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Saturday, May 21, 2022

Summer Lee Defeats Steve Irvin In PA Primary!

Summer Lee beats incumbent Steve Irvin.

As we await the results of the Republican senate race in Pennsylvania, the Democratic primary between two candidates has come to an end. The progressive agitator won despite the Democrats hoping Irvin would win easily.

It appears the leftists won with Pennsylvania state representative Summer Lee and John Fetterman, two polarizing figures who excite the far left but turns off the moderates, independents and mainstream progressives.

Rep. Mike Doyle (D-PA) is retiring and his seat is up for grabs. The Republicans see an opportunity to flip a district that incorporated Pittsburgh with some its most conservative leaning suburbs. It is on the Cook's Political Report as D+3.

On Friday, those precincts were counted and they increased Lee’s lead up to 740 votes, according to unofficial results. Lee leads with 41.8% of the vote, and Irwin is behind her with 41.1% of the vote.

The Associated Press called the race Friday evening.

The Lee campaign had already declared Lee victorious earlier in the week.

“We built a movement in Western Pennsylvania that took on corporate power, stood up for working families, and beat back a multimillion-dollar smear campaign,” Lee said in a statement.

The 12th district comprises Pittsburgh and suburban Allegheny County communities, as well as Westmoreland County communities such as Murrysville, North Huntingdon, Penn Township, Sewickley Township and parts of Hempfield.

It is considered a solid Democratic district, and whoever wins the primary will be heavily favored to win in the general election.

“She ran a formidable campaign, one that reflected her determination to make progress for people and give a voice to the voiceless.

“She will be an outstanding member of Congress and an inspirational leader for our region.”

Three other candidates competed in the 12th District Democratic primary. University of Pittsburgh law professor Jerry Dickinson found himself in a distant third place with 10.8% of the votes counted, followed by nonprofit head Jeff Woodard with 4.8% and entrepreneur William Parker with 1.5%, the Department of State tallies showed.

Lee’s victory means she is very likely to become the first Black woman from Pennsylvania elected to Congress.

The 12th District has a Republican opponent in the general election — Plum Council president Mike Doyle (no relation to current U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle) — but the district is a strong blue district, and forecasters don’t rate it competitive for Republicans.

Regardless, Doyle criticized Lee in a statement following her win.

“In order to restore sanity in Washington we cannot send extremists to represent us in DC. Summer Lee is an extreme, self-avowed socialist who will join the far left of her party and get nothing done for our region,” Doyle said.

The primary race for the 12th District split factions of the Democratic Party, with progressives backing Lee and more mainstream Democrats supporting Irwin.

Lee, a progressive firebrand, was the early front-runner in the race, with polling giving her a significant advantage. She racked up support from local progressives like Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey, and also from national figures like U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders.

AIPAC's influence on lawmakers have made them turn a blind eye to Israel's crimes against the Palestinian people.

The race appeared to tighten a bit after attack ads against Lee flooded the Pittsburgh market, mostly funded with millions of dollars from a pro-Israel super PAC. Those ads also boosted Irwin, who had also garnered the support of establishment Democratic officials like Allegheny County Executive Rich Fitzgerald and Democratic U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle, who is retiring and vacating the district seat.

The Progressive Change Campaign Committee supported Lee in her race. Its co-founder, Stephanie Taylor, said Lee’s victory shows the progressive movement growing within the Democratic Party.

“Summer Lee’s victory continues a sea change in the Democratic Party away from corporate Democrats and weak liberals — toward bold progressives who are connected to their communities and willing to fight for the people,” Taylor said.

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