Pennsylvania

Fetterman Rejects Oz Offer to Hold First Debate, Calls List of ‘Concessions' Insulting

John Fetterman said the debate "concessions" from Mehmet Oz's campaign in Pennsylvania's Senate race “made it abundantly clear that they think it is funny to mock a stroke survivor.”

AP Photo/Keith Srakocic

John Fetterman, who won the Democratic nomination to run for the U.S. Senate for Pennsylvania, in November, greets supporters at a campaign stop May 10, 2022 in Greensburg, Pa. He’s in one of the most competitive U.S. Senate races as Democrats defend their Senate majority.

John Fetterman, the Democratic nominee for an open Senate seat in Pennsylvania, rejected Mehmet Oz’s offer to hold their first debate next week, saying the GOP candidate's campaign thinks "it is funny to mock" his recovery from a stroke.

“I’m eager to put my record and my values up against Dr. Oz’s any day of the week," Fetterman, the lieutenant governor, said in a statement Tuesday evening. "As I recover from this stroke and improve my auditory processing and speech, I look forward to continuing to meet with the people of Pennsylvania."

Fetterman added that a list of debate "concessions" from Oz's campaign team earlier in the day "made it abundantly clear that they think it is funny to mock a stroke survivor."

The Oz campaign said it would "pay for any additional medical personnel" Fetterman might need to have on standby, in addition to permitting him bathroom breaks and allowing him to have all of his notes on hand, along with an earpiece to obtain answers from his staff.

“My recovery may be a joke to Dr. Oz and his team, but it’s real for me,” Fetterman said.

Read the full story here at NBCNews.com.

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