Kristin Egan
www.kristineganforpa.comNeshaminy School District board director (Region 3, elected 2025 while appearing on both Democratic and Republican ballots — a rare cross-partisan validation). Public-school teacher for 20+ years in Bensalem School District, currently district chief navigator and former Title I coordinator (federal grant funding for underserved students). Langhorne/Middletown resident.
Chance of winning38%
Credible challenger with cross-partisan school-board win and education-first framing in a closely-divided district — but Hogan has beaten stronger candidates. National environment decisive.
Background
Neshaminy School District board director (Region 3, elected 2025 while appearing on both Democratic and Republican ballots — a rare cross-partisan validation). Public-school teacher for 20+ years in Bensalem School District, currently district chief navigator and former Title I coordinator (federal grant funding for underserved students). Langhorne/Middletown resident.
Stated positions · 5
- Educational opportunity expansion and teacher retention
- Stronger community involvement in governance
- Demanding greater fiscal transparency to constituents
- Protecting community (public-safety messaging)
- Details on reproductive rights/guns/taxes not yet fully public on campaign site
Pros & cons, honest read
Reasons to support
- Appeared on both party ballots in 2025 school-board race — demonstrated cross-over appeal
- 20+ years classroom experience gives her credibility on education (a district priority)
- Local track record in a school-attentive district (Neshaminy)
Reasons to be skeptical
- No Harrisburg experience; learning curve
- Hogan has outraised and out-organized past Dem challengers here
- Limited fully-built policy platform publicly available as of spring 2026
Three perspectives
Same claim, three reads. Decide which one you find most persuasive.
A public-school teacher with a Title I / underserved-student background running on educational equity and fiscal transparency - natural Dem issues but without a loud progressive edge yet.
Intriguing crossover profile given 2025 school-board vote; the open question is whether the broader campaign can match that consensus appeal.
A first-time state-level candidate whose policy specifics are thin; conservatives will argue she would vote with Dem caucus on social issues despite the cross-ballot appeal.
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