District 1
The 1st district is based in the northern suburbs of Philadelphia , including all of Bucks County and parts of Montgomery County .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Brian Fitzpatrick , who was re-elected with 56.4% of the vote in 2024.[ 3] Fitzpatrick, a moderate , was expected to face a primary challenge from a more right-wing candidate after voting against the One Big Beautiful Bill Act , but ultimately drew no challengers.[ 4]
Republican primary
Declined
Mark Houck, nonprofit ministry founder and candidate for this district in 2024 [ 6]
Endorsements
Brian Fitzpatrick
U.S. representatives
Labor unions
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Brian Fitzpatrick (R)
$4,286,172
$1,348,181
$7,360,520
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 13]
Democratic primary
Eliminated in primary
Lucia Simonelli, mathematician[ 15]
Endorsements
Bob Harvie
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State legislators
1 state senator[ a]
6 state representatives[ b]
Local officials
Organizations
Lucia Simonelli
State legislators
Organizations
Debates and forums
2026 PA-01 Democratic primary debates and forums
No.
Date
Host
Moderator
Link
Participants
P Participant A Absent N Non-invitee I Invitee W Withdrawn
Harvie
Hunt
Simonelli
Strickler
Taft
Zeltakalns
1[ 31]
January 13, 2026
Upper Bucks United
Kim Barbaro
A
P
P
P
A
A
2
February 11, 2026
Sherry Luce
YouTube
A
P
P
P
P
P
3[ 32]
April 27, 2026
League of Women Voters of Bucks County
P
W
P
W
W
W
Fundraising
Italics indicates a nonqualifying candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Bob Harvie (D)
$928,059
$519,928
$408,130
Tracy Hunt (D)
$39,847
$39,083
$763
Lucia Simonelli (D)
$28,347
$832
$27,514
Robert Strickler (D)
$24,795
$24,185
$609
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 13]
Results
Results by county:
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Bob Harvie
52,094
65.1
Democratic
Lucia Simonelli
27,884
34.9
Total votes
79,978
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Brian Fitzpatrick (R)
$5,702,596
$2,810,329
$7,314,796
Bob Harvie (D)
$1,455,202
$850,772
$604,429
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
Polling
Brian Fitzpatrick vs. Bob Harvie
District 2
The 2nd district is based in central and northeastern Philadelphia .[ 2] The incumbent is Democrat Brendan Boyle , who was re-elected with 71.5% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Democratic primary
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Brendan Boyle (D)
$1,522,158
$548,110
$4,812,331
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 46]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Brendan Boyle (incumbent)
53,043
100.0
Total votes
53,043
100.0
Republican primary
Nominee
Jessica Arriaga, entrepreneur[ 47]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Jessica Arriaga
6,328
100.0
Total votes
6,328
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Brendan Boyle (D)
$2,098,099
$688,760
$5,247,622
Jessica Arriaga (R)
$0
$0
$0
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 3
The 3rd district is based in west, south, and north Philadelphia (west of Broad Street).[ 2] The incumbent is Democrat Dwight Evans , who was re-elected unopposed in 2024.[ 3] Evans announced his retirement in 2025.
Democratic primary
Chris Rabb , a democratic socialist , won the primary, defeating healthcare official Ala Stanford and state senator Sharif Street , a member of an influential political family in Philadelphia.[ 48] Rabb ran as the most left-wing candidate in the race, receiving support from members of the Squad , a group of progressive members of congress.[ 48] Stanford was supported by outgoing representative Dwight Evans.[ 49]
During the race, Rabb accused Stanford of receiving support from the pro-Israel lobbying group AIPAC , which he claimed was funneling money through 314 Action , a Stanford-supporting organization that supports politicians with STEM backgrounds. Stanford, 314 Action, and AIPAC all denied these claims.[ 50] 314 Action spent around $2.5 million in support of Stanford.[ 50] Rabb described the war in Gaza as a genocide and pressed the other candidates to do the same.[ 48] American Priorities , a pro-Palestine super PAC created to counter the influence of AIPAC, spent $400,000 in support of Rabb.[ 49]
Failed to qualify
Jahmiel Jackson[ 61]
Isaiah T. Martin III, real estate consultant[ 57]
Endorsements
Chris Rabb
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Greg Casar , TX-35 (2023–present)[ 70]
Maxwell Frost , FL-10 (2023–present)[ 70]
Jared Huffman , CA-02 (2013–present)[ 71]
Pramila Jayapal , WA-07 (2017–present)[ 70]
Ro Khanna , CA-17 (2017–present)[ 71]
Summer Lee , PA-12 (2023–present)[ 7]
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez , NY-14 (2019–present)[ 72]
Ilhan Omar , MN-05 (2019–present)[ 71]
Lateefah Simon , CA-12 (2025–present)[ 73]
Jamie Raskin , MD-08 (2017–present)[ 71]
Rashida Tlaib , MI-12 (2019-present)[ 7]
State legislators
Local officials
Individuals
Labor unions
Organizations
Political parties
Newspapers
Ala Stanford
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
Local officials
Individuals
Organizations
Newspapers
Sharif Street
U.S. senators
Statewide officials
State legislators
Andre Carroll , HD-201 (2024–present)[ 74]
Morgan Cephas , HD-192 (2017–present)[ 62]
Danilo Burgos , HD-197 (2019–present)[ 96]
Jordan A. Harris , HD-186 (2013–present)[ 73]
Movita Johnson-Harrell , former HD-190 (2019)[ 97]
Vincent Hughes , SD-07 (1994–present)[ 62]
Shirley Kitchen , former SD-03 (1996–2016)[ 98]
Joanna McClinton , speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (2023–present) from HD-191 (2015–present)[ 99]
Darisha Parker , HD-198 (2020–present)[ 65]
Anthony H. Williams , SD-08 (1999–present)[ 62]
Local officials
Cindy Bass , Philadelphia city councilor from the 8th district (2012–present)[ 98]
Jannie Blackwell , former Philadelphia city councilor from the 3rd district (1992–2020)[ 98]
Katherine Gilmore Richardson , Philadelphia city councilor from the at-large district (2020–present)[ 62]
Jim Harrity , Philadelphia city councilor from the at-large district (2022–present)[ 55]
Curtis J. Jones Jr. , Philadelphia city councilor from the 4th district (2008–present)[ 62]
Kenyatta Johnson , Philadelphia city council president (2024–present) from the 2nd district (2012–present)[ 62]
Rue Landau , Philadelphia city councilor from the at-large district (2024–present)[ 74]
Cherelle Parker , mayor of Philadelphia (2024–present)[ 62]
Anthony Phillips , member of the Philadelphia City Council from the 9th district (2022–present)[ 73]
Mark Squilla , Philadelphia city councilor from the 1st district (2012–present)[ 73]
Sharon Vaughn , former Philadelphia city councilor from the at-large district (2022–2023)[ 55]
Individuals
Labor unions
Party branches
Philadelphia City Democratic Committee[ 98]
Newspapers
Pablo McConnie-Saad (withdrawn)
Debates and forums
2026 PA-03 Democratic primary debates and forums
No.
Date
Host
Moderator
Link
Participants[ d]
P Participant A Absent N Non-invitee I Invitee W Withdrawn
Cephas
Griffith
McConnie-Saad
Oxman
Rabb
Stanford
Street
1[ 107]
December 4, 2025
9th Ward Democratic Committee
Stephanie Marudas
P
N
N
P
P
P
P
2[ 108]
January 13, 2026
12th & 59th Ward Democratic Committees
Andre Carroll
P
N
N
P
P
P
P
3[ 109] [ 110]
February 9, 2026
PoliticsPA , Center City Residents Association
Steve Ulrich, Gina Ceisler Shapiro, Dick Polman
P
N
P
P
A
P
P
4[ 111]
February 23, 2026
21st Ward Democratic Committee
Lou Agre
P
N
N
P
P
P
P
5[ 112]
March 11, 2026
Mount Carmel Baptist Church
Sharrie Williams
WPVI-TV
P
N
N
P
P
P
P
6[ 113] [ 114]
March 18, 2026
Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church
Michael Fuller
P
N
W
W
P
P
P
7[ 115]
April 14, 2026
G-Town Radio
Solomon Jones
W
P
W
W
P
P
P
8[ 116]
April 20, 2026
24th & 27th Ward Democratic Committees
W
N
W
W
P
P
P
9[ 117]
April 28, 2026
WHYY-TV
Cherri Gregg Avi Wolfman-Arent
W
N
W
W
P
A
P
Fundraising
Italics indicate a withdrawn, disqualified, or nonqualifying candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Cole Carter (D)
$95,947[ e]
$84,730
$11,216
Morgan Cephas (D)
$241,028
$132,370
$108,657
Jahmiel Jackson (D)
$15,368[ f]
$8,870
$6,498
Isaiah Martin (D)
$7,084[ g]
$5,218
$1,865
Pablo McConnie-Saad (D)
$119,221
$50,402
$68,818
Karl Morris (D)
$49,658[ h]
$33,371
$16,287
Dave Oxman (D)
$497,772[ i]
$140,774
$356,998
Chris Rabb (D)
$384,065
$285,344
$98,721
Ala Stanford (D)
$467,227[ j]
$75,190
$392,037
Sharif Street (D)
$700,845
$226,822
$526,581
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 118]
Polling
Hypothetical polling
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Margin of error
Katherine Gilmore Richardson
Chris Rabb
Ala Stanford
Sharif Street
Isaiah Thomas
Undecided
Brilliant Corners Research & Strategies (D)[ 120] [ D]
August 6–12, 2025
584 (RV)
± 4.8%
5%
6%
7%
15%
7%
51%
Results
Primary results by precinct
30–40%
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
30–40%
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
90–100%
30–40%
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Chris Rabb (D)
$1,001,068
$628,087
$372,982
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 4
The 4th district is based in the western suburbs of Philadelphia, including most of Montgomery County and parts of Berks County . The incumbent is Democrat Madeleine Dean , who was re-elected with 59.1% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Democratic primary
Endorsements
Madeleine Dean
U.S. representatives
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Madeleine Dean (D)
$810,820
$687,242
$1,092,319
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 124]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Madeleine Dean (incumbent)
88,286
100.0
Total votes
88,286
100.0
Republican primary
Fundraising
Italics indicates a nonqualifying candidate.
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Aurora Stuski
35,116
100.0
Total votes
35,116
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Madeleine Dean (D)
$1,112,206
$922,769
$1,158,178
Aurora Stuski (R)
$0
$0
$0
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 5
The 5th district is based in the southwestern suburbs of Philadelphia, including all of Delaware County , parts of Montgomery County , and parts of south Philadelphia. The incumbent is Democrat Mary Gay Scanlon , who was re-elected with 65.3% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Democratic primary
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Mary Gay Scanlon (D)
$580,819
$530,088
$368,477
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 128]
Republican primary
Nominee
Nicholas Manganaro, retired financial professional[ 129]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Nicholas Manganaro
25,075
100.0
Total votes
25,075
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Mary Gay Scanlon (D)
$838,952
$756,595
$400,102
Nicholas Manganaro (D)
$6,725
$2,238
$4,487
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 6
The 6th district includes all of Chester County and the city of Reading in Berks County. The incumbent is Democrat Chrissy Houlahan , who was re-elected with 56.2% of the vote in 2024 .[ 3]
Democratic primary
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Chrissy Houlahan (D)
$1,095,399
$648,644
$3,852,368
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 132]
Republican primary
Nominee
Marty Young, business consulting executive[ 133]
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Marty Young (R)
$249,257
$84,904
$164,352
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 132]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Marty Young
33,376
100.0
Total votes
33,376
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Chrissy Houlahan (D)
$1,482,646
$899,192
$3,989,068
Marty Young (R)
$332,719
$150,151
$182,567
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 7
The 7th district is based in the Lehigh Valley , including all of Lehigh , Northampton , and Carbon counties and a small sliver of Monroe County .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Ryan Mackenzie , who flipped the district and was elected with 50.5% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
Ryan Mackenzie
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Ryan Mackenzie (R)
$2,577,819
$850,071
$1,830,988
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 136]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Ryan Mackenzie (incumbent)
35,048
100.0
Total votes
35,048
100.0
Democratic primary
Endorsements
Bob Brooks
Executive branch officials
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State legislators
Local officials
Labor unions
Organizations
Political parties
Ryan Crosswell
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Organizations
Lamont McClure
State legislators
Local officials
Labor unions
Carol Obando-Derstine
U.S. representatives
State legislators
Local officials
Individuals
Organizations
Debates and forums
2026 PA-07 Democratic primary debates and forums
No.
Date
Host
Moderator
Link
Participants
P Participant A Absent N Non-invitee I Invitee W Withdrawn
Brooks
Crosswell
Gonzalez
McClure
Obando- Derstine
Pinsley
Shupe
1[ 177]
February 16, 2026
Working Families Power, et al.
Rev. Gregory Edwards
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
2[ 178]
April 1, 2026
Business Matters
Tony Iannelli
P
P
W
P
P
W
W
3[ 179]
April 7, 2026
Lehigh County Democratic Committee
Ryan Gaylor
Link
P
P
W
P
P
W
W
4[ 180]
April 23, 2026
Blue Ridge Communications
Kim Bell
P
P
W
P
P
W
W
Fundraising
Italics indicate a withdrawn candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Bob Brooks (D)
$609,957
$269,189
$340,767
Ryan Crosswell (D)
$1,144,864
$532,615
$612,249
Lamont McClure (D)
$480,615
$193,025
$287,590
Carol Obando-Derstine (D)
$431,919
$308,411
$123,508
Mark Pinsley (D)
$125,194
$75,177
$50,017
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 136]
Polling
Poll source
Date(s) administered
Sample size[ c]
Marginof error
Bob Brooks
Ryan Crosswell
Lamont McClure
Carol Obando- Derstine
Other
Undecided
Tavern Research (D)[ 181]
May 17, 2026
613 (LV)
± 4.4%
26%
16%
17%
8%
1%
31%
GBAO (D)[ 182] [ E]
April 16–19, 2026
400 (LV)
± 4.9%
24%
9%
17%
12%
2%
36%
GBAO (D)[ 182] [ E]
February 25 – March 1, 2026
500 (LV)
± 4.4%
13%
8%
19%
13%
3%
44%
Change Research (D)[ 183] [ F]
December 16–19, 2025
892 (LV)
± 3.5%
11%
5%
17%
10%
3%[ n]
53%
Public Policy Polling (D)[ 184] [ G]
July 29–30, 2025
518 (LV)
± 4.3%
3%
3%
23%
7%
7%[ o]
58%
Results
Results by county:
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Ryan Mackenzie (R)
$3,726,348
$1,235,341
$2,594,247
Bob Brooks (D)
$1,171,181
$918,818
$252,364
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 8
The 8th district is based in Northeast Pennsylvania , specifically the Wyoming Valley and Pocono Mountains , including all of Lackawanna , Wayne , and Pike counties, and most of Luzerne and Monroe counties.[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Rob Bresnahan , who flipped the district in the 2024 election with 50.8% of the vote.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
Rob Bresnahan
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Labor unions
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Rob Bresnahan (R)
$2,998,394
$1,614,408
$1,437,137
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 194]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Rob Bresnahan (incumbent)
38,075
100.0
Total votes
38,075
100.0
Democratic primary
Withdrawn
Francis McHale, retired state administrative officer and candidate for the 10th district in 2000 [ 196]
Endorsements
Paige Cognetti
U.S. senators
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
Labor unions
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of March 31, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Paige Cognetti (D)
$2,607,715
$682,856
$1,924,859
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 194]
General election
Post-primary endorsements
Polling
Rob Bresnahan vs. Paige Cognetti
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Rob Bresnahan (R)
$4,519,623
$2,299,482
$2,273,292
Paige Cognetti (D)
$3,102,420
$852,243
$2,250,177
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 9
The 9th district is based in North Central Pennsylvania east of the Appalachian Divide , including Williamsport , Bloomsburg , and Lebanon . The incumbent is Republican Dan Meuser , who was re-elected with 70.5% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
Dan Meuser
Executive branch officials
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Dan Meuser (R)
$1,159,544
$1,129,901
$63,289
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 225]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Dan Meuser (incumbent)
62,527
100.0
Total votes
62,527
100.0
Democratic primary
Withdrawn
Jenn Brothers, former corrections officer[ 227] (running as an independent) [ 228]
Daniel Byron, retail manager[ 229] (endorsed Wallace) [ 230]
Endorsements
Jenn Brothers (withdrawn)
Fundraising
Italics indicts a withdrawn candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Rachel Wallace (D)
$253,412
$46,525
$206,886
Jenn Brothers (D)
$7,691
$4,799
$2,892
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 225]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Rachel Wallace
34,503
100.0
Total votes
34,503
100.0
Independents
Declared
Jenn Brothers, former corrections officer[ 227] (previously ran as a Democrat) [ 228]
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Dan Meuser (R)
$1,654,893
$1,563,145
$125,395
Rachel Wallace (D)
$497,478
$227,038
$270,441
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 10
The 10th district is based in the Harrisburg and York areas, including all of Dauphin County , most of Cumberland County , and the northern half of York County .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Scott Perry , who was re-elected with 50.6% of the vote in 2024.
Republican primary
Endorsements
Scott Perry
Executive branch officials
U.S. representatives
Organizations
Fundraising
Italics indicates a nonqualifying candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Karen Lynn Dalton (R)
$11,120
$7,262
$3,857
Scott Perry (R)
$2,880,656
$1,300,085
$1,662,490
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 238]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Scott Perry (incumbent)
45,900
100.0
Total votes
45,900
100.0
Democratic primary
Declined
Robert Forbes, substitute teacher and candidate for this district in 2024 [ 240]
Endorsements
Janelle Stelson
U.S. representatives
Statewide officials
State legislators
1 state senator[ p]
3 state representatives[ q]
Party officials
Labor unions
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Justin Douglas (D)
$84,901
$70,528
$14,372
Janelle Stelson (D)
$2,195,893
$690,423
$1,520,707
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 238]
Results
Results by county:
Third parties and independents
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Isabelle Harman (I)
$33,032
$26,535
$6,496
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 238]
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Scott Perry (R)
$4,415,918
$2,156,941
$2,340,896
Janelle Stelson (D)
$4,691,753
$1,357,723
$3,349,268
Isabelle Harman (I)
$59,449
$45,149
$14,300
Steven Long (I)
$0
$0
$0
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 11
The 11th district is based in Pennsylvania Dutch Country , including all of Lancaster County and the southern half of York County .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Lloyd Smucker , who was re-elected with 62.9% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
Lloyd Smucker
Executive branch officials
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Lloyd Smucker (R)
$969,368
$778,941
$1,094,518
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 259]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Lloyd Smucker (incumbent)
54,169
100.0
Total votes
54,169
100.0
Democratic primary
Nominee
Nancy Mannion, registered nurse[ 260]
Failed to qualify
Sarah Klimm, equity consultant[ 261]
Fundraising
Italics indicates a nonqualifying candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Sarah Klimm (D)
$5,170
$4,975
$394
Nancy Mannion (D)
$88,619
$73,313
$15,305
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 259]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Nancy Mannion
41,107
100.0
Total votes
41,107
100.0
Independents
Declared
Jeffrey Wilder[ 262] (previously ran as a Republican) [ 263]
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Lloyd Smucker (R)
$1,282,682
$1,141,988
$1,044,786
Nancy Mannion (D)
$153,357
$138,213
$15,144
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 12
The 12th district is based in the city of Pittsburgh and its eastern and southern suburbs, including parts of Allegheny and Westmoreland counties. The incumbent is Democrat Summer Lee , who was re-elected with 56.4% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Democratic primary
Eliminated in primary
William Parker, app developer and perennial candidate[ 265]
Endorsements
Summer Lee
Labor Unions
Organizations
Political parties
Fundraising
Italics indicates a withdrawn candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Adam Forgie (D)
$26,850
$14,666
$7,279
Summer Lee (D)
$1,134,453
$355,897
$1,790,134
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 274]
Results
Results by county:
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Summer Lee (incumbent)
75,298
81.2
Democratic
William Parker
17,437
18.8
Total votes
92,735
100.0
Republican primary
Nominee
James Hayes, manufacturing executive and nominee for this district in 2024 [ 42]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
James Hayes
23,760
100.0
Total votes
23,760
100.0
Fundraising
Italics indicates a nonqualifying candidate.
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Benson Fechter (R)
$17,476
$10,671
$6,805
James Hayes (R)
$10,886
$3,384
$8,187
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 274]
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Summer Lee (D)
$1,349,103
$668,865
$1,691,817
James Hayes (R)
$27,106
$16,238
$11,554
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 13
The 13th district is based in rural South Central Pennsylvania, including Johnstown , Altoona , and Gettysburg .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican John Joyce , who was re-elected with 74.2% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
John Joyce
Executive branch officials
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
John Joyce (R)
$1,585,136
$879,483
$3,305,791
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 278]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
John Joyce (incumbent)
58,992
100.0
Total votes
58,992
100.0
Democratic primary
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Beth Farnham (D)
$14,861
$9,981
$5,640
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 278]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Beth Farnham
32,428
100.0
Total votes
32,428
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
John Joyce (R)
$2,102,174
$1,131,246
$3,571,066
Beth Farnham (D)
$36,678
$21,011
$16,428
Cody Thomas (I)
$197
$173
$-24
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 14
The 14th district is based in Southwest Pennsylvania, including all of Washington , Greene , and Fayette counties, most of Indiana and Somerset counties, and parts of Westmoreland County .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Guy Reschenthaler , who was re-elected with 66.6% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Endorsements
Guy Reschenthaler
Executive branch officials
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Guy Reschenthaler (R)
$2,615,688
$2,400,396
$764,371
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 282]
Democratic primary
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Alan Bradstock (D)
$43,788
$13,319
$30,469
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 282]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Alan Bradstock
48,774
100.0
Total votes
48,774
100.0
Independents and third parties
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Guy Reschenthaler (R)
$3,610,168
$3,419,788
$739,459
Alan Bradstock (D)
$129,707
$87,624
$42,083
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 15
The 15th district is based in North Central Pennsylvania west of the Appalachian Divide , including State College , Lock Haven , and Bradford .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Glenn Thompson , who was re-elected with 71.5% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
Glenn Thompson
Executive branch officials
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Glenn Thompson (R)
$1,227,440
$1,152,094
$867,140
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 286]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Glenn Thompson (incumbent)
53,352
100.0
Total votes
53,352
100.0
Democratic primary
Nominee
Ray Bilger, former intelligence officer[ 287]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Ray Bilger
34,963
100.0
Total votes
34,963
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Glenn Thompson (R)
$1,632,830
$1,685,775
$738,849
Ray Bilger (D)
$41,320
$14,112
$27,208
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 16
The 16th district is located in Northwestern Pennsylvania, and contains all of Erie , Crawford , Mercer , Lawrence and Butler counties, and part of Venango County .[ 2] The incumbent is Republican Mike Kelly , who was re-elected with 63.7% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Republican primary
Endorsements
Mike Kelly
Executive branch officials
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Mike Kelly (R)
$668,937
$579,251
$1,132,373
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 289]
Results
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Mike Kelly (incumbent)
44,236
100.0
Total votes
44,236
100.0
Democratic primary
Nominee
Justin Wagner, engineer[ 290]
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Justin Wagner (D)
$3,842
$0
$3,842
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 289]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Justin Wagner
49,371
100.0
Total votes
49,371
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Mike Kelly (R)
$886,279
$739,862
$1,189,104
Justin Wagner (D)
$31,473
$12,520
$23,953
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
District 17
The 17th district is based in the northwestern suburbs and exurbs of Pittsburgh , including parts of Allegheny County and all of Beaver County .[ 2] The incumbent is Democrat Chris Deluzio , who was re-elected with 53.9% of the vote in 2024.[ 3]
Democratic primary
Endorsements
Chris Deluzio
Labor unions
Organizations
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Chris Deluzio (D)
$1,587,843
$1,000,213
$941,301
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 296]
Results
Democratic primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Democratic
Chris Deluzio (incumbent)
83,791
100.0
Total votes
83,791
100.0
Republican primary
Eliminated in primary
Jesse James Vodvarka, manufacturer and perennial candidate[ 298] [ 299]
Results
Results by county:
Republican primary results
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
Republican
Tony Guy
19,581
53.3
Republican
Jesse James Vodvarka
17,183
46.7
Total votes
36,764
100.0
General election
Fundraising
Campaign finance reports as of May 21, 2026
Candidate
Raised
Spent
Cash on hand
Chris Deluzio (D)
$2,355,058
$1,785,871
$922,859
Tony Guy (R)
$54,528
$11,706
$42,823
Source: Federal Election Commission [ 39]
Notes
↑
↑
1 2 3 4 5 6 Key: A – all adults RV – registered voters LV – likely voters V – unclear
↑ Republican candidate Alex Schnell also participated in the February 9 forum.
↑ $90,000 of this total was self-funded by Carter
↑ $5,200 of this total was self-funded by Jackson
↑ $1,679 of this total was self-funded by Martin
↑ $46,284 of this total was self-funded by Morris
↑ $177,379 of this total was self-funded by Oxman
↑ $250,190 of this total was self-funded by Stanford
↑ Morgan Cephas with 7%; Dave Oxman with 2%;
↑
↑
↑ "Would not vote" with 3%
↑ Mark Pinsley with 7%
↑
↑
Partisan clients
1 2 Poll sponsored by Harvie's campaign
↑ Poll commissioned by 314 Action , which supports Stanford
↑ Poll commissioned by Street's campaign
↑ Poll commissioned by Black Leadership Pennsylvania
1 2 Poll sponsored by the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC, which supports Brooks
↑ Poll sponsored by Brooks' campaign
↑ Poll sponsored by McClure's campaign
1 2 Poll sponsored by House Majority PAC, which is focused on electing Democrats to the U.S. House of Representatives
↑ Poll sponsored by Cognetti's campaign
↑ Poll sponsored by Stelson's campaign
↑ Poll sponsored by Republicans Against Perry
↑ Poll sponsored by House Majority PAC, which supports Stelson
References
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "2024 House Vote Tracker" . Cook Political Report . Retrieved December 2, 2024 .
↑ Otterbein, Holly (July 3, 2025). "This Pennsylvania Republican withstood pressure on the megabill. Here's why" . Politico . Retrieved July 7, 2025 .
↑ Ullery, Chris (February 9, 2026). "Fitzpatrick enters reelection bid with sizable headstart in cash" . Bucks County Courier Times . Retrieved February 9, 2026 .
↑ "Political Roundup for February 18, 2026" . February 18, 2026. Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Eichholz, Jack (January 8, 2026). "2026 Endorsement Tracker" . VoteHub . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
1 2 "Largest Federal Employee Union Endorses Rob Bresnahan and Brian Fitzpatrick for Reelection to Congress" . AFGE . May 19, 2026. Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
1 2 3 "Our Recommended Candidates" . National Education Association. Retrieved December 12, 2025 .
↑ "Brian Fitzpatrick" . Giffords. Retrieved March 27, 2026 .
↑ "22 Republicans endorsed by LGBT organization: Full list of names" . Newsweek . February 3, 2026. Retrieved February 4, 2026 .
1 2 3 "RJC endorses 16 congressional incumbents, including 4 Jews" . San Diego Jewish World . March 12, 2026. Retrieved March 13, 2026 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 1st" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Terruso, Julia (April 3, 2025). "Bucks County Commissioner Bob Harvie announces he's running for Congress against U.S. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 3, 2025 .
↑ Rizzo, Melinda (December 11, 2025). "Lucia Simonelli Give Democrats Another Option in the PA-01 Congressional Primary" . Bucks County Beacon . Retrieved December 31, 2025 .
↑ Sofield, Tom (August 5, 2025). "Former Republican Joins Democratic Congressional Primary" . Levittown Now . Retrieved August 5, 2025 .
↑ Werner, Jeff (July 7, 2025). "Buckingham Democrat Joins Race For U.S. Congress In PA01" . Patch Media . Retrieved July 7, 2025 .
↑ Russell-Sluchansky, Carmen (December 2, 2025). "Pa. will help determine control of the U.S. House in the 2026 election. Here's what to know" . WHYY. Retrieved December 31, 2025 .
↑ "Why I am running for U.S. Congress in Pennsylvania's first district" . Bucks County Herald . February 5, 2026. Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
↑ Cole, John (February 9, 2026). "Q4 takeaways: Fitzpatrick has millions more on hand than other Pennsylvania congressional candidates" . Pennsylvania Capital-Star . Retrieved April 28, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Sofield, Tom (April 3, 2025). "County Commissioner Bob Harvie Enters 2026 Congressional Race" . Levittown Now . Retrieved April 3, 2025 .
↑ Tyksinski, Aidan (June 6, 2025). "Former Congressman Matt Cartwright Endorses Bob Harvie in His Bid to Unseat PA-01 Incumbent Republican Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick" . Bucks County Beacon . Retrieved December 31, 2025 .
↑ Rizzo, Melinda (July 16, 2025). "Congresswoman Madeleine Dean Believes Bob Harvie Is the Change Pennsylvania's First Congressional District Needs" . Retrieved July 20, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 "DCCC Announces Eight New Candidates to Coveted 2026 'Red to Blue' Program" . May 4, 2026. Retrieved May 4, 2026 .
1 2 Kitchen, Sean (September 18, 2025). "PA Congressman wants to flip the US House with 4 endorsements" . Keystone Newsroom . Retrieved September 18, 2025 .
↑ "Bob Harvie Picks up Key Endorsement in PA-01 Congressional Race - Bucks County Beacon" . November 13, 2025.
↑ Ulrich, Steve (May 10, 2026). "Shapiro Endorses Harvie In PA-01" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved May 11, 2026 .
1 2 3 Ulrich, Steve (November 25, 2025). "11/25 Playbook: Targeting the Lehigh Valley and NEPA" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
1 2 Neil, Emily (April 10, 2026). "Pa. election 2026: Meet Bob Harvie and Lucia Simonelli, the Democrats fighting to unseat Brian Fitzpatrick in Congress" . WHYY. Retrieved April 11, 2026 .
1 2 3 "Pennsylvania" . Track AIPAC . Retrieved April 1, 2026 .
↑ Cooper, Kenny (January 15, 2026). "In crowded Bucks congressional race, these candidates are trying to separate themselves from Harvie, Fitzpatrick" . WHYY-TV . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
↑ Roth, Fallon (April 28, 2026). " 'A seat we have to win': Bucks County Democrats Bob Harvie and Lucia Simonelli face off ahead of primary to challenge Fitzpatrick" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 29, 2026 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1956559" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 28, 2026 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1924405" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 23, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "2026 CPR House Race Ratings" . Cook Political Report . Retrieved February 6, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "2026 House Ratings" . Inside Elections .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "2026 House" . Sabato's Crystal Ball . Retrieved May 5, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "The 2026 House Forecast" . Race to the WH . Retrieved October 11, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania" . fec.gov . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved May 21, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (March 31, 2026). "Can Bob Harvie End Brian Fitzpatrick's Tenure in Congress?" . Politics PA . Retrieved March 31, 2026 .
↑ Rogerson, Riley; Kalra, Avani (October 15, 2025). "Brian Fitzpatrick's Democratic Challenger Touts Poll Showing Competitive Race" . NOTUS . Retrieved October 15, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Ulrich, Steve. "Who's Running For Congress?" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved May 31, 2025 .
↑ "- AIPAC Political Portal" . AIPAC PAC. Retrieved February 21, 2026 .
1 2 "Endorsees" . DMFI PAC. Retrieved December 17, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 "2026 Planned Parenthood Action Fund Endorsed Candidates" . Planned Parenthood Action Fund . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
↑ "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 2nd" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1929086" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved December 18, 2025 .
1 2 3 Kashinsky, Lisa (May 19, 2026). "Progressive firebrand Chris Rabb wins Democratic primary for the nation's bluest House seat" . Politico . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
1 2 3 Strauss, Joseph (May 19, 2026). "With AOC backing and anti-Israel message, Chris Rabb wins primary in Philadelphia" . Jewish Telegraphic Agency . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
1 2 Cerino, Marco (April 6, 2026). "Third District congressional race intensifies amid PAC money disputes, endorsements and escalating political attacks" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved June 8, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (July 8, 2025). "PA-03: Rabb Enters Race" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved July 8, 2025 .
1 2 3 Terruso, Julia (October 1, 2025). "Ala Stanford, surgeon who helped lead Philly's COVID response, is running for Congress with Dwight Evans' backing" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved October 1, 2025 .
↑ Cone, Allen (June 30, 2025). "Democrat Dwight Evans won't seek re-election in U.S. House - UPI.com" . United Press International . Retrieved June 30, 2025 . State Sen. Sharif Street on Monday posted on X his intention to run for Evans' seat, writing "I'm in."
1 2 Cerino, Marco (March 16, 2026). "Nine candidates make ballot for congressional primary to replace Rep. Dwight Evans" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 Janesch, Sam; Orso, Anna; Walsh, Sean (April 8, 2026). "Meet the 4 Democrats vying to replace Dwight Evans in Congress" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
↑ Thelma Peake vs Shaun Griffith , Christine Fizzano Cannon (The Commonwealth Court of Pennslyvania February 4, 2026).
1 2 Rinde, Meir (November 11, 2025). "11th candidate enters jam-packed 3rd Congressional District race" . Billy Penn at WHYY . Retrieved November 13, 2025 .
↑ Thelma Peake vs Cole Carter , Anne E Covey (The Commonwealth Court of Pennslyvania March 4, 2026).
↑ Anastasakos, Evgenia (August 6, 2025). "Temple professor is going after 'Big Tech' in campaign to replace retiring Dwight Evans" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved August 15, 2025 .
↑ Thelma Peake vs Karl Morris , Bonnie Brigance Leadbetter (The Commonwealth Court of Pennslyvania 3-31-2026).
1 2 3 Terruso, Julia (December 10, 2025). "Former Gov. Ed Rendell endorses State Sen. Sharif Street to succeed Rep. Dwight Evans in Congress" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved December 15, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Orso, Anna; Collins Walsh, Sean (April 15, 2026). "Mayor Cherelle L. Parker endorses State Sen. Sharif Street for Congress" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 15, 2026 .
↑ Wu, Nicholas; Otterbein, Holly (June 30, 2025). "Dwight Evans says he will retire from House" . Politico . Retrieved June 30, 2025 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (April 7, 2026). "PA-03: And Then There Were Three" . Politics PA . Retrieved April 7, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Cann, Harrison (May 13, 2026). "PA-3 Democratic primary tracker: Labor unions continue to back Sharif Street with less than a week until primary day" . City & State PA . Retrieved May 14, 2026 .
↑ Cama, Timothy (March 17, 2026). "Biden-era climate official ends House bid" . Politico Pro . Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (March 18, 2026). "PA-03: Oxman Suspends Campaign; Endorses Stanford For Nomination" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
1 2 Orso, Anna (January 19, 2026). "Chris Rabb is trying to be the left's standard-bearer as he runs for Congress. Will progressives rally around him?" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved January 20, 2026 .
↑ Rod, Marc (April 21, 2026). "Progressive heavyweights line up behind Israel critic Chris Rabb in crowded Pa. congressional primary" . Jewish Insider . Retrieved April 21, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 Vakil, Caroline (April 13, 2026). "CPC PAC endorses Chris Rabb in Pennsylvania House primary" . The Hill . Retrieved April 13, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 Sentner, Irie; Bianco, Ali; Gray, Makayla (April 17, 2026). "MAGA's turning point" . Politico . Retrieved April 17, 2026 .
↑ Orso, Anna (April 24, 2026). "Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez endorses Chris Rabb in Philadelphia congressional race" . Inquirer.com . Retrieved April 24, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Cann, Harrison (April 16, 2026). "PA-3 Democratic primary tracker: Mayor Cherelle Parker endorses Sharif Street, EMILYs List endorses Ala Stanford" . City and State PA . Retrieved April 19, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 Orso, Anna (March 19, 2026). "The progressive Working Families Party is backing State Rep. Chris Rabb for Congress" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
↑ "Civil rights attorney Ben Crump endorses Rep. Chris Rabb for congress" . The Philadelphia Tribune . March 16, 2026. Retrieved March 17, 2026 .
1 2 Janesch, Sam (April 30, 2026). "Leftist streamer Hasan Piker gives Chris Rabb a boost during West Philadelphia campaign swing" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
1 2 3 "2026 Endorsements" . Center for Freethought Equality. Retrieved January 10, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 "National Environmental Groups Endorse Chris Rabb for PA-3" . Friends of the Earth Action. March 19, 2026. Retrieved March 27, 2026 .
↑ "Instagram" . www.instagram.com . Retrieved May 29, 2026 .
↑ "ENDORSEMENTS" . Jane PAC. Retrieved April 1, 2026 .
↑ "Chris Rabb for Congress in Pennsylvania's 3rd District" . Our Revolution. Retrieved May 11, 2026 .
↑ "Candidates" . April 23, 2026.
↑ "2026 Endorsements" . Peace Action. Retrieved April 1, 2026 .
↑ "Philadelphia progressive groups rally for Rabb as Oxman exits to endorse Stanford" . WHYY. Retrieved March 27, 2026 .
↑ The Editorial Board (April 20, 2026). "Chris Rabb in the Democratic primary for Pa. 3rd Congressional District" . Inquirer.com . Retrieved April 20, 2026 .
1 2 3 Cerino, Marco (May 15, 2026). "Dr. Ala Stanford seeks 3rd District Congress seat as outsider" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved May 16, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 Cerino, Marco (March 4, 2026). "Health care professional groups endorse Dr. Ala Stanford for Congress" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
1 2 Orso, Anna (April 21, 2026). "Three members of Congress are backing Ala Stanford in the Philly primary, exposing a divide among Democrats" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 21, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (January 7, 2026). "1/7 Playbook: Trump Sounds Midterm Warning" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved January 7, 2026 .
↑ Cerino, Marco (December 17, 2025). "Former Philly Mayor Nutter to endorse Stanford in Congressional race" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved December 18, 2025 .
↑ Orso, Anna (April 30, 2026). "How the Middle East and the word 'genocide' became the defining issue of the Philly congressional race" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 30, 2026 .
↑ "EMILYs List Endorses Dr. Ala Stanford for Pennsylvania's 3rd Congressional District" . EMILYs List. April 16, 2026. Retrieved April 16, 2026 .
↑ "Endorsement: Dr. Ala Stanford for 3rd Congressional District" . The Philadelphia Tribune . May 15, 2026. Retrieved May 17, 2026 .
↑ Cerino, Marco (May 15, 2026). "Booker joins AOC, national figures as high-profile endorsements reshape pivotal Democratic primary" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved May 16, 2026 .
↑ Cerino, Marco (May 15, 2026). "Sharif Street touts record, relationships in crowded 3rd District race" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved May 16, 2026 .
↑ Terruso, Julia; Orso, Anna (December 14, 2025). "Candidates for Dwight Evans' congressional seat hunt for cash and support at the Pa. Society in New York" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved December 15, 2025 .
↑ Cerino, Marco (July 25, 2025). "Gun violence prevention advocates back Sen. Sharif Street for Congress" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved December 16, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 Cerino, Marco (October 15, 2025). "Building trades unions endorses Sharif Street in congressional run; ward leaders vote gets canceled" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved January 13, 2026 .
↑ Kashinsky, Lisa (May 19, 2026). " 'We are facing an existential crisis': Redistricting rocks the race for the nation's bluest House seat" . Politico . Retrieved May 19, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 Day, Gary L. (July 15, 2025). "25 LGBTQ+ community leaders endorse Sharif Street for Congress" . Philadelphia Gay News . Retrieved December 16, 2025 .
↑ Cerino, Marco (April 7, 2026). "DC33 endorses Sharif Street in 3rd Congressional District race" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Terruso, Julia (July 8, 2025). "Sharif Street announces early endorsements from 10 Philly unions — surprising one of them" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved July 15, 2025 .
↑ Walsh, Sean (October 15, 2025). "The building trades unions have endorsed State Sen. Sharif Street in the crowded race for Pa.'s 3rd Congressional District" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved October 20, 2025 – via MSN.
↑ "Dwight Evans" . J Street PAC. Retrieved December 28, 2025 .
↑ "Animal Wellness Action Endorses Pablo McConnie-Saad in Democratic Primary for Pennsylvania's 3rd Congressional District" . Animal Wellness Action. February 10, 2026. Retrieved February 11, 2026 .
↑ Orso, Anna (May 15, 2026). "Gov. Josh Shapiro has endorsed in four Pa. congressional primaries. He hasn't weighed in on Philly's race" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved May 16, 2026 .
↑ Salisbury, Greg (December 5, 2025). "The 2026 primary season kicks off early with PA-3 candidates' forum" . City & State Pennsylvania . Retrieved December 6, 2025 .
↑ Ajamu, Rasheed Z. (January 15, 2026). "Germantown meets May's primary congressional candidates" . Resolve Philly . Retrieved January 16, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (February 4, 2026). "PA-03: Fundraising Numbers Put Candidates Into Competitive Tiers" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved February 5, 2026 .
↑ Stein, Linda (February 10, 2026). "PA-03 Congressional Forum Airs Viewpoints of Six Hopeful Candidates" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved February 11, 2026 .
↑ Collins Walsh, Sean; Orso, Anna (February 24, 2026). "The candidates in Philly's open congressional race got a chance to ask each other questions. Things got tense" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved February 24, 2026 .
↑ Williams, Sharrie (March 11, 2026). "Democratic candidates for Pennsylvania's 3rd Congressional District meet in face-to-face forum" . WPVI-TV . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
↑ Watson, Kaylon (March 17, 2026). "Congressional candidates to participate in forum at Enon Tabernacle, Wednesday" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
↑ Spivy, O.J. (March 19, 2026). "Third district hopefuls share plans before large crowd at Enon" . The Philadelphia Tribune . Retrieved March 19, 2026 .
↑ Fink, Aubrey (April 20, 2026). "G-Town Beat: PA Third Congressional District Democratic Debate" . Resolve Philly . Retrieved April 20, 2026 .
↑ West, Tony (April 22, 2026). "Three Congressional hopefuls court West Philly voters at forum" . WestPhillyLocal.com . Retrieved April 29, 2026 .
↑ Russell-Sluchansky, Cameron (April 29, 2026). "Stanford drops out of Pa. 3rd district debate at WHYY" . WHYY . Retrieved April 29, 2026 .
↑ "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 3rd" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Orso, Anna (April 15, 2026). "Philly's three-way fight to replace Dwight Evans in the U.S. House enters a volatile final stretch" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved April 15, 2026 .
↑ "Philadelphia Issues and Landscape Poll" (PDF) . Black Leadership Pennsylvania . August 2025. p. 2. Retrieved October 2, 2025 .
↑ Russell-Sluchansky, Carmen (February 10, 2026). "At Pennsylvania 3rd Congressional District forum, primary candidates share policy goals but split on approach to power" . WHYY. Retrieved February 11, 2026 .
↑ "Madeleine Dean" . Giffords. Retrieved March 27, 2026 .
↑ "Madeleine Dean" . J Street PAC. Retrieved December 28, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 4th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Stockburger, George (March 11, 2026). "Pennsylvania's congressional primaries largely set; Who is running?" . WHTM-TV . Retrieved March 18, 2026 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1956044" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 24, 2026 .
↑ "Mary Gay Scanlon" . J Street PAC. Retrieved December 28, 2025 .
↑ "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 5th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Stein, Linda (April 7, 2026). "Delco Republican Nicholas Manganaro is running for PA-5 seat" . Broad + Liberty . Retrieved May 5, 2026 .
↑ "Chrissy Houlahan" . giffords.org . June 24, 2026.
↑ "Chrissy Houlahan" . J Street PAC. Retrieved December 28, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 6th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Stein, Linda (August 12, 2025). "Veteran, Businessman Marty Young Takes Aim at DelVal Dem Houlahan" . Delaware Valley Journal . Retrieved November 23, 2025 .
↑ Weber, Lindsay (May 23, 2025). "Election 2026: Lehigh County executive endorses Northampton counterpart McClure in 7th district race" . The Morning Call . Retrieved May 23, 2025 . Congressman Ryan Mackenzie, who will run for a second term in 2026.
1 2 3 4 5 Roth, Fallon (November 3, 2025). "A year ahead of 2026 midterms, Trump backs Scott Perry, Rob Bresnahan, and other Pennsylvania Republicans" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved December 31, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 7th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 Terruso, Julia (August 26, 2025). "A firefighter running for Congress in the Lehigh Valley has backing from Bernie Sanders and Josh Shapiro" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved August 26, 2025 .
↑ Shortell, Tom (June 9, 2025). "Ex-federal prosecutor Ryan Crosswell joins PA-7 congressional race" . Lehigh Valley News . Retrieved June 9, 2025 .
↑ Weber, Lindsay (February 27, 2025). "Northampton County Executive Lamont McClure announces run for Lehigh Valley's seat in Congress" . The Morning Call . Retrieved February 27, 2025 .
1 2 3 Shortell, Tom (May 1, 2025). "Carol Obando-Derstine enters race for Lehigh Valley congressional seat" . Lehigh Valley News . Retrieved May 1, 2025 .
↑ Shortell, Tom (January 6, 2026). "A 6th Democrat launches campaign into crowded Lehigh Valley congressional race" . Lehigh Valley News . Retrieved January 7, 2026 .
↑ Weber, Lindsay (January 9, 2026). "7th Democrat files to run in crowded primary for Lehigh Valley's seat in Congress" . The Morning Call . Retrieved January 9, 2026 .
↑ Weber, Lindsay (February 18, 2026). "Mark Pinsley drops out of race for Congress in Lehigh Valley, will run for state Senate seat" . The Morning Call . Retrieved February 18, 2026 .
↑ Mutnick, Ally; Wu, Nicholas; Otterbein, Holly (April 5, 2025). "Democrats look to push into GOP turf with buzzy candidate recruits for the midterms" . Politico . Retrieved April 5, 2025 .
1 2 3 Ulrich, Steve (January 30, 2026). "1/30 Playbook: The Midterm PA Congressional Races To Watch" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved January 30, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (February 2, 2026). "2/2 Playbook: Q4 Fundraising Numbers" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved February 2, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (April 28, 2026). "U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren endorses Bob Brooks' campaign for Congress in the Lehigh Valley" . The Morning Call . Retrieved April 28, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (April 20, 2026). "4/20 Playbook: No Love For Fetterman Among Pennsylvania Dems" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved April 20, 2026 .
1 2 3 "Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC Endorses Bob Brooks for PA-07" . December 18, 2025. Retrieved December 18, 2025 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (April 17, 2026). "4/17 Playbook: Questions Arise Around Brooks Campaign" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved April 17, 2026 .
1 2 Kashinsky, Lisa (December 14, 2025). "Shapiro backs Brooks in primary for top Dem target" . Politico . Retrieved December 14, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Dems running in 7th line up seasoned campaign teams, key endorsements" . Leigh Valley Live . February 17, 2026. Retrieved February 17, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 Nir, David; Singer, Jeff (November 26, 2025). "Morning Digest: A notorious proto-MAGA crank may have one more comeback left in him" . Retrieved November 26, 2025 .
1 2 3 4 5 Ulrich, Steve (September 12, 2025). "9/12 Playbook: The Kirk Fallout" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved September 12, 2025 .
1 2 3 Weber, Lindsay (November 7, 2025). "Democrat Bob Brooks, former Bethlehem firefighter, endorsed by Allentown mayor, state reps in congressional bid" . The Morning Call . Retrieved November 7, 2025 .
↑ "National Nurses United endorses Bob Brooks for Pennsylvania's 7th District" . National Nurses United. March 7, 2026. Retrieved April 7, 2026 .
1 2 3 Cole, John (May 6, 2026). "Fitzpatrick says pro-union bill dealing with contracts will pass U.S. House" . The Center Square . Retrieved May 8, 2026 .
1 2 Ulrich, Steve (December 22, 2025). "12/22 Playbook: 'We're Living Here in Allentown' " . PoliticsPA . Retrieved December 22, 2025 .
↑ Kashinsky, Lisa (April 27, 2026). "Republicans Blame Dems After WHCD" . Politico . Retrieved April 27, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (March 3, 2026). "3/3 Playbook: Why No Sunday On PA's Trump Lawsuits" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved March 4, 2026 .
↑ "Bob Brooks for Congress in Pennsylvania's 7th District" . Our Revolution . Retrieved May 11, 2026 .
↑ Cann, Harrison (March 3, 2026). "Bob Brooks receives Working Families Party endorsement in PA-7 race" . City & State Pennsylvania . Retrieved March 3, 2026 .
↑ "Endorsed Candidates" . VoteVets. Retrieved September 22, 2025 .
↑ Weber, Lindsay (May 23, 2025). "Election 2026: Lehigh County executive endorses Northampton counterpart McClure in 7th district race" . The Morning Call .
1 2 3 "Lamont McClure for Pennsylvania" .
1 2 3 4 5 Weber, Lindsay (December 4, 2025). "Lehigh Valley candidate for Congress endorsed by slate of Latina Congress members" . The Morning Call . Retrieved December 4, 2025 .
↑ "CHC BOLD PAC Endorses Denise Powell in NE-02 and Carol Obando-Derstine in PA-07 to Flip Critical House Seats" . July 10, 2025. Retrieved August 25, 2025 .
↑ "314 Action Fund Endorses Carol Obando-Derstine to Flip Pennsylvania's Seventh Congressional District" . 314 Action . September 26, 2025. Retrieved October 16, 2025 .
↑ Soellner, Mica; Cohen, Max; Sherman, Jake (July 10, 2025). "Emmer raises $6.5 million in Q2" . Punchbowl News . Retrieved July 10, 2025 . Also: BOLD PAC is endorsing two Democratic challengers in Nebraska and Pennsylvania.
↑ "Candidates" . Elect Democratic Women . Retrieved December 6, 2025 .
↑ Mackler, Jessica (July 9, 2025). "EMILYs List Endorses Carol Obando-Derstine for Election to Pennsylvania's 7th Congressional District" . EMILYs List . Retrieved July 10, 2025 .
↑ Pichardo, Katharine (July 31, 2025). "Latino Victory Fund Announces Endorsement of "Red to Blue" Congressional Candidates Poised to Make HERstory as First Latinas in Arizona, Nebraska and Pennsylvania" . Latino Victory . Retrieved July 31, 2025 .
↑ "Candidates" .
1 2 "ENDORSEMENTS" . Progressive Democrats of America . Archived from the original on February 27, 2026. Retrieved March 24, 2026 .
↑ "Mark Pinsley" . PatrioticMillionaires . Retrieved October 14, 2025 .
1 2 3 "Candidates for Common Good" . Vote Common Good . Retrieved December 28, 2025 .
↑ Myszkowski, Brian (February 17, 2026). "Democrats in Lehigh Valley congressional race discuss affordability, the economy and cost of living at town hall" . The Morning Call . Retrieved February 17, 2026 .
↑ Shortell, Tony (April 1, 2026). "Lehigh Valley Democratic congressional candidates tout their credentials during first televised primary debate" . Lehigh Valley News . Retrieved April 2, 2026 .
↑ Shortell, Tom (April 8, 2026). "Congressional Democratic candidates talk immigration, housing, warts in 2nd debate" . Lehigh Valley News . Retrieved April 10, 2026 .
↑ Danailova, Hilary (April 24, 2026). "PA-7 Dem candidates meet for televised debate in Jim Thorpe" . City & State Pennsylvania . Retrieved April 25, 2026 .
↑ "PA-07 Toplines" (PDF) . Tavern Research . May 18, 2026. Retrieved May 18, 2026 .
1 2 "Bob Brooks Takes Lead, Has Momentum In PA-7 Democratic Primary" . GBAO . April 21, 2026. Retrieved April 23, 2026 .
↑ "PA-07 | Prometheus | Toplines | December 2025" . Change Research . Retrieved December 23, 2025 .
↑ Grindell, Khaet (August 8, 2025). "McClure is the Early Frontrunner in Pennsylvania's 7th Congressional District Democratic Primary" . Public Policy Polling . Retrieved September 26, 2025 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1930731" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 5, 2025 .
↑ O'Boyle, Bill (November 6, 2025). "Gov. Shapiro calls out Rep. Bresnahan on voting record" . Times Leader . Retrieved November 7, 2025 . Rep. Bresnahan will run for re-election in 2026.
↑ Delfino, Jessica (May 9, 2025). "Bresnahan endorsed by Trump after Social Security 'concerns' letter" . The Scranton Times-Tribune . Retrieved May 9, 2025 .
↑ "Brotherhood_of_Railroad_Signalmen_Endorsement_Lettter.pdf" (PDF) . January 14, 2026. Retrieved February 15, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (April 29, 2026). "4/29 Playbook: Dems By 10 In Generic Congressional Ballot" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved April 29, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (December 3, 2025). "12/3 Playbook: What Josh Shapiro Believes" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved December 3, 2025 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (April 8, 2026). "4/8 Playbook: Can Trump's 'Wall of Cash' Stop Dems?" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
↑ "Rep._Bresnahan_Endorsement_2026" (PDF) . National Electrical Contractors Association . Retrieved May 8, 2026 .
↑ "LIUNA_Endorsement_Letter.pdf" (PDF) . January 23, 2026. Retrieved February 15, 2026 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 8th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 Tomkavage, Robert (September 2, 2025). "Scranton Mayor Cognetti announces campaign for Congress" . The Scranton Times-Tribune . Retrieved September 2, 2025 .
↑ Horvath, Jeff (February 27, 2026). "Scranton Democrat McHale won't run for Congress" . The Scranton Times-Tribune . Retrieved March 1, 2026 .
↑ Horvath, Jeff (December 4, 2025). "Flynn doesn't rule out congressional run after newcomer announces state Senate candidacy" . The Scranton Times-Tribune . Retrieved December 6, 2025 .
1 2 Horvath, Jeff (June 5, 2025). "Cartwright says he's not running for Congress" . The Scranton Times-Tribune . Retrieved June 5, 2025 .
↑ Krawczeniuk, Borys (September 2, 2025). "Cognetti announces campaign for Congress as she runs for reelection as mayor, citing 'more goals' for Scranton" . WVIA-TV . Retrieved September 4, 2025 .
↑ Allabaugh, Sydney (April 18, 2026). "Sen. Kelly, Mayor Cognetti hold 'anti-corruption town hall' in Nanticoke" . Times Leader . Retrieved April 19, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 "DCCC Announces First Round of Candidates Named to Coveted 2026 'Red to Blue' Program" . February 23, 2026. Retrieved February 23, 2026 .
↑ Rubright, Kathryne (February 5, 2026). "Gov. Shapiro endorses Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti in 8th District" . Pocono Record . Retrieved February 5, 2026 .
1 2 3 "SEIU PA state council endorses Cognetti" . River Reporter . May 12, 2026. Retrieved May 15, 2026 .
↑ "Local painters' union endorses Cognetti" . River Reporter . May 12, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
↑ "PASNAP endorses Cognetti for Congress" . River Reporter . May 12, 2026. Retrieved May 12, 2026 .
1 2 Kitchen, Sean (June 23, 2026). "Teamsters endorse Bresnahan after members backed Cognetti" . The Keystone . Retrieved June 24, 2026 .
↑ "New Champions in Competitive Districts" . dfer.org . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
1 2 Schneider, Elena (February 19, 2026). "Pro-Israel group wades into Democratic House primaries" . Politico . Retrieved February 19, 2026 .
↑ "Candidates" . Elect Democratic Women . Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
↑ Mackler, Jessica (September 2, 2025). "EMILYs List Endorses Mayor Paige Cognetti for Pennsylvania's 8th Congressional District" . EMILYs List. Retrieved September 9, 2025 .
↑ Mayo, Liam (February 13, 2026). "End Citizens United endorses Cognetti for PA-08" . River Reporter . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
↑ "Paige Cognetti" .
↑ "Paige Cognetti" . J Street PAC. Retrieved December 23, 2025 .
↑ "LCV Action Fund Announces New Slate of Endorsements for U.S. House of Representatives" . League of Conservation Voters. October 15, 2025.
↑ Bianco, Ali (September 26, 2025). "Playbook PM: Shutdown countdown ticks on" . Politico . Retrieved September 28, 2025 . Endorsement watch: The New Democrat Coalition Action Fund is throwing its support behind two candidates looking to flip battleground seats next year: JoAnna Mendoza in Arizona's 6th Congressional District and Paige Cognetti in Pennsylvania's 8th.
↑ "candidates" . Vote Mama . Retrieved April 7, 2026 .
↑ "ELECT" . WelcomePAC . Retrieved March 27, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (June 23, 2026). "June 23 Playbook: Hurdles Loom On Road to Budget" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved June 23, 2026 .
1 2 "Human Rights Campaign Endorses a Slate of Pro-Equality Members and Candidates Up for Election in Key Competitive U.S. House Districts" . Human Rights Campaign . June 24, 2026.
↑ "HMP POLL: Paige Cognetti Leads Rob Bresnahan in PA-08" . House Majority PAC . June 26, 2026. Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (June 26, 2026). "June 26 Playbook: The Gnarly Democratic Presidential Primary" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved June 26, 2026 .
↑ "New Poll Finds Paige Cognetti Narrowly Leads in Pennsylvania CD-08" (PDF) . Paige for PA . June 29, 2026. Retrieved June 29, 2026 .
↑ "Pennsylvania CD 8 Survey Results" . Public Policy Polling . September 2, 2025. Retrieved September 26, 2025 .
↑ Toth, Matthew (July 9, 2025). " 'My focus needs to remain on doing my job': Rep. Meuser won't run for Pa governor in 2026" . Lebanon Daily News . Retrieved July 9, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 9th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (October 1, 2025). "PA-09: Wallace Announces Challenge to Meuser" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved October 1, 2025 .
1 2 Stockburger, George (April 28, 2025). "Second Democrat files to run in Pennsylvania's 9th Congressional District" . Harrisburg, Pa.: WHTM-TV . Retrieved July 7, 2025 .
1 2 Schlinkman, Olivia (March 25, 2026). "Brothers seeks PA-09 seat as an Independent" . Wyoming County Press Examiner . Retrieved March 26, 2026 .
↑ Stockburger, George (April 21, 2025). "Democrat announces congressional campaign against Dan Meuser" . Harrisburg, Pa.: WHTM-TV . Retrieved April 21, 2025 .
↑ Horvath, Jeff (February 16, 2026). "Petition-filing window opens Tuesday for 2026 primary candidates" . The Citizens' Voice . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
↑ Shuey, Karen (December 11, 2025). "Longtime public servant running for 9th Congressional District in PA" . The Citizens' Voice . Reading Eagle. Retrieved December 11, 2025 .
1 2 Lehman, Tom (July 14, 2025). "Stelson launches 2nd congressional bid, seeks rematch with Rep. Perry" . WGAL . Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (September 22, 2025). "Dalton Enters PA-10 Contest Against Perry" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved September 23, 2025 .
↑ Walters, Mark (March 28, 2025). "Could we see Janelle Stelson take on Rep. Scott Perry again in 2026?" . The York Dispatch . Retrieved March 28, 2025 .
↑ "Democrats' chances of defeating Scott Perry in battleground House race—Poll" . Newsweek . December 3, 2025. Retrieved December 4, 2025 . House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, endorsed Perry last month
↑ "2026 Club for Growth PAC-Endorsed Candidates" . Club for Growth. Retrieved March 3, 2025 .
↑ "2025 Endorsements" . Turning Point Action. Retrieved December 31, 2025 .
1 2 3 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 10th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Rihl, Juliette (September 8, 2025). "Dauphin County Democrat takes aim at Scott Perry's congressional seat" . PennLive . Retrieved September 10, 2025 .
↑ Thompson, Charles (April 29, 2025). "Janelle Stelson 'strongly considering' rematch against US Rep. Scott Perry" . The Patriot-News . Retrieved April 29, 2025 .
↑ Karbal, Ian (April 7, 2026). "Justin Douglas receives endorsements in Pa. congressional primary race against Janelle Stelson" . Pennsylvania Capital-Star . Retrieved April 8, 2026 .
1 2 3 4 5 Manchester, Julia (July 14, 2025). "GOP Rep. Scott Perry to be challenged by Democrat he defeated in 2024" . The Hill . Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
↑ Stockburger, George (July 17, 2025). "Governor Shapiro endorses Janelle Stelson in PA-10 race" . Harrisburg, Pa.: WHTM-TV . Retrieved July 17, 2025 .
↑ Thompson, Charles (July 14, 2025). "Former newscaster Janelle Stelson launches a new run for Congress in PA's 10th" . The Patriot-News . Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
↑ "Candidates" . Elect Democratic Women . Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
↑ Mackler, Jessica (July 14, 2025). "EMILYs List Endorses Janelle Stelson for Election to Pennsylvania's 10th Congressional District" . EMILYs List. Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
↑ "Janelle Stelson" . Giffords. Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
↑ "Jewish Dems Endorsed Candidates" . Jewish Democratic Council of America. Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
↑ Stanton, Greg (July 14, 2025). "New Dems Endorse Christina Bohannan, Rebecca Cooke, and Janelle Stelson in First Endorsement Slate for 2026 Midterms" . NewDem Action Fund . Retrieved August 5, 2025 .
↑ "LCV Action Fund Announces New Round of Endorsements for U.S. House of Representatives" . League of Conservation Voters. Retrieved February 6, 2026 .
↑ Conway, Dan. "Janelle Stelson is back to finish the job" . WelcomePAC . Retrieved November 25, 2025 .
↑ Barcaro, Matt (September 3, 2025). "Independent enters race for 10th Congressional District" . WGAL . Retrieved September 3, 2025 .
↑ Walters, Mark (November 18, 2025). " 'Perry should retire,' fifth challenger says, adding that he'd accept incumbent's endorsement" . The York Dispatch . Retrieved November 18, 2025 .
↑ Roth, Fallon (May 19, 2026). "New poll shows Janelle Stelson leading Trump ally Scott Perry in Central Pa" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved May 20, 2026 .
↑ Prose, J. D. (December 3, 2025). "Rep. Perry underwater with voters on job approval, trails Democrat: poll" . The Patriot-News . Retrieved December 3, 2025 .
↑ "New HMP Polling Shows Janelle Stelson Leading Scott Perry in PA-10" . House Majority PAC . July 14, 2025. Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
↑ "Pennsylvania CD 10 Survey Results" . Politico . July 14, 2025. Retrieved July 14, 2025 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (December 23, 2025). "PA-11: Smucker Announces Reelection Bid" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved December 24, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 11th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ White, Jaxon (July 8, 2025). "Manheim Township nurse enters race for Democratic nomination against Rep. Smucker" . LancasterOnline . Retrieved July 10, 2025 .
↑ Stockburger, George (June 12, 2025). "Democrat, former Marine files to run for Congress in Pennsylvania's 11th District" . Harrisburg, Pa.: WHTM-TV . Retrieved June 12, 2025 .
↑ "Image# 202601109793938657" (PDF) . Federal Election Commission . January 10, 2026. Retrieved January 26, 2026 .
↑ Poglitsch, Tyler (September 29, 2025). "Nancy Mannion launches campaign for Congress in PA-11" . York, Pa.: WPMT . Retrieved September 29, 2025 .
↑ "Congresswoman Summer Lee announces reelection campaign" . WPXI . December 8, 2025. Retrieved December 9, 2025 .
↑ Vellucci, Justin (February 27, 2026). "Challengers test Summer Lee's grip on congressional seat in Trump-era midterms" . TribLIVE . Retrieved March 10, 2026 .
↑ Vellucci, Justin (March 10, 2026). "Turtle Creek mayor drops primary challenge to U.S. Rep. Summer Lee" . TribLIVE . Retrieved March 12, 2026 .
↑ Potter, Chris (July 28, 2025). "Poll tests appetite for 2026 challenge to Summer Lee — and DePasquale says 'no thanks' " . WESA . Retrieved July 28, 2025 .
↑ "Meet Our 2026 Candidates" . Peace Action. Retrieved October 28, 2025 .
1 2 "End Citizens United Endorses 19 No Corporate PAC Incumbents for 2026 Midterms" . End Citizens United. February 4, 2026. Retrieved February 10, 2026 .
↑ "On Earth Week, We're Endorsing Climate Champions to Take Back the House" . League of Conservation Voters. April 25, 2025. Retrieved April 28, 2025 .
1 2 Maruca, Julia (April 20, 2026). "US House 12th District Democratic Primary: Summer Lee v. Will Parker" . WESA . Retrieved May 1, 2026 .
↑ "Endorsements" . PAL PAC. Retrieved February 25, 2026 .
↑ "Our Endorsed Candidates" . Track AIPAC .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 12th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Potter, Chris (March 11, 2026). "Here's who's on the ballot in Western Pa. for Congress, state legislature & more" . 90.5 WESA . Retrieved April 28, 2026 .
↑ "Joyce announces bid for re-election" . Lewistown Sentinel . Retrieved September 26, 2025 .
↑ "Joyce announces bid for re-election" . Lewistown Sentinel . Retrieved September 26, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 13th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ "Beth Farnham will run for Congress" . Gettysburg Connection . August 9, 2025. Retrieved August 24, 2025 .
↑ "Hollidaysburg resident announces campaign for House seat" . Altoona Mirror . March 10, 2026. Retrieved March 11, 2026 .
↑ Nitzberg, Alex (May 26, 2025). "Trump endorses House Republican who failed to vote on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act" . Fox News . Retrieved May 26, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 14th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Ulrich, Steve (September 24, 2025). "PA-14: Former Veteran, FBI Agent to Challenge Reschenthaler" . PoliticsPA . Retrieved October 1, 2025 .
↑ "FILING FEC-1913363" . Federal Election Commission . August 29, 2025. Retrieved September 15, 2025 .
↑ Maitin, Trebor (February 12, 2026). "It's official: Glenn Thompson announces bid for 10th term serving PA 15 in Congress" . Centre Daily Times . Retrieved February 12, 2026 .
↑ "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 15th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Raynor, Cortney (February 6, 2026). " 'Hard-wired to care' Central PA native announces candidacy for Congress" . WTAJ . Retrieved February 7, 2026 .
↑ Luetkemeyer, Em (August 27, 2025). "Forget Retirement: Older Lawmakers Want to Stay in Congress" . NOTUS . Retrieved August 27, 2025 .
1 2 "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 16th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ "Greenville native announces congressional candidacy" . New Castle News . November 13, 2025. Retrieved November 22, 2025 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report FEC-1924099" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 5, 2025 .
↑ Cioppa, Jordan (February 20, 2026). "Rep. Chris Deluzio launches reelection campaign at event in Green Tree" . WTAE-TV . Retrieved February 20, 2026 .
↑ "FEC Form 2 for Report ID H6PA17179, Filing ID FEC-1895493" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved November 2, 2025 .
↑ "Chris Deluzio" . giffords.org . June 24, 2026.
↑ "Chris Deluzio" . J Street PAC. Retrieved December 28, 2025 .
↑ "2026 Election United States House - Pennsylvania 17th" . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved March 5, 2026 .
↑ Paul, John (January 22, 2026). "Beaver County Sheriff Tony Guy To Run For Congress" . Beaver Countian . Retrieved February 16, 2026 .
↑ Potter, Chris (April 20, 2026). "US House 17th District Republican primary: Tony Guy v. Jesse James Vodvarka" . 90.5 WESA . Retrieved April 28, 2026 .
↑ Fontaine, Tom (April 11, 2026). "Undeterred by past setbacks, perennial political candidates set sights on primary" . TribLive . Retrieved April 28, 2026 .
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