Pennsylvania's key Senate race: Dave McCormick urged to run again

Is Dave McCormick, a former hedge fund CEO and under secretary of the U.S Treasury, running for the Senate in the crucial swing state of Pennsylvania -- again?

Other conservatives hope so, and Reuters reported Tuesday that McCormick plans to announce his candidacy later this month.

A spokeswoman declined to comment to ABC News, but nearly 100 Republicans in Pennsylvania signed a letter this month encouraging him to get back in the race.

He narrowly lost the 2022 GOP Senate primary to celebrity TV Dr. Mehmet Oz, who was then defeated by incumbent Democrat John Fetterman.

"A combat veteran, job creator, public servant, and true Pennsylvania, we can think of no one better suited to serve the commonwealth in the United States Senate, and urge you to run in 2024," states the letter, which was organized by Allegheny County GOP Chair Sam DeMarco and signed by 98 people, including Lawrence Tabas, the chair of the state party.

DeMarco indicated to ABC News that time was running out for McCormick to decide whether or not to run.

"I would think he is going to have to make a decision very, very soon. I mean, you would think [by] the end of this month," he said.

This time around, if McCormick wins the GOP Senate nomination, he would be facing three-time Sen. Bob Casey. The winner could determine the balance of power in the chamber, currently held by Democrats 51-49.

After the 2022 race, McCormick has continued to maintain a presence on the ground, popping up at local event parties in the area, talking on conservative podcasts and was recently on tour for his new book, "Superpower in Peril: A battle plan to renew America"

In this May 13, 2022 file photo David McCormick, a Republican candidate for Senate in Pennsylvania, speaks during a campaign stop in Lititz, Penn. Matt Rourke/AP, FILE

McCormick has also gone out to stump for state Treasurer Stacy Garrity, who is running for reelection, and Rep. Mike Kelly.

Should he run, McCormick could face scrutiny over an issue that partially defined Oz's campaign last year: where, exactly, he lives.

While Oz relocated to Pennsylvania, he had lived for more than three decades in New Jersey -- which fueled attacks from Fetterman that he was out of touch with voters.

Recently, McCormick told Texas Sen. Ted Cruz in a podcast appearance, "I live in Pennsylvania." He owns a home in Pittsburgh, according to public records, and was born in Washington, Pennsylvania, outside the city.

But the Associated Press reported last month that according to "real estate listings and footage from recent interviews," McCormick still lived in Connecticut.

State Republican leaders have hit back at the residency reports, with DeMarco calling them "b-------" and Northampton County GOP Chair Glenn Geissinger telling ABC News, "I know Dave McCormick is a Pennsylvanian and I look forward to him denouncing these rumors that he lives in Connecticut."

A spokeswoman for McCormick said in a statement that "Dave has called Pennsylvania home for 30 years and served our country outside of Pennsylvania for an additional 13. It's the place he mailed letters back to when he served in Iraq and the place where three of his daughters were born."

The spokeswoman acknowledged, however, that McCormick "maintains a residence in Connecticut as his daughters finish high school, [but] Dave's home is in Pittsburgh and for the last 10 years he has owned a working farm in his hometown of Bloomsburg, which has been in the family for decades."

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