Northeast
Fox News Poll: Three-way race in Pennsylvania GOP Senate primary election
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Mehmet Oz and Kathy Barnette achieve important floor as assist for David McCormick dips, making it a decent three-way race in Pennsylvania’s Republican major for U.S. Senate.
In March, businessman McCormick led tv superstar Dr. Oz by 9 factors (24%-15%). A brand new Fox Information survey of Pennsylvania GOP major voters reveals the candidates buying and selling locations, with Oz receiving 22% to McCormick’s 20% and political commentator Barnette proper with them at 19%. Subsequent, is businesswoman Carla Sands at 8% and actual property investor Jeff Bartos at 7%.
The race stays huge open as the highest three candidates are throughout the survey’s margin of sampling error, and 18% are undecided on who they may again within the Could 17 major.
Republican Sen. Pat Toomey is retiring, leaving the seat open.
“Oz has closed the hole, and the parallels with J.D. Vance in Ohio are apparent,” says Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who conducts the Fox Information Ballot with Democrat Chris Anderson. “However McCormick and Barnette have appreciable assist, and with one out of 5 voters uncommitted, odds are that the vote will likely be very shut.”
“Regardless that Oz obtained Trump’s endorsement, Barnette has extra momentum,” says Anderson. “Her assist doubled in two months, her supporters are essentially the most , and her negatives are a lot decrease than Oz or McCormick.”
Among the many subgroup of voters who’re extraordinarily within the election, Barnette (25%) is narrowly most well-liked over Oz (22%) and McCormick (21%).
McCormick (+22 factors) and Barnette (+29) have sturdy favorable rankings, with voters viewing each of them extra positively than negatively by over 20 factors. Conversely, the online distinction between favorable and unfavorable views of Oz is damaging by 1 level.
FOX NEWS POLL: VOTERS ARE MOST WORRIED ABOUT INFLATION AND THE COUNTRY’S FUTURE
In fact, the tv character can also be a lot better recognized, with solely 10% unable to fee him. Virtually half of PA GOP major voters, 47%, say they don’t have any opinion or have by no means heard of Barnette and 23% say the identical for McCormick.
The candidate rankings don’t come anyplace near matching former President Trump’s +62 private favorable ranking (80% vs. 18%).
Trump endorsed Oz on April 9. The ballot finds 37% say the endorsement makes them extra supportive of Oz, whereas 22% say much less supportive — with one other 37% saying it makes no distinction.
Trump’s former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo endorsed McCormick and has actively campaigned for him – together with an occasion Friday the place he questioned Oz’s “shut ties to the Turkish authorities and navy.”
The ballot finds a candidate being near Trump isn’t a very powerful issue for voters. For a majority, selecting a candidate who can win in November (62%) is extraordinarily necessary to their vote alternative. That’s way over really feel that method about selecting a candidate who is actually from Pennsylvania (35%) or is a robust supporter of Trump (27%).
Some, together with Barnette, name Oz and McCormick “carpetbaggers” for residing exterior Pennsylvania for a few years.
Voters who say a candidate being a real Pennsylvanian is extraordinarily necessary to their determination again McCormick (24%) and Barnette (21%) over Oz (14%).
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These prioritizing successful in November narrowly choose Oz (25%) over McCormick (21%) and Barnette (20%), whereas these wanting a robust Trump supporter again Oz over others by a minimum of 15 factors.
Oz (56%) and Barnette (51%) have a bigger share of supporters who really feel sure they may again them than McCormick has dedicated to him (39%).
General, half, 51%, say they may change their thoughts about their Senate major vote and practically half, 45%, say the identical about their candidate choice within the gubernatorial major.
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Within the GOP gubernatorial major, Doug Mastriano has damaged away from the pack and now leads with 29% assist. The following tier consists of Lou Barletta at 17%, Invoice McSwain at 13%, and Dave White at 11%.
Fifteen p.c stay undecided, down from 25% in March. At the moment, Mastriano (18%) and Barletta (19%) have been forward, adopted by White (14%) and McSwain (11%).
Mastriano’s lead is exterior the ballot’s margin of sampling error.
CLICK HERE FOR TOPLINE AND CROSSTABS.
Performed Could 3-7, 2022, beneath the joint course of Beacon Analysis (D) and Shaw & Firm Analysis (R), this Fox Information Ballot consists of phone interviews (landline and cellphone) with stay interviewers amongst 1,001 Pennsylvania Republican major voters and has an total margin of sampling error of plus or minus three proportion factors. Randomly chosen from a statewide voter file of registered Pennsylvania voters, respondents have been screened to determine potential contributors within the Republican major elections.
Fox Information’ Victoria Balara contributed to this report.
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Boston, MA
Below freezing temperatures again today
The winds are still going Wednesday, but the air temperatures remain at respectable levels. Highs will manage to weasel up to 30 in most spots. It’s too bad we’re not going to feel them at face value. Instead, we’re dressing for temps in the teens all day today.
Thursday and Friday are the picks of the week.
There will be a lot less wind, reasonable winter temperatures in the 30s and a decent amount of sun. We’ll be quiet into the weekend, as our next weather system approaches.
With mild air expected to come north on southerly winds, highs will bounce back to the low and mid-40s both days of the weekend.
Showers will be delayed until late day/evening on Saturday and into the night. There may be a few early on Sunday too, but the focus on that day will be to bring in the cold.
Highs will briefly sneak into the 40s, then fall late day.
We’ll also watch a batch of snow late Sunday night as it moves up the Eastern Seaboard.
Right now, there is a potential for some accumulation as it moves overhead Sunday night and early Monday morning.
It appears to be a weak, speedy system, so we’re not expecting it to pull any punches.
Enjoy the quieter spell of weather!
Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh Police arrest operators of Hippietown stores on drug charges
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — The operators of two Hippietown stores in Pittsburgh have been arrested on drug charges.
Christopher Younger, who operates the store with his wife, Alex Veoni, sells what he calls “legal weed,” but Pittsburgh Police disagree with his perspective.
The couple operate the two Hippietown stores and were arrested on Tuesday and charged with possession with intent to deliver narcotics and the delivery of a controlled substance.
Until recently, Younger had a third store on East Ohio Street on the city’s North Side, but since it’s closing, police say he has been selling his product out of a maroon van.
KDKA’s news crew was there on Tuesday when the van was confiscated and towed away for evidence. Police say their investigation is ongoing.
In recent reports, Younger has told KDKA lead investigator Andy Sheehan that he sells legal marijuana called THCa — which is less potent than illegal marijuana.
Younger says others who sell THCa have not been targeted by law enforcement and says he’s the victim of selective prosecution.
Police testing shows THCa to be real marijuana and say that businesses and people who live on the North Side complain that Younger’s business has attracted an undesirable clientele to his stores.
Younger and Veoni have been taken to the Allegheny County Jail and are awaiting arraignment.
Connecticut
Governor sets fiscal line, mayors demand reset
A coalition of five Connecticut mayors, including New Haven’s Justin Elicker, called for more funding for urban schools after Governor Lamont opened the 2025 legislative session in Hartford last week.
Zachary Suri
Staff Reporter
Olha Yarynich, Contributing Photographer
The 2025 legislative session in Hartford began last week with obvious disagreement over the state’s fiscal guardrails. Governor Ned Lamont made his support for strict adherence to spending limits clear.
“We have broken the bad habits of the past when we habitually put more and more costs on the taxpayers’ credit card for our children to pay down,” Lamont told legislators in his annual State of the State address. “We have freed up hundreds of millions of dollars in our budget to expand access to affordable childcare, affordable healthcare, and expanded education opportunities. And we are just getting started.”
Last Wednesday, Lamont opened the legislative session praising Connecticut’s steps toward financial stability in the address. Five days later, mayors and superintendents of the state’s five largest cities, including New Haven, demanded a larger state contribution to urban public schools — regardless of fiscal guardrails — in a press conference at the capitol. That same afternoon, leaders of both chambers of the General Assembly held a joint press conference declaring education and affordable housing funds a priority this session.
While Lamont expressed a shared interest in expanding social policy and urged legislators to prioritize early childhood care, gender diversity in teaching and support for public higher education, he did not call for the state to push the limits of its constitutionally imposed fiscal guardrails to provide greater funding for public education.
On Monday, Mayor Justin Elicker — joined by Superintendent Madeline Negrón and the mayors and superintendents of Bridgeport, Hartford, Waterbury and Stamford — called for the state to do just that.
At Monday’s press conference, they asked the state to increase education funding by $545 million, an increase which would likely require loosening the state’s spending limits.
“We’re here to call on an increase in state funding,” Elicker said. “We come together as the mayors of the five largest municipalities and the superintendents of the five largest municipalities to call on the state to loosen the fiscal guardrails to ensure that we can pay for that funding.”
In particular, Elicker asked Connecticut to increase its set amount of $11,525 in state funding per student, a number which has not changed since 2013, even as inflation skyrocketed and municipalities raised taxes to increase their fiscal contribution to public education. New Haven alone has increased its contribution by 50 percent over the last five years, Elicker said.
Urban districts in the state support significantly larger numbers of high-need students, Elicker added, even as they spend less per student than the state average due to lower property tax revenue.
An hour and a half later in the same legislative office building, another unprecedented press conference took place two rooms over. Senate and House leaders held a joint press conference announcing priority legislation to address education funding needs and support affordable housing in the state.
Senate Bill 1 this session will address the state’s dire education funding needs, Senate President and New Haven Senator Martin Looney announced at the press conference.
“We all know that we need to do all that we can to increase resources for our entire education system,” Looney said.
Looney echoed the cities’ call for an increase in the state’s contribution to the Education Cost Sharing program which redistributes tax revenue to high-need districts and emphasized the need to address disparities in special education funding.
In September, Looney expressed concern that state investments in New Haven Public Schools facilities were being squandered by the district’s failure to complete routine maintenance. On Monday, Looney insisted that increased funding must come with increased oversight.
“We know that taxpayer investments directly benefit students, but the taxpayers need to have confidence that those investments are well placed and well spent in all of the municipalities that are justifiably clamoring for more funds,” Looney said.
House Speaker Matt Ritter insisted that increases in education funding could be made without major adjustments to the state’s fiscal guardrails, but admitted that he and Looney are open to “minor modifications” in the spending limits.
Asked about the mayors and superintendents’ proposal, Ritter made clear that the numbers were likely to change.
“I look forward to reviewing their proposal,” he told reporters. “They tend to ask on the high end, and we’ll work through it.”
For many, the fiscal guardrails are likely to be the dominant issue in the next year. Vincent Mauro Jr., chair of the New Haven Democratic Town Committee, called it the “biggest issue” of the year.
Joe DeLong, executive director of the Connecticut Conference of Municipalities, told the News that education funding was a top priority of his organization this session. He views an increase in the state’s contribution to the Education Cost Sharing program as essential to preventing property tax increases. Connecticut already has some of the highest property taxes in the country.
“I’m a supporter of the guardrails,” DeLong said. “I just think they’re not sacrosanct. I don’t think that you should completely get rid of them, but they’re something that you have to analyze and continue to grow with the state.”
While the governor is clearly wary of adjustments to the guardrails, DeLong predicted that the legislature would come to a compromise.
“He’s afraid of opening the door a crack and it turning into the flood waters coming in. But I think ultimately, what’s going to happen through the course of the session is the governor will modify his position on the guardrails a little bit, the legislature will still work to protect them, and we’ll probably come out of the session with still having the fiscal guardrails, but just having some slight adjustments to them that make them more workable,” DeLong said. “The work lies ahead.”
Lamont, a Democrat, was first elected governor of Connecticut in 2018.
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