On Tuesday, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, will elect its county commissioners. This three-person board oversees the board of elections, and is crucial in confirming election results in this pivotal swing county. The two Democratic incumbents, Bob Harvie and Diane Marseglia, are seeking re-election; facing them are GOP incumbent Gene DiGirolamo and fellow Republican Pamela Van Blunk. Voters choose two candidates, and the top three vote-getters become commissioners. The result could affect not just who supervises elections in one county, but the outcome of the 2024 presidential election.
Bucks County is a crucial suburban battleground and a textbook purple district. Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden all won the county by less than 5%. The county’s congressional representative is Republican Brian Fitzpatrick, who frequently emphasizes his ability to collaborate across the aisle (despite constantly aligning with House Republican hard-liners).
Then-President Trump launched Bucks County into the national spotlight in 2020 when he attacked the Pennsylvania election results.
Furthermore, the county has become a national epicenter for the “culture war,” a battleground for debates over book bans and displays of pride flags. In 2021, the school board in the Central Bucks School District — the largest in the county and the third largest in the state — shifted toward a Republican majority amid disputes over mask mandates during the coronavirus pandemic.
The following year, the ACLU of Pennsylvania took legal action against the Central Bucks School District alleging discriminatory treatment toward LGBTQ+ students and their allies. This past summer, Moms for Liberty held their national convention in Philadelphia to remain close to the developments in Bucks County. The convention’s featured speakers included former President Donald Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Ambassador Nikki Haley.
In addition to education-related controversies, reproductive rights have taken center stage in Bucks County following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. Under Harvie and Marseglia’s leadership, Bucks County is one of the few counties in America taking legal action to protect women’s right to access prescription abortion pills. In stark contrast, their opponents, DiGirolamo and Van Blunk, staunchly oppose abortion rights and have consistently worked against efforts to ensure women have autonomy over their health-care decisions.








