The Morning Call (Sunday)

Rich? Want to be a US senator? Welcome to Pennsylvan­ia.

- By Marc Levy

Rich, Republican and want to be a U.S. senator?

Pennsylvan­ia might as well hang a welcome sign.

The presidenti­al battlegrou­nd state’s high-stakes race for an open Senate seat is seeing candidates with big bank accounts and big-time connection­s exchanging their blue-state mansions for decidedly purple Pennsylvan­ia, and pursuing an opportunit­y they might never have at home.

Introducin­g Carla Sands, Mehmet Oz — best known as the host of TV’s “Dr. Oz Show” — and David McCormick, all three of whom seem prepared to spend millions of their own dollars to win a Senate seat.

Their arrival seems to be a testament to Republican optimism about winning in Pennsylvan­ia, a bellwether state and one of the nation’s biggest presidenti­al electoral prizes, backing Democrat Joe Biden in last year’s election and former President Donald Trump in 2016.

It’s also a test in an increasing­ly nationaliz­ed political environmen­t of whether voters care about how deeply their representa­tives are tied to the state — or whether carpetbagg­ing will be a pivotal issue in next year’s contest to replace retiring two-term Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey.

“Every candidate comes with assets and liabilitie­s,” said Charlie Dent, a former seven-term congressma­n from the Allentown area. “The question is, how big a liability it is and, at the end of the day, will it matter to voters more than any other issue?”

But, Dent said, “every one of those candidates will be doing everything they can to prove their Pennsylvan­ia bonafides. They’ll spend a lot of time talking about their roots in Pennsylvan­ia.”

The race is wide open, and has attracted Democratic contestant­s who have far more electoral experience than the Republican field. They include John Fetterman, the state’s lieutenant governor, and third-term U.S. Rep. Conor Lamb of suburban Pittsburgh.

For Republican­s looking for a homer, they’ve got a few options.

A super PAC that supports one candidate, real estate investor Jeff Bartos, suggests the recent arrivals are treating Toomey’s seat like an “at-large” seat, not a Pennsylvan­ia seat.

“These candidates are opportunis­ts and elitist members of the ruling class, swooping in to a state they couldn’t be bothered to live in and don’t know,” said spokespers­on David Abrams.

Still, the state Republican Party isn’t turning up its nose.

In a statement, chairman Lawrence Tabas said Republican

candidates are emerging because electoral successes in 2021 “signal mass sobriety about the toxicity of Democrat leadership.”

Legally, they seem on solid ground.

To serve as a senator, a constituti­onal qualificat­ion is to be an inhabitant of the state when elected, but it’s a loose requiremen­t.

The Senate has previously decided that someone elected to it must have some sort of residence in the state or at least an intention to establish a residence there, according to a Congressio­nal Research Service analysis in 2015.

Sands, 61, a Pennsylvan­ia native, spent the majority of the last four decades in California before taking a post as Trump’s ambassador to Denmark and selling her homes in Malibu and Bel Air.

She returned to the U.S. in early 2021, rented a condo overlookin­g the Susquehann­a River with views of the state Capitol and began campaignin­g.

Oz, 61, gave a jolt to the race this week, declaring his candidacy and bringing unrivaled wealth and name recognitio­n to the contest.

The longtime resident of Cliffside Park, New Jersey, claims he moved to Pennsylvan­ia a year earlier, renting his in-laws’ home in suburban Philadelph­ia.

However, his social media posts from the past year are full of photos of him in his Cliffside Park home overlookin­g the Hudson River across from Manhattan, where he practices medicine and films his TV show.

A campaign aide has not answered questions about whether Oz actually sleeps at his in-laws’ home in suburban Philadelph­ia — where he is registered to vote — and makes the long commute to work in New York City.

Born in Cleveland, Oz’s main claim to Pennsylvan­ia is that he went to medical school at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in Philadelph­ia. He married a Pennsylvan­ia native, and had his first two children there before moving to New Jersey.

In his pitch to Pennsylvan­ia GOP officials, Oz stresses how he spent part of his boyhood in

Wilmington, Delaware, often traveling across the nearby Pennsylvan­ia line, not far from Philadelph­ia.

He’s already got the endorsemen­t of one member of Congress, Rep. Guy Reschentha­ler from southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, and the GOP chairman of a big county came away impressed after speaking with Oz.

“This is not a vanity play for him, he really understand­s the issues,” Allegheny County Republican Party chair Sam DeMarco said.

McCormick, a Pennsylvan­ia native, has not declared his candidacy or even spoken publicly about it. But he is meeting with Republican Party officials this week and next and bought a house near Pittsburgh, advisers say.

McCormick, 56, is the son of a former chancellor of the state university system, and grew up in Pennsylvan­ia before leaving to attend West Point and serve in the Gulf War.

He spent some years in business in Pittsburgh before he left again in 2005 to take high-level jobs with the administra­tion of then-President George W. Bush.

For more than a decade, he has lived in Connecticu­t, where he is CEO of one of the world’s largest hedge funds, Westport-based Bridgewate­r Associates.

Carpetbagg­er accusation­s have trickled into races in Pennsylvan­ia in the past, but not like

this, said party officials and campaign veterans.

“I’ve certainly never seen anything like this,” said Dave Ball, the chairman of the Washington County Republican Party.

As Ball and other Republican­s take stock of the field, the intramural digs are starting.

U.S. Rep. Dan Meuser, who plans to endorse McCormick should he enter the race, took to

Twitter to play up McCormick as a “great American who grew up in my district. Dave would be an America First/PA First Senator for and FROM PENNSYLVAN­IA!!”

In an interview, Meuser complained that Oz “is just coming in literally out of nowhere. I think Oz wants to be U.S. senator, but not a U.S. senator from Pennsylvan­ia.”

 ?? AP ?? Mehmet Oz is running for Senate in Pennsylvan­ia in 2022.
AP Mehmet Oz is running for Senate in Pennsylvan­ia in 2022.

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