Pennsylvania
From Carter to Harris: Pennsylvania woman is oldest delegate at the DNC • Pennsylvania Capital-Star
CHICAGO — Angie Gialloreto of Pennsylvania attended her first Democratic National Convention in 1976, when Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale were on the ticket, and has been to every DNC since. And at 95, she’s believed to be the oldest of the thousands of Democratic delegates, stumping for Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential bid this week with no plans to slow down, she told the Capital-Star in an interview Tuesday.
“I am a Democrat, and I started when I was very young,” said Gialloreto, who said she has been a committee woman in Wilkins Township for 66 years. This year’s election, she said, feels different than many past years. “It’s a new generation, women and people of color are finally not being overlooked and bypassed. It’s a beginning of a new American freedom.”
Gialloreto, who was a delegate for Hillary Clinton in 2016, said Clinton’s Monday night speech was moving. “She should have been president,” Gialloreto said. “But she’s like me, a true Democrat. And I’m so proud of the leadership of my state and this country.”
She advised younger delegates and younger women not to give up the fight, even on days when they are feeling discouraged, and to get involved in politics.
“Some days it fills your heart so much that you can’t explain to people; the enthusiasm that you get,” she said. “But if they feel they have something to contribute to their community it’s worth it. Come try it, you’ll like it.”
She couldn’t choose a favorite convention. But she said President Joe Biden is her favorite Democrat. “I first met him when he was just running as a senator, and I had a feeling about him,” she said.
The youngest Pennsylvania delegate, and one of the youngest at the DNC, is Ellie Goluboff-Schragger, 20, a rising junior at the University of Pennsylvania. “I wanted to see how all this works on a national level and meet all the people that make all of this happen,” she said.
Goluboff-Schragger said she met Gov. Josh Shapiro on Monday and was impressed. “He was so kind, and so amazing,” she said. She also wants to meet Vice President Kamala Harris, of course, but also U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), whom Goluboff-Schragger said really resonates with younger voters.
She’s listening this week to how Democrats speak on the issues most important to her and her peers. “As a woman, obviously reproductive rights are important; as a gay woman, I think LGBTQ rights are really important,” she said. “The right for me to get married is really important to me, and the right to choose what I do with my body and be able to have a kid without being worried about, you know, what we heard at the convention last night happening.”
She referred to a group of women who told their stories of having difficulty accessing abortion care during Monday night’s start of the convention. “Kamala Harris has been an incredible advocate for abortion rights and reproductive rights, and Tim Walz has been an advocate for LGBTQ rights, since the very beginning. So I think those are the things that matter most.”
For Gialloreto, she’s planning to treat the upcoming election the same as she has all past elections: as a call to get to work. “I believe in freedom. I believe in America,” she said. “I’m just a happy 95-year-old woman that’s going to work my head off to get Kamala elected.”
Pennsylvania
Independents sue to open Pennsylvania’s primary elections – AOL
HARRISBURG, Pa. (WHTM) — More than 1.5 million Pennsylvanians won’t be able to vote on May 19 because of the state’s closed primary elections.
The state is an outlier, as 42 other states and D.C. have open primaries, which means voters don’t need to affiliate with a political party ahead of the election to vote. Lawmakers have been pushing for reform since at least 1995, but so far none have successfully changed the law.
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The issue has support from Democrats and Republicans. But now a group of independents has filed a lawsuit asking a Pennsylvania court to force them into the primaries.
John Jones, a former federal judge, cited the “free and fair elections” in Pennsylvania’s Constitution for grounds to open the state’s primary elections.
“Emphasis on the word fair,” he said. Jones and political scientists argue too many elections are decided on primary day, rather than Election Day in November.
“You look statistically in elections from 2020 to 2025, in the state legislature, for example, only about 10% of those elections were actually really contested,” he said.
Pa. primary election 2026: A complete guide
Not everyone is open to open primaries. Republican strategist Chris Nicholas said if voters don’t care to be a part of a party, they shouldn’t get a say in the primary.
“Imagine if you’re a member of the Elks Lodge, and you work all year to make the Elks Lodge the best it can be,” he said. “Then on Election Day, you let those folks from the Moose Lodge in, and they come in for one hour, vote in your elections and leave, never to come back again.”
Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ABC27.
Pennsylvania
Greenville teen dies in Mercer County crash
GREENE TWP., Pa. (WKBN) – A 17-year-old Greenville boy on a minibike was killed in a crash over the weekend in Mercer County.
The crash happened around 5:30 p.m. Saturday.
A family member identified the victim as Ethan Guthrie, who attended Reynolds High School.
A Pennsylvania State Police report states that the teenager was driving a minibike traveling westbound on state Route 58 in the eastbound lane. A 2003 Lincoln Town Car driven by a 23-year-old man from Jamestown was traveling east in the eastbound lane.
The report states that the Town Car swerved to the right to avoid a head-on crash, while the minibike swerved to the left and hit the front end of the Town Car.
Guthrie, who was wearing a helmet, was transported to UPMC Greenville but died from his injuries.
Pennsylvania State Police were investigating the crash.
Hanna Erdmann and Kristen Hephner contributed to this report.
Pennsylvania
I Need to be More Observant, Pennsylvania: You Showed Me Your Best All Along – The Trek
Miles
So, on my current northbound thru hike, I fell into the “trap” of cruising miles, or as folks like to say “ripping/crushing” miles, all along the South and the Southeast on the Appalachian Trail (AT). No worries for me, the AT Mid-Atlantic couldn’t be that much different of a hike. I got this. Yep. Sure.
Pennsylvania Hiking
Then, Pennsylvania happened. Or, as it is referred to affectionately as, but maybe not so much in some cases, “Rocksylvania.” Pennsylvania started out as “cute” and “kind of a nuisance” with the seemingly gazillions of small, medium, and large rocks all over the trail causing me, at least, to start and stop my hiking over and over throughout a given day. There were substantial amounts of bouldering, navigating janky craigs, constant straight up and down of short mountain sides sans switchbacks, which was unlike the South and Southeast’s larger mountains, less rocks, sweeping trail, and often numerous switchbacks.
A lot of rocks on the trail.
Up and down very large rocks and boulders.
Changing Expectations
About halfway through Pennsylvania, I knew that my hiking expectations were very misguided and this state was going to be a slog. My knees started to really hurt as did my feet. In one fell swoop, for example, I tripped on a rock and ripped a very large hole in my trail runner, had the gaiter on that shoe implode, and tore up my knee. Pennsylvania said, “not so fast, bud… this is a different type of hiking.” And, it was indeed, but I still had not gotten that notion through my head. I needed to push miles, man! Why? I was being stubborn, careless, and likely arrogant and should have known better. A few major wipe outs later on rocks with battered shins and knees as proof, I slowly started to change my tune. I realized that my luck would run out falling down more frequently because I was rushing, and potential serious injury may await me. Thus, I dialed back my miles and expectations. Plus, my energy level was low and I needed to slow down or the Northeast states on the AT were not going to happen.
Changing my hiking expectations.
Hiking Community
Beyond the physical and mental toll, which was personal and an inward state of mind for me, Pennsylvania’s hiking community and care started to manifest itself. Certainly, this esprit de corps was there the whole time, I just had not looked for it. As I headed north in Pennsylvania, water was becoming a greater concern. Thank goodness to the kind hearted trail angels and communities that cached water along the route. Without this gesture, and many times a cache of water would be in very remote or mountainous areas that took time and effort, the hike would have been even more difficult.
A water cache in the middle of nowhere with inspirational messages. Thank you!
Last Day
And then, on my last day in Pennsylvania at Delaware Water Gap, you really gave me a jolt. In the morning of my last day of hiking in the state, I was just giddy that I was going to cruise into Delaware Water Gap by 1:00 on a short day, stay at a hostel, shower, do laundry, resupply, eat crazy amounts of food, and then mosey on into New Jersey the next day and all of that “Rocksylvania stuff” would be behind me. Right.
Last day in PA in the Pocono Mountains.
Unexpected Inclusivity
For the first two stay places I contacted in Delaware Water Gap, there were no responses. Hum. I looked at the hiker FarOut app and saw that there was a Presbyterian church hostel (Church of the Mountain Hiker Center) that was donation based (note: if you stay there, please give financially what you can). I walked to the church, texted the contact number on the door, and was heartily greeted with positivity. I received the door code and went in. I unpacked my gear, grabbed a comfy couch to sleep on later that night, took a shower, and then went outside to hang-up my wet tent from the night before. As I was putting my tent on the clothes line, a truck pulled up and a man asked if I was an AT thru hiker. I indicated that I was, and the man in the truck said that the building attached to the church was a banquet hall and they were having a milestone birthday party for a parishioner. He invited me as his guest. You don’t have to ask me twice. I went to the banquet hall and 50-60 people were present. The celebration was just getting underway. I was introduced to the group by the man in the truck. People were so welcoming and friendly. I spent hours chatting and answering questions about the AT, hiker life, food, gear, cool stuff experienced, hardships, and on and on. We ate, had cold drinks, wonderful birthday cake, and then the DJ cranked up the music and it was a dance party. The DJ started with The Beatles’ “Birthday” song, which in my family we blast the morning of someone’s birthday! Folks danced and laughed and had great community. After the celebration, we all helped clean-up, hugged, and said our goodbyes. I went back to the hostel, which I thought I would have to myself, and found my buddy Smiles there. I had not seen him in months since back in the Smoky Mountains. I also met calendar year triple crown attempter, Ricochet. We hung-out swapped stories, laughed, and ate.
Dance party and community fellowship.
With Ricochet (L) and Smiles (R).
I Take It All Back
So, Pennsylvania, I take it all back. The things I muttered under my breath, or may have said forcefully out loud, or thought inwardly. I got it all wrong. The best of you was there the whole time. Beyond the physical, it just took me until my last day in the state to really realize what a caring hiker community you have and the interest folks have in the AT. From the kind gestures of trail communities and angels that I will never meet to the birthday party folks open arms approach to me; all had me a bit teary eyed the next morning as I crossed the Delaware River into New Jersey. I’m going to miss you, Pennsylvania.
Miss you, Pennsylvania.
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