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Russ Diamond | |
|---|---|
Diamond in 2015 | |
| Member of thePennsylvania House of Representatives from the102nd district | |
| Assumed office January 6, 2015[1] | |
| Preceded by | RoseMarie Swanger |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1963-07-26)July 26, 1963 (age 62) Hershey, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| Political party | Republican |
| Website | www |
Russell H. Diamond (born July 26, 1963) is anAmerican politician and businessman fromPennsylvania. Following a string of unsuccessful runs for various offices,[2] he was elected to thePennsylvania House of Representatives for the 102nd District in 2014.
Diamond owned Raintree Multimedia, a CD and DVD duplication company based in Annville,[3][4] and was later anover-the-road truck driver employed by Millis Transfer Inc.[5]
Diamond describes himself as a conservative Republican.[6] His political career has coincided with a shift in thePennsylvania Republican Party further to theright wing.[7]

In 2005, after the state legislature voted itself apay raise, Diamond created PACleanSweep.com, a Web-basedpolitical action committee dedicated to ousting everyincumbent legislator in the state.[6][8] The anti-incumbency movement played a role in the ouster of aPennsylvania Supreme Court justice and in the defeat of 17 incumbent state legislators inprimary elections.[9]
Between 2004 and 2014, Diamond launched six failed campaigns for elected office:[10]
In 2014, Diamond successfully ran for the102nd district[a] to replace RepresentativeRoseMarie Swanger, who spent four terms in the state House after being backed by Diamond's organization.[5] The campaign was contentious; Diamond's supporters filed legal challenges against the campaigns of Joe Eisenhauer and Wanda Bechtold, who sought the Republican nomination, and successfully got their names removed from the primary ballot (due to a failure to timely file financial disclosure forms and a failure to obtain enough signatures, respectively).[5] As a result of these challenges, Diamond was the only candidate on the ballot in the May primary, although Bechtold ran an unsuccessful write-in campaign.[5] Diamond won the general election with 45 percent of the vote, defeatingDemocrat Jake Long (who received 26%), independent Robert McAteer (who received almost 23% of the vote), and write-in candidate Bechtold. (Both McAteer and Bechtold indicated that they would serve as Republicans if elected.)[5] Diamond won reelection in 2016 with 70% of the vote,[18][19] won reelection unopposed in 2018,[17] and won reelection in 2020 with 70.8% of the vote.[20]
In 2020, during theCOVID-19 pandemic, Diamond opposed public-health measures to prevent the spread of the virus. Diamond opposed GovernorTom Wolf's statewide mandaterequiring the wearing of face coverings in indoor public places (saying that the order promoted "hatred and intolerance across Pennsylvania"), opposed Wolf's closure of non-essential businesses, and called on Wolf to fire Dr.Rachel Levine, thePennsylvania secretary of health.[21] Diamond spoke at anti-shutdown rallies at theState Capitol and sponsored a resolution seeking to reverse Wolf's closure of nonessential businesses; the resolution passed thePennsylvania General Assembly, but thePennsylvania Supreme Court ruled that it had no effect.[21] In May 2020, Diamond bragged on social media about shopping without a face covering.[22] In July 2020, Diamond mocked a statement againstdiscrimination against LGBT people issued by Levine, who istransgender, by copying-and-pasting her statement and replacing the term "LGBTQ" with the word "unmasked" to allege discrimination against what he called the "unmasked community" (people who refuse to wear masks during the COVID-19 pandemic). GovernorTom Wolf condemned Diamond's statement and said, "We need the Republicans to stop spreading misinformation to the general public, and we badly need them to be more responsible and more responsive to the health and wellbeing of all Pennsylvanians. This dangerous, reckless behavior is not welcome in Pennsylvania."[23][24] Wolf called for the legislature tocensure Diamond over the statement, but the Republican-controlled legislature chose not to do so.[21]
On December 4, 2020,John Eastman, a Trump adviser, law professor, and senior member of the conservative legal group, theFederalist Society, emailed to Diamond instructions for an illegal scheme to allowPennsylvania's legislature to award Pennsylvania's electoral votes to Trump, despite Trump having lost the state by over80,000 votes.Politico published the email in May, 2022.[25] Diamond was one of 26 Pennsylvania House Republicans who called for the state'scertification of presidential electors to be withdrawn and supported a resolution calling on Congress to consider Pennsylvania electors to be "in dispute."
The resolution echoedDonald Trump's baseless claims ofelection fraud and his unsuccessful attempt tooverturn the election results. Diamond made his call even after litigation brought by Trump's campaign were dismissed due to lack of evidence.[26] Diamond also joined eight other Republican state representatives, led byDaryl Metcalfe, who filed a lawsuit asking a Pennsylvania court to invalidate the state's final vote count; this claim was based on debunkedconspiracy theories and claims that had already been rejected by state and federal courts in earlier litigation.[27] The suit was swiftly dismissed.[28]
In 2019 and 2020, Diamond proposed amendments to the Pennsylvania Constitution that would eliminate statewide elections for state appellate judges (the judges of thePennsylvania Supreme Court,Commonwealth Court, andSuperior Court) would no longer be elected in statewide elections, but would be instead by elected by districts. If adopted, the proposal would tilt the composition of the courts in favor of Republicans. The Republican-controlled General Assembly advanced the proposal for geographic districts for state supreme court districts, on a largely party-line vote, with all Democrats and a few Republicans opposed.[29][30][31]
Diamond unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for Pennsylvania lieutenant governor in 2022.[32] In the May 2022primary election, he received 5.94% of the vote, carrying only one county (his home county, Lebanon).[33]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Carrie DelRosso | 318,537 | 25.66 | |
| Republican | Richard Saccone | 195,171 | 15.72 | |
| Republican | Theodore Daniels | 150,749 | 12.14 | |
| Republican | Clarice D. Schillinger | 147,705 | 11.90 | |
| Republican | Jeffrey H. Coleman | 125,059 | 10.07 | |
| Republican | James E. Jones | 113,183 | 9.12 | |
| Republican | Russell H. Diamond | 73,751 | 5.94 | |
| Republican | John A. Brown | 58,961 | 4.75 | |
| Republican | Christopher C. Frye, Jr. | 58,403 | 4.70 | |
| Total votes | 100.00% | |||
Two women filed for and were grantedprotection from abuse (PFA) orders against Diamond in 2002 (Diamond's former wife) and 2013 (a woman who lived with and dated Diamond), respectively. Court documents state that one woman claimed Diamond "pushed her in the face seven times and scratched her under an eye" and "threatened to kill her if she disconnected the cable".[35] The second woman to file for a PFA against Diamond told the courts that when she wouldn't leave his apartment, "he knocked her down and dragged her to the doorway." Diamond was later fined $200 for violating the second order.[35] In 2014, members of the Lebanon County Republican Committee sent Diamond a letter asking him to withdraw from the race for House of Representatives, citing his "string of unsuccessful runs for office" and the apparent history of violence evidenced in court documents. Diamond responded by saying that "all is fair in love, war and politics" and "Let's not cherry-pick just to make the other guy look bad."[35] Pennsylvania State SenatorDavid Arnold Jr. (also a member of the Lebanon County Republican Committee) said that Diamond had engaged in a "disturbing pattern of behavior" in which he "admits no culpability and makes light of it."[35] Speaking on the state House floor in 2018, Diamond said that he felt the orders against him were unwarranted and contended that PFA orders were "weaponized"; he voted against a bill that would require persons subject to protective orders and persons convicted of misdemeanor crimes ofdomestic violence to surrender their guns to police officers, gun dealers, or an attorney.[36]
In fall 2015, Diamond was cited for public drunkenness inAnnville Township. He subsequently acknowledged that he is analcoholic.[37]
In June 2022, Diamond was diagnosed with "treatable"prostate cancer.[38]
Media related toRuss Diamond at Wikimedia Commons