Torren Ecker

Torren C. Ecker (born September 2, 1985) is a Pennsylvania politician and the Representative for the 193rd District in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.

Torren Ecker
Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
from the 193rd district
Assumed office
January 1, 2019
Preceded byWill Tallman
Personal details
Born (1985-09-02) September 2, 1985
Political partyRepublican
ResidenceHamilton Township[1]
Alma materGeorge Mason University, (BA)
Western Michigan University, (JD)
ProfessionAttorney
Websitehttp://www.repecker.com/

Career

Torren Ecker is an attorney at a Hanover-based law firm. He also works with the East Berlin Community Center, the Hanover Chamber of Commerce, and the Rotary Club.[2] Ecker worked as a legislative aid to Republican Congresswoman Jo Ann Davis in Virginia's 1st congressional district.[3]

Political career

Ecker is a self-described conservative, and, in the early stages of his first campaign, promised to bring his "fiscal responsibility to Harrisburg to protect the hardworking families of the district."[4] He has stated that he is a supporter of Second Amendment rights, but believes that these rights can be balanced when addressing issues like school safety.[5]

Ecker has stated that the school funding formula in Pennsylvania is inequitable and should be changed, and that the Commonwealth needs to increase funding for vocational programs and apprenticeships as a means of workforce development. He has also suggested that the public schoolteacher pension system needs to be reformed.[6]

In 2018, Ecker campaigned on stopping Tom Wolf's "Liberal Agenda" and "Massive Tax Increases," but expressed gratitude that the Governor has supported increasing funding for apprenticeship programs.[7][8]

In the 2019-2020 Legislative session, Ecker was placed on the Children and Youth, Game and Fisheries, Labor and Industry, Veteran Affairs and Emergency Preparedness, and Judiciary committees.[9]

During the 2019 Coronavirus pandemic, Ecker voted in favor of a bill that would terminate Governor Wolf's declaration of emergency, which served as the legal authority for much of the official response to the pandemic.[10][11] In a post on his official Facebook page, Ecker noted that "Pennsylvania will remain under the federal emergency declaration and CDC safety guidance would still apply," while cautioning "that nothing legally will change until the court rules or the governor follows the direction of the Legislature and cancels his emergency declaration."[12]

Ecker did not co-sponsor a resolution from Daryl Metcalfe that would have initiated impeachment proceedings against Governor Wolf for his response to the Coronavirus pandemic.[13]

Electoral History

2018

After Will Tallman announced he would not run for re-election in 2018, four candidates entered the Republican Primary in the 193rd District. Torren Ecker won the May 15th Primary by a one-vote margin over Barry Cockley, John Wardle, and Andrew Myers, receiving a total of 1,784 votes; initially, results indicated that Cockley had won by one vote, but a provisional ballot and absentee ballot that were originally uncounted were included in the final tally in favor of Ecker.[14]

Pennsylvania House of Representatives, District 193 Republican Primary, 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Torren Ecker 1,784 27.4%
Republican Vincent Barry Cockley 1,783 27.4%
Republican John Wardle 1,537 23.6%
Republican Andrew Myers 1,404 21.6%

In the 2018 Election, receiving just over two-thirds of the vote, Ecker defeated his Democratic opponent Matt Nelson.[15]

Pennsylvania House of Representatives election in 2018
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Torren Ecker 16,376 67.9%
Democratic Matt Nelson 7,727 32.1%

Ecker won re-election to another term in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives on November 3, 2020.[16]

Personal life

Ecker lives just outside of Hanover, Pennsylvania with his wife Laura, a special education teacher, and his two children, Addy and Oliver. He is a graduate of Spring Grove Area High School, George Mason University, and the Thomas M. Cooley Law School at Western Michigan University.[17][18]

References

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