State Sen. Williams announces he’ll run for governor
HARRISBURG - State Sen. Anthony H. Williams, who has represented Philadelphia for 20 years in the General Assembly, made it official today: he is seeking the Democratic nomination for governor.
In his first public announcement, Williams said that he was seeking the nomination as a centrist and that he has raised nearly $2 million campaign contributions in less than a month.
Williams spoke today at a Pennsylvania Press Club luncheon as though the crowd knew he was in the race, with less than three months before the May 18 primary.
But it took moderator John Baer of the Daily News to nail him down. "If you are serious about running why not announce?" he asked.
To which Williams replied: "I did declare," adding with a smile, "I am out of the closet."
Earlier this month, at the Democratic State Committee meeting in Lancaster, Williams told reporters that he had filed papers with the Department of State to begin raising money for a race - generally a signal that a declaration of candidacy was near. His comments were overshadowed by the committee's endorsement of U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter for reelection.
Williams, 52, expands the Democratic field to four candidates again, after the departure last week of Scranton Mayor Chris Doherty.
Also running are Montgomery County commissioner Joe Hoeffel, Allegheny County Executive Dan Onorato and state Auditor General Jack Wagner.
In response to a question about U.S. Rep. Joe Sestak's claim that he was offered a job by Obama administration not to run against Specter in Democratic Senate primary, Williams said he was not running to "extract" anything from the other candidates.
"I have the second highest funding raised on the Democratic side in the shortest amount of time," he said. "There were no deals presented to me and nothing they could offer me."
Even without the official announcement Williams took third place in the state committee endorsement vote behind Wagner and Onorato thanks to overwhelming support from Philadelphia delegation.
Williams, who had supported Philadelphia businessman Tom Knox for governor, said he began exploring entering the race around the time Knox bowed out in late January.
Williams enters the campaign with deep Philadelphia political roots - son of the late Sen. Hardy Williams - and a solid base of support in the southeast (he also represents part of Delaware County) but with little to no name recognition in the rest of the state.
Williams' brief remarks were decidedly mid-state in focus and middle-of-the-road in tone. He said he would be the independent candidate who would fight for more jobs, better education and property tax cuts.
Williams is the first major black Democratic candidate for governor since Rep. Dwight Evans ran in 1994. Former Pittsburgh Steelers star Lynn Swann was the Republican nominee for governor in 2006.
A longtime advocate of school choice, Williams bemoaned the state of education in Pennsylvania and said it does a poor job of trailering educational programs to the current job market.
"If a school doesn't work it should not exist," said Williams, who attended both private and public schools.
Williams, who said he needs at least $4.5 million to run television ads, declined to reveal the sources of his donations, saying only it was a "diverse" mix of groups, businesses and individuals. But he said some donors come from nontraditional Democratic sources, including school-choice proponents and union opponents.
He does not have to reveal who they are until the next campaign contribution filing deadline April 6.
On his late entry Williams said he didn't think he had lost any ground to candidates of either party, noting a Franklin & Marshall College poll showed 72 percent of people in Pennsylvania don't even know there is a governor's race.