Bob Harvie

PA-01

Last updated July 8th, 2026 at 3:54pm GMT.

       

STATE OF RACE

Over the summer, Bucks County voters will learn from the Fitzpatrick campaign that career politician Bob Harvie puts himself ahead of taxpayers. The campaign will highlight Harvie’s authoritarian rhetoric and behavior, such as referring to himself as a “King” and voting to give himself a taxpayer-funded pay raise. The Fitzpatrick campaign will expose Harvie as what he is: a self-serving politician more focused on his own power and interests than the families he was elected to serve.

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Voters in Bucks and Montgomery Counties should continue to learn about Bob Harvie’s record of troubling behavior and poor judgment:

  • Power-hungry arrogance – He referred to himself as a “King” and systematically pushed out officials who dared to disagree with him.
  • Self-Serving politician – Harvie voted himself a pay raise and used public money to throw a party in his own honor.
  • Misuse of victims’ funds – He redirected money designated for families who lost children to drug overdoses, instead using it to fund unrelated social events.
  • Hostility toward law enforcement – He compared police to Nazis and cast the vote to eliminate funding for local police.

These are not matters of policy disagreement — they reflect serious questions about Harvie’s character, judgment, and fitness for office. When voters in Bucks and Montgomery Counties learn the full picture of his conduct, they will find it very difficult to support him.

 

PA-01 2026 GENERAL ELECTION TIMELINE

ELECTION DAY – TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3

Polls are open from 7AM – 8PM.

Voter Registration Deadline: 10/19/2026

AB Drop Start: 9/19/2026

AB Request Deadline: 10/27/2026 BY 5:00PM

AB Return Deadline: ELECTION DAY BY 8:00PM

EV Start: N/A

EV End: N/A

 

NOTES:

Early In-Person Voting: Pennsylvania does not offer traditional in-person early voting. However, any registered Pennsylvania voter may request and cast a mail-in ballot without providing a reason.

Pennsylvania has an mail-in ballot and an absentee ballot. What’s the difference?

  • Mail-in ballots are for any eligible voter. You do not need an excuse or reason to request a mail-in ballot.
  • Absentee ballots are for: voters who plan to be out of their municipality on Election Day or voters who have a disability or illness that prevents them from going to a polling place on Election Day.
  • Vote By Mail On Demand: Voters can go to their county elections office and on the same day – request and return a mail-in ballot.

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Brian Fitzpatrick is an independent-minded Republican who has a record of voting in a bipartisan manner.

Bob Harvie: