Trump endorsement of Dr. Oz in Senate race stuns advisers, divides
loyalists
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[April 14, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - Donald Trump’s
decision to endorse celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz in the Pennsylvania
Senate race has divided local Republican Party officials and stunned
close advisers who thought he had decided to stay out of the contest to
pick a Republican candidate, two sources familiar with internal
deliberations told Reuters.
Oz and David McCormick, a former hedge fund CEO who has hired many
former aides to Trump to work on his campaign, are the top two
candidates in the Republican nominating contest that will determine who
faces a Democratic candidate in the November congressional elections.
The Senate race could determine control of the Senate and the fate of
Democratic President Joe Biden's legislative agenda.
In recent months, top advisers urged Trump to stay out of the Republican
primary during routine monthly meetings at his Mar-a-Largo, Florida
estate where potential endorsements of candidates were reviewed,
according to the sources. In the last meeting, held in March, the former
president and advisers agreed to put aside the decision for now, the
sources said.
A third source with knowledge of the situation said Trump's wife Melania
had encouraged him to endorse Oz.
The internal deliberations on the endorsement have not been previously
reported.
While both Oz and McCormick had been vying for Trump’s support, the
advisers saw no reason for Trump to endorse either of them, as both men
have enthusiastically adopted the former president’s America First
agenda.
"It's not like he was knocking out a never-Trumper," with his
endorsement of Oz, said one of the sources, using a name typically used
to describe moderate Republicans who reject Trump's no-holds-barred
approach to politics.
Ultimately, Trump always makes the final call and he "went with his
gut," the second source said.
Neither source was able to shed light on why Trump changed his mind and
decided to back Oz.
A spokesperson for Trump did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Brittany Yanick, the communications director for the Oz campaign, said
there was nothing surprising about Trump's endorsement.
"President Trump endorsed Dr. Mehmet Oz because he's a conservative
outsider who will stand up to Joe Biden and the woke Left," she said.
The McCormick campaign did not respond directly to questions about the
endorsement.
While the primary includes a crowded field of contenders, recent polls
show Oz and McCormick as the clear frontrunners.
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Mehmet Oz, who is running for the U.S. Senate, speaks at a campaign
event in York, Pennsylvania, U.S., February 5, 2022. REUTERS/Hannah
Beier/File Photo/File Photo
Oz, a Turkish American, hosts the
syndicated "The Dr. Oz Show" and is a household name in the United
States, but his public image took a blow in 2014 when he told
lawmakers probing bogus diet product ads that some of the products
promoted on his show lacked "scientific muster."
BLOWBACK
The former president's endorsement has confused and riled
Republicans in pro-Trump regions of Pennsylvania.
Mark Hrutkay, the vice chairman of the Republican Party in
Washington County in western Pennsylvania, says callers have been
flooding his office phone since Trump announced the endorsement on
Saturday night.
“I have not had one call from a voter who supported the endorsement.
They are pissed off,” says Hrutkay. “This doesn’t mean they are
abandoning Trump, because they’re not. They just don’t understand
the endorsement.”
Sean Parnell, who was Trump’s first choice in the Senate race before
dropping out amid spousal abuse allegations, said Oz lacks a
conservative track record and will be burdened by a long list of
“head scratching” moments from his years on television.
Sam DeMarco, who heads the Republican Party in Allegheny County,
which includes Pittsburgh, was also surprised that Trump decided to
weigh in and doesn’t expect it to have a major impact.
“Voters have a lot of questions about Oz’s conservative credentials
on issues like guns and abortion.” DeMarco said. “I am not quite
sure why (Trump) decided to endorse at this point in the race. He’s
putting his credibility on the line.”
Chris Borick, a political science professor at Muhlenberg University
in Pennsylvania, says Trump “went out a limb” with the Oz
endorsement.
“It certainly carries risk for Trump, whose goal in the end is to
look good and there’s a good chance he won’t when the race is over,”
Borick said.
Still, some Trump loyalists in Pennsylvania fully support his
endorsement of Oz and don't understand the blowback it is
generating.
“People are becoming unhinged. Oz is a great candidate," said Lee
Snover, a Trump loyalist who chairs the Republican Party in
Northampton County.
"I got the same treatment when I backed Trump and people criticized
me. They were wrong then and they are wrong about Oz,” Snover said.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw,; Additional reporting by Alexandra
Ulmer,; Editing by Ross Colvin and Alistair Bell)
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