The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Fetterman makes US Senate run official

- By Marc Levy

Pennsylvan­ia’s larger-than-life lieutenant governor, the 6-foot-8, bald and tattooed John Fetterman, will run for U.S. Senate, making the announceme­nt Monday after kicking off an explorator­y fundraisin­g campaign last month that raised over $1 million.

It will be the second bid for U.S. Senate by the plainspoke­n 51-year-old Democrat. He may ultimately see competitio­n from a member of Congress for his party’s nomination in what could become the nation’s most competitiv­e Senate race in 2022.

Meanwhile, on the Republican side, a number of names are circulatin­g, including former Trump administra­tion figures. Another possibilit­y is Jeff Bartos, a suburban Philadelph­ia real estate investor who started running for U.S. Senate before switching horses to become Fetterman’s opponent for lieutenant governor in 2018.

The Senate seat in the presidenti­al battlegrou­nd is being left open after two-term Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey announced in October that he would not run again.

Fetterman is by far the highest-profile name in Pennsylvan­ia politics to show interest in running. He got his start in elective office in 2006 as the mayor of impoverish­ed Braddock, a tiny steel town just outside of Pittsburgh where three-fourths of the residents are Black.

It was there that the Harvard-educated Fetterman became something of a street fighter for progressiv­e values, as well as a minor media star for his work.

“What I bring is a 20year record of consistenc­y in embracing the same core issues that the Democratic Party has come to embrace,” Fetterman said in a recent interview.

In 2010, he was arrested for refusing to leave the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s corporate headquarte­rs in protest over the closing of a hospital in Braddock, a cause that raised broader issues about inequality and the lack of access to health care.

Later, he performed same-sex marriage ceremonies in his home before a federal judge’s ruling made it legal in Pennsylvan­ia.

Including his loss in the Democratic primary in 2016’s Senate race, he is a veteran of two statewide campaigns, is an ever-present guest on cable news shows and has a huge social media following.

On TV and on Twitter, he has taken on Trump with gusto, aggressive­ly attacking falsehoods about voter fraud peddled by Trump and Republican­s after the November election.

Fetterman turns questions about how he himself would fit into the U.S. Senate — he is an adherent to wearing shorts in winter and short-sleeve work shirts whenever possible — into a contrast with lawmakers whose claims of a stolen election helped incite a pro-Trump mob to storm the U.S. Capitol in a deadly attack.

“Here’s what I promise to never to do: I promise to never incite a riot on Capitol Hill, I promise to never stand up on the floor of the Senate after I’ve been driven from it by a bunch of rioters and lie about our election in Pennsylvan­ia,” he said.

Considerin­g that kind of disgrace to the Senate, his style “should be the last of our concerns,” Fetterman said.

Besides the party’s bedrock issues, Fetterman is a fervent advocate for legalizing marijuana, criticizin­g the war on “a plant” as pointless, counterpro­ductive and disproport­ionately inflicting criminal records onto Black people.

As lieutenant governor, Fetterman pushed the state pardons board — which he chairs by virtue of the state’s second-incommand job — to become a vehicle to right some of the wrongs of decades of excessive sentencing, particular­ly of minorities.

He also took the issue of legalizing marijuana on the road, holding a public hearing in every county.

Bartos may be next in declaring his candidacy.

In an interview, Bartos said he is seriously considerin­g a run. In the next couple of weeks, he will be calling community, business and party leaders to discuss his possible candidacy, opening a campaign bank account and starting to fundraise, he said. He expects to make a final decision in March.

Bartos, 48, has longtime connection­s to GOP campaign donors and political elite through his work fundraisin­g for candidates.

He served briefly as the state party’s finance chair and, unlike some of his potential rivals for the GOP nomination, he can make a substantia­l campaign donation to himself.

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 ?? AP PHOTO/KEITH SRAKOCIC ?? Pennsylvan­ia Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, right, speaks Feb. 7, 2019, as he stands beside state Attorney General Josh Shapiro during a news conference about legal action in the dispute between health insurance providers UPMC and Highmark, in Pittsburgh. Fetterman will run for U.S. Senate, making the announceme­nt Monday after kicking off an explorator­y fundraisin­g campaign last month that raised over $1 million.
AP PHOTO/KEITH SRAKOCIC Pennsylvan­ia Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, right, speaks Feb. 7, 2019, as he stands beside state Attorney General Josh Shapiro during a news conference about legal action in the dispute between health insurance providers UPMC and Highmark, in Pittsburgh. Fetterman will run for U.S. Senate, making the announceme­nt Monday after kicking off an explorator­y fundraisin­g campaign last month that raised over $1 million.

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