Biden, Trump, Obama barnstorm Pennsylvania in final midterms dash
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[November 05, 2022]
By Jarrett Renshaw and Gram Slattery
PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) - The biggest names
in Democratic and Republican politics -- Joe Biden, Barack Obama and
Donald Trump -- head to Pennsylvania on Saturday hoping to tip the
balance in a closely contested midterm race that could determine control
of the U.S. Senate.
Former President Obama caps a five-state tour aimed at stemming his
party's losses in Tuesday's congressional elections with appearances in
Pittsburgh alongside Democratic Senate nominee John Fetterman before
heading to Philadelphia, where he will take the stage at Temple
University with President Biden.
Former President Trump, meanwhile, will be ginning up support for his
hand-picked Republican Senate nominee, celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz, and
Republican gubernatorial nominee Doug Mastriano at a rally in Latrobe,
southeast of Pittsburgh.
As he has in a steady stream of rallies since leaving office, Trump is
also working to maintain his own profile as he contemplates launching a
third run for the White House after the midterms, according to advisers.
That could set the stage for a Biden-Trump rematch, though some
Democrats say heavy losses for Biden's party on Tuesday could increase
pressure on the president to step aside and let someone else carry the
party's mantle in 2024.
The Fetterman-Oz Senate race is one of three critical contests, along
with Georgia and Nevada, that will determine whether Democrats hold onto
their razor-thin majority in the Senate, and with it the power to
confirm Biden's nominees to posts ranging from his Cabinet to the
Supreme Court.
Nonpartisan election forecasters and polls show Republicans are heavy
favorites to win control of the House of Representatives, with the
Senate a toss-up. Control of even one of those chambers would give
Republicans the power to block Biden's legislative agenda and launch
potentially damaging investigations.
HIGH STAKES
Both parties have lavished attention on Pennsylvania both because of the
strategic importance of the race and because of its voters' history of
swinging from one party to the other in the past four presidential
elections.
Volunteers are also out across the state.
Susan Mast, a 62-year-old teacher from Lancaster, has spent several
hours each day for the last four weeks knocking on doors trying to
recruit voters for Fetterman and other Democratic candidates.
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A supporter hands out signs ahead of
Democratic candidate for Governor and Pennsylvania Attorney General
Josh Shapiro's "Big Fights Bus Tour" stop, in Stroudsburg,
Pennsylvania, U.S., November 4, 2022. REUTERS/Hannah Beier
"Democracy is at stake. Women's rights are at stake," Mast said.
Fetterman, the state's lieutenant governor, held a commanding lead
in the race throughout the summer, which Oz has whittled away in the
last two months.
Some factors may be local: a stroke this spring forced Fetterman to
scale back his campaign schedule and has affected his speech. At a
debate last month, he often stumbled over his words, in a
performance even allies privately described as shaky.
But Oz's gains also reflect a nationwide momentum shift in favor of
Republicans, as voters' focus on inflation and crime has proven more
durable than concerns about abortion. Democrats' early lead in
several other Senate races, including the contests in Georgia and
Nevada, have also shrunk or evaporated completely in recent weeks.
Also playing against Democrats is Biden's unpopularity. Only 40% of
Americans approve of the president's job performance, according to a
Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll completed on Tuesday, which has led Biden
to hold back from campaigning in some key states.
Obama has by contrast been tearing up the campaign trail over the
past week in the nation's most fraught battlegrounds -- including
Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin and Nevada.
One bright spot for Democrats is Pennsylvania's gubernatorial race,
in which Democratic Attorney General Josh Shapiro holds a commanding
lead against Mastriano, a Republican state senator whose far-right
stances have failed to connect with voters.
Mastriano, who would get to appoint Pennsylvania's secretary of
state and exert heavy influence over the conduct of elections were
he to win, introduced a failed resolution after Trump lost
Pennsylvania in 2020, claiming falsely it was the
Republican-controlled legislature that had the power to determine
which candidate received the state's presidential electors' votes.
Mastriano has also said that if elected he would ban abortions after
six weeks of pregnancy, a position that stands out among Republicans
running in swing states, many of whom have sought a middle ground on
the issue.
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Philadelphia and Gram Slattery in
Washington; Editing by Scott Malone and Daniel Wallis)
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