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malogan82 t1_iqmqqui wrote

From the article:

>Gov. Tom Wolf will now be tasked with appointing a new justice to fill the vacancy on the court, following an application process and approval by the state Senate. However, the state Senate has seven remaining session days scheduled for the remainder of 2022 – and only one in November – meaning it’s likely that the next governor of Pennsylvania will choose who fills the vacancy.

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Extreme_Length7668 t1_iqmtti0 wrote

That'll be Shapiro

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Away-Living5278 t1_iqmyd45 wrote

I freaking hope so.

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StyreneAddict1965 t1_iqobfe6 wrote

Don't hope; vote. And tell everyone else to.

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Away-Living5278 t1_iqoc9km wrote

Unfortunately I moved to MD but I'm prodding all my family and friends who are not Rs. Not that they seem to need it. Of course some didn't vote in 2016 or voted Trump πŸ™„ Tried to get them to vote then...

Debated moving to York so I could vote in PA again.

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Aezon22 t1_iqoezex wrote

Will do. I’m still voting but I lost hope a long time ago.

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discogeek t1_iqmrxrv wrote

Here's the clause in the PA constitution covering this:

Article V, Section 13(b) A vacancy in the office of justice, judge or justice of the peace shall be filled by appointment by the Governor. The appointment shall be with the advice and consent of two-thirds of the members elected to the Senate, except in the case of justices of the peace which shall be by a majority. The person so appointed shall serve for a term ending on the first Monday of January following the next municipal election more than ten months after the vacancy occurs or for the remainder of the unexpired term whichever is less, except in the case of persons selected as additional judges to the Superior Court, where the General Assembly may stagger and fix the length of the initial terms of such additional judges by reference to any of the first, second and third municipal elections more than ten months after the additional judges are selected. The manner by which any additional judges are selected shall be provided by this section for the filling of vacancies in judicial offices.

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UnaffiliatedOpinion t1_iqo22vz wrote

TL;DR: The governor (most likely, the next governor, as I assume the legislature will refuse to vote on Wolf's nominee) will appoint a justice to serve until January 2024, when the winner of the Nov 2023 election will earn that seat.

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bk1285 t1_iqmzcdv wrote

Out of curiosity how many days do these elected officials meet in a year?

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TiberiusCornelius t1_iqnaobq wrote

House and Senate. Session days are only days when they convene in session in the chamber, it doesn't cover days that are spent doing committee hearings or whatever. PA is one of only 10 states that has a full-time legislature that meets year-round.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqng7jc wrote

The PA legislature is full-time?

Color me surprised.

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TiberiusCornelius t1_iqnhma7 wrote

Officially yes.

The full-time/part-time distinction basically just comes down to how many months out of the year you're in session. New Hampshire only meets in January through May, so is part-time. Utah is at the really extreme end of the part-time scale, with one 45-day session per year. PA has ordinary sessions from January through November so gets to be considered full-time.

Incidentally we also have the third highest legislator salaries after California and New York.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqnicm1 wrote

New Hampshire makes for a great comparison! They get, what, a hundred bucks a year for their service whereas the PA legislature gets a nearly 9% increase this year on top of the 5% plus increase last year for naming bridges.

Time to www.rollbacktheraises.com

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TiberiusCornelius t1_iqnksm0 wrote

I mean I think that legislators should definitely be paid more than New Hampshire. You should be able to live off the salary or else it's just asking to open the door to even worse corruption. But PA is definitely also overpaid relative to how little they actually do and they love to give themselves a bullshit raise (remember the literally midnight raise when Rendell was gov)

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StyreneAddict1965 t1_iqob7cf wrote

That midnight raise can never, ever be forgotten. The Commonwealth Legislature is the most corrupt in the nation.

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mtelesha t1_iqpfjrd wrote

So only the rich may take political seats? Getting rid of salaries makes it so only people well enough off to take these positions. Seems stupid to me.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqpg47s wrote

Your position is unsupported by history. Plus, there is no evidence that poor people make better legislators than do rich folks. Take russ-hole diamond for instance. And keep him, please.

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mtelesha t1_iqpth3b wrote

What history? I am dying to know how history shows that non rich people can be legislators with no salary.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqqurjg wrote

Who said anything about no salary?

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mtelesha t1_iqtrsbe wrote

/Who said anything about no salary?

You DID! to quote you exactly.
"They get, what, a hundred bucks a year for their service...' That is not a salary. Representation of the people means there should be a diversity of voices.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqtsqn7 wrote

100 bucks =/= no salary. It's a 100 bucks. Seems to work for NH. Paying 100K seems like overkill. Especially for doing little more than naming bridges and highway sections, and going out for drinks with lobbyists.

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mtelesha t1_iqwfbz8 wrote

Okay $100 is a salary? At minumum wages this is not even a weeks pay.

Your making so many logical falacies and this argument is dead due to you trying to do symantic gymnastics with the legal term salary. You live your life and support your family on $100 a year. $100 is a stipen.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqwki3g wrote

100 is not zero.

Is math difficult for you?

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mtelesha t1_iqxbqtp wrote

SALARY is what you are paid for work. $100 is a stipen you are just hard headed. I said only rich could represent us if they were not paid a salary. If your paid $100for a year's work your missing the meaning of the word salary and your making any payment to mean salary. Your argument skills are frustrating and not productive to communicate your opinion. The thing your arguing is that it's not a big deal if only rich can afford to be full time representative. Your arguing me about salary a totally side subject and even being foolish with your hammering on about the payment of $100 and salary has anything to do with the central argument that a salary or payment that is equal to a full time job is needed so that ecconomically self-sufficient people aka rich would be the sole people who can govern.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqxxtcb wrote

100 is not zero.

Is math difficult for you?

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mtelesha t1_iqybdwz wrote

Logic and debate is hard. Salary as in can you live making $100 a year. Your really bad at this sorry.

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IamSauerKraut t1_iqyefxz wrote

You have yet to debate. You simply refuse to believe that 100 =/= zero. Which makes you a what, zero?

PA legislators are paid over 100k to name bridges. On the other hand, NH legislators are paid $100/yr to do things of substance. We should follow the NH model.

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mtelesha t1_ir0gizf wrote

Really? If there is no salary only people who are independently wealthy can take those positions. That therefore is not a representation of our country.

That was way up there and you got caught up on only dealing with salary and $100 was the same thing and said I was wrong with history and I said what about history and you then tried to tell me my math skill was stupid because $100 and salary are the same and I stated you suck at debate.

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IamSauerKraut t1_ir0hibo wrote

Become familiar with how NH does it. Lots of not-wealthy folks in legislature there.

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