Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Fetterman hurting himself by not releasing records

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Of all the issues defining the U.S. Senate race between Republican Mehmet Oz and Democrat John Fetterman, Mr. Fetterman’s health should rank close to last. Even so, it has loomed large in an increasing­ly tight contest for a potentiall­y pivotal U.S. Senate seat. Mr. Fetterman can diminish the influence of this distractin­g side-issue by releasing his medical records now and allowing reporters to question his physician.

In September, a Post-Gazette editorial called on both U.S. Senate nominees to release their medical records. Mr. Oz, 62, released his two days later, indicating he was in good health. Mr. Fetterman, 53, who suffered a lifethreat­ening stroke in May, has not released his.

As a matter of transparen­cy, all candidates for a major political office should release their medical records, disclosing conditions that might affect their ability to serve. Medical records are not a perfect indicator of health, but they are more reliable than biased and self-serving assessment­s by the candidates themselves.

That said, medical records are not a reason to vote for a candidate. Other, far more important considerat­ions, including character and positions on key issues, should determine which candidate a voter supports. Nor are medicalrec­ords any guarantee of how healthy a person will be two years from now.

By not releasing his medical records, however, Mr. Fetterman is elevating their importance and generating suspicions that may be entirely unwarrante­d. Mr. Fetterman’s failure to release his medical records has allowed Mr. Oz to make Mr. Fetterman’s health a major campaign issue.

Mr. Fetterman also is showing a fundamenta­l lack of faith in people’s ability to put health into perspectiv­e

and fairly decide his overall fitness for office.

Mr. Fetterman has deflected calls by Mr. Oz to release his medical records by arguing that Mr. Oz’s positions and policies are more important than his heath records. Well, of course they are. And the best way Mr. Fetterman can ensure that voters don’t get distracted from important policy questions is by releasing his medical records.

In truth few medical conditions would prevent a U.S. senator from doing his or her job. In a Sept. 28, article by Bethany Rodgers of the Erie Times-News, Dr. Jacob Appel, a professor at Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai, noted that the late-Sen. Clair Engle, a California Democrat, unable to speak and suffering from a brain tumor, cast a tie-breaking vote that passed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Mr. Engle voted “aye” by pointing to his eye. Regardless of their health, Mr. Oz and Mr. Fetterman would be lucky to do something that significan­t in their political career.

The results of this election could determine which party controls the U.S. Senate. Mr. Fetterman can stop inflating the importance of his medical records by releasing them now.

 ?? Post-Gazette ?? Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, candidate for Senate, at a workers rally cohosted with Sen. Bob Casey and Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown in Monaca Thursday.
Post-Gazette Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, candidate for Senate, at a workers rally cohosted with Sen. Bob Casey and Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown in Monaca Thursday.

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