In Pennsylvania, John Fetterman and Dr. Oz Race to the Bottom
Neither candidate in the crucially important Pennsylvania Senate race has made much of a positive case for his candidacy.

You might have expected the Pennsylvania Senate race to provide a glimmer of optimism in an ugly political landscape.
Just consider how unusual the parameters of the race were from the outset: A two-term senator retires, leaving a vacant seat in one of the country's bellwether states at a time when the Senate is split 50/50. Both major political parties see their preferred candidates go down in flames in the primaries as voters flock to anti-establishment choices. Since the race is one of the most important in the country, suddenly, two political outsiders have a national stage from which to broadcast new ideas and solutions.
Almost sounds inspiring.
Compared to what it could have been, the Pennsylvania Senate contest between former coal-town mayor John Fetterman and TV doctor Mehmet Oz is easily the most disappointing in this cycle. Worse, perhaps, it's also become the stupidest. Both campaigns have been relentlessly negative, with neither Fetterman nor Oz doing much to establish a positive argument for their candidacy.
Just look at the opening moments of last month's debate between the two. In response to the first question from moderator Dennis Owens—"What qualifies you to be a U.S. senator?"—Fetterman did not offer a single complete sentence to justify his place on the ballot before attacking Oz. "I'm running to serve Pennsylvania; he's running to use Pennsylvania," Fetterman said before accusing Oz of lying in television ads and during the debate (a debate that had literally just started).
Opening and closing statements are probably the most carefully scripted part of any political debate—and that's doubly true in Fetterman's case, as he's still recovering from a stroke and noticeably struggled in more impromptu moments—and yet that's all you've got?
Oz did no better. "I'm running for the U.S. Senate because Washington keeps getting it wrong with extreme positions," he said, before quickly flipping the switch. "John Fetterman takes everything to an extreme, and those extreme positions hurt us all."
If you're keeping count, that's three mentions of "extreme" in about 30 words. Reader, that's no accident. For weeks, Republican attack ads have been organized around the vacuous idea that Fetterman is too "extreme" for Pennsylvania. "Since Labor Day, Republicans have spent at least $5 million on television ads portraying Fetterman as a far-left radical who wants to let criminals out of jail," The New York Times reported last month. One ad sponsored by MAGA Inc., a Trump-aligned group, says Fetterman "wants ruthless killers, muggers, and rapists back on our streets, and he wants them back now."
All that is pegged to Fetterman's support during his one term as the state's lieutenant governor for streamlining the state's clemency process—with a focus on granting pardons and commutations to nonviolent drug offenders. It's ridiculous to equate that with turning rapists loose on helpless suburban families.
Ads backing Fetterman, the candidate in the race who has a bit of a political record to run on and a semi-interesting personal story, have gone sharply negative as well. One accuses Oz of "selling fake medical cures." Lots of them focus on the fact that Oz is a carpetbagger from New Jersey who hasn't spent much time in the state he wants to represent. And how many campaigns involve one candidate literally accusing the other of being "a puppy killer"?
In fairness, both Fetterman and Oz are rich targets for negative ads. Some of them have even been pretty clever, like the one that inserts Oz into The Wizard of Oz. Through mid-October, the Pennsylvania Senate race was the most expensive in the country for outside groups. More than $98 million has been dumped into ads in the state, according to Open Secrets, which tracks political spending.
"They've been overwhelmingly negative and targeted at the other candidate and their liabilities: Oz as a Hollywood outsider, Fetterman as an uber-progressive, extreme liberal," says Chris Borick, a professor of political science and head of the polling project at Muhlenberg College in Allentown.
But it remains notable that neither campaign has a lot to work with when it comes to selling a positive message. Remember Oz's attempt to look like a normal person who definitely goes to a grocery store with regularity? Yikes. In response to criticism, Oz's campaign released an official statement suggesting that if Fetterman had "ever eaten a vegetable in his life, then maybe he wouldn't have had a major stroke." Double yikes.
Fetterman, meanwhile, stuffs loads of personality into his iconic black hoodie but has never been much of an ideas-driven politician. His campaign website contains the usual progressive pablum about Pennsylvanians "getting ripped off by corporate greed" and promises a "five-point plan to fix our economy and hold Washington accountable." The first item on that list: "Make more sh*t in America." So edgy.
In the wake of the stroke Fetterman suffered just before the primary election in May, there's been an understandable focus on his health. That was underlined by Fetterman's shaky debate performance last month. But the relentlessly negative tone of this campaign was established long before the debate and has little to do with Fetterman's health.
Even though Fetterman had a big lead in polls taken throughout the summer, there was always an obvious opening for Oz to stage a comeback, with or without the stroke.
"Most Fetterman voters said they liked Fetterman. Most Oz voters said…they didn't like Fetterman," The Washington Post's Philip Bump wrote in September as he dissected a YouGov poll. "That's a great example of negative partisanship: casting a vote not for a candidate but against one. This tendency was enormously useful for Democrats in the past two election cycles, with the party gaining a majority after 2018 and the White House after 2020 largely because Americans were frustrated with Donald Trump. Now, it's probably helping keep Oz afloat."
Oz was not particularly popular among Pennsylvania Republicans when the race started—he won a seven-way primary with a mere 31 percent of the vote after former President Donald Trump's endorsed candidate dropped out due to domestic abuse allegations. And Fetterman's attacks about Oz being out of touch and from out of state were obviously meant to keep him unacceptable in the eyes of many Republicans.
But the intensity of negative partisanship seems to have swung around in Oz's favor over the past month.
"Negative partisanship—the fear of the opposition—is drawing people back to their party. And I think Oz has really rested his case on that dynamic, and we see it in our polling," Borick says. Compared to earlier polls, the shift has been noteworthy. Oz has focused on making Fetterman unacceptable to Republicans to such a degree that they overlook his inadequacies.
"I think it has worked," Borick says. "For lots of Republicans, he's not their cup of tea…yet he gets 90-plus percent of Republicans in our polling saying they're going to vote for him."
In other words, the lack of a positive argument from either candidate is deliberate. It might even be the smart move, albeit a deeply cynical one.
This is the dead end of negative partisanship. Oz is not well-liked even within his party and has done little to make the case for why he'd be an effective or useful U.S. senator. But he's got a good shot at winning anyway.
It's a scenario that cries out for alternative choices. Unfortunately, the spirit of zero-sum politics tries to erase those too. Everett Stern, an independent candidate mounting a write-in campaign, had polled as high as 3 percent, but he dropped out last month to endorse Fetterman's flagging effort. Libertarian candidate Erick Gerhardt says there's no way he'll drop out, but he's been excluded from debates and most polls.
"As long as they keep toeing the two-party system, it's never going to really change," Gerhardt, a 37-year-old master carpenter from Montgomery County, tells Reason. "And they're always going to be fighting each other for power. We need third parties in there. We need more voices in there."
Still, the vast majority of Pennsylvanians who vote on Tuesday will cast ballots for Fetterman or Oz. Neither man seems to have proven that he is deserving or capable of being a potential tie-breaking vote on issues affecting all Americans for the next six years. But one of them will win, largely by not being the other guy.
In our current political moment, that's good enough. For the country, it's not good at all.
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I feel terrible for the people of PA that these are their choices.
You should feel terrible for the whole country because one of these two bozos is likely to be the deciding vote on issues that affect us all.
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Yes, and one is running on the platform of not being Trump. If you find that equal to the other, fuck off and die.
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I think these 2 perfectly reflect the people of PA.
The actual candidates are incidental. The respective parties will be running the seats, so whichever we get we actually get the party leadership representing us.
Fetterman hasn't been stressing the Democrats' brilliant REMEMBER 1 / 6 and FASCISM VS DEMOCRACY themes?
Disappointing. But I still hope he wins.
#BlueWave2022
#VoteForUncleFester
I'm surprised Fetterman didn't remind the audience of the success of the recent Inflation Reduction Act.
I am surprised that he didn't remind the audience of the recent flatulation combustion act.
Fetterman is as sharp as ever. He would be up by 15 points if the local Fox station hadn't rigged the debate with sub-par captioning.
#BidenFetterman2024
I'm holding out for the Biden, Fetterman debate in the primary.
News flash to Eric Boehm: most politicians today suck. What sane person wants to be a politician? So voting against the suckier candidate makes perfect sense.
In 2020, we reluctantly pulled the lever FOR the suckier candidate because the less sucky candidate was...*checks four years of media reporting* too extreme for America.
Fetterman: I'm not Trump.
Oz: I'm not Fetterman.
So just maybe the voters will hit the web, look up the party platforms, and vote accordingly.
Damn, now there's a scary thought.
Both sides!
TDS tends to have that effect; ask Eric who got his POTUS vote last election.
Too extremely awesome!
The candidates keep getting worse. Fetterman is clearly compromised.
Herschel Walker is a blithering idiot. Senate oldie Charles Grassley is running for reelection at 89. And Joe is already senile at 80 this month. Donald Trump is a grifting con man and one party is his plaything. The election conspiracists make up about 60% of Republican candidates. We deserve to go bankrupt as a country.
You admit only one person on your list isn’t mentally compromised.
turd lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a TDS-addled steaming pile of shit, a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.
Once again wishing there were a “None of the above” option on the ballot. Here in Virginia, if you write it in, they just ignore it.
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Eric voted for Biden, so of course he pretends fetterman is legit.
Fetterman is on an intellectual level with Boehm so that makes sense. That their progressive policy preferences align is the icing on the cake.
I think Fetterman is better off after the stroke. Before he was spouting insane gibberish, now it's just plain gibberish. I see that as a step toward the positive.
“That was underlined by Fetterman’s shaky debate performance last month.”
Whoah, whoah, whoah! SHAKY performance? Wow the gloves are off there. Since we aren’t gonna mince words here, I will risk being hyperbolic when I say that Fetterman's performance and the decision to put him on the podium both might have been a slight miscalculation.
Disappointing, unfortunate.
Fetterman must be downright awful to get the Both Sides treatment from Reason.
Fetterman is, in fact, downright awful.
Gerhardt is correct. There is no chance to improve the representation of ALL voters until the two-party system is eliminated in every state of the union. Where is the big push by the Libertarian Party to implement ranked-choice at-large elections systems in Pennsylvania and everywhere else in America to implement proportional representation for the other forty-five percent of voters currently suffering under “taxation without representation?” I hereby volunteer to rejoin the national LP and run their effort to put election reform on every ballot in every state pulling out all stops in this moral-equivalent-of-war crash program. Just call me and let me know when you want me to start!
Ranked choice is totally undemocratic and unconstitutional. Go fuck yourself with this nonsense.
There is no chance to improve the representation of ALL voters until the two-party system is eliminated in every state of the union.
Shut the hell up, will you?
There is no two party system in the US. I have never voted in any election in any of the states I've lived in, nor those whose ballots I could see that has only had two parties on the ballot.
The people whining endlessly about the 'two party' system are whining because their chosen party isn't getting the attention they think it should get.
And that's because you've got to get elected regularly to get attention.
And they don't. They crawl out from under their rocks every two years and try to guilt the populace into giving them power in high office without showing that they can do the job by working up from lesser offices.
Show that your shit works as county clerk. Then as city council, mayor, state rep.
Get those offices and then get back to me.
You.
Are.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
I'm still curious about how we can ultimately grade this question of whether ranked choice voting improves things or not. I was reading an article about it (and about other alternative voting systems and about the common voting system most places have) and sort of realized no one was putting forth hard metrics on determining whether things were actually improved.
I'm curious if someone has, but most stuff I've seen is similar to arguments I see for gerrymandering reform which is basically that more moderation is a sign of virtue. But then, moderate is defined by someone and isn't objective and yadda yadda yadda.
I’m still curious about how we can ultimately grade this question of whether ranked choice voting improves things or not.
It's still a little early, but people have tried.
Also, here's a pretty good detailed breakdown, but a perusal of this site suggests that it may be partisan... ie against RCV. But even if it is, it does a pretty good detailed breakdown of how it won't numerically really change things.
Etc. etc.
All that is pegged to Fetterman's support during his one term as the state's lieutenant governor for streamlining the state's clemency process—with a focus on granting pardons and commutations to nonviolent drug offenders.
Yeah, the problem with that...Fetterman's clemency ideas go well beyond non-violent drug offenders. Maybe it's me, but I never recall reading any libertarian theory in favor of releasing actual predators on society.
Dr. Oz sucks as a candidate. But, for God's sake, has Reason so sold its soul that it's saying he's no better than a quite likely literally brain-damaged progressive trust-fund brat?
Anyone who votes for Uncle Fester is crazy. Even if Oz is a dummy, he could not do as much damage as fetterman.
Fetterman and the reason editors, like minds think alike.
Loads of personality? There's a word popular w/ progressives for people who wear clothing as a costume. Fetterman is not blue-collar, not working in the trades, the damned shorts he wears year-round in PA are a good indicator if the pristine Carhartt gear isn't. What is that word, starts w/ 'a,' sounds like 'opriation? Oz is a weirdo, kind of a dick, but fetterman has been a douchebag for as long as he's been holding political office. There is no good choice, but fetterman is definitely the worst choice, barring some major criminal charge against oz.
I would have said a poseur slumming it. But, yeah.
This is why I can't take guys like Boehm seriously. They soil their panties over a guy like Trump, but then when you get a guy like Fetterman, who strikes me as almost a cartoon leftist version of Trumpism, they think of it as "personality".
You can't take anyone who works at reason seriously. They are all clowns. There was a time when reason employed serious writers. The gay Fonzi ran them all off and replaced them with bozos. If you could ever take control of reason, the first thing any sane person would do is fire the entire circus clowns and all.
"...If you're keeping count, that's three mentions of "extreme" in about 30 words..."
Some argument you have there, Eric. Might help if you didn't have an extreme case of TDS.
Fetterman is young. He may recover and get elected next time. But right now he is mentally crippled. Let him rest.
I argue the same about Biden.
Give 'em both a 20-year rest and then see how they look.
He's a potato. A baked one, left in the fire under foil too long.
From what I can tell, the Fetterman campaign's main argument is Oz said crudite instead of vegetable platter, and that should be disqualifying, and the Fetterman campaign also asserts that Fetterman being incapacitated from his stroke, and their hiding it and his previous heart condition, should not be disqualifying.
Oz is much more qualified to be a senator. He can lie convincingly, but Fetterman's inability to lie convincingly due to his mental incapacity should disqualify him from being a senator.
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Don’t know how many of you are actually from PA but I actually came around to liking Oz. Not based on anything related to his campaign, but just his story. He’s no libertarian, but he is more moderate and reminds me of the big tent republican ideal where he has a fundamental opposition to govt interference in daily life.
National senators don’t directly affect PA policy the way state legislators and the governor do, but fracking has been an ongoing issue in the state, as has govt interference. Wolf shut the state down during covid with his moronic traffic light analogy. I should clarify for non-PA people that traffic light is not just an analogy. Wolf literally implemented a red/yellow/green light system for highly variable and arbitrary covid rules based on infection rates. He wasn’t as bad or arbitrary as other governors like Whitmer, but he was bad. On multiple occasions, businesses closed, re-opened, re-closed and re-opened again only to be closed once more. I’m not sure the state nor the country fully realizes the effect these covid policies had on the economic well being of our state and nation.
Also, as others have posted above, Fetterman isn’t just about releasing the so called non violent drug offender. I will concede the argument is more guilt by association, but he clearly has an ideology against life sentences, regardless of the crime. While I’m not aware of him directly approving the release of convicts who recidivated, we know he’ll push for it on a national level and support PA in the event we get Shapiro as governor and more Krasner type DAs. That’s where we get into issues of cash bail and there is a serious crime problem throughout the state. We know the rates are up, everyone in Philly and the suburbs knows it, and this hurts Philly as they try to thaw from Wolf and Kenney’s covid rules while still having the same regressive, job killing taxes and business regulations. We keep losing to Jersey and Delaware and while it isn’t a guarantee, the only way things will start to change is Rs in all levels of office.
We also need the state to focus more on nuclear plants. 3MI was shut down and the state isn’t moving in a positive direction with nuclear power. The anti-energy psuedoscientific garbage we get from our state reps is infuriating.
The only thing I imagine us getting out of a Fetterman/Shapiro combo is legal weed, which I’m really not excited about at all because you just know they are going to reward their UFCW cronies and create some hellscape arrangement like we have with the PLCB. More lost business to the rest of the tri-state area.
I think you’ll be surprised by Oz if he wins. He got the Trump endorsement without having to parrot Trump. He has Romney energy and this state is kind of like MA where that’s actually a good thing. If Oz carries the suburbs and makes a dent in the cities, he’ll win easily.
The fact that millions of people will vote for someone who can't even form coherent sentences proves a lot about politicians and Congress.