Joe Spanik

September 17, 2008 - 10:21am

Beaver County D chairman taking wait-and-see approach on rule changes

Beaver County Democratic Chairman Mike Sisk isn't ready to congratulate his party's state committee after it moved Saturday to change how it picks replacement candidates, nearly a month after its selection of Jason Petrella caused outrage among local Democrats.

"I don't know, we'll see," Sisk told PolitickerPA.com.

The Rules and Order of Business Committee, with the state Executive Committee, voted at the state committee's meeting to develop rules for selecting candidates if one picked by voters bows out of the campaign. The committee does not have any guidelines for picking replacement candidates when local county committees endorsement different people, a flaw exposed this August in the 47th Senatorial District when Sean Ramaley quit his campaign.

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September 15, 2008 - 2:50pm

After anger over Petrella selection, state party moves to change rules

The state Democratic Party moved Saturday to change how it picks replacement candidates, nearly a month after Jason Petrella's selection in the 47th Senatorial District left some local and state officials outraged over a process they deemed unfair.

The Rules and Order of Business Business Committee, in conjunction with the state Executive Committee, voted Saturday to develop rules for selecting candidates if one picked by voters bows out of the campaign, according to rules committee co-chairman Jack Hanna.

The process in place now does not instruct the party how to make the selection if the 50-member Executive Committee, comprising party members across the state who make the final decision, receives different endorsements from county parties within the district. That flaw was exposed in early August after state Senate candidate Sean Ramaley had to step down from his campaign in the 47th Senatorial District following his indictment in "Bonusgate."

The ensuing scramble within the district, which includes parts of Beaver, Lawrence and Allegheny counties, led to two endorsed candidates, former Senate candidate Jason Petrella in Lawrence and Beaver County Commissioner Joe Spanik in Beaver. To further confuse matters, a third pick, former Gov. Bob Casey (D) Press Secretary Bob Grotevant, received the local union endorsement.

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August 20, 2008 - 6:08pm

Petrella's selection infuriates local union, party

Jason Petrella's selection to ballot by the Pennsylvania Democratic Party in the 47th Senatorial District on Wednesday has infuriated local Democratic and union leaders, who said the state party unilaterally made a decision while ignoring their recommendation.

The anger runs deep enough that the decision might even endanger the union's endorsement of the Democratic candidate.

As Dennis Bloom, president of Beaver-Lawrence County Central Labor Council, put it, "We gave them our two selections and kind of got slapped."

The two preferred selections Bloom referred to are Bob Grotevant, former spokesman for Gov. Bob Casey (D) who emerged as a last-minute candidate this week, and Beaver County Commissioner Joe Spanik, originally considered the favorite to replace Ramaley.

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August 20, 2008 - 3:15pm

Picking candidates by polling, not just for Republicans

Two weeks ago the Senate Republican Committee convinced Bob Regola to step aside because polling showed him losing badly in his race and he was replaced by Kim Ward.  It appears Republicans are not the only ones who pick their candidates with polling information.

Today the Pennsylvania State Democratic Committee will be picking their candidate for PA-47 to replace Sean Ramaley.  Last week Lawrence County supported Jason Petrella and Beaver County has supported County Commissioner Joe Spanik.  With each candidate getting the support of one county the decision was sent to the State Democratic Executive Committee. 

Early word was the Executive Committee was going to strongly support Spanik who has long been active in the party.  Petrella seems to have an advantage though heading into the vote thanks to polling that shows him running stronger in a general election.  According to one source Democratic Senate Leader Bob Mellow is working the phones hard to make sure Petrella is the candidate because of his stronger polling numbers.  While both candidates polled ahead of Republican Elder Vogel, but according to a source Petrella was stronger.  We have had reports that Mellow has been joined by other Senators on the phone, but have yet been unable to confirm.

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August 15, 2008 - 10:59am

Race to replace Ramaley on the ballot goes to extra innings

After the Lawrence County Democratic Committee voted unanimously to support Jason Petrella to replace Sean Ramaley on the ballot as the senate candidate from SD-47, the Beaver County Committee threw a monkey wrench into the system.

Last night the Beaver County Democratic Committee met and overwhelmingly decided to support County Commissioner Joe Spanik over Petrella. 

With the two committees not agreeing on a candidate the decision now goes to the State Committee’s Executive Committee.  One western Executive Committee member told Inside Edge on background they believed Spanik had the inside track.  “Joe has been an active party member for years and has earned our support.  I fully believe and expect he will be the nominee after we vote.”

The state committee vote is planned for next Wednesday.  Until then both candidates will be burning up the phone lines dialing for support.

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August 14, 2008 - 11:00am

Will Petrella earn Senate nod tonight?

The Beaver County Democratic Committee executive board might decide Thursday night whether Jason Petrella will be its candidate in the 47th Senatorial District.

Chances look better for Petrella after unanimously receiving the support of the Lawrence County Democratic Committee executive board, according to The Beaver County Times

Petrella is trying to replace state Rep. Sean Ramaley (D-Beaver County), who was forced to step down from his campaign after being charged in July of misusing taxpayer money as part of "Bonusgate."

Although the county committee's by-laws prohibit challenges against endorsed candidates, which Petrella did when he faced Ramaley in the primary this spring, the county party chairman has indicated Petrella should run. 

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July 31, 2008 - 7:57pm

Ramaley bows out

Current state Rep. and now former state Senate candidate Sean Ramaley announced Thursday he is dropping out of his Senate race, ending weeks of speculation about his political future.

Earlier this month, Ramaley was one of 12 people implicated in "Bonusgate." He surprised some immediately following the allegations when he said he wanted to stay in the Senate race. 

Whoever replaces Ramaley faces an uncertain campaign. Beaver County Democrats, including former House Minority Whip Mike Veon, are heavily implicated in the Bonusgate charges, and the candidate would already have to make up for lost time on the campaign trail.

Further complicating matters is the potential candidacy of Jay Paisley, who is trying to collect enough signatures by Friday's deadline to be placed on the ballot. The former Democrat would likely siphon votes from whoever replaces Ramaley, potentially opening the door for Republican Elder Vogel Jr. 

Replacement speculation has centered on Beaver County Commissioner Joe Spanik and Ramaley's rival for the  Democratic nomination this April, Jason Petrella.

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July 17, 2008 - 1:45pm

Ramaley reportedly to stay in state Senate race

State Rep. Sean RamaleyState Rep. Sean RamaleyThe Beaver County Times is reporting state Rep. Sean Ramaley (D-Beaver County) will apparently stay in his state Senate campaign despite being indicted last week in the first phase of 'Bonusgate' charges.

“He indicated that he was still in the race,” Beaver County Commissioner Joe Spanik told The Beaver County Times. “In his mind, he feels that he’s innocent.”

The paper reported Spanik, who is a candidate to replace Ramaley on the ballot, spoke to him Tuesday.

Ramaley's decision could open the door for Republican dairy farmer Elder Vogel Jr. to gain traction in the heavily Democratic area.

Asked whether he would use the allegations against Ramaley, Vogel told the paper, "We'll probably use it sometime down the road."

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