1974 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election

The 1974 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election was held on November 5. Incumbent Democratic Governor Milton Shapp defeated Republican Drew Lewis. Under the state's 1968 constitution, Shapp was the first governor who was eligible to run for consecutive terms.

Candidates

 * Harvey Johnston
 * Martin P. Mullen, State Representative from Philadelphia
 * Milton Shapp, incumbent Governor

Incumbent Governor Shapp easily dispelled a spirited challenge from Martin Mullen, a state representative from Philadelphia who was well known as a firebrand conservative opponent of abortion and pornography.

Candidates

 * Alvin Jacobson
 * Drew Lewis, staffing executive and Richard Schweiker campaign manager
 * Leonard Strunk

With a short Republican bench, wealthy staffing executive Drew Lewis was the only serious contender in the race.

Candidates

 * Stephen Depue (Constitutional)
 * Running mate: Ellis Werft
 * Drew Lewis, staffing executive (Republican)
 * Running mate: Ken Lee, Speaker of the State House of Representatives
 * Roberta Scherr (Socialist Workers)
 * Running mate: Fred Stanton
 * Milton Shapp, incumbent Governor (Democratic)
 * Running mate: Ernie Kline, incumbent Lieutenant Governor

Campaign
Shapp's popularity had waned somewhat since his comfortable victory in 1970; although he could claim to have saved the state from bankruptcy, he did so at the expense of large tax increases. Furthermore, Shapp, an unabashed liberal, had difficulty rekindling support from the state's rural, socially conservative regions. However, Shapp and Democrats as a whole received a significant boost from the Watergate scandal; with President Richard Nixon's popularity in a tailspin, many of the top tier Republicans declined to run. Instead, the party turned to the wealthy businessman Lewis, who was able to project an "outsider" image. Lewis focused on local issues and greatly undercut Shapp in rural areas; despite lagging at the polls in traditional Democratic strongholds such as Pittsburgh and Scranton, Shapp preserved a moderate victory by winning the combined vote of suburban Philadelphia, an unexpected accomplishment for a Democrat at the time.