Current:Home > ScamsAttack ads and millions of dollars flow into race for Pennsylvania Supreme Court seat -Insightful Finance Hub
Attack ads and millions of dollars flow into race for Pennsylvania Supreme Court seat
View
Date:2025-04-19 06:44:46
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Spending in the campaign for an open Pennsylvania state Supreme Court seat is picking up, with millions of dollars flowing into the race as the sides sharpen their attacks over questions about ethics and abortion rights.
The race between Democrat Dan McCaffery and Republican Carolyn Carluccio won’t change the partisan balance on the seven-seat high court, but it could narrow the Democratic majority to a one-vote margin, 4-3, should Carluccio win.
Total reported spending has passed $4.5 million, with millions more likely before the Nov. 7 election. Much of the campaign cash is from trial lawyers, labor unions and a billionaire who is considered one of the GOP’s top national donors.
That money is underwriting attack ads.
In one flier, a pro-Carluccio group tried to tie McCaffery to a nearly decade-old email scandal that resulted in McCaffery’s brother, a one-time state Supreme Court justice, stepping down from the court.
“Can we really trust Dan McCaffery on our court?” the flier said. It’s sponsored by the Commonwealth Leaders Fund, a group that is a conduit for campaign donations from Jeffrey Yass, a securities trading billionaire who spends millions to support school choice, anti-tax and anti-regulation groups.
The Philadelphia Inquirer reported at the time that then-Justice Seamus McCaffery had sent two lewd emails in early 2014 to Dan McCaffery, who was then a Philadelphia judge.
Dan McCaffery responded to ask Seamus to send such messages to his personal email account, the Inquirer reported.
Carluccio, in turn, is the target of TV ads by Planned Parenthood’s national political arm and a pro-McCaffery group called Pennsylvanians for Judicial Fairness that say she is a threat to abortion rights in Pennsylvania.
Carluccio, a Montgomery County judge, is endorsed by a pair of anti-abortion groups, the Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation and Pro-Life Coalition of Pennsylvania. One has said it did so after she represented herself as “pro-life.”
Publicly, she has avoided the topic.
“It has fascinated me that my opponents have made this entire race about abortion and the reality is, it has nothing to do with this race,” Carluccio told a conservative radio host last week. “The law is very set in Pennsylvania.”
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last year to overturn Roe v. Wade and end nearly a half-century of federal abortion protections left the question to states. In Pennsylvania, the law allows an abortion up to the Roe v. Wade standard of 24 weeks, with exceptions for rape, incest and to protect the life of the mother.
McCaffery, who sits on the statewide appellate Superior Court, has been blunt about his positions and warned that electing Carluccio and other Republican judges will undo the gains that Democrats have fought for, including voting, labor and abortion rights.
“We cannot allow those gains to be stripped away,” McCaffery told an online gathering of the Democratic Committee of Lower Merion and Narberth last week. Those are rights that “we Democrats have fought for the last 60 years. I’m unapologetic about it. We elect judges in Pennsylvania, the voters have a right to know what we are and what we stand for.”
In recent years, Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court has been pivotal in major voting rights and election-related cases, including rejecting GOP-drawn congressional districts as unconstitutionally gerrymandered and rejecting a Republican effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election won by Democrat Joe Biden in a bid to keep then-President Donald Trump in power.
Carluccio has reported spending more than $2.8 million, including contributions of good and services, with $600,000 still in the bank through Sept. 18.
Of that spending, more than $2.1 million was spent on fliers and TV ads by Commonwealth Leaders Fund.
McCaffery has reported spending about $900,000 including contributions of good and services, with $1.2 million in the bank.
Labor unions have given more than $630,000 to McCaffery’s campaign, while trial lawyers’ groups have given more than $1 million.
On top of that, Planned Parenthood and Pennsylvanians for Judicial Fairness have spent hundreds of thousands more, with more spending coming.
The ACLU said it will spend more than $1 million in the race, and the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee said it will spend hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Democrats hold a 4-2 majority on the court, which has an open seat following the death last fall of Chief Justice Max Baer, a Democrat.
___
Follow Marc Levy: twitter.com/timelywriter
veryGood! (86)
Related
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- White Stripes sue Donald Trump over the use of ‘Seven Nation Army’ riff in social media post
- Congress honors 13 troops killed during Kabul withdrawal as politics swirl around who is to blame
- Keurig to pay $1.5M settlement over statements on the recyclability of its K-Cup drink pods
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Firefighters battling wildfire near Garden State Parkway in southern New Jersey
- Courts in Nebraska and Missouri weigh arguments to keep abortion measures off the ballot
- Rachel Zoe and Husband Rodger Berman Break Up, Divorcing After 26 Years of Marriage
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Diddy ordered to pay $100M in default judgment for alleged sexual assault
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- SpaceX launch: Polaris Dawn crew looks to make history with civilian spacewalk
- State veterans affairs commissioner to resign at the end of the year
- These Designer Michael Kors Handbags Are on Sale & Too Good To Be True—Score an Extra 20% off Fall Styles
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- James Earl Jones, acclaimed 'Field of Dreams' actor and voice of Darth Vader, dies at 93
- Jury selection enters day 2 in the trial of 3 Memphis officers charged in Tyre Nichols’ death
- 'American Ninja Warrior' Vance Walker on grueling back-to-back victories: 'So difficult'
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Who is David Muir? What to know about the ABC anchor and moderator of Harris-Trump debate
Unionized Workers Making EV Batteries Downplay Politics of the Product
West Virginia governor to call on lawmakers to consider child care and tax proposals this month
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Labor costs remain high for small businesses, but a report shows wage growth is slowing for some
Cuomo to testify before House committee that accused him of COVID-19 cover up
‘Appalling Figures’: At Least Three Environmental Defenders Killed Per Week in 2023