Senate election in Pennsylvania, 2016

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The Pennsylvania Senate election of 2016 was held on November 8, 2016. Kathryn Spencer was elected to serve between 2017 and 2022. Spencer, a Democrat, defeated her Republican challenger, Hillam Warren, 55% to 45%. The margin of victory was roughly the same as when Spencer was last elected in the 2010 election. Both candidates ran unopposed in their respective party's primary.

Contents

Election results


2016 Senate election, Pennsylvania
Party Candidate Votes  % ±%
Democratic Kathryn Spencer (I) 3,572,216 54.83% +0.24%
Republican Hillam Warren 2,943,414 45.17% +0.18%
Majority 628,802 9.65%
Turnout 6,515,630
Democratic hold Swing +0.05%

Candidates

Republican Party

Democratic Party

Factors in the election

Fundraising

Spencer raised more money than Warren, raising $24 million to his $18.6 million. Of that, Spencer received $5.7 million from the Democratic Party or other Democrats and $5.6 million from PACs and SIGs, while Warren received $2 million from the Republican Party and $6.2 million from PACs and SIGs. Even when these amounts are stripped from the totals, Spencer still had a slightly larger warchest than Warren, albeit small. Also, Spencer spent her entire warchest during the election, while Warren had some cash on hand at the end of the campaign.


Candidate Money Raised Money Spent Cash on hand
Kathryn Spencer $24,053,000 $24,053,000 $0
Hillam Warren $18,592,800 $18,000,000 $592,800

Pittsburgh

The Pittsburgh budget crisis of 2015 was the dominant local issue in the election. The crisis stemmed from the city of Pittsburgh not having sufficient revenue to cover its expenses, seeing a $74m shortfall on a $524m budget.

Spencer spearheaded the legislative initiative to provide federal aid to Pittsburgh, introducing the Relief for Pittsburgh Act, which went on to pass the Senate. However, it was not considered by the House of Representatives and failed to become law. Warren attacked Spencer for this, claiming that she was ineffectual at providing support for her constituents. Spencer fought back by painting the Republican Senate leadership as not caring about the plight of the people of Pittsburgh and using the incident to score political points. Warren pointed to his work as OMB Director in providing support to Pittsburgh through the executive branch, in particular the Ameriscapes program, when Congress failed to help.

The campaign

Spencer's campaign

TBC

Warren's campaign

TBC

Polling


Type Date Spencer Warren
Half Poll [1] 2016 45% 43%
Pre Poll [2] 2016 45% 41%
Pop Poll [3] 2016 54% 33%1
Pop Poll [4] 2013 63% 34%1

Footnotes

  • 1 Percentage of voters who disapproved of Spencer

See also

External links

United States Senate Elections
2008 | 2010 | 2012 | 2014 | 2016 | 2018 | 2020 | 2022 | 2024 | 2026 | 2028
See also: Elections | House | Senate | Governors | President
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