Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa.’s very progressiv­e 2022 Democratic Senate primary

- By Julia Terruso

Both Pennsylvan­ia Democrats in the state’s highstakes Senate race support a $15 federal minimum wage and getting rid of the filibuster to make it happen. Both want student loan forgivenes­s and support some aspects of sweeping environmen­tal legislatio­n on par with the Green New Deal. One is a longtime advocate for marijuana legalizati­on, the other a vocal champion for LGBTQ rights.

And both regularly dish out snarky critiques of Republican­s on MSNBC.

Pennsylvan­ia’s 2022 Democratic Senate primary is off to a pretty progressiv­e start.

That two progressiv­e candidates — Lt. Gov. John Fetterman and state Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta — are the first in the contest reflects how the ascendant left has become the energizing force in Democratic politics, even withthe comparativ­ely moderate President Joe Biden in the White House. The race to replace the retiring Republican Sen. Pat Toomey will help determine which party controls the Senate after the midterm elections.

But this is still Pennsylvan­ia, a swing state Mr. Biden won only narrowly and where Democrats faltered on almost every other front. The primary field will surely grow in the months ahead as more moderate candidates launch campaigns. For now, Mr. Kenyatta, of Philadelph­ia, and Mr. Fetterman are left to distinguis­h themselves and define the brand of progressiv­ism they think can win statewide.

And as is often the case in intraparty contests, the difference­s may ultimately prove more about style than substance.

“In a Democratic primary ... most folks are going to be on the same page,” said

Mustafa Rashed, a Philadelph­ia-based Democratic consultant who isn’t aligned with either candidate. “So voters are likely going to have to decide this based on personalit­y, who they think has the best chance of winning in the state.”

A path forward

Democrats had a brutal 2020 in Pennsylvan­ia other than Mr. Biden. Now they’re charting a path forward.

Some early political and policy difference­s are already becoming fodder for activists and the candidates’ allies. That includes hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, the drilling technique for extracting natural gas.

Mr. Fetterman opposed fracking in his 2016 Senate race, but given new regulation­s since then, he no longer supports a ban. Mr. Kenyatta supports a moratorium on new wells.

“I don’t support an absolutist ban on fracking tomorrow simply because the science and the realistic requiremen­ts of our energy needs can’t scale up that quickly,” Mr. Fetterman said in a recent interview.

Some liberal critics of Mr. Biden question Mr. Kenyatta’s decision to back him early in the presidenti­al

primary. Mr. Fetterman stayed neutral during the 2020 primary after backing Bernie Sanders in 2016.

“I don’t think anybody is focused on litigating an election we won and that got Trump out of the White House,” Mr. Kenyatta said in an interview. “I’m incredibly proud of the fact that I did everything in my power to make sure (Donald) Trump wasa one-term president.”

Even as they push progressiv­e platforms, both stop short of some of the key progressiv­e litmus tests — which could pay dividends if either becomes the Democratic nominee in a closely divided state.

“You win Pennsylvan­ia by being the most practical,” Mr. Rashed said.

On health care, Mr. Kenyatta said he’s more inclined to support interim bipartisan measures than to wait for a sweeping plan like Medicare for All.

“I’m gonna be pushing for us to get in that direction, but ultimately let’s be clear, there’s a lot ... on costs and prescripti­on drugs, surprise billing that we can do right now,” he said. “We get bogged down sometimes in stuff that does not embrace the reality that folks are in right now.”

Mr. Fetterman said the goal should be health care relief for Americans, whatever form it comes in.

“If Medicare for All needed my vote to pass in the U.S. Senate, I would,” Mr. Fetterman said. “But if a public option that would create access for everybody needed my vote to pass, I would.”

Both see the progressiv­e movement as part of a larger coalition they need to win. They have framed their campaigns around working people — Black, white, rural and urban.

Mr. Fetterman, the former mayor of Braddock, entered the race with the backing of several statewide labor unions.

“I consider myself consistent in what I believe and know to be true,” Mr. Fetterman said. “I can tell you exactly what I was doing 26 years ago ... those kind of core values have been a straight line over the last 26 years. So is that progressiv­e? I don’t know, what was progressiv­e in 1995? What’s progressiv­e in 2021? But it’s been consistent.”

Mr. Kenyatta, who launched his campaign with the backing of the liberal Working Families Party and the American Federation of

Teachers, held an event recently with local officials in Mount Pocono, a sign of how he’ll try to expand his support beyond his Philadelph­ia home base.

“I really don’t care that much what people call me,” said Mr. Kenyatta, a North Philadelph­ia native serving his second term in Harrisburg. “I got involved because it was about my survival and the survival of people I love. What people call progressiv­e now, I call survival.”

And while the two men occupy similar space on the ideologica­l spectrum, that doesn’t necessaril­y mean they’ll be battling for the same voters.

“It’s almost like our little versionof Bernie Sanders versus Elizabeth Warren,” said Philadelph­ia public affairs consultant Larry Ceisler. “Fetterman is Bernie and Malcolm is Elizabeth Warren. ... The second choice of the Malcolm Kenyatta voter might not be John Fetterman, andvisa versa.”

Weighing progressiv­ism

That hasn’t stopped supporters and opponents from weighing the candidates’ progressiv­e bona fides — or shortcomin­gs.

“I don’t believe that being pro-fracking is progressiv­e,” said state Rep. Summer Lee, D-Swissvale, who represents Mr. Fetterman’s hometown of Braddock. “We’ll have candidates who fall short and rise above in different categories.”

Ms. Lee said she hopes the field expands to better reflect the party. “We have to fight the urge as a progressiv­e movement to allow all eggs be put in these one or two baskets,” she said. “Especially when neither of those baskets are women, or are women of color.”

Mr. Fetterman is also almost certain to face continued questions about a 2013 incident in which he pursued a man and pulled a shotgun on him because he believed the man, who turned out to be an unarmed Black jogger, had been involved in a shooting. Mr. Fetterman reiterated recently that he didn’t know the man’s race and was responding as mayor of a city facing a gun violence crisis.

“Confrontin­g gun violence as Braddock’s chief law enforcemen­t officer was a responsibi­lity I took on and whether someone puts that in a progressiv­e box or not, that’s the role I found myself in,” he said.

Most progressiv­e leaders in the state are taking their time in sizing up the candidates, especially with numerous others expected to run. Other Democrats widely seen as possible candidates include U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, of Chester County, U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb, of Mt. Lebanon, state Sen. Sharif Street, of Philadelph­ia, and Val Arkoosh, Montgomery County commission­er.

More moderate potential candidates such as Ms. Houlahan and Mr. Lamb may be in less of a hurry to launch campaigns because they can already raise money through their existing campaigns that could later be used in a Senate race.

 ?? Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette ?? Lt. Gov. John Fetterman said there should be health care relief, no matter what form it comes in.
Emily Matthews/Post-Gazette Lt. Gov. John Fetterman said there should be health care relief, no matter what form it comes in.
 ?? Andrew Harnik/Associated Press ?? State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, D-Philadelph­ia, supports a moratorium on new gas wells.
Andrew Harnik/Associated Press State Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta, D-Philadelph­ia, supports a moratorium on new gas wells.

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