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Wagner seeks fist bump

Published by Tim McNulty on .

The Jack Wagner mayoral campaign's latest commercial goes positive, featuring the former Auditor General's daughter Sara.

Ms. Wagner, 19, says how her father has "evolved a lot on social issues," notes how it's the first election where she'll be old enough to vote for him, and ends with the 65-year-old Wagner going in for a fist bump from his daughter. "I thought we weren't doing this, dad," she says.

Wagner has described himself in the past as a "pro-life Democrat" who also supports state law allowing aborition. Here's Lauren Daley at the City Paper on his stances on social issues compared to the other candidates.

Wagner's primary rival for next week's Democratic nomination, Bill Peduto, also went positive in his last ad, in which he drove a street sweeper around the city. They're battling for air time against new ads from outgoing Mayor Luke Ravenstahl attacking Peduto and Peduto spots painting Wagner as a pseudo-Republican.

Script:

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New Ravensthal attack ad debuts

Published by Tim McNulty on .

Not being exactly on the best terms with Mayor Luke Ravenstahl and his shadowy PAC, his latest ad comes courtesy of my shaky iPhone.

Ravenstahl's PAC "Committee for a Better Pittsburgh" is back with its second attack ad on rival Bill Peduto's mayoral bid, containing a hodge-podge of opposition material on the Democratic contender in the May 21 primary. FCC records show he'll be on air through primary day next week.

The mayor's first third-party spot claimed the councilman opposed development in largely black neighborhoods while pushing it in his East End community. This one goes into police pensions, parking rates and other fairly common attacks but goes after seniors and pocket book issues at the end.

The main new attack here seems to be the thing about taking public money for exotic trips: the claim here is from a personal trip Peduto made in 2008 to Boston, Turkey, Washington and Norway that began with a conference on public pensions at Harvard paid for with city tax dollars. Peduto got a ruling from the city Ethics Board approving the trip.

"Bill Peduto: A risk Pittsburgh can't afford," it says at the end, over vaguely Soviet-style graphics.

UPDATE: The Peduto campaign has repeatedly tried to tie mayoral rival Jack Wagner to the ads, and did so again in the response from spokeswoman Sonya Toler:

These blatant distortions reflect how desperate the Wagner campaign is getting as voters learn the truth about his siding with Republicans on budget cuts that harmed children and seniors, while increasing his own pay and raising his own pension 50 percent.

Full script -- and Peduto fact-check -- after the jump.

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Peduto moves up

Published by James O'Toole on .

Bill Peduto put some distance between himself and his chief rival, Jack Wagner, in the latest numbers from Keystone Analytics, the Harrisburg firm doing the only outside polling in the Pittsburgh mayor's race.

Mr. Peduto led Mr. Wagner, 39 percent to 32 percent, in the survey of 404 Democrats deemed likely to vote in the May 21 primary.  State Rep. Jake Wheatley had 8 percent and A.J. Richardson, the Sheraden community activist, had 1 percent and 20 percent were either undecided or refused to answer.

Mr. Peduto had a smaller lead in the firm's last survey in late April.  His two-point lead then was within the survey's 4.9 percent margin of error. In a release accompanying the survey, the Harrisburg consultants noted that the negative advertising in the race had clearly had an effect, bruising the favorability ratings of both of the leading candidates.

Fifty-one percent of the voters said they held a favorable view of the councilman,  and 49 percent were favorable toward Mr. Wagner.  In the firm's last survey, those positive numbers had been 65  percent and 64 percent respectively.

The sample was 57 percent female and 43 percent male.  And like the typical Pittsburgh primary voter,  it skewed to the older end of the population.  Seven percent of the respondents were between 18 and 34; 17 percent between 35 and 49; 37 percent between 50 and 64; and 39 percent were 65 or older. The phone calls were conducted on May 8.

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Finding mayoral differences, one week out

Published by Tim McNulty on .

Jack Wagner

One week to go.

In case you missed it Jim O'Toole had a story Sunday on the small policy differences among the three major Democratic candidates for the Pittsburgh mayor's job.

On key issues such as municipal finance and reform of the scandal-battered police department, the differences among them amount to nuances rather than dramatic, polarizing fissures.

In one sense, that's not surprising. They're all Democrats. And the three leading contenders have first-hand experience with the practical realities of politics on the fifth floor of the City-County Building where council and mayoral offices line opposite hallways.

Bill Peduto

In the same paper I trailed Jack Wagner and Bill Peduto for a few hours (I failed to meet up with Jake Wheatley despite two attempts) and found them trying to appeal to core voters. Wagner met with fellow veterans in a bid to cold-call 10,000 military voters and their families over the next week. The Peduto team is taking a different, more targeted tack:

After attending a Mother's Day rally against gun violence at a Baptist church in East Liberty and a street fair in Friendship, he and a campaign staffer scrambled across the city to Carrick to knock on prospective voter doors. But not just any doors: Ten days away from an election is a bit late to start courting all voters, so his campaign had lists of addresses known to be either supporting him or undecided. Even though most houses on hilly Kirk Avenue are owned by Democrats, if they were judged to be firmly supporting Wagner or Wheatley, their doors were skipped.

The primary is expected to be a close one and Mr. Peduto, 48, underscored that in his messages to voters, urging them to call him personally if they had questions about attacks on his record aired in commercials by Mr. Ravenstahl and Mr. Wagner.

"All this stuff on TV is the goofiness of politics," he told a young mother of four. "Give me a chance to address it. All of it is factually incorrect."

Jake Wheatley

Photos, top to bottom: Jack Wagner and vets/Rebecca Droke. Bill Peduto in Strip District/Michael Henninger. Jake Wheatley at mayoral forum/Julia Rendleman.

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Breakfast Sausage: 5 stories to read this morning

Published by Moriah Balingit on .

Happy Monday Early Returners. Here's a handful of links to get your week started. 

1. Not to toot our own horn (toot, toot), but the Post-Gazette's Sunday paper was a true masterpiece. First, check out Kate Giammirise's piece on why there are so few women in state politics, with women holding just 17.8 percent of seats in the the General Assembly. As an aside, Pittsburgh City Council fares a little better, with three women (including the council president) out of nine holding seats. 

2. Not politics related, but Mark Roth's series on former football players with brain disease is phenomenal. The series started Sunday.

3. Higher ed reporter Bill Schackner reports that former Penn State president Graham Spanier received the highest compensation package among university presidents in 2011-2012. Hopefully that massive severance package will help off-set his legal fees

4. Mayor Luke Ravenstahl made Sports Illustrated, and no, not for his brief career as a silver screen place kicker. Unfortunately, there's no link here, but here's an excerpt from the cover story about Sidney Crosby:

Pittsburgh has been disappointed lately by the behavior of other young stars-most famously, Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, but also 33-year-old mayor Luke Ravenstahl, who took office at 26 and who recently dropped his re-election bid amid a federal investigation into police spending. (Last week Ravenstahl responded to an unfavorable story in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette with a rant in the newspaper's online comments section. The highlight: "It's actually laughable to think that you print your newspaper everyday [sic] with a straight face.")

5. And finally, ICYMI, a story that broke late Friday. Rich Lord and I report that the mayor's house received an upgrade from a company related to contractor that did millions in work for the city. It's not the first time the Post-Gazette has inquired about the mayor's abode. In December, Brian O'Neill dared to ask where the mayor lives.