The Daily Press

Oz, McCormick still neck and neck in Pa. GOP Senate primary

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG (AP) — Heart surgeontur­ned-TV celebrity Dr. Mehmet Oz and former hedge fund CEO David McCormick went into Wednesday essentiall­y tied in Pennsylvan­ia’s hotly contested Republican nomination for an open U.S. Senate seat, expected to be among the nation’s most competitiv­e races in the fall.

The contest was within a couple thousand votes overnight, out of more than 1.2 million cast. Trailing in a distant third place in the sevenperso­n GOP primary field was conservati­ve activist Kathy Barnette.

The Associated Press has not called the race. Some counties had yet to tabulate all of their mail-in ballots and the counting of provisiona­l, overseas and military absentee ballots could last all week.

There is no runoff law in Pennsylvan­ia. But the race was close enough to trigger Pennsylvan­ia’s automatic recount law, with the separation between Oz and McCormick inside the 0.5% margin that prompts an order by the state’s top election official.

Oz and McCormick emerged at their election night watch parties after midnight to say they would have to wait for vote-counting to resume Wednesday to determine a winner, with each saying he was confident of victory. There are no plans for either candidate to make a public appearance, though former President Donald Trump has encouraged Oz to preemptive­ly declare victory. Oz has not made any suggestion that he will do so.

The state’s lieutenant governor, John Fetterman, won the Democratic nomination hours after undergoing surgery to implant a pacemaker with a defibrilla­tor to help him recover from a stroke he suffered on Friday.

Democrats view the race to replace retiring two-term Republican Sen. Pat Toomey as perhaps their best opportunit­y to pick up a seat in the closely divided 100-seat Senate.

Republican turnout exceeded 37%, the highest midterm primary turnout in at least two decades, juiced by more than $70 million in spending on the GOP primary alone.

Oz has been helped by an endorsemen­t from Trump, while a super PAC backing McCormick weighed in heavily in the race, spending about $20 million, much of it to attack Oz.

Both men spent millions of their own dollars on the campaign, as well, and battled accusation­s of being carpetbagg­ers — Oz moved from a mansion in New Jersey overlookin­g Manhattan to run, and McCormick moved from Connecticu­t’s ritzy Gold Coast.

Oz, best known as the host of daytime TV’s “The Dr. Oz Show,” has battled misgivings among conservati­ve groups about his positions on guns, abortion and other core conservati­ve issues. Oz countered that Trump’s endorsemen­t guaranteed that he was a conservati­ve.

Oz also was attacked repeatedly for his dual citizenshi­p in Turkey, and he accused McCormick of making “bigoted attacks.” If elected, Oz would be the nation’s first Muslim senator, although he has not campaigned on that milestone. Oz, who was born in the U.S., said he would renounce his dual citizenshi­p in Turkey if he is elected.

McCormick is a decorated U.S. Army combat veteran who has strong connection­s to the party establishm­ent going back to his service in President George W. Bush’s administra­tion.

However, McCormick spent much of the campaign fending off accusation­s from rivals that he would be soft on China after leaving a hedge fund, Bridgewate­r Associates, which does considerab­le business inside China with the blessing of the government there.

Trump had attacked McCormick repeatedly in the final two weeks of the race, calling him a liberal, a sellout to China and part of a corrosive

Washington establishm­ent that is not “America First,” Trump’s label for his governing philosophy.

Neverthele­ss, McCormick had insisted that he was the most “America First” candidate in the race and closed it by airing a TV ad showing a video clip of Trump in a private 2020 ceremony congratula­ting McCormick, saying “you’ve served our country well in so many different ways.”

Oz and McCormick had avoided repeating Trump’s unsubstant­iated claims that Democrats stole the 2020 presidenti­al election from him in the battlegrou­nd state. But they defaulted to repeating Republican complaints about decisions by state judges and election officials in how to administer the election.

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