Pennsylvania
In Pennsylvania’s competitive U.S. Senate race, fracking takes center stage • Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Vice President Kamala Harris has been the official Democratic nominee for president for less than a month, but her presence is already changing the dynamic in critical races down the ballot. On July 26, Pennsylvania’s Republican candidate for U.S. Senate, Dave McCormick, visited a fracking rig in Warren County. One reason for his trip? To link Harris with his opponent in the race, Democratic Sen. Bob Casey.
“The fracking industry is a huge driver of economic growth. It could be a lot more,” McCormick says in a video shot at the site, gesturing at the equipment behind him. “Kamala Harris and Bob Casey want to ban fracking in Pennsylvania.”
While Harris said she was in favor of a ban on fracking during the 2020 Democratic primary, she has since reversed course, and Casey has never supported a fracking ban, despite years of research showing the process can be harmful to public health, the climate and the environment.
McCormick’s ad signals a shift in strategy in one of the most competitive and expensive Senate races in the country. It’s also suggestive of the important role that energy, environmental and climate issues could play in Pennsylvania this fall, not only in that race but in the presidential contest as well.
Like Dr. Mehmet Oz and former president Donald Trump before him, McCormick has seized on fracking in an attempt to paint Democrats in Pennsylvania as anti-industry, anti-national security and out of step with public opinion. Harris’ old comments “give Republicans an opening to claim that she’s extreme on this issue,” said Christopher Borick, director of Muhlenberg College’s Institute of Public Opinion, which frequently surveys Pennsylvania voters.
Since Harris’ announcement, McCormick has talked to Fox News about Casey’s support for regulations on the oil and gas industry, tweeted old news clips of Harris criticizing fracking and accused Casey of being “too weak to fight to unleash our commonwealth’s natural resources.”
In some ways, McCormick’s renewed emphasis on fracking highlights the difficulty of his current position. He is running against a well-financed and well-liked three-term incumbent, and Pennsylvania’s political landscape means that he needs to appeal to the right-wing Republican base without losing more moderate independents.
After a failed primary bid for the Senate seat eventually won by John Fetterman in 2022, McCormick’s success in 2024 rests in part on whether he can convincingly navigate this shaky middle ground.
For Casey, Harris’ entry into the race presents challenges—it’s unknown if Harris will have the same rapport with older suburban moderates that President Joe Biden did. It also offers potential opportunities to help him win over younger voters who don’t agree with his stances on fracking, pipelines and liquified natural gas exports but who may not know that he earned a lifetime score of 94 percent from the League of Conservation Voters and played a role in passing the Inflation Reduction Act. In April, the LCV called Casey a “climate champion.”
“Senator Casey has cruised to victory in his three previous elections,” Borick said. “That said, Dave McCormick is the strongest candidate he has faced.”
As the summer winds down, the race is close; polls show Casey with a narrow lead, an anomaly for a politician who won his previous election with a double-digit margin. Because of that competitiveness, “issues that otherwise may not have been as significant to Casey in past years are going to rise in salience,” Borick said. “I truly see that environmental and particularly energy issues will be a significant part of this campaign.”
The ‘All of the Above’ Approach to Energy
When you ask environmentalists about McCormick, one of the first things they bring up is his wife, Dina Powell McCormick, who sits on ExxonMobil’s board of directors.
It’d be like saying you can be in the best shape of your life and never leave the front of your TV and eat as many boxes of Twinkies as you want.bIt just doesn’t work out.”
– David Masur, executive director at PennEnvironment.
“McCormick has bragged about his ties to ExxonMobil,” said Stevie O’Hanlon, the communications director for the youth-led and climate-focused Sunrise Movement. “He has not hidden the fact that if he is elected, he will do the bidding of oil and gas CEOs and lobbyists instead of actually fighting for what working-class Pennsylvanians need.”
Tiernan Sittenfeld, senior vice president for government affairs for the League of Conservation Voters, said McCormick’s pro-fossil fuel platform stands in “stark contrast” to Casey’s “incredible leadership” on climate and clean energy. “We know McCormick has ties to Exxon,” she said. “He has not been shy about being clear that he wants more fracked gas.”
Despite a vow that “we must drill more,” McCormick’s energy platform also calls for “making America the leader in clean energy technology.” He is supportive of expanding nuclear power and of technologies like carbon capture and storage to “lower or offset emissions from power plants and manufacturing.”
Unlike many of his Republican peers, McCormick is not a climate change denier. “While some still dispute it, the science is clear that climate change, as defined by rising global temperatures, is happening, and there’s also no doubt that human activity is one of many contributing factors,” he said in a speech in March. “But the key question is how to manage that reality. Our leaders must mitigate the risk of climate change through adaptation and energy policies that do not impose significant damage on our society, our economy and our security.”
Climate activists in Pennsylvania say that position is inconsistent with McCormick’s desire to “unleash oil and gas production here at home.”
“McCormick has been pretty clear that he’s not particularly interested in taking the climate crisis very seriously,” said Ilyas Khan, hub coordinator for Sunrise Pittsburgh. “His campaign rhetoric doesn’t make any sense on the environmental front.”
David Masur, executive director at PennEnvironment, an environmental research and advocacy organization, said McCormick’s energy platform was like trying to “have your cake and eat it too when it comes to climate change.”
“It’d be like saying you can be in the best shape of your life and never leave the front of your TV and eat as many boxes of Twinkies as you want,” he said. “It just doesn’t work out.”
McCormick’s campaign says his “all of the above energy goals” are a contrast to Casey’s, though Casey has advocated for a similar approach, and both he and Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro have used the same phrasing when they talk about their energy policies.
“It is increasingly difficult to differentiate between Democrats’ and Republicans’ positions on energy and climate change, and that’s certainly true of Casey and McCormick,” said Karen Feridun, co-founder of the grassroots environmental group Better Path Coalition. “Although McCormick would have us believe otherwise, Casey openly supports natural gas development.”
Neither candidate agreed to an interview for this story, nor did their campaigns offer representatives who could speak on their behalf about environmental policy. When asked for comment, Casey’s campaign team pointed to a recent interview the senator did for Erie News Now. “If any administration proposes a fracking ban, not only will I vote against it, but I will lead the effort to make sure a ban won’t get started, let alone enacted into law,” Casey said.
In the same interview, McCormick accused Biden, Harris and Casey of making it “more difficult to drill and put in place new pipelines that can get our wonderful and clean natural gas” to the people of Pennsylvania and neighboring states.
In a statement, Stephanie Catarino Wissman, the executive director of American Petroleum Institute Pennsylvania, declined to endorse either man but said “candidates running for office should embrace Pennsylvania’s leadership role in energy and promote this advantage at both the state and federal levels.”
That, in fact, sounds very much like both McCormick’s and Casey’s energy platforms. Compare McCormick’s “America—led by Pennsylvania—must become the world’s most energy dominant nation,” to Casey’s call to “maintain” Pennsylvania’s status as a “national leader in energy production.”
The oil and gas industry appears among McCormick’s top campaign donors list, but Casey received $42,738 from the industry in the 2024 cycle and more than $290,000 over the course of his career, according to OpenSecrets.
“A lot of environmentalists and young people are looking at this race and drawing a real blank, because neither candidate has proven, in my opinion, that they’re willing to commit to fighting for the health and well-being of the southwestern PA communities affected by pollution and climate change,” Khan said. “Young people are now in this moment of incredible crisis, of asking, ‘Is my future just destined to be [decided by] old white men who all say the same thing in different ways?’”
The son of a Pennsylvania governor and the grandson of a Pennsylvania coal miner, Casey’s Keystone state bona fides have never been in doubt. (In 2022 and 2024, Democrats pointed to McCormick’s longtime residency in Connecticut as proof he is a “carpetbagger.”) Casey’s climate bona fides are more complicated. First elected to the Senate in 2006, Casey’s positioning on climate change has shifted over time. “When Senator Casey was first elected, he was more reticent about wading into some of these climate fights or voting with the environmental community to tackle climate change,” Masur said.“I think that’s really evolved a lot.”
While the environment is not and likely never will be Casey’s top issue because of the economic and political power of the oil and gas industry in Pennsylvania, he has become a “big advocate” for the Inflation Reduction Act, renewable energy and electric vehicles, Masur said. Casey worked to secure funding for cleaning up Pennsylvania’s abandoned coal mines, co-sponsored a bill to support federal efforts to locate and plug abandoned oil and gas wells and recently touted his role in getting the IRA passed and securing $396 million for industrial decarbonization projects in Pennsylvania.
Casey’s website quotes Pennsylvania’s constitutional green amendment, which protects the right to clean air and pure water, and he acknowledges the “devastating impact” the climate crisis is already having on public health, agriculture, the economy and the environment. “We need to invest in meaningful climate action now, and we can do so while also creating good jobs and providing robust assistance for training and skill development,” it reads.
In 2021, Casey was one of a handful of Democrats who voted to block a potential ban on fracking, and in February, he and Fetterman came out against Biden’s pause on pending approvals for liquified natural gas exports, saying they had “concerns” that the pause could affect the natural gas industry in Pennsylvania. Casey also supports the two hydrogen hubs proposed in Pennsylvania, and he recently urged the Biden administration to “ensure” that the federal hydrogen tax credit is available even for hydrogen produced using fracked natural gas, which environmentalists oppose.
In another recent interview, the candidates explained their views on fracking. McCormick said fracking has a “tiny impact on the environment” and is “incredibly clean.” He also advocated for permitting reform to make drilling easier for fracking companies.
“I think people who say you have to choose between jobs and a clean environment, or between economic opportunity and a better future for a state like ours, are one of two things,” Casey said while reiterating his support for fracking. “They either don’t know what they are talking about, or they are purposefully lying about it.”
Even as McCormick zeroes in on fracking on the campaign trail, Casey is looking to other issues to make his case to voters. At a rally to introduce Harris’ new running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, and to launch the Harris-Walz campaign in Philadelphia this week, Casey’s speech focused on reproductive rights, inflation and the fentanyl crisis and McCormick’s background as a Connecticut-based hedge fund executive. None of the rally’s eight speakers mentioned climate change.
The Fracking Problem
For all the political jockeying over it, the reality of fracking as an electoral issue in purple Pennsylvania is more complex than McCormick’s talking points—or Democratic fears about Harris’ “fracking problem”—make it seem. Casey’s support for what he calls “responsible fracking” that is “regulated and closely monitored” is broadly popular in Pennsylvania, and Pennsylvania’s natural gas production reached historic highs under Biden and two Democratic governors. It’s also unclear that fracking is a winning issue for Republicans; both Oz and Trump lost the state while using “drill, baby, drill” as an unofficial slogan.
“There’s nuanced public opinion on the matter in the state,” said Borick, the Institute of Public Opinion director. “It’s not a slam dunk that you go all in, and it’s going to win you a lot of swing voters.” For most voters in Pennsylvania, the economy is far more important than the environment or climate. But fracking on its own is “not an issue that will carry Pennsylvania,” he said. Rather, McCormick’s fracking tactics are part of a larger effort to smear Harris, and by extension Casey, as “radical.”
The strategy is aimed at scaring off the moderate suburban voters who made Biden’s 2020 win possible in Pennsylvania. Democrats’ affection for Gritty aside, Biden’s victory in Pennsylvania was not only powered by Philadelphia but by his success with voters living in the city’s collar counties.
In 2020, Trump did better in heavily Democratic Philadelphia than in 2016, winning almost 17.9 percent of the vote, compared to 15.5 percent four years earlier; Biden’s improvement on Hillary Clinton’s margins in the suburbs was key. “That’s where the difference was last time,” Borick said. This is likely the reason Harris was seriously considering the middle-of-the-road Shapiro as a running mate, even if environmentalists weren’t enthusiastic about that idea.
With Harris’ appeal to the Philadelphia region’s suburbanites still a question mark, she may need young voters and voters of color more than Biden did to win Pennsylvania. Voters who are part of those constituencies say Democrats shouldn’t take their support for granted. Khan said down-ballot Democratic candidates in Pennsylvania who are banking on the support of voters of color need to genuinely listen to those voters’ concerns. “You can’t keep putting your faith in us if you’re not going to give us anything back,” they said.
Another organizer for the Sunrise Movement in Pennsylvania, Erica Brown, who was arrested in a protest outside Biden’s campaign headquarters in February, said young voters’ awareness of the stakes of the election doesn’t mean their votes should be counted as a given. She criticized moderate Democrats who tell young people to get in line behind the party’s candidates and not to push back on the many policy positions they are not happy with.
“That’s not how change happens,” she said.
For climate-conscious voters, Casey’s and Harris’ “fracking problem” is their support for it. While they see Harris’ candidacy as an exciting development, they are concerned about her change of heart on fracking.
“With Harris, some optimism has returned, especially among young people,” Khan said, adding that Harris stands a better chance in Pennsylvania with young voters than Biden ever did. But “Harris’ position [on fracking] rightly worries a lot of us.”
Young voters will also be watching to see how Harris’ new running mate affects her climate platform. In a statement released on August 6, Sunrise praised Walz’s environmental record and called him “the fighter young people need.”
Khan said all of the focus on the presidential election and the lack of ideal choices in the Senate race should not “obscure the fact that this Senate race does have massive implications” for Pennsylvania. That’s especially true for southwestern Pennsylvania, where they live and where the oil and gas industry is concentrated.
Brown also stressed the importance of the election for the climate and the environment, and she said she recognizes the strategic need for Democrats to control the White House and Congress in order to pass meaningful legislation on climate change. “There’s no future under Republicans at this point,” she said.
“I have only been politically conscious for a couple of election cycles, and I’m already tired of people saying this is the most important election ever. But I think it was genuinely true in 2020, and I would say it’s true now,” said Brown, who was too young to vote in 2020. “We needed to get off of fossil fuels before I was born, right?”
Pennsylvania
Pa. man found guilty of raping teen girl who he took to Mexico
A Pennsylvania man was found guilty of repeatedly raping his daughter’s best friend over a three-year span before fleeing with the teen to Mexico.
On Thursday, March 5, 2026, Kevin Esterly, 53, of Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania, was convicted on all counts of rape, statutory sexual assault, involuntary sexual intercourse and endangering the welfare of children.
Esterly shook his head as the verdict was read but said nothing in the courtroom.
Resources for victims of sexual assault are available through the National Sexual Violence Resources Center and the National Sexual Assault Telephone Hotline at 800-656-4673.
Esterly’s trial began on Tuesday, March 3, after a judge denied his pretrial motion for the charges against him to be dismissed and for the Lehigh County District Attorney to be removed as a prosecutor in the case.
Both Esterly and his victim testified on Wednesday, March 4.
The victim — who is now 24-years-old — told the courtroom that she met Esterly and his family while attending church as a child and became best friends with one of his daughters. Esterly was a youth leader and elder at the church at the time. The victim said Esterly also coached her soccer team.
The victim said she became so close to Esterly’s family that she called his wife “mom” and eventually spent almost every weekend at their home in Lowhill Township, Pennsylvania. She also said she vacationed with them in New York state and Ocean City, Maryland.
The victim said Esterly first sexually assaulted her in August 2015 when she was 13-years-old after he gave her alcohol during a family birthday party.
“I was scared. Frozen in fear,” the woman told the courtroom on Wednesday. “I pretended I was sleeping.”
The woman accused Esterly of sexually assaulting her almost every time she slept over at his home. She told the courtroom she eventually became addicted to alcohol and drugs, which Esterly gave her in exchange for sex. According to the woman, Esterly gave her cocaine and methamphetamine to keep her awake during school because she “would be up with him all night.”
The woman said Esterly continued to sexually assault her until he was confronted by his wife in 2017. Esterly’s wife then threw him out of the house, according to the victim. She said Esterly continued to sexually assault her over the next year.
Esterly was later arrested and then sentenced to prison after federal agents found him with the victim in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, in 2018. She was 16-years-old at the time.
The woman said she moved on and went to college after Esterly’s sentencing though she still struggled with drug addiction. She said she sought counseling in February 2025. She told the courtroom she received a message from Esterly on LinkedIn that same month in which he apologized for “failing you as a person I was supposed to be for you.” At that point Esterly had been released from prison.
The woman said she had not told anyone about her relationship with Esterly up to that point and replied to him, “I live with our secret every day as I promised. I would appreciate an apology.”
The woman told the courtroom that Esterly responded by writing, “I hope one day you can forgive me. Nobody knows I reached out to you. That is the best for both of us.”
On Feb. 21, 2025, Allentown Police received a report of Esterly’s sexual assaults which led to the new charges being filed against him. He was arrested in West Virginia in June 2025 after two police pursuits. He was then extradited to Pennsylvania.
The victim told the courtroom on Wednesday that she kept quiet about Esterly’s abuse for years because she “was afraid to speak,” and felt “dirty and ashamed.”
“I wasn’t ready to tell anyone,” she said. “He was a father figure in my life. I loved him.”
The woman also said she didn’t want to hurt Esterly’s daughter who was her best friend.
When the District Attorney asked her why she was “here today,” she replied by saying, “I want to tell the truth. I want to be set free.”
The woman ended her testimony by saying, “I don’t want to live with this secret anymore.”
After her testimony, Esterly took the stand for 45 minutes, denied all of the accusations against him and accused the woman of lying.
Closing arguments then took place Thursday morning. It then took an hour for the jury of seven women and five men to reach their verdict.
Pennsylvania
3 dead in apparent murder-suicide spanning from Pennsylvania to Illinois, police say
Two women are dead in Pennsylvania and a man is dead in Illinois after an apparent murder-suicide, police said on Wednesday.
According to a report from the Pennsylvania State Police, the investigation began in Hillside, Illinois, when police there were dispatched after a man reported two women dead in Jackson Township, Pennsylvania. Police said that when officers got to Hillside, about 15 miles west of Chicago, they found that the man had died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
After identifying him, troopers said Hillside officers contacted police from Jackson Township to request a welfare check at the man’s home on Dior Drive, about 30 miles north of Pittsburgh.
Police said officers used forced entry to get into the home and found two women dead from apparent gunshot wounds. It’s believed the two women were family members of the man who died by suicide in Illinois, investigators said.
Pennsylvania State Police said they’ve assumed control of the case and are “actively investigating” what happened surrounding the three deaths.
Police didn’t release any names, saying the process of formal identification and notification of next of kin hasn’t been completed. Sources told KDKA that the victims were a husband, wife and their daughter.
“At this time, investigators believe there is no ongoing threat to the public, and law enforcement is not searching for any additional individuals in connection with this incident,” police wrote in the public information release report. “This remains an active and ongoing investigation.”
State police didn’t release any other details on Wednesday but said more information will be made public when it’s available.
“My first reaction was shocked because this is such a close-knit neighborhood, and to think something that horrible could happen here is very tragic because they were such a good family,” neighbor Danielle Sporer said on Wednesday.
Pennsylvania
Top Pennsylvania 2027 quarterback enrolls into Coatesville (Pa.)
One of the top 2027 Pennsylvania high school quarterbacks from the 2025 season has announced that he’s leaving for a new home.
Per an announcement by Class of 2027 signal caller Mikal Shank Jr., the quarterback has left Harrisburg (Pa.) and is now at Coatesville (Pa.) for his senior season. Shank Jr. last season started 14 games for the Cougars and is arguably one of the state’s top returning players behind center heading into the 2026 campaign.
Per a PennLive report, Shank’s mother said the enrollment to Coatesville was due to “employment relocation.”
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With Shank now leaving Harrisburg, the Cougars lose another piece of the starting offense from 2025 as the team is set to graduate running back Messiah Mickens (Virginia Tech enrollee), wide receiver Elias Coke (Rutgers enrollee) and interior offensive lineman Kevin Brown (West Virginia enrollee).
Shank last season through 14 games completed 191 of 280 passes for 2,505 yards and 24 touchdowns. The Cougars made a deep playoff run in the PIAA playoffs, finishing the season at 13-1 and ranked No. 10 according to the final Pennsylvania 2025 High School Football Massey Rankings.
Coatesville went 10-3 last season and finished as the state’s No. 30 ranked team, according to the final Pennsylvania 2025 High School Football Massey Rankings. The Red Raiders bring back 2027 5-Star Plus offensive lineman Maxwell Hiller to the trenches.
More about Coatesville High School
Coatesville Area High School (CASH) serves as the central high school for the Coatesville Area School District in Pennsylvania. Established in the late 1800s and relocated to its current campus in 1968, it features extensive facilities, including a football stadium and a vocational center. Known for its “Red Raiders” athletics teams, CASH provides students with a robust sports program and extracurricular activities that build school spirit and community engagement.
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How to Follow Pennsylvania High School Football
For Pennsylvania high school football fans looking to keep up with scores around the Keystone State, staying updated on the action is now easier than ever with the Rivals High School Scoreboard. This comprehensive resource provides real-time updates and final scores from across the state, ensuring you never miss a moment of the Friday night frenzy. From nail-biting finishes to dominant performances, the Rivals High School Scoreboard is your one-stop destination for tracking all the Pennsylvania high school football excitement across the state.
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