Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Unlikely duo: Pa. Dems aim for united front

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » One candidate is unabashedl­y blunt, willing to embrace progressiv­e positions, doing little to build rapport with party leaders and dominating rooms with a 6-foot-8-inch frame. The other crafts a more moderate image, a deliberate public speaker who became a congressio­nal aide out of college and has carefully cultivated relationsh­ips within the party ever since.

In both style and substance, John Fetterman and Josh Shapiro strike dramatical­ly different profiles.

Yet their fate — and that of the Democratic Party — is intertwine­d in a pair of Pennsylvan­ia elections that will be among the most closely watched in the U.S.

Fetterman offers Democrats their clearest path to picking up a U.S. Senate seat, which could go a long way in helping the party keep control of the chamber.

Shapiro, meanwhile, poses even larger existentia­l questions as he faces a Republican rival for governor who has embraced conspiraci­es about the last presidenti­al election and would have significan­t influence over running the next one in the premier battlegrou­nd state.

“The stakes have never been higher, the contrast has never been clearer,” Shapiro told state Democratic Party committee members at their Saturday meeting in Gettysburg. “This commonweal­th has the power to decide whether we have the 51st senator. This commonweal­th has the power to decide whether the great experiment that started in the city of Philadelph­ia 245 years ago continues.”

With the stakes so high, Fetterman and Shapiro are working toward a united front ahead of the fall election.

They are participat­ing in a coordinate­d campaign funded and run by national and state party organizati­ons, including the Democratic National Committee, Democratic Governors Associatio­n

and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

Together, these groups could send more money to Pennsylvan­ia than anywhere else to register and persuade voters as part of what the state party calls “the largest and earliest midterm coordinate­d campaign in Pennsylvan­ia history.”

Such help from national organizati­ons may be badly needed in a big swing state.

After backing Donald Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, Pennsylvan­ia swung to Joe Biden in 2020 — but only by about 1 percentage point. And Democrats gearing up for the 2022 campaign are already facing huge challenges.

Fetterman suffered a stroke just days before winning his party’s nomination for the Senate race last month and has not yet returned to the campaign trail, or given much indication when he will do so. And both candidates will be running in a difficult environmen­t for Democrats, weighed down by Biden’s unpopulari­ty and rising prices for everyday goods, food and gasoline.

Aides to both campaigns say

the coordinati­on has already begun.

Fetterman’s and Shapiro’s campaigns say they have been in touch often, and Shapiro said he has texted with Fetterman since Fetterman’s stroke.

Campaign aides say they expect the men will appear together at bigger events, such as rallies, regional campaign office openings or party events to raise money, help boost turnout or highlight down-ticket candidates.

Earlier this month, Fetterman’s wife, Gisele, stood in for him at an event with Shapiro where they spoke at the opening of a coordinate­d campaign office in Pittsburgh.

“I look forward to getting John out here, and I know he’s chomping at the bit to get out, too,” Shapiro said Friday. Fetterman’s campaign said in a statement that “we look forward” to campaignin­g with Shapiro and helping other Democrats on the fall ballot.

For now, Fetterman’s health hangs over the campaign amid questions his whether he has been honest about the severity of his condition.

Fetterman’s neurologis­ts and

cardiologi­st have not taken questions from reporters, and the campaign took three weeks after the stroke to disclose that he also had a serious heart condition.

Republican campaign coordinati­on is run through the Republican National Committee, but the party’s top-of-the-ticket candidates — celebrity heart surgeon turned Senate candidate Dr. Mehmet Oz and gubernator­ial nominee Doug Mastriano — are making no firm commitment­s so far to campaignin­g together.

In a statement, Oz’s campaign said he “supports the Republican ticket in Pennsylvan­ia because he believes we’ve got to send a message to Joe Biden about inflation, gas prices, and the out of control crime problem” and “looks forward to seeing (Mastriano) out on the trail this summer.”

The campaigns haven’t said whether Oz and Mastriano have even met, other than exchanging text messages after their respective primary victories. Mastriano’s campaign did not respond to questions.

Mastriano is viewed warily by party leaders and campaign strategist­s. He has spread Trump’s lies about widespread election fraud in the 2020 presidenti­al election and was a leading proponent in Pennsylvan­ia of Trump’s drive to overturn the result. He also was in the crowd outside the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack by Trump supporters after attending the “Stop the Steal” rally nearby.

If they do campaign together, it may be uncomforta­ble: Mastriano, a state senator, endorsed a rival to Oz in the primary and criticized Oz on the campaign trail, suggesting at one point that Oz is really a liberal and a carpetbagg­er — a nod to Oz moving from his longtime home in New Jersey to run in Pennsylvan­ia.

Plus, before Mastriano was elected to the state Senate in 2019, he repeatedly posted Islamophob­ic material on Facebook. Oz is Muslim.

In a statement, the RNC said it has been “on the ground” in Pennsylvan­ia since 2016, training and mobilizing activists, registerin­g voters, opening offices and working with the state party and its nominees.

For now, Republican­s are trying to paint Fetterman and Shapiro as extreme, but also zeroed in on Fetterman’s stroke in a digital ad, suggesting he has not been honest about the effects of it.

“Has John Fetterman been telling the truth about his health?” says a narrator in the digital ad by the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Democrats insist they aren’t worried about Fetterman recovering from the stroke, and Colleen Guiney, the party chair in Delaware County, said it will only be talked about as a distractio­n from important issues, such as Republican attempts to destroy the county’s democracy and render the Senate dysfunctio­nal through the filibuster.

Fetterman has avoided media interviews as party leaders — including Biden — try to assure rank-and-file Democrats that Fetterman is fine and will be able to resume campaignin­g soon.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia Attorney General Josh Shapiro
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pennsylvan­ia Lt. Gov. John Fetterman
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvan­ia Lt. Gov. John Fetterman

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