Democrats and a handful of Republicans picked the Pennsylvania House’s new speaker
State Rep. Mark Rozzi of Berks County was named as the next presiding officer with 115 votes.
2 years ago
This story originally appeared on Spotlight PA.
The Pennsylvania House picked state Rep. Mark Rozzi to be the chamber’s new speaker Tuesday in a surprise vote.
Here are the basics about the Berks County lawmaker, how he became speaker, and more.
Mark Rozzi is a state representative from Berks County who was first elected in 2012.
He is a prominent advocate for survivors of childhood sexual abuse, having been raped by a Catholic priest when he was 13. He supports creating a retroactive two-year window for survivors to bring civil lawsuits.
Spotlight PA will have more on Rozzi’s record in the coming days.
Rozzi is a registered Democrat, but on Tuesday he said he would be an independent speaker. More on that below.
The simple answer: He won a majority of votes, 115 to his only competitor’s 85.
All Democrats voted for Rozzi as did 16 Republicans including those who hold leadership positions:
The more complicated answer is still emerging.
Rozzi’s name was not floated publicly as a choice for speaker. He was nominated by state Rep. Jim Gregory (R., Blair), who is also a survivor of childhood sexual abuse and has worked closely with Rozzi on the issue.
Gregory told Spotlight PA he and Rozzi had discussed the option of Rozzi running for speaker for “months.” But he said he didn’t bring the idea to his party leaders until around 2:30 Tuesday afternoon, when the chamber appeared on the verge of recessing without choosing a speaker.
“They were not aware,” Gregory said. “I made a suggestion to them. ‘Go to Mark Rozzi, I think you might be able to do it.’ And they did.”
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