Republicans in Philadelphia have long been an endangered breed, nudged out of power by an increasingly liberal city and left to fend for themselves by a city GOP that is largely content to let Democrats have City Hall in exchange for some of the few city patronage jobs remaining.
Republican state Rep. John Perzel, however, is a different story.
A 29-year incumbent in Northeast Philadelphia's 172nd Legislative District and a former House speaker and majority leader, he is the most powerful Republican in Philadelphia political circles, with the possible exception of U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter. A reliable fundraiser for his Republican colleagues early and often, rarely has Perzel's his grip on power loosened much, as he has managed to stay in office through years of Republican defeats in Philadelphia.
"He helped so many people get elected to the House, that whenever he wanted to move up the leadership ladder, they looked favorably on him," said Lowman Henry, CEO of the Lincoln Institute, a Harrisburg public opinion organization.
"He had chips he could pull in," added Henry, a frequent critic of Perzel's after working with him as a political director for the state GOP into the early 1980s.
As Perzel, 58, campaigns for a mind-boggling 15th term, his opponent is a different kind of tough guy: Longtime city cop and former police union chief Rich Costello. A city police officer for more than three decades, the 57-year-old Costello was president of the local Fraternal Order of Police for 10 years. And while some political watchers think Perzel could be vulnerable this year, others scoff at the notion that the entrenched and well-funded incumbent could possibly be knocked off.
"[Republicans] certainly can't afford to lose Perzel's seat," said G. Terry Madonna, a pollster and political science professor at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster.
Read More >