Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Candidate in hospital, others scrambling before Pa. primary

- By Marc Levy and Michael Rubinkam

HARRISBURG, PA. » The last full day of campaignin­g in Pennsylvan­ia’s hotly contested primaries for governor and U.S. Senate began Monday with a top Senate candidate in the hospital and establishm­ent Republican­s trying to stave off victories by candidates they worry will be unelectabl­e in the fall.

Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, who is leading in polls and fundraisin­g in the Democratic Party’s primary for U.S. Senate, remained in the hospital Monday after suffering a stroke right before the weekend.

His campaign said he won’t appear at Tuesday’s election night party in Pittsburgh, though Fetterman said Sunday that he is feeling better, expected to make a full recovery and will resume campaignin­g after getting some rest.

Meanwhile, new attack ads are airing against latesurgin­g Republican U.S. Senate candidate Kathy Barnette as many in the Republican Party establishm­ent have begun trying to consolidat­e their support to prevent Doug Mastriano from winning the party’s gubernator­ial nomination in the presidenti­al battlegrou­nd state.

Some Republican­s fear Barnette and Mastriano are too polarizing to beat Democratic opponents in a general election. Barnette and Mastriano have campaigned together, endorsed each other and promoted conspiracy theories, including former President Donald Trump’s lies that widespread voter fraud cost him the 2020 election.

The scrambling reflects the high stakes of Tuesday’s elections in Pennsylvan­ia and the uncertaint­y that has rattled the campaigns in the last week amid news of Fetterman’s hospitaliz­ation and last-minute jockeying in the Republican primaries for governor and U.S. Senate.

In the governor’s race, an organizati­on that has reported spending about $13 million to boost Republican candidate Bill McSwain, a lawyer who was Donald Trump’s appointee for U.S. attorney in Philadelph­ia, switched its allegiance to former congressma­n Lou Barletta barely two days before polls close.

Commonweal­th Partners Chamber of Entreprene­urs, a business advocacy group whose political action committees are conduits for cash from billionair­e Jeffrey Yass, said it believes Barletta has the best chance to beat Mastriano. The group is now calling on McSwain to drop out and endorse Barletta.

Mastriano, newly endorsed by Trump, belittled efforts by Republican­s to defeat him and characteri­zes Democrats, including President Joe Biden, as farleft radicals.

“The swamp struck back, but they struck and they failed, they missed, and Donald Trump came in in the midst of their conspiring with each other’s swamp-like creatures and endorsed me and cut the legs out from underneath them,” Mastriano said in an interview Monday that he streamed online with the Light of Liberty podcast.

Meanwhile, in the hardfought Republican primary for U.S. Senate, Barnette worked to fend off growing attacks from former hedge fund CEO David McCormick and heart surgeon-turned-TV celebrity Mehmet Oz, Trump’s endorsed candidate.

Barnette said on conservati­ve Breitbart Radio on Monday that “I’m not a globalist, both of them are” and that they have “very strong ties to the World Economic Forum,” an organizati­on that has been the subject of right-wing conspiracy theories.

“Globalist” is a derogatory term with an antisemiti­c origin adopted by Trump and others in his orbit to conjure up an elite, internatio­nal coterie that doesn’t serve America’s best interests.

She also suggested on Breitbart Radio that she would not support Oz or McCormick if they win the primary, saying “I have no intentions of supporting globalists.”

Trump’s endorsemen­ts of both Mastriano and Oz have twisted Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican establishm­ent into contradict­ions, as some warn that Mastriano is too far to the right to beat Democrat Josh Shapiro in the fall general election.

Trump himself has warned that Barnette cannot win in the fall — yet Mastriano is campaignin­g with her. Together, Mastriano and Barnette have spent a fraction of the money that some of their rivals have.

With polls showing a late surge for Barnette, Trump’s attacks reflected an eleventh-hour behind-thescenes scramble by Trump allies and rival campaigns to discredit her. If elected, she would be the first Black Republican woman to serve in the Senate.

On Monday, the Oz campaign sent out a 90-second robocall to Republican voters featuring Trump urging them to vote for Oz and attacking McCormick and Barnette as “not candidates who put America First,” Trump’s name for his government philosophy.

In addition to new attack ads on TV targeting Barnette, she is being asked about a history of incendiary comments, which include

disparagin­g Muslims and gays, and contradict­ory statements about the length of her past military service and whether she voted for Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al primary.

“It’s confusing to understand Kathy Barnette. Every time she answers a question, she raises many more,” Oz said on the “Brian Kilmeade Show” on Fox News Radio.

 ?? MARK PYNES — THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP ?? John Fetterman takes a selfie with voters while he campaigns for U.S. Senate at the Holy Hound Tap Room in downtown York, Pa., Thursday, May. 12, 2022.
MARK PYNES — THE PATRIOT-NEWS VIA AP John Fetterman takes a selfie with voters while he campaigns for U.S. Senate at the Holy Hound Tap Room in downtown York, Pa., Thursday, May. 12, 2022.

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