Pennsylvania
Democrats confident they will flip Pennsylvania House
HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania (WPVI) — As election outcomes proceed to trickle in Wednesday, Pennsylvania continues to ship shock after shock.
Democrats are optimistic they’re taking management of the Pennsylvania Home, flipping it for the primary time in additional than a decade.
“I believe this has caught lots of people off guard,” stated John Kennedy, a political science professor at West Chester College. “It’s a must to lay a number of the duty on the high of the Republican ticket and the way poorly they did, significantly the Republican’s gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano.”
Democrats want a dozen seats to achieve management of the Home, and a handful of races are nonetheless neck and neck, together with Montgomery County’s 142nd District and Buck’s County’s 144th District.
SEE ALSO: Political knowledgeable explains why Josh Shapiro received Pennsylvania governor’s race months in the past
Republicans retain management of the state Senate, however with a Democratic Home, analysts say the Republican agenda could be useless within the water.
“The Republicans have bundled quite a lot of amendments collectively on this previous yr, which included limits on abortion rights, limiting the ability of the PA Supreme Court docket, which is majority Democratic, voter ID legal guidelines and quite a lot of different objects that they had hoped to bundle collectively after which go within the subsequent session which might start in January,” stated Kennedy.
And with Democrat John Fetterman defeating Republican Mehmet Oz within the carefully watched US Senate race, analysts say it is vital that Democrats received three open congressional seats and the governor’s race in Pennsylvania.
“This was a defeat for Donald J Trump in lots of many respects,” stated Terry Madonna, senior fellow in resident for political affairs at Millersville College. “I really thought that Mastriano, a diehard Trump supporter, would do higher within the polls…however in the long run, Josh Shapiro nonetheless received by double digits.”
Madonna stated voters had been conscious Trump is prone to announce one other run for the presidency subsequent week, which in flip, motivated Democratic voters to get to the polls.
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Pennsylvania
How Trump won big in Pennsylvania
As a result, Harris fell short and ended with nearly a 2% gap between her and Trump in Pennsylvania.
Trump performed better in Pennsylvania this election than in 2020 among younger voters, white men, Black men and Latin Americans. Black women voted a few points higher for Harris and, interestingly enough, a larger share of older voters also voted for Harris than in 2020.
Results from individual voting precincts help to map some of this out. For example, Harris received fewer votes in many precincts in neighborhoods like Kingessing and North Philly while Trump won more. That’s also the case in Berks County, which has a large Puerto Rican population, particularly in Hispanic-majority Reading.
The blame and infighting has already begun among Democrats but the reality is that there weren’t enough additional doors to knock in Philly to cover Harris’ deficit. The Harris campaign regularly touted their state campaign structure and ground game, regularly boasting about their 50 satellite offices. The campaign hired hundreds of staffers and recruited thousands of local volunteers. For months, they held daily events — often several in the same day — with prominent surrogates, including Republicans for Harris, and were in regular contact with local reporters to spread their message.
Harris herself appeared in Philadelphia some 15 times to motivate her base and made several visits to other parts of the state.
Meanwhile, the Trump campaign’s apparatus was much slower to launch and appeared to lack a consistent ground game. Part of that was likely a simple lack of resources. The Harris campaign was flush with cash, having inherited the Biden campaign’s account and managed to raise more than $200 million after she was elevated to the top of the ticket.
In the end, Harris raised and spent more $1 billion, 2.5 times that of the Trump campaign. Outside PAC spending helped reduce that gap but, ultimately, that imbalance meant few staff on the ground.
“They just didn’t have the resources,” Dr. Tim Blessing, a professor at Alvernia University in Reading, said of the Trump campaign. “And frankly — and I’m trying to be tactful about this — I don’t know that the Trump campaign was overly gifted with skilled volunteers.”
Pettigrew says that there is evidence that the Harris campaign’s efforts did make an impact. The shift toward Trump was much higher in non-swing states — even as high as 6% in deep blue California — than in swing states where they spent all their resources.
“That is suggestive that the ground game was kind of effective and that had it not been as effective then we may have seen an even more pronounced shift in the favor of Trump,” he said. “So maybe they did all that they possibly could, and they just were fighting such an uphill battle.”
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute to relocate to Penn State Health Holy Spirit Medical Center in fall 2026
Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute
Decision comes after unsuccessful attempts to renew current lease, which expires September 2026
As part of its steadfast commitment to delivering behavioral health services that are greatly needed in central Pennsylvania, Penn State Health will relocate Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute’s (PPI) inpatient services to Holy Spirit Medical Center in Camp Hill at the end of its lease in September 2026.
November 7, 2024
Penn State Health had intended for PPI to remain at its current location at 2501 North Third Street in Harrisburg, and made efforts to secure a new lease with UPMC, which holds the master lease for the site. However, UPMC has not been responsive to Penn State Health’s requests, resulting in the decision to relocate in order to maintain ongoing access to these essential services.
“Given the circumstances, we must act now to ensure a successful relocation of PPI by September 2026,” said Kim Feeman, president of PPI. “We are committed to making the transition as seamless as possible and to minimize disruption of care and services for patients and their families, clinicians, staff, educators, students and researchers.”
Late last year, Penn State Health assumed 100% governance control of PPI after the departure of UPMC as a 50% joint venture partner.
PPI inpatient services will continue unchanged through the end of the lease. PPI outpatient psychiatry and therapy services and the Advances in Recovery clinic, which offers comprehensive services for people with opioid use disorder, will also continue to operate at their current locations in Harrisburg until September 2026. Penn State Health is working to identify a new location for these services near the present site.
Later this month, architects and contractors will begin work to renovate the third and fourth floors at Holy Spirit Medical Center. Leaders are working on a plan to retain all employees and transition some of the hospital’s medical and surgical services to nearby Hampden Medical Center.
“We will continue providing all of the important behavioral health services and resources we currently deliver in Cumberland County,” said Kyle Snyder, president, Hampden and Holy Spirit medical centers. Holy Spirit Medical Center provides an acute inpatient and partial hospitalization program, and intensive outpatient and dual-diagnosis programs. “Combining these existing services with PPI will create even greater impact for our communities, as we leverage the benefits of our integrated academic health system to offer the best possible behavioral health care across central Pennsylvania.”
The PPI team will work side by side with the Holy Spirit Behavioral Health team and the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health throughout the transition process.
If you’re having trouble accessing this content, or would like it in another format, please email Penn State Health Marketing & Communications.
Pennsylvania
Facing drought, Pennsylvania bans campfires in state parks and forests
The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources has prohibited campfires on all state park and forest lands until further notice.
The ban, announced Monday, is due to persistent dry conditions that have put half the commonwealth’s counties under drought warnings, including Allegheny County.
Wednesday’s light rains do not affect the drought warning, which was issued Nov. 1 by the Department of Environmental Protection.
“DEP makes drought declarations based on long-term trends; a rainy week may not lift the drought status for an area,” DEP acting secretary Jessica Shirley said in a statement.
The DCNR is also encouraging Pennsylvanians to avoid burning on all lands during the dry conditions. The DEP has also asked residents and businesses to voluntarily reduce nonessential water use. (Suggestions include skipping car washes, running dishwashers and washing machines less often, and checking for and repairing household leaks.)
DCNR officials note that the campfire ban followed an unusually dry September and October, during a time of lots of sun and low humidity.
“Practicing fire prevention outdoors is absolutely critical during these dry conditions,” said state Fire Commissioner Thomas Cook.
The week ending Monday had seen 100 reported wildfires in the state, officials said. Human activity causes 99% of wildfires in the state, leading to the destruction of thousands of acres of woods each year.
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