3 min read

New Britain Township Election

New Britain Township Election

General Election 11/4/2025

New Britain Township – Supervisor – 6-Year Term Steven Groman

  • New Britain Township – Tax Collector – 4-Year Term Nicole Percetti
  • New Britain Township – Auditor – 6-Year Term Brian P. Dutill

Countywide Candidates:

  • District Attorney: Jennifer M. Schorn
  • Sheriff: Fred Harran
  • Prothonotary: Colleen Christian
  • Recorder of Deeds: Dan McPhillips
  • County Controller: Pamela A. Van Blunk

State Judicial Candidates:

  • Commonwealth Court: Matt Wolford
  • Superior Court: Maria Battista

Court of Common Pleas (Vote 4):  

  • Grace Deon
  • Chelsey Crocker Jackman
  • Joseph Pizzo
  • Colin Monahan

Central Bucks School District – Region 2 School Director – 4-Year Term

  • Andrew Miller

Central Bucks School District – Region 3 School Director – 2-Year Term

  • Sharon Beck

Central Bucks School District – Region 3 School Director – 4-Year Term (Vote for 2)

  • Roman Szewczuk
  • Elizabeth Betty Santoro


New Britain Township East – Judge of Elections – Michael Stoltzus

New Britain Township East – Inspector of Elections – Robert LeClair

New Britain Township South 1 – Judge of Elections – Charles Coxhead

New Britain Township South 1 – Inspector of Elections – Holly Pulido

New Britain Township South 2 – Inspector of Elections – Karen W. McCarthy

New Britain Township West 1 – Judge of Elections – Norman Moore

New Britain Township West 1 – Inspector of Elections – Ryan Wantz

Township Superviors supporting unions over local contractors for contract bids shoot down fair bidding in contracting. Good governance and management is not led by politics, but by insuring that budgets are met, and the needs of the residents are balanced, instead of favoring one side to disrupt fair business practices.

With School Board Tax increases of 1500 per household, without any quantifiable improvement on education, the current majority is subsidizing bad policy and increases with no ROI. In addition the 58 billion Governor proposed deficit is 16k per household - calculated to 2380 per person per household. The question is for what, when we can do better, be efficient, and get lean to actually prepare and make our local and state better. A $3800 tax increase should not be accepted by anyone without solid returns to the citizens.

Keep in mind how much money of the 110 million in 2022 was to get Shapiro in as Governor, and of course the recourse is 58 billion burden on the taxpayers - remember who you vote for - easy rise - easy fall - the most principled and experts are the ones that show integrity and consistency in the way they lead. Puppets are shown in their management, and the way they create new USAID resources from the federal to local to burden you as the provider for these projects.

Note: All the redistricting drama pushed by one party on the news fails to counter the redistricting mess they did in Chalfont - take that to the polls that these folks that are hypocrites don't care about you, but power and stealing your money and laughing in your face. I can count a handful of folks on the opposing team with my hands that I think are decent, but the baddies need to go. Get them out and let them learn what it means to be human and relate with the people here - it's too long these folks have had their heads in their rears.

Analysis: Redistricting clearly helped local Democrats flip this PA House
Redistricting boosted Democrats in two key Bucks County races as well as the pivotal Montgomery County contest that gave Dems the PA House majority.

Link that shows how Democrats used redistricting to expand power.