ov. Tom Wolf, a second-term Democrat, is constitutionally restricted from serving a third term. He has endorsed Shapiro, who is serving his second term as the state’s elected attorney general.
In the Senate, Martin has provided a reliable vote for Republican leadership on fiscal matters, pandemic-related legislation and hot-button issues like abortion, guns and elections.
The governor’s race, however, could turn on national issues.
Speaking with reporters Saturday, Martin hedged on questions about two issues that have been prominent with Republican primary voters: repealing mail-in voting and banning abortion.
Martin said there isn’t enough support in the Legislature to repeal the state’s expansive mail-in voting law that he supported in 2019. The law has lost favor with Republicans since former President Donald Trump began in early 2020 baselessly attacking mail-in voting as rife with fraud.
On abortion, Martin has backed Republican efforts to add restrictions, since vetoed by Wolf.
But those bills came before the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservative majority signaled that they would allow states to ban abortion much earlier in pregnancy and or even overturn the nationwide right that has existed for nearly 50 years.
Asked about it, Martin said he would sign “pro-life legislation,” but would not say exactly how far he might go toward restricting or banning the practice in Pennsylvania.
“It won’t be something that can be done by a governor alone, and you’d have to obviously work with the General Assembly and what we can get done in the General Assembly,” Martin said.