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Casey dangles potential for a presidential run in 2020

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Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., gestures after being introduced before a general election campaign event with Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., Friday, July 13, 2018, in Philadelphia. Harris is headlining a pair of fundraisers for Casey. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

This story has been updated. 

(Harrisburg) — U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, fresh off winning a third term in office, is floating the idea of running for president, saying he is battle-tested in Pennsylvania, a state that is a critical for he and fellow Democrats in 2020.

On Monday, Casey’s campaign bolstered the approach, releasing a memo that makes the case for Casey’s electoral effectiveness in a state that was a crucial stepping stone in President Donald Trump’s path to the White House.

Casey said he won his race on the issues he believes will be most prominent in a presidential campaign — health care and the middle class among them — and he won in a state that is a must-win for Democrats running for president.

“For a Democrat, if you lose Pennsylvania, it’s game over, you can’t win, the math doesn’t work,” he said. “And I want to make sure that our nominee can win this state.”

He’s right: Harry Truman in 1948 was the last Democratic presidential candidate to lose Pennsylvania but win the election, while Republicans can secure the White House without Pennsylvania. Trump didn’t need Pennsylvania to secure the White House, but became the first Republican presidential nominee to win it since 1988.

Casey, the 58-year-old son of the late two-term governor of the same name, said his thinking is still in its early stages and he has given himself no timetable to make a decision.

He has plenty of company.

“I think it’d be easier to look around the Senate Democratic caucus and see who’s not running,” said Christopher Nicholas, a Pennsylvania-based Republican campaign strategist.

Casey’s father also considered a run in 1996 during the primaries after the anti-abortion Catholic governor was denied a chance to address the 1992 Democratic convention about abortion.

In the Nov. 6 election, Casey beat Republican U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta, an early supporter of Trump, who returned the favor by campaigning twice in the state for Barletta.

Casey beat Barletta by nearly 13 percentage points after heavily outraising Barletta and boasting approval ratings that reflected no apparent weakness, backlash or scandal that is typically the undoing of an incumbent. Meanwhile, two fellow Democratic senators who are considering running for president — California’s Kamala Harris and Massachusetts’ Elizabeth Warren — both campaigned for Casey.

Long a favorite of labor unions, Casey is a staunch critic of Trump, criticizing the president’s tax law as a giveaway to the wealth and corporations and voting against both of Trump’s Supreme Court nominees. His campaign notes that he accumulated the biggest margin of victory of the 10 Senate Democrats running for re-election this year in states carried by Trump in 2016.

Casey is ready with points about why he fits the presidential bill.

He demonstrated that he can compete for votes in both rural and urban areas, he said. He has national security credentials after more than six years on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and chairing a subcommittee that handled Middle East affairs, he said.

Like his father, Casey has split with his party on abortion, voting for a 20-week abortion ban. Coming from an industrial state, Casey occasionally split with former President Barack Obama on environmental policy and he has voted against every trade deal, including Obama’s.

Casey didn’t dismiss the idea that another Democrat can win Pennsylvania, but he also warned that Trump can win Pennsylvania again.

A Pennsylvania-based Republican political strategist, Charlie Gerow, said the state, with its relatively late primary date, will be of limited value to Casey in a primary campaign. Casey, rather, might better fit the vice presidential mold, Gerow said.

“He might be a very, very solid vice presidential nominee,” Gerow said.

An earlier story appears below. 

(Harrisburg) — U.S. Sen. Bob Casey had barely won a third term in office before the Pennsylvania Democrat began saying he’s open to the idea of running for president in 2020.

On Monday, Casey’s campaign released a memo making the case for Casey’s electoral effectiveness in a state that was crucial to President Donald Trump’s capturing the White House.

In the Nov. 6 election, the 58-year-old son of the late governor beat Republican U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta, an early supporter of Trump, who returned the favor by campaigning for Barletta.

Casey is a staunch critic of Trump, and his campaign notes that he accumulated the biggest margin of victory of the 10 Senate Democrats running for re-election in states carried by Trump in 2016.

Casey beat Barletta by nearly 13 percentage points.

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