Pennsylvania's moderate Democrat Lamb distances himself from Manchin
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[February 17, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw
JENKINTOWN, Pa. (Reuters) -Congressman
Conor Lamb has a message to Pennsylvania Democrats who wonder whether he
is liberal enough to represent them in the U.S. Senate: He is no Joe
Manchin.
Locked in a tight nominating race with the northeastern state's
progressive lieutenant governor, John Fetterman, the moderate Lamb has
drawn comparisons to Manchin, a conservative Democratic Senator from
neighboring West Virginia who has routinely acted as a roadblock to
Democratic priorities in Congress.
Manchin endorsed Lamb for his 2020 congressional bid and has helped him
raise money.
During a weekend chat with Democratic voters at a coffee shop in
Philadelphia suburb Jenkintown, Lamb noted that he voted for President
Joe Biden's sweeping $1.75 trillion Build Back Better spending bill,
which Manchin blocked. He also said he supported ending a Senate
practice called the filibuster that Republicans have used to block votes
on voting rights and other issues.
Manchin and fellow conservative Democratic Senator Kyrsten Sinema of
Arizona both lined up against lifting the filibuster, blocking Democrats
who control the 50-50 Senate due to Vice President Kamala Harris'
tiebreaking vote. Sinema stopped short of fully endorsing the Build Back
Better bill, saying she was willing to continue working.
"We're basically two votes away on that long list of priorities, and
that's what the Senate campaign is really about," Lamb said, without
explicitly identifying the two senators.
The Senate seat that Fetterman, Lamb and state Representative Malcolm
Kenyatta are seeking the nomination for is seen by nonpartisan election
analysts as the most competitive Senate contest ahead of the Nov. 8
midterm elections, since its current occupant, Republican Pat Toomey,
60, plans to retire at the end of his term.
History and Biden's sliding approval rating favor Republicans' chances
of winning back control of at least the Senate or the House of
Representatives, which would give them the power to block the Democratic
president's legislative agenda for the last two years of his four-year
term.
Chris Borick, a political science professor at Pennsylvania’s Muhlenberg
College, said Lamb's pitch to voters is that he would be electable in
November.
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U.S. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) speaks on his phone in a hallway on
Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
"He's trying to find the sweet
spot," Borick said. "And the sweet spot is, look, you know there is
a place for Joe Manchin in the Democratic Party, but I am not Joe
Manchin. I am a Pennsylvania Democrat, which means focusing on labor
and working-class issues, which has been a good recipe for winning
statewide."
Lamb, 37, served in the U.S. Marines and as a federal prosecutor
before he was first elected to Congress in 2018.
He is trailing Fetterman, 52, in the few public opinion polls on the
race and is significantly behind in fundraising ahead of the May 17
primary election, when Democrats will pick their nominee.
His rivals have more directly criticized Manchin.
"Some Democrats, like Manchin, who are refusing to reform the
filibuster, are telling us that allegiance to a flawed Senate rule
is more important to them than democracy itself. They're wrong,"
Fetterman wrote in an opinion article on CNN.com last year, one of
many times he has directly chided the West Virginia senator.
Kenyatta, 31, has criticized Manchin in speeches and social media
posts. Asked in a recent interview whether he thought Manchin was a
Democrat, the state representative responded, "Occasionally."
Manchin, whose office did not respond to a request for comment, has
defended himself from liberal criticism, saying he has never been a
progressive Democrat and doesn't plan on becoming one. The senator
-- whose state voted overwhelmingly for Republican Donald Trump for
president in 2016 and 2020 -- has also offered some advice:
"All they need to do is, we have to elect more liberals," he told
reporters in September.
(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Scott Malone and Jonathan
Oatis)
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