Jamie Walsh (politician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Preceded byMike Cabell
BornJames Patrick Walsh
c.1975
Pennsylvania
CommitteesChildren & Youth, Health, Housing and Community Development, State Government
Jamie Walsh
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
from the 117th district
Assumed office
January 7, 2025
Preceded byMike Cabell
Personal details
BornJames Patrick Walsh
c.1975
Pennsylvania
PartyRepublican
CommitteesChildren & Youth, Health, Housing and Community Development, State Government
Websitehttps://www.repwalsh.com/

James Patrick Walsh[1] (born c.1975[2]) is an American politician who is the current State Representative for the 117th district in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. A Republican, he assumed office in 2025.

Political activities

Walsh was vice president of sales at Comfort Co., a company that supplied wheelchair cushions. After "a short bout with cancer" Walsh left the company and resettled in Northeast Pennsylvania where he had lived as a child.[3] He later started a gutter installation business with his brother.[2]

Walsh was co-founder and president of Citizens Advisory of Pennsylvania, a parental rights group that fought against mask mandates in schools during the COVID-19 pandemic.[4] During the pandemic, Walsh began regularly attending board meetings of the Lake-Lehman School District where his children are enrolled.[5][6] He advocated that Lake-Lehman end contact tracing after his son was kept home from school because of it.[7] Walsh also labeled contract tracing and mask mandates an "unconstitutional mandate from the Pennsylvania Department of Health."[8] In October 2021, Walsh organized a 250-person “Essential Liberties Rally” held at Lake-Lehman's football stadium to protest the district's mask mandate.[9][10] The following year, Walsh filed a lawsuit alleging the district violated Pennsylvania's Sunshine Act by failing to justify closed door meetings and not making documents available in advance of meetings. Walsh claimed a document not made public by the district included critical race theory in the district's curriculum, although this claim was not included in his suit. The suit was settled in 2024 with the district denying any wrongdoing and paying Walsh's legal fees.[5]

After polling places in Luzerne County ran out of paper ballots during the 2022 election, Walsh criticized the county election board over the matter and was part of a group of citizens who testified before a U.S. Congressional committee about the incident.[11]

In 2024, Walsh resigned from Citizens Advisory to challenge incumbent State Representative Mike Cabell in the Republican primary election to represent the 117th district in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.[3] Walsh defeated Cabell in the election, but wasn't officially declared the winner until five months after the primary due to litigation over provisional ballots. The final vote count had Walsh defeating Cabell by four votes. He faced no opposition in the general election.[2]

Prior to the 2024 election, filed a lawsuit against Luzerne County, alleging that its processing and distribution of mail-in ballots was unlawful.[12] Walsh said he was contacted by 20 voters who said that they did not receive their mail-in ballots by four days before the election. Because of the short timespan before election day, Walsh said the voters would not have enough time to mail their ballots and would instead be physically required to go to their polling place or one of two ballot drop boxes in the county.[13] The case was taken to federal court due to claims of constitutional rights violations and continued after the election passed.[14][13] A judge dismissed the suit in April 2025, finding that Walsh lacked standing because “election practices could not possibly have caused him any injury as an unopposed and successful candidate for office.”[15] The case cost the county $104,000 in legal fees, something County Manager Romilda Crocamo demanded Walsh repay for filing a "frivolous" lawsuit.[15] Walsh did not pay and was subsequently banned by Butler Township supervisors from hosting public events in buildings owned by the township for this reason.[16]

Political views

Electoral history

References

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