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Fattah rival cleared to run

His chances of winning might be less than slim, but congressional candidate Jim Foster did score a victory Friday in his battle to get his name on the ballot.

His chances of winning might be less than slim, but congressional candidate Jim Foster did score a victory Friday in his battle to get his name on the ballot.

Nine days after the state rejected his nominating petitions on a technicality, Foster learned that he would be able to run as an "independent" against nine-term incumbent Rep. Chaka Fattah (D., Pa.).

When the 69-year-old Germantown newspaper editor filed his 125 pages of signatures Aug. 1 in Harrisburg, he was told he was too late because another "independent," Philadelphian Robert Ogborn, had filed the previous day.

State law limits a party to one candidate on the November ballot.

Foster accused Fattah's campaign of shenanigans - which it denied - and protested that he belonged to no party.

He filed an appeal with Commonwealth Court, which ruled he could run under a different affiliation.

The court also found that he could be listed as an "independent" if Ogborn's petition were ruled invalid. Foster then filed a challenge to Ogborn's signatures.

That challenge became moot Friday afternoon when Ogborn pulled out of the race.

Ogborn's petition contained 2,000 signatures, 285 more than the minimum. However, Ogborn acknowledged that a review showed he did not have enough valid ones.

He said that "a lot" of the signatures were those of college students who listed addresses that did not match voter records.

"I'm not going to fight this," he said. "Why draw this out?"

Foster said he actually was grateful for the flap and the subsequent attention. He said a ward leader told him, "Jim, this is the best possible way you could have announced the race."

Fattah won reelection in 2010 with 89.3 percent of the vote.

Ogborn said he had not decided whom to support in the congressional election and did not rule out voting for Foster.

As for his own political future, he said, "The mayor's race is only two years away."