S. Sen. Bob Casey on federal spending and Casey's voting record. Smith opposes abortion even in rape cases.
- ELECTIONS
-
Saturday, September 1, 2012
By Melissa Daniels | PA Independent HARRISBURG — GOP U.S. Senate hopeful Tom Smith grew up on an Armstrong Countyfarm and spent two decades running a coal mining business, both of which he used to illustrate his political agenda. When business is bad, “you downsize.” And if elected, that’s what he’d do to federal agencies, he said, determining which programs could be cut, if not eliminated. Smith shared a farm analogy of a leaking tractor fuel tank to discuss how he’d treat the federal deficit. “Do you continue to keep putting fuel in it? No. Fix the leaks,” Smith said to the media Monday during a Pennsylvania Press Club event at the Harrisburg Hilton. But his series of fumbling comments regarding his pro-life stance, in which he appeared…
Bill
1:58 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
O Voter Fraud. Was it stolen or did he win? Wish list complete. More Senators check, same sex marriage check, legalize weed check, abortion on demand check, everybody hand getting greased check, check, check. Things that make you go Uhm... Came across this web site that is logging the voter fraud reported and investigated by news services. Click each link and read the articles if you have the …   more ›