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John Fetterman makes it official: He'll run for United States Senate in 2022

 Pennsylvania's larger-than-life lieutenant governor, the 6-foot-8, bald, and tattooed John Fetterman, will run for U.S. Senate, making the announcement Monday after beginning an exploratory fundraising project last month that raised over $1 million.


It will be the 2nd bid for U.S. Senate by the plainspoken 51-year-old Democrat. He may ultimately see competitors from a member of Congress for his party's election in what could end up being the nation's most competitive Senate race in 2022.

On the Republican side, a number of names are distributing-- including former Trump administration figures. Another possibility is Jeff Bartos, a rural Philadelphia investor who started running for U.S. Senate prior to changing horses to end up being Fetterman's challenger for lieutenant governor in 2018.

The Senate seat in the governmental battleground is being left open after two-term Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey announced in October that he would not run once again.

Fetterman is without a doubt the highest-profile name in Pennsylvania politics to reveal interest in running. He got his start in optional workplace in 2006 as the mayor of impoverished Braddock, a small steel town simply outside of Pittsburgh where three-fourths of the locals are Black.

It existed that the Harvard-educated Fetterman ended up being something of a street fighter for progressive values, in addition to a minor media star for his work.

"What I bring is a 20-year record of consistency in welcoming the exact same core issues that the Democratic Party has actually pertained to welcome," Fetterman said in a current interview.

In 2010, he was arrested for refusing to leave the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's home office in demonstration over the closing of a hospital in Braddock, a cause that raised more comprehensive issues about inequality and the absence of access to health care.

Later on, he carried out same-sex wedding in his house prior to a federal judge's ruling made it legal in Pennsylvania.

Including his loss in the Democratic primary in 2016 ′ s Senate race, he is a veteran of 2 statewide projects, is an ever-present visitor on cable news shows and has a huge social media following.

On TV and on Twitter, he has actually taken on Trump with gusto, attacking falsehoods about citizen scams marketed by Trump and Republicans after the November election.

The party's bedrock issues, he is a fervent advocate for legalizing cannabis, slamming the war on "a plant" as meaningless, counterproductive and disproportionately causing criminal records onto Black individuals.

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