Independent Candidate for PA Governor | Father | Business Founder | Fighting for lower costs, safer communities & a PA that belongs to the people.

Joined April 2026
2 Photos and videos
I support a school-day cellphone ban in Pennsylvania schools, but I want it done the right way. This is not about being against technology or pretending kids will never use phones. It is about being honest about what is happening inside our classrooms. Teachers are trying to teach while phones are buzzing, lighting up, recording, messaging, and pulling kids into social media, group chats, bullying, drama, and distractions that have nothing to do with learning. Our kids already have enough pressure on them. They do not need a phone pulling them away from every lesson, every conversation, and every real moment in front of them. Teachers should not have to compete with TikTok, Snapchat, group chats, games, and constant notifications just to get through a lesson. And this goes beyond simple distraction. Social media can fuel bullying, threats, fights, dangerous challenges, sexual pressure, humiliation, self-harm, and other destructive or violent behavior. A lot of the drama that starts online gets carried into the school building, and then teachers, students, and parents are left dealing with the fallout. We cannot keep pretending this is just harmless scrolling. I support a clear bell-to-bell phone policy for students. Phones should be powered down and put away during the school day, including class time, lunch, and passing periods. If we create too many exceptions, we risk creating more division, more pressure on parents and doctors, and more distractions inside schools that teachers should not have to manage. But a cellphone ban cannot mean cutting students and parents off from safety. Every classroom should have a working phone or emergency communication device. Schools should also have clearly marked phones placed throughout the building so students can reach the office, nurse, parent, guardian, or emergency contact when there is a real need. Parents deserve peace of mind. Students should never feel like they have no way to get help. But we cannot keep using emergency concerns as the excuse for letting smartphones take over the entire school day. The standard should also apply to adults in the room. Teachers and staff should keep personal cellphone use out of instructional time unless it is necessary for school operations or a real emergency. We cannot ask students to focus while adults are modeling the same distractions we are trying to remove. Pennsylvania schools need calmer classrooms, better focus, stronger discipline, and more respect for the teachers who are trying to do their jobs. A real phone ban, paired with proper emergency communication inside every school, is a common-sense step in the right direction. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #EducationReform #StudentSafety #FixPennsylvania
1
2
120
I believe Pennsylvania needs to have a serious conversation about cameras in classrooms, but it has to be done with strong rules and common sense. Cameras should not be used to micromanage good teachers. They should not be livestreamed to parents. They should not become a political weapon. They should not be used to embarrass students, expose private situations, or turn classrooms into public entertainment. But when something serious happens inside a classroom, everyone deserves the truth. Students deserve protection from abuse, bullying, violence, and situations that get ignored or covered up. Teachers deserve protection from false accusations, unfair complaints, and situations where one side of a story gets spread before the facts are known. Parents deserve to know that serious incidents are being handled honestly. Administrators need a real record when they are asked to make hard decisions about discipline, safety, or misconduct. That is where classroom cameras can help, if they are handled the right way. Any camera policy should have strict guardrails: no cameras in bathrooms, locker rooms, changing areas, or private spaces. No public access. No parent livestreams. No random viewing. No posting clips online. Footage should be securely stored, access should be limited, and video should only be reviewed for serious incidents, safety concerns, abuse allegations, discipline disputes, or formal complaints. We already use cameras in hallways, buses, stores, public buildings, and plenty of workplaces because they create accountability. Classrooms should not become surveillance zones, but they also should not be places where serious incidents come down to rumor, politics, or whoever complains the loudest. This is about protecting students and teachers at the same time. It is about truth. It is about accountability. It is about making sure that when something happens, the facts matter more than the cover story. Pennsylvania needs safer schools, stronger discipline, more transparency, and better protection for everyone inside the classroom. Cameras with strict privacy rules should be part of that conversation. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #EducationReform #SchoolSafety #FixPennsylvania
1
29
People are tired. They are tired of working more, paying more, and still falling behind. They are tired of opening electric bills that keep climbing, filling up their gas tank and wondering how much more it will cost next week, paying property taxes that never seem to go down, and watching Harrisburg act like none of it is their fault. Governor Shapiro’s latest video is a perfect example of what people are sick of. He spends several minutes drawing numbers on a board and blaming Trump for nearly every cost increase hitting Pennsylvania families. Gas prices? Trump. Health care? Trump. Inflation? Trump. Electric bills? Somehow still someone else’s fault. Washington absolutely has problems. No serious person denies that. But Josh Shapiro is not a commentator on cable news. He is the Governor of Pennsylvania, and Harrisburg has power over a lot more than he wants to admit. If gas prices are crushing families, then where is the push for a Pennsylvania gas tax moratorium? Pennsylvania has one of the highest state gas tax burdens in the country. Every single mom driving to work, every senior driving to a doctor’s appointment, every small business owner, contractor, truck driver, and working family is paying into that every time they fill up. If the Governor truly believes people need relief at the pump, then he should be leading that fight here at home instead of only pointing to Washington. That is the part he leaves out. He wants credit for giving a family a few dollars back through targeted programs, but he does not want to talk about how much Pennsylvania government keeps taking from that same family through fuel taxes, rising utility costs, property taxes, fees, and policies that make daily life more expensive. A tax credit may help for a moment, and I am not against helping people, but people should not need a political bandage just to survive what government helped make unaffordable in the first place. The same goes for energy. Pennsylvania helps power this country. We produce natural gas. We generate energy. We have workers, communities, and resources that should make this state one of the most affordable energy states in America. Instead, families are still paying too much, and now massive data centers are coming in that could place even more pressure on our grid, water systems, roads, and local infrastructure. Governor Shapiro’s data center plan does not go far enough. It sounds good in a headline, but basic standards tied to state support are not the same thing as real protection for every Pennsylvania ratepayer. If a data center wants to build here, it should have to prove where its power is coming from, pay for its own grid impact, protect local water supplies, hire local workers, and guarantee that families and small businesses are not stuck paying higher bills because a massive corporation needed more power. That should not be optional. That should not only apply when a company wants a state benefit. That should be the standard for doing business in Pennsylvania. And this is where both parties keep failing people. Shapiro keeps blaming Trump and acting like Harrisburg is powerless. Garrity and the PA GOP keep giving political talking points and acting like criticism alone is a plan. Pennsylvanians do not need another excuse from one side or another slogan from the other. They need a governor with actual reforms ready to go. I have an energy and ratepayer protection package ready. It addresses utility rate protections, data center accountability, public energy-use transparency, shutoff protections for seniors and working families, stronger oversight of utility rate cases, local worker requirements, and a Pennsylvania-first energy fairness model that asks a very simple question: why are Pennsylvanians paying more when Pennsylvania helps power everyone else? I also have a transportation plan that phases out the gas tax, protects road funding, audits where the money is going, and stops treating working people like an endless revenue source. My property tax relief plan, budget accountability plan, education reform, Medicaid fraud enforcement, and senior protection reforms all come from the same belief: Pennsylvania does not have a money problem because working families are not paying enough. Pennsylvania has an accountability problem because Harrisburg keeps taking more and delivering less. People do not need another governor with a whiteboard explaining why nothing is his fault. They need a governor willing to fix what is actually within Pennsylvania’s control. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #EnergyFairness #GasTaxRelief #FixPennsylvania
1
1
2
122
Pennsylvanians are getting squeezed from every direction on energy costs, and the people in Harrisburg still want to treat this like a talking-point battle. Governor Shapiro’s energy agenda is not lowering costs for working families, seniors, small businesses, or local communities. His so-called Lightning Plan still leans into government-managed energy schemes while families are already seeing higher electric bills, higher utility costs, and more pressure from a grid that is being stretched by massive new demand. Now we are being told his data center standards will protect Pennsylvanians. But let’s be honest: requiring some standards from companies that want state support is not the same thing as protecting every ratepayer in Pennsylvania. Data centers should not be allowed to come into this state, use enormous amounts of power and water, strain local infrastructure, and then leave Pennsylvania families paying the bill. They should be required to prove their energy source, cover their grid impact, protect local water supplies, hire local workers, and enter real community benefit agreements before projects move forward. And the Republican answer cannot just be “Shapiro bad.” Stacy Garrity and the PA GOP are right to criticize rising costs, but political talking points are not a reform plan. Pennsylvanians need more than press releases, hashtags, and party attacks. I already have an energy and ratepayer protection reform package ready to go. It includes enforceable utility rate protections, data center accountability, public energy-use transparency, shutoff protections for seniors and working families, stronger oversight of utility rate cases, local worker requirements, and a Pennsylvania-first energy fairness model that asks a simple question: Why are Pennsylvanians paying more when Pennsylvania helps power everyone else? We do not need more excuses from Harrisburg. We need leadership that is willing to protect the people who actually pay the bills. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #EnergyFairness #RatepayerProtection #FixPennsylvania
1
45
If Pennsylvania is refusing to share SNAP data with the federal government, taxpayers deserve a clear explanation why. The Shapiro Administration has reportedly declined to turn over SNAP recipient data requested by USDA, citing privacy and data-security concerns. Privacy matters, but so does program integrity. If secure safeguards can be put in place, Pennsylvania should be working with federal officials to identify fraud, waste, duplicate benefits, eligibility errors, and improper payments. SNAP exists to help people who truly need help.... children, seniors, disabled residents, struggling families, and people trying to get back on their feet. Protecting the program also means protecting it from abuse. The answer should not be hiding data or turning accountability into a partisan fight. The answer should be secure data sharing, privacy protections, audits, cross-checks, and public accountability so taxpayers know benefits are going to people who actually qualify. We can protect vulnerable people and protect taxpayers at the same time. This is why I’m running as an independent candidate for Governor. Pennsylvania needs benefit-program audits, public dashboards, stronger eligibility verification, cross-checks across agencies, provider-level fraud investigations, and a system that protects help for those who truly need it while stopping abuse from those who exploit it. Taxpayer money should help the vulnerable, not fund fraud, waste, or incompetence. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #TaxpayerProtection #Accountability #FixPennsylvania
2
37
Pennsylvania leading the nation in Medicaid fraud convictions is good news — but it should not be treated like the job is finished. According to reporting, Pennsylvania had 115 Medicaid fraud convictions in FY2025 and recovered more than $41 million in misused Medicaid funding. That matters. Anyone stealing from programs meant to help seniors, disabled Pennsylvanians, children, and struggling families should be prosecuted. But Pennsylvania’s Medicaid system is massive. If we are serious about fraud, waste, abuse, and improper payments, then we cannot stop at individual convictions and press releases. The public deserves to know how much fraud is still going undetected, how many cases involve providers, facilities, billing networks, hospitals, care centers, contractors, and managed care organizations, and whether Pennsylvania is truly auditing the parts of the system where the biggest money flows. A few dozen or even a hundred convictions may sound impressive, but the real question is whether we are going after the full scale of the problem. This is why I’m running as an independent candidate for Governor. Pennsylvania needs healthcare and Medicaid accountability that includes provider-level fraud investigations, public dashboards, stronger data cross-checks, independent audits, billing transparency, nursing home and care facility oversight, and real consequences for anyone who steals from taxpayers or vulnerable people. Protect the vulnerable. Protect taxpayers. Follow the money. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #TaxpayerProtection #MedicaidFraud #FixPennsylvania
1
1
25
What we are seeing in other cities should be a warning for Pennsylvania. When state and local leaders turn immigration enforcement into a political battlefield, the result is confusion, confrontation, and dangerous conditions for residents, law enforcement, federal officers, and communities caught in the middle. We can debate immigration policy. We can demand accountability from detention facilities. We can insist that every person be treated humanely and that contractors follow the law. But none of that means cities should obstruct lawful enforcement, refuse reasonable cooperation, or allow public safety to break down because officials do not like who is in the White House. Pennsylvania should not wait until a national fight becomes a local crisis. We need clear rules for cooperation between local, state, and federal law enforcement when serious criminal activity, trafficking, gang activity, repeat offenders, or public safety threats are involved. This is not about attacking immigrants. Legal immigration is part of America’s story. This is about the rule of law, public safety, protecting taxpayers, and making sure citizens and lawful residents are not forced to live with the consequences of political games. Compassion matters. Enforcement matters. Public safety matters. This is why I’m running as an independent candidate for Governor. Pennsylvania needs leadership that puts citizens, lawful residents, taxpayers, law enforcement, and local communities first. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #RuleOfLaw #PublicSafety #FixPennsylvania
1
1
3
109
I want Pennsylvanians to know exactly where this campaign is headed. This campaign is not going to be built on empty slogans, party talking points, or vague promises. I believe voters deserve to know what a candidate actually stands for, what reforms they are working on, and what problems they are serious about fixing. Right now, my campaign is focused on building and releasing real reform plans for the issues Pennsylvanians are living with every day: lower costs, property taxes, utility bills, public safety, education, election integrity, small business, healthcare accountability, and government spending. One of my biggest upcoming priorities is a Pennsylvania Homeowner Property Tax Relief Plan. Homeowners, seniors, working families, and family farms should not be taxed out of the homes and land they worked their whole lives to build. My goal is to move Pennsylvania toward serious school property tax relief, potentially cutting school property taxes by up to 50% over time through a responsible, phased plan that includes spending controls, replacement revenue, levy caps, education funding reform, and protections for seniors, homeowners, and family farms. I will also be releasing an Election Integrity and Ballot Access Reform plan. Pennsylvania needs elections that are secure enough for voters to trust and open enough for voters to have real choices. That means voter ID with free ID access, clean voter rolls, citizenship verification, transparent audits, uniform mail ballot and drop box rules, faster reporting, voter data transparency, and fairer ballot access for independents and third-party candidates. I am also working on or preparing reforms around Public Safety and Criminal Justice, Education, Pennsylvania Energy First and Utility Ratepayer Protection, Budget and Taxpayer Protection, Healthcare and Medicaid Provider Fraud Accountability, Workforce, Skilled Trades and Small Business, Transportation and Commuter Relief, Senior Protection, and Small Games of Chance Reform for local nonprofits, fire departments, clubs, and community organizations. Pennsylvania deserves a governor with plans, not just posts. We need leadership that can lower costs, protect taxpayers, defend constitutional rights, strengthen schools, support families, protect ratepayers, crack down on violent crime, stop waste and fraud, and give people a reason to believe this state can still be fixed. That is why I am running as an independent candidate for Governor. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #UnboughtUnafraid #IndependentLeadership #FixPennsylvania
1
1
62
Today, we remember June 6, 1944 D-Day. On the beaches of Normandy, Allied forces faced unimaginable danger in defense of freedom. Thousands of young men from America, Britain, Canada, and our Allied nations stepped into history knowing many of them would not come home. Their courage helped turn the tide of World War II. Their sacrifice helped preserve liberty for generations they would never meet. We should never forget what was paid for the freedoms we enjoy today. Freedom is not automatic. It is not guaranteed. It has been defended by ordinary men and women who answered the call when the world needed them most. Today, we honor those who served, those who fell, and the families who carried their sacrifice forward. May we always remember D-Day, the Allied forces at Normandy, and the price of freedom. #DDay #Normandy #NeverForget #HonorTheFallen #Freedom
2
41
Protecting children should never be a partisan issue. Bullying today is not the same as it was when many of us in Gen X or older were growing up. Years ago, bullying often ended when the school day ended. Today, it follows kids everywhere. It happens at school, continues online through social media and messaging apps, and can spill into neighborhoods and streets after school hours. For many students, there is no escape. I appreciate the intent behind Jonny’s Law, but I do not believe it goes far enough. Too many parents know what it feels like to report bullying, threats, harassment, or violence and then watch the system minimize it, delay action, or bury the complaint. Schools already have anti-bullying policies on paper, but paper policies do not protect children if they are not enforced. Bullying is not just “kids being kids.” It can destroy a child’s mental health, education, confidence, and sense of safety. When verbal abuse, physical assault, cyberbullying, intimidation, stalking, or repeated harassment happens, families should not have to fight for schools to take action. Students deserve safe classrooms. Parents deserve to be notified when their child is being targeted. Teachers and staff deserve clear procedures and support. Most importantly, schools must be held responsible when they fail to properly respond to bullying incidents. Ignoring warning signs or failing to intervene is unacceptable. Schools should be required to investigate serious reports quickly, document what happened, protect students from retaliation, and face real accountability when they fail to act. But accountability cannot stop at school discipline alone. Parts of bullying reform must also be addressed through criminal justice and public safety reform. When bullying crosses the line into assault, credible threats, harassment, stalking, extortion, or repeated targeted abuse, especially online, there must be meaningful consequences and intervention. We cannot continue treating serious behavior as harmless when it leaves lasting trauma on children and families. This will be part of my broader education reform, criminal justice reform, and public safety plan that I will be releasing in the coming weeks... a plan focused on protecting students, respecting parents, strengthening school safety, enforcing accountability, and making sure Pennsylvania takes bullying seriously before tragedy happens. Every child deserves to feel safe going to school. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFirst #SchoolSafety #EducationReform #PublicSafety #FixPennsylvania
53
I want to be honest about what makes this campaign different. This campaign is not backed by party bosses, Harrisburg insiders, lobbyists, or political machines. I am not taking orders from consultants trying to script every word or special interests trying to buy influence before the election even begins. That is exactly the point. Pennsylvania does not belong to Democrats or Republicans. It belongs to the people... the families trying to afford groceries, seniors struggling under rising property taxes, small businesses fighting to stay open, parents worried about schools, workers stretched thin by utility bills, and communities tired of crime, addiction, blight, and excuses. We are building something real, and now it is time to grow. I am assembling a serious statewide team of people who believe Pennsylvania deserves independent leadership focused on results, not party loyalty. If you have experience in organizing, outreach, communications, events, volunteer coordination, ballot access, social media, fundraising, or grassroots leadership, or if you simply want to help build something bigger than politics as usual, I want to hear from you. I am also looking for founding supporters across every county who are ready to help move Pennsylvania forward. You do not need political connections or deep pockets. You just need to believe this state can do better. Whether you can collect signatures, host a meet-and-greet, help online, organize locally, volunteer your time, donate, connect us with local leaders, or simply spread the message..... your voice matters. This campaign will be built the way real movements are built: person by person, county by county, conversation by conversation. James Moore for Governor Unbought. Unafraid. Pennsylvania belongs to the people, not the parties. And together, we are going to prove it. If you want to help build this movement, reach out. #MooreForPA #PAFirst #IndependentLeadership #FixPennsylvania #UnboughtUnafraid
4
135
Pennsylvania needs a serious public safety conversation, not another round of politicians using law-abiding gun owners as the easy target. I support the Second Amendment, and I support responsible firearm ownership. Gun owners should secure their firearms, especially around children, prohibited persons, or anyone who should not have access. But there is a major difference between encouraging responsibility and creating laws that punish responsible citizens after a criminal steals their property, breaks into their home, or commits a crime. If Harrisburg truly wants safer communities, then the focus should be on violent criminals, repeat offenders, illegal gun possession, straw purchasers, gangs, drug traffickers, and people who use firearms to terrorize neighborhoods. Those are the people hurting families and making communities unsafe. Responsible gun owners are not the problem. Criminals are. Pennsylvania can support safe storage, responsible ownership, firearm education, and family safety without turning constitutional rights into another political weapon. We should be making it easier for people to act responsibly, not harder for law-abiding citizens to protect themselves and their families. This is why I’m running as an independent candidate for Governor. Pennsylvania needs leadership that protects constitutional rights, supports public safety, cracks down on violent crime, and stops pretending that punishing good people will stop bad people. Public safety and the Second Amendment can both be protected. We just need leaders honest enough to focus on the real problem. #MooreForPA #PAFirst #SecondAmendment #PublicSafety #FixPennsylvania
1
49
Pennsylvania should be an economic powerhouse. We have natural gas, energy production, manufacturing history, farmland, universities, healthcare systems, skilled trades, major highways, ports, rivers, rail lines, small towns, big cities, and some of the hardest-working people in America. There is no reason this state should feel like it is falling behind while families are getting crushed by higher costs and businesses keep looking elsewhere. The problem is not that Pennsylvania lacks potential. The problem is that Harrisburg keeps making it harder to build, hire, grow, and stay here. Property taxes are too high. Utility bills are rising in one of the top energy-producing states in the country. Small businesses are buried in red tape, insurance costs, taxes, fees, and workforce problems. Families are paying more for groceries, housing, healthcare, transportation, and basic survival. Meanwhile, politicians celebrate scattered job announcements while ignoring the fact that too many communities are still losing opportunity. A serious economic plan has to do more than hand out selective tax breaks and hold press conferences. Pennsylvania needs lower costs, faster permitting, reliable energy, workforce training, small business relief, property tax reform, infrastructure investment, and a tax structure that rewards growth instead of punishing it. This is why I’m running as an independent candidate for Governor. I am not running to protect a party or defend the same Harrisburg system that helped create these problems. I am running because Pennsylvania families, workers, farmers, small businesses, and communities deserve an economy they can actually feel. Pennsylvania should be the best state in America to work, build, raise a family, start a business, and retire. We do not need more excuses. We need results. #MooreForPA #PAFirst #EconomicGrowth #LowerCosts #FixPennsylvania
4
79
Philadelphia is becoming another example of the same broken pattern we keep seeing across Pennsylvania. The school district faces a massive budget deficit, classroom cuts are on the table, and the answer from government is another tax..... this time a proposed $1 per-ride tax on Uber and Lyft. Supporters say it would help save jobs and protect classrooms, but it still would not fully close the district’s budget gap. Meanwhile, everyday riders, workers, drivers, families, and small businesses could end up paying more. I am not against every tax change. Sometimes government needs to restructure broken funding systems. But if you are going to ask people to pay more in one place, there needs to be a clear offset, a locked purpose, a full audit, and a real explanation of what taxpayers get in return. A tax shift that lowers a bigger burden is one thing. A new tax added onto an already broken system is something else. That is the problem here. Where is the full audit? Where is the accountability for how the district got here? Where is the review of administrative costs, contracts, programs that are not working, and spending decisions that never seem to produce better results for students? I support strong schools, good teachers, safe classrooms, and making sure students have what they need. But taxpayers and parents deserve more than another tax attached to another crisis. If a district is facing a $300 million hole, the public deserves to know exactly where the money went, what cuts are truly necessary, what spending can be reformed, and how any new revenue would be protected from being swallowed by the same broken system. Pennsylvania cannot keep funding education through crisis management and open-ended tax hikes. More money should come with transparency, accountability, measurable results, and real reform. Our kids deserve better than classroom cuts, and taxpayers deserve better than being treated like the emergency backup plan every time government fails to manage the money it already has. #MooreForPA #PAFirst #EducationReform #TaxpayerProtection #FixPennsylvania
1
6
422
Pennsylvania needs to slow down and get serious about data centers before communities are left dealing with the consequences. Governor Shapiro’s new GRID standards are being sold as stronger guardrails for transparency, energy use, environmental impact, local infrastructure, and accountability. His own administration says these standards apply to developers seeking Commonwealth support, including faster permitting, coordinated project help, and access to state tax incentives. That is exactly where the concern starts. Reporting from PennLive indicates that some of Pennsylvania’s biggest data center projects may not have to follow these new GRID rules because they were already underway before the announcement. If that is accurate, then Pennsylvanians deserve a clear answer: why would some of the largest projects be allowed to move forward without the strongest protections? Data centers can bring investment, jobs, and technology, but they also raise serious questions about water use, electric demand, utility costs, noise, roads, emergency services, land use, tax incentives, and local control. These questions need answered before projects are approved, not after the biggest deals are already moving. This is why I have called for a full Data Center Reform Package, not just voluntary standards or rules tied only to state incentives. Major projects should have to prove up front that they will not drain local water supplies, overload the electric grid, drive up residential utility bills, damage local roads, or leave taxpayers responsible for infrastructure costs. If they need grid upgrades, water infrastructure, road improvements, emergency-service expansion, or special utility arrangements, those costs should not be dumped onto Pennsylvania families and small businesses. Pennsylvania needs growth, technology, and investment, but not at the expense of the people who already live here. The rules should be clear, enforceable, and applied fairly to every major project. No loopholes. No special treatment. No rushing projects through first and promising accountability later. #MooreForPA #PAFirst #DataCenterReform #RatepayerProtection #FixPennsylvania
1
5
467
Pennsylvania families should not be priced out of basic utilities. My utility reform plan would control unjustified rate hikes, stop unfair shutoffs, require real notice before termination, protect vulnerable households, regulate emergency heating fuel, and make data centers and large corporate power users pay their own way. If a utility wants families and small businesses to pay more, it should have to prove every dollar. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFamiliesFirst #UtilityReform
1
59
Pennsylvania families should not be priced out of basic utilities. My utility reform plan would control unjustified rate hikes, stop unfair shutoffs, require real notice before termination, protect vulnerable households, regulate emergency heating fuel, and make data centers and large corporate power users pay their own way. If a utility wants families and small businesses to pay more, it should have to prove every dollar. mooreforpa.com #MooreForPA #PAFamiliesFirst #UtilityReform
1
40
Memorial Day is not just a long weekend. It is a day to remember the men and women who gave their lives for this country, and the families who carried that loss. May we never take their sacrifice lightly.
42
I want to start getting more input from people across Pennsylvania about where I should go, who I should talk to, and what issues people actually care about. Too often, it feels like government only shows up when it wants your vote, your money, or a photo op. Then once the election is over, regular people go right back to feeling ignored. That’s not how this should work. State government is supposed to work for the people, not the other way around. So I’m asking directly: what businesses, nonprofits, communities, towns, cities, schools, farms, volunteer groups, local organizations, or everyday people should I visit in the coming weeks? What topics matter most where you live? Cost of living? Roads and bridges? Education? Public safety? Small business? Property taxes? Jobs? Agriculture? Energy? Healthcare access? Veterans? Children and youth services? Government corruption and accountability? I’m not looking for scripted political answers. I want real suggestions. Tag places. Name towns. Mention groups doing good work. Tell me where people feel ignored. Tell me what conversations need to happen. This campaign should not be built behind closed doors or around political insiders. It should be built by listening to people across Pennsylvania. mooreforpa.com facebook.com/mooreforpa
1
2
3
66
Media says Shapiro and Garrity “won” their primaries. Reality: both were uncontested. That is not a real test. It is a ceremony. PA voters deserve more than two party-approved options handed down by insiders. It is time for an independent push. mooreforpa.com
1
1
4
405