U.S. Senate hopeful Fetterman seeks to calm health worries at 
		Pennsylvania rally
		
		 
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		 [September 12, 2022]  
		By Jarrett Renshaw 
		 
		PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) -Democratic U.S. 
		Senate candidate John Fetterman on Sunday sought to allay concerns about 
		his health after suffering a near-fatal stroke earlier this year, at a 
		campaign rally focused on abortion rights in suburban Philadelphia. 
		 
		Speaking at times in a halting and clipped fashion, Fetterman took aim 
		at his Republican opponent in Pennsylvania's Senate race, celebrity 
		physician Mehmet Oz, for questioning his fitness to serve. 
		"Unfortunately," he said, "I have a doctor in my life doing that." 
		 
		He spoke for about 10 minutes before moving slowly off the stage. He 
		walked into the crowd, shaking hands, greeting people and smiling for 
		selfies as AC-DC's "Back in Black" played.  
		 
		Fetterman, Pennsylvania's lieutenant governor, has largely kept off the 
		campaign trail since a stroke in May that he said almost killed him. Oz 
		has seized on the issue, suggesting Fetterman's health would prevent him 
		from carrying out his duties if elected. 
		 
		Polls show Fetterman leading Oz in a race that will help determine 
		whether President Joe Biden's Democrats hold onto their razor-thin 
		margin in the U.S. Senate. The race for the seat held by retiring 
		Republican Pat Toomey is important enough that both Biden and former 
		President Donald Trump have traveled to the state in recent weeks to 
		promote their parties' candidates. 
		  
		
		
		  
		
		 
		Speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss their concerns, five state 
		Democratic Party officials interviewed in the past two weeks expressed 
		worries about Fetterman's health and whether Republican attacks were 
		swaying voters. 
		 
		"It's important for people to see John Fetterman out on the campaign 
		trail and to see for themselves that he's all right. In a state where 
		one (percentage) point can decide an election, it matters," said Joe 
		Foster, a state Democratic committeeman from the Philadelphia suburbs. 
		 
		Fetterman held his first public event after his stroke in August, and 
		has made a handful of campaign appearances since, including at a Labor 
		Day parade in Pittsburgh. His campaign confirmed he relies on closed 
		captions to conduct interviews due to hearing damage. He has said the 
		symptoms are temporary. 
		 
		Fetterman campaign spokesman Joe Cavello said he is up to the job. 
		 
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			Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor and U.S. Senate candidate John 
			Fetterman delivers remarks as he attends a Labor Day celebration 
			with U.S. President Joe Biden at the United Steelworkers of America 
			Local Union 2227 in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania, U.S., September 5, 
			2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz 
            
			
			
			  
            "John marched for over two hours in the rain in Pittsburgh's Labor 
			Day parade, and spoke at two other events afterwards," Cavello told 
			Reuters on Friday. "Anyone who's seen John speak knows that while 
			he's still recovering, he's more capable of fighting for PA than Dr. 
			Oz will ever be.  
			 
			Fetterman rallied with abortion-rights advocacy group Planned 
			Parenthood in Philadelphia's largest suburban county as he seeks to 
			fire up women voters concerned about the U.S. Supreme Court's 
			decision in June to end the nationwide right to abortion. 
			 
			"Women are the reason we can win," Fetterman said.  
			 
			The stakes are high in Pennsylvania, where the governor's race will 
			decide whether women will maintain their access to abortions. 
			Fetterman has vowed to help protect that access, while Oz says he's 
			"100% pro-life" but supports exceptions in cases of rape or incest 
			or if the life of the mother is at risk. 
			 
			Christopher Borick, a political science professor at Pennsylvania's 
			Muhlenberg University, said bread-and-butter campaign events like 
			Sunday's take on added meaning following the stroke. 
			 
			"He doesn't have to be pre-stroke John Fetterman, but people need to 
			see that he's capable," Borick said. 
			 
			Oz used an initial refusal by Fetterman to debate to argue that his 
			rival was either afraid of him or concealing the scope of the damage 
			done by the stroke. 
			 
			"John Fetterman is either healthy and he's dodging the debate 
			because he does not want to answer for his radical left positions, 
			or he's too sick to participate," Oz told reporters last week, 
			according to media accounts. 
			 
			Fetterman has now agreed to debate in October, but his campaign is 
			looking at the possibility of using a closed captioning monitor for 
			the event so that he does not miss any words as he continues to 
			recover from his stroke.  
			 
			"Let's be clear, this has never really been about debates for Dr. 
			Oz," Fetterman said in a statement. "This whole thing has been about 
			Dr. Oz and his team mocking me for having a stroke because they've 
			got nothing else." 
			 
			(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, Additional reporting by James 
			Oliphant; Editing by Scott Malone and Daniel Wallis) 
            
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