Politics & Government
Guenst Vs. Weinrich: PA 152nd Legislative District Results
Democratic State Rep. Nancy Guenst was being challenged by Republican candidate John Weinrich, Sr.

Editor's Note: This story was updated around 9:45 Wednesday morning.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY, PA — It is the morning after the 2022 General Election, and it appears as though incumbent Democratic State Rep. Nancy Guenst may have succeeded in fending off a challenge by Republican candidate John Weinrich, Sr.
The most recent unofficial results reported by the Pennsylvania Department of State showed Guenst with 16,824 votes and Weinrich with 11,314.
Find out what's happening in Lower Morelandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Results are still unofficial since there were outstanding mail-in and provisional ballots yet to be counted.
From our earlier story:
Find out what's happening in Lower Morelandfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In Pennsylvania's 152nd Legislative District, Democratic incumbent State Rep. Nancy Guenst was in a race against Republican challenger John Weinrich, Sr.
Guenst is a Hatboro native who previously served in the United States Military.
Weinrich is a businessman from Montgomery County.
The district includes the communities of Hatboro, Upper Moreland, Lower Moreland, Bryn Athyn and a portion of Abington.
Election returns are expected to start coming in for this and other state and federal races throughout the night on Tuesday following the closure of polls, but even unofficial results are not anticipated to be ready by night's end due to a laborious process to count mail-in ballots since Pennsylvania recently greatly expanded mail-in voting.
While many results likely won't be ready by Tuesday evening in Pennsylvania, in the coming days Patch will bring you up to date information about the results in state and local election races.
Disclaimer: All election results reported on Tuesday night are unofficial and totals may change. State election officials say it could take days for actual, official results to be tallied, due to things like mail-in voting. And it then takes 20 days after the election for Pennsylvania to certify its results.
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