Why this moderate Republican is done with the Pa. legislatureOne of the Pennsylvania House's last moderate Republicans is leaving after 10 years, and he says a big reason for his impending departure is a “lack of humanity” in politics.
First elected in 2014 at the age of 26, Aaron Kaufer of Luzerne County has a reputation for embracing bipartisanship.
He always wears an orange tie, a sartorial choice that references his independent approach as well as the Orange Revolution in Ukraine. “Plus, I just don't look as good in purple as I do in orange,” he quipped of the color that more commonly represents political cooperation.
Legislatively, Kaufer is on the same page as his Republican colleagues on many issues. In the past year, he’s voted against stricter gun regulations, a $15 minimum wage (though he backed $12), and a proposal that would shield women from out-of-state abortion prosecutions.
But he’s also supported Democratic and good-government bills that other GOP members have rejected as they move further to the right. He is the lead sponsor of a bill that would prevent lobbyists from giving gifts to lawmakers, as well as one to allow community solar projects, and he cast one of only two GOP votes in favor of expanding LGBTQ nondiscrimination protections.
Spotlight PA spoke with Kaufer about why he’s calling it quits and how he feels about the future of the chamber. —Stephen Caruso, Spotlight PA
The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Harrisburg is a place where sometimes it took 20 years to reach a committee chairmanship, and you're knocking on that door. Why are you leaving now, when it seems you're in a position where you could start a really fruitful legislative career?
Timing is everything. When I first got elected, I was a bachelor. I was single, I wasn't married, I didn't have any kids. I got used to doing the job as a single guy running around, running all over the state, you know, high energy. Doing whatever needs to be done. And I always operated that way. Now, here I am. I've been married for almost five years now. I have a two and a half year old at home. And it's just time for me to make sure I get my priorities right in life.
Has the tone of Harrisburg at all impacted your decision?
Yes.
Do you care to elaborate?
(Laughs.)
I came in that era where there was that ability to say, “Hey, if we agree here, well, let's work on this together and let's find common ground. And we both realize you're not getting the whole loaf, but half a loaf isn't the worst thing.” And I think right now, because of social media, because of the 24/7 news cycle, it's easy to be a no on anything, but it takes work to be a yes.
That's something that I prided myself on. I don't need to fully love what it is. But if you can view it as a step in the right direction, and work to being a yes, that's what I've tried to do. And it's harder to do that right now.
Do you think there is hope for bipartisanship within the General Assembly as it's currently constructed?
I do. I think there's a lot of newer members coming in who are trying to figure out ways to work with one another. The big issue is, I think people sometimes miss the humanity that we have in one another. We're all human. I don't think people naturally want to, you know in the political sense, go after one another. But that's sort of this mentality that we get from the 24/7 news cycle, this animosity between people.
But when you actually get to meet people as people … get to know their family, get to know what issues are important to them, even though you might disagree on a certain issue, you could agree with them on something else. And so I think that's what's important. |