“Your day-to-day involvement with local
government matters far more than a referendum on the White House every four
years.” Michelle Wu
Next year will permit most of the country to recover from a
demanding 2022 midterm election season. Pennsylvanians will be spared another
eleven months of continuous campaign ads.
However, there will be little time to turn away from politics in
Washington County. In 2023, the Commissioners and a majority of the other
county officials will be standing for election. What makes the 2023 election
season of special interest to local voters is the subject of this commentary.
To understand what is at stake, four groups of election players
must be considered. First are the traditional Democrats, led by minority
Commissioner Larry Maggi. His position
in winning reelection next November is the most secure. However, if his party
is unable to elect another Democrat to serve with him, his influence will
remain limited, outflanked by two Republican Commissioners. The Republican
majority in voter registration makes a Democratic
sweep highly unlikely, unless Democrats are able to reverse recent trends.
Second are the traditional Republicans, led by Commissioner
Chairman Diana Irey Vaughan. Four years ago her party gained control of county
government for the first time in decades. Her political future appeared secure.
Diana Irey Vaughan is a stanch conservative, but she believes in practical
leadership over right wing ideology. Today, an insurgent group of Republicans
who seek to remove her from office have weakened her position. If she runs for reelection, the Republican
Primary for Commissioner will be a raucous affair.
Third are the local MAGA Republicans, self-styled as
“patriots.” This group’s leaders now manage the county Row Offices. These
elected officials show no allegiance to Commissioner Irey Vaughan
notwithstanding that she was instrumental in placing them in office four years
ago. They plan to run their own slate of candidates who favor the positions of
the former president.
The insurgent complaint against Irey Vaughan is that she has
not replaced many political appointments and county civil servants with MAGA
Republicans. Most importantly, Irey Vaughan never supported the local “stop the
steal” movement, which includes replacing all of the county’s voting machines. Lastly, Irey Vaughan has backed the county
court system and the President Judge through several contentious disputes
regarding court administration.
Fourth are the individuals in key positions appointed by
Irey Vaughan and other long-serving county civil servants. These employees have
faithfully kept local government running like a well-oiled machine. Unfortunately,
they have a short shelf life if MAGA Republicans gain majority control of the
commissioner’s office. These positions include County Solicitor, Budget
Director, Chief of Staff, Director of the Planning Commission, Director of
Elections, Director of the Chamber of Commerce/Tourism Agency and many others.
The replacement of these employees, responsible for running important functions,
with inexperienced MAGA partisans would cause chaos in local government.
Republicans in
favor of good government should be careful what they wish for. If they replace
Irey Vaughn and terminate other key employees, local government will implode.
Voters should recall that right wing Republicans captured the Allegheny County
commissioner’s office in the early 1990s and attempted similar radical changes.
Without dedicated non-partisan employees in key positions, Allegheny County’s
municipal bond rating went down and surplus county funds disappeared. Businesses lost confidence, and basic
services could not be delivered. Living and working under such conditions
became undesirable.
Another
historical example when zealotry was permitted to trump local government will
emphasize my point. It takes us to Florence, Italy near the end of the
Renaissance. Jerome Savonarola was a Dominican Friar who denounced what he and
other religious extremists considered corruption and despotic rule.
In 1494 with
the help of the French King, he was able to expel the long ruling Medici family
from Florence. The friar instituted a
scorched earth, puritanically Christian campaign to reverse all of the secular
beauty that Renaissance artists had brought to Florence. In his famous “bonfire
of the vanities”, priceless manuscripts, paintings and sculptures that
Savonarola deemed immoral were burned in the public square.
Savonarola's
divine mandate soon became a fiasco, and popular opinion turned against
him. Citizens came to understand that
the Medici family knew how to govern and that the friar, steeped in religious
fervor, but with no leadership abilities, did not. Within five years, it was
Savonarola who was burned at the stake and the Medici’s were welcomed back into
power.
This tale of
those with extreme political views gaining power in local government could
easily be repeated in Washington County.
MAGA supporters were recently elected to lead the local Republican
Party. The new Party leadership immediately
announced plans to “clean up Washington County” and to “dismantle the Democrat
cabal.” These goals are head scratchers in that Republicans have controlled
county government for the past four years.
One of the
first acts promised by MAGA Republicans, if their commissioner candidates win
in November, is to "metaphorically burn” all of the county voting machines
on the courthouse steps and return to paper ballots. Local MAGA Republicans
have other current policies they are against with few positive plans for
governing Washington County. Like the
Florentine friar and his supporters, our local MAGA Republicans are a radical
political experiment that we should avoid at all costs.
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