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National Democratic super PAC steers money into Northeastern Pa. as battle for Congress heats up

Freshman Republican Rep. Rob Bresnahan is defending his seat against Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti in one of November's most closely watched congressional contests.

Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti speaks during a President Joe Biden campaign event in Scranton, Pa., April 16, 2024. Cognetti is the Democratic nominee for the 8th Congressional District.
Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti speaks during a President Joe Biden campaign event in Scranton, Pa., April 16, 2024. Cognetti is the Democratic nominee for the 8th Congressional District. Read moreMatt Rourke / AP

A race for a key swing district in Northeastern Pennsylvania has caught the eye of a major Democratic super PAC that plans to spend around $50 million on advertising targeting Republican-held seats, according to the New York Times.

“We’re going to Republican territory and planting a flag,” Bradley Beychok, the president of American Bridge, a Democratic super PAC, said in an interview with the Times. “These Republicans are in a world of hurt.”

American Bridge is targeting 14 House races, the report said, with a television, radio, streaming, digital, and direct mail advertising blitz focused on economic issues like the cost of living and tariffs.

That includes the 8th Congressional District, which includes Scranton and Wilkes-Barre. U.S. Rep. Rob Bresnahan, a freshman Republican who narrowly flipped the seat in 2024, will face a challenge in November from Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti.

Cognetti, who was unopposed for the Democratic nomination, has attacked Bresnahan over stock trades he’s made since taking office and over cuts to healthcare.

Bresnahan voted for President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which cut Medicaid to help pay for tax cuts, but he was one of a handful of Republicans to vote to restore Affordable Care Act subsidies that lapsed earlier this year.

“Rob ran for Congress on a promise to ban stock trades,” Cognetti said in an ad launching her campaign. “This year, he’s already made 600 trades — 600.”

Bresnahan made up 79% of Pennsylvania’s delegation’s stock activity reported in 2025, according to Quiver Quantitative. Bresnahan has faced scrutiny over his trades, including offloading $130,000 in Medicaid provider stocks ahead of a House vote on Trump’s bill, as reported by NBC News.

But the lawmaker has stated he does not trade his own stocks.

“I think you need to know that the trades are being executed on my behalf. I do not have any dialogues with my financial advisers,” Bresnahan said in response to a question during a June 10 telephone town hall.

This year’s $50 million spend is the most American Bridge has spent on a midterm election, according to the New York Times, which cited Trump’s falling approval ratings as the reason.

“Your opponent’s drowning,” Beychok said to the paper. “We need to throw them an anvil.”

The nonpartisan Cook Political Report has classified the race as a toss-up.