Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, 2002

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1,913,235
  
1,589,408

Start date
  
November 5, 2002

53.4%
  
44.4%

Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, 2002 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Winner
  
Ed Rendell

The Pennsylvania gubernatorial election of 2002 was held on November 5, 2002, and included the races for the governor and lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania.

Contents

Gubernatorial Primaries

Attorney General Mike Fisher ran unopposed for the Republican nomination. Although incumbent Governor Mark Schweiker was eligible to run for reelection (he had served only a partial term after Tom Ridge resigned to become Secretary of Homeland Security), he chose not to seek his party's nomination. Despite polls showing that Schweiker polled well among the same groups that backed Ridge, the Republican establishment considered Schweiker to be a weak candidate and stood steadfast behind Fisher.

In the Democratic primary, Mayor of Philadelphia Ed Rendell defeated Pennsylvania Auditor General Bob Casey, Jr., bucking the "myth that a Philadelphian could never win" a statewide election. Despite strong support from organized labor for Casey, lackluster campaigning, combined with Rendell's ability to cast himself as a strong executive allowed him to pull out a primary win.

Campaign

Rendell defeated Fisher with "endless retail politicking" and a hard-working campaign. The political website PoliticsPA praised Rendell's campaign team of David L. Cohen, David W. Sweet, and Sandi Vito.

Rendell was the first official from Philadelphia to win a spot in the governor's mansion since 1914. Although Fisher emphasized Rendell's Philadelphia roots continuously during his campaign, and described the mayor as an urban liberal whose programs would require huge tax increases, his strategy backfired; in much of Eastern Pennsylvania, voters instead related to Rendell, and he was thus able to win by huge margins in even many traditionally GOP suburbs.

References

Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, 2002 Wikipedia