This article is shared with LebTown by content partner Spotlight PA.
By Stephen Caruso of Spotlight PA
HARRISBURG โ Calculating which party controls a legislative chamber normally requires simple math.
But less than a month after the critical midterm election, Democratic and Republican leaders in the Pennsylvania state House are contesting which party can run the body, a dispute that could determine who has the power to call special elections to fill up to four pending vacancies, and shape who lawmakers pick to lead the chamber on Jan. 3.
Those decisions will impact what legislation advances through the lower chamber during the first few months of incoming Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiroโs administration, and set the tone for the coming two years of policymaking.
While Democrats will likely have a one-vote majority after several special elections to replace their members, itโs an open question who will run the chamber until then. And after a long and partisan session dominated by fights over the 2020 election and the COVID-19 pandemic, neither party appears willing to cede ground without a fight.
Democratic leaders held a news conference Thursday, the first day of the new two-year session, to claim theyโre in control, since their partyโs candidates won 102 out of 203 seats on Election Day.
But Republican leaders have countered that neither party has a majority, and thus control of the House, since one of the Democrats who won on Nov. 8 was longtime state Rep. Tony DeLuca (D., Allegheny), who died too late to be taken off the ballot. That gives the House a 101-101 split.
Speaking to reporters Thursday, Democratic Leader Joanna McClinton (D., Philadelphia) said the situation is โrather precarious,โ but that she hoped Republicans would accept Democrats had won and โcede their votesโ to her Jan. 3.
In recent years, while the minority party has sometimes nominated one of its own members to challenge the majorityโs speaker candidate, they traditionally rescind their votes and ask that the record show unanimous support for the new speaker โ a powerful and prestigious post that controls the ebb and flow of debate in the chamber.
โWeโre hoping to work across the aisle and see that same type of action happen,โ McClinton said Thursday. If elected, sheโd be the first woman to ever hold the gavel.
But outgoing speaker and GOP leader Bryan Cutler (R., Lancaster) has countered that DeLucaโs death nullifies Democratsโ majority. While he has said he wonโt again take up the position, Republicans could still offer another candidate instead.
This means that for the next month, the House will have no recognized presiding officer to schedule special elections, and the speakership will be up for grabs come Jan. 3, with the House split an even 101-101.
โThere is no clear majority,โ Cutler said Wednesday, โand in order to effectuate anything prior to January 3rd, you have to have a majority and a minority, and we donโt currently have that.โ
Dueling claims of control
The first clash over Cutler and McClintonโs dueling claims of authority came over the right to schedule the special election to replace DeLuca.
On Wednesday, the last day of the previous legislative session, Cutler set the election for Feb. 7, 2023. Cutler, who was still speaker, said it was imperative to fill the seat as quickly as possible, and claimed it became vacant after Allegheny County certified its election results earlier this week.
In response, McClinton agreed on the date, but said Cutler did not have the authority to schedule an election in a yet-to-start term. She said that role should have fallen to her on Thursday, the first day of the new session, โas Majority Leader and Acting Speaker.โ
The Department of State must still sign off on Cutlerโs chosen election date. A spokesperson said as of Thursday they were reviewing it.
That power is especially critical for Democrats because two more of their members โ state Reps. Austin Davis and Summer Lee of Allegheny County โ must step down next month to take higher office. Davis was elected lieutenant governor, and Lee won a seat in Congress.
If they resign in December, McClinton could then claim the right to schedule elections to replace them in February, rather than in March or later if they wait until January to resign. However, their early resignations would decrease the number of Democrats in the chamber and require Democrats gain even more Republican votes to elect McClinton as speaker on swearing-in day.
Neither Davis or Lee have resigned; they will not be required to until Jan. 17 or Jan. 3, respectively. McClinton told reporters to โstay tuned.โ
All this debate could be rendered moot if Republicans flip one of the Democratic-won seats in the coming Allegheny County special elections. However, voters in the three seats typically back Democratic candidates by double-digit margins or better.
With control of the House on the line, one big money GOP group is eying the races. Matt Brouillette, executive director of the Commonwealth Leaders Fund, which advocates for less government and more private schooling and is backed by billionaire Jeff Yass, told Spotlight PA that the group is โevaluating opportunities.โ
But Schuyler Sheaffer, a Pittsburgh-based Democratic operative, added that he doesnโt see a realistic path for the GOP โunless something unforeseen happens.โ
Still, McClintonโs claim to be โacting speakerโ caused a hubbub among Republicans; the term appears nowhere in the state constitution or House rules. Cutler called it โcompletely inappropriate.โ
McClinton acknowledged that the title doesnโt exist in the stateโs founding document Thursday, but pointed to past instances of the majority leader taking on the duties of the speaker in the event of their absence.
โWhile the Constitution does not include the title of acting speaker, it does require a presiding officer,โ McClinton said.
Has this ever happened before?
On Wednesday, Cutler pointed to a contested speakerโs election in 1979 as the closest precedent. According to news reports at the time, after the election, Republicans appeared likely to have flipped the chamber from Democratic control with a one-seat majority.
However, the reelections of two incumbents, one from each party, were still being disputed in court.
While there was some doubt whether the Republican majority would hold up in court, the party still had a 101-98 advantage Jan. 2, swearing-in day.
The other vacancies stemmed from a Democratic lawmaker from Allentown dying before Jan. 2, and another Democrat being too sick to attend the ceremony.
Over the span of five hours, the GOP members elected Lebanon County Republican H. Jack Seltzer as speaker in a series of contentious party-line votes. Democrats unsuccessfully objected that they could not elect the Houseโs top officer without a full majority of 102 lawmakers.
A few weeks later, the state Supreme Court upheld both incumbentsโ reelections, giving Republicans a majority that would remain for the rest of the session.
In other words, the party that flipped the chamber and had the most seats on swearing-in day picked their preferred speaker, which isnโt particularly useful for todayโs deadlocked legislature.
However, another lesson from that episode could be relevant. The flexibility required to govern with such a narrow margin was still apparent to lawmakers some 40 years ago.
โOur philosophical differences still must be overcome,โ Seltzer said at the time, according to the AP. โWeโll do it with friendship, argument and pleading โ whatever device that is necessary.โ
Capitol insiders have already suggested that the razor-thin divide will necessitate negotiations between the two parties as a whole, or with individual members.
Both parties could seek to win over the othersโ support for their own speaker with concessions such as the chair of a key committee or promises to consider pet projects and policies.
McClinton hinted at this Thursday, noting that she wanted to change the Houseโs rules to make the chamber more collaborative.
โWe will embrace the challenge of having a very modest majority, because it means that weโre going to have to fundamentally change the way we operate so that we can be more representative of all Pennsylvanians,โ McClinton said.
However, both McClinton and Cutler have said their opposite has declined solicitations to chat and hash out a deal.
Still, the call to revise rules matches one that has been made by advocates for months. As currently constructed, Pennsylvaniaโs legislative rules, which are rewritten at the start of each session but rarely change, place most of the power in the hands of the majority.
The majority partyโs committee chairs, picked by the Speaker from a list of the most senior members, decide which bills advance and which die without a vote. The majority leader then has discretion to pick which bills receive consideration from the full chamber.
Looking at the margin earlier this month, Carol Kuniholm, executive director of Fair Districts PA, a nonpartisan group that opposes gerrymandering, said she saw โan opportunity to think through how to get things done in Pennsylvania.โ
โOr, if they try to shut out a party, they could end up in a place where nobody gets anything,โ she added.
Christopher Baxter is the executive director and editor-in-chief of Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom based in Harrisburg. Email him at cbaxter@spotlightpa.org. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results.