Site last updated: Monday, April 20, 2026

Log In

Reset Password
MENU
Butler County's great daily newspaper

Pa. court to pick tiebreaker for district panel

HARRISBURG — The Republican and Democratic floor leaders of the Pennsylvania House and Senate said Friday they could not agree who should be the tie-breaking fifth member of the panel that will redraw the state’s legislative district lines.

The announcement means the chairperson of the Legislative Reapportionment Commission will be selected by the state Supreme Court, which currently has a 5-2 Democratic majority.

The four floor leaders told Chief Justice Max Baer in a letter that they were “unable to find consensus” after interviewing dozens of applicants. They wrote Baer on the 45th and final day they had to choose their own chairperson. The justices now have a month to pick one for them.

The joint letter from Republican leaders, Sen. Kim Ward of Westmoreland County and Rep. Kerry Benninghoff of Centre County, and Democratic leaders, Sen. Jay Costa of Allegheny County and Rep. Joanna McClinton of Delaware County, suggests what criteria the court should use.

They asked the justices to pick someone who will be a “fair and neutral arbiter” who has “some distance from the political process” and who has no interest in running for a seat in the Legislature. They said the chair should “be several years removed from engaging in the political process and should not have been involved in lobbying recently at any level of government.

“Simply put, a chair should possess the qualifications that would enable them to resolve disagreements in a fair and transparent manner,” the four leaders wrote.

The 253-member General Assembly currently has significant Republican majorities in both chambers, and for several decades, the tie-breaking member of the redistricting commission has been chosen by Republican-majority supreme courts.

In comparison, congressional redistricting in Pennsylvania is done as regulator legislation, so it must pass both chambers of the Legislature and be signed by the governor.

Census numbers released Monday mean Pennsylvania, the nation’s fifth-most populous state, will lose a congressional seat in next year’s elections.

More in Pennsylvania News

Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter

* indicates required
TODAY'S PHOTOS