The Guardian (USA)

Oprah Winfrey spurns Dr Oz to endorse Fetterman in Pennsylvan­ia Senate race

- Chris Stein in Washington and agencies

Oprah Winfrey sprang a November surprise for Democrats in the midterm elections as the US TV host endorsed their candidate John Fetterman in Pennsylvan­ia’s hotly contested Senate race, snubbing his Republican rival Mehmet Oz whom she originally made famous on her daytime talkshow.

Until now, Winfrey had said she would leave the election to Pennsylvan­ians, but on Thursday evening she changed that position in an online discussion on voting in next Tuesday’s election.

“I said it was up to the citizens of Pennsylvan­ia … but I will tell you all this, if I lived in Pennsylvan­ia, I would have already cast my vote for John Fetterman for many reasons,” Winfrey said, before going on to urge listeners to vote for Democrats running for governor and Senate in various states.

The Pennsylvan­ia seat has for months been seen as the most likely pickup opportunit­y for Democrats in the evenly divided Senate.

Polls show a close race between Fetterman, the state’s lieutenant governor, and Oz, a celebrity heart surgeon who is endorsed by former president Donald Trump.

In a sign of how high the stakes are, Trump will return to Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday to campaign for Oz, while Joe Biden and the former two-term Democratic president Barack Obama will campaign for Fetterman that same day.

Oz left Oprah’s show after five years and 55 episodes to start his own daytime TV program, The Dr Oz Show, which ran for 13 seasons before he moved from New Jersey to Pennsylvan­ia

to run for the Senate.

The Senate seat is being vacated by the retiring Republican Pat Toomey.

Fetterman’s race is among those that have grown tighter in recent weeks as polls showed rising support for Oz, who has made much of the fact that

Fetterman had a stroke this spring during the campaign and spent much of the summer convalesci­ng.

Fetterman has been declared fit for work by his medical experts but has needed some adjustment­s to accommodat­e auditory processing.

At a recent debate, in order to accommodat­e Fetterman’s condition, which he said was improving daily, two 70-inch monitors were placed above the heads of the moderators, which showed the transcribe­d text of their questions, and the text of Oz’s responses.

The candidates fiercely clashed over abortion rights, with Fetterman strongly pro-choice.

His endorsemen­t by Winfrey – an icon to many Americans, particular­ly women and African Americans – is seen as a useful boost to Democrats’ chances in that race.

Fetterman celebrated with the kind of witty burn on social media he has become well-known for, especially over the summer when he was physically absent from the campaign trail but repeatedly taunted Oz’s New Jersey connection­s.

 ?? Photograph: Caroline Brehman/EPA ?? Oprah Winfrey: ‘I will tell you all this, if I lived in Pennsylvan­ia, I would have already cast my vote for John Fetterman for many reasons.’
Photograph: Caroline Brehman/EPA Oprah Winfrey: ‘I will tell you all this, if I lived in Pennsylvan­ia, I would have already cast my vote for John Fetterman for many reasons.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States